KIRK FERENTZ: Good afternoon. Thanks to everybody for being here.
I’ll say a couple words about Saturday and then look forward to this week’s game. As I said after the game, disappointed with the outcome, but certainly but not the effort. Our guys gave good effort and competed hard. Coming off the field, I felt that way, and the tape verified that.
We knew going in that execution was going to be paramount, and then taking advantage of any opportunities or creating opportunities, and you play a team like that, the margin for wiggle room is pretty slim.
A quick example, in that first half we were having a hard time getting off the field defensively, and then offensively we had two early possessions where it didn’t make what I thought was a convertible 3rd and 3, and the next possession we missed a pass that would have given us probably 2nd and 2, maybe a 1st down, that type of thing.
Those are illustrations that we have to be able to do if we’re going to be able to continue to sustain a drive, and then in a game like that, that’s critical because it’s a two-way street as far as that time of possession. Both sides have ownership.
And then also, special teams-wise, we didn’t impact the game. We had a great respect for their specialists, but we never really influenced the game or impacted the game any way on special teams. I thought it was better in the second half. Saw some progress there. Our guys fought hard and overcame some tough circumstances, too, and fought until the end.
Some positives came out of the game. Looked at the tape on Sunday, made the corrections that needed to be made, and we have shifted our focus forward.
Heading into this week against Illinois, same four captains. Jack, Sam, Kaevon and Riley.
Injury-wise, not a lot to report other than it looks like Terry Roberts is doing better. He was pretty limited last week. Didn’t play much in the game. He’s having a better week of practice right now, so that’s encouraging. Hopefully we’ll get him back this week and that’ll help our depth a little bit in the back end.
Then obviously facing a big challenge this weekend, traveling on the road, night game again, and playing an Illinois team right now that’s playing really well.
They’re basically three points away from being undefeated and coming off a very impressive road win up in Madison.
Last week, they played good team football, complemented each other, took advantage of the situations they did create, and got a really good road win there.
Two big stats that factored into the game, and it’s a credit to Illinois. They were plus 3 in the turnover takeaway margin and controlled the ball rushing the ball, but they made plays in the passing game, too, that were impressive, and they held Wisconsin to two yards.
You look at their team, they’re strong up front on both sides. They have an outstanding running back, not just a good running back, very productive. The receivers are making plays. Quarterback is a newcomer who has done a very nice job for them. He’s playing really well right now.
Defensively, they’re pretty much nationally ranked in every category, doing a good job there. A little bit of a unique preparation for sure.
They have earned those stats. They’re playing well right now, playing with confidence, and are very aggressive. They’re a talented football team, very confident and we’re going on the road to play in a tough environment.
It’s going to be a big challenge for us .
Last but not least, our kid captain is Cormac Faley, who’s a 12 year old from Asbury, fighting leukemia for a lot of his life, and then had his last treatment two years ago. Doing really well, so obviously he won’t be with us at the game, but certainly will be in our thoughts.
Q. Going up against another team that can run the ball effectively as you were mentioning earlier, how do you make sure this is a better outcome than last week?
KIRK FERENTZ: A lot of the same challenges because these guys are balanced. They’re doing a great job in the passing game and diverse with what they do. A lot of different things in their attack. So they make you defend the entire field.
The back is not the same as last week, but similar in that he’s a really tough runner, runs hard and makes the extra yards. He was really good last year, too.
They’ve lost a couple guys off the offensive line, but they have a J.C. transfer who’s done a good job, and they’re still good up front, so we have a big challenge. We’re going to have to do a little bit better getting off blocks and hopefully getting to the ball a little bit better.
Q. Everybody talks about Illinois’ running game, but it seems like Tommy DeVito maybe has provided them more stability at quarterback. How vital has he been to making that offense click?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, he’s been playing better and better week by week, which being a newcomer you’d kind of expect that. I thought he played a great game Saturday and made some really nice throws, and then the receivers went up and made some plays, too, which helps on top of it.
It wasn’t just one guy. They had three receivers pitch in and do a nice job making contributions.
They overcame some crazy circumstances, too, went for it on 4th down a couple times and converted that and had a touchdown called back and then turned right back around and still went in there and converted.
Q. It’s not even halfway through the season yet and two Big Ten coaches have been fired. Are you surprised by that?
KIRK FERENTZ: Today or 10 years ago?
Q. Today.
KIRK FERENTZ: No, not at all. Disappointed but not surprised. I think it’s the fifth one this season, right? The toll has mounted. Ball kind of got rolling last year.
The one big one I remember was USC the second week of the year, and my question would be if it’s that bad, why didn’t you do it a year ago or a half year ago.
But that’s the world we’re living in right now. I’m not surprised but disappointed.
Q. Would you ever anticipate changing up your staff in the middle of a season?
KIRK FERENTZ: For what purpose?
Q. Any purpose.
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, if you thought it was going to serve an end, yeah, absolutely. But I’ve never been in that situation as an assistant or a head coach. Certainly as an assistant I never thought I should be changed out. That was never on my mind. (Laughter)
Q. In relation to Paul Chryst, the success that he’s had, 67-26, even their down period has been 60 percent winning percentage, did that catch you off guard knowing the way Wisconsin usually operates?
KIRK FERENTZ: It’s not surprising but it’s surprising. You think about the success they’ve had, but again, I’m not privy to all the details. I’m not there, so I can’t comment on any one specific.
I just brought up USC. That one kind of caught me off guard at that point because it was week one or two. That was surprising to me. But you never know what’s going on behind the scenes, so I don’t want to give commentary on one specific situation.
Broad-based, though, it’s kind of like us picking up two schools from the West Coast into the Big Ten. We’re living in different times now, operating in a different world, and we live in a very reactionary world, too, right now. That’s obvious.
The fact that most of expansion has been driven by TV I believe, at least with that in mind, and I’m going back 10 years there now.
We basically are in the entertainment industry, and some things come with that, and that’s kind of what we’re seeing. In some ways we’re becoming a little bit more like the NFL. I wish we had the structure of the NFL. That’s one wish I would make, and maybe in the future we will.
Q. Do you think the television revenue is encouraging schools to act quickly like this, knowing that there’s so much money coming in?
KIRK FERENTZ: I don’t know all those details, but that’s the world we’re living in right now. It’s a results-driven business, and it always has been. That’s not new.
But there’s a lot of other things going on in college football, and I’ve coached in both arenas. When you coach in the NFL, there is no responsibility, accountability towards the players’ graduation, towards their personal lives. Somebody else deals with all that, and we didn’t deal with graduation.
I think that’s one of the rewarding parts about college is seeing people that are really changing — kind of like high school coaching, you’re watching kids or young people in real developmental years of their lives. The 2002 team was just here. 20 years later now you see these guys as young adults, or even Tony who was here last week at this time who, younger than those guys yet, starting his family, all those kinds of things. Those are the fun parts about college coaching. You kind of miss that in the NFL.
It’s a little different train coaching in college, I guess. I’ve always looked at it differently.
Again, times are changing. We all know that. NIL, transfer portal.
Q. Do you think it’ll ever go back to anywhere —
KIRK FERENTZ: I don’t think it can right now, but again, I think my biggest concern about college football is just our lack of structure right now. There’s really no framework, a firm framework that we’re operating from, whereas in the NFL it’s very clearly defined. Every part about it is very clearly defined.
That’s one of the things I’ve always enjoyed about working here. You walk in every morning knowing what the expectations are, and they’ve been very consistent.
But we live in a changing world. We all know that, and you’ve got to change with the times.
Q. Spencer was talking about earlier with two six-game seasons separated by a bye week, every game is important. Is there maybe more of an importance getting a win going into that bye week, getting momentum going into that week?
KIRK FERENTZ: It’s like winning a bowl game. It’s a lot better to go into the offseason after a victory. To that point, there’s no downside to winning games ever that I can think of, and there’s not much upside from losing.
But what we’ve tried to do, and it’s so cliche and so mundane, but it’s week to week in college football and any football. Any football level I’ve ever coached at, all three of them, you just try to focus on the opponent and matching up as best you can.
Right now we’re fully focused on that because we have to be, and we’re playing a good football team that’s playing very, very well.
We’ll reassess things once we get to Sunday, and the only reason it’s six and six, that’s how the schedule shook out. Nothing too creative there.
Q. Gavin Williams has been quietish lately. Is that injury, workload related or just schematics? What’s kind of the cause of that?
KIRK FERENTZ: Well, it has only been, what, one week or two weeks? I’m losing track now, where we had both guys — I guess two weeks now with Leshon back, too. Yeah, Gavin was out for quite a while longer than we’d thought, and the injury was a little bit more extensive than we had hoped initially. So yeah, he’s working his way back.
The other guys are doing a good job. The way I look at it, right now we have three guys that we have confidence in, which is one more than we did maybe two weeks ago, so that’s good news.
He’ll get his share.
Q. You mentioned their aggressiveness on defense. Wisconsin only got two yards rushing. That catches your eye right away. What do they do defensively against the run that presents such a problem?
KIRK FERENTZ: Well, when you watch them, there’s a lot of guys up there. You’ll see that right off the bat. It just makes it a little tougher to create run lanes. Their linebackers fill pretty well. They know where to get and where to fit, and I think the biggest thing is they’re very well-coached team-wise, and that’s true no matter what your defensive style may be or whatever your scheme may be, but you’re going to see more guys up on the line than you would typically.
But the key thing I think is they’re well-coached and they know where to be, when to be there, that type of thing, so they don’t leave big seams for you, and it’s hard to create them. That’s going to be a hard challenge is just trying to — I’m sure they’ll have a wrinkle or two — but they pretty much are what they are, which most good teams are like that. We sure as hell knew where Mississippi State was; we just didn’t know what to do about it.
That’s the challenge. You’re just trying to — I only bring them up because of the statistics, where they rank statistically. The challenge is to try to find a way to block them basically is what it gets down to, and that’s easier said than done. Nobody has done it very well.