Buffs can't look ahead
New Mexico State will receive CU's undivided attention
By B.G. Brooks, Rocky Mountain News
September 10, 2005
BOULDER - The theme this week within the University of Colorado football program has been "every game counts the same."
The point, of course, is that tonight's past prime-time engagement with New Mexico State is no different than the Buffaloes' visit to Miami on Sept. 24 or the Big 12 Conference opener the following week in Stillwater, Okla.
It's a sound, workable theory, and if played that way, CU will leave Folsom Field near the midnight hour undefeated, feeling fine about itself cruising into an open week.
If it doesn't play that way, if the Buffs are found guilty of peeking toward South Florida . . .
Stop. No way, said Buffs coach Gary Barnett: "This team wants it too badly. They all know the value of each game, no matter who it is. I don't think these guys are going to let that happen.
"We can't afford to be human at this point in time, and that's what the average player would do. We cannot be average. If we want to be at the other end of the bell curve, we can't let that happen, and we won't let that happen. That will be my job to make sure we don't."
The other factor possibly coming into play is discarding any emotional residue from last weekend's harrowing 31-28 win against in-state rival Colorado State, which might prove more problematic than glancing ahead at the Hurricanes.
But for the past six days, Barnett and his staff have been preaching self-improvement, believing an experienced team will listen up, clean up the numerous Week One errors and forge ahead.
"We've got so much to work on and improve on that we can't worry about anybody but ourselves," offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Shawn Watson said. "We've got a long way to go to get where we need to be."
A 34-17 opening-week loser to Texas-El Paso, New Mexico State must travel an even longer road. The Aggies, who finished 5-6 in 2004 and were 34-56 in eight seasons under Tony Samuel, still are acclimating to a complete system change. They are a work not yet in progress until new coach Hal Mumme restocks his roster with personnel to fit his schemes.
"We've got all the system in, but it's a tough chore," Mumme said, noting the loss to UTEP was the result of "mainly just us having a kind of deer-in-the- headlights look in the first half (the Aggies trailed 31-0 at intermission). UTEP is just a really fine football team (but) we basically gave them some cheap scores and some easy field position with mistakes."
Yet with their Texas Tech-style spread offense (Tech coach Mike Leach worked for Mumme at Valdosta State in the mid-1990s) and unconventional "50" defense (the coordinator is widely traveled Woody Widenhofer), the Aggies, even if outmanned, present problems.
Tonight's best bets: The Aggies' first, last and most of the plays in between will be passes, nudging the game's finish toward Sunday morning.
New Mexico State attempted 62 passes against UTEP, completing 38 for 347 yards and two touchdowns, with three interceptions and a lost fumble. The game's official time: 3 hours, 35 minutes.
If CU senior receiver Evan Judge won't permit himself a peek at Miami, he did ponder what it might be like to play in a spread offense.
"It would be great; in those kinds of offenses, those receivers put up big numbers," he said. "But if I had to choose between 60 catches at New Mexico State or 12 catches at Colorado, I think I'd rather play for Colorado. No offense to them, but I'm happy where I'm at."
Barnett called the spread offense "a nightmare for defensive coaches, trying to prepare a package for this," adding that the Buffs likely will be in nickel and dime sets for most of the game and must pressure Aggies quarterback Royal Gill better than they did CSU's Justin Holland.
"As a D-line, we were pretty disappointed in ourselves (with pressure vs. CSU)," senior nose tackle Vaka Manupuna said. "We're pretty happy that we've got a big opportunity with a passing team. . . . We've got something to work towards."
It will be against an offense tonight that wasn't exactly pressure-proof in its opener, surrendering eight quarterback sacks to UTEP.
Defensively, the Aggies' scheme can cause pass-protection problems that might be amplified by the absence of Buffs junior guard Brian Daniels (broken rib), allowing redshirt freshman Daniel Sanders to make his first start.
New Mexico State's best defensive player is a Coloradan - senior linebacker Jimmy Cottrell, of Castle Rock. His 18 tackles (4 solo, 14 assists) in the opener earned him the Western Athletic Conference's defensive player of the week award.
Five key questions
1 Can CU's secondary cope with New Mexico State's pass-mad spread offense?
2 Can CU's defensive front generate more of a pass rush than it did in the opener?
3 If the Aggies attempt a running game, how successful will it be?
4 Are the Buffs focused on this game instead of their Sept. 24 trip to Miami?
5 Will tonight's game end in the wee hours of Sunday morning?