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Thursday, July 21, 2011

New threads for 'new' Dogs?

From Mike Lough here subbing for Seth at media days

Georgia no doubt wants to rinse as much of last season, and maybe the season before, away.

And new uniforms will be part of it. At least early.

Georgia head coach Mark Richt said the Bulldogs will have new threads for the opener against Boise State, but the details are still supposed to stay a secret.

Richt sat down with state and some national media before Thursday’s activity started at SEC Media Days.

He said the team saw the Nike-produced Pro Combat uniforms this week at a team meeting.

“We’re trying to honor (Nike) by not describing what it looks like, they want to present that,” Richt said. “We’re like death threating on the cell phones. ‘I better not see anything that resembles you saying what it looks like or somehow having an image of it.’”

Richt confirmed that running back Carlton Thomas will watch the Boise State game from the sidelines, and hinted without hinting that there might be somebody else joining him.

“Well, I’ll say this. If there’s anybody else we need to announce well announce it at the appropriate time. This is not the appropriate time. We’ll see.”

Richt doesn’t know if this year’s running backs will be better than last year, what with all the inexperience, but it seems as though he expects them to be better.

And returning Richard Samuel to the backfield is a plus.

“He’s a very mature physically man, he’s a mature man in the way he goes about his business. He’ll be in that meeting room and he’ll be a great example of how to prepare and how to play the position of tailback.

“I know he holds onto the ball well, I know he’ll strike a backer. I know he’s fast I k now he’s powerful. He will play hard.”

Samuel is also the unofficial No. 1 back going into the preseason, and Richt isn’t like everybody else, distressed over a depleted and raw backfield.

“I’m not fretting right now. I don’t lay awake at night going, ‘Oh my goodness, what do we do now?’”

Other nuggets from the early-morning sitdown:

- QB Aaron Murray is likely to make more plays from the pocket than taking off. Richt doesn’t want to change too much simply because Murray has experience. One issue is adjusting to new receivers: there’s no A.J. Green and Kris Durham running routes.

Obviously, the other wideouts have to step up.

- Opening up with the likes of Boise State and South Carolina has inspired a buzz on the team, and Brandon Boykin said there’s not talk of heat on Richt, but that the players have to show more pride in the program.

- Richt is, like everybody else, ready to see RB Isaiah Crowell on the field. And taking a commitment from a sophomore (RB Stanley Williams of Apalachee) is new, but a good sign for the program, he said.

He had a funny recruiting story regarding former Florida State linebacker Ernie Sims, who was down to Auburn, Georgia and FSU and whom Richt saw and liked in junior high.
And he wanted to wear No. 34.

“I’m at Georgia, I just got there,” Richt said, starting to laugh. “The last thing I’m gonna do is give Herschel Walker’s number away. I don’t care who he is.”

And here's some more stuff going to the website, on the hotseat, uniforms and running backs:

Mark Richt is pretty much atop the list of SEC coaches qualifying for the hammered-to-death hotseat, which won’t change until the season commences.

The Georgia fanbase is mixed in not forgiving him last season’s 6-7 mark and wanting him out, and in hoping he’s the coach to quickly get the Bulldogs back among the SEC and nation’s noteworthy program.

Contrary to the belief in some circles, he doesn’t think he’s steering the Titanic.

“I know if you walk in the Butts-Mehre Building, there's not one sense of doom or gloom,” he said Thursday at SEC Media Days. “There's only excitement, only guys that are so thankful that we've got a new season and a clean slate and the ability to play some great opponents to start the year.

“The expectations are just as high as they've ever been going into any season.”

As is the pressure. His players dismissed such talk, and it’s quite simple for center Ben Jones.

“We just try to focus on each game just trying to win every game,” he said. “If we win, there's no pressure on him.”

Cornerback Brandon Boykin said the Bulldogs don’t pay attention to speculation, and he sees the bigger picture.

“There are minor little mistakes that we (shouldn’t have) made that could potential have made us a 9-4 or, you know, 10-3,” he said. “If we take care of the little things and the minor mistakes that we’ve had, we can go to from that season we had last year to contending for a championship.

“There’s no reason why not.”

The questions aren’t just for Richt, either.

“It’s our job to go out there and play, play to the best of our ability,” Boykin said. “I wouldn’t say heat, just pride in ourselves and our program, not wanting to be what we were last year. It was a terrible season for the University of Georgia. Just our pride alone will allow us to bounce back.”

As has been noted, it wasn’t like Georgia was getting hammered in 2010, with six of the seven losses coming by a total of 39 points, an average of 6.5 points, and four by seven points or less.

Richt minced no words, however, in how bad the 10-6 loss to Central Florida in the Liberty Bowl was.

“It wasn't devastating,” he said. “It hurt real bad. I didn't enjoy it. But devastation means you've like blown up the program and it's beyond repair, so I don't think it was devastating. But it was awful. I can say that.

“We learned that we better compete harder and we learned we better finish better. That was the story of our season. We'll see how well we learned it.”

Starting off in style

Maybe fresh threads will help wash away the stink of 2010.

Regardless, Georgia make a fashion statement to begin 2011.

Georgia will have new uniforms for the season opener against Boise State, but the details are still supposed to stay a secret.

Richt sat down with state and some national media before Thursday’s activity started at SEC Media Days.

He said the team saw the Nike-produced uniforms on Wednesday at a team meeting. At the start, Richt feigned anger when quarterback Aaron Murray and defensive back Brandon Boykin weren’t at the meeting, throwing a pad down.

“ ’That’s what the heck’s wrong with this team,’ ” Richt said to his troops. “ ‘Two leaders of our team, we got a team meeting, and they don’t even show up on time.’ Ben (Jones) tried to say something, and I jumped Ben.”

Then Murray and Boykin strolled in wearing the new Nike Pro Combat uniform and gear, greeted at first by silence.

“Their jaws dropped,” Richt said. “Then they’re looking at me, and then they started getting excited. There was a lot of buzz in that room for at least five to 10 minutes before things finally settled down.”

Richt knows that uniforms don’t win games, and the Bulldogs have had mixed success with wardrobe adjustments, ranging from a great game against Auburn in a 45-20 win at home in 2007 to a wretched first half en route to a 41-30 home loss to Alabama a year later.

Sometimes a surprise change works, sometimes it doesn’t.

“Your focus may be gone, too, because you’re worried about what you look like,” Richt said. “We’re going to get all that over with before we go out.”

The public won’t get a look until late August.

“We’re trying to honor (Nike) by not describing what it looks like, they want to present that,” Richt said. “We’re like death threating (sic) on the cell phones. ‘I better not see anything that resembles you saying what it looks like or somehow having an image of it.’”

Boykin seemed ready to bust out and talk about the uniforms.

“It was pretty exciting,” he said. “I’m always looking at every team and seeing what they have on. I’m like, ‘I wish I could wear that one day.’

“When me and Aaron put them on, we were like little kids at Christmas. When we walked into the team meeting and everybody saw them, they were really excited.”

Some players have tweeted general reactions, all of excitement, with no real details.

“As far as describing them, we told everybody (Wednesday night), ‘you’ve seen them, don’t ruin it for everybody else,’ “ Boykin said. “You guys’ll see them soon enough.”

Samuel boosts backfield

Returning Richard Samuel to where he began at Georgia, to tailback, is a plus.

“He’s a very mature physically man, he’s a mature man in the way he goes about his business,” Richt said. “He’ll be in that meeting room and he’ll be a great example of how to prepare and how to play the position of tailback.

“I know he holds onto the ball well, I know he’ll strike a backer. I know he’s fast I k now he’s powerful. He will play hard.”

Samuel, a 6-2, 243-pounder, has carried 114 times for 528 yards, an average of 4.6 yards. He’s caught eight passes for 50 yards in two seasons before moving to linebacker for what became a redshirt year.

He was a top-50 running back nationally coming out of Cass, No. 5 by ESPN, in 2007.
Samuel is also the unofficial No. 1 back going into the preseason, and Richt isn’t distressed over a fairly depleted and raw backfield.

“I’m not fretting right now,” he said. “I don’t lay awake at night going, ‘Oh my goodness, what do we do now?’"

He might if the absence of Carlton Thomas plays a role against Boise State. Richt confirmed his suspension.

“Carlton won’t play game one, I’ll say ‘team rules,’” Richt said. “You can figure out whatever you want.”

But Thomas will be back for South Carolina.

Richt hinted without hinting that Thomas could have company.

“Well, I’ll say this. If there’s anybody else we need to announce, we’ll announce it at the appropriate time,” he said. “This is not the appropriate time. We’ll see.
“We’ll be ready to play Sept. 3. I can promise you that.”

6 comments:

Stuart said...

I hope this means we're bringing back the silver britches.

Seth Emerson said...

(From Mike Lough subbing): Boykin reeeeally wants to talk about these unis. Ben Jones said they're lighter, which doesn't mean much for linemen with all the stuff they wear, i.e. braces, etc. They may add a little spring in the step at the start, but unis don't tackle, fumble, blow coverage, making leaping catches, etc. But if it makes 'em feeeel like Superman, maybe they play that way. Tis so much mental.

Mike said...

Are we getting new unis? or is this just about the pro combat unis vs Boise St?

Julian said...

Maybe the other person on the sidelines for the Boise St. Game will be Jarvis Jones?

Seth Emerson said...

Yeah, he'd sure be the leading candidate. Fortunately for UGA, he's not an O-lineman or RB. The Dawgs can handle the loss of a body almost everywhere else, and Jones hasn't played yet. Richt obviously sounded like punishments were done just yet. And Jones' situation is less dire than Mr. Pope. Pope is probably going to get serious sitting time.

Sam said...

Can we get some paragraph breaks, please?