Mizzou football presser notes: UMass

Oct 8, 2024 | Uncategorized

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Missouri head coach Eli Drinkwitz walks on the field to see opposing players and coaches after the end of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

What Eli Drinkwitz & Co. had to say leading up to Mizzou’s trip to Amherst.

This week’s visitors to the podium for Mizzou football were head coach Eli Drinkwitz, center Connor Tollison and linebacker Corey Flagg Jr.

Eli Drinkwitz | Head coach

Opening statement: “Disappointed in our performance and preparation. It starts with myself, our coaching staff and our players, and we all take full responsibility for not playing to our full capabilities as a team. And that starts with me. Had a slow start on both sides of the ball. Third downs were incredibly critical in the first half, on both sides. Their ability to convert, our inability to get off the field, and our ability not to run the ball and or stop the run, these things have got to be corrected, and we’ve got to continue to work on those again. It begins with me. It begins with our coaches schematically, making sure that we’re putting our players in the best positions possible to be successful. It begins with us playing complementary football. If one side of the ball is struggling, the other side of the ball needs to be able to pick it up. If we weren’t able to do that, like I said, I take full responsibility as the head football coach for everything that happens in this this building, and it starts with me to identify the problems, work to correct those problems and to fix those problems, and that’s what we’re working on.

“This week, I had a very clear and direct message with our team, and I’m going to say it again here to y’all: one bad day doesn’t define our team or our season. Our response will. There’s going to be bad days you’re going to have, you’re not always going to have peak performance as much as we would like to. It doesn’t have to define us, but we do have to respond, and we do have to respond in a better manner, and how we respond will define who we are as a team and what kind of character we have as a program. The second thing I told him is ignore the noise. There’s always going to be narratives, there’s always going to be criticisms, there’s always going to be opportunities to point the finger that really doesn’t have anything to do with us. Our opportunity is to respond. Ignore the noise, embrace the brotherhood. The best always tell themselves the truth. You have to tell yourself the truth of your performance on Saturday. You have to take responsibility for that. You have to find a way to beat UMass.”

On struggling to contain Conner Weigman: “Shouldn’t have mattered who was playing the quarterback position. We should have been better, and we need to focus this week on stopping this quarterback and figuring out our team so that we can execute at a higher level.”

On bouncing back: “We haven’t had to face this challenge yet this year. We’re a program that I believe, hadn’t suffered a loss since of last October. It’s an opportunity for this team to figure it out. You got new staff, new players. I know the way that I’m going to handle it. I know the way the guys that have been here know how I’m going to handle it. The sky is not falling. We had a poor performance. Doesn’t have to define us. We what we have to do is respond, and how you respond is do your job, focus on the core values that we’ve instilled, lean into your elite E.D.G.E, energy, details, great emotional consistency. Ignore the outside narrative and come in here and go back to work. And it’s really that simple. We all have a perfection dream, but that’s not reality. So when you come up short, doesn’t have to define you. It just has to push you to grow.”

On the offensive line’s struggles against Texas A&M: “Our inability to get into an offensive rhythm because of our lack of execution on third downs…we were in predominantly third-and -long, which allows them to get into a heavy blitz package. Contributed to the issues there. I’m not specifically concerned with any one side of the ball, or the left side or the right side. I’m concerned with, as the head football coach, making sure that our team is working to improve and making sure that our schemes put us in a better position for our players to execute. Not pointing the finger at any of those guys.”

On Brady Cook’s running: “I thought Brady did a really good job of scrambling and creating first downs. One was called back in the penalty in the first half for illegal formation, but I know I hadn’t seen or noticed anything other than maybe we haven’t been hyper focused on doing that just because we’ve been given Nate Marcus those carries. But I do think it’s something we can see more in the future, just to give him more rhythm and get him into a better flow of the game.”

On the locker room environment after the game: “It’s always really tough in the locker room after a game, because you come face-to-face with with something that you never expect. You don’t go into a game expecting that, and you really don’t go into a game expecting the way it turned out. And so the locker room is always a really tough place, but what gives me a lot of confidence in our football team and our staff is the way we handled ourselves after the game. It wasn’t finger pointing. There was not assigning blame. There was no we call it B.C.D., blame, complain or defend poor performance. There was a responsibility accepting of hey, I had ownership in this. It starts with me, and we got to work to improve. And that’s how you bounce back. That’s how you ignore the noise. You don’t deflect, you don’t place blame on anybody else. You take responsibility for it.”

On reflecting on losses: “You look at everything. You look at the preparation, the travel, the practice plans. I think you have to be steady in your approach and understand that again, one bad day doesn’t define a season. And the people who I think run into the most trouble are the ones who jerk the steering wheel too fast. A slight adjustment can change the direction and angle of a football team.”

On limiting penalties: “You do a great job of coaching the things that should be coached and ignoring the things that don’t have to be coached. We have officials here on Wednesdays. We have to do a better job of making sure that when those guys point out issues, we handle it. Offensive lineman not aligned on the line of scrimmage is a head coach issue, and so that’s my responsibility. I haven’t done a good enough job of enforcing that and maintaining discipline on that.”

On effort: “I didn’t see anything on the film that told me we had a lack of effort. I’m keenly aware to look for that, because that would tell me that there’s a deeper issue.”

On Nic DeLoach playing more snaps than Toriano Pride Jr. against Texas A&M: “I expect more competition from every position on our football team, because at the end of the whole thing, number one core value is always compete. And if we’re not playing at the level we want to play, everybody else has got to compete. We have to compete as coaches in order to raise the level that we want to play at…I thought Jalen Marshall came in in the third quarter and made a couple of really nice plays defensively which helped us secure the run game. I think Nick DeLoach and Toriano have done a better job of rotating and competing, and I think you’re going to see that more and more, because we need to compete to get the best out of our team.”

On special teams: “From a special teams unit, we consistently cover kicks really well. You look at our return, our coverage units, I think those guys have done an excellent job. I think Luke’s playing the ball at a really high level. I think our kicking game is growing in its consistency defensively.”

On ABC’s broadcast showing Luther Burden III on the sidelines frequently: “First I’ve heard of it. I’ll be honest. I ignore the noise. There’s nobody on our team that’s questioned Luther’s motivation, drive and determination to help us win. I think everybody saw him compete for catches at the end of the game. I think we were all disappointed. I hope they didn’t have a video of me on the sideline the entire game, because my facial expressions would have shown disappointment in our performance. But again, I ignore the outside narrative, the noise, focusing on our team…We believe what we believe about each other, because we see what we see every day in this environment, and we’re all competitors, we all wanted it to be different. We created that issue. So it’s our job to respond this week.”

Corey Flagg Jr. | Linebacker

On needed improvements: “We see the things we need to improve on. We see the holes in our ship. We understand that it’s a very mature team.”

On the team’s mentality: “We reiterate as a team that it’s really just about us.”

On what went wrong for the linebackers against Texas A&M: “I think it was just a lot of guys. I feel like trying to make a play instead of just, including myself, instead of just doing our assignment, doing our job and playing with the defense.”

On failed blitzes: “I feel like the timing of the blitzes, we jut weren’t doing exactly what we were supposed to do based on the calls that we were getting.”

On what it takes to reflect and grow from adversity: “Being honest with yourself in the mirror and being truthful with yourself. That’s something I had to do after the game. There’s a couple of plays I left on the field, a lot of plays I left on the field. I have to be really honest with myself and tell myself I just have to continue to do my job. It was just extremely selfish on my part to try to make a play where my guys trust me to be here. It just comes to being honest with yourself, just like real-life scenarios. If you’re going through something and something’s no going your way, you have to be honest with yourself, see what you can do better. And that’s just what we have to do as a team.”

On having productive conversations with teammates in the midst of adversity: “It’s easy to to have those conversations with these guys because they are having them on their own…We’re a very experienced team. You got Theo (Wease Jr.) and Triston (Newson) and Mookie (Cooper) already talking about improving. I was just adding on to what they’re saying.”

Connor Tollison | Center

On the offensive line’s struggles against Texas A&M: “I just think we got behind the sticks and got in obvious pass down situations.”

On getting over defeats: “I get over pretty quick.”

On generating rhythm on offense: “Just staying on schedule, getting four or five yards a run so it’s not third-and-10, third-and-12.”

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