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Showing posts with label Tennessee Vols. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tennessee Vols. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Two-A-Days: Tennessee Volunteers

Two-a-Days rolls on with our 11th installment, in which we take a closer look at the Tennessee Volunteers.

To read previous entries, click HERE.

Tennessee in a flash:

Head Coach: Derek Dooley, first year
2009 Record: 7-6 (4-4 SEC), lost to Virginia Tech in the Chick-fil-A Bowl
2009 Stats: Total offense, 383.46 ypg (6th SEC, 60th nationally); Total defense, 318.77 ypg (5th SEC, 22nd nationally)
Coaching Changes: Craziness in Knoxville during the offseason. Lane Kiffin bolted town amid a sea of angry fans after just one year. He took much of his staff with him, including DC Monte Kiffin, D line coach Ed Orgeron, QB coach David Reaves, receivers coach Frank Wilson, OL coach James Clegg, RB coach Eddie Gran and DBs coach Willie Mack Garza. Derek Dooley, the former La Tech coach and son of longtime Georgia coach Vince Dooley, takes over the program. He fillled out his staff with Justin Wilcox as DC (formerly the Boise State DC), Charlie Baggett as WR coach, Chuck Smith as D line coach, Eric Russell coaching tight ends and special teams, Terry Joseph as DBs coach, Darin Hinshaw, formerly a receivers coach at Memphis, as the QBs coach, and Harry Hiestand, a longtime NFL assistant with the Bears, to coach the O line.
Starters Returning: Offense (4), Defense (7), Special Teams (2)
Key Player Losses: QB Jonathan Crompton, RB Montario Hardesty, DT Dan Williams, S Eric Berry
Big Games: Oregon (9/11), Florida (9/18), @ LSU (10/2), Alabama (10/23)
Non-Conference Slate: Tennessee-Martin (9/4), Oregon (9/11), UAB (9/25), @ Memphis (11/6)

Tennessee was the talk of the SEC last season -- although usually because of head coach Lane Kiffin's antics, but also after a mild resurgence in the standings. But as quickly as Kiffin took the conference by storm, he bolted, and things could get pretty ugly in Knoxville in Derek Dooley's first year at the helm.

A tough schedule and massive player departures have the Vols facing an uphill climb. To find out how far they may have come during spring practice, I turned to Wes Rucker, who covers Tennessee for the Chattanooga Times Free Press. Here's what he had to say...

David Hale: Obviously Lane Kiffin caused quite a stir last spring. How was this year’s spring practice — and the overall mood in Knoxville — different under Derek Dooley?


Wes Rucker: It depends on whose mood you’re gauging. From a media perspective, we didn’t see as much this spring. Kiffin, for all his faults, let us watch anything we wanted last spring. Dooley only allowed us in for individual practice periods, and we didn’t see scrimmages. As a result, many of my readers were disappointed with the lower amount of insight I was able to provide. We’ll figure this out, though. We better, anyway, because I don’t see a lot of wiggle room with this regime. Dooley and Co. even stopped the Kiffin-era blasting of Lil’ Wayne during practice, which disappointed several players and at least one beat writer.


As far as the mood around town, I’d say that’s nervy. The attrition from three head coaches in three years has really taken a toll on UT’s roster. The Vols will only enter preseason camp with barely more than 70 scholarship players, and that’s assuming no one else transfers, gets injured during summer conditioning or fails to qualify academically. I think most fans will rally somewhat before the season starts — even Kentucky and Vanderbilt fans usually do — but a slow start would squash those good feelings in a hurry.

And the Vols' second and third games are against Oregon and Florida. So, uh, yeah...



DH: Somewhat related question: Will the Times Free Press be reimbursing you for your entree fee to cover practice?


WR: I’m proud to state for the record that I didn’t pay UT one penny to attend its coaching clinic and watch the final, pre-spring-game scrimmage. I hope UT never puts us in that position again, but if it does, I hope no one attends the next one.



DH: While there were plenty of reasons for Tennessee’s rejuvenation last year, I thought the dramatic improvement of Jonathan Crompton probably topped the list. This year, however, UT is back to square one at QB, and with the transfer of Nick Stephens, there’s not much experience on the depth chart. How do you see the QB battle playing out, and how big of a concern is it right now?


WR: Coaches and players, nearly to a man, thought junior college transfer Matt Simms — Phil’s son and Chris’s brother — was UT’s best quarterback for a majority of spring practice. But Tyler Bray, a lanky, 6-foot-6 January enrollee from California, had a much better performance in the Orange and White game. Simms wasn’t particularly spectacular in UT’s scrimmages, either, but Bray wasn’t much (if any) better.


The bottom line is precisely what you speculated. The Vols have returned to a familiar situation from the last few years — quarterback uncertainty. Dooley has said from the beginning that he wouldn’t rush a decision, and that he’d play both during the season until finding the right guy. He’d rather pick one in preseason camp and be done with it, but he’s not going to pick one just to avoid an in-season controversy.


Simms instantly became a popular figure in the locker room, and teammates love his presence in the huddle and savvy on the field. Bray is probably more talented and definitely has a stronger arm, but he should be getting ready for his high school prom right now. It’s definitely an interesting situation, especially following Stephens’ abrupt, unexpected departure.



DH: If Crompton was the spark for UT last year, surely the running game was the foundation. Now Montario Hardesty is playing in the NFL, Bryce Brown has left the team, and the offensive line has a ton of question marks after Aaron Douglas left the team and virtually all of last year’s starters gone. So, what did you see from the ground game during the spring, and does someone like Tauren Poole even stand a chance if the Vols can’t find some answers on the O line?


WR: I’ve said for three years that Poole was the real deal, and nothing I saw this spring disproved that. He’s a solid, all-around back who can generate yards by himself on the ground or in the passing game. He won’t lead the SEC in rushing or anything like that — there are some awfully dynamic runners in this league — and he’ll be running behind five new starters up front.

First-year offensive line coach Harry Hiestand, who came to UT after five seasons with the Chicago Bears, said he’s “never even heard of anything like” replacing an entire front five in one year. Poole had no problem gaining yards against the Vols’ first-team defense this spring, though, and I think he’ll do the same this season. UT has some talent up front, but it’s young talent, so I think the Vols will struggle mightily offensively early before improving in October and November.



DH: Dan Williams and Eric Berry both became first-round draft picks. Monte Kiffin, the architect of last year’s D is gone, too. So what has been the impact of new DC Justin Wilcox, and who has stepped up this spring that he thinks could help fill the major holes left by Berry and Williams?

WR: Wilcox is a bright young coaching mind who might not be in Knoxville for too long. Friends who write for ESPN.com and Sports Illustrated told me I’d be highly impressed with the former Boise State defensive coordinator, and they were right. His outside-the-box thinking arrived at the perfect time for a program that must do more with less in order to succeed this season. Wilcox was 49-4 with two undefeated seasons and two BCS wins in just four seasons as Boise’s defensive coordinator, and his units led the WAC and ranked among the nation’s leaders in several statistical categories throughout his tenure.


The Vols don’t have tremendous depth defensively aside from the defensive end and middle linebacker positions, but their top 11 will be OK. No one player is capable of replacing Berry and Williams, but sophomore safety Janzen Jackson and big sophomore defensive tackle Montori Hughes are good young players who are also on track to making serious NFL money in the near future.


UT’s defense will be OK regardless, but it could be really good if a third defensive tackle and second cornerback step up in preseason camp. Scoring enough points will be another matter, despite having several solid wideouts and potential star tight end Luke Stocker in the receiving rotation.



DH: Aside from Kiffin, the biggest story from Tennessee last season might have been the incident involving three players allegedly robbing a convenience store. Already this offseason, defensive back Darren Myles has found himself in trouble off the field. What’s the approach that Dooley has taken to discipline, and how big of a concern is off-field behavior at Tennessee at the moment?


WR: Even good guys like Mark Richt occasionally struggled to keep 100-plus male college students in line, so I don’t think anyone should worry unless several incidents pile up in a short amount of time. The Vols have only had one documented incident during the Dooley era, and it didn’t involve illegal drugs or guns — or the double whammy combination of both — so I honestly don’t see any red flags there just yet. My stance will change if more incidents follow, but Myles’ alleged decision to become intoxicated and temporarily turn himself into a human hood ornament outside a sushi bar isn’t the worst story I’ve heard. If that’s the worst incident UT (or any other SEC program) has to deal with in a calendar year, that’s far from a nightmare scenario.


The relative lack of off-field trouble in the Dooley era hasn’t provided the coach many opportunities to show his disciplinary side, but we’ll see how he reacts to the inevitable problems that typically arise. I will say that I’ve been very impressed with the off-field character meetings he has with each class every week. Those meetings are designed to give the players basic information on not only how to avoid trouble, but how to handle simple tasks like signing apartment leases, avoiding credit card debt and paying bills on time.

***

Big thanks to Wes for some great insight into all the changes going on in Knoxville. You can read Wes's UT coverage for the Times Free Press HERE, follow his coverage on Facebook HERE or follow him on Twitter HERE. You can also catch Wes as host of "Inside Tennessee" on ESPN Radio's Knoxville affiliate (and subpar softball team) every weekday from 10-11 a.m.

So, what do you see as a fair prediction for Tennessee's season? They had a new coach and plenty of questions last season and still gave Georgia its ugliest loss of the season -- any chance for a repeat performance?

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: A look at Georgia's opening foe, Louisiana-Lafayette, this afternoon.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Grading the Game: Tennessee Volunteers

Before we get to the grades, a few links I figured I'd share...

-- Mark Bradley offers perhaps the most stinging indictment of Mark Richt yet from a major media outlet. Quite frankly, it'll take more than a 5-1 campaign in the pillow-fight conference to convince me that Paul Johnson just wants it more than Richt does, but for UGA fans, the use of Tech as the basis for criticism of the Dawgs has to hurt.

-- David Fox at Rivals essentially says there's no way Mark Richt can avoid making staff changes now. The fact that the message-board memes about Richt and Willie Martinez and Mike Bobo are now out there in mainstream media outlets should really say something.

-- Every Day Should Be Saturday does a nice job of summarizing the Georgia secondary, "American Beauty" style.

-- Senator Blutarsky points out two more of the message-board memes that still remain a little silly. Although, I'll admit, the idea of Aaron Murray seeing action could still be pretty realistic.

-- Georgia's defense made Johnathan Crompton the SEC offensive player of the week . If Willie does get canned, that should be his epitaph.

-- Now this is some good casting on the part of "How I Met Your Mother."

-- And finally, in honor of Mr. Crompton, the Boston Globe has an in-depth story on the curious exile of the American mustache.

Now, to the grades for this week...

First off, a disclaimer: Throughout the rest of this week, I'm sure I'll have plenty of notes from players discussing the issues at hand for Georgia, and I'm sure I'll have some more in-depth analysis of specific problems. But as for dissecting this particular loss or running up the numbers for why Willie or Bobo or anyone else should be fired... I'm simply over it.

If you've watched Georgia football for the past two seasons, you've seen enough evidence on one side or the other to have already come to a conclusion, and there's probably not much I can do to sway you in one direction or the other. Nor do I want to.

And I don't think I need to take the time to put into perspective just how far Georgia has or has not fallen with respect to its chief rivals. You'll see plenty of columnists, like Bradley, do that this week and in the weeks to come. It's not my place.

What I am interested in are these questions: Why has Georgia struggled, what are the players going to do about it and what changes will the coaches be making -- or more to the point, should they be making -- in the weeks to come.

No one is getting fired tomorrow. Georgia can't go sign a few free agents to help the defense. There's not much point in debating any of that until there is actually something to be debated.

On to the grades...

QUARTERBACKS: The funny thing is, for as bad as Joe Cox played, he started out with what appeared to be a good game plan and a measured amount of success.

Tennessee decided they weren't going to let Cox beat them deep, so the short passes were wide open. Cox completed his first six passes -- for gains of 8, 7, 9, 7, 4 and 7. Considering this had been the area Georgia's offense had struggled most this this season, and given the ridiculous number of short drives the Bulldogs have had so far, it was a stellar game plan and impressive early success.

But two things happened on Georgia's first two drives that proved crucial to undertanding where things went wrong.

On Georgia's first drive, the Bulldogs had a third-and-inches at their own 10-yard line. It might have been a great time for a play-action, but backed up that deep, Georgia couldn't risk it. More over, I'm not sure Monte Kiffin repsected Georgia's run enough to bite on it anyway. Instead, Cox handed off to Richard Samuel, who ran straight up the middle behind his fullback and got nowhere. A punt followed.

On Georgia's next drive, Cox's short passes had picked up three first downs already when Georgia faced a second-and-three at the Tennessee 42. Cox went back to what worked, hitting a wide open Rantavious Wooten with a good throw, but Wooten dropped it. It would be the first of at least five drops by Georgia receivers in the game -- nearly all of which could have been big plays.

On third-and-three, a good offense would have considered running the ball. It was a short-yardage situation at a position on the field where going for it on fourth down would have made some sense. But looking back at the struggles of the running game and Samuel's failure on third-and-inches on the previous drive, Georgia elected to throw. Cox's pass was batted at the line of scrimmage and intercepted Chris Walker. It was the beginning of the end.

Hard to blame Cox for any of that. If Samuel picks up 6 inches and a first down or if Wooten hangs on to an easy reception and picks up another first down, who knows how things pan out. Maybe Tennessee has to adjust its approach and things open up downfield for Green. Maybe Georgia dinks and dunks all game, dominating time of possession for a change, and the defense gets a relaxing afternoon rather than being torn to shreds by Johnathan Crompton. Maybe.

No, Cox did not play his best game on Saturday. Not by a long shot. And his numbers are not just trending downward, they've fallen off a cliff. But those first two drives are a perfect illustration of how difficult Cox's job -- or Logan Gray's or Aaron Murray's job, should they eventually take over -- actually is.

No running game, only one reliable receiver, and an offensive line that isn't getting it done. To paraphrase Indiana Jones (I'm dumb) Sean Connery, Cox is essentially bringing a knife to a gun fight every time out.

Blame Cox if you must -- and certainly he deserves some of it -- but if you think any other QB is going to step in and find much more success, you're ignoring the obvious.

And for those who are craving a taste of Logan Gray leading the offense, you finally got a sneak peak. Gray came in on Georgia's final two drives when the game was clearly out of hand and Tennessee was simply waiting for the game to end. He did help Georgia pick up two first downs, but both were on running plays. His final numbers: 1-of-4 for 6 yards.

Now, I'll ramble on for hours about the dangers of making decisions based off small samples, so I'm hardly endorsing the notion of giving up on Gray after two drives. But you probably should keep the performance in mind as you beg for Cox, who completed 10 of his first 13 passes (and would have been 12-of-14 if not for drops by Wooten and A.J. Green) to be benched.

NOTE: I didn't mention the clock management at the end of the first half. I'll get to that in the "Coaching" section of the grades.

Final Grade: C-

RUNNING BACKS: Richard Samuel is the next Knowshon Moreno!

Whoops, no he's not.

Caleb King is the answer to Georgia's running woes!

Whoops, no he's not.

Washaun Ealey is the answer to Georgia's running woes!

Um, nope. Wrong again.

Hey, Carlton Thomas had 30 yards on just three carries against Tennessee! He's the answer!

God bless all of you who have said that. As a Cubs fan, I know exactly what you're thinking. I once convinced myself Hee Seop Choi was going to be the answer to the Cubs' problems. Those were the days.

Anyway, Thomas did have a few nice runs and was probably Georgia's best offensive weapon overall, picking up 40 yards on five touches. But all it really did was underscore how mis-used he's been all season. His runs came in space, going around the tackle and busting it outside. He didn't go up the middle where he clearly is overmatched. So if the kid is capable of doing one thing well and struggles at another thing, isn't it imperitive upon the coaches to put him in his best position to succeed on game day and worry about coaching him up at the other stuff during the week?

But I digress.

What else to say about the Georgia running game?

Well, obviously it has been bad, but I think we might be failing to realize just how bad.

For the season, Georgia is averaging 3.39 yards per carry. That's ugly. But the real numbers are even worse.

Assume for a moment that a defensive breakdown is bound to happen at least once per game, so any team is capable of at least one good run. So, let's set aside Georgia's longest run of each game.

To be fair, however, sack yardage is added into the rushing totals, so let's sit that aside, too.

Now, what we're looking at is Georgia's true numbers without its best play and it's sacks. Here's what we come up with:

Opponent RushesYards
LongSack
Avg. Avg w/o long
Okie State
30 95 19 (Samuel)
1-9 3.17 3.03
S Carolina 29 107 61 (Smith)
2-21 3.69 2.58
Arkansas 36 155 80 (Samuel)
2-9 4.31 2.55
Ariz State 3192
18 (King)
0-0 2.97 2.47
LSU 24 45 8 (Ealey)
0-0 1.88 1.61
Tennessee 22 89 17 (Thomas)
0-0 4.05 3.43
Totals 172 583 203 5-39 3.39 2.62


So, aside from the occasional big play -- and really, we're talking about little more than the reverse by Branden Smith against South Carolina and the untouched 80-yarder by Richard Samuel against Arkansas -- the Bulldogs are averaging a woeful 2.62 yards per carry.

Now, I didn't take the time to weed out the long runs and sacks from every other team, but on pure aggregate numbers, only Washington State, San Jose State and Bowling Green are averaging less yardage per carry than Georgia's 2.62. The combined record of those three teams? 4-13 (and they aren't exactly playing Georgia's schedule, either).

Heck, maybe we should be crediting Joe Cox for doing as well as he has given these numbers rather than bashing his inconsistency.

Moreover, look at the long runs. In six games, those numbers have belonged to five different players. There's absolutely no consistency whatsoever.

Again, blame Cox if you must, but with numbers like these, no quarterback is going to succeed.

Final Grade: F (although credit Thomas, he made the most of his garbage-time efforts)

RECEIVERS/TIGHT ENDS: Let's start with the tight ends for a change. They have virtually disappeared from the offense in the past few weeks.

Remember A.J. Green's big catch that happened on third down on Georgia's game-winning drive against Arizona State? He had man coverage because the ASU defense chose to bring the safety over to double Orson Charles. The tight ends were getting respect, and it was opening things up for A.J.

In the two games since then, Georgia's tight ends have combined for three catches and 23 yards -- including being shut out against Tennessee. In fact, Charles and Aron White each had drops vs. the Vols.

Remember how the tight ends were going to be a bigger part of the offense this season? Those numbers won't get it done. Of course, I'm sorta curious -- how much more are the TEs being held in to block recently due to the problems on the O line? I haven't paid close enough attention during the games, but I will ask Mike Bobo tomorrow.

As far as the receivers go, this was hardly a pretty performance for them either.

Georgia's longest passing play was a 21-yarder to Green. After that, no reception was for more than 14 yards.

With Tavarres King out, Marlon Brown got more playing time and showed why he hasn't been a featured part of the offense so far. He had two catches for 15 yards and another drop that was negated by a false start on Green. (SIDE NOTE: Boooooo! to Tennessee fans for booing Brown. Classless.)

Michael Moore finally showed up, making six grabs, but all were for short gains except for that 14-yarder. He also fumbled a reception to set up another Tennessee touchdown.

And what's left to say about Israel Troupe? The kid barely saw playing time even when Georgia only had four other scholarship receivers to work with -- and two of them were true freshmen. I covered Troupe in high school, and if you'd told me then that he would have this much trouble seeing the field in college, I would have said you were crazy.

As for Green, he did all he could, but he was held to little more than a few short catches. Take away his 21-yarder, and he averaged 5.6 yards per catch and had one crucial drop. He was held out of the end zone for the first time since the Oklahoma State opener. Hard to find much room when no one is doing anything around you.

Final Grade: F+ (I can never give an official 'F' to a unit with A.J. on it)

OFFENSIVE LINE: Remember last week when you could at least say the pass blocking was good? Fond memories.

No, Cox wasn't sacked, but he was running for his life on every five-step drop and the pressure directly related to both interceptions -- one with a tip at the line of scrimmage with hands in his face and the other coming when he threw a ball up for grabs to avoid a sack. Granted, the ultimate responsibility for both of those falls on Cox, but it was the line that put him in a position to fail.

And the running game… I don't even know what to say on this. Instead, I'll just ask a simple question: Aside from Samuel's 80-yarder vs. Arkansas, when can you remember a running back going between the tackles for more than a 3-yard gain all season?

There's no push, no aggressiveness, nothing remotely close to the dominant unit we were expecting to see. And it looks like the line play is getting worse each week.

One final note on the blocking: The tight ends and fullbacks are not holding up their ends of things either, so this can't all fall on the line. We knew coming into the season that the tight ends might have some problems, but Shaun Chapas' struggles are really perplexing. I think Georgia also missed Caleb King's ability to pass block this week, too.

Final Grade: F

DEFENSIVE LINE: The previous two weeks: 18 tackles for a loss and seven sacks. Against Tennessee: Three tackles for a loss and no sacks.

Only Justin Houston showed much of anything, tallying one-and-a-half tackles for a loss. Beyond that, the defensive line looked confused, unable to stop the run, and was utterly useless against Johnathan Crompton's repeated bootlegs.

For the first 30 minutes of action, the D line actually held up fairly well against the run. Tennessee had just 48 yards on 16 carries.

In the second half, Tennessee made things look easy. That's bad.

Tennessee made things look easy with a makeshift offensive line that features two former walk-ons. That's really bad.

Final Grade: D

LINEBACKERS: Even Rennie Curran couldn't escape the ineptitude of Georgia's defensive effort on Saturday. He missed badly on a tackle of Denarius Moore along the sideline that allowed Moore to dash another 30 yards an in for Tennessee's second touchdown of the game. After picking up 16 tackles a week ago against LSU, Curran had just eight against Tennessee. That still led the team.

Among the other linebackers, there wasn't much to speak of. Darius Dewberry had five tackles, but he was also usually in coverage on tight end Luke Stocker, who had four big catches for a total of 68 yards -- all of which went for a first down. Dewberry did force a fumble by Kevin Cooper, but Tennessee recovered.

Darryl Gamble continues to be on the field, but I can't remember actually seeing him do anything this year. Gamble's and Demarcus Dobbs' important play-to-overall number of plays ratio is at about zero. They haven't really screwed up much, but they're not bringing a whole lot to the table, either. Of course, in a game as bad as this one was, I suppose you have to be pretty happy with a zero-sum effort by a player.

Christian Robinson had one tackle for a loss in the game, but he was also flagged for an offsides call and, curiously, he was on the field a good bit for Rennie Curran in the second half, including following the touchdown by Baccari Rambo when Georgia pulled to within 5.

The Dawgs have to hope Marcus Dowtin will be ready to return next week.

Final Grade: D

DEFENSIVE BACKS: Baccari Rambo took advantage of a bad pass by Crompton and returned it for a touchdown at a time when it still mattered. Kudos to Rambo.

No one else in the secondary deserves even a cursory mention for anything positive in this game.

In fact, I'm going to keep them as far away from this post as they were from most of Tennessee's receivers throughout the game.

Just brutal.

Final Grade: F-

SPECIAL TEAMS: People will remember the special teams as one of the few silver linings in this game, and rightfully so.

Brandon Boykin is a star as a kick returner, picking up his second 100-yard return for a touchdown of the season. The kid is extremely dangerous, and if he gets any sort of blocking from his wedge, he can take it to the house. He'll be fun to watch the rest of the way, and his kick return in the second quarter was a huge momentum swing.

Of course, that was followed by another ridiculous directional kickoff that Tennessee returned 37 yards. A facemask flag on Richard Samuel accompanied the run, giving the Vols the ball at the UGA 45. Three plays later, Crompton threw his second TD pass of the game. And I added it to "The List."

Zach Renner returned to prominence, blocking yet another punt -- the third in the last year-and-a-half -- to give Georgia some late momentum in the first half. But Cox's (and the coaches') absurd clock management on the ensuing drive ensured that what could have been a big momentum swing turned into yet another missed opportunity.

Another big day for Drew Butler, too, who has been masterful this year. Blair Walsh connected on his third 50-plus-yard field goal of the season and did boot a couple nice kickoffs. But all that really just begs the bigger question of why, if he leads the SEC in touchbacks, he isn't kicking deep more often.

Add to that a fair catch called by Boykin on a kickoff at the 14 when he had at least 10 yards to run and the absurd return of a punt by Prince Miller when he fielded the kick at his own 1-yard line, and you get a day that wasn't quite as special for the special teams as it might have seemed.

Final Grade: B

COACHING: When I worked for the newspaper in Albany a few years back, I covered the local arena football team during the spring.

The head coach of the team at the time was former Georgia Tech quarterback Donnie Davis. I could tell you some stories, but my journalistic integrity won't allow me to do so. Suffice it to say, it was an interesting season.

The team -- the South Georgia Wildcats, in case you were wondering -- finished the season with a 3-13 record and Davis spent the final six weeks or so under the same kind of microscope as Willie Martinez, only scaled down to Albany, Ga. size.

There were plenty of good reasons to can Davis that season, but there was one that stood out above all the rest. It's a play that everyone who witnessed still talks about today. In fact, it's been a running joke between myself and my friends in Albany for going on five years now.

The Wildcats were down by a touchdown in the waning seconds of the game and were charging down the field, hoping for a late score. As the seconds ticked off the clock, South Georgia was taking open plays in the middle of the field rather than trying to force throws into coverage along the sideline. The quarterback eventually completed a third-down pass to around midfield with about four seconds to play. It wasn't good for a first down, but when the Wildcats got to the line of scrimmage, the QB spiked the football anyway, thus turning the ball over on downs.

It was, until Saturday, the most inexcusable clock management I've ever seen and, to be fair, it probably still is. But what Georgia did as the clock expired on the first half was nearly as absurd.

In any case, I afforded Joe Cox the same opportunity to explain the play as I afforded Davis. Here's what he had to say: "That was tough because I thought if we spiked it fast enough, we might have a chance to get the field-goal team out on the field. You're in such a rush, and you're looking to the sideline and they're telling you what to do, and they were telling us to spike the ball. I think they were thinking we were going to have a couple seconds because when Mike (Moore) caught it and got down, I thought there was like three seconds. But I don't know how we could have handled it any differently. We were just trying to get a chance to get a field goal there before the half. I don't know."

OK, a few things:

1.) Joe's right. Moore did catch the pass with three seconds left, and the clock should have stopped then. But you're on the road, and we all know how timekeepers operate on the road.

2.) Joe needs to know the game situation, at least taking a glance at the clock as he gets the team to the line of scrimmage.

3.) The coaches DEFINITELY need to know what's going on -- someone has to have seen the clock. And instead, Cox is looking to the sideline for help and he's being told the wrong thing to do.

There's just no excuse for something like this, and if you look at the rushed way the field-goal unit got onto the field for Blair Walsh's miss last week against LSU and the confusion before the half against Arkansas, you have to wonder what the heck is going on with the coaching staff. Don't they practice this stuff? Isn't there someone -- Mark Richt, for example -- who is aware of the game situation at all times. Who is making these decisions?

(SIDE NOTE: A final coda to the Wildcats story -- Each week after the game, the Wildcats held a "media luncheon" similar to what Georgia does each Tuesday. The luncheon consisted of myself, one other writer from the paper, two TV people and a few sponsors, along with Davis, some Wildcats reps and usually a plate of cold spaghetti. Following the game in question, I was eager to show up for that week's meeting because I wanted to find out what the thought process might have been on that final play -- even though it was pretty clear that it was simply an issue of no one knowing what was going on. I asked Davis, "So, Coach, when you spiked it on fourth down, what were you thinking there?" His reply, and I swear I'm not making this up, was, "Well, it was the right play at the time, and I'd do it again." Ladies and gentlemen, former Georgia Tech quarterback Donnie Davis.)

(SECOND SIDE NOTE: Davis was only the second-most-ridiculous coach I covered in Albany. Former New York Mets second-baseman Wally Backman managed the independent league baseball team there and, following numerous suspensions for his on-field histrionics, would sit in the press box and drink souvenir cups full of scotch. Those were good times.)

The rest of the coaching in this game was nearly as bad, but that one play was emblematic of a larger problem. There seems to be no cohesion among coaches, no understanding of what is best for that specific moment, how to adjust to a problem and correct it on the fly.

Richt is fond of saying how he doesn't get angry about a bad play because it can only hurt your preparation for the next play. He's right about that.

But what has all his calm, cool, collected behavior gotten? Georgia's coaches seem as unprepared for crucial situations as they would be if they'd spent the previous 10 minutes searching for correct change for a vending machine in the locker room.

Here's the thing: In the wake of what was without question one of the most embarrassing performances of the Richt era at Georgia, there are a lot of people who are calling for blood.

It's not just message-board posters and anonymous bloggers anymore. It's not even just the local columnists. Georgia is being questioned on a national basis, and that's something Richt could not have expected at this point in his career.

But I have to wonder if perhaps it's the wrong things that are earning scorn from the public. At the end of the day, there is only so much a coach can do to ensure his players perform. I look at it this way: My parents are awesome. They are two of the most wholesome, intelligent, good-hearted people you'll ever meet. They don't drink, don't smoke, and as far as I know they've never done something stupid in their lives. Heck, my mom spends 30 minutes a week chatting with the Jahovah's Witnesses because she's too nice to tell them she's not interested in their religion.

And I can assure you that growing up, my parents imparted all of those values to me and my sister. I assure you that they taught us well, reminded us often, and punished us when we messed up. And yet, we both messed up. A lot.

In truth, there's not much more my parents could have done. Lord knows, they tried it all. At the end of the day, however, we had to want to do the right thing, and I'd like to think we both eventually learned that. But we had to screw up more than a few times before we did, and when it finally happened, it had little to do with my parents. It was simply a matter of me realizing that they were right and I was wrong and I needed to change.

I know most of the fans don't see what they want from Georgia's coaches -- the anger, the fury, the frustration, the yelling and cursing and screaming. But I promise, it does happen. And I also promise, it doesn't necessarily work.

Now, if you want to argue that the offensive play calling has been bad, I'll agree with you on most accounts.

If you want to argue that the defensive scheme gets exploited by anyone with talent, I'd say the fact that Georgia has allowed 37 points or more in seven of its last 12 games would prove that correct.

If you want to tell me that the kickoff situation has gone from simply a bad idea to a reckless bit of stubbornness, well, I think my week of posting on that subject should give you a good indication of where I stand on the issue.

But like Cox at quarterback, sometimes a change won't really matter. At the end of the day, a football team is a fully functioning organism that requires every part to do its job. And right now, there are too many players not doing there jobs, and I'm not sure there's anything any coach can do about it until those players make the decision that what they've been doing simply isn't good enough.

Final Grade: F

Friday, October 9, 2009

Behind Enemy Lines: Tennessee Volunteers

Well, we're one day away from a game that probably means a lot more to Georgia than we might have thought a couple weeks ago and a game that means a ton to Tennessee. It doesn't look right now like either team is going to be a world-beater, but it's definitely shaping up like a matchup between two hungry teams with something to prove. That usually makes for good football.

We've talked a lot this week about the issues facing the Bulldogs, so I figure it's time to find out what the hot topics are in Knoxville. To get answers, I tracked down Tennessee beat writer Wes Rucker of the Chattanooga Times Free Press.

David Hale: Obviously Jonathan Crompton isn’t exactly intimidating opponents yet, but his numbers have been better the past two weeks. Are there signs of improvement?


Wes Rucker: There have been signs of improvement, but how much does that really say?


Crompton has done nothing this season to soften the vitriolic feelings Big Orange Nation (as they call themselves) have for him. He’s a talented, smart young man who simply looks like he won’t put the pieces together before cementing his legacy as one of the biggest busts in college football history. And that will obviously be a major disappointment for the long list of well-respected coaches who never thought they’d see Crompton’s career take this route.


Crompton’s numbers have somewhat improved from the UCLA and Florida disasters, but a vast majority of his damage against Auburn came after the Tigers backed off into soft zone coverage in the fourth quarter. Even UT’s late second-quarter touchdown drive came in a hurry-up setting, with Auburn sitting back to avoid the big play.


If Crompton starts putting up similar numbers (and avoiding turnovers) against defenses in normal situations, then he’ll have started showing real improvement — in my opinion, anyway.



DH: Despite Crompton’s problems, Tennessee hasn’t had too many problems running the ball. Is it the O line, the combination of Montario Hardesty and Bryce Brown or a little of both?


WR: Like I’ve tried telling people for years, a healthy Hardesty is an NFL tailback who can run exceptionally well, block exceptionally well and catch-and-run better than you think. In the right college offense, and with the right number of postseason games (SEC championship, bowls), he’d be a 2,000-yard, all-purpose back. Without his injury history, he’d already have locked himself into the first day of the NFL draft. But ... he’s been hurt. A lot. And in different areas. Hardesty is a tough kid who pushes himself into injuries because he runs and plays the game so hard. He is by no means a “soft” player. Just watch the way he finishes runs.


Brown was seriously pushing Hardesty for the starting position until getting thudded in the hip during a preseason practice. The freshman phenom hasn’t been the same since. His explosive strength and speed just isn’t quite what it was, but he’s still a capable player at 80 percent. If UT develops an offensive line the next few years, Brown and shifty-quick David Oku will rack up yards.


The offensive line has been a patchwork unit ravaged by injuries. Of the four proven, solid seniors who were supposed to anchor that group, only left tackle Chris Scott is still standing at 100 percent. Right guard Jacques McClendon is less than 100 percent (high ankle sprain), but he’s gotten by. Center Josh McNeil’s latest knee injury might have ended his promising career, and left guard Vladimir Richard could miss his third consecutive Saturday with Achilles' and knee issues. But the line has managed OK despite using primarily a group of formerly inexperienced players. The fifth-year senior Sullins twins, Cody and Cory, are former walk-ons who start at center and left guard.


But that combination has been enough, obviously, especially after a full-speed, full-contact spring and fall camp focused on running and stopping the run — the two things Lane Kiffin said any first-year team must do.



DH: Georgia has had some trouble against mobile QBs in the past two years, and Jordan Jefferson burned the Dawgs for a few big plays in the second half last week. So might we see a bit more of Nu’Keese Richardson in the Wild Cat this week?


WR: I would certainly expect to see more “Pahokee Package” this week. The Vols named it after Richardson’s talent-rich Florida hometown, though my vote was always “Nukular.” (No one ever listens to me around here. Not even my girlfriend. Sigh.)


UT wants to put the offense on Hardesty’s shoulders Saturday, but they’ll need others to help. The less they need from Crompton, the better. Putting those factors together, I think there’s a great chance we’ll see Richardson playing his old position for a few plays Saturday.


And be careful, Dawgs’ defenders. Richardson can throw it all over the yard. I saw it in camp. I don’t know how the little guy’s hands got around the ball — he’s listed at 5-foot-10 and is closer to 5-7 — but he can throw it.



DH: Georgia’s running game has been brutal recently, while A.J. Green has been great. So will Eric Berry be spending a bit of extra time shadowing Green or will we see him more in the box as he has been routinely this season?


WR: This is one of the day’s biggest questions, and one for which I can only speculate at this point, since we in the media aren’t allowed to watch the team periods in practice.


My guess is that UT will continue using Berry as essentially a fourth linebacker — or “bafety,” or “sacker,” as he laughingly calls the position. The Vols have to stop the run and keep their defense off the field to beat Georgia, and without junior middle linebacker Nick Reveiz (torn ACL), they’ll be hard-pressed to stop the run without Berry’s linebacker-like skills in the box.


The Vols have a nice set of defensive backs, led by criminally underrated junior Dennis Rogan, but certainly Berry would be their best shot to contain Green.


My bet is you won’t see Berry on Green all that much, because he’ll be in the box. But the bottom line is Berry plays free safety, strong safety, cornerback and a few linebacker spots during the course of most games, so who knows where he’ll be Saturday? All we know is that he’ll usually be somewhere hitting someone hard, and occasionally taking that ball from them and scoring.



DH: We all know about Berry, and Monte Kiffin is obviously a legend among defensive coordinators. But Mark Richt was very complimentary of freshman safety Janzen Jackson. What does Jackson bring to the table, and who else should Georgia fans be looking out for on the defensive side of the ball?


WR: Jackson is an intriguing player to watch. Athletically, in some ways, he’s superior to Berry. He doesn’t hit quite as hard as his role model — who does? — but he brings it pretty hard. His hit on Florida’s Brandon James is a YouTube classic.


I don’t think Jackson will be as good as Berry in the long run, but I think he could be an All-American or at least All-SEC player in his own right. Like Berry, he comes from a football family and was raised the right way. He stays out of trouble and stays in his playbook, so he knows where to be (and how to act) on and off the field.


Berry is an exceptionally rare player, but Jackson can still be a star. And some think he’s already there.



DH: It was obviously a controversial offseason at Tennessee, and there’s been drama that has continued into the season, most recently the dismissal of receiver Brandon Warren. Add to that three losses without an SEC win to start the season, and it can’t be exactly the start Lane Kiffin was hoping for. So what’s the atmosphere like in Knoxville right now? Still some excitement or a bit of disappointment?


WR: This is a complicated question that requires a complicated answer, but I’ll shorten it the best I can.


Kiffin certainly hasn’t been perfect since taking this job, but he’s repeatedly said that nothing he’s seen so far has knocked his plan off course. He knows what he wants to do with this program, but one of his main challenges will be keeping the win-starved locals at bay for a year or two.


More than 10 players have voluntarily left or been dismissed from the program since Kiffin arrived, and most of those players would have made this season’s team better. But Kiffin said he didn’t come to UT with a quick-fix in mind. He wanted to transform this program into what it was from 1995-2004. The Vols went 101-25 in that dominant, 10-year stretch, winning two SEC championships, one national championships and coming oh-so close to more of each.


It will take time to even approach those gaudy records, but Kiffin got off to the right recruiting start in February. He’ll likely sign another top class this winter, and it likely won’t be long until he puts a large group of his prized prospects on the field every Saturday.


With that said, I have no idea what will happen in the meantime. And I don’t know how long that “meantime” will last. People around here simply do no tolerate losing, with few exceptions. How long the UT fans and influential boosters can stomach the rebuilding process remains to be seen.


I can say with certainty that many fans will feel better when someone else — anyone else — is under center. Fair or not, Crompton has become the face of UT’s football calamity, and his mistakes have drawn the loudest boos I’ve heard at Neyland Stadium.

Huge thanks to Wes for his time. You can read his Tennessee coverage HERE, check out the TFP's Vols blog HERE, follow him on Twitter HERE or just be his Facebook pal HERE.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Practice Notes: King Likely Out For Tennessee

Caleb King’s return to the lineup for Georgia may have been short lived.

The tailback, who missed the first two games of the season with a hamstring injury, suffered broken jaw and a concussion following a hit in the fourth quarter of Georgia’s loss to LSU last week, and head coach Mark Richt said King was doubtful to play this week against Tennessee.

“There’s a concussion that he also had from the shot that he took, and that’s probably more of a concern right now,” Richt said. “He can’t do anything until the concussion symptoms clear. As soon as they clear, I think they would let him practice immediately with the no-contact and they might OK him to play as early as this week. I don’t think that’s out of the question, but it’s probably not likely.”

King had just seven yards on eight carries last week, but added 30 yards receiving and had been Georgia’s most successful runner in each of the previous two games.

The jaw injury will not require a wire, however, and Richt said there is hope the injury could heal quickly.

“There are different kinds of fractures,” Richt said. “This one the doctors don’t feel will need any type of surgery, and actually, they feel like relatively soon we can protect him to the point where he can play. So it’s not a season-ending thing by any stretch. It might be a stretch to say this week, but we’re not really counting that out.”

True freshman Washaun Ealey saw his first action of the season prior to King’s injury and was the only Bulldogs runner to meet with any type of success against a stout LSU defense.

Still, Richt said he expects Richard Samuel to be the starter this week, just as he has been in each of Georgia’s first five games.

That doesn’t mean Ealey won’t play often, regardless of King’s status, offensive coordinator Mike Bobo said, and while the freshman was off the field in most passing situations last week, he could see a far bigger role against Tennessee.

“We wanted his first time out of the box put him in a situation where he could be successful and not rattle him with something where he wasn’t successful and would lose confidence,” Bobo said. “But he’s very capable.”

DOWTIN GOES DOWN

Linebacker Marcus Dowtin underwent surgery on a torn ligament in his left ring finger Sunday and said he won’t be available for this week’s game.

Dowtin started two games this season and is third on the Bulldogs in tackles with 26. He sat out all of Tuesday’s practice, and said he’s unlikely to resume contact this week. Dowtin said he hopes to be available in time for Georgia’s Oct. 17 game against Vanderbilt.

“I’m just rehabbing, trying to take it easy on my hand so I can come back next week full go,” Dowtin said.

Christian Robinson and Marcus Washington have handled the majority of the second-team reps at middle linebacker in Dowtin’s absence.

TIME FOR A CHANGE

There were no hard feelings a day after SEC officials admitted a mistake in flagging receiver A.J. Green for an excessive celebration penalty that helped cost Georgia crucial field position in the loss to LSU, Richt said, but that doesn’t mean the issue will go away.

After three players – Green, Orson Charles and LSU’s Charles Scott – were flagged for celebration penalties in last week’s game, Richt said he thinks it’s time that the SEC considers changing the rule, which prohibits players from any gestures officials believe calls attention to themselves or is unsportsmanlike toward an opponent.

“I think it might be time to look at that and say we just have to be careful not to take the joy out of the game for the players and the ability to celebrate something good,” Richt said.

Green was flagged following a go-ahead touchdown with 1:09 left to play. He immediately celebrated with teammates and made no overt gestures following the play, but the referees still called an infraction.

Because the rule is so vague and can so easily be interpreted differently by different officials, quarterback Joe Cox said it essentially forces players to minimize their emotions during the game.

“I do think sometimes it takes away from the emotion that you play with,” Cox said. “Football is an emotional game, and it’s tough when you try to have emotion with your teammates and not try to disrespect the other team, but there’s people trying to get you to stop. I don’t think it’s something that should be penalized.”

STILL A BIG GAME

This week’s meeting between Georgia and Tennessee marks the first time the two teams have faced off while neither was ranked in the top 25 since 1937. But with the Bulldogs coming off an emotional loss to No. 4 LSU last week and the Volunteers still looking for their first SEC win, linebacker Rennie Curran said he has no doubt the players are still treating it as a big game.

“It’s a huge game every time out two teams meet up,” Curran said. “There is a lot of tradition involved, a lot of emotions and goals that can be achieved for whoever wins. It is going to be a big game for both teams.”

BIG CHANGES AREN'T LIKELY

A week after Georgia's porous kick coverage cost the Bulldogs a win over LSU, Richt said he isn't expecting any major changes to how Georgia prepares its special teams.

“It’s very, very difficult as far as time," Richt said. "We are crammed to the gill on this 20-hour rule. Every minute is accounted for and even if you add five minutes to that team, you are going to pull five from something else. Whoever is losing that five minutes is screaming and squawking and rightfully so because they feel like they don’t have enough time to get it just like they want it."

Richt said he believes Georgia already spends more time practicing and meeting with special teams units than most programs, but admits that the lack of experience -- particularly on the kickoff coverage unit -- has been costly.

"We are very, very immature on that team," Richt said. "We have too many young guys side-by-side on those teams, on the kickoff coverage team in particular it’s probably the youngest bunch we’ve ever had out there."

Richt pointed to injuries to special teams stalwarts like Chad Gloer, who missed last week with a hamstring injury, as one reason for the problems, but he said the biggest solution will simply be giving the younger players time to develop.

"You only get good at something through experience," Richt said. "You hate to have bad things happen to you in the process, but they have. … We have to continue to work on our consistency on the hang time and ball placement and guys’ abilities to basically execute what’s being coached.”

With so many young players forced into the special teams units, another option could be involving more of the veterans from Georgia's first- and second-team offense and defense. But that creates a new set of problems, Richt said, which makes the option unlikely.

"Some people think you can just throw a guy in there and all of a sudden he’s good," Richt said. "There is technique involved in that just like there is technique involved in playing linebacker or anyone else. It’s not that easy just to throw someone in there. All that stuff takes reps and time to get better at."

MORE TO COME

Redshirt freshman safety Baccari Rambo has seen his playing time increase each of the past two weeks, and that's a trend that Richt said will continue as the season progresses.

“Rambo is playing well, he’s tackling well, he’s gaining confidence on special teams and at the safety position," Richt said. "He’s got ball skills and he’s got a pick. He just deserves to play. I think it’s good for him, Reshad and Bryan if he gets more reps. You just don’t want those two safeties to get every single rep. I think we’ll see more of Baccari.”

TOP TACKLER

After a career-best 16 tackles against LSU, linebacker Rennie Curran broadened his SEC lead in takedowns to 10 over Vanderbilt's Chris Marve.

The 16-tackle game was a nice highlight, he said, but it was hardly a personal best despite being the high-water mark since arriving at Georgia.

"Going back to high school, I made about 20 tackles a game, so that's something I always strive for," Curran said. "I don't even set limits for myself. I just try to get as many tackles as I can to help this team win. If I have to make 20 or 30, I'm going to do it."

Curran now has 56 tackles through five games after finishing last season with 115, the most by a Bulldogs defender since 1998.

While he said finishing the year as the SEC's top tackler is an honor he's shooting for, it's not his top priority.

“It would be a great accomplishment because when you work hard at something, you want to see results," he said. "It would be awesome. But at the same time, if our defense isn’t well respected in the league and well respected nationally, it wouldn’t mean much to me.”

CALEB'S HIT NOT UNCOMMON

Richt said he had not seen the video of the hit that injured tailback Caleb King but was made aware by several media members Tuesday that it appeared to be an illegal tackle.

Richt said he would investigate it further, but said that hits like the one on King happen often throughout the course of a game and are usually not made maliciously.

“If you watch film you see those kind of shots every single day, every single game," Richt said. "It’s not that unusual to have that. If you are tackling a runner, you have to stick your face at the guy and sometimes a runner at the last second drops his head. There are so many times helmets hit. But again I’ve not seen the shot, so I couldn’t tell you. From what I understand he played after the tackle.”

Friday, July 24, 2009

Media Days Notes: Florida Dominates Preseason Projections

A year ago, Georgia was the top team in the country to start the season, but the media in Hoover, Ala. for SEC Media Days still picked Florida to win the East. It probably shouldn't come as a big surprise then that the Gators were the runaway pick to repeat in 2009.

Florida was a unanimous selection by media to win the SEC East in the preseason balloting released Friday. Only one of the 64 voters selected anyone other than the Gators to win the conference. The lone dissenting vote went to Mississippi.

With the exception of receiver Percy Harvin, Florida returns nearly every key contributor from last year's national championship team, and the Gators' selection as the odds-on favorite to repeat as conference champs came as no surprise to the rest of the SEC.

"They win the big games, and you can't take anything from them," Georgia senior Jeff Owens said of the Gators. "They're a great football team, and we know that if you're going to be successful in this league, you've got to beat Florida. If you want to win a national championship or an SEC championship, you've got to beat Florida. That's the No. 1 thing."

Georgia was the consensus pick to finish second in the East, and the Bulldogs also landed five players on the All-SEC teams, as selected by the media. Receiver A.J. Green was the team's lone first-team representative, while linemen Clint Boling and Trinton Sturdivant, defensive tackle Geno Atkins and linebacker Rennie Curran were both named to the second team.

In the coach's poll, Curran was a first-team selection, but South Carolina's Eric Norwood said the demotion by the media was a reflection of the immense talent at linebacker in the conference.

"Our conference, you've got to have good linebackers," Norwood said. "It's not an option. It's not like you're in the Pac-10. This is a tough, physical conference, and you've got to be able to hit."

Alabama was selected by the media to win the SEC West, but the balloting was much closer. The Crimson Tide received 33 first-place votes, followed by Mississippi with 16 and LSU with 15.

Florida led all teams with 12 representatives on the All-SEC teams, including eight first teamers. Alabama had eight selections, while LSU and Ole Miss tied Georgia with five.

MY BAD, GUYS

The long national nightmare is over. The culprit has been found. The mystery has been solved.

The coach who left Florida quarterback Tim Tebow's name off his preseason All-SEC ballot was South Carolina's Steve Spurrier, but he promised the slight was unintentional.
Spurrier said an assistant filled out the ballot, leaving Tebow's name off and instead voting for Mississippi's Jevan Snead. Spurrier signed off on the ballot and admitted it was a mistake.

"I've called (SEC media relations director) Charles Bloom and said, 'Can I change our selection and put Tim Tebow in?'" Spurrier said. "I was able to put Tim Tebow in today, so now it's unanimous."

But even after Spurrier took full responsibility for leaving Tebow's name off his ballot and corrected the mistake, large contingent of reporters refused to let the story die. Nine more questions were posed to Spurrier involving Tebow, Florida or his voting habits, and a horde of reporters followed the former Gators coach off the stage and into the lobby to pose additional inquiries.

"I know some of you may not think that's right," Spurrier said of the voting error, hoping to end the discussion. "We made a mistake. Tim Tebow is not only the best quarterback in this league, I think he's the best in the country. … I admire and respect him. I apologize to him. He should have been on that ballot. I messed up, and I take full blame for it."

DELIGATION OF AUTHORITY

Spurrier's admission of the voting snafu put an end to the week's biggest story, but it created a second wave of inquiries from the reporters in attendance.

After admitting that an assistant filled out his ballot, Spurrier added a bit of fuel to the fire surrounding the decision this spring to keep coaches' ballots anonymous in the top-25 poll, beginning in 2010.

The coaches' poll represents one-third of the formula for determining the final BCS standings, which in turn determine which teams play for the national championship. Many coaches, like Spurrier, don't fill out their own ballots, instead delegating the job to assistants, and the South Carolina coach understands why that creates a problem.

"I've been doing the preseason ballots for 17 years, and I've never filled one out," Spurrier said. "I don't know why we vote. I guess it's because college football is still without a playoff system. I really believe most coaches do not know a whole lot about other teams, but we do vote. That's what they ask us to do, and I think we all try to do the best we can."

The sentiment isn't one LSU's Les Miles disagrees with, but he thinks delegating the voting to assistants at least makes the system work a bit better, as head coaches focus primarily on teams in their own conference.

In the end, Miles agreed the system was far from perfect, but argued that he hadn't heard a better alternative.

"I am for the playoffs, I just don't see how it works effectively," Miles said. "Everyone in the room can come up with a playoff system … but until it gets done, I'm not going to complain."

STILL WAITING

With just 10 days before Georgia begins fall practice, head coach Mark Richt is still waiting on one more recruit to arrive.

Lineman Kwame Geathers still hasn't qualified officially, and while Richt remains confident that he will, nothing is set in stone yet.

"The only guy who hasn't been in is Geathers, and we still expect him to be here," Richt said. "There's a couple more hoops that he had to jump through that hopefully he's jumping through right now."

BEAUTIFUL MIND

Norwood figures to be South Carolina's defensive leader when the Gamecocks arrive in Athens on Sept. 12, but if he knew in high school what he knows now, he might have been in the opposite locker room.

Georgia recruited Norwood heavily, he said, but issues with his grades – he had a 1.6 GPA at the end of his senior season – forced the Bulldogs to give up their pursuit.

"I had a grade problem," Norwood said. "Clearinghouse was like a 2.3, but by then it was too late. Teams have to recruit."

Auburn and Oklahoma State joined South Carolina in offering a scholarship to Norwood, but the majority of the other teams that had shown interest dropped out after learning of his grades. Once he chose South Carolina, it took three tries before he could be admitted. The process was a lesson learned for the All-SEC linebacker.

Since joining the Gamecocks, Norwood has turned his academic life around. He has made the Dean's list five times, he said, and he is scheduled to graduate in December.

The key, Norwood said, was simple. He just had to commit to his studies and believe he could do it.

"Applying myself, that's the main thing," Norwood said. "In high school, I used just walk around the halls and stuff like that. Now, we have a great academic support staff, and they let me believe that if I didn't have football, I could still succeed academically in college."

GIVING UP ALREADY?

Tebow was the dominant topic of conversation throughout media days, and Tennessee coach Lane Kiffin knows why. His fan base may hope the Volunteers will be national championship contenders this year, but Kiffin is already handing the title over to the Gators and their star quarterback.

"I think there will be a million articles written after Tim has another great year," Kiffin said. "With all the great players, they'll win another national championship. He'll win a Heisman. I'm serious about that. I really believe that."

Friday, June 12, 2009

Sometimes You Wanna Go...

I spent a majority of my Thursday watching reruns of "Cheers" and doing laundry. I recently decided that I had seen every episode of "Seinfeld" too many times, so I had to switch up my syndicated sitcom of choice, and determined that "Cheers" would be a welcome addition to my DVR schedule.

Anyway, I watched six episodes, my favorite being one from the final season in which Harry the Hat (played by "Night Court's" Harry Anderson) helped the gang at Cheers finally exact some revenge on Gary from Gary's Olde Towne Tavern. The ongoing war between Cheers and Gary's was always one of the best recurring storylines of the show, and Gary, of course, always got the better of Sam's crew.

Beyond the mini-marathon of "Cheers," I also spent a relatively sizable chunk of my day reading through the extensive copy dedicated to the potential success of Lane Kiffin, as posted by T Kyle King HERE, Senator Blutarsky HERE, and some fine Tennessee fans HERE. To say the least, it was enjoyable.

I'm not about to jump into the fray of wondering how much success Kiffin will find this season at Tennessee -- although I believe I didn't exactly pick the Vols to do well in my way-too-early projections -- but some of the points King discusses touched on something I've been thinking about for a while.

I spent some time listening to Kiffin explain his offseason antics in Destin, Fla. two weeks ago. Dubious or not, Kiffin seems to think he needed to be a little wacky this offseason in order to bring attention to Tennessee. He felt he needed to throw a few stones at the opposition in order to turn the spotlight back to his school. He needed to get his name -- and by association, I presume, the Volunteers' -- into the national conversation in order to ensure he'd have a shot at luring prized recruits. The results, he suggests, speak for themselves, insofar as Tennessee landed a top-10 recruiting class and the nation's No. 1 overall recruit.

Now, regardless of whether or not you believe all of this was premeditated, I think there's another question to be asked: Since when did Tennessee need publicity stunts to be regarded as a national program? Say what you want about Phil Fulmer, but beyond a few legal headaches in Alabama and the obvious marketing tie-ins with Krispy Kreme, when did he need to make an ass out of himself in order for people to pay attention to the Vols?

I've rarely cared one way or another about Tennessee, but come on... they're better than that, right?

In King's post, his essential point (and I'm glossing over some good stuff) was that, Kiffin may be a fine recruiter, but he hasn't proven he can coach. Valid point.

But my question is -- is he really a fine recruiter? Yes, he got a good class this time in terms of the valuations by recruiting sites (which are at least on occasion a bit dubious) but if this is Kiffin's method for recruiting, is he really getting the type of players a program wants?

That's the thing about publicity stunts. They're stunts, and they're designed to get a quick boost in interest, but they never last. There's a reason the Yankees and Lakers don't offer publicity stunts, and there's a reason why two-bit teams in small towns offer free haircuts, speed dating at the ballpark and Rod Blagojevich bobbleheads. My guess is that most Tennessee fans would prefer to be associated with the former than the latter.

For the past few weeks, I've been talking with a number of Georgia's incoming freshmen for a Getting to Know You series. In each interview, I've asked them the same question: What brought you to Georgia?

These aren't just local kids who spent their lives wanting to play for the Bulldogs. These are players from California and Virginia and Massachusetts. Even the local standouts like Branden Smith were recruited heavily by other top schools. Orson Charles picked Georgia over Florida and Southern Cal, arguably the two best programs in the country in terms of wins and losses.

Despite the distinct differences in the backgrounds of each player, they all gave essentially the exact same response: Georgia felt like a family.

OK, so at this point, unless you're a rose-colored-glasses-wearing Georgia fan, you're rolling your eyes and saying, "Of course they said that." I get it, and I'm not trying to be the head of the Mark Richt fan club.

But think about it: They didn't say they came for playing time or because it was their best chance to win a national title or because Georgia puts so many players into the NFL. I have no doubt that all of those things factored into their decision, and all would have been valid answers to my query. Instead, however, every one of them -- and I've talked to nearly a dozen (many of which I haven't posted yet) -- said the same thing. Family.

At that same press conference Kiffin held in Destin, he was asked how recruiting in the SEC was different from other areas of the country. Here's what he said about kids in the South:

"It's the people around them more, the relationships around him. A lot of times the kid's not making the decision on his own. Someone else is making it for him. I think different parts of the country, it's more about the kids himself than about the parents or the coaches. It's more about family values here."

This should sound at least a little familiar to Georgia fans, since Kiffin essentially said Marlon Brown only chose the Bulldogs because his grandmother was so taken with Richt. (And in case you were wondering, here's what Brown told me when I asked him why he came here: "Probably the thing that made up my mind was the people. Coach Richt and his staff did a good job of recruiting me from Day 1, and that's really what made the difference.")

In any case, clearly Kiffin acknowledges that creating a family environment is important to landing top recruits in the area, and yet he thinks that publicity stunts and boorish behavior were a necessity to get good players to come to Tennessee.

Now, I'm not saying Richt is the perfect family man, both at home and in the locker room. Clearly Georgia has missed out on some top recruits that were also good kids (UT's Eric Berry springs to mind). But there's a good reason why so many of this year's incoming freshmen said they felt at home in Athens.

During the season, I spent countless days over at the Butts-Mehre building, watching practice and doing interviews. The one guy who I didn't talk to all season was Stacy Searels. He wasn't doing interviews, as you may know. But you know who I talked to at least once a week? Searels' daughter. She was always running around the halls and playing on the elevators along with the other coaches' kids. Marcus Washington's wife and kids were often in the building, hanging out with players. Former players dropped by often with their families to visit. Richt's wife is the water girl on game day. It really is a family environment.

Now, I'm not saying none of those things happen at Tennessee or anywhere else. I'm sure they do. But rather than rent limos or rip off shirts or call out other coaches, it's that family environment that Georgia's coaching staff sells, and I have no doubt that it attracts a specific type of person to want to play for the Bulldogs.

In fact, here's another great example that Rodney Garner gave about the recruitment of Montez Robinson from Indiana:

"He was a young man that was from the state of Alabama. He's sort of a unique story a lot like DeAngelo Tyson. He's been a ward of the state since he was six years old. Just getting to know him, you really felt a bond toward him, a love for him, and you really felt like he was an outstanding young man. Here's a kid that came from a very difficult set of circumstances, but yet he was able to rise up and is going to be able to do something special with his life. He has eight brothers and sisters, he's the oldest, and I think they are all looking to him to do something special. It's not just from an athletic standpoint, but I think we all fell in love with him as a person, too. I think arguably he is the best player in the state of Indiana, and we're excited about him getting here in June and getting in with this family. We know he's going to have a family once he gets here."

Seriously, if you heard that, wouldn't you want to go play for Garner, too? Maybe a lot of it is B.S., but it's pretty convincing B.S.

That, of course, is not to say every player who has worn the red and black has been a good guy. Some haven't been. Some have been good people but still made some bad mistakes. Nobody's perfect.

But when you look big picture and compare the approach of Lane Kiffin with the approach of Mark Richt, there's a good chance you end up with two markedly different recruiting classes. Both might have top-10 talent, but they're likely to have distinctly divergent agendas they hope that talent helps them achieve. There were, after all, a lot of folks at USC who were thrilled to have O.J. Mayo, and a lot of fans at other schools who were angry they missed out. How'd that work out for Tim Floyd?

I guess what I'm saying is, Kiffin can trumpet the success of his over-the-top approach all he wants. In terms of bringing talent and attention to Tennessee, it certainly seems to have worked. But sometimes you have to be careful what you wish for.

Gary spent a lot of years tormenting the gang at Cheers, but in the episode I watched yesterday, he finally got what was coming to him. Harry convinced Gary he was a billionaire developer interested in buying the property where Gary's bar was located. Hoping to play one final prank on Cheers, Gary demolished his own bar and tried to pin it on the Cheers gang, only to learn that Harry was a fraud. In the end, his arrogance was his own downfall. (Well, that and some delightful hijinks from Harry the Hat.)

Being the loudest, most confident guy in the room has its immediate rewards, but there's an upside to being understated and biding your time. Kiffin might take a lesson from Gary's ultimate demise. While a lot of talented players want to have their ego stroked and the world handed to them, there are plenty of others who simply want to go where everybody knows their name.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Two-A-Days: Tennessee Volunteers

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 tenth entry in the series is the Tennessee Volunteers.

TENNESSEE VOLUNTEERS
Head coach: Lane Kiffin (1st year)
2008 Record: 5-7 (3-5)
Total Offense: 268.75 ypg (11th SEC, 115th overall)
Total Defense: 263.5 ypg (1st SEC, t-3rd overall)
On the docket: The Vols open with Western Kentucky on Sept. 5 and host Georgia in Knoxville on Oct. 10.

Tennessee struggled without a speck of offense in 2009 and the result was the end of the line for former head coach Philip Fulmer. Fulmer made for some good jokes over the years (Krispie Kreme, the giant pumpkin, the Alabama subpeonas, etc., etc.), but his replacement, Lane Kiffin, has taken things to a new level by upsetting just about every coach in the SEC within his first few months in the league. So, how will the rest of Kiffin's first year go? I talked with Chattanooga Times Free Press beat writer Wes Rucker to find answers.

David Hale: You don't have to read the paper too often to know that Lane Kiffin hasn't made a ton of friends around the SEC in his first few months in Knoxville. What has been the overall reaction to him from his own players, and is there a concern that quite a few teams (UGA, Florida and South Carolina to name a few) will be looking for revenge when they take on the Vols in 2009?


Wesley Rucker: Kiffin certainly talks the talk, doesn't he? He's a supremely confident man, and one that knows what he wants to do with the UT program. The question, obviously, is whether he and his experienced, expensive staff can produce.

From what I've gathered, on and off the record, most of Kiffin's players respect and/or like him. He's incredibly straight-forward -- I know, shocking, right? -- but that approach has worked with most of his players.

I'm not sure if there's any concern over the bulletin-board material, honestly. The UT-Georgia and UT-Florida games are packed with more than enough intensity, anyway. And credit Kiffin for stating the obvious regarding Florida: The Gators had no bulletin-board material when they waxed the Vols the past two seasons.

I'm not sure Kiffin's words are the best approach -- and they're certainly not the most tactful approach -- but it's too soon to know whether it will be a successful or silly approach.

DH: The biggest problem for Tennessee a year ago was the offense, and that started at quarterback. Phil Fulmer never seemed to find his guy at the position last year, and the offense struggled mightily. Does Kiffin have a clearer picture of how he'd like to see the QB position play out, and what are the odds that the Vols offense can actually show a dramatic improvement in 2009 if they can find their quarterback?


WR: There's no doubt in my mind that UT can compete with everyone in the SEC East not named Florida if it gets good quarterback play. But whether UT will get good quarterback play is a huge question mark -- and one that no one in their right mind could possibly answer until after the Florida game, in my opinion.


The Vols are at least SEC-competitive and relatively proven at every offensive position except quarterback and right tackle, but those aren't ideal places to have question marks. You'd think that a competent quarterback would emerge between Jonathan Crompton, Nick Stephens and B.J. Coleman -- three highly-rated recruits with impressive offer lists -- but who didn't think that last season, too?


Crompton has taken most of the starter's snaps this spring, with Coleman taking most of the No. 2s and Stephens battling back from a broken wrist, Coleman's statistics have been better, and his offense has scored more points, but he hasn't faced the same front four as Crompton. I envision that battle lasting at least halfway into preseason camp, but rotating similar-style quarterbacks is often a bad idea in the SEC, so these coaches would prefer to avoid another season-long carousel.

(*NOTE: This interview was done a few days before Coleman decided to transfer. You can read Wesley's coverage of the Coleman transfer HERE.)

DH: With Lennon Creer's decision to leave the team, the Vols still have a deep backfield, but after senior Montario Hardesty, it will be very young. Has Hardesty shown enough this spring to be a featured back or do you expect to see a lot of Bryce Brown, David Oku or even Tauren Poole?


WR: Hardesty's ability to be the feature back hasn't been a question since his freshman season, in my opinion. He's tough, strong, fast and has good vision. He just hasn't stayed healthy. Hardesty has just been one of those frustrating cases of a hard-working, well-respected, talented young man simply being plagued with injuries. It's not an effort or conditioning issue -- he's given himself two stress fractures by pushing through sprains too quickly -- but it's fair to question if he will ever stay healthy in a grueling league like the SEC.


Regardless, though, Hardesty has been and will continue to be pushed by a growing group of talented youngsters. Poole has probably been the Vols' most impressive runner this spring, but he's fumbled way too much for the coaches' liking. Toney Williams, who arrived in January from Alpharetta (Ga.) High School, has also shown flashes of promise the past few weeks. And obviously, Brown and Oku have been built up as tantalizing talents who will have opportunities to earn immediate playing time.

DH: Obviously Lane wasn't the only Kiffin to join the Vols' staff this year. As good as the Tennessee defense was at times last season, how much better can the unit be under Monte Kiffin and, from what you've seen this spring, can it be good enough to potentially carry the load to get the Vols back into contention in the East?

WR:
There are depth issues on UT's defense, and its linebackers -- always a major strength under former coordinator and linebacker maestro John Chavis -- will be extremely inexperienced aside from All-SEC weaksider Rico McCoy. But I think this will be a very solid defense, nonetheless (and not just because it's faced UT's offense all spring).


Safety Demetrice Morley's dismissal cost the Vols a dynamic playmaker, but there's no shortage of options to start alongside All-American Eric Berry, and many of those options are capable of executing playcalls better than the notoriously freelancing Morley. There are plenty of good options at cornerback, too.


Big freshman defensive tackle Montori Hughes has been the team's biggest pleasant surprise this spring, and he looks to be at least a solid compliment to proven commodities Dan Williams and Wes Brown in the middle. Defensive end, meanwhile, could be UT's biggest strength. Juniors-to-be Chris Walker and Ben Martin have played very well this spring, and Walker has probably been the team's second-best player (behind Berry). Defensive line coach Ed Orgeron is cautiously optimistic about his group, and I can see why, but tackle depth is a possible concern.

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


WR: I'm sure this will sound cliché, but the energy has been undeniably positive -- and not just because local media are watching full practices for the first time since 2003. Several players buried in the depth chart responded well to Kiffin's “blank slate” philosophy, and practice tempo has been a noticeably impressive upgrade.


Given time, I think this core group of coaches could compete for SEC championships. Lesser-known additions like running backs coach Eddie Gran -- who fiercely recruited South Florida for Auburn and coached six Tiger tailbacks still in the NFL -- have impressed me this spring, and the Monte Kiffin/Ed Orgeron daily tour de force is a seemingly effective, testosterone-filled spectacle.


But, as always in this league, the road to Atlanta and beyond is not an easy one. UT has gradually slipped in the SEC East since 2001. Gritty efforts to outlast the field and play in the league title game in 2004 and 2007 were solid, but the Vols haven't had a bona fide national title contender since 2001 -- regardless of what some around these parts say about the shockingly bad 2005 season.


Several programs have maintained or returned to meet their lofty standards since UT's 1998 national championship. Catching the Floridas, Alabamas, LSUs and Georgias of the league won't be an easy task but, given time, I think these Vols' coaches could do it. But will they stay together long enough to do it? Will fans and boosters allow them the time to do it? And will public opinion stay with them long enough to hold off the initial setbacks?


Those questions combined with Kiffin's supreme confidence leave several interesting possibilities for the next few seasons in the SEC, for Kiffin-lovers Kiffin-haters alike.
The worst-case scenario this season still leaves UT back in a bowl game, I think -- but I wouldn't bet a mortgage payment on it. The best-case scenario leaves them playing a bowl game near January -- where the Vols could showcase their young talent and hope to continue signing similar players and narrow their deficit to the SEC's elite.

* Wesley Rucker has coverd the Tennessee Volunteers for eight years, and is the beat writer for the Chattanooga Times Free Press. You can read his Vols coverage HERE or check out his blog HERE. His wrap up of Tennessee's spring can be found HERE.

NEXT UP: The South Carolina Gamecocks with The State beat writer Seth Emerson.