LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) -Texas Tech coach Mike Leach believes worthy pirates go into battle with swords held high.
A self-proclaimed piratetologist, Leach has revisited his sword analogy this season, reminding his Red Raiders: “None of that droopy stuff,” he said.
Droopy, though, is how this season in Lubbock compares to last.
Texas Tech was undefeated through 10 games this time last year, ranked No. 2 in the country and basking in back-to-back wins over top-10 opponents. On Saturday the unranked Red Raiders take three losses into No. 17 Oklahoma State.
There’s been internal strife this season- nothing close to a mutiny, though – and Leach has resorted to some, well, politically incorrect tongue-lashing.
ting team rules.
The loss to the Cougars was the second straight for the Red Raiders, who had fallen 34-24 at No. 2 Texas in an early Big 12 matchup. This season is the first since 2002 – Leach’s second season – that the Red Raiders dropped two of their first four games.
That same week Leach banned his players from having Twitter pages after linebacker Marlon Williams asked on his account why he was still in a meeting room when “the head coach can’t even be on time.”
Leach has also juggled quarterbacks – a first for his program. Injuries gave him no option. Starter Taylor Potts went out with a concussion in early October. He was replaced by former walk-on and backup Steven Sheffield, who led the team to two wins before injuring his left foot at 15th-ranked Nebraska.
M game. Leach even went to third-stringer Seth Doege after Potts got his third turnovers against the Aggies. Doege started the game against Kansas.
It isn’t just the record (6-3, 3-2 Big 12) that’s slid this season. Fan support has waned, too.
The city and the university went nuts last season after Texas Tech beat top-ranked Texas on a final-second touchdown pass and the eighth-ranked Cowboys, both at home.
M game – are empty.
Despite all the woes and losses, cornerback Jamar Wall said this year’s team is a tight unit.
“We haven’t been perfect this year and that’s why it (all) kind of stands out more,” he said. “We’re all playing hard every single game. Things might not go our way but we’re all still pulling as a family.”
Receiver Alex Torres said the season has been tough at times.
“We’ve gone through some controversy throughout the season, just ups and downs, Torres said. “That all come down to our team’s discipline and focus throughout the season.”
Leach said his players will be fine if they remain focused on their inner pirate.
“I think it’s always tested,” he said. “It’s tested in practice, I think it’s tested individually and team-wise. I think that’s what you got to just keep battling away.”
When Leach goes off on his pirate tangents it’s not like a 60-second cameo from a recent episode of the TV show “Friday Night Lights,” that he taped while in Austin for the Texas game.
In the bit part, Leach asks a motorist at a gas station how to get to Lubbock. Then Leach recognizes the man as a well-known but dispirited high school coach who’s lost his inner pirate. Leach tells him he’s got to swing his sword properly.
alk about waving the sword one way or another.”
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