Enhance Your Experience
Snap Shots: Despair, Disgust, Disbelief, and Dissociation In the Little Apple
This is the third of three posts sponsored by Samsung. Intro here.
There wasn't anything positive to take from the Kansas State disaster either offensively or defensively. So that rules out a Snap Shots post talking about anything successful.
There were certainly plenty of negatives -- failing to convert third and shorts early in the game, five interceptions by Garrett Gilbert, numerous breakdowns by the defense. It's getting old talking about defensive mistakes at this point and the mistakes by Gilbert were mostly just forcing the ball into coverage or not putting it where he wanted it, nothing to break down in particular on those plays.
Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the game was the looks on the face of Texas fans in the stands of Bill Snyder Family Stadium. Looks of despair, disgust, disbelief, and dissociation.
A breakdown of the what Longhorn football looks like in 2010 after the jump.
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Snap Shots: Failed Zone Blitz Against Baylor
Introduction to the "Enhance Your Experience" series here.
The Big Picture
Only looking at total yardage, the Texas defense appeared to play a fantastic game against Baylor, holding the Bears to 328 yards. After all, the long-time 'Horns' whipping boy came into the game averaging 510 yards per game, one of the top figures in the entire country after a 683-yard performance against Kansas State. In that context, allowing a team only 64% of its average yardage sounds like a recipe for success.
Not for this Texas team. A short field given up by the offense hurt, but what hurt more were three long touchdown plays by the Bears. All told, those three plays accounted for 158 yards and 48% of the total yardage by Art Briles' offense on the day -- a 69-yard touchdown run by Jay Finley, a 30-yard touchdown catch by Kendall Wright, and a 59-yard touchdown catch by Terrence Williams. Back. Breaking.
The Context
Things were going reasonably well for the Longhorns when Justin Tucker kicked off following a long field goal with just over four minutes left in the second quarter. Sure, Texas was held to two field goals inside the red zone, but a 9-3 lead wasn't such a bad thing, especially after getting down early against UCLA, Oklahoma, and Iowa State.
After picking up a first down with a quarterback sneak, Kheeston Randall barged into the Baylor backfield on a passing play and forced a holding call.
Good news -- 1st and 20 for the Bears. Then, Christian Scott came up quickly in run support to stop Finley for a one-yard gain.
Even better news -- 2nd and 19 for the Bears. A screen pass on second down picked up nine yards on a nice open-field tackle, again by Christian Scott, who also forced a fumble on the play, knocking the ball loose from Finley while sending him to the turf.
Of course, this being the Longhorns, Scott's tackle twisted Finley and his momentum sent the ball downfield and towards the Texas sideline. No Longhorns had a play on the ball, which bounced harmlessly out of bounds. Of course.
However, Texas was still in an advantageous position with the Bears facing 3rd and 10 on the Texas 41-yardline.
Snapshots: Failed Run Blitz Against Iowa State
The Big Picture
Samsung has been kind enough to sponsor a series of posts across the network over the next three weeks, focusing on the intersection of sports and technology. Now, I'd love to be able to sit here and tell you how much I love my Samsung HDTV, but unfortunately I'm still living in the late '90s with my 24-inch, decidedly non-HD TV. It's a piece of junk (probably because it's not a Samsung! Like what I did there? Eh? Eh?).
What I can tell you is that if I had the money, there's no question every Saturday would find me glued to one of the new Samsung Smart TVs that feature web-connected aps and the ability to stream shows and movies, as well as connect with social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter. What better way to appreciate the game than that? Maybe one of the 3D models. Point is, I'd never leave my couch!
Moving on from GoBR's fantasyland (brought to you in stunning high definition!), the intersection of sports and technology now allows the average fan to break down plays in much greater detail than ever before. High-speed internet allows users to download games onto their slick Samsung laptops, pull screenshots from the game, then add illustrations to provide breakdowns on a level normally reserved for the profesionals.
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NCAA Football TV Schedule, Week 8
Special thanks this week go to Samsung, who approached us wanting to sponsor posts related to the intersection of technology and sports. Well, this is it, in all its full, Saturday glory. Literally dozens of games from across the country, all available in the comfort of your living room. These are good times we live in. Good times indeed. Enjoy your football Saturday, my friends.
All times Central
| TIME | GAME | TV | LINE |
11:00 |
Miami at Virginia | MIA -15 | |
| 11:00 | Purdue at Illinois | ILL -17 | |
| 11:00 | Syracuse at Cincinnati | PICK | |
| 11:00 | Northwestern at Indiana | NW -3.5 | |
| 11:00 | Oklahoma St. at Kansas St. | OSU -4.5 | |
| 1:30 | Tulsa at Notre Dame | ND -8.5 | |
| 2:30 | Missouri at Nebraska (MAP) | NEB -7.5 | |
| 2:30 | Michigan St. at Iowa (MAP) | IA -6.5 | |
| 2:30 | Arizona at UCLA | AZ -9.5 | |
| 2:30 | Florida vs Georgia at Jacksonville |
UGA -2 | |
| 2:30 | Duke at Navy | NAVY -13.5 | |
| 2:30 | Wake Forest at Maryland | MD -5.5 | |
| 5:00 | Auburn at Ole Miss | AUB -7 | |
| 6:00 | Stanford at Washington | STAN -7.5 | |
| 6:00 | Baylor at Texas | TX -7.5 | |
| 6:00 | Kentucky at Mississippi St. | MSU -6 | |
| 6:30 | Utah at Air Force | UT -7 | |
| 7:00 | Ohio St. at Minnesota (MAP) | OSU -25.5 | |
| 7:00 | Oregon at USC (MAP) | ORE -6.5 | |
| 8:00 | Michigan at Penn St. | MICH -3 | |
| 8:15 | Colorado at Oklahoma | OU -23.5 |
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| 10:00 | TCU at UNLV | TCU -35 |

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