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
Georgia football signee Xavier Avery is off to play professional baseball. We wish him a long and successful career, and it’s great to see that his contract provides for his education.
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.
Tuesday June 17, 2008
I’ll be honest – recruiting hasn’t gone well for Andy Landers over the past few years. The rising junior class that had three freshmen all-SEC performers was solid, but last year’s class didn’t have much of an impact. It doesn’t help that the top recruit from that class, Brittany Carter, struggled on the court and in the classroom and will transfer. The current incoming class isn’t particularly heralded, though transfer Porsha Phillips is expected to be a key contributor. With some high-profile prospects headed out of state, you get articles like this pointing out the difficulty of the situation when you’re not UConn or Tennessee.
But a coach as successful and driven as Landers doesn’t take setbacks without responding, and a very positive sign came today with the commitment of Wesleyan rising senior Anne Marie Armstrong. Armstrong, considered the top prospect in Georgia for the 2009 class, won the state’s Miss Basketball honor as a junior while leading her team to the Class AA state title.
Armstrong, at 6’3″ is a versatile wing with good size. If you had to compare those attributes to a recent Lady Dog, think Megan Darrah. Hopefully this commitment is just the start towards what could be a very strong 2009 class.
Monday June 16, 2008
I don’t know that I’ve ever been this drained just from watching a game.
If Georgia’s grueling 4-3 win over Stanford Monday night at the College World Series was this intense for fans, I can’t imagine how the players held it together.
Georgia football fans – remember how you felt leaving Vanderbilt’s stadium last year or leaving South Carolina in 2002? The thrill of victory alternated with bouts of nausea, and the net effect was relief and exhaustion – and we didn’t even play the games.
After tonight’s game, it’s easy to understand how unseeded Stanford upset Cal-Fullerton and FSU to get to this point. They are tireless fighters, make few mistakes, and force you to work for every scrap you can get against them. Nothing came easy for Georgia tonight, not even the final outs, but somehow here they are 2-0 and in the driver’s seat of their half of the CWS field.
Stanford jumped out 3-0 on three extra-base hits in the third inning including a two-run homer by standout catcher Jason Castro. Though starter Nick Montgomery pitched well otherwise, he yielded to Stephen Dodson in the 4th inning.
If there’s a story developing thus far for Georgia, it’s been the bullpen as a whole. They’ve allowed only one run in two games, and Alex McRee atoned for Saturday’s homerun pitch with a perfect performance against the Cardinal. In fact, the Georgia bullpen allowed only one hit after Montgomery left. Dodson, McRee, and Fields held Stanford in check and gave the offense room to mount the gradual comeback.
Getting back in the game was like pulling teeth. The Dawgs missed a chance to get on the scoreboard in the 3rd when Lyle Allen doubled but was inexplicably held at third base on a David Thoms single to right. Neither Peisel nor Olson could bring in Allen, and the Dawgs missed a golden scoring opportunity.
The first run came in the 4th – Matt Cerione doubled in Gordon Beckham, but Cerione was stranded. Georgia again inched closer in the 6th when Robbie O’Bryan drew a bases-loaded walk that scored Rich Poythress. Still, Georgia could do no further damage with the bases loaded and just one out.
The Dawgs finally got on top in the 7th when Gordon Beckham started a two-out rally with a single. Poythress walked, and Massanari was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Matt Cerione laced a single to center field plating Beckham and Poythress for Cerione’s second and third RBI of the day. O’Bryan popped out to end the rally, but Georgia now held the lead.
McRee pitched an incredibly efficient 8th against the heart of the Cardinal lineup, and you had to like Georgia’s chances with Fields pitching to the bottom half of the Stanford order in the 9th. Nothing was easy in this game, though, and Fields certainly made things interesting by walking and then hitting a batter to put the go-ahead run on base with one out. He worked deep into the count against pinch-hitter Colin Walsh before enticing Walsh to hit a ground ball that was fielded by Beckham and turned into a textbook 6-4-3 double play to end the excruciating game.
Georgia has earned the mixed blessing of three days’ rest before playing again on Friday. Everyone should be fresh and rested, but that’s a long time to stew during a championship run. The good news is that Georgia needs just one more win to advance to next week’s championship round. Stanford must play Miami in an elimination game, and the Bulldogs will have two cracks at the winner of that game.
Georgia will play the winner of Wednesday’s Stanford/Miami game at 2:00 p.m. on Friday (ESPN2). If Georgia wins, they advance straight to the championship round which begins Monday. If Georgia falls, they’ll face a rematch with Friday’s opponent on Saturday to determine who advances.
For a complete schedule and stats and recaps from the CWS, visit this page over at ESPN.com.
And with that…I’m going to go collapse into bed.
Monday June 16, 2008
When Georgia
meets Stanford this evening in the College World Series (7:00, ESPN2), it
will be a rematch of sorts of one of the biggest battles along the way during
Georgia’s 1990 national title run. Georgia will technically be favored against
the unseeded Cardinal tonight, but it was Georgia’s underdog performance against
top-seeded Stanford that put them into the national title game.
While Stan Payne’s 2-1 victory over Oklahoma State clinched the 1990 national
title for Georgia, the Bulldogs’ shot at the championship was set up by three
battles over six days with top-seeded Stanford. Georgia crushed Stanford in
the first meeting sending the Cardinal to the loser’s bracket. The favorites
worked back through the bracket and topped Georgia to force a winner-take-all
rematch.
Stanford turned to ace and future MLB star Mike Mussina who had been roughed
up by Georgia in the first meeting. The Bulldogs countered again with senior
Mike Rebhan. Though fatigued, Rebhan pitched a complete game as the Bulldogs
eliminated the Cardinal 5-1.
There’s a great account
of this 1990 meeting over on UGASports.com. The transformation of Mussina
from a dominant pitcher to someone throwing batting practice turned the first
meeting. Stanford struck back with a freshman beating Bulldog All-American Dave
Fleming. Rebhan turned the tables in the final showdown, and teammate Bruce
Chick reflected on how important that performance was. "He had two children
and he knew he wasn’t moving on," says
Chick. "Mike pitched the game of his life and it wound up being the
last game he ever pitched."
Tonight another relatively unknown Bulldog pitcher will step on the Rosenblatt
Stadium field with a chance to make his own splash against Stanford. Nick Montgomery
wasn’t one of Georgia’s three weekend starters during the regular season, but
since his outing against Georgia Tech at Turner Field Montgomery has been one
of the most consistent and outstanding Bulldog starters. He already has wins
over Georgia Tech and N.C. State in this NCAA Tournament, and the Bulldogs are
counting on him to move them one win away from their first trip to the championship
round since 1990.
Wednesday June 11, 2008

Before Fran Tarkenton, Buck Belue, Eric Zeier, David Greene, Matthew Stafford, and all Georgia quarterbacks in between, there was Johnny Rauch. Rauch set the standard for quarterbacking for college football in the late 1940s, and he went on to a successful career as a pro quarterback and as a coach. He passed away on Tuesday at the age of 80. From the obituary at georgiadogs.com:
Former University of Georgia All-America quarterback John Rauch, who started every game for the Bulldogs from 1945-48, passed away in his sleep on Tuesday at his Oldsmar, Fla., home. He was 80.
Rauch came to Georgia in 1945 after excelling in three sports in high school in Pennsylvania. He didn’t arrive with much fanfare, however, and was discovered by then-Coach Wallace Butts while playing in a flag football game.
After accepting an invitation from Butts to come out for football, Rauch started every game (45 in all) of his college career from 1945-48 and became the first player in NCAA history to start four consecutive bowl games. He passed for 4,044 yards, then the NCAA record for career passing yardage.
Rauch led the Bulldogs to a 36-8-1 record, including the Williamson poll’s national championship in 1946 and two SEC titles. He was an All-American and the SEC Player of the Year his senior season.
Rauch was the No. 1 player taken in the 1949 NFL draft by the Detroit Lions and he went on to a four-year playing career. Rauch then entered the coaching ranks, serving several schools, including Georgia from 1955-58, as an assistant coach.
Rauch returned to the NFL as an assistant for the Oakland Raiders under Al Davis in 1963 and was promoted to head coach in 1966. He guided the Raiders for three seasons, compiling 33 victories and leading them to Super Bowl II. Rauch, whose assistant coaches included John Madden and Bill Walsh, was named AFC Coach of the Year in 1967 after the Super Bowl appearance. Rauch also was the head coach of the Buffalo Bills in 1969, O.J. Simpson’s rookie year.
Rauch completed his coaching career in 1985 after stints with Philadelphia, Atlanta and Tampa Bay of the NFL, Toronto of the CFL and Tampa Bay of the USFL.
Rauch was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2004. He also was chosen for the Georgia-Florida Hall of Fame in 2000 and Georgia¹s Circle of Honor in 2001.
His grandson also posted a nice note on the DawgVent. Our thoughts go out tonight to the family of one of Georgia’s best.
Wednesday June 11, 2008
If you’re like me, you missed out on the early feeding frenzy on airline tickets for the Arizona State game. Maybe you weren’t sure if you were going. Maybe your group was dragging its heels making arrangements. Maybe you were betting on the price of oil to crash and send fares plunging. Good luck with that.
Anyway, here you are in mid-June, and fares for non-stop flights are pushing $450 and not budging. You’ve listened to Paul Westerdawg and Kanu and have your social agenda in order and possibly even have tickets taken care of. But you’re still procrastinating about a flight.
AirTran has come through with a flight option that checks in at just over $300. I have to credit my lovely wife with finding this one. She affects the outcome of the Florida game, and she finds good deals to road games. What a catch. Here are the details:
- Outbound: AirTran flight 1940.
Leaves 8:40 p.m. on Thurs. Sept. 18, arrives 9:45 Phoenix time
- Returning: AirTran flight 1941.
Leaves 10:40 p.m. on Sun. Sept. 21, arrives 5:17 a.m. Monday morning
Yes, those are some late flights, but they come with some advantages:
- If you’re up for it, a night out in Tempe isn’t out of the question on Thursday. If you’re staying near Tempe, you’ll probably be off the plane and checked in by 11:00.
- You have all day Friday, Saturday, and Sunday in town. Having Sunday to recover from gameday won’t suck.
- If your work vacation time is tight, these flights give you the option of working Thursday and Monday if you’re reasonably close to Atlanta. I know turning around and going into the office on Monday after a red-eye and a football weekend isn’t the most appealing option in the world, but it’s there if you need it.
Again, those flights check in at just over $300 for the round trip after taxes and fees. I don’t know how long these prices will hold, so jump on it. I doubt you’ll find anything cheaper as we get closer since most of the seats on other flights are already booked. You might be able to do better if you are willing to forgo the non-stop flight, but be cautious of booking with Frontier as the future of the airline is uncertain. If you want to continue to hold out, I second Kanu’s recommendation of kayak.com.
If you’re still looking for a hotel, you might try the Hyatt Place Tempe / Phoenix Airport. It’s no more than two miles from both the airport and Sun Devil Stadium. They also have 42″ flat panels in the rooms which any sports fan should appreciate.
Wednesday June 11, 2008
The Coliseum Practice Facility has been open for about a year now. For fans who haven’t toured or taken a look yet inside the facility, UGASports.com has a photo feature up taking you inside the men’s basketball area. I’ve written about how the facility measures up nationally, but don’t take my word for it…
One parent of a high profile prospect said, “My son and I were at the Dean Dome(UNC) last week, and this place beats that hands down!”

Tuesday June 10, 2008
Mitchell Boggs was a key relief pitcher on the 2004 Georgia squad that reached the College World Series. Now with another group of Bulldogs on their way to Omaha, Boggs is set to record another personal milestone. He will make his first major league start on Tuesday night for the St. Louis Cardinals against the Cincinnati Reds. Boggs made his MLB debut on Friday out of the bullpen and gave up one run in two innings of work.
Mitchell Boggs and Josh McLaughlin celebrate after beating Georgia Tech in the 2004 super regional. Photo: Red & Black
Tuesday June 10, 2008
Some nations require years of residency and an exam for citizenship. In Russia,
all it requires is a professional basketball contract.
Olympic dreams are commonplace for elite athletes. In many sports the Olympic
gold medal is the summit, and you’d be hard-pressed to find an athlete who hasn’t
been inspired along the way by watching one of his countrymen excel at the Olympics.
But spots on the Olympic team aren’t as commonplace, so the dream of playing
for one’s country never becomes a reality for most. Because of lineage or birthplace,
dual citizenship is an option for some. For others, Mother Russia is willing
to help.
Three WNBA players – including two former Georgia Lady Dogs – have
made the 24-member preliminary squad for the Russian national women’s basketball
team. How can native-born American citizens play for the Russians? ESPN
explains in the case of WNBA star Becky Hammon,
Under Russian league rules, (Hammon) was able to obtain a passport and become
a naturalized citizen because she had never appeared for another country in
a FIBA-sanctioned event. In other words, she was still eligible to compete
for Russia internationally.
Hammon’s papers were approved quickly by the highest levels of the Russian
government, just as they were for former Bucknell guard J.R. Holden, who hit
the game-winning shot last summer to help Russia win the 2007 Eurobasket Championships.
Holden, too, will compete for Russia in Beijing.
Kelly Miller and Deanna Nolan are the former Georgia players on the squad.
Both played for Russian club teams in the WNBA offseason and acquired Russian
citizenship as a result. Neither was selected for the American national team
(a questionable decision in Nolan’s case), so playing for Russia might be their
only shot at playing in the Olympics. 20 years ago, this news would have been
scandalous – if not impossible. How about now? Does it bug you that American
athletes would take Russian citizenship in order to participate in the Olympics,
or do you respect the decision to chase their Olympic dreams any way they can?
Monday June 9, 2008
Sometimes the events just speak for themselves:
Georgia Bulldogs 1st – Peisel singled to right field (1-0 B). Olson hit
by pitch (2-0 B); Peisel advanced to second. Beckham walked (3-1 BBBKB); Olson
advanced to second; Peisel advanced to third. Poythress walked, RBI (3-1
BBKBB); Beckham advanced to second; Olson advanced to third; Peisel scored.
Massanari singled to left field, 2 RBI (1-1 KB); Poythress advanced to second;
Beckham scored; Olson scored. Brown to p for Surkamp. Cerione singled, bunt
(0-0); Massanari advanced to second; Poythress advanced to third. O’Bryan
grounded out to 3b, RBI (2-2 KBSB); Cerione advanced to second; Massanari
advanced to third; Poythress scored. Allen singled to center field, 2 RBI (0-1
F); Cerione scored; Massanari scored. Thoms singled to left field (0-0); Allen
advanced to second. Peisel singled to right field (1-2 BKFF); Thoms advanced to
second; Allen advanced to third. Olson flied out to lf, SF, RBI (2-2 KBSB);
Allen scored. Beckham singled to left field, RBI (0-0); Peisel advanced to
second; Thoms scored. Poythress singled through the left side, RBI (0-1 K);
Beckham advanced to third; Peisel scored. Cutler to p for Brown. Massanari
reached on a fielder’s choice (0-1 F); Poythress out at second ss to 2b.
9
runs, 8 hits, 0 errors, 2 LOB.

Monday June 9, 2008
After the wonderful dismissal of rival Georgia Tech in the regional round,
it was reasonable to wonder if the Georgia baseball team could get back up for
a series with an unfamiliar opponent. Georgia’s recent postseason opposition
had been regional or conference foes like South Carolina, Clemson, FSU, and
Georgia Tech – all very familiar, all usually very good, and there was no problem
getting up for those teams.
But here was N.C. State. The two programs don’t play each other. They, more
or less, don’t recruit against each other. N.C. State’s story was one of a solid
but not traditionally-strong program having a great season and seeking its first
trip to Omaha since 1968. Georgia fans probably even cheered the Wolfpack when
the boys from Raleigh dispatched South Carolina in the regional. Though a trip
to the College World Series is always its own motivation, I wondered in the
back of my mind if a letdown was possible after the euphoria of taking two games
from Tech.
It didn’t take long into the series to discover that 1) N.C. State was a very
formidable opponent and 2) it would indeed be very enjoyable sending them home.
It started on Friday when Wolfpack coach coach Elliott Avent asked
the home plate umpire to examine Trevor Holder’s cap for a foreign substance.
(The cap, of course, checked out clear.) It continued on Saturday when Georgia
star Gordon Beckham was hit not once but twice by Wolfpack pitching. It came
to a head Sunday afternoon when Wolfpack reliever Drew Taylor hit Lyle Allen
following a Joey Lewis home run in the bottom of the 6th. Intentional or not,
the pitch just below Allen’s head fired up the Bulldogs to finish the job and
enjoy the beating as if it were an SEC or regional rival. Though the umpires
and coaches did a good job of keeping the emotion from boiling over, the Bulldogs
made sure to get their revenge on the field.
- "We wanted to make them sorry for Lyle getting hit," catcher
Bryce Massanari said. "It woke up the sleeping dogs. After that,
we just wanted to pour it on and embarrass them."
- "Embarrass them," (Gordon)
Beckham said about Georgia’s mindset. "I think we got like eight
runs after that, didn’t we?"
- "We were asleep," (coach David) Perno said. "We were in the
dugout going ’12 outs. 12 outs, we’re going to Omaha. Nine outs.’ All of a
sudden, they woke the bats back up."
If a pitch aimed at a Georgia batter’s head led to a five-run explosion in
the bottom of the 7th, Wolfpack pitchers must have been peppering the family
members and girlfriends of the Bulldog team prior to the game. Georgia erased
any concerns about a tense nailbiter by putting up nine runs in the bottom of
the 1st inning. The fact that the only scoreboard drama of the day came when
State closed to within six runs indicates how complete of a win it
was. On offense, eight Georgia singles combined with two walks and a hit batsman
did the damage in the 1st. On defense, Nick Montgomery had yet another strong
outing, and he was helped with strong plays in the field by Ryan Peisel, Lyle
Allen, Matt Cerione, and Gordon Beckham.
While history might remember Allen’s HBP as the spark for Georgia’s final push
at the plate, the first few runs actually came at a very important moment in
the game. LSU’s dramatic comeback against Cal-Irvine on Sunday demonstrated
that no lead is ever safe in college baseball, so the Wolfpack’s three runs
in the top of the 6th were enough to get one’s attention after four straight
scoreless innings from the Bulldogs. Gordon Beckham’s first home run of the
day, a solo shot to left, got the Bulldogs back on the scoreboard and helped
to stem what might have been the beginning of an NCSU comeback. Lewis’s two-run
blast completed the scoring for the inning, and Georgia had answered the visitors’
challenge and ensured a relatively anti-climatic finish.
There were no need for Keppinger-esque heroics, and Josh Fields was, if anything,
sloppy in closing out the
17-8 win. Instead, the lopsided win provided an opportunity to reflect on
the many accomplishments and storylines across the roster. From Beckham’s star
power to the emergence of Nick Montgomery to timely hits from the bottom half
of the lineup, Sunday’s win gave us the chance to enjoy it all.
Click here for an outstanding gallery from UGASports.com of the celebration.
Friday June 6, 2008
When NC State deposited two Trevor Holder pitches over the fence in the top
of the 3rd inning in Friday’s opening game of the Athens Super Regional, I had
a flashback to the opening game of the 2006 Athens Super Regional. South Carolina
hit five consecutive home runs in the second inning and jumped out to a 9-0
lead on the host Bulldogs. In the 2008 opener, three straight Wolfpack batters
– including the #9 batter – hit deep shots, and two found their way out of the
park. It wasn’t looking good for Holder who recently struggled with shoulder
problems and had a so-so regional.
But the right-handed junior wasn’t about to allow a repeat of 2006. On the day he found out that he was drafted in the 10th round of the MLB Draft by the Florida Marlins, Holder
buckled down, got out of the 3rd, and went another 5 2/3 innings without allowing
another earned run. The Bulldogs quickly answered those two runs and went on
to a convincing 11-4 win over the Wolfpack. Holder ran out of gas just one out
away from his first complete game after giving up 7 hits, 2 runs, and recording
5 strikeouts. Justin Earls came in to record the final out.
Prior to Friday’s game, the Wolfpack hadn’t allowed more than ten runs in a
game since a March 14th loss to Miami. Starter Clayton Shunick was dominant
at times, but Georgia took advantage of two weak innings to do their damage.
The Bulldogs scored four times with two outs in the bottom of the 3rd, and they
chased Shunick with five more runs in the 6th. Matt Olson and Gordon Beckham
got the Dawgs going with key two-out hits in the 3rd, but the bottom of the
order once again was a big part of the story. Lyle Allen, Miles Starr, and Joey
Lewis combined for 5 RBI including a two-run homer by Lewis.
That 2006 Super Regional had a lesson: even if you get your tail kicked, you
start out 0-0 in the next game. Georgia bounced back that year to win two straight
over the Gamecocks and advance to Omaha. Friday’s opening win by Georgia puts
them in great shape just one win away from the CWS, but they’re not there yet.
The good news for the Bulldogs is that they have everything going for them right
now – they’ll have a fresh bullpen, a partisan crowd, and the bats show no signs
of cooling off.
Trevor Holder with the strong outing.
Thursday June 5, 2008
As expected, Gordon Beckham and Josh Fields were taken early in the first round of Thursday’s Major League Baseball draft.
- Beckham was drafted 8th overall by the Chicago White Sox.
- Fields improved on his second-round selection of a year ago by being selected 20th overall by the Seattle Mariners. Atlanta’s loss is Seattle’s gain.
With their futures certain now, here’s hoping that these Bulldog stars can end their college careers on top.
UPDATE: Georgia football signee Xavier Avery was selected 50th overall by the Baltimore Orioles. According to his father, Avery is baseball all the way. Some fans I’ve read have been griping that Avery’s scholarship could have gone to someone else, but I think the coaches knew and expected that Avery was going to go the baseball route and factored that into the numbers for this signing class. His decision actually clears up a situation where Georgia might have been over the football scholarship limit.
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