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FB : Feeling ill: Illinois hands Syracuse another blowout loss, worst start since 1986

It’s starting to feel like one of those recurring nightmares. It’s the same old story of dropped passes, awful tackling, inconsistent drives on offense, bad penalties and a lack of clutch plays on defense. First downs remain a rarity, the same goes with defensive stops.

Three games. Three crushing losses.

And in the end, the final score epitomized a team that has shown little signs of improvement since the start of the season. Illinois trounced Syracuse, 41-20, in the Carrier Dome on Saturday afternoon. The Orange now have lost three games by a combined margin of 86 points, and SU holds its first 0-3 record since 1986.

The announced crowd of 34,188 was the second smallest in the past 20 years at the Dome. And it looked like considerably less actually filled the silver bleachers.

A disastrous showing on defense once again exemplified the worst of Syracuse’s problems. The Orange defense gave up 508 yards of total offense, including almost 400 yards rushing the ball.



‘There’s not much we can say,’ cornerback Dowayne Davis said. ‘Fundamentally, we have to play better.’

Since the opening-day loss to Washington, the defense has removed blame from the gameplan and placed an emphasis on improving football essentials like tackling, plugging the opponent’s running game and marking assignments.

Two weeks after the season-opener, the defense still looks lost on the field. The Illinois running game trampled over the Orange. Three Illini ran for over 90 yards, including running back Rashard Mendenhall, who had three touchdowns and 156 yards on 16 carries.

‘Sometimes missed tackles come down to athletes,’ SU head coach Greg Robinson said. ‘I’m not going to say what I see. You can teach fundamentals tell the cows come home. Sometimes when you’re in position to make a play you got to make a play.’

When the Orange cut the Illini lead to 20-10 in the third quarter it seemed Syracuse finally had gained some momentum. A 62-yard dash by running back Curtis Brinkley – Syracuse’s longest play of the season – set up Jeremy Sellers goalline plow into the endzone. However, the Orange’s inability to make a stop on the ensuing drive put any control Syracuse had gained back in the hands of Illinois.

Illini quarterback Juice Williams capped the 80-yard drive with a 10-yard sprint. Williams utilized an option attack to confound the Syracuse defense, which stayed in nickel formation for most of the game to try to compensate for Illinois’ speed. On the next Illinois drive, a careless pass interference by freshman linebacker Mike Mele on 3rd-and-long extinguished any last hopes that remained for the home team.

Once more, a breakdown in basics had devastated the Orange. Mendenhall took advantage of the penalty with a 50-yard touchdown run, making the score 34-10.

Mendenhall’s score punctuated the theme typifying this year’s Orange squad: The sequence starts with a missed opportunity by Syracuse, it ends with a score by the opponent. ‘When you’re playing the way we are your looking for somebody (to make a play),’ Robinson said. ‘Early in the ballgame I saw some situations for interceptions, some fumble opportunities we didn’t get. We got to make those plays and all of a sudden you don’t let that offense proliferate.’

The offense continued its mediocre performances from the past two games. Dropped receptions, three-and-outs and pressure on the quarterback characterized the SU offense, which scored half of its points against the Illinois second-team defense.

The stats looked decent on paper. But the offense’s numbers did little to alter the final score.

‘I thought we got the ball moving pretty well,’ offense lineman Carroll Madison said. ‘We showed we can move the ball. We got to be able to finish. We got a lot of those drives inside their territory. And didn’t get any points. We can’t do that. We can’t let that happen.’

The offense’s slow start put the Orange in an early hole. At halftime, Illinois led, 17-0. And Syracuse did not collect a first down on any of its first three possessions. A potential first down by receiver Taj Smith – who had his breakout performance in last year’s Illinois game – turned into a dropped catch on the first drive.

After another week of practice, the fundamental woes seem impossible to shake. The dj vu of blunders seen each weekend has left the Orange frustrated and spiraling further into a nightmarish season – where every game the simplest of mistakes seem almost inevitable.

‘We’re a team that is a work-in-progress – big time,’ Robinson said.





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