Monday July 9, 2007
Everyone’s pointing to Mark
Bradley’s latest (and greatest).
I agree that it’s
more flamebait than anything else, but it’s still our flamebait,
and the replies from Tech fans are pure gold.
I’m glad to see someone a little more high-profile than I questioning
the popular assumption that things can’t get worse than Reggie Ball. "Georgia’s
No. 1 quarterback beat out three teammates for the job. Tech’s No. 1 quarterback
couldn’t beat out Reggie Ball." Yep.
While we’re enjoying the current of muck flowing in the other direction, Dawg
fans should pay close attention to Bradley’s point #7.
For all the fuss made over Jon Tenuta’s defense, it should be noted
that the Georgia D, coached by the unappreciated Willie Martinez, finished
ahead of Tech last season in total defense, scoring defense, pass defense
and turnovers created.
Tenuta is a very good defensive coordinator, appreciated by both Tech and Georgia
people. But many Georgia fans would take Tenuta (or just a car Tenuta once owned)
over Willie Martinez in a second. They’re morons.
Monday July 9, 2007
Hiding just beneath the surface in this whole Les Miles / Southern Cal dustup
is the story of the 2004 Auburn team. That team of course finished the season
undefeated but neither played in the BCS championship game nor finished first
in a major poll.
It bugs me a bit whenever I see the story of that Auburn team used in the context
of conference strength or strength of scheduling discussions. To me, Auburn’s
story is simply a lesson in the value and importance of preseason polls. This
sidetrack into recent history might be a little random, but I might as well
get this out while it’s at the top of my stack.
It’s not that I think that the 2004 Auburn team wasn’t deserving of a shot
at the national title. Of course they were. I’m not going to say that they were
better or worse than Southern Cal or Oklahoma because reasonable arguments could
be made either way. But watching from my perch at Jordan-Hare Stadium while
Auburn rolled over a Top 10 Georgia program, they looked pretty damn good to
me.
The whole Auburn strength
of schedule thing is the part that always rings very hollow with me. There’s
the implication that Auburn was punished for a weak nonconference schedule,
but I have never bought it. To understand why, you have to go back to the end
of the 2003 season. LSU beat Oklahoma in the BCS Championship game and earned
the #1 ranking in the ESPN/USA Today coaches poll. Meanwhile, Southern Cal beat
Michigan in the Rose Bowl and claimed the #1 ranking in the AP poll. It was
a split title. Auburn, on the other hand, had what was considered a disastrous
2003 season and nearly fired coach Tommy Tuberville (remember that whole Petrino
debacle?).
That 2003 controversy aside, the results meant that Southern Cal, Oklahoma,
and LSU started the
2004 season at the top of the polls. Pretty reasonable, right? Southern
Cal was #1, Oklahoma was #2, and LSU was #4. Auburn started the season around
#10. OK so far?
So SoCal and Oklahoma started the year #1 and #2 and went undefeated. Not only
that, but SoCal had been left out of the BCS Championship in the previous season,
and Oklahoma was a title game participant. With those facts in mind, I maintain
that Auburn could have played three NFL teams as its nonconference opponents
and still not have jumped Southern Cal or Oklahoma. There was no way
that an undefeated Southern Cal team snubbed the year before was going to be
left out. That left Oklahoma, and as a runner-up the previous season and preseason
#2 in 2004 they got the benefit of the doubt and got another crack at the title
game. That’s it. It had nothing to do with conferences and nothing to
do with the quality of the teams’ respective schedules.
Does that mean I believe that Oklahoma and Southern Cal were better than Auburn
or that Auburn’s perfect season was less impressive than any we’ve seen in the
past decade? Again, no. That’s what sucks about the whole thing. The table was
set for the national title game in July and August. As long as the preseason
favorites kept winning, there was nothing that Auburn or any team behind them
could do to have a part in the process. You know where this is headed. "Every
game counts," my ass.
When Les Miles "said
Auburn was the victim of an injustice and repeated his assertion that an
unbeaten SEC champion should play for a national championship," we have
to be careful just what kind of "injustice" we’re talking about. Auburn
didn’t get jobbed because they were Auburn or from the SEC or played some directional
Carolina schools. Interestingly, LSU might be the beneficiary of a similar outcome
this year. We have a while until the "real" preseason polls come out,
but if the consensus holds LSU
appears to be #2 heading into the season. If they and the Trojans just win,
it won’t matter what West Virginia or Michigan or anyone else does – Miles will
see Southern Cal up close and personal, and it won’t be because he’s coaching
an SEC team. But there’s a lot of football between now and then.
In hindsight, I’m just glad that it was Auburn and not Georgia. The Dawgs started
the 2004 season at a consensus #3 and would have been in the same boat as Auburn
had the Dawgs won out. That’s not a pain I would have liked to have known.
Friday July 6, 2007
Damn.
I’ve written about this before, but UGA
has officially announced its relationship with XM satellite radio.
XM Satellite Radio is now the official satellite radio home of the University
of Georgia Athletic Association under a five-year sports broadcasting and
marketing agreement starting in 2007.
XM will have all regular season Georgia football games, most men’s and women’s
basketball games, and select games from other sports. They’ll also broadcast
the football and basketball SEC championships. Though all football games will
be available, a satellite provider only has so many channels to use, and they
can’t do both home-and-away broadcasts of all games. They commit that "a
minimum of eight games will feature the Georgia broadcast crew of Larry Munson,
Scott Howard, and Loran Smith." In 2007, XM will also carry games for Arkansas,
Kentucky, Mississippi State, Ole Miss and Tennessee, so it’s possible that you’ll
only hear the Tennessee broadcast crew when we play in Knoxville. XM also has
the ACC, so the Tech game might be another instance where XM won’t have the
Georgia broadcast (with or without Munson).
Part of my reason for choosing Sirius last year was that most of the SEC schools
were there, and it seemed reasonable that the remaining few (Georgia, Arkansas)
would follow suit. Now not only will Georgia go with XM; the SEC itself will
go with XM, and the remaining schools will come on board when their current
agreements expire.
Georgia fans can go to http://www.xmradio.com/dawgs
for a special offer on XM radios. With the investment I’ve already sunk into
Sirius, I’m going to hold out hope that the proposed
Sirius/XM merger goes through.
Friday July 6, 2007
Former Auburn (and Clemson) basketball coach Cliff Ellis will be coaching again
for the first time in three years. Ellis was recently
named the new coach at Coastal Carolina – just down the road from Bobby
Cremins at the College of Charleston. If we ever see Nolan Richardson surface
at the Citadel, we can then say with some certainty that the Southern Conference
has become the recycling center of college basketball.
For SEC fans, that means a new announcing crew coming to Lincoln Financial
regional broadcasts. Ellis will now be luring high school prospects with promises
of "sharing the candy" and plenty of trips to the "bonus-sphere".
Tuesday July 3, 2007
We all like to pick on Reggie Ball, and he’s an easy target. But as poorly as he played against Georgia over his career, he was still a four-year starter with wins over teams like Auburn, Miami, and Virginia Tech.
So for all of the amusement we get reading lines saying that Tech has to be better in 2007 now that Reggie Ball is gone, is it really a given that Taylor Bennett will be markedly better?
Bennett is getting a lot of mileage from the first half of last season’s Gator Bowl. As Bennett threw jump ball after jump ball to Calvin Johnson en route to a big halftime lead, it was natural to wonder why he wasn’t tried before Ball became ineligible.
But I am not yet a believer that Bennett will be an improvement at quarterback over the long term. You’d expect a QB to improve over the course of a game, but Bennett did not in his moment in the spotlight. Tech went from 340 yards of offense in the first half of the Gator Bowl to 133 in the second half. They had four drives of 60+ yards in the first half and none in the second half.
It could be argued that West Virginia wasn’t expecting a backup to find Johnson with such ease, but he did. Once they adjusted and realized that Bennett could throw the ball, he wasn’t as effective. After the world gets a few games of film on Taylor Bennett this fall, we’ll find out if he really is an improvement over a four-year starter.
Monday July 2, 2007
That’s six and counting, guys.

Monday July 2, 2007
With the 2006-2007 academic and athletic year completed, Georgia finished
a respectable 12th in the 2007 Director’s Cup – not the best showing in
recent years, but nothing to be ashamed of either. Two national titles (gymnastics
and men’s tennis) were at the top of the highlights, and we’ll get to those
top stories soon. But first, we’ll take a look back first at some of the lower
points from the past year.
10. "I’m Georgia!"
OK, I understand the proceeds went to a
really, really good cause. I bought a few towels myself for that reason
alone. But manufactured enthusiasm always seems a little artificial and often
cheesy. The "I’m Georgia" campaign was both. It became painful watching
former Georgia greats trying to rally the Sanford Stadium crowd in their middle-aged
monotones. "You want me to wave this towel and say what?!"
But because they distributed so many towels and the kids love them – kids love
anything free – the "I’m Georgia" towels are barnacles on the Georgia
program that will be hanging on for several years.
9. Basketball collapse at Alabama.
It’s unfair to label any particular game as the reason why Georgia missed the
NCAA basketball tournament. It’s not even clear that another win would have
made the difference. Still, a
double-digit lead against Bama represented a rare chance to get a quality
road conference win. The questionable finish only made the missed opportunity
more painful. This game wasn’t the only time that the Dawgs blew a decent lead
late in the game; Western Kentucky handed Georgia its first loss of the season
with a late rally from ten points down. Either one of those wins would have
been nice to have. Both together might have earned the Dawgs a bid.
8. Women’s golf embarassment.
The mysterious resignation of women’s golf coach Todd McCorkle turned into
an uncomfortable if not creepy story filled with charges of harrassment and
other conduct inappropriate for someone in his position (and most anyone over
the age of 14). McCorkle resigned his position but remains with the athletic
association, an arrangement that I agree creates a lose-lose situation.
There’s another angle to the story that didn’t get much play – the spokesperson-parent.
Art Leon, father of star player Taylor Leon, triggered
an investigation by complaining to administrators "after his daughter
said she was berated by McCorkle at the Bryan Intercollegiate (tournament)."
While I consider the harassment charges very serious and worthy of the reaction
they received, I am not so quick to sympathize with parental claims of "verbal
abuse" that resulted because a coach got in a player’s face.
Mr. Leon comes across a bit differently in this
quote from the AJC following McCorkle’s resignation: "I’m shocked,
surprised, just flabbergasted…Todd’s a great coach. I just
saw him at SECs and everybody was happy and jubilant." A week later, Leon
told the ABH, "He’s the type of guy you feel like you’d like to have
a beer with, but he has no place being a coach of women’s golf."
Hm. OK.
7. UGA: home of the minor alcohol-related incident.
From Akeem Hebron to Ian Smith to Tasha Humphrey, the campus crackdown on underage
drinking left its mark on Bulldog athletics. For the football team, the incidents
resulted in another round of early-season suspensions, and Hebron was suspended
by the University. In the case of Humphrey, her suspension led to chemistry
issues on the team that weren’t really sorted out until the final month of the
season. Given the climate withing the campus administration, the overzealousness
of local police, and the automatic suspensions mandated by the athletic department,
you’d think the message to be smarter about drinking might be getting out to
student-athletes. But this next academic year hasn’t gotten off to a great start
either.
6. Quarterback indecision.
A year later, it seems like a hazy dream. But
a year ago, Georgia fans were debating whether or not Joe Tereshinski’s
unproven ability to "manage the game" (whatever that meant) was enough
to give him the nod at quarterback over less-experienced but more talented options.
Ideally, the question would have played itself out in August. Unfortunately,
the quarterback question ended up dragging into the middle of the season and
not settled for certain until the Mississippi State game, the eighth game of
the season. Along the way we had an injury to the starter, a solid debut from
the freshman phenom, an off-the-bench rescue by a third quarterback, and several
close calls. Eventually the job was won by Matthew Stafford, but his on-the-job
training during the middle part of the season included some very harsh lessons.
It’s impossible to say how the season would have turned out had Stafford started
the whole time, but that doesn’t keep fans from wondering.
5. Big Three vs. Florida.
0-fer. Sweep. Georgia’s "big three" men’s sports of football, basketball,
and baseball all played their part in the Year of the Gator. The Gator football
team held off a second-half comeback from the Dawgs en route to SEC and national
titles. Florida’s outstanding basketball team was never seriously challenged
in three games against Georgia including the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament.
Georgia’s best chance for a win was against a struggling Gator baseball team,
but even a Florida team that would finish under .500 and fire its coach managed
to sweep a three-game series in Athens. Thank goodness for other sports like
tennis, gymnastics, and women’s basketball which took care of their own business
against Florida, but a turnaround in the "big three" can’t come quickly
enough.
4. Baseball roller coaster hits bottom.
I guess we should have seen it coming. Georgia baseball has had a strange pattern
of feast and famine lately, and the calendar said that they were due for another
downturn in 2007. But the severity of the downturn was the news this year. The
talent drain after the 2006 trip to Omaha hurt, and those expected to carry
the team this year didn’t. Georgia produced no all-SEC players this season,
and they clearly lacked the clutch star power they’ve enjoyed recently. Georgia
finished the season under .500 with their worst record in several years and
far out of contention for the postseason.
The season was in trouble out of the gate as the Dawgs dropped early series
to PAC 10 members Oregon State and Southern Cal. A sweep of Auburn to start
SEC play provided a small glimmer of hope, but reality set in quickly. Taking
two of three games from Georgia Tech was one of the few bright spots of the
season, and those two wins might have had the added benefit of keeping Tech
out of the NCAA Tournament.
The odd-even schedule that seems to rule the Diamond Dawgs lately says that
Georgia baseball should be back on top next year, but they’ll be looking for
answers and improvement at nearly every spot.
3. Mike Mercer’s season-ending injury.
Ouch. You knew the moment it happened that Mike Mercer’s knee injury at South
Carolina was severe. In fact, it was considered "good" news that the
injury was only season-ending. Similar injuries have ended careers.
A lot of Bulldog programs had significant injuries last year, and some like
Thomas Brown’s were season-ending too. But a major injury to a basketball starter
is magnified, and Mercer’s injury turned out to be too much for the fragile
Georgia depth to handle down the critical stretch run. Though they fought until
the regular season finale against Tennessee, Mercer’s injury gave them very
long odds for a postseason bid with no margin for error. Still, the team scrapped
by and were able to record their first postseason win in nearly five years.
2. Football losses to Vanderbilt and Kentucky.
We sensed that inexperience at the quarterback position would cause problems,
but few would have guessed that the defending SEC champions would fall to the
traditional doormats of the SEC East. Even worse is that Georgia held the lead
in each game but saw Vandy and Kentucky drive late in the game for the winning
scores against a relenting Georgia defense. Following the loss at Kentucky in
November, things were as bleak as they’ve looked at Georgia since 1996. How
the Dawgs turned things around to beat three consecutive ranked teams is an
incredible story, and I don’t think we’ll ever know just how much negative momentum
the team had to overcome in order to make that turnaround happen.
1. The death of Kevin Brophy.
The Georgia basketball world was rocked in July when point guard Kevin
Brophy was killed in an auto accident. The Australia native was driving
to Savannah when he wrecked during a rainstorm south of Athens.
Though I consider the death of Brophy the bottom story of the past academic
year, the response by the team and the fan base was far from a low point. The
team embraced the memory of the popular player, and an emotional win over LSU
in the presence of the Brophy family topped off a season dedicated to Kevin.
Fans and the University worked together to start a Kevin Brophy Memorial Scholarship
Endowment Fund, and its trademark circular "3" patch was a ubiquitous
reminder all season on the court and in the stands.
Monday July 2, 2007
Usually
it’s left to Tommy Tuberville to stick his foot in his mouth about a tough
schedule or an unfair system before they actually play the games. Now it’s Les
Miles’ turn. Miles, who doesn’t have an SEC title to his name yet, is already
knocking down other preseason contenders and flashing
his SEC membership card (H/T: Get
the Picture).
"I can tell you this, that they have a much easier road to travel,"
Miles said of the Trojans. "They’re going to play real knockdown drag-outs
with UCLA and Washington, Cal-Berkley, Stanford – some real juggernauts –
and they’re going to end up, it would be my guess, in some position
so if they win a game or two, that they’ll end up in the title (game).
I would like that path for us."
"I think the SEC provides much stiffer competition."
Has anyone checked the
LSU schedule? There are two, maybe three games which should give a preseason
Top 10 team any problems. Virginia Tech, yes. Florida, yes. Auburn, maybe. Arkansas,
maybe. They don’t play Tennessee or Georgia. There will be a ridiculous amount
of hype with the Alabama game, but there is no reason why a rebuilding Bama
team, even under Saban, should be on the level of this LSU squad. That Bama
game is LSU’s only challenge on the road this year while the Trojans visit Nebraska, Notre Dame, Oregon, and Cal. Southern Cal is not the team
to be picking on.
So LSU’s position can be said to be much the same. Win a game or two – at home –
plus the SEC championship, and they’re in the title game.
Look, Les. The SEC is cool. Great football and fans. Don’t lean on the conference
too much though. Just find a quarterback, win your games, win the mighty SEC
first, and then we’ll see where things stand.
If the Tuberville Rule holds, bet the house on Virginia Tech.
PS…Can you blame him though? If he can convince a pollster or two that the
2007 LSU schedule is a death march, good for him. It might even help to swing
things his way should there be another batch of one-loss teams at the end. That’s
how the process works.
Friday June 29, 2007
Ron Franklin is still the voice of college football on television to me. He and Gottfried together on ESPN Saturday nights were pure gold, even better than the Blackledge-Lundquist team on CBS. Though Gottfried has declined (to the point of ESPNU), Franklin still seems to be a quality man in the booth.
Now Franklin, already moved down the pecking order to ESPN2 games, has been reassigned to ABC regional coverage. That makes his chances of calling a Georgia game in the near future virtually nil.
In all of the Munson talk last week, someone (I will try to find a link) mentioned Franklin as a possible addition to the Georgia broadcast booth after Larry finally hangs it up. I thought that a bit of a stretch given his national TV gig, but as he gets pushed further and further down the list at ABC/ESPN, I have to admit that the idea sounds pretty interesting.
Read on about other changes to the ESPN/ABC lineup.
Erin Andrews…really…Saturday afternoon on ESPN? And Sean McDonough, still complaining about a Bryan McClendon touchdown at Vandy in 2005…hope you enjoy Friday nights.
Thursday June 28, 2007
I always feel a bit dirty after buying a Tech three-game package (hit
the Georgia Sports Blog for details). But it’s not a bad slate this year,
and they let you create a three-game pack from any of their home games. So I’ve
got my Georgia tickets, my Tar Heel father can catch the UNC game, and I also
picked up a pair for a Thursday night to see Virginia Tech who should be in
the mood for a little payback.
I too was able to get into section 228 which is near the perch from which I
saw Bryan McClendon write his name into my personal Bulldog Hall of Fame in
2005. Even
as Tech struggles to fill their best seats, these seats (particularly those
in friendly sections) will probably go quickly. You can follow
GSB’s instructions to make sure that there is again plenty of Red and Black
in the stands.
Tuesday June 26, 2007
…via the NCAA’s
Double-A Zone blog:
Remember the restrictions announced
back in April on text messaging and other electronic communications with
prospects? Don’t relax your thumbs just yet.
The NCAA has received enough (30+) objections from member schools to force
the Division I Board of Directors to reconsider
three proposals at its meeting in August, and that text message ban is among
them.
The issue might not be settled until January at the earliest.
The Board will have several options at its August 9 meeting: reaffirm the
April decision, aquiesce to the override requests or adopt alternative legislation.
If the Board reaffirms its decision, the matter will be settled by a vote
of all Division I delegates present and voting at the January 2008 Convention
in Nashville. The proposal is not effective until August 1, 2008. If the Board
decides to adopt new legislation, it would be subject to another override
period.
Another proposal among the three being reconsidered is the overhaul of the
financial aid distribution rules for baseball. I touched briefly on the details
of those changes here.
I’d have to agree with the folks at the Double-A Zone and argue that both proposals
should be reaffirmed.
Wednesday June 13, 2007
If you read David Ching’s blog
(and if you don’t you should), you noticed last week that he live-blogged
Columbus State’s appearance in the Division II baseball championship. You probably
skipped over it if you’re just there for the Georgia stuff, but the posts were
a great service to a local (Columbus) readership in a situation where TV and
radio coverage was spotty or nonexistent.
It turns out that Ching was an outlaw.
Louisville Courier-Journal reporter Brian
Bennett was tossed from the press box during Cardinal’s historic Super Regional
performance over the weekend because he was blogging during the game. The NCAA
decided to enforce a new policy in order to protect the broadcast rights of
"the NCAA’s official rights holders".
Josh Centor has a
really tough job. Being a public face of the NCAA must be right up there with
IRS public relations and Georgia Tech football marketing in terms of its thanklessness.
In the times I’ve seen his responses to some pretty controversial issues (including
the football clock rules debacle), he’s always been professional, level-headed,
and informative even when the critics of the NCAA aren’t. He has some quality
thoughts on the subject while disagreeing with the policy, noting in particular
that no one is going to prefer sporadic blog updates to a high-def ESPN television
broadcast if they have that option.
For now, I agree with Deadspin’s
observation that "the NCAA has now, by definition, given the proverbial
guy in the basement better access to his/her readers than someone in their own
press box." Just over on the DawgVent we see this very practice almost
daily now as people provide running updates on everything from NASCAR races
to Georgia’s national championship tennis match. The NCAA holds that blogs are
a "live representation of the game", a concept I find pretty absurd
unless you can type really, really fast. The Courier-Journal’s attorney is right
on here: "Once a player hits a home run, that’s a fact. It’s
on TV, everybody sees it. They (the NCAA) can’t copyright that fact. The
blog wasn’t a simulcast or a recreation of the game. It was an analysis."
If you follow the NCAA’s memo and policy to its logical conclusions, every
SMS message, phone call, or e-mail you’ve sent from a game describing the action
is a violation of the rights of the official broadcast rights holders.
It was around 1998 that I remember seeing live fan reporting in action. A guy
with a cell phone at Will Witherspoon’s press conference reported Witherspoon’s
commitment to someone on the other end of the call who was in a Dawg chat room.
Those people reading knew the news before anyone at the press conference had
left the room. The immediacy (not to mention unlimited column-inches) of the
Internet is a big problem for print journalists. They’ve responded with blogs
and updates to their own Web sites between publications, and someone like Ching
live-blogging a local event of interest is yet another innovative way for a
print journalist to serve a readership looking for near-real-time information.
A properly credentialed journalist providing these brief updates to their readers
should be encouraged instead of punished. They are doing nothing to diminish
the value of the broadcasts. If anything, they are creating more exposure for
and interest in the event, and it’s likely that a few of those readers will
tune in to the broadcasts when they can.
UPDATE: As I hoped, Ching
has his own comments up now. Read the whole thing. Two great points: 1)
the rule was applied capriciously – no one cared if he live-blogged an event
that ESPN wasn’t covering. 2) this is an issue fans should be interested in
because it affects the quality and quantity of options for following their teams.
Tuesday June 12, 2007
Doug over at Hey Jenny Slater has done the work of combining
the preseason rankings to date. Southern Cal seems to be the favorite, and
the Dawgs come in around the low teens. As
the senator reminds us, a lot of these early preseason rankings don’t take
into account the Paul Oliver news or any injuries and suspensions that might
come up between now and the season.
Chris Stassen has been tracking this
kind of thing for over a decade now, and it’s interesting to look back at
Georgia teams over that time and see how they did relative to expectations.
Year |
Preseason |
Final |
Change |
1996 |
– |
– |
– |
1997 |
– |
10 |
+16 |
1998 |
24 |
14 |
+10 |
1999 |
15 |
16 |
-1 |
2000 |
9 |
20 |
-11 |
2001 |
25 |
22 |
+3 |
2002 |
9 |
3 |
+6 |
2003 |
10 |
7 |
+3 |
2004 |
3 |
7 |
-4 |
2005 |
13 |
10 |
+3 |
2006 |
16 |
23 |
-7 |
The overrated/disappointing season that most remember is 2000, and sure enough
the eleven position slide from the preseason ranking is the largest drop on
the chart. 2004 might also be considered a disappointment because the Dawgs
were overshadowed by Auburn and even Tennessee, but a final ranking of #7 isn’t
a bad year. Losses to Vanderbilt and Kentucky meant that the 2006 team also
turned out to be "overrated", and it took that great finish to the
season to only drop seven spots from the preseason.
It makes sense that the 1997 and 1998 teams were two of the most underrated
Dawg teams. The 1997 team followed a 5-6 1996 team that itself followed the
unspectacular end of the Ray Goff era. A 10-2 record and #10 ranking after all
that shocked many of us. The Dawgs lost a lot of key players after 1997, and
it was easy and reasonable to write them off in 1998. Richt’s first three teams
were slightly underrated. Doug’s work seems to tell us that pundits aren’t particularly
worried by last year’s slide, but it will be worth watching if the later preseason
polls include a correction for Oliver and anything else that comes along.
Since the polls play a part in determining the national champion, it’s also
worth looking at where the past eleven national champs started out.
Year |
Team |
Preseason |
Change |
1996 |
Florida |
4 |
+3 |
1997 |
Michigan |
14 |
+13 |
1998 |
Tennessee |
10 |
+9 |
1999 |
FSU |
1 |
0 |
2000 |
Oklahoma |
21 |
+20 |
2001 |
Miami |
2 |
+1 |
2002 |
Ohio State |
11 |
+10 |
2003 |
Southern Cal |
11 |
+10 |
2004 |
Southern Cal |
1 |
0 |
2005 |
Texas |
2 |
+1 |
2006 |
Florida |
6 |
+5 |
(LSU started at #14 in 2003 for those in the one-peat crowd.)
So as you might expect, you don’t have to start in the top 5 to win the national
championship – just five of the last eleven did. Four champions started outside
of the top 10. The teams that came the longest way to win the title (Michigan,
Oklahoma, SoCal, tOSU, and even LSU) are all traditional powers who came off
sub-par seasons. Of those teams, only SoCal did not have a four-loss or worse
season before their national title.
I look at preseason polls a lot like qualifying for a race. You don’t have
to start on or near the pole to win a race, but it does help. The further back
you start, the more help you need in front of you and the more traffic you have
to work through on your way to the front.
Wednesday June 6, 2007
It’ll be just like old times at Minnesota:
New Minnesota coach Tubby Smith has finalized his staff.
Ron Jirsa is the associate head coach, Saul Smith and Vince Taylor are the assistant coaches, and Joe Esposito is the director of basketball operations.
We just want to let Golden Gopher fans know to enjoy the next two seasons and then buckle up. Trust us.
Monday June 4, 2007
From the unfortunate-quotes department:
The language around the recruiting water cooler has always been a bit eyebrow-raising
what with grown men talking about "studs" and "specimens".
Now the prospects themselves are contributing to the double-entendre.
Jerrell Harris is probably the top prep linebacker from the state of Alabama
this year and one of the best in the southeast. His offer sheet reads like a
top 25 poll. The
AJC caught up with Harris at a recent event hosted coincidently by our favorite
rival.
Harris was in Atlanta as part of the Scout.com elite combine at Georgia Tech
on Saturday.
“I wanted to see where I stand,” he said of the combine. “I
am always checking out other guys.”
Not that there’s anything wrong with that.
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