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OU-HSV
4/16/2009, 07:28 PM
Never too early to get to know the opposing team for our season opener. I ran into this article/blog article a bit ago on espn.com. I didn't see it posted anywhere, so here it is.

http://myespn.go.com/blogs/others/0-4-282/A-different-Quest-for-Perfection.html




A Different Quest for Perfection

April 16, 2009 11:30 AM

Posted by ESPN.com's Graham Watson

Ask any BYU fan, player, coach, or even opponent, and they probably have a theory as to why BYU, the highest-ranked non-BCS team to start 2008, imploded in every big game it played last season.

The Cougars were too tense, too overconfident, too absorbed with all the hype that surrounded the program, too insert-a-theory-here. The team has heard it all.

But to get to the root of what happened last year, it's important to understand where this program was just a few years ago. From 1997 to 2004, the Cougars had one double-digit win season. They had just four winning seasons during that span. And for the better part of this decade, the Cougars only winning season came in 2001.

So when coach Bronco Mendenhall took over in 2005 and went from a 6-6 record his first season to two consecutive 11-2 seasons, expectations for the program grew faster than Mendenhall and his staff could have predicted and ultimately could control. And Mendenhall said he's as guilty as anyone for pushing his team more than they were maybe ready to handle.

"In terms of where do you go from there, and I continued to propel and kind of push the team forward, but most likely I was pushing beyond where that team was capable of going," Mendenhall said. "The expectation because of the previous years, myself included, was that you now have to surpass what you have done. And so I think that's why players, staff and community felt the pressure that was there."

That's why BYU has worked hard this spring to change the culture around its football team. Expectations for winning are still high, but so is the expectation to have fun and enjoy playing the game. Too often the fun in football was lost last season, which put a strain on the players and the coaches. So each coach has challenged his players not to be afraid of failure, but instead to embrace, learn from it and come out a better player on the other side. It's the mission of the coaches this season to insulate the players from the pressures of the media and the community and just get back to when football was simple, when it was just a game.

"I think the hype that everyone gave us going into the season and kind of the pressure that we put on ourselves as a program to win every game and to be perfect and all that was difficult for us to handle," senior tight end Dennis Pitta said. "I think we had the mindset that we were better than we were and that we didn't have to work as hard to be as good. That was obviously wrong. I think we've learned a lot of lessons from it and I think we're a stronger team this year and a better team this year because of all the things that we went through last year."

Lost in translation
Looking back on it, Mendenhall wishes he had never muttered the words "Quest for Perfection" during the last offseason. At least not publicly. From the minute he took the line from the school's mission statement, it was taken out of context.

While Mendenhall was asking for perfection out of his players in every facet of their lives, with football being far down on the list, fans, media, and opponents took the mantra to mean that Mendenhall was searching for an undefeated season, another Mountain West championship and the school's first BCS berth.

"After I tried to explain, no matter how many times, it never really was embraced in the way it was intended," Mendenhall said. "It was just one more thing I was having to manage as the season was going on and conversely, it was one more thing the players were having to manage. I don't regret the principle and presenting it to the team because I do think it was the final step in kind of re-linking the program to the institution and tying to the mission statement, but if I were to say now, was making it public worth the maintenance? Certainly not."

BYU didn't need help intensifying the target that was already on its back, but Mendenhall's words certainly did that. BYU came into 2008 having gone undefeated in Mountain West Conference play for two consecutive seasons. It had won every game at home during that span and was the highest preseason ranked non-BCS team in the country.

And the team was heaping expectations on itself. In 2007, the departing seniors told the team to be better than 11-2, leaving the 2008 class with the task of carrying the torch for a team that had tasted winning, but didn't understand what it meant to be a winning program.

"I know the seniors that left the program [in 2007] that was a huge exit suggestion, to raise the expectations," offensive coordinator Robert Anae said. "It was to expect more, to do more, and even though that has a good ring to it, a good sound to it, man, the guys that stayed back, they got to live up to that and that puts it all on them."

Expectations keep building
BYU's 59-0 win over UCLA on Sept. 13 was the beginning of the end for the Cougars. It was one of the best games BYU had played during Mendenhall's tenure. The Cougars executed flawlessly, exploited one of the most well-known schools in college football and did so on national television.

Even though the season was just three games old, BYU was already being hailed as a team that was going to go undefeated, bust the BCS and take the rest of the country by storm.

The next weekend, BYU dismantled Wyoming 44-0 and though it was a great victory, players and coaches remember fans and media grumbling about the Cougars scoring fewer points on a lowly Wyoming team than they did on a power like UCLA.

That's where Anae said the wheels started to come off.

"There was a point where we're rocking and rolling, No. 7 or 8 in the country, and we had an outstanding game and the people of the country and our fans just thought, this is it, we're going to waltz through the rest of the deal, everybody's just going to fall down when we show up," Anae said. "That intention is good, but it kind of paints you in a corner if you've got to fight your way back into a game from a huge first-quarter deficit. It makes it problematic if you have a slugfest with a [New Mexico], who you should just, according to the point spread, should just roll over. And so, those kind of things happened throughout the course of the year and we just kept getting a little tighter, and tighter, and tighter. One mistake happens and before you know it a kid starts to slump his head and his body language. We didn't have the group value that we're going to live for the next play instead of think about the last one."

The "Quest for Perfection" started to take on a life of its own. After two consecutive shutouts, Utah State scored 14 points on the Cougars and the grumbles got louder. It didn't matter that both touchdowns were scored in the fourth quarter against some of the second-string players after BYU had a 34-0 lead. BYU had already established that it had the ability to shut out weaker teams and a one-win Utah State team was certainly that.

So players started getting questions about lackadaisical play. People who worked around the program started bringing out historical numbers and comparing the 2008 Cougars to the national championship team in 1984 and several other BYU teams that had had stellar seasons. Practices became quiet and focused, the joking in the locker room was limited. BYU was 5-0, on its way to 6-0, outscoring its opponents by more than 27 points and football stopped being a game.

"It became just like a workman-like attitude," senior defensive back Jan Jorgensen said. "We came in to just do our job, to get in, get out, win, win by a lot, and leave. And it wasn't like we were out there flying around, having fun and doing those things. I think we really forgot about that."

The fall
Anae said talking about what happened at TCU on Oct. 16 is easier than living through it. From the opening kick, TCU jumped all over the Cougars, got them out of their comfort zone and came away with a 32-7 win, the first conference loss for BYU in two years and a crushing blow to the Cougars chances at a BCS game.

Several players described the postgame as a surreal moment, a time when everything that they had built came crashing down. It was the moment the team broke under the weight of the expectations of its community and itself.

"In the minds of our team, our team's psyche, we went from being a very top performer in the country to just everything shattered," Anae said. "That was tough. And I'm not sure we did that at a very high level, to get the guys back and get on to the next one. I don't even remember who we played after, but I do know that as the year wore on, man, it seemed like every little mistake was just tough to let go of. The guys were just so tight in what they were doing. 'Tight' meaning afraid to make mistakes. Almost playing not to lose, that kind of thing."

BYU survived the next four weeks on talent, but it was clear that something was broken in the system. The team couldn't insulate itself from the criticism and football stopped being the sport than many of the BYU players had come to love as children. It started to become a grind that affected personal lives, school, every aspect of perfection that Mendenhall hoped they would be able to achieve when the season started.

But even after all of the struggles, the Cougars still had a chance to claim their third Mountain West title with a win over rival Utah. It didn't happen and the Cougars' quest came to an abrupt and shocking end. By the time the bowl game came around, players were done. They were done going to the same bowl for the fourth consecutive year and they just wanted the season to be over.

"Really, the worst thing that happened to this team was the 6-0 start because this team and staff started to believe that we were the previous years' teams," Mendenhall said. "We all knew we weren't."


A new year, a new attitude
This spring has been about getting back to basics for both BYU players and coaches. All parties spent much of the offseason reassessing what's really important in the game of football and while winning is a big thing, it's not the only thing and that's been stressed to the players in nearly every handout and pep talk they've been given.

Practices have been light, but more productive than in late 2008. Coaches have joked around and made a point to praise players for doing things well rather than punishing them for doing things poorly. The coaching staff has done its best to eliminate the fear of failure within their players.

Anae said he's made it his mission to insulate players from the media, comparison statistics and anything else that might cause them to lapse back into the team it was a year ago.

And the players appreciate it. Quarterback Max Hall said the locker room is a different place. For much of last year, no one was smiling, laughing or joking. But the carefree attitude that he's almost always associated with football has started to return. Guys are playing loose and enjoying the game, not working the job.

Finally, BYU is starting to understand the "Quest for Perfection" in the terms that it was intended. The Cougars might not go undefeated this season, but at least they'll enjoy trying.

"The season before, we were upbeat the whole season and it ended up great for us," Hall said. "When you're a kid it was just like, 'We're out here on the field, this is sweet.' And you're just enjoying the moment and enjoying playing ball. I think that's what we're getting back to and I think some of the younger guys are helping us out with that. There's an excitement now, and a culture change that's going on. It's going to be a different year."

JLEW1818
4/16/2009, 09:12 PM
I know they lost a lot of the offensive line, i think.... this can't be good for a team of this caliber...

LoyalFan
4/17/2009, 12:41 AM
Never fear! We will soundly thrash those Marmots!
What? Mormons? Ohhhh...sorry.

LF

Flagstaffsooner
4/17/2009, 01:02 AM
We better watch out. Those mudderfuffahs are gunning for us.

Crucifax Autumn
4/17/2009, 01:11 AM
Yeah..We need to remember the Boise State thing when taking these guys on.

That said, I'd hope Stoops shows the team film of that Fiasco Bowl to show them that even though we are the superior team, if the Sooner team doesn't take it seriously and play EVERY down Sam's decision to stay and win it all could be derailed from game 1.

Now...THAT said, I think we'll destroy the Mormtards!

JLEW1818
4/17/2009, 01:20 AM
yep, OUr boys will be pumped, playing in the new Dallas stadium..

olevetonahill
4/17/2009, 03:27 AM
Just win em ALL
Nuff said

A-M
4/17/2009, 11:53 AM
Just win em ALL
Nuff said

Sounds good to me!

badger
4/17/2009, 12:06 PM
Have the Utes and Coogz join the Pac 10 and see how many 11+ win seasons they can amass there :D

soonerfan28
4/17/2009, 12:27 PM
No offense, but BYU of 2009 is not Boise of 2006. Our d-line will dominate and our LB's will be making plays all over the field.

badger
4/17/2009, 12:32 PM
No offense, but BYU of 2009 is not Boise of 2006. Our d-line will dominate and our LB's will be making plays all over the field.

I will boo from the comfort of my comfy chair back here in Tulsa should they attempt a statue play like one of our guests did last sesaon... oooo, that angered me (along with the 85k in attendance, as I'm sure many of you recall)

Flagstaffsooner
4/18/2009, 12:30 AM
At least we're not playing in AZ.

GKeeper316
4/18/2009, 05:14 AM
Just win em ALL
Nuff said

we kinda dont have a choice.

after last year, there's no way in hell the voters will put us ahead of a team with an equal record for a bcs game.

win em all and leave no doubt.

OU-HSV
4/18/2009, 07:12 AM
we kinda dont have a choice.

after last year, there's no way in hell the voters will put us ahead of a team with an equal record for a bcs game.

win em all and leave no doubt.

I've heard that before....the last few season actually. Hell I've even said that before. But I don't believe it anymore. Because in all honesty it doesn't seem to make a huge difference to voters when OU fails to win whatever BCS game we're in. Think about the last few seasons, coming back from losses in big BCS bowls.....we still end up in big BCS games the following years...and we still end up ranked at/near the top.

However if espn/abc keep pushing like they did last season, I'm sure the media could help pull in some more anti OU votes this year than normal....but last season was ideal for the media to sway as many votes as they could, yet we still landed in the National Championship game. Thanks to the way the system is set up and thanks to some non-bias from the computers, and whatever else weighed in. Oh and most importantly thanks to the reality that we were playing damn good football and deserved to be in the National Championship game...all things considered.

All that being said, I do agree with your last sentence, win them all and leave no doubt.

Jacie
4/18/2009, 02:21 PM
we kinda dont have a choice.

after last year, there's no way in hell the voters will put us ahead of a team with an equal record for a bcs game.

win em all and leave no doubt.

I also disagree with this statement. What happened last year or any other has no bearing on the current season. In 2008, everyone had ample opportunity to see how the top teams fared against both good and mediocre competition. Oklahoma lost early to a stout sa*et squad, then finished the rest of the season playing lights out, beating and beating badly the same team that "stout" sa*et squad lost to because they were unable to stop them from driving the field when they positively, absolutely had to. The viewing public and BCS voters also saw SUC look pretty mediocre versus Oregon State, which was 'nuff said about them!

So in 2009, when it comes time to pick two teams to play for the title, it won't matter how Oklahoma, sa*et, Florida, SUC or whoever did what in the previous bowl games. You cannot hold against a team something they didn't do, a game they didn't play, a team they didn't lose to because every team changes from year to year.

bent rider
4/23/2009, 06:13 PM
Notice in the article BYU gives every excuse except the other teams were better than the mighty Cougars. There is no real explanation given for losing to Arizona in Las Vegas bowl. This is the school that was going to sue the BCS back in 2001 when they were like 10-0, only to lose 72-45 the next weekend to Hawaii. They like to run up the score on weaker opponents, but fold like a cheap tent when up against quality opponents in games that matter, like TCU and Utah. We all remember they needed a gaffe by the Washington QB (questionable unsportsmanlike penalty for throwing the ball in the air after a touchdown) to defeat winless U-dub last year.

Unless the Sooners pull another 2005 TCU game out of their butts, this should be a cakewalk.

JLEW1818
4/23/2009, 06:17 PM
The first thing that I will due when i enter the stadium is go take a ****. I will get in a stall and **** all over the wall. And say "how's that feel Jerry!!"


hehe

bent rider
4/23/2009, 06:50 PM
The first thing that I will due when i enter the stadium is go take a ****. I will get in a stall and **** all over the wall. And say "how's that feel Jerry!!"


hehe

Given how such massive projects go, the restrooms will probably be unfinished at that time, and you'll be doing same in some Porta-John in the parking lot.

goingoneight
4/23/2009, 07:06 PM
The first thing that I will due when i enter the stadium is go take a ****. I will get in a stall and **** all over the wall. And say "how's that feel Jerry!!"


hehe

Watch out... this high tech new stadium will call police dispatch automatically if you **** on it's walls. :D

JLEW1818
4/23/2009, 08:25 PM
lol

picasso
4/23/2009, 10:36 PM
we kinda dont have a choice.

after last year, there's no way in hell the voters will put us ahead of a team with an equal record for a bcs game.

win em all and leave no doubt.

not up to the voters.

MamaMia
4/23/2009, 11:42 PM
Yeah..We need to remember the Boise State thing when taking these guys on.

That said, I'd hope Stoops shows the team film of that Fiasco Bowl to show them that even though we are the superior team, if the Sooner team doesn't take it seriously and play EVERY down Sam's decision to stay and win it all could be derailed from game 1.......

...and that little TCU thing that happened on our own turf. :(

SoonerShark
4/24/2009, 02:00 PM
Thanks to the way the system is set up and thanks to some non-bias from the computers, and whatever else weighed in.

We do look good to the silicon chips, don't we? Unfortunately, our detractors might call us the Silicon Sooners. And when we are in the BCS Championship game, we are the Silicon Implants. I am pretty darn tired of other programs' fans berating us as losers since we have lost recent BCS tier bowl games. It is much easier to win a lower tier bowl against lower caliber opponents. I now realize that we should feel blessed that it is big news when we lose rather than when we win.

oupride
6/18/2009, 02:21 PM
I am worried about this game, seriously. This BYU team is not going to be a cakewalk like last year's opening game vs Tennessee-Chat. Some of the pre-season magazines think if BYU wins this game, then they will run the tables to the MNC. Does anyone believe the Sooners will be focused on BYU?

JLEW1818
6/18/2009, 02:26 PM
we are the first college football team to play in this stadium.... trust me.... Bobby will have OUr boys ready for this one. ....

and I'll be there... and if it looks like we might lose... I'll cut the power.

again like every year... this team is on a mission.

A-M
6/18/2009, 02:47 PM
we are the first college football team to play in this stadium.... trust me.... Bobby will have OUr boys ready for this one. ....

and I'll be there... and if it looks like we might lose... I'll cut the power.

again like every year... this team is on a mission.

I sure hope you are right about this. You know that we have more to lose then BYU and that is what makes this a tricky game. Just set close to the power switch so you can flick it off and on if you have to give the guys a little memory of what they are doing wrong.