I'm usually pretty optimistic heading out of the spring game. I thought Saturday offered a pretty sobering dose of reality though. Three thoughts on the Cats spring performance;
1. UK's defensive line. My goodness. I'm not sure where to start. Clearly, this unit is going to seriously struggle. SEC opponents are going to run the football at will against UK's front seven. UK's pass rush was pretty much a joke last year. More of the same is awfully likely. This is especially frustrating because I think the secondary is actually pretty good. Unfortunately, that won't matter much with no pass rush.
2. UK's offensive tackles. My goodness. UK looks like they'll be alright at the guard and center spots, but tackle is another story. I'll say the same thing now that I said three months ago. If Meadows is on the field, UK is in deep trouble. And honestly, I can't see Mosier holding up in one-on-one pass block situations. But....
3. ...Eddie Gran is going to rely more on the running game, which could be a strength. I don't know that this line is going to be especially good at either run or pass blocking, but I'm betting they're better when running the ball. Mosier/Meadows pass blocking one-on-one gives me nightmares. Hopefully, Leavitt and Young are both the real deal and develop quickly.
Three schedule thoughts;
1. Don't take Southern Miss for granted. Sure, USM lost some key guys on offense, but they return a QB that passed for 4,476 yards last season. The Cats d-line will face a huge test right away. They won't be able to let this guy just sit in the pocket with all day to throw.
2. Kentucky has its issues, no doubt. But so does Vanderbilt. And Missouri. And South Carolina. And possibly Mississippi State. Can Stoops take advantage (three of these games are in Lexington)?
3. Is there a path to six wins? If UK goes 3-1 in the four SEC games I mentioned, sure. Maybe UK stays healthy and those teams don't. Maybe UK catches breaks that they rarely catch. Who knows, but I think there are 7-8 opponents on the schedule that Kentucky "could" beat. That probably means a 5-7 or so finish.
GBB!!!
1. UK's defensive line. My goodness. I'm not sure where to start. Clearly, this unit is going to seriously struggle. SEC opponents are going to run the football at will against UK's front seven. UK's pass rush was pretty much a joke last year. More of the same is awfully likely. This is especially frustrating because I think the secondary is actually pretty good. Unfortunately, that won't matter much with no pass rush.
2. UK's offensive tackles. My goodness. UK looks like they'll be alright at the guard and center spots, but tackle is another story. I'll say the same thing now that I said three months ago. If Meadows is on the field, UK is in deep trouble. And honestly, I can't see Mosier holding up in one-on-one pass block situations. But....
3. ...Eddie Gran is going to rely more on the running game, which could be a strength. I don't know that this line is going to be especially good at either run or pass blocking, but I'm betting they're better when running the ball. Mosier/Meadows pass blocking one-on-one gives me nightmares. Hopefully, Leavitt and Young are both the real deal and develop quickly.
Three schedule thoughts;
1. Don't take Southern Miss for granted. Sure, USM lost some key guys on offense, but they return a QB that passed for 4,476 yards last season. The Cats d-line will face a huge test right away. They won't be able to let this guy just sit in the pocket with all day to throw.
2. Kentucky has its issues, no doubt. But so does Vanderbilt. And Missouri. And South Carolina. And possibly Mississippi State. Can Stoops take advantage (three of these games are in Lexington)?
3. Is there a path to six wins? If UK goes 3-1 in the four SEC games I mentioned, sure. Maybe UK stays healthy and those teams don't. Maybe UK catches breaks that they rarely catch. Who knows, but I think there are 7-8 opponents on the schedule that Kentucky "could" beat. That probably means a 5-7 or so finish.
GBB!!!