Tuesday January 22, 2008
We continue a high-level look towards the football season by acknowledging
that winning even an SEC East title in any season is a difficult challenge with
very little margin for error. Other than the usual caveats about injuries, these
factors will be potential obstacles for the Dawgs in 2008:
» The schedule. It’s going to be tough. In the SEC part
of the schedule, you replace Ole Miss with LSU. That LSU trip comes a week before
the Florida game. The Dawgs will have three interesting and challenging nonconference
opponents: Central Michigan pushed Purdue in the 2007 Motor City Bowl. Georgia
Tech will present a unique offensive scheme to challenge the defense at the
end of the season. Then there’s the trip to Tempe.
Playing Arizona State will test the Dawgs in three ways. First and most basic,
the Sun Devils are a quality program, and Dennis Erickson looks to have injected
some energy into the program. The game will also bring a tremendous amount of
hype; it’s Georgia’s first regular season trip outside of the southeast since
1965, and that fact alone will add to the circus of a quality midseason lineup.
Finally, there’s the human element. The Dawgs must play at South Carolina (often
a night game), return, prepare for, and travel to Arizona State, absorb that
game and the effects of cross-country travel, and then prepare to host a motivated
Alabama team the next week. Should they survive that three-game swing, a bye
week awaits before Tennessee comes to town.
Georgia will face nine teams next year that played in a bowl this season. The
two 2008 Division 1 opponents that aren’t coming off a bowl trip are South Carolina
and Vanderbilt – two teams that gave Georgia plenty of problems in 2007.
There is one bit of good news peeking through the schedule gloom and doom:
no SEC opponent will have a bye week before they play Georgia.
» The offensive line. Hear me out. Stacy Searels and
his troops were magnificent this season. But we’re not out of the woods yet.
As young and inexperienced as line was in 2007, the Dawgs still had a rock to
anchor that line: senior center Fernando Velasco. Velasco’s contribution to
the success of the 2007 squad might be one of the most underrated stories of
the year. Senior Chester Adams was also a key; his versatility at guard and
tackle enabled the coaches to experiment until they found the most effective
combination of linemen.
Those two seniors will be replaced by another round of newcomers. While the
Dawgs might have the "luxury" of using redshirt freshmen instead of
true freshmen this time, the difference in experience is marginal. Where the
line, and even the entire offense, could look to Velasco as a leader, that role
will now fall to sophomores Boling, Davis, and Sturdivant. Vince Vance, a junior
reserve tackle, and senior long snapper Jeff Henson will be the lone upperclassmen
on the line.
» The hype. There’s no escaping it. There will be no
going under the radar. Big things will be expected of the Dawgs next year. Expectations
are always high at Georgia, but the Dawgs will have the additional glare of
the national spotlight. Teams can wilt easily under that pressure. On the other
hand, we’ve seen plenty of instances where a team can get full of itself and
try to coast on its ranking. Embracing and coming to terms with high expectations
will be a key factor of success in 2008.
I think that Mark Richt has had the right attitude so far when asked about
high preseason rankings: it’s a good thing. Teams want to be ranked high, and
it’s every team’s goal to play for the national title. Why field a team if that
opportunity doesn’t excite you? But Richt is quick to caution that a high ranking
entitles a team to nothing. Sure enough, Georgia won’t be the only SEC team
with a top 10 ranking. If the team approaches the expectations with the right
mindset, the hype will be motivation for the offseason. "We got a taste
of just how close we might be to getting that ultimate goal," Mark
Richt said. "And everybody’s gonna be really working hard toward that
end."
See also:
Monday January 21, 2008
Mark Richt didn’t have to turn very far to find his new tight ends coach. UGASports.com
is reporting this afternoon that Richt’s friend and former Florida State
colleague John Lilly will accept the position left vacant by David Johnson’s
departure to West Virginia.
While some of Richt’s past hires have required a bit of connect-the-dots to
make sense, Lilly was an obvious target from the beginning. He was offered a
position at Georgia in 2001 when Richt originally assembled his staff, but he
chose
to remain at FSU. Seven seasons later, Lilly has decided to make the move
and will join Richt and Dave Van Halanger in Athens.
News of this move breaking before Signing Day is a little surprising; Lilly
has a reputation as an outstanding recruiter, and his departure will surely
have an impact on the Seminoles’ recruiting efforts. He has been FSU’s recruiting
coordinator since 1998. With Georgia’s 2007 recruiting class more or less
finished, Lilly won’t have much of an impact this year except perhaps to shore
up the commitment of TE Dwayne Allen.
For future classes the addition of Lilly will give the Georgia program an impressive
roster of recruiters. Rodney Garner is still Georgia’s recruiting coordinator
of course, but Lilly gives Georgia some flexibility down the road. Garner
is happy at Georgia, but we can’t blame the guy for eyeing his dream of
a head coaching opportunity. In the meantime, Garner, Lilly, and Bobo are as
good as it gets as recruiters, and they all complement Mark Richt well.
Lilly’s challenge on the field will be to continue the recent legacy of successful
Bulldog tight ends that goes back over a decade now. Brandon Warren was a freshman
All-American tight end at FSU in 2006, but he left the Seminole program before
the 2007 season.
Monday January 21, 2008
I was impressed as anyone with Georgia’s win over Arkansas on Saturday. There
were so many things to note: Humphrey’s continued development inside the perimeter.
Woodbury finally started to find his shot. Price and Bliss are becoming an effective
tandem when Bliss plays well.
It was interesting to hear analyst Eddie Fogler note that Arkansas didn’t strike
him as a very bright team. You could see that play out as Arkansas willingly
got into Georgia’s preferred up-and-down style. The Dawgs were able to hit layups
and jumpers, often in transition, and passing was generally sharp.
As pwd observes, we’ve
seen flashes like this from the Dawgs before. Putting it together against
Arkansas is one thing. Keeping it going in consecutive road games at Tennessee
and South Carolina is another. We know that this team is an off-night from Humphrey
and/or Gaines away from an ugly loss, but Humphrey especially has become more
and more consistent of a scorer, and that’s just what this team needs to be
successful. Now with Woodbury seemingly coming around and a nice supporting
cast developing, are we foolish for starting to get our hopes up again?
One thing is becoming clear after a few weeks of SEC play: Georgia might be
a sure tournament team if they played in the SEC West. There is some awful basketball
being played over there.
You’d think that a game at Tennessee wouldn’t be the place to expect much consistency,
but hopefully the guys will hold themselves to a better standard. A lot has
happened since last March, but Georgia pushed the Vols to the buzzer in the
2006-2007 regular season finale. They are more than capable of playing with
the Vols.
SEC Men’s Power Ranking:
1. Tennessee: Handling the role of favorite well for once.
2. Florida: Still a very quality club.
3. Vanderbilt: Need to beat better teams to be taken seriously.
4. Mississippi St.: Good start, solid defense.
5. Kentucky: Best of the rest?
6. Ole Miss: Shaky SEC start after undefeated non-conference slate.
7. Georgia: Can we play them all at home?
8. Arkansas: Disappointing start for preseason West favorite.
9. Auburn: Good upset win at home over Ole Miss.
10. South Carolina: Stole one at Arkansas; Odom’s farewell tour begins.
11. Alabama: More than missing Steele behind their 0-4 start.
12. LSU: Is John Brady still coaching this team?
Lady Dogs
Andy Landers had been stuck on 698 career wins at Georgia for over a week,
but a return home to Stegeman served to put the Lady Dogs back into the win
column. Ugly road losses at Auburn and Vandy gave Georgia a 1-2 conference record
and three losses in their last four games. Behind 25 points from Tasha Humphrey,
Georgia
beat Alabama 71-53 on Sunday. Angel Robinson added 12 points and 14 rebounds.
I’ll say what the team couldn’t say in the press. Alabama isn’t good. They’ve
improved slightly from last season when they were embarrassingly bad. A win over
Bama isn’t much cause for celebration these days, and the fact that the margin
in this game hovered around ten points for much of the afternoon isn’t a good
thing. Georgia out-talented Alabama, and that’s about it. Turnovers in particular
were devastating. Guard play, especially on offense, is becoming a big concern.
This is an important week for the Lady Dogs. They’ve lost three of their four
true road games this season, and those three losses haven’t been pretty. They
go on the road to face Florida this week. The Gators have been surprisingly
good in conference play with a first-year coach, and they surely have to see
a shaky Georgia team as a great opportunity to make some noise in the SEC. This
Sunday the Lady Dogs head out to face Oklahoma in a nationally-televised battle
of ranked teams. It’s billed as a Tasha Humphrey vs. Courtney Paris showdown,
but the supporting casts will likely mean the difference.
A win in both these road games would be significant to right the ship, and
beating Oklahoma would be noteworthy on the national scene. Landers’ next win will be his 700th at Georgia.
SEC Women’s Power Ranking:
1. Tennessee: A class of their own.
2. LSU: Defensively dominant with Fowles. Offense can sputter at times.
3. Vanderbilt: 2-2 with losses to UT and LSU.
4. Kentucky: Solid win over Auburn has them at 3-1 after some bad nonconference
losses.
5: Georgia: Got a needed win over Bama, but still vulnerable. Key week for them.
6. Auburn: Win over Georgia the sole bright spot lately. Depth and suspensions
taking their toll.
7. Florida: Playing well, first back-to-back SEC wins since 2006.
8. Ole Miss: Nice upset of Arkansas.
9. Arkansas: Unimpressive in conference play after soft nonconference schedule.
10. Mississippi St.: Embarrassed at LSU.
11. Alabama: 22 losses in last 23 SEC games.
12. South Carolina: Unacceptable loss to Alabama.
Monday January 21, 2008
Like a lot of football fans I watched some of yesterday’s NFL playoff action
(Go Giants!!!), and I don’t think I was alone in reacting to the weather in
Green Bay with a mix of amazement, horror, and admiration for those out in the
sub-zero temperatures. A week earlier, we saw Green Bay beat Seattle in a blinding
snowstorm.
As a kid who spent plenty of winter afternoons playing backyard football in
the snow, I have to say I love watching games like that. You haven’t lived until
you leap over a three-foot snow drift serving as goal-line defense. At the same
time, I have to ask if watching football in such weather is a worse
product. The weather is more often the story instead of the skills
of the players.
Dealing with the elements is part of the game, and it certainly adds a bit
of humanity to the game to see a receiver track the ball through the snow or
a running back try to get his footing in the mud. That’s entertaining to a point,
but in a sport where speed and precision play such a role, is it really such
a great thing that weather can do so much to equalize the game and keep the
stars from performing at their top level?
The Super Bowl will be played in Arizona. Weather won’t be a factor. Instead,
the game will be about Brady to Moss. Manning to Burress. It’ll be about Seymour
and company trying to shut down Jacobs and Strahan finding a way to pressure
an untouchable quarterback. As much as a game on the Frozen Tundra is a fascinating
novelty, I prefer it when games are decided more by the players and not the
thermometer.
All that said, I couldn’t help watching those games yesterday and thinking
about some of the colder Georgia games I’ve been to since I began following
the Dawgs in 1991. My wife nominates the 1987 Liberty Bowl when fans were setting
fires in the bathroom sinks to keep warm. This is my list, though, so here we
go. Is it coincidence that four of them were losses? Does sitting through a
loss just make it seem colder?
My Five Coldest Georgia Football Games:
1: 2001 Music City Bowl. Going by my recollection of the crowd,
you probably skipped this one. Other games might have had worse weather, but
no game I’ve attended matches this one for sheer bitter cold. I had never been
too cold to tailgate until this day, and portable heaters were useless. Still,
there was Uga VI on his bag of ice…
2: 1991 Florida. America remembers the weekend of this game
as the dates of the "Perfect
Storm" later made (in)famous by Hollywood. Much of the East Coast was
in the grip of a large storm off New England, and Florida was no exception.
Friday was nice enough, but those of us at the beach were already dealing with
the strong winds. By Saturday, the strong storm off the coast was bringing cold
arctic winds straight down the entire East Coast and into the Gator Bowl. Incidently,
other than 1992, the weather for my four Georgia-Florida games as a student
was pretty damn crappy…just like the outcomes.
3: 1995 Auburn. This game was noteworthy for the plummeting
temperatures as the day went on. The morning started off relatively mild for
mid-November as rain ended and the skies began clearing following a cold front
passage. By the time the game came around, fans – many of whom were dressed
for the warmer temperatures of the morning – were facing not only rapidly dropping
temperatures but a gusty, biting northwest wind that came right in through the
open end of Sanford Stadium unimpeded.
4: 2000 Ole Miss. It’s not often that a Georgia home game
is accompanied by frozen precipitation, but it happened here. Tailgaters dodged
sleet and then a cold and miserable rain. It seemed like another cold, soggy
loss was on the way when Ole Miss went up 14-0, but the Dawgs bounced back for
a 32-14 behind Musa Smith. The weather wouldn’t improve much before Georgia’s
next home game…
5: 2000 Georgia Tech. Maybe it was the outcome. Maybe it was
the fitting end to a disappointing season. Maybe it was the unthinkable third-straight
loss to Tech. All of that only served to make the day’s cold rain seem that
much colder and more miserable.
Sunday January 20, 2008
I wrote just a few posts below that “our glee over a low attrition forecast has to be tempered with the acceptance of the likely offseason suspension or two.”
As it turns out, it didn’t even take the weekend to get to the “or two” mark. In separate incidents, defensive back Donavon Baldwin and fullback Fred Munzenmaier were arrested and will be suspended for at least the season opener against Georgia Southern.
Because both incidents were alcohol-related, a second offense down the road could result in a semester-long suspension from the University; that was the punishment for Akeem Hebron for a second alcohol-related arrest while on University probation for his first offense.
Both arrests have an element that makes it a bit tougher to shrug them off. Baldwin was arrested for DUI, always a serious thing. Munzenmaier allegedly decided in his late-night drunken stroll (in sub-freezing temperatures) to pop off at the Athens Clarke-County officer and accused the APD of having it in for athletes. Some misguided fans probably agree with him. It’s no shock for a football player to think he’s above the law, especially after a few drinks. But if it’s a common belief among Georgia players that the Athens police are out to get them, one might think that they’d be a little smarter about going out of their way to draw attention to themselves after a bender.
We can hope this is the end of it, but as Carter Strickland notes in the AJC, this is the third consecutive season that Georgia has had a January or February arrest that has impacted the subsequent season. There’s a long way to go until August.
A former player also was a casualty of the weekend. Terreal Bierria was arrested for DUI and speeding in Athens.
Friday January 18, 2008
In what I guess is a conciliatory gesture, President Adams has written writing our vanquished bowl victims and patted them on the head for a job well done.
The University of Hawai’i has much about which it can be proud — its academic program, its successful alumni and, yes, its football team. But what will remain for many of us from this year’s Sugar Bowl is the warmth and graciousness with which UH fans conducted themselves.
You’d think he’s campaigning for something. Did we send a similar note to the Roanoke Times last year?
Friday January 18, 2008
We started
talking about the 2008 season by recognizing and embracing the high expectations
awaiting the Dawgs next fall. What are the reasons for those lofty preseason
rankings?
» Lots of returning key players. Returning starters
are all over the place. Moreno. Ellerbe. Curran. Owens. Stafford. Georgia’s
losses are few and occasionally significant, but the list of departing players
for whom there doesn’t already seem to be a successor in place is limited to
Velasco and Coutu. No one is jumping to the NFL.
Of course our glee over a low attrition forecast has to be tempered with the
acceptance of the likely offseason suspension or two. Hopefully the Dawgs can
at least avoid a catastrophic injury over the spring and summer, and it would
be nice if no Paul Oliver-like academic screwup was an issue this year.
At first glance, it looks as if the roster will be stocked next year. Sure
there are a couple of holes; there always are. But you look across the roster
and don’t see any positions that really scare you, and several bring a big smile.
» Momentum / exposure / poll position. Georgia is hot.
They finished among the top 3 in both final polls, and they will surely start
out high in 2008. That’s a big advantage if Georgia can put together another
nice season next year.
Once the Dawgs dispatch Georgia Southern in the season opener, the same schedule
that presents such a challenge will put the Dawgs in the spotlight early and
often. You have clashes against LSU and Florida with direct national significance.
Georgia’s trip to Tempe won’t go unnoticed. Even Saban coming to Athens will
create a stir. The Dawgs will be performing on the main stage for much of the
season, and there won’t be a way to ignore them should they put up wins.
With the 2007 emergence of Knowshon Moreno alongside the established Matthew
Stafford, the Dawgs also have a backfield rich in name recognition. Stafford
fills the role of the BMOC quarterback, and Moreno is as charismatic a personality
as David Pollack was. That kind of star power, not to mention others like Rennie
Curran, will ensure that Georgia is a program that gets talked about. They’re
interesting, fun to watch, and, above all, pretty damn good.
» Impact newcomers. The depth chart will be bolstered
in 2008 by some very highly-regarded newcomers. Tailback Caleb King is at the
top of the list. King was an option during 2007 as injuries took a toll on the
position, but he was able to preserve his redshirt season. King and Moreno could
give Georgia the most exciting tandem in the conference. Besides King, you also
hear about QB Logan Gray, WR/TE Aron White, LB Charles White, and S John Knox.
I’m interested to see what role LB Akeem Hebron will play. He was slated as
a possible starter in 2007 but spent the semester at Georgia Military College
after alcohol violations at UGA. He’s back, but there’s a question how the linebackers
might have to shuffle to fit him in next year. The unit had begun to click at
the end of 2007.
Then there are the true freshmen. In a class rated among the best in the nation,
you figure some will contribute right away. Receiver AJ Green comes to mind
first. Kicker Blair Walsh will get a chance to start out of the gate. Preseason
camp should be entertaining as these talented freshmen fight for positions against
a roster that’s already potent.
» Stable coaching staff. As regional rivals such as
Florida, Tennessee, Auburn, and Georgia Tech replace coordinators, several assistants,
or even head coaches, the only change in the Georgia program – at the time I
write this – looks to be the departure of TE coach David Johnson. While Georgia
has turned over all but a handful of assistant coaching positions since Mark
Richt arrived, we’ve been fortunate 1) not to have more than one or two in a
given offseason and 2) the departures have almost always been career moves with
the best wishes of the program.
The stability of the staff gave Richt the luxury of being less hands-on in
2007, and he used that freedom in part to step into more of a managerial role.
With Mike Bobo promoted to offensive coordinator, Richt was able to get his
head out of the details and look more frequently at the bigger picture. That
change possibly afforded him the opportunity to recognize and correct problems
during the 2007 season, and a changed team emerged. With confidence in a staff
that continues to operate well, Richt can continue to grow in his new role and
prepare the team to play at the level required of their ranking.
Friday January 18, 2008
Known for ending the careers of successful football coaches, the coaching graveyard
that is Columbia, South Carolina has now claimed a victim on the basketball
court. Dave Odom plans
to retire at the end of this season.
Odom shocked the basketball world in April 2001 when he left a successful ACC
program at Wake Forest to take over after Eddie Fogler resigned. Odom was actually
South Carolina’s third choice after Tubby Smith and Jim Calhoun turned
them down, but Odom’s arrival still caused a pretty big splash.
Fogler had led the Gamecocks to consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances in
1997 and 1998, compiling a 47-16 record in those seasons, and he was named national
coach of the year after winning South Carolina’s first SEC regular season title
in 1997 with a 15-1 conference record. Those two NCAA Tournament appearances
(which included a #2 and #3 seed) became notorious though as the Gamecocks were
upset in the first round each year. Fogler never had a winning season after
1998, and he resigned after a 15-15 finish and first-round NIT loss in 2001.
Odom arrived with an impressive resume. Besides coaching All-Americans Tim
Duncan, Randolph Childress, and Rodney Rogers, he led Wake Forest to two ACC
championships, several top 10 finishes, and seven straight NCAA Tournaments
from 1991-1997. South Carolina, in the middle of the Lou Holtz euphoria, expected
Odom to right the ship and return the program to consistent results like the
program enjoyed in the late 90s.
It never happened. Odom’s Gamecocks have never finished better than 8-8 in
the SEC, and they have made a single trip to the NCAA Tournament (2004). South
Carolina won consecutive NITs in 2005 and 2006, and they were the Cinderella
of the 2006 SEC Tournament reaching the finals and nearly knocking off eventual
national champion Florida.
Odom was never quite able to get the South Carolina program to the level that
was expected in 2001. Though he’ll likely leave with a better winning percentage
than Fogler, his teams never approached Fogler’s best.
Wednesday January 16, 2008
Though the playoff proposal got tabled, another issue raised by UGA President Michael Adams will get a closer look from the NCAA.
The Division I Board of Directors at its January 14 meeting approved the formation of a presidential task force to examine issues of commercialism and student-athlete well-being associated with athletics, including postseason football.
The Board issued a statement which said in part that, “the NCAA Board agreed the issues of presidential leadership and commercialism, identified in President Adams’ communication, especially deserve further discussion.”
One wonders what the outcome of this task force will be. When most of us complain about the crass commercialism surrounding bowl games, we’re talking about television broadcasts that last until the rooster crows three times the following morning. But “commercialism” can mean many things from corporate sponsorships to the gifts given to participating players.
On the other hand, TV deals fuel the bowls which fuel the BCS conferences, and, as we’ve seen every time this subject comes up, the conferences aren’t in a hurry to get off the gravy train. A conclusion that “less commercialism” means “give us just as much money but be less visible” will probably get the same response from the networks and sponsors as the playoff proposal got from the conferences.
Wednesday January 16, 2008
Alabama’s Ronald Steele, out for the year with a knee injury, won’t be able to travel at the end of tonight’s Georgia-Alabama basketball game.
If there’s one game that keeps coming back when you talk about last season in basketball and coming up just short of the NCAA Tournament, it was the loss at Alabama. Georgia blew a 20-point lead and a rare chance at a big SEC road win, and that buzzer-beater by Steele might have been the single most significant play of the entire season.
The Dawgs and Tide both enter tonight’s game looking for their first conference wins of the season. Georgia has struggled with inconsistent offense, and Bama has really missed Steele. The home court should give Georgia the edge, but they’ll have to play and shoot much better than they did last weekend at Mississippi State.
Wednesday January 16, 2008
LSU hasn’t been champion long, but we might as well look ahead to the next
season while the previous one is still fresh in memory. Over the next several
days we’ll look at the strengths, challenges, and dynamics ahead in Georgia’s
2008 season. The dominant story out of the gate will be the expectations facing
the 2008 squad.
The "who’s #1?" talk is already starting for the 2008 season. (As
an aside, this is why delaying official polls until midseason won’t change much.
The discussion will happen with or without their participation.) Tony Barnhart
didn’t wait very long to declare Georgia
his preseason #1 team. He’s just one pundit, but it’s reasonable to expect
many preseason polls to include Georgia among their top 5.
John Kaltefleiter takes what I think is the wrong approach today
in the Banner-Herald by downplaying the expectations. I think he overreacts
to what’s been going on. He complains of a "public coronation" and
says that making Georgia the "hands-down preseason No. 1 team and booking
those Orange Bowl reservations for the first weekend of January of next year
is not just premature, it’s presumptuous."
The trouble is that no one is really saying all of that. No one, least of all
Mark Richt, is assuming anything about next year. There is simply the recognition
that there are several really good teams with a shot at a title run next year
and, yes, Georgia is one of them. Beyond that, why not Georgia? While the Dawgs
might not be the hands-down favorite (is anyone?), they make as good of a case
as anyone at this ridiculously early stage. It’s not Kaltefleiter’s job as a
journalist to cheerlead for the Dawgs, but if he’s going to try to temper the
enthusiasm, I have to disagree.
Blame Dooley or Munson, but for whatever reason Georgia fans seem to shrink
from this position and relish the under-the-radar approach. There’s no getting
around it though: the Dawgs (and their fans) are going to have to deal with
some very high expectations in 2008. We might as well dive in with both feet.
The ranking and the expectations should serve as motivators for a team that,
as
Mark Richt said, "got a taste of just how close we might be to getting
that ultimate goal. Everybody is going to be really working hard towards that
end."
It’s likely that Georgia will be in its best preseason position since a #3
ranking to open the 2004 campaign. Though an 11-win season, New Year’s Day bowl
victory, #7 finish, and a win over Florida can hardly be considered a truly
disappointing season, many fans expected Pollack and Greene to ride off into
the sunset with at least a divisional title. It didn’t happen.
Fans might be a little gunshy after high expectations in 2000 and 2004, but
that’s no reason to run from the promise of the next few seasons. The story
of the 2004 season has another lesson: the best program never put all of their
eggs in one season or all of their hope in one player. Georgia’s no stranger
to this lesson. While 2004 didn’t result in any hardware beyond an Outback Bowl
championship, the Dawgs followed it up with an SEC title in 2005.
There is no reason not to be enthusiastic about the 2008 season. The best part
is that even if the schedule takes its toll and the Dawgs drop a game or two,
this isn’t a one-and-done shot. With outstanding recruiting classes in 2006
and 2007, the pump seems primed for seasons to come in Athens. Excitement and
even a little attitude is justified. Enjoy the ride we’re about to take.
Coming up we’ll look a little deeper at some of the reasons for all of this
hype and of course give the schedule and other potential stumbling blocks their
due.
Tuesday January 15, 2008
Officials at West Virginia suspect former coach Rich Rodriguez of taking the scorched earth strategy to the extreme on his way out of town:
Soon after returning to work after the Fiesta Bowl a little more than a week ago, the staff at the Puskar Center found that most of the files — including all of the player files — that had been stored in Rodriguez’s private office were missing. In addition, all of the players’ strength and conditioning files in the weight room were gone.
According to multiple sources, several people in the Puskar Center reported seeing Rodriguez and at least one member of his inner circle, video coordinator Dusty Rutledge, in Rodriguez’s private office shredding paperwork on Dec. 18.
This is on top of a $4 million dispute between Rodriguez and West Virginia over breaking his contract. The ill will was already bad enough, but now one has to wonder what he was hiding, especially in the area of player development.
While the files in Rodriguez’s office held a wide range of information, those that were discovered missing from the weight room office were more specific. Those included every aspect of strength and conditioning progress made by players under former strength and conditioning coordinator Mike Barwis, who along with most of his immediate staff followed Rodriguez to Michigan after the Fiesta Bowl. Those files included the progression made by each player in every specific area, from bench-press totals to 40-yard dash times. The files even included pictures of the players at different points in their careers.
Now the world may never find out how Owen Schmitt was transformed from a walk-on into a mohawk-wearing cyborg that still had the capacity for human emotion.
Monday January 14, 2008
The NCAA held
an educational session called "Crisis Communication Planning Strategies
and Tools" at its annual convention in Nashville over the weekend. Two
of the discussion leaders were from Virginia Tech and Bluffton. "Crisis"
doesn’t begin to describe what those schools went through last year; Virginia
Tech had a massacre on its campus, and Bluffton lost members of its baseball
team in a bus accident in Atlanta.
There was a third member of this panel: a representative from Rutgers. What
crisis did the Scarlet Knights deal with last year that’s in the same ballpark
as a mass murder and a fatal bus accident? Oh, that’s right. Their women’s basketball
team was insulted on a national radio show.
I give full credit to the Bluffton and Virginia Tech representatives for not
asking Rutgers’ senior director of media relations Greg Trevor, "are you
lost?"
Monday January 14, 2008
The Knoxville News-Sentinel reports that two Tennessee football players were arrested over the weekend for marijuana possession. That might seem like just another offseason arrest (and early Fulmer Cup entry) until you read that they were showing a visiting lad a night on the town.
Also in the car were Jameel Owens of Oklahoma, a recruit in Knoxville for his official visit, and UT player William Brimfield. Neither of those two were charged.
Monday January 14, 2008
The appeals process began last summer, and the NCAA Board of Directors decided to uphold the proposed ban. The process gave the membership the opportunity to vote on it at this week’s annual meeting, and, with only 21.3% of the Division I membership voting in favor of overturning the ban, the appeals process is over. E-mail and fax will be the only approved methods for initiating electronic communication with prospects. (Of course a prospective student-athlete may initiate contact using any means he or she chooses.)
The voice of the student-athlete carried a lot of weight in this decision. Speaking as the voice of the Division I Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, Kerry Kenny told the membership, “We believe that text messaging and instant messaging are both highly unprofessional in the recruiting process,” Kenny said. “You wouldn’t use text messaging to contact an employer when searching for a job, and it’s unlikely that an employer would contact you with a text message to offer you the job.”
The Division I membership also upheld a proposed restructuring of baseball financial aid. Squad size will be capped at 35 players, and the minimum share for a partial scholarship is 25%. Georgia president Michael Adams voiced support for the plan.
After surviving the appeals process, both proposals go into effect in August.
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