Thursday August 10, 2006
I’ve had the privilege in the past to have press credentials for various sporting
events. I appreciated the opportunities and enjoyed serving those who arranged
the credentials for me. It’s a nice change of pace and gives you a different
perspective on the games. You get to see little things that escape you in the
stands or on TV, and you see sides of the participants and coaches that most
don’t get to see. I especially appreciate getting the occasional interview where
I can ask the questions that I know are on the minds of fans like myself.
I couldn’t imagine doing it full-time though. Why? It’s a job. There is little
if any tailgating. You must (or should) appear outwardly impartial and neutral.
After the game, there’s no time to celebrate or enjoy a win – it’s time to get
to work filing stories and/or processing pictures. You’re at the game, but there
is a disconnect from the fan experience. That’s a big adjustment that most fans
couldn’t handle. I just enjoy being a fan too much.
EDSBS has an interview
up today with Phil Steele, publisher of the invaluable preseason football
guides. He describes how he researches all of the teams and then goes into detail
about his setup for the weekends. "In this year’s magazine on page
17 we have a picture of the 12 tvs in front of my desk. I get to watch 12 college
games all day long on Saturday and 12 NFL games on Sunday."
To a lot of people, that sounds like heaven. Not to me. Don’t get me wrong
– there are a lot worse fates in the world than being surrounded by an endless
choice of football games. It’s how I spend bye weeks. But it’s infinitely better
to me to be at a Georgia game and immerse myself in the gameday experience.
Steele might be surrounded by hundreds of square feet of hi-def college football
goodness, but in that same position it would kill me not to be at Sanford Stadium.
What I’m trying to say comes down to this example: In 2002, I was fortunate
enough to be on the sidelines for Georgia’s game at Auburn. Most of you immediately
recognize the significance of that game. My mission was mostly photography,
and I took several rolls of pictures during the game. What stands out is the
picture I didn’t or couldn’t take. You’re all familiar with the play
– fourth down, David Greene, Michael Johnson, touchdown. It was possibly the
biggest play in Georgia football in decades. I was in a perfect position – on
the goal line maybe 20 feet away from Johnson’s catch. You can see me in the
replay of that catch. I had my camera ready to capture the picture of a lifetime.
But I couldn’t move. I had to watch the play. I had to make sure he
caught the pass. I forgot about the camera, I missed the picture, but I didn’t
care – Georgia had just taken the lead and was on its was to the SEC Championship.
Thursday August 10, 2006
I happened to catch yesterday’s PTI,
and the topic of the college football rules changes came up. I shouldn’t be
so naive as to expect an ESPN show to point the finger back at the networks,
but they could have at least acknowledged television’s role in excessively long
football games. Of course they didn’t head in that direction. They focused instead
on why all of the complaining coaches should get over it. It’s not like they
have time to get more than an inch deep on an issue given that show’s format,
but that makes it that much more important to get to the root of the issue,
and they didn’t in this case.
Wilbon even mentioned the long Rose Bowl broadcast but failed to connect the
dots and see the obvious reason why the Rose Bowl (and any BCS bowl) lasts so
long. As pointed out clear as can be in
this analysis by Dan Bickley of the Arizona Republic, there were 161 plays
in the BCS title game and 96 commercials.
Bickley’s analysis had one surprising stat – the SEC has the shortest games
at 3:15 on average. With the interminable CBS broadcasts, I expected that number
to be a bit higher. That might mean that the SEC is more of a run-based conference
with fewer changes of possession (and consequently fewer chances for commercials).
It might not mean anything since we’re talking no more than thirteen minutes’
difference among the conferences.
Thursday August 10, 2006
HeismanPundit has an interesting
post up about the stat-skewing in overtimes. Lots of good, hard empirical
data courtesy of CFBStats.com.
I replied that if there are stats that have the potential to really get skewed
or distorted by overtime, they’re team scoring offense and scoring defense.
Remember Georgia’s 1996 game at Auburn? Of course you do. Regulation ended
28-28 after a miracle Bobo-to-Allen pass, and the Dawgs won in overtime 56-49.
My problem is that the nature of overtime scoring means that the final score
doesn’t tell the true story of a game. A low-scoring struggle can easily turn
into a 45-42 final. These points come from a shootout format that starts at
the 25 yard line.
A team that gives up 20 PPG could find its average shifted by 2 or 3 points
per game after a single overtime game. That’s a pretty significant skewing of
the average.
My suggestion: keep score as usual in overtime but once things are decided,
revise the score to give one point to the winner. A 28-28 game would end 29-28
no matter if overtime had a single field goal or five or six touchdowns.
Wednesday August 9, 2006
While I searched for a job after graduating from the University of Georgia
in 1995, I noticed that the Dawgs didn’t have much of a presence – official
or unofficial – on the relatively new World Wide Web. There were several discussion
groups on services like Prodigy, UseNet lists, and scattered e-mail distribution
lists. But there wasn’t much on the Web, so I started a Dawg site for the hell
of it on my personal account. I don’t remember the specific date I started,
but I remember working on the site while the news of Jerry Garcia’s death came
across the TV. I’m not an especially big Deadhead or anything, but the date
stuck with me. It seems as good a date as any for the anniversary of this site.
August 9th, 1995. 11 years ago. We’ve been there for three
Georgia football coaches, four basketball coaches, dozens of conference and
national titles, and two URLs.
The site grew quickly. We got good behind-the-scenes reports from Jim Donnan’s
first spring practices in 1996. We eventually had contributors writing on everything
from football to hoops to baseball. We had the Daily Dawg which became the directory
of Dawg news sources. It was very crude and very grassroots, but that was the
nature of the medium. We were all learning. Several other Dawg sites sprang
up, each with their own kind of speciality. The Anti-Orange Page captured perfectly
what it meant to be a Georgia fan in a world of rivalries. The DawgVent quickly
established itself as the place for discussion. The Grapevine became a must-visit
site for Georgia recruitniks.
In 1998, the specialized news services started up. AllianceSports and Rivals
(later to morph and twist and reincarnate into Rivals and Scout) started a healthy
competition and arms race for the very focused target market of the passionate
college sports fan. The role of disorganized grassroots coverage was fading,
and I was glad to see this cottage industry established. I dove in myself, contributing
frequently to UGASports.com over the years.
Those sites take a lot of heat for being "amateurs" among journalists
and letting fans run wild on message boards, but other media and even official
team sites have been completely transformed in response to the innovations pioneered
by companies like Rivals and Scout.
With the online news services establishing themselves, the mission of this
site had to change. I bought the dawgsonline.com domain in 2000, and I abandoned
the "breaking news" style while keeping the site as a place to write
and reprint things I had written elsewhere. A blog, in other words. I had become
familiar with the blog concept by reading some of the early pioneers like Dave
Winer, but content management tools were so clumsy when I dove in. I tried
writing my own system, and then I settled on a system called GrayMatter. It
worked well but wasn’t maintained at all. I tried Blogger for a short time,
used Moveable Type for a while, and now I’m happy using WordPress.
A few things have been lost in the transitions, but some posts as
far back as 2001 have been salvaged. I’ve recently found some content that’s
older still and may post that again just so it’s not lost.
While I can’t help but be slightly amused by all of the sites congratulating
themselves recently over a year or two online, I’m really happy that so many
fan sites have been created. Some have become wildly successful in just a year
– deservedly so. I’ve read so much good analysis, thought-provoking writing,
and humor online over the past couple of years, and several of the writers are
as good (if not better) than some who get paid to write about sports.
The one thing that most of us eventually realize is that it’s hard and sometimes
even expensive
to keep a personal site going over a long time. Motivation can come and go.
Priorities and life circumstances change. But if the bug to write is there,
you can work through that.
I agree with Stewart Mandel’s opinion here
in an interview with HeismanPundit.
It’s another outlet for fans to express themselves, which is always good.
I think it’s the next generation of the Rivals/Scout message boards, only
now, instead of having to share space with 900 other posters, you can be your
own columnist. And just like anything else, the best will rise to the top
and gain more credibility.
Without sounding all populist and idealistic, that’s what this is all about
– fans love to talk sports, and now they can connect. Someone with something
to say now has very few obstacles to getting his thoughts out there. True, there’s
a lot of crap out there now as a result, but Mandel’s point is right: the best
will separate themselves.
I can’t begin to count the opportunities and personal rewards that have come
from starting this site 11 years ago. I’ve been published on the Rivals.com
national home page. I used my experience building the site to change careers
– one of the best moves I’ve ever made. I’ve met some amazing people and made
some great friends. I guess it comes down to one moment – circumstances put
me on the sideline at the goalline ten feet away from where Michael Johnson
caught the gamewinner against Auburn in 2002. It’s the moment I’ll probably
remember most as a Dawg fan, and it probably wouldn’t have been possible had
this site never existed.
RIP Jerry Garcia, and here’s to another 11 years.
Wednesday August 9, 2006
Maurice Clarett…traffic stop…weapons…police chase…mace…stun gun…hatchet. bulletproof vest.
In other words, Wednesday.
Wednesday August 9, 2006
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Welcome to August.
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No news is usually good news in the month before the season.
Suspensions, injuries, and generally bad news dominates the preseason coverage. Fans are just dreading each additional update, peeking with one eye to see if we survived this afternoon without losing another lineman. We’re so accustomed to the bad news that even good news can get turned around. Are the wide receivers looking good? Oh no! The secondary is toast!!! Is the offensive line playing like a brick wall? Noooooo!!! We have no pass rush!!!
The life of a football fan is a roller coaster of emotions, and there aren’t many ups in the preseason. We crest the hill during the first week of August and enter a freefall as the updates and bad news and potentially bad news and the good news that we’re sure is somehow bad comes flying past faster and faster until the season begins and we get that rush that makes us come back for the ride every year.
Injuries are an inevitable part of this time of year and the news we dread the most, especially when the injury is serious. The Dawgs seem to have recorded their first serious injury of preseason camp – UGASports.com reported today that redshirt freshman safety Antavious Coates is out for the year with an ACL injury. Coates also missed last season with an injury to his other knee. It’s really tough to see a promising career derailed like this two years running. Just one knee injury is enough to alter some careers, and he’s now dealing with two. We hope he can recover from this setback, because you can almost hear in his voice how much this hurts.
“I worked my butt off this summer and came here ready to play,” Coates said. “It’s hard.”
Monday August 7, 2006
Even they know…
Monday August 7, 2006
You’ve probably already heard that Picture Day is Saturday August 19th at Sanford Stadium. UGA has released some additional details. Some highlights:
- Picture Day will take place between 1:00 and 5:00 p.m. The football team will be there between 3:00 and 5:00.
- You may only bring in one item to sign.
- Team locations: The Georgia offensive unit and Coach Mark Richt will be located throughout the North side concourse of Sanford Stadium between Sections 109-101 while the defense will be located on the Gate 6 Plaza between Sections 125-121. Other Georgia sports teams will be located between Sections 119-113 and the interactive games, concessions and merchandise will be located throughout the event. All activities associated with Picture Day will take place only on the 100 Level between Sections 125-101. Everyone must enter through Gate 6 on the southeast corner of the stadium.
- (Free) tickets are required for a photo with Coach Richt and UGA, and those will be available beginning at 9:00 a.m. at the East End Ticket Windows located off East Campus Road.
Monday August 7, 2006
In the Palm Beach Post. Not so sure about the addictive bit, but there are a lot of regulars on the boards I’ve seen. In 10+ years of the DawgVent, you get a pretty tight-knit group of folks talking about the hobby they love above all, so I can see why people keep coming back. Now that the sites associated with the message boards update so frequently with team and recruiting news, there is an impulse to check it frequently just to keep up.
“Yet enough solid information has been offered that the boards can’t be ignored.”
Very true. There’s a lot of crap slung, but most developments in the Georgia program that I can remember have been mentioned on the boards first. The problem is knowing not to jump and overreact at every rumor and see how the facts play out. But I’ve seen enough to know that we just can’t be outright dismissive of them.
All I can say is that you’d be surprised who reads (and posts) on these things. The experiences mentioned on the FSU and UF boards have played out on ours several times over.
Monday August 7, 2006
Just in time for the season, ToonDawg (or more appropriately TuneDawg!) has put Anti-Orange Radio back on the air. If heaven had a radio station, this is what they’d play. Just a few minutes of listening should have you ready to pack up the truck for gameday.
Friday August 4, 2006
Last year, Andy Landers took his undermanned team up against defending champion Baylor in the season opener at the State Farm Tip-Off Classic. The Lady Dogs played well until the final minutes when their lack of post depth was painfully exposed.
This year, Georgia will once again participate in the State Farm Tip-Off Classic, hosted by Oklahoma, and will face Rutgers on November 12. Rutgers isn’t the defending champ, but they always have a good team and are coached by C. Vivian Stringer, one of the best there is. Rutgers lost superstar guard Cappie Pondexter to the WNBA, but they bring in a top-rated recruiting class headlined by high-scoring Epiphanny Prince.
This opener is just part of a typically-challenging Lady Dogs non-conference schedule which will also feature Stanford, Georgia Tech, and FSU.
Friday August 4, 2006
The first coach’s poll has been released, and the Dawgs start off at #14. That projects to a nine or ten win season. As expected, Auburn, Florida, and LSU all start off ranked higher, and Ohio State is the preseason #1.
Friday August 4, 2006
Perhaps my favorite Jamie Henderson play was at Arkansas in 2000 when he jumped an Arkansas pass early in the game and took it all the way back to start one of the more impressive routs in the Jim Donnan era. Love me some Pick Six.
Anyway, Henderson went on to the NFL and the New York Jets, and you might remember that his career was cut short by a motorcycle accident. Unlike Big Ben up in Pittsburgh, Henderson was wearing a helmet, and it probably saved his life. His injuries were severe thought and ended his NFL career. He was in a coma.
The happy ending is that Henderson has come back from that devastating accident to earn his degree from the University of Georgia this summer.
The NY Daily News has the story of his road to recovery. Well worth a read.
Thursday August 3, 2006
The Gainesville Sun reports that Georgia’s Sept. 2nd season opener against Western Kentucky will kick off at 12:30 and will be televised by the Lincoln Financial network (formerly JP Sports). The Dawgs move into that time slot because other schools, including Florida, didn’t want to change their kickoff times from the much later (and cooler) 6:00.
Damn, that’s gonna be early and hot, even for a season opener.
Wednesday August 2, 2006
A lot of people are already all over the news that Oklahoma quarterback Rhett
Bomar has been dismissed from the team, allegedly for receiving "payment
over an extended period of time in excess of time actually worked".
Certainly this story has implications everywhere from the national title hunt
to the Heisman to at the
very least the struggle for control of the Big 12 South.
The story demonstrates that discussions
of amateurism and eligibility aren’t necessarily black-and-white. Of course
we want student-athletes to work in order to earn spending money just like any
other student. On the other hand, we don’t want rogue boosters paying them $10k+
for work they didn’t do. So we have oversight and rules. But it can (and should)
be argued that this is much more a question of competitive fairness than it
is about amatuerism.
Side note…it’s good to see Mark Schlabach in the middle of the story. He’s one of the better college football journalists (vs. columnists) out there.
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