Saturday, January 10, 2009
Stafford and Moreno Leave Athens: Georgia Fans Savor Memories, not Trophies
Gators vs. Jackets at Talladega
In the interest of full disclosure (and in case this is your first visit to my space), I am a Southeastern Conference football fan. I live and breathe it, in all of its glory.
Like most college football fans in the southeast, I recognize the conference as the best. Others merely play out their games to see who should lose to the SEC champion.
It's pompous I know, but it's how we roll.
From its grills outside the stadium to its gridiron fanfare, the SEC is simply superior.
I will also be honest that during bowl season, I root for just about any team playing against an SEC team. The exception is
Oh, and I also pull for any SEC team playing Georgia Tech. Uh...unless it’s
If that ever happens I would just succumb to whatever is on Jennifer's to do list. Because that game could only entertain me if it were played on the track of a NASCAR race.
No, maybe you misunderstood. Actually during a race...
Come to think of it, that might be the first time I watch an oval track with cars travelling at such ridiculous speeds that Rosco P. Coltrane's head would spin and his revolver would discharge Plaxstyle...
I digress.
A large number of SEC fans have this feeling of pride in their conference that somehow requires them to root for the teams that their own team competes against every season.
The SEC is best and we need to pull for each other. We need to show the country how our boys play football.
Do we?
Is it really necessary and vital that Coach Spurrier has my support for his chickens to have any shot at beating a Hawkeye?
Bad example. Maybe Darth Visor actually did need my voice.
See, in my mind, pulling for
That and it would likely make my head implode.
Let's face it, a
That's what his cape is for.
Why exactly should I hope that
Hard to say, but I'll take my chances. Go Utes!
So as this year's bowl season began, all of the attention was focused squarely on the Big 12. And it turns out there are actually 12 teams in the conference, unlike the Big Ten that actually has 11.
No wonder their teams can't win at football, they can't count to 11!
Yet again I stray...
Anyway, this attention was newsworthy because the SEC had won the previous two BCS Championships, but had taken some lumps from the media during the regular season. It seems
Altogether now...Awww!
The Big 12 was sexy, high powered, offensive...and full of controversy. While
Practicing. Scheming. Concocting new formations. Having dinner with agents. Come to think of it, maybe Andre Smith knew what was coming in the Sugar Bowl.
And while I was looking at the schedule of bowls and wondering how the SEC would manage just four wins, Rich Brooks had his coaches watching film. Bobby Johnson had his players practicing 45 yard field goal attempts that would erase 53 years of post season misery. Coach Nutt had his Rebels running some sprints.
Coach Fulmer ate another pie.
This all went on behind my back; therefore I picked my beloved conference to finish the post season at .500. And I smiled at the thought that they might do worse.
Now it's no wonder my bowl pool left me at the shallow end before Santa even returned to the North Pole. Not only did Brooks' Wildcats and Johnson's 'Dores win, so did the Rebels and even LSU. WAHOO!
While the national media was setting the stage for a ceremony in which college football's torch would be passed to the sexy new neighbor with the shiny new Heisman and the ever subjective tie-breaker system, the SEC was setting the table.
And cleaning their plates.
Even before
Now, in the words of our favorite Friend Joey Tribbiani, the point is moo.
Three pretty crystal footballs in three years. Six wins and two losses in the bowl season. And not one respectable coach fired in over a month.
The SEC is not back. It never left. The torch it carries is not petering out; it is burning brighter than ever.
Big 12, your case for supremacy has been dismissed. And not by some 1996 OJ Simpson trial judge in LA named Ito. Closer to one like Judge Jackie Glass in
Friday, January 9, 2009
Coaching Changes For Richt's Staff
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Stafford and Moreno Have Returned To Athens...
Monday, January 5, 2009
Garner Stays...exhale.
In an off-season that has many Georgia Bulldog fans blue in the face, the average barker is once again breathing a sigh of relief.
Georgia assistant head coach and defensive line coach Rodney Garner has announced that he will remain on Coach Mark Richt’s staff despite being courted heavily by Tennessee as their new offensive line coach.
“Certainly I'm flattered and am sincerely appreciative of the interest shown by Tennessee," Garner explained. "But in the final analysis the positives at Georgia were the determining factors.”
The positives Garner spoke of were being able to coach the defensive side of the ball, raise a family in the Athens community, and work for a head coach who is potty trained. Garner also took the time to mention that he is eager to work with Georgia’s returning linemen and the 2009 recruiting class.
Garner is the lone holdover from Jim Donnan’s staff and has gained a reputation as a solid recruiter and exemplary line coach. His resume includes four NFL first-round draft picks from his defensive line: Marcus Stroud, Richard Seymour, Charles Grant and Jonathan Sullivan.
That alone is reason for all of the interest in Garner, who has also recently interviewed with Auburn for their head coaching position. But a closer look reveals a deeper reason Tennessee’s new regime came after the Georgia coach.
Garner served at Tennessee before joining Donnan’s Georgia staff in 1998. At the time Fulmer and Tennessee were regularly taking recruits from the state of Georgia, specifically the Atlanta area. However, since Garner left Knoxville the only top recruit the Bulldogs have lost to Tennessee has been Eric Berry of Fairburn, Ga.
The common denominator in the equation is Garner. The coach has not only helped develop NFL-worthy prospects, but has helped build the fence around the state of Georgia. Fulmer and staff no longer had an easy drive down I-75 into Atlanta to evaluate talent and talk to mamas.
Since 1998, Fulmer and Tennessee enjoyed seasons of success, and countless buffets. But not success to the tune of the teams that included Tee Martin and Jamal Lewis. As seasons came and went, the wins became more and more difficult.
Enter Lane Kiffin.
Tennessee’s new head guy is known as a recruiter, but not necessarily in the Southeast. The decision to hire the young Kiffin was not an immediate threat to Georgia, but set in motion a series of other decisions that could have led to a piece being missing in Richt’s staff.
Tennessee also hired the esteemed NFL defensive mind and head coach’s dad, Monte Kiffin, as their new defensive coordinator. The salary agreed upon is a whopping seven figures.
Garner, who very much wants a coordinator and eventually a head position, undoubtedly took notice.
Then late last week, Tennessee also signed Ed Orgeron as their defensive line coach and recruiting coordinator. Many Georgia fans who had already lived through the courtship from Auburn of not just Garner but offensive line coach Stacy Searels, may have felt Richt’s staff was safe from being cherry picked.
But then the University of Tennessee jets started flying across the border. And the occupants of the planes were not in the Peach state just to call upon 18-year-old recruits.
Garner was listening. He was even flying back with them to Knoxville.
Even as the state of Georgia’s top football prospect was announcing on national television that he would play ‘tween the hedges next year, the two schools were vying for Garner’s services. Offers were trumped by counter offers.
In a way, Branden Smith is a prime example of how things have changed in the state of Georgia leading up to National Signing Day. He will graduate from Booker T. Washington High School in Atlanta and had a stellar game in the Under Armour All-American game.
Historically, Georgia has had difficulty recruiting in Atlanta. Champ Bailey, Garrison Hearst and even Herschel Walker all came from rural areas of the state. It seems Georgia coaches had trouble getting into high school coaches’ offices…and bleachers.
In Mark Richt’s press conference after being hired in late December 2000, he quickly mentioned the importance of recruiting within the state. He firmly acknowledged that he felt championships could be won with the talent being developed within the state.
Within two years he had added an SEC trophy to Butts-Mehre’s collection and his staff was turning in travel receipts that were easier on the recruiting budget. Atlanta had opened its doors to the new Georgia regime and players like DJ Shockley, Thomas Brown and Thomas Davis had traveled down highway 316 towards Athens.
Last week, when Orgeron signed as a position coach in Knoxville he inked a deal that will pay him more than most coordinators. This potentially put Georgia in a hardship to keep their man as they could not match figures with Tennessee.
Willie Martinez, Georgia’s defensive coordinator, had drawn the ire of many fans for the defensive performances in its three losses and a couple of its wins. So the timing was not right to give their own defensive coordinator a lucrative raise given the Bulldog Nation’s discontent. And to give Garner a raise over Martinez’s compensation was inconceivable.
It seemed Tennessee was in a position of power.
But Coach Richt had an audience with his assistant coach last and Garner made a decision he felt he could live with. His family has spent 11 years in Athens.
Georgia fans are glad they will spend at least one more.
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Greek Literature, Anthropology....
...or NFL Combines...??
- Ol' Willie, for reasons already stated.
- the Capital One Bowl for the gift bags that included the thunder sticks; somehow Conner and Ainsley's both disappeared before our 8 hour trip home...??
- section 327 for representin' down in Orlando.
- the nine teams in my pool of picks this year who covered for me (Bama - that obviously excludes you). Safe to say I'm not winning the dough this year. It's all yours Brenda.
- An anonymous blogger somewhere out there (I've forgotten where I read it) that submitted this joke for the blogosphere's enjoyment: What's the difference between Alabama football and a dollar bill? You can still get four quarters from a dollar.
- All of the seniors (and any juniors that choose to declare next week) for another 10 win season and four (or so) years of dedication. You're welcome back anytime.
- Coach Mark Richt for 82 wins in eight seasons. ReMARKable. Anyone who doesn't appreciate what you have done for UGA Athletics is either too young to remember the Goff years or too ignorant to complete a coherent thought.
- And lastly, my reader. Go ahead and give your own shout out to your first grade teacher.