#32 Louisville Cardinals |
#4 in ACC |
The job Scott Satterfield did in salvaging Appalachian State, after Jerry Moore had let it slip heading into their FBS transition, qualified him for a better job. So why he would choose to cash that in at a school that was just five years removed from being a Group of Five school, coming off a 2-10 mess of a season, seemed curious. The job he did in his first year cannot be given enough credit. The Cardinals were picked to finish dead last in the Atlantic Division, and it was nearly a consensus. Instead, after an ACC opening loss in Tallahassee, Louisville won 5 of their 7 remaining ACC games, to finish alone in second. Granted a 45-10 blowout loss at home to Clemson, where they were outgained by 300 yards, showed just how big the gap was between them and #1. So what are the expectations for 2020? They were already second in their division, but if any (reasonable) person thinks the goal is to win at Clemson, and win the division, they are nuts. The season starts with a bang, opening with a divisional matchup against NC State, before that road game at Clemson. They also play November road games at Virginia and Notre Dame, before finishing with the annual rivalry game against Kentucky. So a New Years Six Bowl has to be the goal, and it seems like a reasonable one. The way the bowl tie ins work, there is room for a mediocre ACC team to grab that second slot, as a 9-4 Virginia did last year. The Cardinal are flush with exciting, young skill position players, with three underclassmen running backs and receivers earning all-conference honors last year. Micale Cunningham only averaged 14.8 passing attempts per game, which didn’t qualify him for the ACC stat leaders, but if he had, he would have led the conference in passing efficiency. They need him to handle more of the load this year, and his 62% completion rate, and 22 touchdowns to 5 interceptions suggest he can. This was already the #2 offense in the ACC last year, both in terms of scoring and yards per play, even with the handcuffs kept on Cunningham. The reason the handcuffs have to come off is because the defense has a long way to go to just be mediocre, surrendering ACC worsts 33.4 ppg on 6.3 ypp. They return seven starters, but this from the lone ACC unit, offense or defense, to fail to register even a single All-Conference player, including honorable mention. The problems began up front, allowing an ACC worst 5.4 ypc, 9th worst in the FBS, while also failing to get after quarterbacks, with the third worst sack rate in the conference, at 5.11%. There were some positive developments on that front late in the year, as they at least improved their pass rush, nearly doubling that rate, up to 10.17% over the final quarter of the season, 10th best in the nation, including a season high 4 sacks against Mississippi State in the Music City Bowl. Granted a good deal of that improvement came from the linebackers, not the line. G.G. Robinson was the only lineman to rack up more than 2 sacks on the season (4), and he has graduated.
| KEY PLAYERS |
RB | Javian Hawkins, Sophomore |
RB | Hassan Hall, Junior |
WR | Tutu Atwell, Junior |
| . |
LB | C.J. Avery, Senior |
LB | Rodjay Burns, Senior |
LB | Monty Montgomery, Junior |