Tennessee head football coach Phillip Fulmer was served with a subpoena Thursday during SEC Media Days to appear for a deposition on improper recruiting by the University of Alabama.
Anyone else scheduled to speak at SEC Media Days this week can go ahead and book another round of golf…this one story should just about take care of the Alabama and Tennessee media.
Via Anthony Dasher of UGASports.com, Mark Richt announced this morning that neither Justin Anderson nor Trinton Sturdivant will miss any game time for their offseason simple battery arrests. Richt mentioned that in-house punishment was possible (i.e., a whole lotta running), but they will be in the lineup for Georgia Southern.
Given the news and what the media wants to focus on these past few days, this calls for…wait for it….
Mettenberger’s status as a favorite was short-lived, however, as his similarly Georgia-bound roommate Aaron Murray scored a huge upset in the first round, knocking off his confident confidante 27-24. It was the start of just another winning effort for Murray, who took eventually took home the NCAA 09 title with three more victories, just four days after leading his Tampa Plant team to victory in the NIKE 7ON championship in Portland, Oregon.
Best part: Murray, playing with the Georgia team, beat Richard Brehaut’s Florida squad in the championship round.
Aaron Murray has been all
over the news this week with some standout performances at two major national
prep events. Kirk
Herbstreit gushed over Matthew Stafford yesterday at the Elite 11 camp.
It’s a good time to be a Georgia quarterback.
Greene and Shockley proved to be a productive and popular tandem, but they
might end up being the opening act for an unparalleled level of quarterback
talent at Georgia. With Moreno, King, Samuel, and others Georgia’s traditional
strength at tailback is as solid as ever, but now the quarterback position looks
to be just as deep and talented. At the very least, Georgia might soon have
its first first-round draft pick at QB since Johnny Rauch in 1949.
Whenever a high-profile position gets loaded with talent, the depth chart always
generates a lot of interest. Who plays, who sits, and – sometimes – who transfers?
That will certainly be the case at the key position of quarterback. Stafford
is set as the starter for as long as he’s in Athens and healthy, but at some
point in the next two years we will once again be looking for a new starter.
The big wildcard of course is Matthew Stafford’s senior season. Does he stay
or does he go? His name is all over the mock drafts, and Herbstreit isn’t the
first to consider Stafford first round talent. On the other hand, Georgia’s
accomplishments and Stafford’s stats in 2008 will have a lot to do with his
potential draft position. He’ll have to put up better numbers as a junior of
course, but it’s not out of reach. JaMarcus Russell became a top draft pick
by throwing for nearly 2,800 yards, 26 touchdowns, and 7 interceptions as a
junior. Stafford threw for 2,523 yards, 19 touchdowns, and 10 interceptions
last year. A few more touchdowns, a bit more protective of the ball, and he’s
right there.
It’s impossible to know Stafford’s decision at this point, so we’ll look at
the question from both possibilities.
If Stafford Stays
If Stafford returns for his senior season, the 2009 season is taken care of.
The only questions will be further down the depth chart. With two seniors and
a legitimate redshirt sophomore on the depth chart, it seems a near certainty
that the two incoming 2009 freshmen quarterbacks would redshirt.
Things would become more interesting in 2010. Stafford and Cox would have moved
on, and the contenders for the position would be:
Logan Gray (RJr.)
Aaron Murray (RFr.)
Zach Mettenberger (RFr.)
Gray would seem to have the advantage. He’d have seen at least limited action
in 2008 and 2009, and the other two would be coming off of redshirt seasons
and have only scrimmage experience.
If Stafford Declares for the NFL Draft
A quarterback competition in 2009 would involve the same three guys with one
key addition.
Joe Cox (RSr.)
Logan Gray (RSo.)
Aaron Murray (Fr.)
Zach Mettenberger (Fr.)
At first glance, it almost seems like 2006 all over again. You have a career
backup who suddenly rises to the top of the depth chart as a senior. Fans, perpetually
attracted to that new recruit smell, will be likely more interested to see a
pair of promising freshmen.
But I suspect that Joe Cox would do more to hold on to the job than Tereshinski
did in 2006. The presence of Gray also complicates things, and it’s possible
then that at least one of the true freshmen would redshirt. If you asked the
Georgia fans who pay attention to these things, I suspect most would expect
Gray to win the job if only on the basis of what they remember from G-Day. I
would just hope that the situation doesn’t mirror 2006 in that the position
is unsettled – to the detriment of the team – into the middle of the season.
The depth chart at the end of the 2008 season will at least tell us who the
favorite is going into spring.
The "cleanest" scenario seems to be if Stafford stays for his senior
year. Gray would be ready to step in as a redshirt junior, and Murray and Mettenberger
would continue to develop until their turn to fight it out as juniors. It might
seem absurd to think that we’d have to wait until 2012 to see a quarterback
as promising as Murray take the reigns, but isn’t that preferred to having to
turn to a new freshman every four years or so? We value depth and the ability
to turn over experienced players every few years at positions on the offensive
and defensive lines, and Mark Richt looks to be setting up the quarterback position
to do the same.
Murray notes today that he especially enjoyed working with Georgia quarterback and possible 2009 teammate Matthew Stafford.
…it’s unbelievable to be working out with [Georgia quarterback Matt Stafford]. He gave me pointers. I was in his group today and he was pointing little things out to me throughout the day and helping me out. If we were running a route, he would say “this is what we call it at Georgia.” He was very, very helpful today.
Other instructors include Chase Daniel from Missouri, Colt McCoy from Texas, Curtis Painter from Purdue, Bobby Reid from Texas Southern(formerly of Oklahoma State of course), and Mark Sanchez from SoCal.
With only three members on the 2007 postseason All-SEC teams, Georgia might have been one of the most anonymous teams in recent memory to finish the season ranked #2 in the nation.
The 2008 preseason All-SEC teams have been announced. Georgia might start the season ranked #1 in the nation by many polls, but according to the SEC coaches the Bulldogs are just third-best in the SEC when it comes to All-SEC selections. Nine Bulldogs received some mention, trailing defending champion LSU’s 14 and Florida’s 10. Here are Georgia’s selections:
First Team
So. RB Knowshon Moreno
Sr. LB Dannell Ellerbe
Second Team
Sr. WR Mohamed Massaquoi
Jr. QB Matthew Stafford
Jr. DT Geno Atkins
Jr. CB Asher Allen
Third Team
Sr. DT Jeff Owens
So. LB Rennie Curran
Sr. P Brian Mimbs
It’s interesting that not even Trinton Sturdivant made the list from Georgia’s accomplished 2007 offensive line. Only three of the selections were from the offense, so are the coaches hinting that Georgia’s strength is once again on the defense?
Last season no Georgia player named to the preseason team made it onto the postseason team. I doubt that scenario will play out again this year. Brandon Coutu and Brandon Miller were Georgia’s only 2007 preseason All-SEC picks, and Georgia was the only SEC team without a preseason first team member last year. The season turned out pretty well regardless.
Aaron Murray might not see game action at Sanford Stadium until 2010, but recruitniks are buzzing today about an ESPN report from the past weekend’s Nike 7-on-7 event. Though neither has played his senior season in high school yet, the event offered an opportunity to compare Georgia commitment Aaron Murray with Southern Cal pledge Matt Barkley. Though both Rivals.com and Scout.com rate Barkley as the top overall prospect in the nation, Murray showed out just as well.
To sum up the scout on Murray: shorter than you’d like, but an “explosive” release with great speed and footwork. Throws hard, takes risks (sometimes too many risks). Needs work on his mechanics.
Bonus: Georgia’s other quarterback commitment, Zach Mettenberger, gets a nod for his arm strength.
No offense to the many Bulldogs who will be so honored over the next few weeks, but are there many more meaningless things than the preseason award watch lists? They’re basically an acknowledgment that a player is an upperclassman with a pulse.
Phillip Daniels is relatively anonymous among Bulldogs in the NFL. Most run-of-the-mill Georgia fans could list Ward, Seymour, Champ Bailey, Thomas Davis, and several others, but by now most of us have forgotten that Daniels, himself from a relatively anonymous time in Georgia football history, has been a 12+ year veteran of the NFL. He is well-respected around the league -especially for his workout routine and upper-body strength, and his 59 career sacks rank 17th among active players.
Daniels suffered a season-ending knee injury on the first day of summer camp for the Washington Redskins. At the age of 35 and his speed already waning, you have to wonder if he can come back from this. There’s only speculation now, and there’s still surgery and rehab ahead. Even if Daniels has played his last down, he’s had a full and successful professional career.
On a related note, another Bulldog, Demetric Evans, stepped in at Daniels’ spot in the drill.
Urban Meyer’s “syrupy” book, Urban’s Way, will be out in early September. Gene Frenette has a few words on it in today’s Florida Times-Union where he alternates between descriptions like “interesting” and “compelling” and saying the book “reads more like a recruiting pitch.” News about the movie rights can’t be too far away.
According to an excerpt from the book, Georgia fans should know that Urban Meyer will forever remember a certain incident. Urban Meyer is not amused.
That wasn’t right. It was a bad deal. And it will forever be in the mind of Urban Meyer and in the mind of our football team. … So we’ll handle it. And it’s going to be a big deal.
Got it? Urban Meyer says what was a bad deal is a big deal to Urban Meyer and Urban Meyer’s team. It’s not quite what Urban Meyer told Terence Moore though.
On a completely unrelated note, Frenette has some encouraging words for the Georgia fullback position.
Georgia fans who are worried because starting fullback Brannan Southerland might not return from a foot operation until the Sept. 27 game against Alabama would breathe easier if they watched film on backup Shaun Chapas, a Bolles School graduate. Chapas might not be the blocking machine that Southerland is, but he’s more versatile. Chapas’ value will become evident as he gets more plays.
Versatility is fine, but a “blocking machine” is more of what’s required from that position in Richt’s offense. Southerland has shown plenty of versatility himself in the passing game, and there is no Bulldog with a better nose for the end zone.
Earlier
this week Doug pointed to this
handy quiz where you could find out if you were "that guy". Other
than letting the occasional "my bad" slip, I think I came out of
the quiz OK. Since Doug also brings us the
Friday Random Ten+5, we’ll steal borrow heavily from his
format to present 5 ways to tell if you’re "that Georgia fan".
Yes, we’re only six weeks from kickoff, and pretty soon we’ll be face-to-face
with…that fan. At one point or another, this has probably been most of us.
You wear red pants.
Admit it: you don’t wear the red pants hoping that you go unnoticed. They look
pretty damn sharp, and you’ve embraced your inner attention-whore. The red pants
are widespread enough now that the pants by themselves aren’t enough to make
someone "that fan". Not everyone rocking the red pants is a tool,
but tell me you’re surprised by what this guy is wearing:
Red pants – check. Black polo – check. White hat (possibly mesh, possible
reading "Herschel for Heisman") – double check.
You start the "drunk obnoxious Georgia fan" cheer.
Calling the Dawgs is as much a part of the pregame ritual as being, well, drunk
and obnoxious. Put them together and you should have the perfect cheer, right?
But the novelty tends to wear off when it’s 11:30 a.m. and it’s already the
29th time this morning you’ve heard some lush with no rhythm take three or four
minutes to slur, "Whut’s that comin’ down thuuuu track?" Bonus points
if your version includes "all dressed up in red and black."
You’re the tailgate emcee.
We all have our game day playlists. Division of labor at a tailgate is a good
thing – you need someone who knows how to work the grill, someone who could
zero in on a satellite signal from the deck of an Alaskan crab boat, and good
tunes help too. Your friends might love your clever mix of David Allan Coe and
acceptably mainstream hip-hop played at 130 decibels, but the guys three cars
down who are just trying to watch Gameday wish you’d catch bird hepatitis.
You get involved in sit down / stand up arguments.
I’d like to think we live in a world where standing and sitting at a ballgame
is less
scripted and regulated than a Catholic Mass. By God, if I want to jump up
when Rennie Curran adjusts someone’s spine or if I want to kneel in fervent
prayer on 4th-and-1, I will. But there is a give and take here. The only thing
worse than the "down in front" nazi is the guy who stands on principle
knowing there’s an elderly fan or kid behind them who can’t see.
You provide play-by-play and color commentary to everyone
sitting around you.
We all talk about what’s going on, but I can see that the last play was a Southerland
run that gained 4 yards. Why, yes, the defense is in man coverage.
If you could only run down to the sideline and get some info on that injury,
I could turn my radio off. Bonus points if you a) ever put on the Munson voice
or b) launch a rant on the wrong player or coach. (Um, dude, Chandler was on
the sideline for that whole series.)
Have a great weekend! Only six of them left until we have better things to
do.
Linebacker Derrick White was the Michael Lemon of the 2005 season. Just months after a bar fight earned White a suspension, he was arrested for DUI and dismissed from the Georgia team. White finished his college career at Clark Atlanta.
Fortunately the rest of the story is mostly positive for Derrick. Marc Weiszer points to a feature on White that tracks his progress in arena football and, more importantly, the turnaround in his life.
White is now married and a key defensive member of the AIFA’s Mississippi MudCats. He has also spent some time in the Arena League. He’s now focused on “setting a good example, being a good teammate and putting himself in a position to leave every game with no regrets.” That’s quite a turnaround for someone who was described by Coach Richt as having “a past history of behavior that does not represent (Georgia’s) program in the proper way.”
The release of NCAA 2009 has lots of people excited, and it’s no surprise that the guys around whom the game is built are among those lining up to buy the game. When you think about it for a second, it’s at once flattering and bizarre that your identity could be boiled down to a few numerical ratings and controlled by thousands of couch potatoes across the nation.
Marc Weiszer talked to some of the Georgia players about the game and Georgia’s #1 ranking in the game. Coach Garner says thank-you-very-much for the recruiting edge of being the #1-ranked team and notes, “Anything like that with today’s kids, they’re all about electronics and the games.” It can’t hurt that every prep tailback can choose to be #24 in a black jersey for the nation’s #1 team.
I love reading the comments from the players when they see how they translate to bits and bytes. You’ll have freshmen and reserves tweak their ratings to make sure they’re in the starting lineup. It’s a very serious and hilarious business. There’s always bound to be this poor guy:
Linebacker Rennie Curran isn’t thrilled about one aspect of the game. He says they left out No. 35, which just happens to be his number.
“I think they messed up with my number,” Curran said.
Ellerbe knows the feeling.
“I got shafted last year,” he said. “They gave me Akeem Hebron’s number.”
I feel Dannell Ellerbe’s pain about needing a new system. “I’m probably going to go buy the Playstation 3 just so I can play the game on Playstation 3,” he said. The game isn’t available for my ancient X-Box, so I’m going to have to upgrade the hardware myself.
The shockingly high ticket cutoffs announced
yesterday led many in message board land to ask the obvious question: is
it time to expand Sanford Stadium?
There seem to be no immediate official plans to increase capacity. Ticket manager
Tim Cearley told UGASports.com,
"I have seen no mention or plans for a stadium expansion. I have not been
given any indication from the Development Office that there is a plan or study
for doing so."
That doesn’t mean we can’t kick the idea around. It’s a discussion worth having.
You’ll see below that my view on expansion is generally negative in the "do
you realize what it will take to do this?" sense. Any expansion worth considering
will likely be the single most expensive undertaking in the athletic department’s
history. It would also place significant additional stresses on the campus and
city of Athens. Those concerns don’t mean that there aren’t solutions, and we
might even be willing to live with some of the discomforts.
Pros
Revenue. At $40 per game, adding 5,000 seats means $1,200,000
in revenue over a six-game home schedule. That’s before any additional Hartman
Fund contributions to secure the right to buy those tickets. The costs of
expansion will be great, and it will take some time to recover those costs,
but eventually an expansion should become a revenue generator if demand remains
high.
Status. Sanford Stadium still trails only Tennessee’s Neyland
Stadium among SEC schools in terms of capacity, but the
neighborhood has become a bit crowded lately with recent expansions at
Alabama and LSU. Would an expansion make Georgia the largest stadium in the
SEC or the nation? Likely not. But it might get Sanford close to 100,000 seats.
This might seem like a silly point, but college football – especially in the
South – is all about the big. Coaches salaries are big. Even mundane facilities
like offices and weight rooms are now caught up in the arms race. Bigger is
better, and that applies to the stadium as much as anything else.
Accessibility. With a point total of over 10,000 necessary
for first-time season tickets, most recent alumni won’t sniff season tickets
for years. Alums from my era in the early 1990s never had this problem (there
were even such things as non-renewable season tickets!), but Georgia football
is now accessible to fewer young alums and families. There’s no right to watch
Georgia football in person, but you hate to turn away fans who want to support
the program and start their own traditions of bringing their families to Athens
for game day.
Fixing what’s broke. I’ll bring this up again in the cons,
but expansion will force improvements in existing areas of the stadium such
as concessions, entry gates, and concourses. These areas need work even at
the current capacity.
The view is changing anyway. Almost everyone speaks wistfully
of the view out of the open end of the stadium whenever expansion comes up.
It isn’t special because of what you see (I mean, is Baxter Hill really that
scenic?), but the sense of open space is what makes it work. Between the Student
Learning Center and work going on around the Tate Center expansion, that view
is changing on its own. If, as
planned, a mirror of the SLC is built on the southeast corner of Baxter
and Lumpkin, you’ll be looking at a lot of brick.
Cons
Additional costs. Whether Sanford Stadium is expanded by
filling in the west (bridge) end zone or extending the Tech Deck around to
the east, there will be some very expensive consequences. Either option will
require rerouting or tunneling a main campus artery. Construction on the
east side would also have to deal with an active rail line. Construction on
the west side would affect not only the bridge but also the Tate Center and
the improvements currently underway for Tate 2. This extra work before actual
stadium work begins will add significantly to the cost of the project.
Parking. As recently as ten years ago, free parking was
the norm on game day. One could park as close as the corner of Baxter and
Lumpkin for no cost. The combination of campus construction, stadium expansion,
and the expansion of Athletic Association-controlled lots has put a price
tag on much of the parking on and close to campus. Free parking remains in
nooks and on the campus’s southeastern fringes.
Finances. Though the Athletic Association continues to
operate in the black and bring in record revenues, it still carries close
to $90 million in long-term debt. The last major expansion in 2003 cost
$21 million, and it didn’t involve much of the extra work that the next
expansion would. Would the fiscally conservative athletic department be willing
to take on that additional debt with other projects like the Butts-Mehre expansion
still ahead?
Campus concerns. The state of campus after big games has
drawn the attention of President Adams and other campus leaders. Their suggestions
and proposals for dealing with a trashed campus have only added to the friction
between Adams and the football fan base. Will the University administration
be receptive to adding several thousand more fans onto crowded streets and
a crowded campus?
Stadium bottlenecks. The Gate 6 improvements showed how
much has to be done around the rest of the stadium. Concession and bathroom
lines are long, concourses are narrow and cramped, and it can take a while
to get through the gate if you arrive close to game time. Those are problems
that would have to be addressed before another major expansion.
Tickets can still be had. The record-high cutoffs have
led to a bit of overreaction, and I admit I contribute to that above by implying
that Georgia football is somehow accessible to all but the loyal and the wealthy.
That’s not really the case. Half of Georgia’s home games each year are more
or less throwaways. Tickets for Georgia Southern, Central Michigan, and Vanderbilt
will be easily available on game day and you’re almost certain to pay less
than face value. Tickets for the other home games will be a little more difficult
to come by, but they can still be had even if you have to use a broker like
StubHub.
The same applies to road games. If a $10,000 donation is too rich for your
blood, I would be willing to bet that you could get into every regular season
Georgia football game – home and away – this season for less than $1,000.
If all you want to do is see a few games at Sanford Stadium with your kids,
you can do it and pay less than face value for the tickets if you
aren’t picky about the games.
Demand is cyclical.Paul
is right on. Times are good now, and they’ll be that way for the short
term (wait til you see next year’s home schedule!). But reality is that it
won’t be that way forever. Demand for Georgia football will probably always
be strong, but the peaks will ebb and flow. Planning for stadium capacity
according to those peaks will end up leaving a lot of excess capacity. If
you don’t believe me, look at the stands during the second half of the season
opener.
What do you think? Is expansion inevitable? Is Sanford at ts optimal size?
Are the parking problems and other concerns exaggerated? Is preserving the view
and aesthetics of the stadium overrated? Are there other considerations or benefits
everyone else is overlooking?