Tuesday July 1, 2008
I’ll let the story speak for itself…
Georgia football player Michael Lemon is a suspect in an alcohol-related battery incident Saturday night that sent a University student to the hospital with a severe eye injury, according to an Athens-Clarke County police report.
Read the whole thing. It’s not a favorable account.
It gets better…Trinton Sturdivant and Justin Anderson were apparently booked on “simple battery” charges. (hat tip to Steve Patterson of UGASports.com) It’s unknown at this time whether those arrests were related to Lemon’s incident. Way too early to make heads or tails of this story yet, but for those of you keeping score at home that’s over half of Georgia’s projected starting offensive line (when you include Boling) that has been arrested over the offseason.
UPDATE: It seems as if the incidents are not related. More information on the Sturdivant / Anderson incident is available from ESPN. Still doesn’t look good for Lemon, but I wouldn’t be surprised if charges are ultimately dropped against the two offensive linemen.
Monday June 30, 2008
A big hint that you’re not that far up on the ol’ recruiting board: all of the coaches – even your position coach – are on vacation during your recruiting visit.
Justin Jones will commit to Kentucky following a disappointing recruiting visit to South Carolina. “Justin went to South Carolina on Wednesday and everybody was gone,” Heritage coach Chad Frazier said. “They had a [graduate assistant] showing him around campus. That’s what sealed it for him.”
Saturday June 28, 2008
According to the Savannah Morning News and Josh Kendall, Georgia’s mascot Uga VI died last night. He would have turned 10 in June, and that’s pushing the life expectancy for a bulldog. There was some speculation last summer about his retirement, but Uga VI remained in place for the entire 2007 and went out a winner. He presided over 114 Georgia football games and 87 wins – records for both wins and longevity for a Georgia mascot.
Georgia under Uga VI
- 87-27 (76.3%) career record
- Made a bowl in each of his nine seasons, winning seven
- Three sUGAr Bowl appearances, winning two
- Two SEC titles
- Three SEC East titles
- Five AP Top 10 finishes
Friday June 27, 2008
Dennis Felton will now be replacing both of his starting backcourt players after Billy Humphrey was dismissed from the team on Friday.
Humphrey’s dismissal stems from a Tuesday night arrest for DUI on top of two previous incidents. Coach Felton said,
“I am disappointed in Billy,” Felton said. “We’ve worked really hard with him in the past to see that he succeeds, but I feel that it’s now best for our program to move forward without him.”
Initial reports stated that Humphrey blew a .02 (still trouble for an underage drinker), but additional details from the ABH correct that error and paint a much more serious picture:
When Humphrey was stopped on Georgia Highway 316 early Tuesday morning, his blood-alcohol content tested at .082 on the road and .129 later at the county jail, where he was booked on DUI and other charges, according to the officer’s report. The Banner-Herald previously reported in error that Humphrey blew .02.
Police found a half-full bottle of Bacardi rum on his back seat, and jailers tested Humphrey’s blood alcohol level at more than one and a half times the legal limit.
With that new information and with his earlier (though minor) incidents in mind, Felton really had no choice here.
Jeremy Price and Terrence Woodbury are now the only returning starters. Coach Felton got a new lease on life with the SEC Tournament title, but he’ll have to identify a new shooting guard to avoid slipping backwards. Obviously this is bad news for the program and Felton (not to mention Humphrey).
Thursday June 26, 2008
Earlier this morning, Steve Detwiler’s thumb was removed by surgeons in Omaha
and replaced with a prosthetic. The thumb is currently en route to Lubbock,
Texas where it will be featured next to the monument already in place at the College
Baseball Hall of Fame.
We’ve seen individuals break Georgia’s heart before. Dan Marino. Mark Prior.
Ronnie Daniels is still running. And of course there’s John
Wallace.
But few have had such a dominant individual performance against a Georgia team
with so much on the line as Fresno State’s right fielder Steve Detwiler. Fresno
posted six runs against Georgia, and every single one of them was knocked in
by Detwiler. His performance was so incredible and so unlikely that it overshadows
a clutch pitching job by Justin Wilson. Under any other circumstances, the ability
of Wilson to come off of three days’ rest and contain a Georgia offense that
had scored 17 runs in two previous games would have been the story of the night.
Congratulations
to Fresno State. A team that beat Long Beach, San Diego, Arizona State,
Rice, North Carolina, and Georgia to get to this point is as legitimate as a
champion gets.
There’s no use breaking down the game. The season is over, and the second-best
season in Georgia baseball history deserves the focus now. This team rebounded
from a rough early stretch to win the SEC, end Georgia Tech’s season, take the
season series over Tech yet again, and roll to the program’s best postseason
finish since 1990. There was individual excellence and key role players. There
were dominant performances and clutch comebacks.
If history is any indication, the good news was that this title run probably
won’t be a one-shot deal. Georgia baseball is competitive nationally and has
been that way for most of this decade. The personnel losses will be significant
just as they have been after each of Georgia’s three previous trips to Omaha
since 2001. Recruiting is strong, and coaching is solid, so the safe bet is
for Georgia to be back in this position sooner than later.
The immediate challenge for Coach Perno is to smooth out the valleys. A return
trip to the NCAA Tournament, even as a lower at-large seed, is what we’re talking
about here. With guys like Poythress, Cerione, Allen, McRee, and Weaver due
to come back, a strong an experienced core is there. Georgia must replace not
only gloves and bats but leaders also, and finding the guys who will challenge
their teammates to demand better of themselves as Ryan Peisel did earlier this
season will be as important as finding a new leadoff man or closer.
If there’s any kind of silver lining in the constant attention to the "Cinderella"
storyline this week, it’s this realization: Georgia teams are expected
to play for titles. Georgia being in Omaha is dog-bites-man. Situations where
we are the great underdog story are rare (see: men’s basketball), but that’s
what happens when you have one of the nation’s strongest athletic programs.
After Hawaii and Fresno you might be getting a bit tired of being the foil to
the media darling, but remember that the story of the underdog is great because
it is the exception. This loss stings, but Georgia teams will be back competing
for titles in just a few months.
Wednesday June 25, 2008
Senior guard Billy Humphrey was arrested in Gwinnett County and was charged with, among other things, DUI because he is underage and a breathalyzer showed a trace amount of alcohol (0.02).
Note that this is Humphrey’s second alcohol-related incident within the past year. He avoided suspension after that incident and an earlier weapons charge, but the University’s alcohol policy will now come down hard on Humphrey.
It’s very likely that Humphrey will miss fall semester, and who knows what that would do to his status with the Georgia basketball program. With the status of the starting shooting guard now up in the air, Dennis Felton’s chances of building on the SEC Tournament championship have been dealt a significant blow.
Wednesday June 25, 2008
What can you say about a 19-10 loss? Georgia had the momentum, the pitching matchup they wanted, and even a 5-0 lead, and it vanished in an inning. Within the span of three innings, Fresno State scored 15 runs and made Georgia fans put away the champagne and start biting fingernails.
Georgia’s been in this position before during this tournament. They won the first game of the Super Regional, but N.C. State struck back against Georgia pitching to take Game 2 going away. Georgia bounced right back in Sunday’s game with a 9-run first inning. They’ll need that kind of resiliency against a Fresno State team that has proved to be no fluke and every bit the team that sent some very good clubs packing earlier in the tournament.
Simply put, the championship comes down to Georgia’s pitching. Georgia has plated 17 runs in two games against Fresno. Though Fresno will be able to start a regular starter in tonight’s game, so will Georgia. The Dawgs have hit Fresno’s better pitchers during this round, and there’s no reason to doubt their ability to score a fair amount of runs.
The question then lies with some experienced Georgia pitchers. Moreau. Weaver. McRee. Fields. Georgia doesn’t exactly have to piece together a staff tonight if the guys they send out there can give a decent performance.
You’ll hear all day that Fresno has taken momentum, and the Cinderella talk will be in overdrive (do we need to come up with a drinking game for this?). Forget that. Georgia is throwing Moreau, an experienced Sunday starter. The same toughness that has been with this team from Arkansas through the regional and Super Regional and in three comeback wins already in Omaha is still there. Georgia has come too far to let one setback sink them, and I think we’ll see a fired up and focused Georgia team ready to bring a title home.
Tuesday June 24, 2008
You’ll notice that the live blog stops abuptly during the 4th inning. I was
reminded that the championship is no time to start screwing around with the
routine that had taken us this far.
So, anyway, what a game. What a comeback. It’s what we’re used to from this
team – Georgia had to come from behind against Miami and Stanford – but it’s
still amazing every time they get back off the mat. In Monday’s game, they broke
through against the best pitcher they had seen all evening after struggling
to scratch out runs against guys with ERAs north of 6.75.
Two plays before the pivotal bottom of the 8th stand out as game-changers:
- Lyle Allen’s catch. Otis Nixon was reached for comment and said, "daaaaaaamn."
Between that catch and the one at Turner Field, Allen has stepped nicely into
the "did you SEE that catch?!" void left by Joey Side. Allen’s leaping
catch in the 4th saved a run, and we know how important a single run proved
to be.
- Steve Susdorf getting doubled off of second. Susdorf doubled in Fresno’s
first run of the 8th, but he was caught leaning towards third on a line drive
hit to Gordon Beckham. Beckham won the race to the bag. It looked as if Susdorf
was bailed out after Fresno tacked on two more runs, but that out had two
big implications. First, the subsequent home run plated only one run instead
of two. Second, the out and the batter order meant that Susdorf – with a double
and triple to his credit already – was left in the on-deck circle in the 9th.
The little things got Georgia in trouble. Leadoff walks. Big hits by the bottom
of Fresno’s order. Even Georgia’s offense was so close. The Dawgs hit the ball
hard, but great Fresno defense kept them in the game. Those hits fell in the
8th. Olson’s bloop started it, Cerione found the right side of the foul line,
and Lewis played pinball with second base to drive in the winning run.
Fresno lost a heartbreaker, but you can’t expect them to fold. They lost a
game this way to UNC on Saturday and bounced back nicely. Still, the stress
of another elimination game coupled with their depleted pitching staff has to
weigh on them. For Georgia the win couldn’t have been better. It gave them a
huge shot in the arm, but the game served notice that they can’t relax and take
anything as a given against a quality opponent. Postgame comments seemed to
show that Georgia was well aware that nothing was settled yet.
The first few innings could be huge tonight. If Georgia can keep the fire going
and score some runs against some tired pitching, they’ll be set up very nicely
with Montgomery on the mound. On the other hand, a close game will only serve
to restore Fresno’s confidence.
Monday June 23, 2008
The college road trip is a right of passage, and some writers for the Red and Black have taken to the highways to watch the Diamond Dawgs in Omaha.
Highlights:
11:23- Tyler: Is it blog worthy if I run down this Tennessee fan in front of us ?Me: sure it is, I was thinking the same thing. Although, weren’t you a Tennessee fan growing up? Tyler (regretfully): Yes
Side note- Tyler LOVES pretzel sticks, they are apparently really good with beer. Since I’m not 21 and have never drank underage, I wouldn’t know.
12:21: Tyler once again points out the mind-blowing realization that we are driving to Nebraska. Damn, 1,043 miles is a long way. My over/under for someone saying that we are driving to Nebraska is five, and we already at two.
4:39: Mile 434.2. Insanity may finally be broached, as we all join in a terrifically harmonized and falsettoed rendition of “I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke†(you know, that commercial from the 70s). And then we, of course, each enjoy a Coke. And keep it company. In perfect harmony.
6:41: Chumbawumba’s “Tubthumping†raises morale.
Highly recommended. I hope they keep it up and make it to Omaha.
I’m going to try liveblogging tonight’s game. Someone has to keep track of the number of times they show Lauren Massinari or tell us that Fresno State was a #4 seed in their regional. I doubt they mention that Fresno was a preseason top 20 team.
Monday June 23, 2008
Title
IX is 36 years old today. For some football fans, it’s the law that is the
root of all that’s wrong with the world. But without it, the Georgia campus
probably never would have been graced with Teresa Edwards, the Gym Dogs, Kristy
Kowal, or any of the other outstanding female student-athletes we’ve known.
The law itself is pretty simple:
No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from
participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination
under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.
The current landscape of intercollegiate athletics is, for better or worse,
built on the sturdy shoulders of that law. Various judicial and executive interpretations
have combined to give us the current guidelines, and it’s still very much a
politically active topic. Teams and scholarships have had to be added, removed,
and balanced in this modern nod to the Missouri Compromise. Though the opportunites
opened for women have been tremendous, Title IX hasn’t come without its costs
or friction.
It’s interesting to
read that "NCAA President Myles Brand (suggested) that unisex teams
could be the wave of the future for intercollegiate athletics." You’re
starting to see more and more of this measuring against the men, and we’re not
just talking about Michelle Wie. The WNBA’s Atlanta Dream is running an ad in
which a young girl in a playground game shows she belongs by throwing an elbow
at a male opponent. But when
it’s still big news that a 6’4" woman can dunk a basketball, the idea
of unisex teams still seems a little ridiculous, doesn’t it?
Monday June 23, 2008
Yes, it is Dawg vs. Dog. The College World Series has gone to the dogs.
With that out of the way, we now know that it’s Georgia vs. Fresno State for all the marbles at the College World Series. Fresno State has definitely had a tremendous run, and the fact that they were a #4 seed in the regional makes the “underdog” label applicable.
You’ll hear no end to the George Mason comparisons, but that’s hardly fair to a Fresno State squad very familiar with postseason play. The Bulldogs have won three straight WAC titles and are in their third straight NCAA Tournament (a claim even Georgia cannot make).
Let’s get it out of the way: Georgia looks to have everything on their side. They’ve had the better season against stronger competition. They are hitting well against good pitching. Their rotation is set up perfectly for the best-of-three series after copious amounts of rest over the past week. Our own Bulldogs are a great story in their own right. They have come off a losing season to play for the national title. For some, it’s a chance at redemption for a missed opportunity in 2006.
But Fresno has beaten some pretty big odds just to get to this point, and they probably won’t blink twice at Georgia’s advantages. Fresno State has solid, fundamental defense, timely hitting, and they have had some great pitching in Omaha, though it’s yet to be seen how much is left as they play their third game in as many days on Monday.
So, yes, the Bulldogs will win the national title. Will it be Fresno’s first or Georgia’s second national title? Monday’s first game will be critical, and Georgia has to feel pretty good handing the ball to Trevor Holder.
Here is the finals schedule:
Monday, June 23
Game 1 — Fresno State (45-30) vs. No. 8 Georgia (44-23-1), 7 p.m., (ESPN2/ESPN360)
Tuesday, June 24
Game 2 — No. 8 Georgia (44-23-1) vs. Fresno State (45-30), 7 p.m., (ESPN/ESPN360)
Wednesday, June 25
Game 3 — No. 8 Georgia (44-23-1) vs. Fresno State (45-30) (if nec.), 7 p.m., (ESPN/ESPN360)
Thursday June 19, 2008
Rain hit the Omaha area Thursday night, forcing the postponement of the loser’s bracket game between LSU and North Carolina. The UNC-LSU game will resume at 7:00 p.m. ET on Friday.
The shuffled schedule means that Stanford and Georgia will not play until Saturday at 2 p.m. ET (ESPN2) If Stanford beats Georgia on Saturday, the two teams would play again on Sunday.
Basically, everything is pushed back a day.
Why is this less-than-good news? Two reasons. First, it gives Stanford another day to rest. The historical disadvantage of the loser’s bracket was quick turnaround. Now any pitcher Stanford used on Monday against Georgia should be just fine for Saturday’s game, and it’s not out of the realm of possibilities that Stanford could call on a pitcher used Wednesday.
Second is looking ahead a bit to the potential championship round. If Georgia must play on Sunday, they are looking at no fewer than four straight days of action should they prevail over Stanford. Saturday’s game now becomes extremely significant. Win on Saturday and Georgia can rest on Sunday while their championship opponent might have to play on Sunday. Lose on Saturday and brace yourselves for some pretty interesting personnel decisions. Getting through Stanford is of course the priority, but you also don’t want to arrive at Monday’s championship game with nothing in the tank.
Thursday June 19, 2008
It’s looking a bit like 1990 – Georgia and Stanford will meet with a trip to the College World Series championship round at stake. The Cardinal looked really, really tough dispatching #1 and top-seeded Miami 8-3 last night. Dominant Stanford pitching got out of early trouble and kept the potent Miami offense at bay until the Stanford offense with eight runs from the third through sixth innings.
Monday night showed us how hard the Dawgs will have to work to advance, but they do have the advantage of needing just one win while the Cardinal would have to beat the Bulldogs twice. It took that extra rubber match for the Dawgs to advance in 1990, but hopefully they can take care of things on Friday and rest up for Monday’s championship opener. The challenge will be on Georgia’s bats to create some runs against Stanford’s formidable pitching and defense.
Trevor Holder, who started Saturday’s first game against Miami, will get the nod again on Friday.
Georgia vs. Stanford: Friday, 2 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Wednesday June 18, 2008
An updated summer depth chart is out, and there are definitely some things worth noting.
Just be careful of reading too much into those “official” heights and weights…
“I don’t think it’s a big deal,” (Beasley) said of being measured at 6 feet 7 inches, three inches shorter than his listed height at Kansas State. “Other than it’s a little disappointing to me that I found out I’m actually a midget.”
Wednesday June 18, 2008
That’s the case so far in Omaha. #1 seed Miami and #2 seed North Carolina will have to work back through the loser’s brackets while the Georgia Bulldogs and Fresno State Bulldogs enjoy a 2-0 advantage in their respective groups.
Tuesday’s action in the College World Series had no impact on Georgia’s half of the bracket, but LSU continued this year’s theme of ninth-inning drama with a comeback win over Rice. Fresno then continued their improbable postseason run by handing UNC their first loss of the entire NCAA Tournament.
Things get going in Georgia’s bracket this evening as Miami and Stanford meet with elimination on the line. The winner gets another shot at Georgia on Friday afternoon. We know from experience that both Miami and Stanford are quality opponents, but I think most Georgia fans would rather face Stanford again rather than the #1 team and their offense. Whatever happens tonight, I hope it lasts about 23 innings with each team running out of pitchers.
While you’re waiting for Friday, head over to the Georgia Sports Blog for an interview with 1990 hero Mike Rebhan (part one | part two). I mentioned Rebhan the other day while looking back at Stanford’s role in Georgia’s 1990 national title, and pwd got some great insight out of the Cardinal conqueror.
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