Thursday, May. 23, 2013

New Digital Edition

Little Donkey at AvondaleBricksGallery

Enjoy tapas from Little Donkey, Wine Tasting by Athens Imports, Art Exhibition Opening. $15.  Friday, November 30, 5-9 p.m.

street_20tcos.widea.jpg

Visit us during the Avondale/Forest Park Holiday Crafts Bazaar at Avondale Bricks Gallery, 130 41st Street South in Avondale.  Must be 21 for wine tasting.

Write bhamweekly@gmail.com for more information or questions. Thank you for joining the Revolution in Avondale. 

  • Thu
    23
  • Fri
    24
  • Sat
    25
  • Sun
    26
  • Mon
    27
  • Tue
    28
  • Wed
    29
Saturday, May 25, 2013
- -
Featured Video
 
 
 

flip the sound

You are in: Home » Blogs » Users Blogs »   Popular Blogs
Translate to:
 
X's & O's happysports_72
Aug
06

X's & O's: 3-D TD

By John Easterling

No, it’s not a new Star Wars character that has popped out of George Lucas’s brain. It’s the new promotion that ESPN and the ACC are unveiling for this fall. That’s right sports fans, now even you can watch your sports in the Third Dimension. It’s almost like you actually watching a game live, where the players appear real. And not just flat. And in color and everything. Holy schnikes. It’s the greatest thing since High-Definition. It’s been so long.

As of right now, ESPN is scheduled to show 4 ACC college football games (all out of conference) this fall in 3D. Boise State vs. Virginia Tech on September 6 will kick things off on a high note as early season Cinderella/favorite sleeper/underdog/Top 5 team Boise comes cross-country to visit the Hokies in Blacksburg.

September 11 brings together perennial powerhouses Ohio State and Miami in a non-conference barn-burner (thanks Keith). 2 teams that are preseason to win their conferences – Big Ten and ACC, respectively – meet at the Horseshoe in Columbus for some early season, Miami and Ohio State are looking to use this early pivotal game as a springboard towards loftier goals – a National Championship.

The Tigers meet the Tigers in an intraspecies clash on September 18 as Auburn plays host to Clemson in a rematch of the 2007 Chick-Fil-A (Peach) Bowl, which Auburn took 23-20 in OT.

In addition to these regular season games, the ACC Championship will be shown on ESPN 3D on December 4.

So what do you need to view these marquee match-ups in 3D? You need a 3D-ready TV (who doesn’t have one of those?), a pair of 3D glasses to go with your 3D-ready TV, plus a 3D-ready top box and 3D service from your service provider. That’s it. All you need to do is spend a crazy amount of money.

Or: you could just buy a ticket and watch one of them in person. It’s probably cheaper. And I promise it will still be in 3D at the stadium.

at 04:52 PM | Permalink | Comments (19)
 
X's & O's happysports_72
Sep
07

X's & O's: The Roof is On Fire

Or should at least be on the hot seat...

By John Easterling

The Auburn Tigers were back on the field for the first time on Saturday as they welcomed the Arkansas State Red Wolves to the Plains for a little tackle football. Electricity was in the air with the excitement and hope that comes with a new season. Tiger Walk was packed. The stadium was packed. It’s good to be back. As the eagle soared around the stadium (the greatest pregame ritual in the country in my humble opinion), goose bumps and voices soared with it. Pregame videos rocking. Music thumping. Band marching. Everyone was on the edge of their seat. It was finally time to put all those expectations to bed and start analyzing the results.

The Good

There was plenty for the Auburn faithful to be excited about. The offense looked explosive and exciting, piling on 52 points, 23 first downs, and a staggering 608 yards of total offense (367 on the ground). Freshman phenom Michael Dyer made his Jordan-Hare debut rushing for 95 yards on 14 carries.

Aairon Savage and Zac Etheridge both made triumphant returns from injury and getting back into the starting lineup. Savage has missed the passed two seasons with injuries – 2008 with a knee injury, then 2009 with a torn Achilles – but was awarded a sixth year of eligibility by the NCAA and was back on the field and ready to go, racking up 7 tackles. Etheridge was carted off the field to end his season last year, but it was highly likely that it was the end of his career. Etheridge tore ligaments in his neck and crack a vertebra while colliding with defensive end Antonio Coleman during a tackle in the Ole Miss game last season. But Zac returned to practice and was cleared for contact a couple of weeks ago. He had 4 tackles in his return against Arkansas State.

The Bad

The defense gave up 366 yards to the Red Wolves attack, 323 of those through the air. Arkansas State established sustained drives that were 10+ plays. They controlled the ball for much of the first quarter. The visiting Red Wolves were the first team to strike where it hurts – the scoreboard. Not exactly what the Tiger fans were hoping to see out of the revamped defense. The Tigers’ only prevented Louisiana Tech from scoring 20+ points last season. No such luck here. The Red Wolves put 26 on the board.

The Ugly

Ted Roof is not an SEC caliber coordinator in my opinion. Given the speed and talent of the Auburn defense, the consistent lack of results is troubling. The Tigers finally have something they didn’t have last year as well – depth. Granted a lot of it is young talent, there is still talent in the depth chart. Experience in the starting lineup, and talented youth in the depth chart. Tough combo to beat… unless you’re the opposing offense it seems.

Roof’s zone defense is soft and reactive. The Tigers almost never blitz. And when they do, it’s usually only one extra person. The corners consistently play 10 yards off the ball. The linebackers drop deep. This leaves gaping holes in the flats and underneath across the middle. Rather than utilize the speed of the secondary and running tight man defense to force bad throws, or the speed of the linebackers and run zone blitzes, Roof runs this weird mini-prevent. Which as my pop says, all it does is prevent you from winning. It’s a bend-but-don’t-break defense that bends all the way to the endzone. Arkansas State consistently attacked the lack of coverage on the slot receivers by running little bubble screens and quick hits to get their receivers the ball in space, allowing them to pick up 6 or 7 yards at a time.

Roof is slow to make adjustments. It took him an entire half to adjust the linebackers to get out onto the slot receivers and pull in the corners tighter. I can’t understand why it would be so hard to see that what you are doing isn’t working and adjust. It cost Auburn many games last year, including the Iron Bowl. Alabama simply ran two plays down the field on their game-winning drive – a 7-yard hook route to Julio Jones and a swing pass to Trent Richardson.

The Beautiful

But there is light on the horizon for the Auburn faithful. QB Cam Newton shined in his debut. He was crisp throwing the ball, and when the opportunity presented himself, Newton tucked the ball and gained positive yards – a lot of it. Newton finished the day 9-14 for 186 and 3 touchdowns passing, and 171 yards on 15 carries plus another 2 touchdowns on the ground. He looked composed and confident in the pocket, and elusive out of it. The thing that impressed me most was even when Newton was scrambling, he still had his head up looking downfield for a target. Once he decided to tuck it though, he was off. His release is quick. His pass was accurate. His arm is big. Incredibly quick for a man his size, Newton will be a tough man to sack for opposing defenses. Good start to the season for Newton and the Auburn offense. They’re gonna need it.

at 12:44 PM | Permalink | Comments (22)
 
X's & O's happysports_72
Sep
08

X's & O's: A.J. is Out

By John Easterling

A.J. Green, star WR for the Georgia Bulldogs, has been declared ineligible by the NCAA for the next 3 games. For the Bulldogs, this means Saturday at (24) South Carolina, home against (14) Arkansas Sept. 18, and at Miss State on the 25th. Green was already held out of Georgia’s game against Louisiana-Lafayette this past Saturday – the Bulldogs won easily 55-7 – in wake of the NCAA’s investigation.

Green reportedly sold a jersey that he had previously worn during the Independence Bowl to an person who falls under the NCAA’s “definition for an agent” for an undisclosed amount, though it is reported that the sum was under $1,000 (that’s good news). Green has paid back the money to charity according to ESPN.com.

Green said in a statement: "I want to apologize to my coaches, teammates and the Georgia fans for the mistake in judgment […] I very much regret all that has taken place and the distraction that¹s been caused."

Georgia looks to move on and prepare to face its tough upcoming SEC schedule, though the school does plan to appeal.

Green is ranked 4th on Mel Kiper, Jr’s Big Board for the 2011 NFL draft.

at 04:13 PM | Permalink | Comments (24)
 
X's & O's
Oct
13

X's & O's: Low Tide

By John Easterling

Recently, Alabama lost its first game since the 2008 Sugar Bowl, and first regular season since the 2007 Iron Bowl. After facing 2 top-10 teams in a row, the Tide had to travel to Columbia to face the No. 19 South Carolina Gamecocks. The Gamecocks are a talented, fast team coached by Steve Spurrier. The Ol’ Ball Coach always seems to have one really surprising win every season, and this was his day.

South Carolina came flying out of the gates, playing fast and aggressive, determined to hit the defending champs in the mouth and really make them work for every inch. The Gamecocks aggression paid off as they were able to establish an early lead, but more importantly, control the tone and tempo of the game.

On the hard, downhill running of Marcus Lattimore and the strength and athleticism of their tall receivers, South Carolina responded with an impressive drive resulting in the game’s first touchdown – a 9-yard slip screen to Lattimore from QB Stephen Garcia, using the Tide’s aggressive scheme to create an open lane to the endzone. South Carolina was able to get a stop and take the ball back down the field to score to establish their hold with a 14-3 1st quarter lead they never relinquished.

Quarterback Stephen Garcia, the oft-criticized QB, played the game of his life. He repeatedly found his big targets on the outside, mostly Tori Gurley and Alshon Jeffery, who had 7 catches for 127 yards and 2 TDs. Garcia ended up an incredibly efficient 17-20 for 201 yards and 3 TDs. He was steady, avoiding turnovers, and costly mistakes; well, almost avoiding them. He did have 1 interception. Plus, on the Gamecocks opening second-half drive, Garcia went chasing after a snap that sailed over his head towards the endzone. Garcia recovered the ball on the 4… and immediately deciding to throw the ball through the endzone and hit the crossbar of the goal post, resulting in a safety – 2 points for Alabama, plus the ball and the momentum – and left Coach Spurrier scratching his head. The South Carolina fans let out a collective groan and I’m pretty sure Whitesnake’s “Here We Go Again” was playing in the background.

But the South Carolina defense came up big again, holding the Tide to another field goal. This, plus the ‘Bama’s failed fake field goal with the game 28-21, sealed the victory for the Gamecocks.

This was South Carolina’s first ever victory over a No. 1 ranked team.

Two things really stood out to me watching this game: first, the play of QB Greg McElroy and second, the way South Carolina was able to out hustle and be more physical.

Greg McElroy put up pretty good numbers. He ended up throwing for 315 yards and 2 TDs. But something just looked off. He didn’t go all the way through his progressions many times. He looked slow to react to the Gamecocks pressure, often holding the ball far too long which resulted in a sack (7 sacks in total). When his first or second read was open, he delivered the ball confidently and accurately, but he just looked a little slower than normal processing the game. It reminded me a lot of former Auburn QB Brandon Cox, actually. It makes me wonder whether McElroy was totally over his head injury he sustained against the Florida defense last week. It wasn’t considered to be too severe, and he didn’t miss any action last week, but maybe there were some lingering effects.

For Coach Nick Saban, this was a very uncharacteristic performance by one of his teams – especially this team. They looked flat. They made far too many mistakes. They didn’t execute. But most surprisingly, they were pushed around the field. The play-calling, especially in the first half, was gruelingly conservative. Don’t get me wrong, Saban loves to pound it down your throat, but this was different. McElroy didn’t throw the ball further than 10 yards for most of the first half, which allowed the defense to overload the box to stop RBs Mark Ingram and Trent Richardson. When Ingram and Richardson did run the ball, it seemed like it was either off-tackle right or off-tackle left. There didn’t seem to be any creativity or inspiration behind the play-calling, or the execution. After the game Saban said, “It's not like we just lost. They beat us. They out-executed us. They played better than we played. They played with more intensity. They played physical." Saban is now 1-3 against Spurrier, who, in true Steve Spurrier form, rewarded himself the gameball.

Life in the SEC finally caught up to the mighty Tide. Every week you face a team that is solid, well-coached (except LSU), fast, and can beat you. And every one of those teams is targeting the defending champs and giving them their best. An inexperienced defense and facing their third top 20 team in a row just wore down Alabama. It makes it a lot easy for David to topple Goliath if Goliath has just finished fighting two other giants.  But you still have to execute and compete.  South Carolina played a nearly flawless game.  Just because Goliath was a little tired, doesn't mean David didn't hit it perfectly with his slingshot.

at 02:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (31)
 
X's & O's happysports_72
Sep
17

X's & O's: Heisman No More

By John Easterling
     Reggie Bush announced Tuesday that he was forfeiting his Heisman Trophy that he was awarded in 2005. In doing so, Bush becomes the first individual to lose or relinquish his trophy in the 75 years of the award, which is given annually to the best college football player. Bush’s decision comes in the wake of the NCAA investigation into Bush receiving additional aid from an agent during his tenure at USC. Bush was recently ruled ineligible during the 2005 season, the year in which he garnered the award.

In a statement released Thursday, Bush announced that his decision to return the award was not an admission of guilt or any wrong doing; rather, Bush stated that the decision was motivated out of his respect for the prestige of the award and its previous winners. Citing his recent negative publicity and association with the award, Bush told reporters that he didn’t want to tarnish the reputation of the award in any way. The media is creating the negative attention, guilty or not, so Bush respectfully walked away. At least this is his reasoning.

     My question though is this: even if Bush is 100% guilty of the infraction(s) of which he is accused, should those affect his Heisman Trophy?

     My personal answer is no. The Heisman Trophy is voted on by members of the media and the elite fraternity of previous winners and given to the player whom they see as the best player in the country based on his on-field performance. I think that is the key here. You can argue that Bush was ineligible – and you would be right to do so; however, that ruling was only made after the fact (5 years for goodness sake), and Bush did play that season. And based on his performance and his ability as one of the most exciting and dynamic college football players ever, he was awarded that year’s trophy. And the vote wasn’t even close. Bush won by a landslide over Texas QB Vince Young.

     I think it is a much different argument for USC vacating their team’s championship and any wins in which Bush was playing. The team was using an NCAA ineligible player, in NCAA games, and won an NCAA championship. Bush, on the other, was not cheating personally. He wasn’t caught using any performance-enhancing drugs, or steroids, and using a jet pack, he simply excelled on the field through his own abilities. Plus, the Heisman Trophy is a privately awarded honor, and not directly affiliated with the NCAA. Bush really did play, and on the field, he didn’t cheat, for which the award was given to him.

     Either way, what’s done is done. Some are saying that it is a mature move on Bush’s part. Perhaps they are right. I probably wouldn’t have given it up (that probably bodes well for Bush’s maturity). I do applaud the Heisman Trust’s decision to leave the 2005 award vacant, rather than passing in onto another person, presumably Vince Young. If one thing is for certain, he did not win it. Would Young have won it if Bush were not allowed to play that season? Probably. But he did. And he didn’t. I think the Trust got it right in 2005 (barring the National Championship game, and I blame that on Pete Carroll) and right again in 2010. Well done.

Cheers!

at 05:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (23)
 
X's & O's happysports_72
Nov
30

X's & O's: Déją Vu All Over Again

By John Easterling

Well, not exactly…

While this year’s Iron Bowl was eerily similar to last year’s version, it was more a mirror image rather than a replica. The stakes were much the same. One team was ranked No. 2 in the BCS, undefeated, and had aspirations for an SEC championship and beyond, including a potential Heisman winner. One team’s season was a bit of a disappointment (though the expectations were drastically different, so disappointment is quite relative) and looking to play spoiler. The home team was ranked lower, but came out full of passion and energy to take an early lead. The Heisman candidate was contained for much of the first half. But ultimately, the away team mad adjustments, rallied together, and took the lead on a fourth quarter touchdown that won the game.

Last year it was the Crimson Tide of Alabama that avoided the stumble against rival Auburn. This year it was the Tigers’ turn.

Much like Mark Ingram last year, Heisman hopeful Cam Newton was held in check on the ground, just 39 yards on 22 caries though he did get a touchdown. But unlike Ingram, Newton made up for his lack of running game by passing the ball; he is still a quarterback after all. Newton finished the day 13 of 20 for 216 yards and 3 TDs; but most importantly, he didn’t throw any picks.

Auburn’s much-praised offense was pitiful for most of the first half. In fact, they were down 21-0 before it ever picked up a first down. Really, Auburn only mustered positive yards on one series. Luckily for the Tigers, it ended in a 36-yard pass from Newton to Emory Blake for a touchdown and the Tigers’ only points of the first half.

If the offense was pitiful, Auburn’s much-maligned defense was simply abysmal. The secondary was torched for 300+ yards through the air – most of which was QB Greg McElroy connecting with WR Julio Jones in some miraculous way that transcended mere football. It looked like Jones just willed himself to be open and it was so. Too easy for a QB of McElroy’s ability to miss.

Bryant-Denny was rocking. The Tide players were elated and dominant. The Tigers looked to be finished. In one game, they could see their SEC and national title hopes slipping away, as well as Newton’s hope to be the first junior college transfer to win the Heisman. A terrible day in T-town as mighty Cameron looked to be striking out.

Not so fast, my friend.

Though I have been hard on Auburn defensive coordinator Ted Roof (and I do think there is much to be desired), he has responded in two straight games with nearly flawless adjustments. Georgia and Alabama scored a combined 13 points in the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th quarters of their games against Roof’s defense. But they also scored 42 points in the 1st quarters. But with an offense as explosive as Auburn’s, it doesn’t seem like they are ever out of it.

The Tigers dominated the second half, outscoring the hometown Tide 21-3 capping the biggest comeback for the Tigers in school history. Newton got things back on track, utilizing his often overlooked and frequently undervalued ability as a passer. With Alabama crowding the line, the Tigers took to the air.

But I believe the Tigers won the game good old-fashioned stick-to-it-tiveness. Hustle plays, taking care of the ball, and never giving up were critical to Auburn’s success in their biggest test of the season – biggest crowd, toughest environment, best team, and biggest deficit all wrapped into one. But the Tigers showed heart as they have done all season, coming from behind in 8 of their 12 games. Much like their in-state foes did a year ago, the Tigers refuse to quit and refuse to lose.

What a difference a year makes. The Tigers head to Atlanta this week to play for the SEC championship and a spot in the BCS title game. The Tide wait around to find out which bowl game fate delivers them. The Tigers look to make a clean sweep and add another Heisman trophy to the case to go along with a national title. The Tide think about how close they were to greatness.

What is the difference? The son of a preacher man.

at 03:16 PM | Permalink | Comments (29)
 
X's & O's happysports_72
Aug
31

X's & O's: So Long Heisman?

By John Easterling
In a statement released by Nick Saban and the University of Alabama today, it was revealed that Heisman-winning running back Mark Ingram will miss at least the season opener against San Jose State due to knee surgery. The surgery is said not to be serious and seems to be a scope. Ingram hurt his knee in practice on Monday. Saban and the staff decided that it would be better for Ingram to have the surgery now, so that he can return to the field as soon as possible. From Saban to the press:


 “Mark will definitely be out for this week’s game against San Jose State and we will manage this on a week to week basis beyond this week. We will make every decision in the future based on what’s best for Mark and his career as we consult with Dr. Cain and Dr. Andrews on his progress. This is not an injury that will affect Mark’s future ability to make a full recovery in a relatively short time frame.”


The team is probably hoping that the relatively short time frame will mean Ingram is ready for the second game when #19 Penn State comes to Tuscaloosa. It sounds like Ingram’s injury might be a little more severe if it required two opinions.


But there is good news for the Crimson Tide. Sophomore Trent Richardson is ready to take the bulk of the snaps. Richardson was scheduled to split a lot of carries with Ingram anyway this season. As good as Ingram is and his 2009 season was, many are saying that Richardson could be more explosive and a touch more talented. Must be nice to lose your Heisman-winning running back (even for just one game potentially) and not really have to sweat it. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that San Jose State is coming to town.

But will this hurt – or even kill – Ingram’s chances of repeating as Heisman winner?

I believe so. The offense will plug in Richardson. McElroy will take on a little more responsibility. Even though it might only be for one game, there is no guarantee that Ingram won’t be out longer. He’s already prepared to share the carries and split time with Richardson. A porous San Jose State defense might have been just the thing to get some early padded stats. Not to mention that as the returning winner, Ingram will have to really wow the voters. Anything less than a more spectacular season is likely to be viewed as a disappointment for the voters.


As they say, only time will tell.


Cheers!

at 02:47 PM | Permalink | Comments (20)
 
X's & O's happysports_72
Aug
11

X's & O's: Them's Fightin' Words

By John Easterling
[Editor's Note: This post was uploaded on August 11, but do to an oversight on my part, it is being posted now.]

The Cincinnati Reds and the St. Louis Cardinals are fighting for first place in the NL Central – literally. After a verbal exchanged between Reds’ 2B Brandon Phillips and Cards’ C Yadier Molina, the benches cleared and pandemonium ensued. It started out pretty tame with some general yelling and name calling, but eventually the mass of people, which started at home plate, moved to the netting behind home plate.

There Chris Carpenter, pitcher for St. Louis, got pushed into the net by Scott Rolen, a former teammate. Johnny Cueto, red hot pitcher for Cinci got pushed into the net as well, where he proceeded to kick any and everyone around him.

Baseball “brawls” are notorious for being drawn out, machismo-infused staring contests. Most of the time both benches clear, everyone runs out onto the field in a rush of uncontrollable anger, tempers flare, and the tension crescendos into a wild fire culminating in … looking (albeit intensely and pointedly).

Standard operating procedure dictates that you take these steps:

  1. Yell at your opponent – usually a batter vs. pitcher in a “hit-by-pitch” situation.
  2. Point finger aggressively at said opponent.
  3. Charge at your opponent. (In the event that step 3 doesn’t occur, skip to step 6)
  4. Grabble with your opponent, maybe pushing back-and-forth in a forceful manner.
  5. Benches clear and begin to commence yelling.
  6. Everyone gets separated.
  7. Return to dugout.

Let’s face it. Basically, you get staring, glaring, some yelling. And if you’re lucky, you get some pushing and shoving.

That being said, every once in a while, we get to witness magical moments in baseball bickering, which typically turn out more comical than ferocious. Here are some of my favs:

  1. Pedro Martinez vs. Don Zimmer
    1. This one is my all-time favorite. The hilarity of watching Pedro sidestep the portly Zimmer and toss him head first to the ground is just priceless
  2. Nolan Ryan vs. Robin Ventura
    1. Another great one. Ventura charged at Ryan thinking he was going to put a hurtin’ on the hall-of-fame pitcher who was getting on in years at this point. Ryan put him in a headlock and punched him repeatedly in the head.
  3. Carl Everett vs. Ron Kulpa
    1. Classic crazy. Everett went on verbal tirade which ended in him head-butting umpire Kulpa
  4. Mike Sweeney vs. Jeff Weaver
    1. Sweeney got fed up with Weaver’s talk so he charged him, threw his helmet at him, then decked him with a hard right.
  5. Chan Ho Park vs. Tim Belcher
    1. Everybody was Kung Fu fighting is this pitcher v. pitcher bout. Park put down a sacrifice and Belcher fielded, tagging Park in a kind of bear hug thing instead of throwing him out. Park didn’t like it so he dropkicked Belcher.
  6. Izzy Alcantara vs. an Entire Team
    1. After a pitch was thrown inside (that didn’t hit him), Alcantara turned, kicked the catcher in the chest, then took off after the pitcher. Classic.
at 07:24 PM | Permalink | Comments (26)
 
X's & O's happysports_72
Jul
15

X's & O's: Sail On Bobby to the Brick House

You were three times a maybe

By John Easterling

If you didn't pick up on my Commodores puns, shame on you (thanks Lionel).

Vanderbilt coach Bobby Johnson announced his retirement as of Wednesday. The news comes as a bit of a shock given the timing of the announcement. Just one week before media day, a few weeks before players report for fall practice, and less than two months before Vanderbilt opens its season against Northwestern on September 4, Coach Johnson is leaving a few people (probably a few players as well) scratching their heads.

According to sources, Johnson has stated this is not a decision made due to health concerns, either for himself or his wife Catherine. Johnson emphasized the fact that it was not a decision made lightly. In fact, he asserts that this is it. The end of the line. All she wrote. Sailing into the sunset...you get the idea. He's not walking away from the Vanderbilt job, he's walking away from coaching, period.

For me, I hate to see him go. I think he was a good coach, who did it the right way, and did more with less than most anyone. While Johnson's record at Vanderbilt was a seemingly sub-par 29-66, he has the fourth most victories in school history. Most impressively, he changed the perception of Vanderbilt from a team you booked for homecoming to beat them 70-0 to a team that can compete with any team on any given day. It seems he won the most important battle of getting his players to believe that. While they are still the 'darlings' of the SEC, their improvement is good for the SEC as a whole.

2008 was Johnson's most successful season at the helm. Johnson got the Commodores as high as #13 in the polls - the national poll, not the SEC (yes, I'm aware there are only 12 teams in the SEC) - beating South Carolina and Auburn, both of whom were ranked in the top 25. Vanderbilt got off to a roaring 5-0 before cooling off a bit. They capped off their dream season with a Music City miracle beating Boston College in the Music City Bowl.

Along the way, Johnson halted many of Vanderbilt's less than flattering skids. 2008 was the team's first winning, well, non-losing season season 1982. I wasn't even alive. He put the ax to a 22-game losing streak to rival Tennessee in 2005, as well as a losing streak to almost every SEC team (I believe 9 in total) during his tenure.

Assistant Coach Robbie Caldwell will assume the reins as Interim Head Coach. I stand by Vanderbilt vice chancellor David Williams in saying I respect Johnson's decision if his heart is no longer in it. It just seems the timing could have been better.

All in all, I think Johnson's absence will be felt not only by Vanderbilt, but the SEC as a whole. You're only as strong as your weakest link, or something sappy like that. I hope Vanderbilt can find someone as classy and driven to run a program like Vanderbilt. It can't be the easiest of jobs. Good luck Bobby.

at 01:33 PM | Permalink | Comments (15)
 
X's & O's
Aug
17

X's & O's: Faithful Football

Ramadan-concious Practice at Michigan High School

By John Easterling

So this isn’t exactly a local story, but I think that the message hits home in a very real way. There are few things that are more important to people in the South than high school football and religion. Some would say that football becomes religion to many people. We attend weekly services – sometimes two or three times a week (kids in high school, college football a must, and pro football because there isn’t much else to do on Sunday, once church is over of course) - we say many prayers, and even throw up Hail Marys. I believe a wise man once said, “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” I don’t know what the hell it means either, but I’m guessing it has something to do with where you spend your time and energy, that’s what you care about most. Seems simple.

Well, if most of us are being honest, football wins almost every round versus church. Church might win when we tell other people what’s most important, but how often do we decide not to go to church this week because we went out of town for the game, or it was on too late? I say this, not to have a sermon or tell you to go to church, but rather to put into perspective the power of passion and the hold that football has in our lives. We sacrifice a lot for the things we love, and football is no different.

Family vacations, school, youth group, all kinds of things are shuffled around for football. It is important. But God will always be king in the South. Perhaps for no other reason than we don’t want to admit otherwise. Easter and Christmas will always, always win out over any and everything. Church mission trips are viable excuses for getting out of most anything. “Sorry Coach, I’ve got to circumcise orphans in the Philippines” (cheers Timmy) can get you out of the hot sun and those dreaded two-a-days, no questions asked. Well, unless you’re coach is a heathen who only cares about football … and is willing to say it out loud. But what if it could work the other way? What if football could help you practice your faith? What if we didn’t have to choose?

Dearborn High School in Dearborn, Michigan, a predominantly Muslim Detroit suburb, has arranged its football practices around the holy month of Ramadan. Ramadan is a month of fasting for Muslims. From sunrise to sunset, Muslims cannot eat or drink. Now I’m no doctor, but it seems like those two things would be kind of important for someone trying to play football, water especially. Never fear, there’s always a solution.

Dearborn High School is holding its practices from 11 p.m. to 4 a.m. Players are allowed to drink water to their hearts’ content, and grab a granola bar for a little snack. That is something they wouldn’t be able to do in just a few short hours. While practically they needed it for the still grueling practice, they need it for the day to come as well. Avoiding the August heat didn’t hurt either. Ramadan fell during two-a-days this season, something that would have been nearly impossible to achieve with the majority of its players unable to drink or eat.

Dearborn is a highly competitive in the Michigan football world, often competing for the state championship. The team is coming off of a one-loss season, falling just short of the state title. Head coach Fouad Zaban, a former player at Dearborn and a Muslim himself, came up with the idea to avoid sacrificing the two things that mattered most to himself, the players, and most of the community – faith and football.

In an incredible moment of symbiosis, a compromise that avoided sacrificing either actually turned out to strengthen both. Observe holy month? Check. Practice football? Check. Not pass out and die while doing either? Check.

Coach Zaban made it clear that he never forced anyone to fast or even raised the issue; rather it was a compromise born out of necessity – the 95% who do fast. And let’s face it, practicing late at night sure beats practicing in the middle of the Alabama heat. Give me a little sleep deprivation over heat exhaustion any day.

Two-a-days: where faith and football meet. Cheers!

at 04:08 PM | Permalink | Comments (20)