CHICAGO - Wisconsin head coach Bret Bielema addresses the media at this morning's 37th annual Big Ten Media Day at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in downtown Chicago.
COACH BIELEMA: It's great
to be back in Chicago for media day. Missed you
guys. I hope everybody is doing well.
We are very excited about Wisconsin. As
always, there are high expectations, but those
things are based off the premise of what we've
done in the past as well the 17 starters that we
have coming back. I know offensively we've got
players at the running back, at the tight end
position an improvement at the wide receiver and
everybody asks about the quarterback position
which is open for competition defensively, have a
lot of players coming back that have game
experience.
But for us to have success this year it's
based on what they do in the upcoming weeks in
camp as well as the way we attack the non-
conference schedule league into the Big Ten.
We're excited about things, and I know that as the
season unfolds there will be challenges that come
up in this conference. As Fitz (Pat Fitzgerald)
mentioned, it's a great conference from top to
bottom, but it presents challenges every week, and
we're excited to get there.
Q. Coach, you've had a lot of injuries,
especially in your defense, defensive line and
your secondary. Can you update the status of
your guys, specifically (Allen) Langford and
(Aaron) Henry who both had ACL injuries?
COACH BIELEMA: Absolutely. I'm not a
doctor, but I get doctor reports, and everything that
they've given me so far -- by rule, as coaches we
can't watch workouts per se. But everybody is
back in the full swing of things. Everyone has
been cleared for fall camp. The only guy that may
be limited in a certain fashion is Matt Shaughnessy, our defensive end. But those two
guys you asked specifically about, Allen Langford,
who was injured in the Ohio State game, is back
and actually was in my office yesterday and felt
great and was moving very well.
And then Aaron Henry, injured in Bowl
game preparation, is doing very, very well. He's
about a month behind Langford and Chappy
(Jason Chapman). Both guys have had ACLs, as
well, but we're excited about his full return to
competition this fall.
Q. You have big back-to-back night
games at Camp Randall. Did you have any say
at that at all, and what do you think of those?
COACH BIELEMA: As you know, the
powers that be determine our game schedules. If
they make a certain game a night game before a
certain date, there's nothing anybody can say,
either home or away.
Because three two
back-to-back night games, we had to go through
some proceedings within our campus.
But we're very excited. We have a great
record in night games, and any advantage you can
gain on Ohio State and Penn State is a good thing.
Hopefully Wisconsin fans if they have a couple
more hours to relax in the stadium parking lot, it's a
festive environment so we're excited about that
opportunity.
Q. As one of the contenders picked by
the media, what's it like to not see Michigan up
there, kind of a perennial pick for years?
COACH BIELEMA: That's probably a
misprint. I think that Michigan because of way they
can recruit, because of the way they have recruited
under Coach (Lloyd) Carr and the coaches he had
there, I've been fortunate enough to get to know
Rich (Rodriguez) over the last couple years and
know that he's a very, very high quality coach.
And I guess, you know, when people make
preseason predictions it's based really on numbers
and it's based on who they have coming back. I
think a year ago at this time when I was asked by
several people who might be a surprise team in the
conference I said Illinois over and over again
because of what I saw the year prior and of Coach
(Ron) Zook and the quality things he adds. The
preseason publications are great, but I like the
postseason publications better.
Q. Coach, back to Michigan a little bit,
you kind of knew what you were going to get
with Lloyd Carr. It's going to be something a
little different this year and it's the Big Ten
opener. How do you prepare for what Rich is
going to do and what do you think it will be like
to face that Michigan team?
COACH BIELEMA: Fortunately for us they
have a non-conference game they have to get
through before they play us, but we're just going to
take one game a time with them. I know Rich has
got a certain type of offense obviously he had at
West Virginia, but he's ran several type of offenses
during his coaching career. Him and Paul Chryst,
my offensive coordinator, were together before his
GA and share a background, so I think Rich is
going to be able to put his players in the best
position to have success, and it's good to be at a
Michigan press conference.
Q. Coach, can you kind of update us on
your quarterback situation and talk about Allan
(Evridge) and Dustin (Sherer) and what they
bring to the team?
COACH BIELEMA: Well, Allan, as is
well-documented, came as a transfer from Kansas State. I got to know him a little bit as a recruiting
coordinator there before I came to Wisconsin. He
actually ended up starting several games as a
freshman at Kansas State and did some good
things, so with him transferring in, we knew he
came with game experience. And obviously he
backed up Tyler (Donovan) a year ago, so the one
advantage with Allan is he's been huddle, he's
made calls, made adjustments, been hit very hard,
if you YouTube him, by Kansas and bounced back
from that.
So Allan has game experience, Tyler Donovan, Scott Tolzien, James Stallons, and then
Curt Phillips, our incoming freshman who
graduated early and came in January. The things
those guys have is their last two weeks of spring
football were by far their best two weeks. A year
ago at this time we had the same quarterback
controversy, and I believe competition brings the
best out of people. So as those guys go into fall
camp they have to perform every day.
I don't know when we're going to name a
starter. I do know ten days out from our opener
versus Akron we'll release a two deep and have
our starter identified by then. If it happens before
then, it happens. I'm not in any hurry. I'm anxious
to watch those guys compete.
Q. Some teams in the Big Ten run the
spread offense, and what's it like to be one of
the few teams putting such a strong emphasis
on the run?
COACH BIELEMA: The thing I like about
being at Wisconsin right now is we're unique. Five
years ago when the spread first starred coming
into the league, you needed preparation versus
those teams. For us now Wisconsin is unique.
You line up with a fullback and tailback and have
some big ugly guys in front that come downhill. It's
a different preparation. So I like that.
I think now people have to go into a certain
preparation mode against Wisconsin, which to me
is an advantage. Now, we have to make certain
adjustments defensively because we go against
our offense in fall camp. We're going to set aside
certain amounts.
We almost doubled the
preparation time that we have for our preparation
versus the spread. The spread is a unique
offense. To me as an old defensive coordinator,
the thing people use the spread for is to create
spacing; they create one-on-one tackles and make
you make plays.
Everybody's spread is different. Illinois'
spread
is
different
from
Northwestern,
Northwestern is different from Indiana, and Indiana
is different from Purdue. Michigan is going to be
their own variety, Ohio State, whatever they do;
everybody's spread is a little bit different, which
makes that preparation even more so.
Q. Your out-of-conference schedule
includes Akron, Marshall Fresno State and Cal
Poly. Isn't this below what's to be expected of
a program that's been to 13 Bowl games in the
last 13 years and that is a perennial contender
for the conference championship?
COACH BIELEMA: We open up with
Akron, which is a MAC conference school that has
shown over the last two years especially to be
strong within their conference. We agreed to the
Marshall contract several years ago, and, you
know, when that contract was signed you would
find Marshall among the top in the country. At that
time I was actually at Kansas State when I was
ranked No. 4 in the country and was upset by
Marshall at that time who was unranked.
And then to go to Fresno State, who if you
read the publications in the preseason, is top 25 in
almost everything I read yesterday, that puts them
in a chance for the BCS game.
So those three games in itself, I think,
speak for themselves. And what you have to take
into perspective as a reporter or when you're trying
the report the news is find out when those games
were scheduled.
The only game that was
scheduled in the last year was Cal Poly.
The reason I scheduled Cal Poly is before
we play Michigan, Ohio State and Penn State
back-to-back, I was set to play Virginia Tech, and
that didn't seem like a good idea for me to have
those games before we get rolling into the Big Ten
season.
So I got out of the Virginia Tech game to
create a bye week. Because of the Big Ten
schedule we were unable to have a bye week
during any course of that conference schedule
thus giving us a buy week before the season
starts. I put Cal Poly as one on the few teams that
worked for our agreements. And the reason I think
we've been successful is because we've had good
scheduling.
Q. Coach, listen, Ohio State has had a
recent run of dominance in the conference and
obviously back to 2002 winning the national
title, but they've lost decidedly in both those
BCS title games that they've been in back to
back. I think some have kind of thought that
maybe that reflected on the conference a little
bit and maybe kind of tarnishes what they
actually accomplished.
Is that a fair
assessment for both the Buckeyes and the
conference do you think?
COACH BIELEMA: No one can argue with
Ohio State's past history and tradition. I was at
Kansas State when I saw them win a
championship in 2002, and they did it with a solid
defensive play.
They didn't hurt themselves
offensively and great on special teams. They put
themselves in the national championship game in
back to back years.
Obviously things didn't fare well for them in
those games, but as a conference we need to
have out there that last year we played Tennessee
in a heartbreaker, a loss at the end. Two years
prior to that we had beaten Arkansas and Auburn,
who are huge favorites in our game who as you
know are SEC opponents and we were able to win
both of those games.
So during my time at Wisconsin we're two
and two. I think the great indication of where our
conference is at, the next marquee Bowl game
outside of the BCS games is actually the Capital
One Bowl in Orlando, and you saw Michigan who
had all the reasons in the world maybe not to play
their sharpest game ever, with all that was going
on there, go out and basically defeat the Florida
team that was really a heartbeat away from playing
in a national championship game, SEC
championship game. So if you want to group and
gather, make sure you have appeared all the
things gathered together because I really believe
the Big Ten conference is strong as ever and go
out and play anybody on any given day.
Q. Coach you mentioned that last year
you were talking up the line and keep your eye
on the line. Is there anybody this year that you
have an eye on or that you think everybody
should keep an eye on?
COACH BIELEMA: You know, in this
conference there's so many things that determine
your success, being able to stay healthy, being
able to do certain things. But there's such a group
of coaches that are high quality, that it's just a
matter of time before everybody has that year.
And you look at the conference now, Mark
Dantonio going into his second year, they had us
on the ropes in Madison a year ago. And I know
that's going to be a challenging game for us. And I
expect within the conference, we don't play Purdue
or Northwestern so I don't really have a gauge on
them. Indiana, those guys have done a great job.
They have a great quarterback. They are probably
waiting to jump onto the scene. That's the great
part about this conference is anybody can beat
anybody on any given day.
I go back to my first year when we were 12
and 1 we were hoping for a break down the stretch
there for us to get in the BCS game, and there
were a lot of close games going down the stretch
between Ohio State and Michigan before they got
to that big game at the end of the year.
I'm going to answer the Joe Tiller question
before it gets asked. I'm a big Joe Tiller fan
because he can walk in here without a tie. If I got
up here without a tie, I'd get heckled, so I admire a
guy going into his last year and can wear what he
wants and no one is going to say anything. I
played him one time and I got him. That's all I got.
Q. I was wondering with the quarterbacks,
from each guy, what do you want to see out of
each guy, an area of improvement, to kind of
put them ahead in competition?
COACH BIELEMA: Well, because Allan
has the experience, I really want him, if a receiver
is open, to hit him. He has to be able to deliver the
ball. I think the part that we appreciate at
Wisconsin more than anything because of the
offense we run, we ask our quarterback to really
manage the game well, so if you have a third and
eight throw and he's open, you need to make the
throw and be able to catch it if you're a receiver.
The other guys, we want to see how they're able to
handle the huddle, handle adjustments. Being
able to read a defense for the first time.
As a former defensive lineman, there's
nothing like hitting a quarterback. During fall camp
we put all of our quarterbacks, pretty boys in green
jerseys, no one can hit them. And that's a great
thing. But on the same account, in the game of
football, it's a tough sport and you get hit. How
they handle that first couple times when they get
pressure on them when a guy is coming at them
full speed from the blind side, that's going to be a
thing we have to measure during the fall camp.
Q. Feelings about the 40-second clock
and what was the purpose of the rule change?
COACH BIELEMA: Well, I think it's a
great thing. Dave Parry did a great job explaining
it to our officials. It's obviously something that the
NFL has experienced. I have a couple coaches
that had NFL experience. They were for it right
away.
What I think it's going to be able to do, and
Dave would be a better explainer of this, it's going
to make things more consistent. Within each crew
in the Big Ten Conference, and we have excellent
officials, again excellent officials in the Big Ten
Conference, the one part that gets frustrating as
coaches, everybody moves at a different pace.
And you may get a ref or a crew that really sets the
ball in play very, very fast, and it may change even
during the course of the game.
People get tired.
And it really hopefully is going to make
things more consistent and you're going to
eliminate the issues with the clock. Basically you
get in a rhythm and you get in the way of play
calling, and all of a sudden you look up and you're
down to five seconds. You may have been set a
little bit faster than the previous series or even the
previous quarter.
Overall it's to do two things.
Everybody wants to cut down the time for the TV,
but on the same account, it's good to make things
more consistent overall and a better game.
The only clock issue, as a coach you're
able to speak up on those things, and as some of
you know I have tinkered with clock issues in the
past in the kicking game. But the one part that is
surprising to me is when you go out of bounds in a
game other than in the last two minutes of the first
and second half, for that clock to stop and then
start again I think is really going to change the
game.
That's the only part I have an issue with. If
we change the game -- we have a pretty good
game as we've got it right now. If I'm a head coach
and down by three scores going into fourth quarter
that basically takes that away from us and I don't
know why we'd want to do that.