Monday May 19, 2008
New Blue Devil football coach David Cutcliffe isn’t going to take other Duke coaches kicking sand in his program’s face:
Probably the difficult thing was just some of the culture here as to how our facilities may have been a little disrespected in my mind.
I made a lot of people mad. I closed off our practice facility and had some cars towed from some other coaches that were parking where they weren’t supposed to be parking.
I made some enemies, but they found out real quick that we’re going to have a football program here that’s not going to be disrespected.
It would be interesting to hear what sport those coaches were from. I doubt anyone’s towing Steve Wojciechowski’s car. But if we’re not talking about basketball (or even Duke’s great lacrosse program), how bad are things with Duke football that someone from, say, volleyball thinks that the football parking lot is fair game?
Monday May 19, 2008
Ryuji Imada was part of a national title for Georgia golf back in 1999. Bulldog coach Chris Haack went so far as to say, “He did for Georgia golf what Herschel Walker did for Georgia football.”
Now Imada has picked up his first professional win, and it came just down the road this weekend at Sugarloaf. He just missed winning this event last year, but it was his turn to win on the first playoff hole this year. The win qualifies him to play in another tournament in Georgia in 2009 – the Masters.
Friday May 16, 2008
While we wait for the Diamond Dawgs to get going in their doubleheader this afternoon, the ABH looks ahead a bit to next week’s SEC baseball tournament in Hoover, Ala. Only eight teams make the double-elimination SEC Tournament each year, and reaching Hoover is often, though not always, a sign that a team is headed for the NCAA Tournament. Once there though, the tournament is about as meaningful as basketball’s preseason NIT.
As Coach Perno points out, an SEC Tournament title is the one accomplishment that has eluded the Georgia baseball program. Sure, it would be nice to win one. But with the NCAA Tournament starting up less than a week after things get wrapped up in Hoover, I won’t be too upset if the team and pitching staff isn’t extended all the way through the weekend.
Friday May 16, 2008
You almost have to pity Gamecock
delusion because, well, reality isn’t a very fun thing to consider. When
a moment of clarity arrives for the Gamecock fan, it isn’t pretty.
This
screed is what happens when a Gamecock reaches the breaking point. If you
hadn’t noticed, it hasn’t been a very successful year all-around in Columbia
(even by South Carolina standards).
You f#!king suck, man.
Here’s how your sorry ass stacks up in SEC conference play: football,
3-5; men’s basketball, 5-11; baseball (prior to the UT series), 13-14;
softball, 8-18; women’s basketball, 4-10; volleyball, 7-13; men’s
tennis, 1-10; and women’s tennis, 5-6. The only team, in fact, at the
entire school with a winning SEC record is women’s soccer, which eked
out a 5-4-2 record.
…Oh, you started off talking all kinds of s#!t. Conference championships
in football. New recruits and transfers in basketball. Best infield in the
nation in baseball and the program’s best-ever slugger. And yet, man
did you ever fall on your face in front of everybody, over and over again,
week after week, loss after loss.
With that sad existence as the alternative, it’s understandable that a
certain level of rationalization and detachment is required to keep South
Carolina fans from crying themselves to sleep each night.
Thursday May 15, 2008
The NCAA membership has maintained an odd duality when it comes to the 1-A football postseason. On one hand, they disclaim any role or even influence in the process that determines the BCS champion. True enough. On the other hand, the NCAA is granted some oversight such as the requirement that a team must win at least six games in order to accept a bowl invitation.
Why?
Though bowls started out as a tourist attraction, along the way we’ve attached the implication that a bowl bid is some kind of reward for which only certain teams should be eligible. If at their core the bowls are just business arrangements between teams, conferences, television, and organizers, why put restrictions on the participant pool? This restriction might mean that there won’t be enough teams to fill all of the bowls certified by the NCAA.
In any season there are several big-name teams who sit on the postseason sidelines. Even with a depressed or angry fan base, these teams might be more attractive in terms of attendance, name recognition, television appeal, and publicity for the bowl. You think a Notre Dame team even at 3-8 wouldn’t be a bigger draw for a lower-tier bowl than, say, Florida Atlantic?
It’s not like 6-6 or even 7-5 is a season for the books. If we’re going to keep this traditional, quirky, and great postseason based around bowls (and it looks as if we are), throw off the restrictions on the marketplace and let all teams regardless of record compete for a spot in these exhibition games.
Wednesday May 14, 2008
I’ve put my two cents in about the one-and-done rule before, and I know it’s easy to tell David Stern and Myles Brand that the chickens have come home to roost.
But the NCAA isn’t the only party that “would rather have the money the Mayos of the world can generate.” Mayo and the people around him have been bad news since 2005, but Tim Floyd wasn’t about to return the present that was given to him in 2006. AD Mike Garrett didn’t step in, even in the wake of the Reggie Bush mess, to question the recruiting of a very shady player. Mayo was worth quite a bit of money to the Trojans also.
Wednesday May 14, 2008
Our friends at the Atlanta Sports Council are at it again. They’ve already arranged for one Alabama game to be played in Atlanta against Clemson in 2008, and they’re currently working with Duke to move their 2010 home game with the Crimson Tide to the Georgia Dome. Outgoing Duke AD Joe Alleva is hopeful that the deal will get done, and new Duke coach David Cutcliffe is no newcomer to recruiting in Georgia.
The Sports Council is just doing its job by bringing a college game to the city, but it will be Alabama’s second regular season trip to Atlanta in three seasons. Hopefully they’ll get lots of experience for the Chick-fil-A Bowl instead of the SEC Championship.
Wednesday May 14, 2008
In a move that should surprise no one, the ACC
has decided not to add a ninth conference game. In the end, fears of additional
losses and fewer bowl bids won out. The value of a bowl bid is more than money
– there’s additional practice time, television and media exposure, and recruiting
credibility. Remember that the next time the "too many bowls" argument
comes up. The postseason club might let nearly anyone in the door these days,
but there is still a definite inside and outside. Right, South Carolina?
It’s not a scenario exclusive to football. The basketball coaches likewise
do not want to expand their conference schedule because bids to the NCAA Tournament
can be hard to come by these days. Replacing two or four easier nonconference
games with tougher games within the league isn’t likely to add to the win totals
of marginal teams.
It is interesting to note that, in both cases, the postseason is driving the
decision-making.
Wednesday May 14, 2008
Though the season series was already decided, the Diamond Dawgs got the final word in against Georgia Tech last night with a close 3-2 win at Turner Field in front of over 22,000. With postseason seeding at stake, Georgia prevented a sweep by the Yellow Jackets and won their fourth straight game over their rival at Turner Field.
Nick Montgomery’s shaky start led to an early 1-0 Tech lead, but he settled down in impressive fashion to give up only two hits over five innings. Georgia got solid pitching all night from the four hurlers they used, and they needed it. The Dawgs squandered several good scoring opportunities including a bases-loaded one out situation in the third inning, but the Georgia defense held. Two defensive gems, including a diving catch by Lyle Allen which knocked him out of the game, made ESPN’s top 10 plays for the night.
Joshua Fields now holds the Georgia single series save record by himself as his strong ninth inning earned him his 16th save. After looking a little wild against Ole Miss and Vanderbilt, he left no doubt against Tech.
Georgia now carries a three-game winning streak into this weekend’s series against Alabama. Because the SEC Tournament starts mid-week next week, this weekend’s action gets going on Thursday. Here are the game times:
- Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
- Friday: 6:30 p.m.
- Saturday: 2:00 p.m.
Georgia has already clinched the SEC title and the top seed in Hoover, but every win against Alabama will go towards ensuring a favorable seeding when the NCAA makes its selections in little less than two weeks. Head out to Foley to welcome the champions home and help them wrap up the regular season in impressive style.
Tuesday May 13, 2008
When Brandon Coutu was selected late in the seventh round of the 2008 NFL draft,
he became the 40th Bulldog from a Mark Richt team to be drafted. Since 2002
Georgia has had as many as eight and no fewer than four players taken in each
draft. There have been six first round selections, but only one Bulldog (Tim
Jennings) has been drafted in the first or second rounds of the three most recent
drafts.
2002 (8 total):
First round: Charles Grant
Third round: Will Witherspoon
Fourth round: Randy McMichael, Terreal Bierria
Fifth round: Jermaine Phillips, Verron Haynes
Seventh round: Josh Mallard, Tim Wansley
2003 (7 total):
First round: Jonathan Sullivan, George Foster
Second round: Boss Bailey, Jon Stinchcomb
Third round: Musa Smith
Sixth round: Tony Gilbert
Seventh round: J.T. Wall
2004 (4 total):
First round: Ben Watson
Second round: Sean Jones
Fourth round: Robert Geathers, Bruce Thornton
2005 (6 total):
First round: Thomas Davis, David Pollack
Second round: Reggie Brown, Odell Thurman
Third round: David Greene
Fourth round: Fred Gibson
2006 (7 total):
Second round: Tim Jennings
Third round: Leonard Pope
Fourth round: Max Jean-Gilles
Fifth round: Greg Blue, Demario Minter
Sixth round: Kedric Golston
Seventh round: D.J. Shockley
2007 (4 total):
Third round: Quention Moses, Charles Johnson
Fourth round: Martrez Milner
Sixth round: Charles Shackleford
2008 (4 total):
Fifth round: Marcus Howard
Sixth round: Thomas Brown
Seventh round: Chester Adams, Brandon Coutu
Defensive Line U.
To no one’s surprise, the Bulldogs have cranked out defensive linemen and defensive
backs like few others. Nearly half (18) of Georgia’s 40 picks have come from
those two units. The overall offense / defense split isn’t as drastic as some
might expect (17 vs. 22), but the difference is in the first two rounds: eight
defensive picks versus four from the offense. Given their relatively limited
role on the field, it could be argued that Georgia has been most productive
in terms of draft picks at the tight end spot.
Quarterback: 2
Tailbacks and fullbacks: 4
Tight ends: 4
Receivers: 2
Offensive linemen: 5
Defensive linemen: 9
Linebackers: 4
Defensive backs: 9
Kickers: 1
Stating the obvious
The past three drafts haven’t been as kind to the Bulldogs. From 2001 through
2005, the Bulldogs had at least one first round pick. They haven’t had one since,
and Tim Jennings in 2006 has been Georgia’s only selection from the top two
rounds since 2005. This slump is very likely to change as soon as the 2009 draft,
but the results of the 2007 and 2008 drafts help to illustrate that there was
more to the struggles of 2006 into 2007 than just the quarterback transition.
It’s impressive that Georgia has sustained a high level of play over some lean
draft years, but when you look over the national champions of the past few years
high draft picks figure prominently. Having a few first round picks doesn’t
necessarily lead to titles, but the inverse is usually true.
Draft Picks 2002-2005
Draft Picks 2006-2008
Monday May 12, 2008
Highly-regarded and outspoken Florida 2008 signee Matt Patchan was shot in the shoulder over the weekend at a Tampa-area park. The injury fortunately is not life-threatening, and he is out of the hospital. Though there aren’t many more details, it looks for now like a case of wrong place, wrong time.
Monday May 12, 2008
Terry Bowden
commends the ACC for considering a 9-game conference schedule, and I agree
with him.
If we’re going to keep the college football postseason unchanged, the one title
a team has complete control over is its conference championship. Yet as conference
expansion has pushed membership in several conferences from eight to twelve
members, conference schedules in most cases haven’t grown in response. The PAC
10 and Big East are the only BCS conferences in which all teams play each other.
Playing eight out of ten or eleven other schools might seem good enough, but
the quirks of scheduling can mean that a conference champion hasn’t necessarily
played the best competition that the conference has to offer. Last season’s
SEC champion, LSU, didn’t have to play Georgia. The 2006 ACC champion, Wake
Forest, didn’t play Miami. Ohio State won the Big 10 in 2006 without playing
Wisconsin. Georgia avoided a 10-2 Alabama team in 2005. It doesn’t always work
out that way of course, but not all schedules within a particular conference
are created equal.
While some schools have used the 12th game to improve their nonconference schedules,
others have used them to pad the schedule with an additional easy home game
(and given what
gets rewarded in college football, I can’t blame them). It might be impossible
to get nationwide consensus on tougher scheduling, but it is an issue that can be tackled
conference by conference. Two of them have already done so, and the ACC is considering heading down that direction (along with an 18-game conference basketball schedule!). The occasional marquee nonconference game might seem
like an appealing alternative, but there is still room on the schedule for those
if a team is willing to give up some of its lighter fare.
Bowden’s money quote:
Isn’t it funny how protecting the integrity of the regular season is so dadgum
important when it comes to a playoff, but it doesn’t mean squat when it comes
to the teams we actually play?
Perfect…right down to the classic Bowden "dadgum".
Monday May 12, 2008
Fresh on the heels of a basketball SEC tournament title and a gymnastics national title, the Georgia baseball team wrapped up the 2008 SEC championship on Sunday in dramatic fashion at Vanderbilt. Georgia jumped out to a 12-4 lead on Sunday but had to hold on before Joshua Fields closed the door for his 15th save of the year and a 12-10 win.
If there was a single play of the weekend, it came on Saturday. Georgia’s lifeless offense roared to life in the final two frames after going scoreless all day. They scored two in the ninth to force extra innings and then added two more in the top of the tenth. Fields was brought on to close the door, but he didn’t start out in his typical dominant fashion. Fields walked the first batter on four straight pitches and then threw three more balls to the second batter of the inning. Matt Olson then made a sliding catch on a David Macias bloop into shallow right field for the first out of the inning. If that ball had dropped, Vandy would have had two runners on with no outs and a shaky Fields on the mound. Instead Fields recovered to strike out two of the next three batters to even the series and make Sunday’s championship-clinching win possible.
When you look at a list of Georgia’s conference titles in baseball, there’s no question that these are the golden years for the program:
1933
1953
1954
2001
2004 (shared with Arkansas)
2008
The regular season isn’t finished yet. We have the annual battle at Turner Field against Georgia Tech on Tuesday. Though Tech has clinched the season series, a win against the Jackets would be very important if Georgia wants a leg to stand on when it comes time for postseason seeding. The SEC title is a big trump card to hold, but a season sweep at the hands of Tech wouldn’t look very good.
The Diamond Dawgs wrap up the regular season with a home series against Alabama this weekend. Postseason seeding is also an issue in this series (a few more SEC wins could never hurt), and Bama will have a lot to play for with a logjam atop the SEC West. Bama is just 1 1/2 games behind LSU in the West, but they’re only half a game out of fourth place.
Thursday May 8, 2008
David Pollack talks about his decision to retire. His plans for the future?
He wants to finish out the two semesters required to complete degrees in history and education at Georgia. He wants to explore the possibilities of a career in broadcasting and could surface on the sideline or in the booth with either CBS or FOX. He wants to coach. He wants to be a good father to the son he and his wife expect to arrive in August.
Wednesday May 7, 2008
It’s a strange question given the win-or-lose nature of sports: is
the team with the best record the best team? In the context of a conference
or league where teams play all or most of the others, that conclusion is more
than reasonable. But in a division of hundreds of teams with at most 14 games
for any one team the record becomes a less reliable indicator.
I ask this question in response to a
question raised by Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops (hat tip as always to Get
the Picture) about undefeated teams in a plus-one scenario.
"(The ‘plus-one’ is) a good scenario when there’s an odd number
of teams with no losses or one loss," Stoops said last fall. "It
doesn’t make sense in years like 2000 when we won a national championship
and were the only team with no losses. Why should we have to beat all the
one-loss teams?"
Stoops’ meaning is obvious: the record defines the quality of the team. Your
first instinct is to agree with him. Oklahoma won all of their games, so why
should some one-loss team get a pass for losing? And then you remember Utah
or Hawaii. Both were undefeated (in the regular season anyway), but it’s hard
to imagine June Jones or Urban Meyer making the case that they were above playing
any of those inferior one-loss teams.
So record, even for teams playing at the same classification, can’t be an absolute
indicator of superiority. Fine. It’s still accepted in our system that in most
cases record trumps any other metric. Without an improbable Pittsburgh win over
West Virginia, last year’s national champion would have never had the opportunity
to play for the title. Why? LSU had two losses while Ohio State and West Virginia
would have had just one. It didn’t matter that both LSU losses came in overtime
to bowl-bound conference opponents. 1 is less than 2 or, in this case, greater
than 2.
I don’t necessarily consider this reality a flaw in college football; after
all, the point is to win games. Record is as close as we have to an objective
measure for so many teams with relatively few points of comparison between them,
but it isn’t a perfect indicator. We’ve tried to take that reality into account
in the BCS whether it was the overt strength of schedule adjustment early on
or the current built-in adjustments of the computer polls. Even human pollsters
(consciously or otherwise) sometimes consider schedule in some rough form.
That brings
us to Dennis Dodd who unfortunately captures a meme we’re going to hear
a lot this preseason. One, Ohio State is good enough and has a favorable enough
schedule to skate through a weak Big 10 and remain in the national title picture
even with a loss to Southern Cal. Two, Georgia might be a great team,
but their schedule is just too tough to expect them to come through unscathed.
Agree or disagree with his analysis, but his conclusion makes sense when you
look at things in the context of the pursuit of the unblemished record.
Ohio State could lose three games and be irrelevant in the title discussion,
but that hasn’t been the way to bet lately. And if they do beat Southern Cal
and run the table, I’ll be the first to welcome them to the BCS championship.
The thing of it is that Dodd seems to be setting up his apology in advance for
having to rank Ohio State near the top if they sweep the Big 10 schedule but
lose to the Trojans. Given the way we decide things in college football, it’s
an entirely reasonable approach.
If this all sounds vaguely familiar, it should. Les Miles stuck his neck out
last summer and made
some pretty bold comments about LSU’s schedule relative to Southern Cal’s.
But you know what? It worked. LSU was just one of a number of two-loss teams,
but there they were at the end. Mark Richt hasn’t had to say a word about Georgia’s
schedule; pundits like Dodd are doing the work for him. If Georgia survives
its gauntlet, how can anyone using Dodd’s logic deny them a shot at the national
title?
In a regular season of 162, 82, or even 30 games, the difference of one loss
between two teams is insignificant. In a 12-game season, it’s a chasm. Not to
turn everything into the scheduling debate (here we go again…), I’m left with
this question: is it rational for a contender from a major conference to schedule
challenging non-conference games? Why is Ohio State playing Southern
Cal when a diet of mid-major schools from the state of Ohio would get the job
done with less risk?
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