Friday August 24, 2007
Receiver Joe Adams of Arkansas is expected to announce his college decision Friday night on local television. If you believe the recruiting gurus, the decision is between Georgia, Southern Cal, and Florida with Georgia having as good of a chance as anyone. Rivals.com rates him the #1 player in the state of Arkansas and among the better receivers in the nation.
If Georgia is Adams’ choice, it would almost guarantee the Bulldogs the nation’s top receiver recruiting class. The Dawgs already have commitments from A.J. Green (rated the nation’s #2 receiver) and Tavarres King (rated the #15 receiver in the nation and the best in the state of Georgia). Adding a third guy of Adams’ quality would surpass – on paper of course – the 1999 signing of Durrell Robinson and Reggie Brown as the best group of incoming receivers at Georgia.
I know it’s hard to get into recruiting with the season just a week away, but this decision is one worth tuning in for tonight.
Thursday August 23, 2007
I was glad to see a reporter ask these questions of Mark Richt at yesterday’s practice. They illustrate nicely what I was talking about in yesterday’s post about the importance of Gray. (Transcript courtesy of UGASports.com):
How important is it having Logan Gray around to emulate Bobby Reid for the scout team in practice?
It is very important for us. He has requested to be live tomorrow. He wants to give the defense as realistic a look as possible. We usually allow our Oklahoma State quarterback to be live to help our defense try and tackle somebody. We truly have not sacked anybody all year, so we may let him do that. He is excited about it and he is very talented. He is a hard thrower. He kind of knew on signing day that he would be a redshirt and he knew there would be a time when he would need to help us by being the scout team quarterback. He is already taking a lot of pride in it and he is helping us.
How much does it help having an athletic quarterback like Logan since in the past you had to use a defensive back or another player to emulate an athletic quarterback for the scout team?
I know at times Ramarcus Brown and others have been back there. I think he can do it.
It’s very interesting that Gray requested to be a live player for the purposes of improving the defense – “please, come hit me!”. It’s especially significant when you are practicing against a mobile quarterback. In a non-contact situation, you let up at the last minute. In a game, that’s exactly when a mobile quarterback might make that one move to get himself out of trouble and into space. Finishing through on the pursuit is a crucial concept to practice and master when preparing for a quarterback liked Reid.
Thursday August 23, 2007
I hesitated about commenting on this bit from Ching’s
update yesterday. No one wants to discourage enthusiastic fans – especially
students. We experienced fans just need to help the next generation direct that
enthusiasm and avoid bad ideas. College is all about learning and discovering
life lessons, so here’s another.
Word traveling around the UGA students is a red-out for the opening home
game against OSU. Many of us really want this to happen and for it to work
successfully. … Please PLEASE get the word out about this red-out to as
many friends and fans as you possibly can. A red-out against a visiting Big
XII program on national television would give the Bulldog squad added publicity
and attention, and we as students feel it would energize the team and the
crowd to no end. We also feel like it would be a GREAT beginning to what could
be a very promising season. PLEASE do everything you can to support this cause.
Where to begin…
- Georgia fans generally wear red anyway. Asking Georgia fans to come to a
game in red is like asking Cure concert-goers to wear black. It’s just going
to happen. No one is going to look at Sanford Stadium and remark, "does
it look more red in here to you, or is it just me?"
- It’s Oklahoma State. It’s the season opener and a nationally-televised game,
but I can’t wait to see what the students have in store for the Ole Miss game.
- The Dawgs have been one of the top programs in the nation for several years
and have earned national acclaim and respect with their performance on the
field. They don’t need crowd gimmicks for publicity. Leave that for lesser
teams.
- Crowd gimmicks often backfire spectacularly. Don’t
do this to the Dawgs.
The biggest thing that the students can do to energize the team and the crowd
is to show up to the game an hour before kickoff and welcome
the team as they come out for warm-ups. A full and loud student section starting
well before kickoff matters infinitely more than the choice of wardrobe.
Wednesday August 22, 2007
Ever since the topic of Larry Munson’s semi-retirement came up, I’ve thought
that the question isn’t so much, "who should replace Munson?" as it
is, "who should replace Scott Howard?" It just made sense
to me that Howard would slide into the lead role of the broadcast team, essentially
taking Munson’s place. It’s a role he has earned on the basketball broadcasts,
and it’s natural that he’d make that transition for football. The question of
replacing Howard is a lot less emotionally-charged than a discussion about replacing
Munson.
Athletic director Damon Evans and flagship radio station AM750 WSB announced
today that my contemporary at UGA, former Bulldog legend Eric Zeier, will
join Howard in the broadcast booth for road games this season. Munson has already
announced that he will skip road games.
This might ruffle a few feathers given Munson’s popularity, but I the Howard-Zeier
team will be an improvement from an informational standpoint.
The game should be easier to follow, and the quality of information should be
richer. As anyone who listens to Georgia basketball games knows, Howard is at
home doing play-by-play with all of the passion that Georgia fans want. He has
worked as part of the football broadcast team since 1993 and is familiar to
fans. He is comfortable enough in a Georgia broadcast booth to avoid the temptation
to imitate Munson or to be intimidated by Munson’s legacy.
Although Zeier is a relatively inexperienced broadcaster, he seems like a great
choice as a color analyst. In his career as Georgia, he was known as an intelligent
quarterback with an above-average understanding of the game, and his college
and professional experience should add quite a bit of insight to the broadcast.
As a fan favorite from 1991-1994, Zeier should find quick acceptance from the
Bulldog faithful.
The rest of the broadcast team, including Loran Smith and Hondo Williamson,
will remain unchanged. We’ll miss Munson’s distinctive style and cherish the
remaining broadcasts during home games, but the future seems to be in very good
hands.
Zeier’s first broadcast will come against Alabama on Sept. 22 in Tuscaloosa.
Tuscaloosa was also the site of Zeier’s first road game as a Georgia quarterback
in 1991. Hopefully this Zeier debut will have a better outcome than that 10-0
loss.
Wednesday August 22, 2007
Most programs would love to have quarterback Logan Gray in camp right now. Anywhere else, the true freshman from Missouri might even be in the mix for playing time. Rivals.com rated him among the top ten dual-threat quarterbacks in the nation. With those credentials and aware of Georgia’s quarterback situation, it was quite an accomplishment by the coaching staff to get Gray’s signature. It’s also a mature decision by Gray to accept his current role with an eye towards starting in a few years. If there was one thing besides turnovers that gave Georgia trouble last season, it was a mobile quarterback. From Colorado to Vanderbilt, Kentucky, and Florida, the ability of a quarterback to move the pocket and scramble if necessary gave the Bulldog defense fits. It was a happy coincidence that two of the quarterbacks involved in Georgia’s season-ending winning streak were basically potted plants. To make matters worse, the Bulldogs couldn’t do much to work on the problem. All of the quarterbacks on the roster were more traditional drop-back types. You really couldn’t take a guy like A.J. Bryant and have him run the scout team – he needed the work at receiver. So the Bulldogs were left to get most of their lessons defending the mobile quarterback on the field. You can break down assignments and talk theory, but there’s nothing like experience. This year, the Bulldog defense will have a high-quality player on the scout team to simulate that kind of quarterback. Gray is already at work playing the Bobby Reid role as Georgia prepares for Oklahoma State. Reid is a quality and experienced quarterback, but Gray should at least be able to approximate some of the challenge. The mobile quarterback might still be a nuisance for Georgia this year, but it won’t be because the defense hasn’t been prepared in practice. With Stafford and Gray, the Bulldogs have both quarterbacking styles covered, and the defense should be better for it this year. You won’t see Logan Gray on the field this season, but know that he’s already helping the team.
Tuesday August 21, 2007
Looks like Tennessee is in for a
lesson in big-time football:
As if they needed any more reason to make noise, Cal will be passing out
50,000 mini-megaphones before the season opener against Tennessee at Memorial
Stadium. "It’s going to be loud," said Jackson. "Everyone’s
been waiting to play Tennessee. Just like Tupac said, it’s going to be ‘all
eyes on me.’ "
If only Tennessee had experience playing in front of large, loud crowds in
meaningful games.
Since this is Cal-Berkeley we’re talking about, Phil Fulmer will eschew the
usual tactic of blaring loud music at practice to simulate crowd noise. He will,
however, invite 500 anti-war protesters and Karl Rove to practice.
We’ll wait to see if we can record the mini-megaphones alongside other
notorious crowd disasters.
(h/t
CFR)
Tuesday August 21, 2007
With so many young players battling for playing time and so much need at some
key positions, the redshirting question seems to have above-average importance
this year. Lots of new names are, for one reason or another, mentioned frequently
in practice updates as the coaching staff continues to evaluate the depth chart.
I tend to get skeptical that true out-of-nowhere newcomers like Boling and Cuff
will really see much time unless there is a long-term injury ahead of them,
but you continue to hear their names as the season draws near.
Based on the most recent practice
reports and comments,
it looks as if we can group the newcomers as shown below. I included all newcomers,
just not the true freshmen. It wouldn’t surprise me to see anyone in the top
three groups play, and it wouldn’t surprise me to see anyone in the bottom three
groups redshirting.
Likely (+90%) to play:
- LB Rennie Curran
- OL Justin Anderson
- P Drew Butler
- OL Scott Haverkamp
- DL Corey Irvin
- OL Trinton Sturdivant
- OL Vince Vance
- DL Jarius Wynn
Leaning towards playing:
- OL Clint Boling
- CB Vance Cuff
- TE Bruce Figgins
Leaning toward redshirting:
- RB Caleb King
- TE Aron White
- LB Charles White
- OL Ben Harden
Likely (+90%) to redshirt:
- S John Knox
- LB Justin Houston
- WR Israel Troupe
- WR Walter Hill
- QB Logan Gray
- DE Neland Ball
- OL Chris Little
- OL Tanner Strickland
Monday August 20, 2007
UGA has updated the 2007 ticket cutoff requirements, and 25,501 points were required for Georgia Tech tickets. You see now why so many of us go for Tech’s three-game pack.
Still no word on the Florida cutoff, and this is starting to get a bit ridiculous. They’ve known the number of ticket requests since April. Is there a question about the number of seats available at Alltel Stadium? Maybe one of our intrepid beat reporters could start asking these questions of the athletic administration today while they wait for football practice to end.
Monday August 20, 2007
Odell Thurman is currently sitting out his second straight NFL season. After
a DUI arrest and a missed drug test, Thurman was suspended for the 2006 season.
That suspension has been extended without explanation for a second season, though
Thurman has
been in the news since that original suspension. Now his quest for reinstatement
is trying a new tactic. The Orlando
Sentinel reports,
Tampa Bay Buccaneers CB Torrie Cox and Cincinnati Bengals LB Odell Thurman
have filed discrimination claims with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
to have their NFL suspensions overturned. The players contend they have been
viewed as alcoholics by the NFL, and that perception is the basis for the
action imposed by Commissioner Roger Goodell, ESPN.com
said.
You see? They contend that their "alcoholism" is a disability. They
are leaning on a case from the 1990s where the "EEOC ruled that NBA violated
the Americans with Disabilities Act when it did not reinstate (Roy) Tarpley
even though he apparently passed drug screenings for four straight years."
There seems to be a genetic component to alcoholism where the condition is
passed through heredity, but scientists may be shocked to learn that DUIs can
also be transmitted.
Kara Braxton, Thurman’s girlfriend and mother of his child, recently
plead no contest on a charge of "operating a motor vehicle under the
influence of alcohol." It shouldn’t be a surprise that Braxton’s charge
came as a result of "a Sept. 25, 2006, arrest in Cincinnati."
Braxton’s not a stranger to the wrong kind of headlines – the WNBA all-star
was dismissed from the UGA basketball program several years ago – but DUI is
new territory for her. She was suspended for just two games by her league and
did not seek any EEOC sanctuary.
Monday August 20, 2007
The Offense Strikes Back
The weekend started with a bang. After the defense looked strong in the first
scrimmage of the preseason, the offense showed up in Friday night’s scrimmage.
Quarterbacks combined for six touchdown passes, and three
of the passes went for over 30 yards. Excuse my optimism over hitting the
deep pass. "You know we had a lot more success offensively today than the
other day," remarked Coach Richt. He credited the improvement in part to
a better effort from the offensive line. "The number one unit blocked really
well," he said.
Other than a few individual plays (like Geno Atkins’ 40-yard fumble return),
the big news from the scrimmage is that 1) there were no serious injuries and
2) the coaches haven’t had much time to go over and make changes to the depth
chart based on the scrimmage. Any changes might come early this week, though
several positions are still very much up in the air.
One-headed Monster?
I can’t be the only one who’s noticed that, despite fewer carries, Knowshon
Moreno has led both scrimmages in rushing yardage and YPC. Scrimmage stats might
be as relevant as G-Day stats, but no one would be dismissing these stats if
it were Brown or Lumpkin putting them up. The running backs only got carries
in the first half of Friday’s scrimmage.
Richt made it clear though that the tailback rotation would continue. "Whether
people like it or not, they’re all very talented and they all are ready to play
and they’re gonna play." Meanwhile, Caleb King’s nagging hamstring injury
makes his chances of redshirting greater and greater with each practice missed.
Fine Line Between Dedication and Insanity
I consider myself a pretty big fan – I think that’s obvious, right? I’ll concede
there are more devoted fans. I’ll also concede that having children can and
does change your priorities. But none of that should involve camping out overnight
for a chance at a picture with Uga and/or Mark Richt. Ching writes,
I always enjoy the details on picture day of who showed up first for the
guaranteed tickets for photos with Uga VI and Mark Richt and WHEN. This year’s
Uga winner was Athens’ Joe D’Angelo, who got in line for the first of 120
guaranteed tickets at 8 p.m. Friday night (the dog’s time at the stadium was
between 1 and 3 p.m. today). Jackson’s Wayne Parker started the Richt line
at 4:30 this morning. He got the first of 250 Richt tickets. Demand again
was pretty high. A little more than seven minutes after UGA staff began distributing
the tickets at 9 a.m., they were all gone.
There are lots of reasons to attend Picture Day even on an extremely hot day
like Saturday. Kids seem to love it, and the players enjoy the interaction.
But there are literally dozens of better opportunities for getting a snapshot
with Richt or Uga. I hope it was worth it for those gentlemen.
Man Down
Our best wishes to D.J. Shockley for a quick recovery after sustaining
a knee injury on Friday night that will keep him out for the 2007 NFL season.
Shockley tore his ACL and injured his MCL against Buffalo.
Spotlight on the Receivers
Everyone in the world seems to be sensitive to (or at least aware of) the issue
of dropped passes. Whether you believe it’s a question of talent, coaching,
scheme, or some combination of them, it’s the 800-lb. gorrila in the room when
the subject of receivers comes up.
You even have other players sticking up for the receivers. Thomas
Brown said,
The receivers were making plays. They’ve received a lot of criticism in last
season and in the spring about not being able to catch the ball. But they’ve
made a lot of great steps. They’ve been doing it all camp long in practice,
making diving catches and things like that, so they’re gonna be fine.
Matthew Stafford added,
Their effort is up. Their confidence is up. That’s what you want from any
position.
We’ve seen several articles now with this slant. "Massaquoi
forgets the past." "Georgia
receivers have something to prove." "UGA
wide receivers are sticking together."
There are two ways that this kind of spotlight can affect the situation. Right
now, everyone’s happy. Us vs. the world. "We’re all in it together, no
matter who is catching the ball, no matter who it is thrown to, no matter who
has the touchdowns," said Mikey Henderson. That’s a great attitude, and
fellow senior A.J. Bryant has echoed it. If that kind of prove-everyone-wrong
approach is what it takes for the receivers to step forward this year, great.
But as Mark Richt likes to say, you never really know how good a team is until
it is tested by adversity. The receivers seem focused and a close-knit group
now, and I hope they can keep that attitude after the first inevitable drop
and the simultaneous groan of 92,000 fans. There has been a lot of self-doubt
and a lack of confidence in the passing game (and, to be fair, the receivers
are far from the only group affected by drops). With an emerging star in Matthew
Stafford, the receivers should have the talent, experience, and the quality
passes they need to have the kind of year they are talking about. All they need
now is for that attitude to show up on the field.
Friday August 17, 2007
Picture Day descends on Athens tomorrow. Hundreds of parents will make their
families suffer in the blistering heat for a chance at getting a picture of
their kid with Uga. Fans with great tact will blow past reserves and other Georgia
teams to hobnob with a handful of football players. The lines for Matthew Stafford,
Uga, and Mark Richt started forming in June. To top it off, message board psychos
will attempt to evaluate this year’s team based on how someone looks. It’s really
great family fun.
Here are some of the particulars:
|
Saturday April 17th at Sanford Stadium
The Georgia football players and coaches will be on hand for photographs
and autographs from 3-5 p.m. Uga VI will be available from 1-3 p.m. inside
Sanford Stadium on the 200 Level near Section 213. Interactive events, concessions
and merchandise sales will take place from 1-5 p.m. through the 100 level
concourse of Sanford Stadium.
Fans will be able to enter Picture Day through Gate 6 located off East Campus
Road and Gate 2 located on Sanford Drive across from the UGA Bookstore and
Tate Student Center. Parking is available to the general public in the following
campus lots: any lots along East Campus Road, Psychology-Journalism, Clarke
Howell, Legion Field and Tate Center lots and the North Campus and Hull Street
parking decks. Handicapped parking will be available in the Tate Center lots.
Fans may bring in just one item to be signed, and Picture Day event
staff will enforce this number at the entrances.
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
fan interactives, concessions and merchandise will be located throughout the
event. The UGA Cheerleaders, National Champion Gym Dogs, Baseball, Track &
Field, Softball, Women’s Basketball, Equestrian, Women’s Golf,
Swimming & Diving, Soccer, Volleyball teams will also be in attendance.
Fans can pick up their tickets to reserve their place in line for a photograph
with Uga VI beginning at 9:00am at the East End Ticket Windows located off
East Campus Road. The first 120 groups in line will receive a ticket and be
guaranteed a photo with Uga VI, with additional groups receiving standby tickets.
The Athletic Association will attempt to accommodate as many standby fans
as possible within the time Uga VI is available from 1-3pm.
Fans can pick up their tickets to reserve their place in line for the opportunity
to meet Coach Richt beginning at 9:00 am at the East End Ticket Windows located
off East Campus Road. The first 250 individual fans in line will receive a
ticket and be guaranteed an opportunity to meet Coach Richt between 3:00-5:00
pm.
Fans’ cooperation is appreciated in not bringing other pets or animals into
the area with the Georgia Bulldog mascot, Uga VI. Also, all fans are encouraged
to bring your own camera to take your group’s photo with Uga VI. Groups
with tickets to have their picture made with Uga VI, can enter through Gate
6 only beginning at 12:30pm. All other fans will be allowed to enter Sanford
Stadium through Gates 2 or 6 beginning at 1:00pm.
Let’s just hope this preseason event goes better than the one that an
English soccer team had recently:
Norwich City’s preparations for the new second division season have been
hit by vomiting and diarrhoea following a social event for players, staff
and their families.
Four players were among some 30 people taken ill following a barbecue at
the club’s training ground on Sunday. The club said in a statement it had
contacted the local environmental health authorities about the incident.
Thursday August 16, 2007
Pitchers Josh Fields and Stephen Dodson have decided to return to Georgia after being selected in June’s Major League Baseball draft. Fields has been Georgia’s closer for two seasons, and Dodson led the SEC for most of the season in ERA as Georgia’s Friday night starter.
Meanwhile, pitcher Trevor Holder was named playoff MVP in the Cape Cod summer league.
Georgia’s pitching should be outstanding next spring.
Thursday August 16, 2007
I know that the comical
launch of the Big 10/1 Network is usually Sen. Blutarsky’s specialty, but
it’s interesting to watch the Big 10 attempt to mirror the strategies of some
other specialty sports networks like the NFL Network. The NFL Network doesn’t
come cheap, $100 million dollars in the case of Time Warner cable, so cable
operators are considering adding the network to their premium "Sports Tier"
packages where customers who want the NFL Network will pay for it. The NFL naturally
wants cable operators to place the network on basic cable where it would reach
the most eyeballs.
The standoff is to the point where cable operators have begun
arming their CSRs with responses when customers call in to complain. An
NFL spokesperson responds,
"Time Warner wants the network on a sports tier — where fans would
have to pay extra," he said. "That’s not something we’re willing
to do — have our fans exploited for Time Warner’s profits."
That’s right…Time Warner can’t exploit our fans for profits. Only we
can exploit our fans for profits! Does this sound familiar? The Big 10 seems
to think that they too belong next to CNN (h/t of course to Get
the Picture):
“When the cable company decides to send 70 channels – the food
channel, and the dog channel and the bike channel and the jewelry channel
– into your home, (we believe) that the Big Ten Network deserves to
be in that grouping,” Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany said. “Everything
else is pretty negotiable.”
If the NFL Network, an existing channel with some actual live professional
football games, is struggling with cable providers over its placement in the
cable lineups, what chance does Iowa volleyball have?
Thursday August 16, 2007
One play from the Chick-fil-A Bowl always stands out to me when I watch the
game. Georgia had just scored during their second half comeback. During the
ensuing kickoff, a streak of red wearing #53 got through the blocks and made
a clean tackle on the Virginia Tech return guy inside of the Hokie 20. It wasn’t
a game-changing play by any measure, but it was an impressive special teams
play and the kind of thing that makes you ask, "who the heck was that
guy?"
That guy was Chris
Gaunder, a senior walk-on linebacker from Acworth. Named the outstanding
scout team special teams player in 2004, Gaunder played in every game in 2006
as part of the kickoff coverage unit. Now Gaunder, along with fellow walk-on
Drew
Williams, has earned a scholarship. Williams, a senior safety from Blairsville,
has earned outstanding scout team and outstanding defensive walk-on awards during
his career and has seen playing time on special teams and as a reserve safety.
Gaunder and Williams become the second and third walk-ons to receive scholarships
this season. Snapper Jeff Henson was
awarded his scholarship as preseason practice started. Congratulations to
these guys – the award of a scholarship in these circumstances is a recognition
of special effort and attitude over an entire career.
Wednesday August 15, 2007
If there is one phrase other than “Florida home-and-home” that sends Georgia fans into an endless debate, it’s “quarterback rotation.” From 2002-2004, the merits and disadvantages of the Greene-Shockley rotation were debated endlessly with nothing to show for it except two SEC titles.
With Matthew Stafford firmly established as Georgia’s starting quarterback at the end of last season, Dawg fans might have thought that they wouldn’t see the backup again until the fourth quarter with a 20+ point lead.
But Mark Richt lit the fuse again Wednesday night, and it didn’t take long for the reaction to start coming in.
Here is what Richt actually said as transcribed by UGASports.com:
…If (Joe Cox) plays (in the opener), it is because we believe that he has earned it. Right now, we are leaning towards trying to get him into the game.
We just want to get him in the game at one point or another. It could be in the first half. I do not want to pigeon-hole ourselves because sometimes you have every intention of getting a guy in there and you do not. People will question why you didn’t and you hurt the kid’s feelings. We will not promise him anything, but the way he has been performing, he deserves to get in there. Hopefully we will find the right time to do that.
It didn’t take long for this interpretation to emerge:
We will have a quarterback rotation with Cox and Stafford splitting time.
Yes, Richt said that Joe Cox has earned some playing time, though Richt will not promise Cox anything. Richt hopes he can find the right opportunity to play Cox. Wow.
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh! Run for the hills! Light ourselves on fire!
Actually, this is a brilliant tactic by Richt. With so much attention on mundane things like the offensive line and linebackers, he knew that even hinting at the possibility of playing a second quarterback would distract the fans for the next two weeks while the QB rotation debate gets stoked one more time.
|