One of the things that concerned me when Kalen Deboer took over as head coach was going back and reviewing his tenure at Washington. In CKD's last year at UW, and especially in the second half of the schedule, UW had a tendency of allowing teams to stay in games well into the 4th quarter. That's understandable against teams like Oregon, Texas, and Oregon State (all games that came down to the wire). However, games against a 3-9 Arizona State team, 3-9 Stanford, and 5-7 Washington State followed the same script. Some of this was seen the year prior also, but these examples suffice.
Fast forward to this year, and this tendency is again obvious. Against UGA the game was 24-21 UA the entire 4th quarter... with UGA turning the ball over on downs at the UA 8-yard line with 13:20 to go. In the Vandy game, it was 20-14 UA with 4:07 in the 4th quarter (UA kicks FG to go up 9). Against Missouri, we were only up 20-17 at the 3:17 mark in the 4th before scoring a TD and allow Mizzou to draw it to 3 with 1:40 to go. And against Oklahoma, the game stayed 23-21 OK during the entire 4th quarter. Obviously, we can understand all the close games against these teams - they're all top 20 squads.
However... against South Carolina we go into the 4th down 22-14 and take a 29-22 lead with 34 seconds to go. Against LSU we allow them to close it to an 8-point game (17-9) with 10:28 to go before going up 11 at the 4:25 mark. Then in the game against Auburn it's tied 20-20 for most of the 4th quarter until we score a TD on 4th down with 3:50 left to go... and fortunately get a TO with them driving on our 27 yard line at 33 seconds.
We could go back to 2024 and see some of the same tendencies at times, but not like this year and 2023 UW. IMO, when there's this much evidence, it's clear our staff plans and maybe even wants to "win" in the 4th quarter... even against the teams that have no business playing with us that late in the games. A few observations after writing all this. One, this strategy puts a LOT of pressure on your offense to deliver in crunch time. A great example is Ty's pass from the 6 vs. Auburn... it could have just as easily been an incompletion as it was a TD. You also have to be perfect on defense in these types of games... one fluke play and you're tied or even down a score. Second, if this is a strategy (and I think it clearly is), I'd feel better IF we have a more dominant running game. It's one thing to lean on a team with the running game in the 4th quarter like we often did in the Saban years when you've got dominant OL/RB groups. It's another thing when you have a mediocre running attack like this year (I feel like Grubb made a mistake of relying on it against Oklahoma in the 4th). Third, this is what we can expect with CKD IMO. If you enjoyed the "cushy victories" under Saban against less talented teams (and often good teams too), there's not going to be many of them on a yearly basis - and when it happens, it's an anomaly.
Fast forward to this year, and this tendency is again obvious. Against UGA the game was 24-21 UA the entire 4th quarter... with UGA turning the ball over on downs at the UA 8-yard line with 13:20 to go. In the Vandy game, it was 20-14 UA with 4:07 in the 4th quarter (UA kicks FG to go up 9). Against Missouri, we were only up 20-17 at the 3:17 mark in the 4th before scoring a TD and allow Mizzou to draw it to 3 with 1:40 to go. And against Oklahoma, the game stayed 23-21 OK during the entire 4th quarter. Obviously, we can understand all the close games against these teams - they're all top 20 squads.
However... against South Carolina we go into the 4th down 22-14 and take a 29-22 lead with 34 seconds to go. Against LSU we allow them to close it to an 8-point game (17-9) with 10:28 to go before going up 11 at the 4:25 mark. Then in the game against Auburn it's tied 20-20 for most of the 4th quarter until we score a TD on 4th down with 3:50 left to go... and fortunately get a TO with them driving on our 27 yard line at 33 seconds.
We could go back to 2024 and see some of the same tendencies at times, but not like this year and 2023 UW. IMO, when there's this much evidence, it's clear our staff plans and maybe even wants to "win" in the 4th quarter... even against the teams that have no business playing with us that late in the games. A few observations after writing all this. One, this strategy puts a LOT of pressure on your offense to deliver in crunch time. A great example is Ty's pass from the 6 vs. Auburn... it could have just as easily been an incompletion as it was a TD. You also have to be perfect on defense in these types of games... one fluke play and you're tied or even down a score. Second, if this is a strategy (and I think it clearly is), I'd feel better IF we have a more dominant running game. It's one thing to lean on a team with the running game in the 4th quarter like we often did in the Saban years when you've got dominant OL/RB groups. It's another thing when you have a mediocre running attack like this year (I feel like Grubb made a mistake of relying on it against Oklahoma in the 4th). Third, this is what we can expect with CKD IMO. If you enjoyed the "cushy victories" under Saban against less talented teams (and often good teams too), there's not going to be many of them on a yearly basis - and when it happens, it's an anomaly.


