Tuesday February 10, 2009
The possibility of opening the season at Oklahoma State on a Thursday night has been kicked around for a while, and Mark Richt even gave the idea his support, noting the advantage it would give the Dawgs in preparing for the SEC opener against South Carolina. Richt doesn’t think it will happen, and I agree for two reasons.
First, OSU already has one Thursday night game on their home schedule. The final home game of the season, against Colorado, has been moved to November 19 and will be broadcast by ESPN. Now, as our Thursday night experts on North Avenue will remind us, multiple Thursday home games aren’t unheard of, but it seems a bit much to expect a school that hasn’t had a Thursday home game since 1995 to suddenly go for not just one but two in the same season.
An even bigger reason is the stadium itself. The Georgia game will be the first in the newly-renovated Boone Pickens Stadium, and the Cowboys will want to show it off. A Thursday night slot is definitely a big stage – especially that first week when everyone is starving for football – but playing at night isn’t necessarily the best time to see the new stadium. I would think that a Saturday afternoon on a major network would be their ideal situation to spotlight a renovated stadium where many of the improvements are to the exterior. It’s nowhere near as thought out as all of this, but 3:30 on ABC makes the most sense from what OSU wants out of the game.
Monday February 9, 2009
First read pwd’s take on why we’d rather certain basketball programs do well down the stretch. That’s exactly right. It’s just like competing for an at-large tournament spot. If you’re a bubble team, you want the favorites to win their conference tournaments. Otherwise they get knocked down to at-large status and take a bid that could have been yours. Similarly we want to avoid as many high-profile coaching vacancies after this season as we can because that’s our competition for available coaches. Who we get depends on who would even consider the Georgia job, and that pool shrinks if there are openings at places like Maryland or Arizona.
Meanwhile it wasn’t the best week for many of the prospective candidates.
Anthony Grant’s VCU team lost a key midweek conference game to UNC-Wilmington. VCU is 10-3 in conference and 17-7 overall.
Sean Miller’s Xavier team rose into the Top 10 but were upset by Duquesne last week.
Lon Kruger’s UNLV team have lost their past two games by a combined four points. They’ve dropped from 5-2 in conference to 5-4.
Even Oliver Purnell, whose Clemson team beat the daylights out of Duke last week, couldn’t avoid the upset bug. Clemson blew a 19-point lead at home and lost to FSU.
But Jeff Capel and Oklahoma are riding an 11-game winning streak and are 23-1 overall. Speaking of Capel, the Oklahoman has a look at what is attractive about the Oklahoma job and what might drive a successful coach away. Naturally it’s written from the Oklahoma perspective, but the things that make Oklahoma a great job could so easily apply to Georgia. Of course Georgia has nowhere near the basketball tradition of Oklahoma as a program; that’s not my point. Just consider these lines:
When you’re in a league like we’re in… It’s not the strongest year for the SEC, but it’s usually at least on par with the Big 12. …when you have the resources like we have… Georgia doesn’t lack for resources, and it’s shown the willingness recently to invest in hoops. …an athletic director and athletic department like we have… Again, Damon Evans is saying all the right things about supporting basketball, and the athletic department is positioned to make the necessary investments.
Lloyd Noble Center isn’t a basketball cathedral and can’t be turned into one in these economic times, but it’s still not a bad place to watch a ball game. And OU’s practice facility is state of the art. Ditto Georgia. Stegeman isn’t the new UVA arena, but the improvements to the seating area have made it a good place to watch a game. And I’d put UGA’s new practice facility up against any in the nation.
Capel sits in fertile recruiting territory. Not many areas produce basketball talent on a year to year basis than Georgia.
Big-time football means big-time money for resources, facilities, even contracts. Yep. We know.
Again, I don’t claim that Georgia is on par with Oklahoma right now. It is still, to some extent, “career roulette.” We have to admit that. We don’t have nearly the tradition of success on which to stand. But I couldn’t help reading those points that were compelling evidence to keep Capel in Norman and realize how, almost point for point, how they apply to Georgia. We’re in a strong league, in fertile recruiting territory, and we have an athletic department squarely in the black that sounds as if it is willing to commit to a successful basketball program. When people talk about lofty expectations for the Georgia program, those are the reasons why we think Georgia could, under the right circumstances, become every bit the program that Oklahoma is. It’s also why we might get a coach like Capel of the #2 team in the nation to at least listen.
Thursday February 5, 2009
Steve Spurrier is in a little bit of a pickle (h/t The Wiz).
Spurrier promised four-star receiver Alshon Jeffery that Jeffrey could wear the #2 jersey if he signed at South Carolina. Of course promising a jersey number is nothing new and pretty insignificant on the hierarchy of promises a coach will make to close the deal.
The sticky wicket here is that #2 is retired in Columbia in honor of Sterling Sharpe. Sharpe claims that he wasn’t approached to sign off on Spurrier’s promise, and he’s not at all thrilled about the idea of seeing another Gamecock wearing #2. Spurrier, meanwhile, is floating the idea that has caught on at other schools of retiring a jersey and not a number. Georgia also no longer retires jerseys, but they also had to deal with a bit of discomfort when superstar prospect Ernie Sims had his eye on #34 a few years ago.
My guess: Jeffrey ends up with another number. After all, once the letter of intent is signed, there’s no going back.
Thursday February 5, 2009
You’ve all probably heard about or even seen the video in which Lane Kiffin takes smug satisfaction in busting Urban Meyer on a minor recruiting violation.
“Just so you know, when a recruit is on another campus, you can’t call him,” Kiffin said. “I love the fact that Urban had to cheat and still didn’t get him.”
The only problem: it wasn’t a violation, and Meyer wasn’t cheating.
Kiffin’s accusation is false, because there is no NCAA rule that prohibits a coach from calling a prospect while he’s visiting another school during a contact period. This past weekend was a contact period.
So not only did Kiffin taunt and poke a stick at the defending SEC and national champ, he showed off his inexperience and lack of knowledge of the recruiting rules in spectacular fashion. Florida AD Jeremy Foley didn’t miss the opportunity to score his own points in defense of his head coach:
There was no rule violation and we have confirmed this with the Southeastern Conference. It is obvious that Coach Kiffin doesn’t know that there is not a rule precluding phone contact with a prospect during an official visit on another campus during a contact period…His comments not only slandered our coach, but he violated SEC rules by publicly criticizing another coach and institution.
This is going to be fun. Tennessee’s not going to fade away as a competitive threat, but we can’t say we weren’t warned about what kind of coach Tennessee would be getting.
Thursday February 5, 2009
It’s bad news if you used to scalp student tickets to get into the game, but otherwise the new online system seems to be a good step forward. The Red & Black agrees.
Instead of waiting in line at Stegeman for hours in the summer heat, “tickets” will be bought online, added to the student’s account, and a scanned student ID at the gate will verify the admission – there will be no paper student tickets. There will also be a pool of unused or returned student tickets if someone can’t use the tickets they purchased.
One development I really like is the official recognition of first-come, first-served seating in designated student seating areas. Of course much of student seating has operated more or less along these lines for years, but doing away with reserved student seating in certain sections will only encourage students to arrive early for the games. (Now if they could only do something about the alums…) If there’s going to be a challenge, it’s going to be enforcing that the first-come, first-served seating only goes to students. I’m surely not the only one who knows fans who have tickets elsewhere in the stadium but head over to the student section as soon as they’re in the gate.
As for the rest of us, don’t forget that the Hartman Fund deadline of February 15th is just ten days away.
Wednesday February 4, 2009
Signing Day has mostly come and gone, though there are still a
few big undecideds out there. Georgia currently
has eighteen signees which is second only to 2005 as the smallest class
in the Richt era. The Bulldogs’ attrition from seniors and NFL-bound underclassmen
was relatively small but still significant. Of course the real value of the
class won’t be known for years, but there are still some initial impressions
about the group as a whole after a long day.
Positives:
- Quality. Even though it’s a relatively small class, Georgia
still has one of the
top 10 recruiting classes in the nation. The late addition of someone
like Orson Charles could boost that ranking even higher.
- Zero defections. All of Georgia’s verbal commitments ended
up signing with the Dawgs.
- Needs met. It was hairy for a while, but the signing of
Marlon Brown gave Georgia two receivers and filled one of Georgia’s bigger
needs. The all-important quarterback position is solid, there were some nice
additions to the defensive backfield, and the interior offensive line is stout.
- Impact players. Though the Dawgs are no longer in the spot
of needing immediate help along the lines, there will be opportunities for
newcomers to make an immediate impact. Receiver and defensive back are two
of those positions, and Marlon Brown and Branden Smith fit the bill perfectly.
Negatives:
- Needs not met. Though overall Georgia got a lot of help
where they needed it, there were a couple of holes. Montez Robinson was a
big pickup at defensive end, but he was the only end signed after Toby Jackson
failed to qualify out of prep school. Austin Long was the only offensive tackle
signed, and if you doubt that’s a position of need, look at the juggling that
occurred once Sturdivant went down last year.
- Academics. Georgia already lost one high-profile commitment
(Jackson) due to academic issues, and an already small class could be further
reduced later in the summer as high school grades are finalized.
- Closing the borders. Six of the top ten and 13 of the top
20 prospects in the state left Georgia. The good news is that the seven
who did remain in state all chose Georgia. If it helps, the Dawgs did sign
the top
two prospects in Tennessee – a nice welcome for Lane Kiffin as he begins
to target the state of Georgia.
- Tilted to the offense. Branden Smith excepted, it seems
as if more of the marquee players in the class were on the offensive side
of the ball. Though there will almost surely be big contributors down the
road among the defensive signees, a defense that needs to take a big step
forward in 2009 will have to rely mainly upon returning players for that improvement.
On the bright side, there is some impressive firepower being stockpiled by
the Georgia offense.
Tuesday February 3, 2009
For the first time in several years, Georgia will have as many as five or six prospects undecided entering National Signing Day on Wednesday. Any of them would be a tremendous addition to a strong class, and any combination of them would make for big news.
Georgiadogs.com will have the official list of signees, and G-Xtra will have live broadcasts throughout the day.
You can also follow our Twitter feed for quick bursts of news through the day as it comes from Athens, the message boards, and the official site.
Tuesday February 3, 2009
It’s been an eventful few days around the Georgia basketball coaching search.
Just to recap:
- Furman Bisher, who hasn’t covered Georgia basketball since it was played
at Woodruff Hall, started
the Knight-to-Georgia talk on Saturday.
- Georgia players expressed
interest in the idea of playing for Knight. Corey Butler demonstrated
why players usually aren’t in the best position to make these kinds of decisions.
"To be honest, I don’t know that much about college basketball,"
he said. "I just play it."
- The governor of Georgia, a former UGA football player who probably couldn’t
find Stegeman Coliseum if you dropped him off at the Georgia Center, is reported
to be a possible broker of a deal if Knight decides to persue the job.
- Dick Vitale joined
the campaign. Just take it easy on all of the "General" references
though…we’re a little nervous in these parts about generals
born in Ohio.
- Through everything, both Knight and UGA maintain that there
has been no contact.
Say what you want about the opinions of everyone from Furman Bisher to Dick
Vitale, but the one thing they have in common is that the best interests of
the Georgia basketball program are secondary at best to them. Knight’s friends
in coaching and in the media will support him in anything he wants to do. Local
media have to be drooling over the thought of the Knight circus coming to town.
Knight is certainly an accomplished and respected coach, but Damon Evans and
those making this decision cannot allow themselves to be the rubes who allow
this torrent of outside interests to shove someone into the job who might not
be the best fit for the long-term success of the program.
Look, I’m not saying that Knight is a bad coach. How can anyone say that? The
question isn’t whether Knight can improve Georgia basketball. First, it can’t
get much worse. Second, it’s not a Knight-or-nothing discussion. Knight can
and likely would improve the program. So can some of the other candidates mentioned.
Given the downward
trend during Knight’s last few years in Lubbock, the abrupt way in which
he left the program, and the current struggling state of that program, it’s
valid to ask whether someone else might be just as able to turn the program
into a winner while doing a better job of positioning the program five years
from now.
But at least he’d be entertaining.
If I’ve heard one line more than any other this week, it’s that one. Knight
would be exciting! He would fill the stands if only because people want to see
the inevitable explosion. He’d put Georgia on the map. You know what else would
do all of that? Winning.
We’ve seen that even a moderately successful program will pack Stegeman
Coliseum. The interest in and demand for Georgia basketball in 2002
and 2003 was sky-high. Every single SEC game was sold out. That was a team that
barely cracked the Top 25. Harrick’s bittersweet final home game against Florida
in 2003 was basketball at its best, and the Coliseum was second to none that
night for a big-time college hoops atmosphere.
Fans weren’t scalping tickets during those years to see the antics of the coach
on the sideline. They weren’t there to see tantrums and gimmicks. Though there
was a strong personality coaching the team, fans packed the house to see a winning
team, quality basketball, and a group of guys playing their tails off. Right
up until the end the interest that was building in Georgia basketball was happening
for all the right reasons.
So what now?
Georgia is not going to hire anyone now and not without talking to several
candidates. (They’re not, right? Right!?) It’s going to be at least six weeks
before those candidates begin to become available. Between now and then the
attention around Knight will die down and shift. Hey, look, now
he’s interested in the Alabama job.
This week’s news hasn’t been without its benefits. It can’t hurt to have the
Georgia job as a story on most national sports shows over the past few days.
Instead of some bogus test making the Georgia program a national joke, we’re
hearing now how great an opportunity it is. And it is. At the same time, the
frenzy that would otherwise be around the usual list of hot candidates is squarely
on Knight. That’s a good thing – Georgia can go about its search, and those
men can continue coaching their teams with much less distraction.
Monday February 2, 2009
The Alabama basketball team pulled out all the stops for its Saturday night showdown with a Georgia team that was 0-5 in the SEC.
Turns out that on Friday night, a day before the Alabama basketball team played Georgia, Saban sat them down and gave them some sort of a fiery pep talk. Who said the man couldn’t whip any team into a frenzy? And it worked.
Yep. It worked all right. A 75-70 win over a team that had just lost by 26 at Florida and fired its coach. Way to go, Lombardi.
Sunday February 1, 2009
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Trippi (L), “Red” Grange, and Charlie “Choo Choo” Justice (from LIFE magazine) |
A familiar name is all over the news this week. One of the big storylines in this year’s Super Bowl is the return of the Cardinals franchise to the league championship for the first time since 1947. The star of that 1947 Chicago Cardinals squad was of course Georgia’s own Charley Trippi.
This sentence says a lot about what kind of player Trippi was. Remember that during this 1947 season the future Hall-of-Famer was a rookie.
Never was Trippi more magnificent than in the 1947 NFL Championship Game when the Cardinals defeated the Philadelphia Eagles, 28-21. Playing on an icy field in Chicago, Charley wore basketball shoes for better traction and totaled 206 yards, including 102 yards on two punt returns. He scored touchdowns on a 44-yard run and a 75-yard punt return.
Have you ever seen Trippi in action? Bear Bryant called him the greatest college football player he’d seen. The UGA Libraries Walter J. Brown Media Archives & Peabody Awards Collection has a pair of videos from the Trippi-era Bulldogs of the 1940s.
The best is from the 1947 Sugar Bowl, a 20-10 win over North Carolina and Trippi’s last game as a Bulldog. Trippi played the entire 60 minutes of the game on both offense and defense. Though John Rauch was the quarterback (and a damn good one), Trippi threw the 67-yard touchdown pass that put Georgia up for good. In fact, in the first five plays of the game, Trippi runs the ball, passes the ball, punts, and makes a tackle.
The second Trippi-related video is a silent movie from the 1943 Rose Bowl. Trippi and Frank Sinkwich led Georgia to a 9-0 win over UCLA.
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