High Four Kerri! GATA.
Saturday, May 5, 2012
Jorts and Helmets, meet in a 2012 schedule
Even though she's carrying a future middle linebacker in her belly, Kerri ain't complaining. Instead she took it upon herself to create a jorted version of the 2012 SEC Helmet Schedule. Sure, there's others out there. But she found them unsatisfactory.
High Four Kerri! GATA.
High Four Kerri! GATA.
Coach Mark Richt in cell phone purgatory, vol II
This time he didn't pocket text by accident. But he lost telephone privileges for two weeks for mentioning Josh Harvey-Clemons as a signee before the recruit actually signed.
Mark Richt's premature commenting on Josh Harvey-Clemons on signing day cost the Georgia head coach two weeks of telephone priviledges.Meanwhile I mentioned JHC WAY early, yet received no punishment. Life of a blogger. And I hate talking on the phone.
Back on Feb. 1, Harvey-Clemons announcement his commitment to Georgia. It was the day's major signing for Georgia - except Harvey-Clemons didn't sign until the next day, as his grandfather wavered on signing the letter-of-intent. In the meantime, however, Richt had talked about the defensive standout from Valdosta during an interview on ESPNU.
Georgia reported the secondary violation the next day. The SEC returned its verdict on April 23, according to documents provided by UGA: Richt was prohibited from "placing recruiting telephone calls for a period of two weeks." The violation was also termed a Level II violation, the lesser of the secondary violations.
That is the only secondary violation the football program has reported since February. The men's tennis and volleyball programs have each reported two.
Read more here: http://www.macon.com/2012/05/04/2014564/harvey-clemons-talk-sends-richt.html#storylink=cpy
Diamond Dawgs mow down Barners
Behind a stellar pitching performance behind Alex Wood, the Dawgs get some good at bats late to edge Auburn 5-2 in the first game of the weekend series.
Friday, May 4, 2012
Flashback Friday: Dominique Wilkins
The early to mid 1990's will always be my favorite era for men's hoops. (Neville Austin from the charity stripe anyone?) Carlos Strong and Terrell Bell were Jaguars that stayed home to play for Durham. I happen to be a product of Cedar Shoals HS. The fact that I couldn't dribble a basketball somehow kept me off the gym floor....*sigh*...
Back on point, Shandon Anderson was probably my favorite player to watch. But Dominique Wilkins is considered the best to ever play ball in Stegeman. And yet it was the year after he left that we made the Final Four for what has proven to be the only time in Men's Basketball history.
The pic below is from a Sports Illustrated in the early 1980's obviously. Thanks to Dawg19 for sharing. I was a little too young to remember much from #21 in a Georgia uniform, but remember plenty of The Human Highlight Film in The Omni after he left Athens. Is Dominique the best ever? He's the record holder for points in a season, but Litterial Green has the career point record. Aside from the best ever discourse...who's the Hoop Dawg you think of most?
Back on point, Shandon Anderson was probably my favorite player to watch. But Dominique Wilkins is considered the best to ever play ball in Stegeman. And yet it was the year after he left that we made the Final Four for what has proven to be the only time in Men's Basketball history.
The pic below is from a Sports Illustrated in the early 1980's obviously. Thanks to Dawg19 for sharing. I was a little too young to remember much from #21 in a Georgia uniform, but remember plenty of The Human Highlight Film in The Omni after he left Athens. Is Dominique the best ever? He's the record holder for points in a season, but Litterial Green has the career point record. Aside from the best ever discourse...who's the Hoop Dawg you think of most?
Thursday, May 3, 2012
DING DONG! The bastard is finally...
...taking his yankee carpet baggin' ass out of Athens.
Michael Adams is a polarizing figure. Some see his long tenure and applaud the growth, development and academic achievements. But while Adams enjoyed taking credit for those I prefer to see things realistically. The University of Georgia has long needed new leadership from the top. Now the Board of Regents will have several months to find it.
The campus and university as a whole has enjoyed tremendous growth since Adams took office in 1997. He deserves credit there. Maybe not as much as he demands, but for the most part he helped raise a lot of money and stood out of the way of UGA's brick and mortar expansion.
Athletics has been more of a mixed bag. Sure, the UGAA has enjoyed profits and success during Adams' time on campus. But there's just as much of an argument that he stood in the way of greater success as one that he was responsible for what Georgia has enjoyed.
Overall, if you ask me how I'll look back on Adams' time as President of the University of Georgia I would say it was a good time to be a student and part of the alumni. I'll always wonder if it could've been greater. I don't care for hishands-on style meddling ways when it comes to athletics. I hope the successor gets along better with the faculty and stays away from Butts-Mehre as much as possible.
But that's just me. I eat grits and don't wear jeans to the Intramural Fields.
Michael Adams is a polarizing figure. Some see his long tenure and applaud the growth, development and academic achievements. But while Adams enjoyed taking credit for those I prefer to see things realistically. The University of Georgia has long needed new leadership from the top. Now the Board of Regents will have several months to find it.
The campus and university as a whole has enjoyed tremendous growth since Adams took office in 1997. He deserves credit there. Maybe not as much as he demands, but for the most part he helped raise a lot of money and stood out of the way of UGA's brick and mortar expansion.
Athletics has been more of a mixed bag. Sure, the UGAA has enjoyed profits and success during Adams' time on campus. But there's just as much of an argument that he stood in the way of greater success as one that he was responsible for what Georgia has enjoyed.
Overall, if you ask me how I'll look back on Adams' time as President of the University of Georgia I would say it was a good time to be a student and part of the alumni. I'll always wonder if it could've been greater. I don't care for his
But that's just me. I eat grits and don't wear jeans to the Intramural Fields.
Dawg Tags:
idiots not named Terence,
neither red nor black,
Prez Adams
"An almost boring" game "explodes in the waning seconds"
A couple weeks ago we looked at the night Herschel's jersey was retired. It was Labor Day 1985 and Bama was in town for a night game. Well now, carlmilton has uploaded the final minute of that game. It was more than a little nuts, with a blocked punt, an excessive celebration and then a drive by future Bama head man Mike Shula.
And now, here's the dulcet tones of Keith Jackson...circa the Reagan era...
And now, here's the dulcet tones of Keith Jackson...circa the Reagan era...
Shula was 5 of 8 for 67 yards before that last drive. Nice of Bill Lewis to give us a preview of WilMart's pass defense so early and before it's time.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Adams almost done bagging carpet in Athens
It's not effective until June 2013, but Prez Adams in retiring from his post at UGA. The Chapel Bell should be ringing all night. I just cracked open a celebratory beer. Join me.
More tomorrow.
More tomorrow.
Dawg Tags:
idiots not named Terence,
neither red nor black,
Prez Adams
Coach Magill reflects, and predicts on Men's Tennis
Grabbed this from Coach Diaz's channel, one of my favorite YouTube ones to follow because it has classic gold like this:
The NCAA Tourney starts Thursday May 17th in Athens. Fulls session tickets went on sale yesterday. Single session tickets go on sale May 14th. Georgia is a #2 seed and will take on South Carolina State first in a bracket that includes FSU and Boise State.
Here's a link to the complete bracket. Hope to see you out there.
Here's a link to the complete bracket. Hope to see you out there.
Humpday Hilarity - never too young to jive
I can dance like this too. But it takes a table that is adjacent to an open bar.
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
GATArchives: the Railroad Track Crowd eviction
They were not players. They never scored a single touchdown. In fact, they never really bothered to sober up for kickoff. They probably even approached their studies in much the same manner. Yet they are The Railroad Track Crowd. They earned Erk Russell's respect and their stories are those of legend. Therefore, they are to be honored with an archive here.
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| Source: AJC Date: Sun 11/30/1980 Photo credit: Steve Deal |
First, I was neither of age to celebrate amongst the Track People, nor was I conceived among them. That puts me about knee high to Amp Arnold around the time of their hey day. On Sunday mornings I recall riding along East Campus Rd on the way to church. After a home game the rocky embankment that led up to the railroad track was completely littered with bottles, tailgating remnants and the occasional underclassman.
If you wanted to party with these guys you had to be ready Friday afternoon and your insurance had to cover the occasional tumble down the rocky slope to the street's pavement below. Saturday November 29th, 1980 was the last home game before Sanford was enlarged and enclosed on the east end (in the picture you can see the beginnings of the construction). About 4000 fans took to The Tracks for one last view of a football game from the perch they had come to know and love. No doubt feeding off of that energy, the Bulldogs used two 4th quarter touchdowns to beat visiting Tech 38-20 that day. It finished an undefeated regular season and put Dooley's team in the Sugar Bowl on New Year's Day against Notre Dame.
The fact that the last team they saw became Georgia's best team ever was no coincidence. You see, Erk Russell had written that it was to be so. On July 7th, 1980 the Georgia defensive coordinator wrote a heartfelt letter referencing the "Railroad Track Crowd" addressed to his "Gentlemen: (and Linemen)". He openly challenged his Dawgs to not only be the last team they saw from the tracks, but also the best.
And it was so.
But in the years leading up to that time just before and during the magical 1980 season, the citizens of the tracks had already begun to wear out their welcome. In the article that accompanies the picture, Alan Truex explains that a student suffered a spinal injury due at least in part to a fight on the tracks in 1979. If you speak to those around campus at the time this was fairly frequent behavior, along with thrown bottles and confrontations with local police. And all that was before even the first trashbags were used to clean up the free seats.
As with the more recent case on North Campus, the UGA tailgating scene knows that it takes just a few bad apples to kill the buzz. It's hard to imagine the decision to enclose the east end being about anything more than money, but doing away with the free seats was surely a welcome byproduct of the stadium's growth.
Still, the Railroad Track Crowd is largely and affectionately remembered as they should be: die hard fans that cherished their spot, greeted the team before and after each home game, and generally bled red and black. But don't take my word for it, here's Scott Woerner:
"It's gonna be sad not having those people there. I can tell how much the team is gonna miss these people. When you drive up and see all the people, and know that some of 'em stayed out all night long up there, you get chills and a warm feeling."Yes. It might be hard for today's fan - and player for that matter - to understand. But back in the 1970's the Track People were as big a part of the Georgia football gameday tradition as Munson, the cheerleaders and even Uga. They won the hearts of the players. And they gave each game their all.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Some bonus readings:
- I certainly don't believe in the curse (it's Bleacher Report after all), but the "legend" of Rusty McKay provides a decent picture of who many of these fans were.
- Rex talked about what it was like to be a player during the tradition of getting off the bus to the Tracks. The comments provide some great memories as well. I especially chuckled at the reference to the "hippie lettuce".
- Same is true for Garbin, "as long as there was whiskey to drink and Larry Munson on his radio."
- And make sure and visit the official website where you can read Erk's letter in its entirety as well as grab a commemorative t-shirt.
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