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Showing posts with label South Carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Carolina. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Two-A-Days: South Carolina Gamecocks

Two-a-Days rolls on with our fourth installment, in which we take a closer look at the South Carolina Gamecocks.

To read previous entries, click HERE.

South Carolina in a flash:

Head Coach: Steve Spurrier, sixth year
2009 Record: 7-6 (3-5 SEC), lost to Connecticut in the PapaJohns.com Bowl
2009 Stats: Total offense, 347.38 ypg (9th SEC, 82nd nationally); Total defense, 300.69 ypg (3rd SEC, 15th nationally)
Coaching Changes: Former Appalachian State assistant Shawn Elliott takes over for departed O line coach/running game coordinator Eric Wolford, who left to head up Youngstown State's program. Spurrier will also be more involved this season, calling 100 percent of South Carolina's offensive plays.
Starters Returning: Offense (8), Defense (7), Special Teams (2)
Key Player Losses: LB Eric Norwood, DE Clifton Geathers, WR Moe Brown
Big Games: Georgia (9/11), Alabama (10/9), @ Florida (11/13) and @ Clemson (11/27)
Non-Conference Slate: Southern Miss (9/2), Furman (9/18), Troy (11/20) and @ Clemson (11/27)

The late-season trials and tribulations continued for South Carolina in 2009 and after five full seasons on the job, Steve Spurrier hasn't been able to get the Gamecocks over the hump. But with one of the calmer offseasons among its Eastern Division rivals -- QB complaints aside -- South Carolina has become a chic pick to earn its first trip the the SEC title game in 2010.

To get the low-down on how serious a contender the Gamecocks really are, I checked in with South Carolina beat writer Seth Emerson of The State. Here's what he had to say...

David Hale: So it sounds like Steve Spurrier isn't the biggest Stephen Garcia fan in the world. What is the potential impact of Spurrier's public flogging of his QB, and is there any chance we might see Connor Shaw as the starting QB at some point this season?

Seth Emerson: Yeah, it emerged as the storyline of camp, partly because there weren't any better stories, but also because it moved a bit beyond the normal Spurrier carping about his quarterback. In a nutshell, Garcia isn't getting it quite done off the field - still misses some meetings, things like that - and on the field still makes what the coaches think are dumb mistakes - like the wrong read on a route - which the coaches trace back to not being as committed off the field.

Garcia didn't take the public criticism too lightly, saying it "upset" him but would make him more committed to prove Spurrier wrong. Will he? That's anyone's guess.

When push comes to shove, I don't think we'll see Connor Shaw starting against Southern Miss, unless Spurrier really wants to send a message. The kid's still a true freshman. That said, Shaw impressed me in camp, a dual-threat quarterback who seemed a pretty heady kid. So you never know, especially with Spurrier.

DH: How much better has Stephon Gilmore gotten since Georgia last saw him, and where might we seem him on the field come September? Will he be a regular part of the offense in addition to his CB duties?

SE: He's gotten better as a cornerback, but he wasn't that bad to begin with. He was hardly a true freshman, having enrolled early, and the coaches raved about him. He'll cover the boundary side of the field for the Gamecocks for the foreseeable future.

As for quarterback, we'll see. The results were mixed for that, especially throwing, but he gives them an added dimension running wise. He didn't do too great in the spring game in the one series he got - he was picked off. It'll be interesting to see in August how much they take a true look at him there, but with Garcia and Shaw both being mobile quarterbacks, that kind of takes away the pressing need to put him in there.

DH: Bigger issue at this point: How good the D line might be or how concerning the O line might be? How has new O line coach Shawn Elliott tweaked what was a big problem for the Gamecocks last year?

SE: Oh, it's the O-Line by a mile. The D-Line should be fine, the only concern in the spring was that three starters were sitting out, all with precautionary reasons. Cliff Matthews could lead the SEC in sacks, the other end (Devin Taylor) is an athletic specimen, and the two DTs are veterans.

The O-Line, once again, is a work in progress. They were OK in the spring, and add six recruits who arrive this summer. Elliott has done some tweaking, as part of an inside zone running scheme you'll see more of this season. But will this line improve? I'll believe it when I see it.

DH: Most pundits seem to view South Carolina as perhaps the most settled team in the division (which granted, is a rather dubious honor). What do you see as the main concerns after spring practice? Were there any surprises in terms of who really stood out during the spring?

SE: Quarterback shouldn't be a concern, but now it is. The tailback situation is in flux, as stud recruit Marcus Lattimore arrives this summer. The O-Line we discussed. The defensive secondary has a potential issue, with Chris Culliver (formerly a safety, who sat out the spring after shoulder surgery) flipping positions with Akeem Auguste. The two linebackers (Rodney Paulk and Shaq Wilson) are both pretty small for the SEC.

I'd say the biggest surprises to me were Shaw, receiver D.L. Moore, and some of the younger secondary players. But no one stood up and made you say "wow."

DH: From what you saw this spring and the folks you've talked to about the team, how realistic would you say South Carolina's chances of finally grabbing an SEC East title are in 2010?

SE: Realistically, they've got a shot. But given that Florida, and to a certain extent Georgia, are merely reloading with the major talent they've recruited in recent years, the Gamecocks still need to have everything line up right. Garcia needs to have his head on straight, the running backs need to produce, the offensive line needs to at least be serviceable, the defense needs a pass rush and to avoid injuries, the special teams needs to become a plus.

If most or all of that happens, yes South Carolina can win the division. And the fact is, that hasn't been true going into past years.

***

Big thanks to Seth for his insight. You can read his Gamecocks coverage HERE , check out his South Carolina blog HERE and follow him on Twitter HERE.

So, how serious a contender do you view South Carolina as this year? Will you be worried about Georgia's trip to Columbia in Week 2? Or does the public fallout between coach and QB lead you to believe another 7- or 8-win season is the highwater mark for the Cocks?

And don't forget, we'll be wrapping up Two-A-Days with an in-depth look at Georgia, so if you have questions you want answered, leave them in the comments section here or send me an email at dhale@macon.com.

NEXT UP: Mississippi State on Wednesday morning.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Grading the Game: South Carolina

Sorry for the lack of posts today. I was in Charlotte on Sunday for the Eagles game against the Panthers and din't make it back to Athens until this afternoon. But hopefully this extended post recapping Georgia's 41-37 win over South Carolina will make up for the brief absence.

QUARTERBACK: For the second straight week, Joe Cox entered the game with plenty of questions lingering about his health and ability to lead Georgia's offense. Unlike last week, however, he provided some encouraging answers this time around.

Cox finished 17-of-24 passing for 201 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. Unlike his forgettable debut against Oklahoma State, his passes had a good bit more zip on them and his timing was significantly better, leading his receivers rather than throwing behind them and getting rid of the ball quickly.

And while all the talk before the game surrounded just how long Cox could stay on the field before giving way to backup Logan Gray, the answer was emphatic -- Gray took just one snap.

“He handled it tremendously,” wide receiver Tavarres King said of the controversy surrounding Cox leading up to game day. “He handled all the things coming at him, came out confident in himself and confident in us. We put our confidence in him, and you saw what happened. He just balled out.”

I'm less than familiar with the term "balled out" but I assume it's a good thing, and Cox certainly showed why Mark Richt has stuck by him as the QB.

It wasn't all pretty. Cox telegraphed a pass to Eric Norwood with 12:56 left in the fourth quarter that Norwood returned for a touchdown that could have tied the game. A blocked extra point saved the day for Georgia. Even Cox admitted he's not sure what he was thinking on the play.

The turnover was ugly, but beyond that Cox exhibited all qualities coaches have praised him for since January, most notably his strong leadership which was absolutely crucial to getting the offense back in gear after sitting on the sideline for nearly the entire first quarter and trailing 17-7 by the time the unit took its third snap of the game.

"I was very proud of him," offensive coordinator Mike Bobo said. "He came out and played ball and had fun. You can't get caught up in everything that's going on."

Final Grade: B

RUNNING BACKS: Georgia finished with just 107 yards rushing on 29 carries (3.7 ypc) which might not seem too shabby. The problem, however, is that 61 of those yards came on just one play. Take away Branden Smith's touchdown, and the numbers are much less encouraging -- a 1.64 yards per carry average. Even if you add back the 21 yards the team lost after Carlton Thomas recovered a fumble by Cox, the Bulldogs still averaged fewer than 2.5 yards per rush.

Of course, the numbers can be a bit deceiving. Richard Samuel tallied just 65 yards on 15 carries, but he looked much better than he did a week ago. Rather than hitting the ground at first contact, Samuel ran hard, and while he never broke a long one -- his high was just 11 yards -- he did pick up some hard-earned yards to keep drives going.

So if Samuel did well, but the running game struggled beyond that, why the heck didn't we see more of him? On Georgia's first scoring drive, Samuel had rushes of 11 and 6 yards and caught a pass for a 16-yard gain before capping the drive with a 1-yard touchdown with 1:56 to play. He looked impressive, but he didn't touch the football again for 15 minutes of game action spanning three Georgia drives.

Bobo gets a pass for the first drive, on which Smith scored on the second play. There might be a rationale to why Samuel wasn't on the field on the next drive, too. A chop-block penalty put Georgia in a second-and-long situation and the Bulldogs didn't run again -- but isn't Samuel a superior pass blocker, too? Then the third drive without Samuel was utterly perplexing. South Carolina had just closed to within four and Georgia's offense needed to move the football. Instead, a Thomas run went nowhere and a short pass to Tavarres King left Georgia in a third-and-four. Rather than handoff to the bruising tailback, Thomas remained in the game and Cox ran the third-down play from the shotgun, throwing incomplete to Mike Moore to finish a three-and-out.

South Carolina scored again on its next drive to pull to within 1, but once again Thomas was on the field for Georgia's first play. Mercifully, Bobo went back to Samuel again on second down -- a full 15 minutes of game time after his last touch -- and the sophomore tailback rumbled 11 yards on second down.

Clearly Samuel is a weapon, and Richt has explicitly said Samuel is the type of back who gets better as the game progresses. So why keep him off the field for so long?

Of course, before I bury Georgia for poor personnel decisions, I have to applaud the coaching staff for keeping confidence in Smith. He had five touches last week but had few results. Against South Carolina, however, the reverse to Smith was executed to perfection, and his 61-yard run would have been "SportsCenter" material most nights if he hadn't been upstaged by Brandon Boykin's 100-yard return.

Caleb King missed a second straight game, but he was dressed and should be back this week. That's a good sign for Georgia, particularly given Thomas' lack of success running between the tackles.

Final Grade: B-

RECEIVERS/TIGHT ENDS: After an absolutely dismal performance in Georgia's opener, the Bulldogs' receivers looked dramatically improved against South Carolina, but the unit looks like it's still going to have some issues.

Tavarres King had a nice game, catching three passes for 27 yards, and Mike Moore hauled in two catches, including his second four-yard TD reception of the season. But it was mostly the A.J. Green show. The sophomore caught six passes for 86 yards, including a few acrobatic grabs that add to the legacy he's building in Athens. Cox's 9-yard touchdown pass to Green in the back of the end zone before the half was reminiscent of the Matthew Stafford-to-Green TD to win the Kentucky game last year -- a thing of beauty. Of course, some points have to be deducted for Green's fumble on the second offensive play of the game, too.

Orson Charles looked solid, too. He's clearly a matchup problem and he has looked respectable in the blocking game as well. He had two grabs for 38 yards against South Carolina, and the truth is, he probably needs more looks.

Aron White was shut out, and while Marlon Brown and Rantavious Wooten did see action, the two freshmen combined for just three snaps in the game.

The coaches talked about a need for increased diversity on offense, and they found some of that Saturday, but not enough.

Final Grade: B

OFFENSIVE LINE: The O line was supposed to be dominant in Week 1 against the undersized Oklahoma State front four, but instead it struggled.

Breaking in a new left tackle against South Carolina's dominating pass rush, it looked as if the Bulldogs might struggle last week. Instead, the unit looked good.

No, the running game wasn't dominant, but the line opened some holes and for the most part protected Cox well. The Gamecocks had two sacks, but for the most part Cox had the time he needed to throw downfield.

It wasn't a perfect performance, but it was a step forward against a far better opponent.

Also of note, Clint Boling earned the SEC's lineman of the week award.

Final Grade: B+

DEFENSIVE LINE: Justin Houston returns from a two-game suspension this week, and the timing couldn't be better. Rod Battle went down with a season-ending knee injury which hurt the depth at an already shallow position. Geno Atkins and Marcus Washington continued to see snaps at defensive end while also rotating to other positions, and Cornelius Washington saw the most action of his career, earning his first career sack.

While the Bulldogs' line managed to stifle South Carolina's running game, holding the Gamecocks' tailbacks to just 3 yards per carry. Unfortunately, they couldn't do the same with quarterback Stephen Garcia.

Containment problems persisted throughout the game with Garcia routinely being able to step up in the pocket to avoid the rush and either dump off a short lob pass or use his legs to pick up some big gains. Garcia had 58 yards rushing in the game (not including the yards lost from Georgia's two sacks) and was able to keep drives going by avoiding the rush.

Defensive coordinator Willie Martinez said Battle's loss throughout most of the game played a role in the poor containment of Garcia, but clearly this is a problem as it was a year ago against mobile quarterbacks.

"He was making plays, and they were catching the ball. He got away from our pass rush, we lost contain at times, and a lot of it was because of his ability to do it. But we didn't want to give up the deep balls, the vertical game. We wanted to keep everything in front of us, and he scrambled a couple of times to make some big-time plays."

On the upside, however, Georgia was exceptional in the red zone and that started with the line's ability to control the running game, and of course any assessment of the defense's performance -- particularly the guys up front -- should come with the caveat that the were on the field for 30 more plays than South Carolina's defense.

Final Grade: C

LINEBACKERS: This was not the best day for Georgia's linebackers not named Rennie Curran. Both Darius Dewberry and Nick Williams missed the game, leaving Georgia with little depth at Sam linebacker, and the results were obvious.

Marcus Washington was forced to return to linebacker for the first time since spring practice, and South Carolina exploited Georgia's weak linebacker play by finding tight end Weslye Saunders over and over and over.

Saunders had eight catches for 96 yards and was open all night. It was the go-to play for Garcia, who would survey the field, then step up to avoid the rush and dump a short lob to Saunders over the middle for crucial gains.

But it's hard to throw the linebackers under the bus too much when you factor in the work that Curran did. Before the game, he gave an impassioned speech that had the team ready to play. During the game, he was dominant, finishing with a career-best 15 tackles. And on the Gamecocks' final play, he once again made the play that ended South Carolina's comeback attempt.

As impressive as Curran's deflection of Garcia's final pass was, it's even more impressive when you remember that Garcia had been killing Georgia with his legs all night and could have easily ran up the middle and picked up the first down, too. Curran was forced into no-man's land, but made the right choice staying on his receiver and making the crucial deflection at the goal line.

“There’s something about this game and the goal line," Curran said, "I’m just always there in the right place at the right time. It feels good though.”

Darryl Gamble had a solid game, too, finishing with nine tackles, a sack and a forced fumble, while Marcus Dowtin finished with six tackles, a nice follow-up to his strong performance in Georgia's opener against Oklahoma State.

Final Grade: B

DEFENSIVE BACKS: Martinez said the game plan was to shut down South Carolina's vertical attack, but the Gamecocks probably did a better job of that than the Bulldogs did. It it weren't for several crucial penalties that negated big plays, Prince Miller would have had a long night. Tori Gurley had two touchdown receptions overturned because of flags on the Gamecocks' offense.

Penalties were a problem for Georgia, too. The Bulldogs were flagged 13 times for 108 yards in the game, and the DBs played a big role, including two 15-yard penalties on Vance Cuff and another personal foul call on Reshad Jones.

Brandon Boykin was once again the highlight of the secondary. He was exceptional in coverage and came down with Georgia's first -- and to this point, only -- turnover of the season, a brilliant interception of Garcia in which the South Carolina QB clearly under-estimated Boykin's leaping ability.

"He made a couple other great plays when they were trying to throw the ball deep," Martinez said. "He's got an unbelievable vertical jump, he's a great athlete and it was good to see him play so well."

Richt said Boykin has introduced an interesting new presume ritual the past two weeks. When the players finish warm ups and run back toward Richt, Boykin leaps up and Richt said the cornerback's feet get up to the coach's eye line.

"He's a tremendous athlete," Richt said of Boykin. "I wish we had about three of him. He's an outstanding cover guy, he's tough enough to play the boundary corner which we expect them to support the run, he can return kicks as you saw. He can do so much."

Kudos to Bryan Evans, by the way. After so many really ugly coverage performances, his breakup of Garcia's pass in the end zone intended for D.L. Moore was a game saver.

Final Grade: C

SPECIAL TEAMS: Where to begin?

On one hand, you have Boykin's 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown.

On the other hand, you have Branden Smith's fumble to set up a South Carolina score.

Of course, Smith also had another long return, and Georgia managed a school-record 252 kick return yards.

Of course, there were some problems in the punting game, where a bad snap from Ty Frix turned into the first safety allowed by Georgia since 2006.

Balir Wash was actually able to kick deep this week and responded with two touchbacks and the Gamecocks began their first five drives following kickoffs at the 22 or worse. Walsh also booted two field goals, including his second 50+ yarder of the season.

But Chris Culliver also returned Walsh's seventh kickoff 57 yards to set up a South Carolina field goal.

And then you have the fake punt that South Carolina ran in the second quarter turned a three-and-out into a field goal for the Gamecocks -- one of five in the game for Lanning.

And that's all before you get to what might have been the biggest play of the game -- DeAngelo Tyson's block of South Carolina's point-after try following Eric Norwood's pick six. That preserved a one-point lead for Georgia and forced the Gamecocks to go for the touchdown on the game's final drive rather than booting a sixth field goal to tie the score.

So the bottom line is, there were a lot of problems on special teams that can't be repeated next week, but the good definitely outweighed the bad.

Final Grade: B

COACHING: From the Saturday kickoff in Stillwater right up until the kickoff at Sanford Stadium against the Gamecocks, it was clearly not one of the finest weeks in Richt's career. But despite all the problems -- the loss to OSU, the offensive ineptitude, the public questions raised about personnel, the on-the-record contradictions made by various coaches, the report that Cox was going to be benched -- Richt had his troops ready to play Saturday.

More than a few folks, including myself, wondered if Richt didn't need to be a bit more vocal in critiquing the performance against Oklahoma State, but the results of his cool and collected approach were more than enough justification.

On offense, questions still have to be asked about Bobo's personnel decisions, but the game plan was both more diversified and more successful against South Carolina and Bobo deserves some credit for finding ways to get Green open by putting him in motion and moving him around the field more than he did a week earlier. The playcalling was much better this week, however, and the result was three touchdowns on three trips inside South Carolina's 20. (Of course, we didn't see Logan Gray on any of those red-zone snaps, which I thought was supposed to be where the coaching staff wanted to use him.)

"The one thing we talked about all week as an offense was to execute," Bobo said. "We wanted our guys to be aggressive, play with some passion, and I thought they did that tonight. Obviously it wasn't perfect, but whoever had the ball had a mind-set of making a play, and it wasn't just A.J. Green. I'm proud of the way they came back after last week."

There will no doubt be criticisms of Martinez and his unwillingness or inability to adjust, and yes, South Carolina did do essentially the same thing offensively throughout the game to exploit Georgia's zone for short, time-consuming gains. But I think this was probably the right approach for the Bulldogs in this game rather than stubbornness on Martinez's part.

The defense certainly didn't look great, but it got the job done. Martinez did what he could given the injury concerns at linebacker and defensive end. Martinez did a nice job of blitzing linebackers when he could without sacrificing the vertical defense, holding most of the gains South Carolina made in front of the defense, and forced South Carolina to settle for field goals or no points on five of seven trips to the red zone.

“Bottom line is we got it done in the end," Richt said. "There were so many good things, so many bad things. When it came down to it, the red-zone defense was fantastic and that really was the difference.”

Extra credit goes to Martinez's defense for holding up while being on the field for 30 more plays than the offense was.

All the flags should be a concern for Georgia's coaching staff. The Bulldogs got 13 of them Saturday and now rank 109th in the country in penalties. That's discouraging given all the work the team supposedly put in to minimizing the whistles during the offseason. The problems, however, have been offset for the most part by 26 penalties against the opposing team in the first two games.

Turnovers are still a problem, with Georgia giving the ball away three more times Saturday, and while Boykin did muster the first takeaway of the season, South Carolina also put the ball on the ground twice without turning it over. Georgia needs to both create more takeaway opportunities and do a better job of capitalizing on them.

More than anything else, however, the coaching staff earns some kudos for keeping the focus where it needed to be despite all the furor following the team's first 0-1 start in 13 years.

Richt admitted that the players and coaches were all down after the OSU loss, but he said some encouraging words by assistant coach Joe Tereshinski and linebacker Rennie Curran helped to turn the tide and the attitude was as impressive on game day as Richt could remember.

“I think our guys played about as hard as I’ve seen them play in a long time," Richt said. "There was a special energy. I don’t know why. Maybe there was a special sense of urgency at not going 0-2, knowing we’re at home, knowing it was the SEC. There was so many things riding on it, and for whatever reason I think our boys had as much heart and fire, wire to wire, that I’ve ever seen.”

Final Grade: B

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Live Blog: Georgia vs. South Carolina

PREGAME (6:50 p.m.):

-- Joe Cox was out warming up and didn't show any ill effects of the arm injury. Throwing a few 20-yard passes with plenty of zip on them.

-- I love that South Carolina's starting center is named Garrett Anderson. How he finds time to anchor the Gamecocks' line and still have a .312 on-base percentage for the Braves is beyond me.

-- I take full responsibility for calling out the Big Ten earlier today. Wisconsin did eek out a win. Meanwhile: Penn State 28, Syracuse 7. Has the Greg Paulus era been as exciting for you as it has been for me?

-- Lovely pregame welcome from the fans for their beloved Steve Spurrier. Does sarcasm come through in print?

-- Tavarres King gets the start at split end this week.

-- I know the Oklahoma State score looks bad for Georgia, but maybe -- just maybe -- it's a simple let-down game situation against a team that, despite not being a BCS power, does have a pretty potent offense. Oh, who am I kidding... it looks bad.

-- Quick note: The live blog will be limited tonight. I have an 11 p.m. deadline, so I need to be working on my game story during the game, which will cut into my blogging. I know, I know... who still reads the newspaper, right? Well, I'm a sucker for tradition.

(FIRST QUARTER, 5:58 left)

-- Hey, a touchback on the kickoff. What a novel concept!

-- Cornelius Washington with his first career sack. He got to Garcia in a hurry. None of Georgia's DEs had a sack in SEC play last year, but that's a nice start for Washington.

-- South Carolina covered the punt well and Georgia will begin its first drive on the 26. Contrary to popular reports, Joe Cox is in at QB. Shocking, I know.

-- Cox starts in the shotgun and goes deep down the near sideline for A.J. It was nearly picked off... but because it was overthrown, not underthrown. Not sure if that's a good sign.

-- Oh my... I have no idea what Green was thinking there. It looked like he was lateraling the ball to South Carolina. First-and-10 Cocks at the UGA 23. Just to keep you up to date: Georgia's turnover ratio this season is now 4 giveaways, no takeaways.

-- Nice coverage in the end zone by Boykin on a second-down pass. He's looked every bit as good as Asher did last year so far this season.

-- Garcia gets off a pass to pick up a first down inside the 5 on third-and-9. No one was home up the middle and Garcia was able to step up in the pocket and lob the pass for an easy completion.

-- And Michigan officially drives the dagger through Dr. Lou's heart. Wonder if Charlie Weis can get his old job back with the Patriots.

-- Garcia to Tori Gurley for a South Carolina touchdown. That may clinch the over for those of you who bet. South Carolina 7, Georgia 0, 9:51 left in 1st quarter.

-- Boykin the deep man for South Carolina's first kickoff and returns it the length of the field for a touchdown. He got in behind the wedge, broke one tackle, then had a caravan of three blockers to lead him the rest of the way. Hey, if the offense can't do it, somebody's got to. Georgia 7, South Carolina 7, 9:37 left in first.

-- The 100-yard kick return is the longest in school history. Thomas Brown and Lindsay Scott each had 99 yarders.

-- Gurley had Prince Miller beat by a mile for a TD, but an ineligible receiver flag overturns a TD for South Carolina. The scary part though: Stephen Garcia is carving up the UGA defense right now.

-- UGA honors Ashley Houts and Trey Thompkins on the field. Thompkins looks like he's slimmed down a good bit, which is a good sign. And Mark Fox is rocking a Tressel-style sweater vest. Interesting fashion choice.

-- Pass interference flag on Prince Miller -- though it looked like it was Marcus Washington who made contact. As good as the Dawgs looked against OSU's passing attack a week ago, that seems to have disappoeared this week. Garcia looks like a stud -- which is saying something.

-- Georgia's D has been on the field all but two plays so far. As exciting as Boykin's kick return was, it also put the defense right back on the field for essentially three straight series without an interuption.

-- Facemask on Vance Cuff sets SC up with a first down at the Georgia 15. Garcia is 7-of-10 passing so far.

-- Garcia hits Brian Maddox wide open in the flat for an easy touchdown. The Gamecocks are feasting on those mid-range throws down the middle. South Carolina 14, Georgia 7, 5:58 to go in the first quarter.

(END OF FIRST QUARTER UPDATE)

-- Georgia's time of possession through the first 9:02 has been 30 seconds. Branden Smith in as the deep return man. Boykin probably deserves to catch a breath on the bench.

-- Garcia's numbers so far: 8-of-12 for 91 yards and 2 TDs.

-- Branden Smith fumbles the return without being touched and South Carolina will take over again at the Georgia 9-yard line. This could not be a worse start for the Bulldogs. The defense has to be dying right now.

-- Georgia's turnover margin so far this season: 5 giveaways, no takeaways.

-- I'm guessing Tony Ball can't pin that one on Shaun Chapas.

-- Hey, Auburn scored. A real barnburner on the Plains.

-- South Carolina has 25 yards rushing thus far -- or in other words, seven more than they had in the entire game a year ago.

-- Just a side note, Caleb King is in uniform tonight. Whether he plays or not? That's a mystery.

-- Big play by Demarcus Dobbs who breaks up a Garcia pass on third-and-goal. Lanning kicks a chip-shot field goal of 21 yards. South Carolina 17, Georgia 7, 5:07 left in the first.

-- While Caleb is in uniform, Nick Williams isn't. No clue why he's out.

-- Boykin was a shoestring tackle away from breaking another one, but returns it to the 48.

-- So much for Samuel going down on first contact. He just ran OVER two tacklers for an 11-yard gain. First down at the SC 37.

-- Cox hits Samuel for a 17-yard gain. Who didn't see this coming?

-- Samuel is running like he's a bit angry about all that criticism last week. Third-and-5 at the 15 for Georgia.

-- A pass interference flag keeps the drive alive and sets up first and goal for Georgia, and Samuel gets into the end zone on his second attempt. South Carolina 17, Georgia 14, 1:56 remaining in the first quarter.

-- This has got to be one of the longest quarters of football I've watched in a while. We're coming up on an hour of real time to play 13 minutes of game time.

-- Another touchback... come on, Fabris.... where's the challenge in that?

-- I hope Tennessee's loss motivates Lane to bring the crazy this week. He's been a bit too quiet lately.

-- Man, Georgia's opponents have had a lot of flags thrown against them in the past two weeks. This week it's cost Carolina some big plays. A 20-yard run by Garcia was just overturned, and in case you're keeping track, that's 23 flags that went Georgia's way in the past 5 quarters of football.

-- And finally the quarter comes to an end -- 59 minutes after it began. South Carolina 17, Georgia 14.

(UPDATE: SECOND QUARTER, 6:40 left)

-- Congrats to Washington, which beat Idaho for its first win in 15 games. And congrats to Idaho for being, at best, the second best team in Idaho.

-- Dawgs D didn't look great on that series, but much improved after getting a minor breather. Fair catch at the 22 on the punt by Logan Gray.

-- Time of possession in the first quarter for Georgia: 3 minutes, 41 seconds. Dawgs should be thrilled to be down just three with the ball in their hands right now.

-- Orson Charles in the game and A.J. in motion. Cox throws a bit of a floater to Green who makes an amazing grab between two defenders for a 22-yard gain. Does it really matter who's playing QB when No. 8 is the intended target?

-- Branden Smith in on offense split out wide along with Carlton Thomas in the backfield. It's a reverse that works like a charm. Smith goes 61 yards on a brilliant bit of play calling by Mike Bobo. Where was this last week? Georgia 21, South Carolina 17, 14:04 left in the half.

-- Of note: This marks the first time either team has topped 20 points in this series in six years.

-- All three kickoffs have left SC starting at the 20 or better.

-- Interception by Brandon Boykin. I thought this was going to happen last week, but he got some air on that one. Quarterbacks are going to underestimate this kid's leaping ability all season. Dawgs set up at the SC 33.

-- Georgia's turnover ration this season is now a respectable 5 giveaways, 1 takeaway.

-- Cox throws a laser to Orson Charles to the 13 for a 29-yard gain. So much for those arm troubles, eh?

-- Quote from the press box: "I think this was a basketball timeout by Spurrier. He needs to halt the momentum."

-- I could be wrong but I still haven't seen Marlon Brown or Rantavious Wooten on the field.

-- TK's doing a little Knowshon dancing in the huddle. Umm... it's maybe a little more Mark Madsen than Knowshon Moreno, but it's a nice touch nevertheless.

-- A chop block flag moves Georgia back to the 28 to set up 2nd and 28.

-- TK picks up Georgia's 4th non-AJ reception by a WR this season.

-- Blair nails another kick of 50-plus.... connects on a 50-yarder. Georgia 24, South Carolina 17, 12:31 left in the half.

-- Georgia's D line was dominant on that series, forcing a three-and-out.

-- Well, make that a three-and-fake punt. Lanning keeps it and runs for a first down. When's the last time Georgia didn't fall for the fake punt? SC starts with a first down at its 36.

-- Couple scores of interest from the ACC: Jax St 9, FSU 7; TCU 30, Virginia 14; James Madison 28, Maryland 21. If JMU holds on, we're looking at a 3-0 record for the Colonial against the ACC.

-- Garcia has looked good so far, but he just had Moe Brown wide open for an easy TD and threw behind him.

-- Last year, SC had a Smelley. This year, a Gurley. Nice. I wish former Detroit Lion Mike Furrey had played there.

-- Garcia connects with Moore to the 22 to bring up fourth down, and SC is going for it... or not. A timeout is called and Lanning comes out and boots a 34-yarder. The fake punt costs Georgia 3 points. Georgia 24, South Carolina 20, 8:21 remaining in the half.

-- The 20 points for South Carolina is their highest output against Georgia since 2000. Another TD for the Gamecocks would give them 27 for the first time sinec 1979.

-- After looking great on Georgia's last TD drive, Richard Samuel hasn't touched the ball. He doesn't look hurt, but it's odd that he hasn't been in. Even on a third-and-4 now.

-- Bad snap to Cox forces the Dawgs to punt. Why would Samuel not be seeing action?

-- Offensive plays so far: South Carolina 41, Georgia 19.

(UPDATED, END OF 2nd QUARTER)

-- Some bad tackling by Georgia and Reshad Jones gets another personal foul flag after hauling Giles out of bounds by his shoulder pads?

-- The defense holds on third-and-6 and SC sends in the kicking team again for another chip shot. Not the prettiest series for Georgia's D, but those guys have got to be getting winded at this point. Cocks have dominated time of possession. Georgia 24, South Carolina 23, 2:29 remaining in the half.

-- Georgia has run 19 plays to Carolina's 49 so far. Time of possession: 20:11 for SC, 7:20 for UGA.

-- Samuel is wandering around the sideline like he's healthy. Guess a successful drive warrants bench duty for two series to follow.

-- Branden Smith returns the kick to the South Carolina 40 and easily could have gone all the way but tripped up. Special teams are carrying the Bulldogs tonight.

-- Still no Richard Samuel. Carlton Thomas takes the toss sweep and picks up 4 after a rather pedestrian block by Cox.

-- Samuel finally returns... seriously, what the heck?

-- And he goes for 11 yards and rumbles over a few defenders. But yeah, didn't need him in the game.

-- A holding call on Ben Jones gives that all back plus negates a big play by Tavarres King. First and 20 at the SC 35.

-- Cox doesn't need a big arm when South Carolina is going to tip the ball and add a few more yards to the throw. Michael Moore picks up 19 and Richard Samuel absolutely leveled Alonzo Winfield after Moore came down with the ball. Just inches shy of the first down.

-- Cox sneaks for the first down. Georgia sets up with a 1st-and-10 just inside the 15 with 37 seconds.

-- Still no Marlon Brown. Seems like a red-zone look might be worthwhile. And wasn't Logan Gray supposed to see time in the red zone? Ah well.

-- Georgia takes its last time out with 16 seconds left, third-and-5 at the 9 yard line.

-- Georgia has 204 KO return yards today. That's a new record. The previous high was 196 in a shutout loss to Kentucky in 1977.

-- Now that was a pretty pass by Cox. He hits A.J. Green in the back of the end zone -- a little reminiscent of the Stafford-to-Green combo against Kentucky last year -- for six. Just a brilliantly executed drive by Cox. Georgia 31, South Carolina 23, 9 seconds remaining in the half.

POST HALFTIME

-- After Georgia leaves the field, the officials call them back out while the final play -- a long Carolina run after catch -- is under review. Cocks have a first down at the 40, but is there any time left on the clock? No, no there's not, but we needed to delay things a little longer to ensure I don't make deadline. Thanks, guys!

(UPDATED THIRD QUARTER, 5:30 remaining)

-- Cox underthrew Green by a touch on third-and-short, but a flag followed for pass interference. The 15-yard penalty gives Georgia a first down at the SC 42. Cox hasn't been Stafford today by any means, but he's shown a lot more zip on his passes than he did a week ago.

-- Cox hits Green who sheds a tackler and picks up 34 yards to the 5. There definitely should have been a flag following that, too, but no matter. It's first and goal.

-- Some first half stats: Cox 10-of-16 for 113 yards and a TD; Samuel 6 touches for 51 yards and a TD; Green 3 catches for 38 yards and a TD; Boykin 2 returns for 148 yards; Reshad Jones with six tackles; Garcia is 17-of-30 passing for 178 yards, 2 TDs and 1 INT plus another 35 yards rushing on six carries; South Carolina 7 flags for 58 yards, Georgia 9 flags for 80; TOP SC 20:11, Georgia 9:40.

-- Cox to a wide open Michael Moore at the goal line on third-and-4. There was nobody over the middle and Moore just fell backward into the end zone. Georgia 38, South Carolina 23, 9:04 left in the third quarter.

-- The 38 points are the most by Georgia in this series since a 42-23 win in 1995.

-- Couple interesting notes via Twitter: MikeinValdosta says SC fans were getting arrested at the concessions. Hope that wasn't my buddy, Ken. ChuckWestbrook says Samuel wasn't in the game for a while because he's actually a linebacker and the coaches were prepping him to go in on D. Good stuff, guys.

-- The South Carolina mascot looks an awful lot like the Stanford Tree only red and with a beak.

-- Cocks get their own big return to set up their first drive of the second half.

-- The tackling really hasn't been great by Georgia in this game, but I've got to imagine the D is exhausted after spending so much time on the field so far. Weslye Saunders just picks up his seventh reception of the game for a 13-yard gain.

-- Oh, yes, it's the Uga VII hiding behind the frech fries game. I say it's two. ... ... And I was right! Also, it's amazing how many people could follow that after tailgating all day.

-- One more halftime note: It's good to know the hot dogs are just as awful this year as ever. But hey, free is free.

-- SC is going for it on fourth-and-1 from the 21 and Maddox has no trouble picking it up. If there's one really troubling thing for Georgia from a defensive standpoint it's been the inability to get to Garcia or keep him from picking up key yards with his feet. His 7 yards on third down were crucial.

-- Three straight incompletions brings in the field-goal unit. Lanning drills home a 35-yarder. Georgia 38, South Carolina 26, 5:30 remaining in the third.

-- I gotta start some serious work on my game story, so minimal blogging from here on out. I'll have notes after the game though.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Notebook: Ball Clears Up the Confusion

Receivers Michael Moore and Marlon Brown both said their coach, Tony Ball, lost track of who had played during the game, leaving Brown and fellow freshman Rantavious Wooten on the sideline and Moore, A.J. Green and Tavarres King handling nearly every snap.

As it turned out, however, Ball said the decision not to play the freshmen was dictated by the game situations rather than an oversight.

“The timing, just the things that were happening and needing to make something happen and get something going, what better way to do that then to have your best players in there,” Ball said. “The intention was to play them, and the season is still young, so they’ll play. They just have to be patient. You’ve got to get A.J. and Mike and Tavarres flowing before you start subbing people.”

While neither Brown nor Wooten saw action against Oklahoma State, Ball said there’s every indication that both will play this week against South Carolina, but their rolls will likely be dictated once again by how the game unfolds.

“They’ll play, but if you were to ask me how many plays, I couldn’t tell you,” Ball said. “I think what you’re seeing this week is you’re seeing their legs come back and looking a lot more sudden and explosive, and that’s encouraging. Last week, you could still see the sluggishness in their performance.”

KING, DEWBERRY OUT

Richt said Tuesday he thought tailback Caleb King would be a near certainty for Georgia’s matchup against South Carolina, but after the sophomore failed to make it through any of this week’s practice sessions without soreness in his injured hamstring, Richt downgraded his assessment to “doubtful.”

Multiple additional sources confirmed to the Telegraph that King would not be available for the game, leaving sophomore Richard Samuel as the Bulldogs’ primary ball carrier. Samuel had 87 yards on 20 carries in Georgia’s opener.

King said Wednesday he wasn’t sure when he would return to action, but Richt said the primary obstacle for the tailback now is simply rebuilding the strength in his hamtring.

“We don’t really have any set limitation on him other than how far can he go before it fatigues and the last couple days he hasn’t been able to go too far into practice,” Richt said.

Linebacker Darius Dewberry was Georgia’s starting Sam linebacker for its opener against Oklahoma State, but the senior from Peach County tweaked a muscle and Richt said he’ll miss Saturday’s contest.

UNDER PRESSURE

Georgia’s defense didn’t record a single sack against Oklahoma State, but senior tackle Jeff Owens said it wasn’t for a lack of trying.

The Cowboys’ spread offense made getting to the quarterback a difficult task, as Zac Robinson ran few five- or seven-step drops, but that shouldn’t be as much of an issue against South Carolina and quarterback Stephen Garcia this week – and that’s news that has Georgia’s defense excited.

“That’s something you look forward to being a defensive lineman and they won’t be in shotgun the whole time, so hopefully we can apply some pressure and get some sacks,” senior defensive end Rod Battle said.

Saturday’s game will also be the last for Georgia before sophomore defensive end Justin Houston returns from a two-game suspension, and while Battle said he thought the back-up pass rushers handled themselves nicely last week, he’s eager to take the field with a full compliment of defensive ends.

“I don’t think anybody got too tired due to depth problems, and I think they’re continuing to get better, but we’ll be glad when Houston gets back,” Battle said.

TEMPORARY SOLUTION

Defensive tackle Geno Atkins saw action at defensive end throughout Georgia’s opener against Oklahoma State, and line coach Rodney Garner said there were plans to use tackle Jeff Owens in a similar role, but the game plan may not look the same this week against South Carolina.

“Part of that had to do with a particular play that they like to run that the bigger, more physical, meaner the defensive end, the better for the couple things we do,” Richt said of the unique alignment against Oklahoma State. “It wasn’t so much that we’re short of D ends as it was a schematic thing we thought would help us.”

Georgia plays its last game without suspended defensive end Justin Houston this week, but Garner said the coaching staff hasn’t ruled out using Atkins, Owens or fellow tackle Kade Weston as pass rushers in the future.

“We feel like Geno and Jeff and Kade and all those guys are some of our better players and we feel like we need to keep them on the field,” Garner said.

ANOTHER PIECE TO THE PUZZLE

Georgia will have one more option at defensive end this year than it did against the Cowboys.

After missing the Bulldogs’ opener with a shoulder injury, Kiante Tripp returned to practice this week and is cleared to play in Saturday’s game. How many snaps he’ll see, however, is still undetermined.

“He’s able to play, but how much he’ll play, if he plays, I don’t know that answer,” Richt said.

BROTHERLY LOVE

Freshman defensive lineman Kwame Geathers said he hadn’t even graduated high school yet before he started talking trash to his older brother about this week’s Georgia-South Carolina game.

Clifton Geathers, Kwame’s brother, is a defensive end for South Carolina, and Saturday’s game marks the first time the two brothers will face off against one another.

“I was talking smack to him and he was talking smack to me, but it’s going to be very exciting to see him on the other side,” Kwame Geathers said. “I don’t say anything about the game plan, just about who’s going to win and how good he’s going to do.”

Geathers said he’ll have plenty of family members in attendance for the game, but he’s still not sure which team they’ll be rooting for.

“Hopefully when they come here and see our fans, they’ll switch their minds over to Georgia,” Geathers said. “Or go half-and-half at least”

WHAT CONDITION THEIR CONDITION IS IN

Rennie Curran was as surprised as anyone when he had to take a seat on the sideline during last Saturday’s game and get IV fluids. He was one of several Bulldogs to need fluids after suffering from dehydration and cramping under the Oklahoma sun, and the physical limitations were an unexpected twist, Curran said, following an offseason of particularly grueling conditioning.

“I really don’t know what it was because the whole entire offseason we trained in the heat in the hottest time of the day,” Curran said. “I felt like we had put in our work, we had trained well and I don’t know if it was the turf or the atmosphere, but we got IVs, came back out and finished strong.”

LIVING THE DREAM

When Georgia’s team bus pulled up next to the plane the team was taking to Oklahoma last week, freshman quarterback Aaron Murray knew he’d finally made the big time.

“Getting on the plane and the bus actually drove to the plane, it was pretty cool, all that stuff,” Murray said. “From the hotel to the meetings, the whole experience, I loved every minute of it.”

Well, everything but the final score, he said.

Despite the loss and the lack of playing time – Murray remains third on Georgia’s quarterback depth chart – he said the experience was invaluable, not to mention pretty entertaining.

“It was pretty crazy, especially being so close to the fans,” Murray said. “There was some crazy stuff being said. But it was entertaining just standing on the sideline listening to them.”

Of course, things will be a bit different this week as Murray gets his first taste of the home crowd and life in the SEC. It’s an experience he’s excited about, however. After soaking in the crowd of just more than 57,000 in Stillwater, Okla. last week, he can’t wait to see what game days in the SEC will be like.

“When they announced it right after halftime, like 50-some thousand, I was like, we have 90,000. Tennessee has 100,000,” Murray said. “It’s going to be crazy in those games and I’m excited for this weekend.”

UP ON DOWTIN

Marcus Dowtin didn’t figure to get a ton of playing time against Oklahoma State, but after the sophomore linebacker saw increased action while several other players required IVs during the game, Curran said he’s gained confidence in his young teammate to get the job done on a more routine basis.

“It’s definitely impressive,” Curran said. “We always want to have young guys step in and he did a great job of keeping his poise. He did a great job on the goal line of just staying focused and making plays.”

RICHT'S RESPONSE

To those of you wonder, no, Richt wasn't thrilled about the report that Logan Gray would start Saturday, but he took it well for the most part. Still, when a reporter inquired as to how open practice might be today, Richt made sure he underscored where his frustration with the media rumors has taken the program.

"Even some of the people that might be out there on an earlier weekday, we try to shut it completely down," Richt said of practice. "But if one of the coaches' kids wanted to be there or my dad wanted to watch it, we're not going to say nobody. We try to close it down. We've told the players, usually parents are allowed, but there's so much going on to tell writers, stories and stuff like that. For some reason, they feel good when they see a little something they can tell the world. It makes them feel important, I guess. And the more of that that happens, the harder it makes it to say, 'Come on out and enjoy the day.' There are some things you could see that are very obvious to even my mother that we're doing this or that, and she might tell her girlfriend and she tells her son and then it's on the Net. I don't think you can stop it, but we try to control it a little bit. Maybe."

I guess this is as good a time as any to admit it: Richt's mom has been my source all along.

I'm kidding, of course, but there may be a silver lining to all this.

As Seth Emerson at The State reports via Twitter, South Carolina defensive coach Ellis Johnson is now a believer that he's going to see Logan Gray this weekend.

Behind Enemy Lines: South Carolina

Georgia takes on South Carolina at 7 p.m. Saturday, but thanks to The State's Seth Emerson, you can get a taste of what the Gamecocks will bring to Athens now.

David Hale: Fans are up in arms around here after Georgia mustered just 10 points last week. Is the tone any different in Columbia after South Carolina scored just seven, but managed to win? And how is Steve Spurrier planning to get the offense going again?

Seth Emerson:
I really get the sense that people were just happy to get a win, no matter how ugly it was. Maybe that's the hunger for a winner, or that they've gotten used to good defense/bad offense. Spurrier is talking about opening up the offense, and throwing downfield - it clearly irks him not to be able to win shootouts like he did at Florida. But it'll be interesting to see just how much he'll open up the playbook. I mean, they DID win at NC State with a ball-control offense, and this defense looks like it can carry them.

DH: There was some talk after the game debating how much control Stephen Garcia should have of the offense with regard to changing plays at the line of scrimmage, etc. What's Spurrier's take on that, and how ready is Garcia to handle a bigger role?

SE:
Spurrier has said that Garcia had the power to call audibles, but that the coaches "didn't have him prepared as" they needed to in order to do that. In fact Garcia made a few run-call audibles, including one that resulted in a loss, as Spurrier pointed out this week. (Laughing as he said it). Garcia has the kind of personality where you expect him to be able to handle a bigger role, and the big-game atmosphere. I think that's why so many fans embraced him last year, rather than the more sedate Chris Smelley. But will he manage the game well, rather than try too many ill-advised throws or panicky scrambles? We still don't know yet.

DH: Clifton Geathers returns from a suspension this week, but Devin Taylor looked dominant against NC State. How are you expecting that position to shake out this week?

SE:
Devin Taylor's giong to start. I mean he has to, after having the best defensive debut in recent memory for a Gamecock - he literally forced a fumble, what turned out to be the game's most important play, on his first play as a college football player. Then he blocked a punt, had a sack, two more tackles for loss. It was incredible. That said, Geathers is a talent, and has two years of experience so the missed practice might not hold him back too much. I expect Taylor to start but Geathers to see some time.

DH: Rodney Paulk went down with a season-ending knee injury in Week 1, so who the heck is Shaq Wilson, and what will the injury mean to South Carolina's defense?

SE:
Shaq Wilson is an undersized linebacker who will be making his first start on Saturday. The good news for him is he's surrounded by so much talent, and has Eric Norwood next to him, so the pressure's not as much as it would be for other middle linebackers making their starting debut. Plus he played all of the second half at N.C. State. Paulk was a guy with a nose for the ball, but he wasn't the world's fastest or biggest player either. I'm not sure there will be a huge drop-off from him to Wilson.

DH: This game is historically a defensive battle regardless, but after Georgia and USC combined for just 17 points in their openers, what are the odds that this one turns out to be anything but a "first team to 14 wins" scenario?

SE:
The over-under is 38.5, at least on one gambling site I saw. (And gambling is evil, kids, remember that). But if I were a gambler, I'd put my life savings on the under. Not only is it historically low-scoring, but like you said both offenses stunk it up in the opener - or at least Georgia's did, and USC played it tight. ... Having said all that, there's two ways this could really open up: Georgia's struggles turn out to just be because of playing at a top 10 team, and they get it going, and/or Spurrier opens it up for USC, which either produces the desired results or has Garcia turning it over left and right.

Be sure to check out Seth's coverage of South Carolina at The State's Web site HERE or on his blog HERE.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Comments From The Ol' Ball Coach

Here's a bit of what Steve Spurrier is saying as South Carolina preps for this week's game...

On Georgia as an opponent...
“I think Georgia, certainly, personnel-wise is better than NC State. NC State has some good defensive linemen that can play with just about any group in the country. I think linebackers and secondary-wise, Georgia is ahead of most schools in the country. The ACC has a lot of good teams. That game last night was a good game, FSU and Miami. Anyway, I would say Georgia’s personnel is better than NC State’s. Certainly.”

On his young players playing in Sanford Stadium...
“I don’t know if that helps or hurt or what. I do know the NC State crowd was loud and they were fired up. It was a big-time atmosphere. Obviously, Georgia’s stadium is a little bigger. They’ll be about 30,000 at Georgia’s (stadium) than NC State. What do they hold, around 60 or so? 56. OK. A little more than 30,000 more will be there screaming and yelling for the Bulldogs. But when you can’t hear, you can’t hear anyways, so it doesn’t matter if it’s 60 or 90 or 100 thousand. But we were able to audible to a couple of runs, change it from one side to the other. Hopefully, we can change a play or two here or there. You have to change them every know and then. Not a lot but a little bit.”

On Stephen Garcia's ability to call audibles...
“Hopefully, we can help him out. As coaches, we have to help him out better. You don’t just send him up there say go change it to something you see. Nowadays, the defense disguise too well. Even Sam Bradford at Oklahoma last year, his coaches pretty much sent in the play from the sideline. A lot of schools do that nowasays. We need to help Stephen more in that situation. Hopefully, we can do that a little bit this week. Not a lot. It will be very loud. We’re not going to go up there and change every play. At some point, we need to get some better plays on than whatwe had last week.”

On the rivalry between him and Georgia...
"All that has worn off. I think it’s just Georgia and South Carolina playing now. Simple as that. Us against them. No more this coach or that coach. Us against them. Back when Todd Ellis played, it was Todd against the Dawgs. Now it’s just South Carolina.”

On his team's health...
"OK, we're about as healthy as we can be going into Georgia. Rodney Paulk suffered a season ending injury. But other than that, we're very healthy and looking forward to seeing if we can't play a little better offensively against the Bulldogs and try to score a few more points. But anyway, our guys are looking forward to going to Sanford Stadium -- first SEC game -- and playing the Georgia Bulldogs."

On his offense last week...
"It was a very conservative attack. We had some bad plays on about three those occasions. We had the offensive interference, Jarivs ran backward, I think we had another penalty or something happened on another play that sort of took us out. But, yea, it was a little too conservative at times there. Hopefully, hopefully, we can get the ball moving around a little bit better this game. Yea, it was probably a little way too conservative an approach. Our defense was playing very well. But other than that we had some plays that didn't quite get executed and we had some plays that didn't have much a chance. We've got to do a better job getting some good plays out there and going from there."

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Two-A-Days: South Carolina Gamecocks

Over the past few weeks, I've traded emails with beat writers for each SEC team, along with Georgia's three other BCS-conference opponents to get some insider insight into what fans can expect from UGA's competition in 2009.

Each day, we'll preview two teams, culminating with a big-picture look at the SEC and a deeper look at the biggest issues facing your Georgia Bulldogs. To submit a question for the Georgia entry in Two-A-Days, send me an email with the subject line "Two-A-Days" and I'll do my best to find you an answer.

To read the previous entries in the series, click HERE.

The 11th entry in the series is the South Carolina Gamecocks.

SOUTH CAROLINA GAMECOCKS
Head coach: Steve Spurrier (5th season)
2008 Record: 7-6 (4-4)
Total Offense: 316.54 ypg (7th SEC, 97th overall)
Total Defense: 291.92 ypg (4th SEC, 13th overall)
On the docket: The Gamecocks open on the road on Thursday, Sept. 3 against N.C. State. They then get a 10-day break before heading to Athens for their SEC opener against Georgia on Sept. 12.

Another relatively promising season went up in flames a year ago when South Carolina dropped its final three games of the year -- including blowout losses to rivals Florida and Clemson -- and finished with seven wins or fewer for the third time in Steve Spurrier's four seasons in Columbia. When Spurrier arrived, fans expected the same magic he was able to create at Florida, but now most observers are simply wondering how much longer he'll stick around. So, will this be Spurrier's best season at South Carolina, or might it be his last? I talked to Seth Emerson of The State to get some answers.

David Hale: There were some major shake-ups on Steve Spurrier's staff this offseason. How has the team reacted to the replacements, and has Spurrier's attitude changed at all this spring? Any signs that it might be his last?

Seth Emerson:
The most immediate impression is that these are younger, perhaps more hungry assistants - in the sense that all of them either moved up the ladder by coming to South Carolina, or got a promotion. So the coaches themselves are quite happy to be here, and seem to be bringing some fresh ideas to the table. As for Spurrier, there's not a hugely detectable difference in him. Maybe not as critical, which he said he would work on, but it's spring practice, how much is there really to be critical about? And as for his future, who knows. He's never going to come out and say it.

DH: Given all the success Spurrier had at Florida, it seems hard to believe he has never found a quarterback he could settle on at South Carolina. Might this finally be the year, and might Stephen Garcia be the guy? How has Garcia's first spring of work with the Gamecocks gone?

SE:
Garcia might benefit from finally being "the guy." No questions about his starting spot, at least not yet. Plus, this is his first spring practice. I think most people are looking at the situation warily, merely hoping that Garcia will lock things down and play well, but not necessarily knowing that he is the answer.

DH: While South Carolina may finally be able to settle on a quarterback (maybe), the offense will have to replace several other playmakers, including Kenny McKinley, Jared Cook and Mike Davis. Has anyone stepped up this spring who might emerge as a true offensive threat?

SE:
Lots of options, but no definite go-to guy yet. Moe Brown, who will be a senior, has had a good spring, but he has yet to develop consistency - had a huge game last year against Georgia, then was quiet the rest of the way. Jason Barnes, who will be a redshirt sophomore, is a tall receiver in the Sidney Rice mold, but he has to do it on Saturdays. Weslye Saunders has played tight end the last two years behind Jared Cook, and he'll get a shot. The running backs are wide open, with junior Brian Maddox the leader, but true freshman Jarvis Giles giving him a push.

DH: Captain Munnerlyn, Jasper Brinkley, Emanuel Cook, Carlos Thomas, Stoney Woodson... a lot of talent is gone from last year's defense. Have any of the younger players impressed enough in the spring to give some hope that there won't be a big drop off on the defensive side of the ball?

SE:
They're in a lot better shape at safety than cornerback. Chris Culliver has been hurt most of the spring, but he should be healthy by the fall, and he could have a breakout season. Darian Stewart, who played the hybrid linebacker-safety spot last year, is also back. The cornerback position is in a lot of flux, and could be the weak point of the defense.

DH: After seeing the team this spring, what jumped out at you in a positive way, and what would you say are the biggest questions South Carolina still needs to answer before the season begins?

SE:
I like where they are at running back, and think Maddox, Giles and the other guys give them an approach they lacked last year. If the new offensive line coach, Eric Wolford, has a positive impact, the running game should be much better. As for the passing game, well, it all depends on what's going on inside Garcia's head. We'll see. Defensively there could be a drop-off because of the departures, but Eric Norwood is still around, and the defensive line looks much improved.

* Seth Emerson covers a variety of South Carolina sports for The State. You can read his Gamecocks coverage HERE or check out his blog HERE.

NEXT UP: The Arkansas Razorbacks with Northwest Arkansas Morning News beat writer Alex Abrams.