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	<title>If You&#039;re Not a Gator...Then You&#039;re Gator Bait!</title>
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		<title>It&#8217;s Championship Or Bust For Baseball Gators</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/its-championship-or-bust-for-baseball-gators.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/its-championship-or-bust-for-baseball-gators.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 May 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/pitching.html">pitching</a>, <a href="/blog/tags/tag/preston-tucker.html">preston tucker</a>, <a href="/blog/tags/tag/mike-z]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[If you're studying or ever have studied human behavior, then you know what shaping is. Well, if you don't, here's the perfect example:
In 2008, the Gator baseball team, in its first year under Kevin O'Sullivan, made the NCAA tournament, but was prompt...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you're studying or ever have studied human behavior, then you know what shaping is. Well, if you don't, here's the perfect example:</p>
<p>In 2008, the Gator baseball team, in its first year under Kevin O'Sullivan, made the NCAA tournament, but was promptly eliminated in the FSU Regional.</p>
<p>In 2009, Sulley's second year, the Gators hosted their own region, and won it, but were knocked out in their own Super Regional by Southern Miss.</p>
<p>In 2010, Sulley's third year, the Gators won their own region, won their own Super Regional over Miami (thanks to a bunch of errors) to advance to the College World Series but were immediately bounced by UCLA and FSU.</p>
<p>In 2011, Sulley's fourth year, the Gators won their own regional, beat Mississippi State in their own Super Regional, and then beat Texas and Vanderbilt twice in the College World Series, but their bats went cold against South Carolina in the national championship series and lost.</p>
<p>That's shaping- take a step closer each year and praise the improvement each time. Now, though, it's time for the Gators to take that final step and win it all. The preseason  #1 Gators have really slumped after starting out 20-1. They still have a good chance to win the SEC, and they will get home field until the College World Series unless they <em>really</em> collapse down the stretch, but there's no excuse for the lack of run support for their pitchers.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><img class="rg_hi uh_hi" src="http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTbJmbQOeZ0ngJknWfYHMtCOMscuMJM5UCZ61VpG4ClJ9yLEa6h" border="0" width="159" height="221" align="left" />At one point, this Gator lineup was by far the most feared in the nation, hands down. Nolan Fontana has an excellent on base percentage to lead off, and the Gators have perhaps the biggest 3-4 punch- Mike Zunino and Preston Tucker. The rest of the lineup is pretty solid too, with Vickash Ramjit, Justin Shafer, Casey Turgeon and Brian Johnson all power threats at the plate.</p>
<p>But for some reason, the Gators now can't seem to buy a run. This awesome lineup has not scored more than five runs in three weeks- and that was against Bethune Cookman. OK, the Gators have played some good teams- Mississippi State, Arkansas and Kentucky are all probably NCAA tourney bound- but the Gators usually break out in at least one game in a series. Or, as I should say, they used to.</p>
<p>It's fair to say the Gators peaked at the wrong time- back in March- but that doesn't mean they can't peak again. Teams change during a season, and if the Gators changed for the worse, they can easily change for the better. All it takes is one guy getting really hot at the plate and the rest very well may follow suit.</p>
<p>The good news is, the Gators' pitching has been top notch pretty much all season, and pitching and defense win championships. All you need is more runs than the other guy, and if the Gators' suddenly frozen bats heat up for a string of runs in one big inning, you have to like the Gators' chances in that game.</p>
<p>The Gators have a tune-up game against Samford tomorrow before wrapping up their season at Auburn this Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The SEC tournament is next week, followed by the NCAA Tournament. Basically, the Gators' bats better wake up soon if they want to make this season successful and do something that Florida fans have come to expect from pretty much all their sports teams- win a national championship.</p>
<p>These Gators have the bitter taste of past failures stuck in their mouths, no doubt. Preston Tucker made the killing error in the loss to Southern Miss three years ago. Mike Zunino lined into the game ending double play against FSU two years ago. And the entire lineup was silenced by South Carolina last year.</p>
<p>Let's see if those memories really make the Gators into a championship team.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>For Good And Bad, Hold Off On Muschamp Opinions</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/for-good-and-bad-hold-off-on-muschamp-opinions.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/for-good-and-bad-hold-off-on-muschamp-opinions.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/urban-meyer.html">urban meyer</a>, <a href="/blog/tags/tag/will-muschamp.html">will muschamp</a>]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Whether or not Urban Meyer left the Gators' program in shambles is a big issues trending among Gator fans, and often Muschamp's name comes up in this discussion. It goes one of two ways: Meyer crushed the Gators' program, not Muschamp's fault, or it wa...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Whether or not Urban Meyer left the Gators' program in shambles is a big issues trending among Gator fans, and often Muschamp's name comes up in this discussion. It goes one of two ways: Meyer crushed the Gators' program, not Muschamp's fault, or it wasn't Meyer's fault, 7-6 is inexcusable bottom line.</p>
<p>Meyer did leave Florida with some talent. There's no question about that. On offense, Chris Rainey and Jeff Demps terrorized defenses when healthy and Rainey was even in the Heisman race a third of the way into the season. Trey Burton, Andre Debose and Jordan Reed proved to be solid contributors, and Mike Gillislee has showed flashes of huge potential. Defensively, Meyer left Muschamp the pieces to the 8th best defense in the nation.</p>
<p>So I don't want to hear this "Meyer left the cupboard bare" garbage. Maybe the Circle of Trust report hurt, but he definitely left Muschamp some talent to work with.</p>
<p>On the flip side, Meyer did allow the Gators' offensive production to slip- a lot. This comes back to Steve Addazio. Here's why I still hate him- had he been a good or at least competent offensive coordinator, Meyer's respite wouldn't have hurt Florida at all. For all we know, he was half asleep during the Dan Mullen years- we just don't know. But had Mullen remained onboard for 2009 and 2010, I'm betting Florida's offense would have been at least time and a half better than it was.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><img class="rg_hi uh_hi" src="http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRe-7CiMKgYm9X6YhZLZF7LXicJ4dcl41Ojh2S4Y7S2fB2236Xa5g" border="0" width="161" height="232" align="left" />But here's what I'm getting at- all the good and all the bad that's going on right now was due to Meyer and his staff. Sure, Muschamp's defense was 8 in the nation but that was with Meyer's players. And sure, Muschamp is fully capable of recruiting the players to do even better, but he hasn't yet at Florida. His track record at LSU, Auburn and Texas doesn't help Florida at all. Brian Orakpo and Sen'Derrick Marx don't play for the Gators. So sure, he very well might build his own dynamic defense in the future, so he hasn't yet.</p>
<p>So hold off on all thoughts of him, good and bad. You can't blame the 7-6 record on him because he didn't have guys on offense to fit his philosophy. You also can't praise him for getting through it and merely surviving it, because it was with all of Meyer's players.</p>
<p>The true test will be next year.</p>
<p>But if you want something positive to end on, check this out. Some second year coaches at schools have unbelievable success compared to their first, especially in the SEC. Can Muschamp be the latest?</p>
<p>Nick Saban, Alabama</p>
<p>1st year: 2007: 7-6 (Def. Colorado in Independence Bowl)</p>
<p>2nd year: 2008: 12-2 (Lost to Florida in SEC Championship, lost to Utah in BCS Sugar Bowl)</p>
<p>Chip Kelly, Oregon</p>
<p>1st year: 2009: 10-3 (Lost to Ohio State in BCS Rose Bowl)</p>
<p>2nd year: 2010: 12-1 (Lost to Auburn in BCS Championship Game)</p>
<p>Gene Chizik, Auburn</p>
<p>1st year: 2009: 8-5 (Def. Northwestern in Outback Bowl)</p>
<p>2nd year: 2010: 14-0 (Def. South Carolina in SEC Championship, def. Oregon in BCS Championship)</p>
<p>Urban Meyer, Florida</p>
<p>1st year: 2005: 9-3 (Def. Iowa in Outback Bowl)</p>
<p>2nd year: 2006: 13-1 (Def. Arkansas in SEC Championship, Def. Ohio State in BCS Championship)</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>My Finalized BCS Playoff Plan</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/finalized-bcs-playoff-plan.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/finalized-bcs-playoff-plan.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 May 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/bcs.html">bcs</a>]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/finalized-bcs-playoff-plan.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ 
Even with 8 teams, a really good one loss Texas or Alabama team might be shut out, and remember, the whole point is to generate excitement and money. Excluding a high profile team that's really proven to be one of the best does neither.
With 16 team...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> </p>
<p>Even with 8 teams, a really good one loss Texas or Alabama team might be shut out, and remember, the whole point is to generate excitement and money. Excluding a high profile team that's really proven to be one of the best does neither.</p>
<p>With 16 teams, you start to get a lot of conference champions deserve an auto-bid arguments, which leaves you with two choices: deny a conference champion the chance to win the national championship, or you have the same problem as you do with 8 teams.</p>
<p>How about 25 teams?</p>
<p>The slots would all be determined by a committee, like the basketball and baseball tournaments. The 11 conference champions would get autobids, 14 at large bids go to the rest. Notre Dame, BYU and the service academies could receive one of the at large bids. Here's the really fun part: any FCS team with an unbeaten record AND that has beaten TWO FBS schools must receive one of the autobids.</p>
<p>In addition, the conferences are ranked by the committee from 1 to 11. The champions of the top 4 conferences get the top 4 seeds in that order with an exception: if the team that wins the conference has a worse overall record AND the team with the better record has one or no losses AND is ranked higher, the team with the better overall record gets the top 4 seed. For example, TCU won the WAC, but Boise gets the WAC auto bid because they have the better overall record- and it's 12-1 to 11-2 better, not 9-3 to 8-4 better, and Boise State was ranked higher. In this scenario, Boise gets the auto bid. This is not meant to snub TCU, but rather, it is meant to eliminate fluky situations where a 9-3 team gets the top 4 seed by winning the 4th best conference over a 11-1 team. It just comes out this way this time. TCU, as the conference champ, still gets an auto-bid, but much lower.</p>
<p>Under last year's rankings with these guidelines, the seedings would be as follows (*= conference champ):</p>
<p>1)LSU*</p>
<p>2)Oklahoma State*</p>
<p>3)Stanford*</p>
<p>4)Boise State</p>
<p>5)Alabama</p>
<p>6)Arkansas</p>
<p>7)Oregon</p>
<p>8)Kansas State</p>
<p>9)South Carolina</p>
<p>10)Wisconsin*</p>
<p>11)Virginia Tech</p>
<p>12)Baylor</p>
<p>13)Michigan</p>
<p>14)Oklahoma</p>
<p>15)Georgia</p>
<p>16)Clemson*</p>
<p>17)Southern Miss*</p>
<p>18)Michigan State</p>
<p>19)Houston</p>
<p>20)TCU*</p>
<p>21)West Virginia*</p>
<p>22)Nebraska</p>
<p>23)Arkansas State*</p>
<p>24)Northern Illinois*</p>
<p>25)Louisiana Tech*</p>
<p>The last two teams in, #24 and #25, will meet in a play-in on the home field of #24. The winner of that will play at the home of the #9 seed, the 23 seed will play at the 10 seed, 22 vs. 11, 21 vs. 12 and so on. The winner of 9 vs. 24/25 will play at the number 8 seed, the 23/10 winner will play at the number 7 seed, 22/11 vs. 6, and so on. The quarterfinals will take place at each higher seed's home field. The semifinals and the finals will be played in a neutral site- one of the five rotating Big Bowls. The first four you know- Rose, Fiesta, Sugar and Orange. The fifth is the Cotton Bowl, which was once upon a time one of the highest ranked bowl games in prestige. Anybody remember any of those Cotton Bowl Classics? Tommy Lewis's off the bench tackle? Billy Cannon's punt return? Yeah, me neither. That's because it's been irrelevant for the last few decades. Time to restore it to greatness.</p>
<p>The reason the higher seeds would host the games is simple. Money. Well, that and attendance. Sure, Boise State's 32,000 seat stadium is pretty small, and they definitely need to enlarge it for this playoff to happen, but even as it is, the game would attract more fans than if it were played in the Papajohns.com Bowl, which barely seats 40,000 (forgetting the fact that it always has trouble selling tickets) in a town that nobody wants to go to where there's nothing to do. And Boise is the exception- every other team that would host a playoff game this year has a stadium with at least 54,000 seats. The home school would be paid handsomely to host this playoff game, rewarding its football program for earning it.</p>
<p>But that's why the Final Four would be played at a neutral site- to ensure maximum fans in attendance as possible. Say Boise does make it. You can't host a national semifinal with 32,000 fans in attendance. Triple that figure, and you've got your average ideal attendance for the semis and championship. So it's that balance that keeps this playoff going.</p>
<p>The regular season would start the first Saturday of September or the last Saturday of August, depending on the dates. The regular season would conclude on Thanksgiving weekend, and the conference championship games would be played the following Saturday- the first of December.</p>
<p>The playoffs would start right around New Year's Day, giving the players nearly a whole month- at least to focus on their exams. The play-in game would be a week earlier, so the student-athletes on those teams would have "only" three weeks. The round of 16 would be played a week later- usually the first Saturday of January, the round of 8 would be played the next Saturday, the semis would be played the following Saturday, and the championship would be 8 days later- the next Sunday, to give diehard football junkies something to watch on Sunday before the Super Bowl, especially without the Pro Bowl anymore. True, the NFL playoffs are on those two Saturdays, but come on, Saturday belongs to college football. Sunday is for the NFL. The NFL can either lose views to the college games or reorganize their TV times. Too bad for them.</p>
<p>As for the bowl games? They wouldn't go anywhere. There would be ten postseason bowl games- Capital One, Outback, Chik-Fil-A, Gator, Independence, Liberty, Sun, Alamo, Fight Hunger and Holiday- and then the winners of each in order (Capital One vs. Outback, Chik-Fil-A vs. Gator, Independence vs. Liberty etc.) would play in one of the BCS Bowls- (in order) Orange, Fiesta, Sugar, Cotton and Rose, to legitimize the label BCS, which stands for Bowl Championship Series. Winning a simple bowl game doesn't really make anybody champions of anything, despite the t-shirts that proclaim "GEORGIA BULLDOGS: 2010 LIBERTY BOWL CHAMPIONS" (Oops... they lost that game.To UCF. Sorry.) You get the point. To become champions, a team needs to win one of these "four team playoffs" that the BCS brass is proposing. Except, you know, with teams that don't deserve a shot at a national title. These would be teams with records no better than 9-3, and usually worse.</p>
<p>The BCS bowls- Rose, Sugar, Fiesta, Orange and Cotton- would pick the team they want most in a random order. It can be any team with 6 wins or more. Then they pick the team they want the second most, in reverse order. Then they pick the team they want third most, in the original order, and the team they want fourth most in reverse order. The first choice of each bowl will play the fourth choice, and the third choice will play the second choice in the play in bowl games. The winners would square off in one of the "Bowl Championship Series" games.</p>
<p>These games would be played during the week leading up to New Year's Day, and some on the few days before Christmas. The BCS games would be played the week of January 2nd, at night.</p>
<p>Now, to get those dying rivalries back together.</p>
<p>If a BCS bowl game wants to ensure that they get a certain game or matchup, there's a way to do that too. Say the Cotton Bowl wants to pit Texas and Texas A&amp;M together in one of its play-in bowls, say the Alamo Bowl (obviously it would be better if they would both win their play-ins and both get to the Cotton Bowl, where there are many more fans, but if one of them loses, it won't happen, so to ensure the fans get to see a Lone Star Showdown at all, this is how to do it). They would tell the other BCS bowl officials. If they agree that it is a must-see game, the Cotton Bowl would get to select both of them with their first two picks. Then everybody else would select their four teams in a similar fashion as normal (except with only four bowls, not five) order, and the Cotton Bowl would be left with the last two picks to form their other play-in game. To ensure that this doesn't happen with each bowl game every year, each bowl is allowed to do this once every ten years- and only one bowl may do it per year. However, both teams must have 6 wins and not make the playoffs, so the chances of both teams a BCS Bowl wants having between 6 and 9/10 wins is minimal.</p>
<p>ESPN currently has the stranglehold on the BCS and all bowl games in general, so I'll just assume that they would televise the playoffs too. There would be 8 games a day for the first two weeks, 4 in the round of 8, 2 in the semis, 1 in the final... can you imagine how much traffic ESPN would get? They would use all their networks for the first two rounds- ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU and ABC. ESPN Goal Line would be going nonstop. ESPN3 would have a remarkable amount of traffic, much like the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. Except, you know, without millions of dollars in lost productivity due to everybody skipping work to watch on their computers!</p>
<p>A big argument people might have against playoffs in general is that it diminishes the regular season. Let's go back to 2010. Alabama jumped all over Auburn 24-0 in their annual blood fued. With a 25 team playoff, neither team had anything to play for, critics would argue. Alabama was ranked #11, Auburn #2. Auburn's clinched home field through the Final Four, and Alabama can't move up higher nor can they drop. Then Alabama goes up 24-0. Why should Auburn even try to come back? Why should Cam Newton even play?</p>
<p>There are about a million reasons why, and the BCS Cartel knows them all. Surely they've at least been briefed on the intensity of that rivalry. The biggest rivalry games are all played the last weekend of the season, so if seeds are locked up, it doesn't matter. Undefeated Ohio State would play its backups against 4-7 Michigan the whole game. 10-1 USC would call running plays to kill the clock and end the game quicker against 6-5 UCLA. Unbeaten Florida would try out a new play-caller against 7-4 FSU, and FSU would play its backups the whole way.</p>
<p>So that line of thinking goes.</p>
<p>We with common sense know that none of this would ever happen in a billion years. Be ranked #1 on the last weekend of the season and lose to a mediocre team, and you risk dropping out of the top 4 conference champions to #5 overall where you would have to visit another school in the quarterfinals, instead of hosting the #8 seed in the quarters. The difference is glaring.</p>
<p>There's only one possible scenario where a team would even consider tanking their final game- a team is undefeated and #1, and everybody else in the nation has at least two losses. This is about as likely to happen as Urban Meyer quitting Ohio State and kicking Will Muschamp out of office in Gainesville. Even if this situation did happen, it would take a coach who is willing to blow a huge rivalry game, with bragging rights and recruiting implications on the line.</p>
<p>The other thing it does to help the regular season is that it forces fans to follow the rest of the country. A 7-5 Big 10 team is facing a 12-0 team in the conference championship. There's a 10-2 midmajor team hoping to gain access with an at large bid. If the 7-5 team wins, they get the auto bid while the 12-0 team would settle for an at large- and the 10-2 midmajor could get shut out. This playoff forces fans to follow games around the nation, especially in November, with the hopes that their fellow playoff hopefuls lose, allowing them to jump back in it.</p>
<p>Then there's the excitement the playoff would generate.</p>
<p>Just take a look at the matchups. I have all the higher seeds winning, just to show what the matchups would look like. Tell me these matchups are not highly intriguing. Nebraska-Virginia Tech, Georgia-Michigan State, Michigan-TCU, Oklahoma-Houston, and Baylor-West Virginia highlight the opening round games. The less interesting ones include the winner of North Illinois and Louisiana Tech against South Carolina, Wisconsin-Arkansas State and Clemson-Southern Miss.</p>
<p>See? Those are the opening round games. Are they not really intriguing for even casual football fans? Does Case Keenum vs. Landry Jones not turn on fans who love an offensive fireworks show? How about Nebraska's defense, led by Jared Crick and Alfonzo Dennard vs. Virginia Tech's offense, featuring Logan Thomas and David Wilson? And who would dare pass up any chance to watch RG3 square off against any BCS school?</p>
<p>The second round match ups are simply orgasmic. Boise State, as the 4th best conference champ with a first round bye, would face the winner of Michigan and TCU. Think: a Big 10 national powerhouse (probably) going on the blue turf to play the Broncos. Alabama, with the #5 overall seed, also has a bye, and would face the winner of Baylor-West Virginia. Even if WVU wins, it's still exciting to watch Geno Smith go up against that Bama defense. How about if Baylor wins? That might get the most views of any sporting event ever: Robert Griffin III, Kendall Wright and co. vs. Dont'a Hightower, Courtney Upshaw, Robert Lester and co. How could anybody NOT watch that? The others are nearly as good: (pretending the higher seeds all win) Oklahoma at Stanford, Wisconsin at Oregon, South Carolina at Kansas State, Virginia Tech at Arkansas, Georgia at Oklahoma State and the Death Valley Tiger Bowl: Clemson at LSU.</p>
<p>Then we get to the quarters. If all the high seeds win, Oregon would visit Oklahoma State, Alabama would visit Boise State, Kansas State would pay a visit to LSU, and Arkansas would go to Stanford.</p>
<p>The Final Four (again, if the high seeds win): LSU vs. Boise State, and Oklahoma State vs. Stanford, and so on.</p>
<p>Please, tell me that those match ups are anything short of ridiculously exciting.</p>
<p>So to recap the plan: the schools get more money from happier fans, the players still have almost a month to take their exams, higher seeds are rewarded, the regular season and conference championship games are increased in value, and most importantly, we get a real method of determining a champion.</p>
<p>Unlike the current system.</p>
<p>Anybody know how the BCS standings are done? If not, it goes like this: the Harris Poll, the USA Today and the computer rankings are averaged together.</p>
<p>Anybody know how flawed both the human polls and the computer polls are?</p>
<p>Here's a hint: following the 2008 season, three voters were called and asked why they didn't vote Utah in the top 2. The response? The three men watched a combined 5 minutes of Utah football the whole year- all highlights. The computers are not allowed to use margin of victory, so a 59-3 win means nothing more than a 21-20 win. If margin of victory (maxed out at 35, to prevent teams from running it up for no other reason) was included, it would have been Texas going to the Big 12 Championship in 2008, not Oklahoma.</p>
<p>Did Texas and Utah both not deserve a chance to prove themselves to be the best in the nation? What more could they have done? Utah was unbeaten, and Texas' only loss was a freak play on the road against Texas Tech. OK, Texas could have won that game, but then Florida lost to Ole Miss and they got in to the title game.</p>
<p>This is a huge GATOR FAN saying this: following the 2008 regular season, following the conference championship games, what did Florida do that was so impressive that Texas, Utah, Texas Tech, and hell, even Alabama didn't do? We saw what happened in the 2012 BCS Championship: Alabama avenged a previous loss to LSU. So because Florida beat Alabama once, that automatically means Alabama wouldn't have won in a rematch? Because Oklahoma won some freaky tiebreaker in the Big 12 South, Texas and Texas Tech couldn't have won head to head matchups with them in a playoff?</p>
<p>And by the way, if the BCS wants to keep the BCS and the bowls the way they are, they might really want to reconsider. Without a playoff, what did Texas Tech have to play for in the Cotton Bowl? What did it mean? Nothing; they got thumped by a 9-4 Ole Miss team. Before you start chanting SEC!!! SEC!!! SEC!!! you might want to take a second to remember that Alabama had the same problem against Utah, and looked suspiciously inept all night.</p>
<p>And these are just the most prestigious bowl games.</p>
<p>At least the Sugar and Cotton Bowls were filled for these games. Not so lucky are the Papajohns.com Bowl, the Belk Bowl, the GoDaddy Bowl or the Car Care Bowl. No, those games are so unattractive that the school can't even sell their share of tickets. As a result, they all lose: the bowl games lose because they have thousands of empty seats, the schools lose because they were forced by the bowl games to buy thousands of tickets and can't sell them to their students or alumni because the game is pointless and therefore lose lots of money and the fans lose because, well, who gives a (fill in the blank) about who wins pre-New Year's Day bowls?</p>
<p>Without a playoff, the bowl games the Cartel so desperately wants to protect are worthless. Mississippi and Utah were not upsets; they simply beat teams that couldn't have cared less about being there.</p>
<p>What's the BCS's reasoning for rejecting a playoff?</p>
<p>"Having carefully reviewed calendars and schedules, we believe that either an eight-team or a 16-team playoff would diminish the regular season and harm the bowls," the BCS said in a statement. Obviously, they haven't done any real thinking because if this 25 team playoff doesn't hurt the regular season, (it actually strengthens it) then 8 or 16 team playoffs surely wouldn't. As I've explained, tanking a regular season finale kills a team's seeding, recruiting, and bragging rights over a rival. Nice try.</p>
<p>That's bad enough, but even worse is when the BCS executive Bill Hancock said, "The system is working fine."</p>
<p>Right. Except for the blind writers' poll, the nonsense computer systems, and robbing schools and fans of a legitimate way to crown a champion, it's just fine and dandy.</p>
<p>I have uploaded a chart onto the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/#!/photo.php?fbid=3037834990362&amp;set=o.240814965943288&amp;type=1&amp;theater" style="color: #1b57b1; text-decoration: none; font-weight: normal;">facebook group</a> of what last season's postseason would have looked like.</p>
<p>Enjoy...</p>
<p> </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Multi-Gator Draft Streak Reaches 32 Years, Should Continue</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/multi-gator-draft-streak-reaches-32-years-should-continue.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/multi-gator-draft-streak-reaches-32-years-should-continue.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 May 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
		
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/multi-gator-draft-streak-reaches-32-years-should-continue.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Many people around the nation are bummed that Florida only had two players drafted. The school is falling off the map, they say. It aint what it used to be.
Oh yeah? Try finding another school that has had multiple players drafted every single year sin...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Many people around the nation are bummed that Florida only had two players drafted. The school is falling off the map, they say. It aint what it used to be.</p>
<p>Oh yeah? Try finding another school that has had multiple players drafted every single year since 1980, when Scot Brantley was the only Gator drafted. It's not so easy to do, when you think about it. Every school has a lull at some point: a coaching change, two or three recruiting classes that aren't up to snuff, and one year where only one guy- or nobody is drafted. Oh, there are a few, like Tennessee, Oklahoma, Alabama, Texas, etc. but that's about it.</p>
<p>So that's pretty cool when you think about it, but what's even cooler is when you think how many guys could be drafted next year.</p>
<p>In theory, the entire starting defense aside from sophomore corner Marcus Roberson (too young) could be drafted. If the juniors all declare, Florida would likely have 10 players selected. On offense, lineman Xavier Nixon, tailback Mike Gillislee, and receivers Omarious Hines and Frankie Hammond, all seniors, are likely to be drafted barring a highly disappointing senior season or an injury. Andre Debose, a junior wideout, could also declare. Finally, you never know with kickers, but Caleb Sturgis could get picked as well. He was a finalist for the Lou Groza Award last year, and if he can only work on his accuracy a little more, he could win it.</p>
<p>That's a grand total of 16 players that could be selected next year. If that number is accurate, then it's good and bad. Bad because, well, they won't be playing for Florida anymore, but good because that means they would have done well for Florida and therefore the Gators' season was a success.</p>
<p>Which, remember, is a real possibility...</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Radical New College Football Playoff Plan</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/radical-new-college-football-playoff-plan.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/radical-new-college-football-playoff-plan.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Apr 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/bcs.html">bcs</a>]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/radical-new-college-football-playoff-plan.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The BCS brass is meeting in Florida right now to discuss a 4 team "playoff", which as I have previously explained does nothing in the long run.
Even with 8 teams, a really good one loss Texas or Alabama team might be shut out, and remember, the whole p...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The BCS brass is meeting in Florida right now to discuss a 4 team "playoff", which as I have previously explained does nothing in the long run.</p>
<p>Even with 8 teams, a really good one loss Texas or Alabama team might be shut out, and remember, the whole point is to generate excitement and money. Excluding a high profile team that's really proven to be one of the best does neither.</p>
<p>With 16 teams, you start to get a lot of conference champions deserve an auto-bid arguments, which leaves you with two choices: deny a conference champion the chance to win the national championship, or you have the same problem as you do with 8 teams.</p>
<p>How about 25 teams?</p>
<p>The 11 conference champions would get autobids, 14 at large bids go to the rest. Notre Dame, BYU and the service academies could receive one of the at large bids. Here's the really fun part: any FCS team with an unbeaten record AND that has beaten TWO FBS schools must receive one of the autobids. In addition, the top 4 seeds must be conference champions.</p>
<p>The last two teams in, #24 and #25, will meet in a play-in on the home field of #24. The winner of that will play at the home of the #9 seed, the 23 seed will play at the 10 seed, 22 vs. 11, 21 vs. 12 and so on. The winner of 9 vs. 24/25 will play at the number 8 seed, the 23/10 winner will play at the number 7 seed, 22/11 vs. 6, and so on. The quarterfinals will take place at each higher seed's home field. The semifinals and the finals will be played in a neutral site- one of the five rotating Big Bowls. The first four you know- Rose, Fiesta, Sugar and Orange. The fifth is the Cotton Bowl, which was once upon a time one of the highest ranked bowl games in prestige. Time to restore it to greatness.</p>
<p>The regular season would start the first Saturday of September or the last Saturday of August, depending on the dates. The regular season would conclude on Thanksgiving weekend, and the conference championship games would be played the following Saturday- the first of December.</p>
<p>The playoffs would start right around New Year's Day, giving the players nearly a whole month- at least to focus on their exams. The play-in game would be a week earlier, so the student-athletes on those teams would have "only" three weeks. The round of 16 would be played a week later- usually the first Saturday of January, the round of 8 would be played the next Saturday, the semis would be played the following Saturday, and the championship would be 8 days later- the next Sunday, to give diehard football junkies something to watch on Sunday before the Super Bowl, especially without the Pro Bowl anymore.</p>
<p>As for the bowl games? They wouldn't go anywhere. There would be ten postseason bowl games- Capital One, Outback, Chik-Fil-A, Gator, Independence, Liberty, Sun, Alamo, Fight Hunger and Holiday- and then the winners of each in order (Capital One vs. Outback, Chik-Fil-A vs. Gator, Independence vs. Liberty etc.) would play in one of the BCS Bowls- (in order) Orange, Fiesta, Sugar, Cotton and Rose, to legitimize the label BCS, which stands for Bowl Championship Series. Winning a simple bowl game doesn't really make anybody champions of anything, despite the t-shirts that proclaim "GEORGIA BULLDOGS: 2010 LIBERTY BOWL CHAMPIONS" (Oops... they lost that game.To UCF. Sorry.) You get the point. To become champions, a team needs to win one of these "four team playoffs" that the BCS brass is proposing. Except, you know, with teams that don't deserve a shot at a national title. These would be teams with records no better than 9-3, and usually worse.</p>
<p>A big argument people might have against this playoff is that it diminishes the regular season. Let's go back to 2010. Alabama jumped all over Auburn 24-0 in their annual blood fued. With a 25 team playoff, neither team had anything to play for, critics would argue. Alabama was ranked #11, Auburn #2. Auburn's clinched home field through the Final Four, and Alabama can't move up higher nor can they drop. Then Alabama goes up 24-0. Why should Auburn even try to come back?</p>
<p>There are about a million reasons why, and the BCS Cartel knows them all. Surely they've at least been briefed on the intensity of that rivalry. The biggest rivalry games are all played the last weekend of the season, so if seeds are locked up, it doesn't matter. Undefeated Ohio State would play its backups against 4-7 Michigan the whole game. 10-1 USC would call running plays to kill the clock and end the game quicker against 6-5 UCLA. Unbeaten Florida would try out a new play-caller against 7-4 FSU, and FSU would play its backups the whole way.</p>
<p>So that line of thinking goes.</p>
<p>We with common sense know that none of this would ever happen in a billion years. Be ranked #1 on the last weekend of the season and lose to a mediocre team, and you risk dropping out of the top 4 conference champions to #5 overall where you would have to visit another school in the quarterfinals, instead of hosting the #8 seed in the quarters. The difference is glaring.</p>
<p>There's only one possible scenario where a team would even consider tanking their final game- a team is undefeated and #1, and everybody else in the nation has at least two losses. This is about as likely to happen as Urban Meyer quitting Ohio State and kicking Will Muschamp out of office in Gainesville. Even if this situation did happen, it would take a coach who is willing to blow a huge rivalry game, with bragging rights and recruiting implications on the line.</p>
<p>The other thing it does to help the regular season is that it forces fans to follow the rest of the country. A 7-5 Big 10 team is facing a 12-0 team in the conference championship. There's a 10-2 midmajor team hoping to gain access with an at large bid. If the 7-5 team wins, they get the auto bid while the 12-0 team would settle for an at large- and the 10-2 midmajor could get shut out. This playoff forces fans to follow games around the nation, especially in November, with the hopes that their fellow playoff hopefuls lose, allowing them to jump back in it</p>
<p>Then there's the excitement the playoff would generate.</p>
<p>Just take a look at the matchups. I have all the higher seeds winning, just to show what the matchups would look like. Tell me these matchups are not highly intriguing. I have uploaded a chart onto the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/#!/photo.php?fbid=3037834990362&amp;set=o.240814965943288&amp;type=1&amp;theater">facebook group</a> of what last season's postseason would have looked like.</p>
<p>Enjoy...</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>More BCS Madness</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/more-bcs-madness.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/more-bcs-madness.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Apr 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/bcs.html">bcs</a>]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/more-bcs-madness.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Right now, the BCS brass is meeting to discuss a potential "playoff" to determine the national champion. Who do they think they're fooling?
Certainly not me, or any other college football fan with any common sense. You don't need to be a genius to figu...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Right now, the BCS brass is meeting to discuss a potential "playoff" to determine the national champion. Who do they think they're fooling?</p>
<p>Certainly not me, or any other college football fan with any common sense. You don't need to be a genius to figure out that a four team playoff does nothing at all, you just need a single grain of intelligence.</p>
<p>What does a four team playoff do that the current system doesn't? OK, it involves two more teams that would be left out- but so what? Within five years, I will guarantee, there will be five undefeated teams from different conferences, or at least one undefeated team that gets left out behind a one loss SEC team, and then the original problem is even worse- an undefeated team isn't in the top 4 in the country.</p>
<p>This is only one of dozens of playoff plans that won't work, and while the BCS Cartel doesn't know a whole lot about anything, they know enough to see that this type of doomed plan will keep the money in their pockets, the arguments and therefore "attention to the game of college football" stronger and the fans of all fan bases steaming.</p>
<p>At least the Cartel is not flat out denying this "playoff". They've shot down every somewhat possible proposal. They've denied Craig Thompson's 8 team playoff, Death to the BCS's 16 team proposal, and a bunch of others. And at least the Cartel appears to be a fair group of people. They gave Joe Paterno the same amount of respect they gave all the others- none- and shot down his plea for an extended postseason as well.</p>
<p>In order for a playoff to work, each of the following criteria must be met:</p>
<p>1) Protecting/increasing the importance of the regular season.</p>
<p>2) Conference championship games must still mean something.</p>
<p>3) Higher seeds must host early round games; not bowl sites.</p>
<p>4) TV ratings must improve; all games must be intriguing for random fans.</p>
<p>5) Schools must profit more than from bowl games.</p>
<p>So as I've said, my proposal will be available tomorrow right here on IAKOW, at about 1pm. It covers all the bases. The fans win, the schools win, TV wins, and I've even made sure the bowl games don't go down. The only people that lose is the BCS, and, well, that's too bad. Because this playoff actually uses logic.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Million Dollar Question: Brissett or Driskel?</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/million-dollar-question-brissett-or-driskel.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/million-dollar-question-brissett-or-driskel.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Apr 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/jeff-driskel.html">jeff driskel</a>, <a href="/blog/tags/tag/jacoby-brissett.html">jacoby brissett</a>, <a href="/blog/tags/]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Every Gator fan wants to know who will be the starting QB next season. It's by far the biggest question mark on the Florida football team.
The coaches are silent, neither QB really distinguished himself as a legitimate starter last year, so it appears ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every Gator fan wants to know who will be the starting QB next season. It's by far the biggest question mark on the Florida football team.</p>
<p>The coaches are silent, neither QB really distinguished himself as a legitimate starter last year, so it appears to be dead even.</p>
<p>One thing that's for sure: whoever does get the starting job has full support from Will Muschamp, who has praised both throughout the spring. Muschamp says the Gators can win with either one.</p>
<p>My thoughts? If that's the case, pick one and move on. If you really feel you can win with either one, then just make up your mind. The two split reps with the first team offense, but it would benefit the starter to have 90% of the reps so he can really get accustomed to his fellow starters, rather than sort of have the hang of it. A starter must be picked by mid summer.</p>
<p>The other option is rotating QB's, which is really not an option but an absolute last resort. We've seen that before, and even with a much better offense than we had in 2010, it still is not a good sign. Only somebody who's lucky enough to have a football bounce like a tennis ball can pull that off, specifically Les Miles.</p>
<p>Both have their strengths; Driskel is really fast and a good runner, more like a Tebow type (but certainly not Tebow's level) and has a good arm while Brissett has good mobility and a great arm. Both can make smart decisions, and both can read defenses. There are slight differences, but no major ones.</p>
<p>Unless one goes a long way to separate himself in the summer, if they're really dead even, then do whatever you want to pick one. Use any of Steve Addazio's play-calling methods; have them play rock paper scissors, pick one of their two names out of a hat, use a magic 8 ball, ask jeeves or do eenie-meenie-minie-mo. I don't care. Muschamp, you really need to just pick one by mid-summer and ride him all the way. The extra practice with the first team will pay off.</p>
<p>See what happens.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>My Anti-BCS War: Introduction</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/intro-to-the-anti-bcs-war.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/intro-to-the-anti-bcs-war.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Apr 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/bcs.html">bcs</a>]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The BCS is a disgrace for a number of reasons, and diehard college football fans know them all. It has robbed undefeated teams of a shot at a national championship, it has caused so much controversy that the whole matter has been taken to court multipl...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The BCS is a disgrace for a number of reasons, and diehard college football fans know them all. It has robbed undefeated teams of a shot at a national championship, it has caused so much controversy that the whole matter has been taken to court multiple times, and most importantly, it has cheated fans- the ones who provide the majority of the money- out of a meaningful conclusion to one of America's greatest pasttimes.</p>
<p>The BCS doesn't care. In fact, they love the current system because it puts money in their own pocets. Who cares about the fans? As long as the suits win, it's all good. This is why the BCS has lasted as long as it has.</p>
<p>The only problem is, to get rid of a system that's in place, a foolproof alternative must be proposed. If there's one problem with a replacement model, it goes by the wayside.</p>
<p>If any of you have read Death to the BCS, then you know quite a bit about the BCS, the Cartel, the bowl games, their proposal, everything. The authors of that book did an excellent job covering what makes the BCS wrong from so many different angles. That said, I have an angle to give that they didn't- I was a GA for my high school team for three years.</p>
<p>I've watched guys lay everything out on the line week after week, day after day in practice, etc. The physical and mental ability needed to even play football is hard to understand for people outside the game. I'll get into greater details later in my war against the BCS, but let me assure those of you that don't know: it's very, very hard to play football. The heart needed is not present in everyone; only a select few.</p>
<p>Multiply that ability and heart needed a few times over and you've got a college football team. To win a college football game, the entire team must give everything they have. Literally, EVERYTHING in their bodies must be put to sacrifice. Guys get bruised up every day, and they must simply ignore it. Do this 12-13 weeks in a row and you've got an undefeated team, which is nearly impossible, since the letdown game can get the best team in the nation (Florida twice under Urban Meyer, for example).</p>
<p>My question the BCS big shots is: how can any person with a functioning brain or heart possibly be willing to explain to a team that did everything they possibly could that they're not worthy of a national championship? From a neutral perspective, Utah was dearly wronged in 2008. What more could they have possibly done? They were undefeated, and one of those wins came against a top 5 team. Sure, Utah might not have done so well playing big time opponents a few times in a row in a playoff but who knows? Cincinnati in 2009? Yeah, they got hammered by Florida, but they were still undefeated. Who knows if they even cared about the Sugar Bowl? Why should they have cared? It wasn't for a championship, was it?</p>
<p>There are others problems which I'll explain at a later date: the greed, the bowl games, the larger playoff income and how the actual system "works".</p>
<p>For now, though, I am putting the finishing touches on my alternate playoff plan. I've thought everything through: the dates/players' exam schedules, kickoff times, locations, TV telecasts, bowls, and money. In case this gets enough publicity and somebody in the BCS sees it and wants to shoot it down with some absurd question just to stall, I've even got the answer on how to paint the end zones if I need it. I'm that determined.</p>
<p>I've got this thought through.</p>
<p>In the meantime, though, I need your help. Spread the word around wherever you go. Whatever other sites you guys go to, message boards, spread the word. The plan I am about to propose will seem too crazy to be possible, but it really is. I can pretty much guarantee that nobody has ever tried to get something like this pushed forward. This is not an article I thought of overnight; this is a long time's work all coming together. It's awesome, in my own opinion, but it will only do any good if it's highly publicized. So alert everybody that a gigantic, never seen before proposal to destroy the BCS is on its way.</p>
<p>Check your calendars, because next Friday at 1:00pm, right here on inallkindsofweather, the plan will be released. So be here at 1:00pm to get the first look!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SEC East Is Wide Open In 2012</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/sec-east-is-wide-open-in-2012.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/sec-east-is-wide-open-in-2012.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Apr 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/missouri-tigers.html">Missouri Tigers</a>, <a href="/blog/tags/tag/kentucky-wildcats.html">Kentucky Wildcats</a>, <a href="/]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I know Georgia won the SEC East last year, but you can't say they were the favorite, nor can you say they're the favorite this year.
Simply put, Georgia was the single worst team to ever represent a finalist for a conference championship contest.
In th...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I know Georgia won the SEC East last year, but you can't say they were the favorite, nor can you say they're the favorite this year.</p>
<p>Simply put, Georgia was the single worst team to ever represent a finalist for a conference championship contest.</p>
<p>In their defense, they did win 10 games- with a schedule softer than a feather. They beat Florida, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, and Mississippi State by an average of 9 points. Three of those teams they struggled against didn't even make bowl games. The other three were 6-6. So to sum it up: all six of these teams were .500 or below in the regular season. They also had a 31-17 win over a de facto mid major team in Georgia Tech, which was semi-impressive since you never take a win on the road lightly. In addition, Georgia blew out big bad Coastal Carolina and New Mexico State. Boring.</p>
<p>The two and a half games Georgia looked legitimate were: a 45-42 loss to South Carolina, a game that was yet was actually not their fault in a comic sort of way; the Gamecocks scored in some of the most unconventional ways possible (fake punt, pick 6, fumble recovery, another fumble recovery that put the ball inside the UGA 5), a 45-7 blowout over an Auburn team that had nothing whatsoever to play for (and boy, it showed) and the first half against an LSU team that seemed perfectly content to give Georgia a half to run up as big of a lead as it could before settling down and playing to win in the second half instead of showing a flair for botcher seldom seen in a Pee Wee game, let alone an SEC Championship.</p>
<p>Get the point?</p>
<p>The Dawgs are not a team to fear. If anything, they are a team to laugh at, mock, and dismiss in any national title talk.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oS-iCHBb_mo">See for yourself</a>.</p>
<p>When you're done laughing, take a second to <a href="http://www.fbschedules.com/ncaa-11/sec/2011-georgia-bulldogs-football-schedule.php">look at their schedule from a year ago</a>.</p>
<p>See what I mean?</p>
<p>But now, in 2012, the schedules have halfway evened out. Alabama and Auburn are off the Gators' schedule, replaced by Texas A&amp;M and Missouri, two mediocre ex-Big 12 teams. Then remember how close the Gators were in all of their losses to the teams not in last year's BCS Championship Game. Meanwhile, UGA's schedule is pretty much the same. The one difference is Missouri replacing Mississippi State, which is basically a lateral move. Neither team particularly impresses as better than the other one.</p>
<p>The only other possible threat to Georgia's SEC East repeat chances aside from Florida would be the obvious choice, Carolina. Losing Alshon Jeffrey is a blow, but never count out a Marcus Lattimore led team (as long as he's healthy.)</p>
<p>Here are my way too early SEC East projections for 2012:</p>
<p>1)Florida- This is strictly by default. Remember, Georgia was awful last year and won the East due to a nice schedule. Florida should definitely be better on both sides of the line of scrimmage. Even with the loss of Ronald Powell (I've heard he is targeted to return for the first SEC game against Texas A&amp;M), this defense is simply evil. The offense has enough playmakers (Andre Debose, Trey Burton and Quinton Dunbar especially impressed) to put up winning point totals, but this team will ride its defense. The schedule sets up nicely, with the toughest opponents (LSU, South Carolina) coming to the Swamp. The road games are for the most part jokes. The Gators are a good, not great team, but will win the East not because they are so great, but because there's simply nobody better.</p>
<p>2)South Carolina- Cocky is never out of the race to Atlanta for one two word reason: Marcus Lattimore. Assuming this warrior is healthy, Carolina should ground and pound their way to the mid 20's every game. With their defense, that should be enough. Melvin Ingram, Stephon Gilmore and Devin Taylor have departed for the NFL, but Jadeveon Clowney is still a one man wrecking crew up front and should do his usual job of singlehandedly forcing the opposing QB to make quick and often bad decisions. Connor Shaw seemed to have a good grip on the offense last year. He'll need to if Carolina wants to get back to the ATL. It'll be a replay of last year- the SEC East title game in Gainesville. But this time around, the depleted Gamecocks don't have quite enough to win, despite a fairly easy schedule.</p>
<p>3)Tennessee- this is the bold pick of the article. If I'm wrong about this, then Derek Dooley begins to feel the heat in Knoxville. A third straight season in the bottom half of the SEC East, no matter how many injuries the Vols have, would spell doom for Dooley, one of the true class acts of the SEC (a grudging admission from a Gator fan). Last season Georgia was on the verge of firing Mark Richt in 2011, only to win 10 straight games (albeit against horrible competition, remember). The same could happen to the Vols this year. Tyler Bray may be virtually unknown now, but I don't believe that Tyler Bray's talent will be unknown to the world for long. His top target, Justin Hunter, will return with a special fire in him. Together, the two could send scoreboard numbers flying, along with help from a much improved offensive line. But the question marks on defense are too big and too many to seriously label this team a contender.</p>
<p>4)Georgia- this isn't really so much a slap in the face to Georgia, nor a hopeful plea from a huge Gator fan as much as I would like to say it is. No, this is simply a guess that all the close games UGA won last year will turn into heartbreaking losses in 2012. Florida, Vanderbilt and Kentucky in particular could have easily beaten Georgia and Tennessee, Ole Miss and MSU were never out of it until the last few minutes. Their 2012 schedule is essentially the same, as is their roster, particularly on defense. Their lone big loss is their great tight end Orson Charles. Perhaps their real losses come due to suspensions- Alec Ogletree, Bacarri Rambo, Sanders Commings and Branden Smith are all out from a variety of 1-4 games. That means they might lose a game to a mediocre Mizzou team they shouldn't- and if they do, well, then they certainly won't win the East unless they can pull off a string of thrillers- again. Which is nearly impossible to do in the SEC- even in the weaker division.</p>
<p>5)Vanderbilt- the Commodores are no joke. Ask Arkansas, Georgia, Florida, or even Alabama. All four of those teams beat Vandy, but not without a serious fight first. And with Alabama and Arkansas off the schedule in 2012, the Dores have a real chance. For once, Vanderbilt, kick started by energetic coach James Franklin and QB Jordan Rodgers, appears to be a legitimate threat to win the East. The schedule even sets up nicely- South Carolina, Florida, and Tennessee have to visit them, and they go to Georgia, Kentucky and Missouri. The only problem is that the rest of the SEC knows not to take them lightly, and when you're in the SEC and you suddenly have high(er) expectations, you tend to fall flat. Plus, you know, they're Vandy. They always make Vandy plays, even when they're good. Watch this good-by-other-conference-standards-but-not-by-SEC-standards-team this year and you'll see what I mean if you don't already know.</p>
<p>6)Missouri- say hey to the new kid on the block. Here's your schedule. Now go take your maulings. Truthfully, Mizzou is probably sick of hearing how good the SEC is by now and they're hungry to take the league by storm, but that doesn't mean they will. In fact, chances are they won't, no matter how good QB James Franklin (no relation to Vandy's coach) really is. They're in way over their heads. Even if heralded freshman DGB (Dorial Green-Beckham, the latest awesome three letter nickname in college football) turns out to be a stud, he and Franklin will never light up scoreboards against the nastiest SEC defenses. Good luck with that. Their defense actually wasn't bad last year, and should be good again this year, but they need more offensive playmakers before they can make a run, even with the element of surprise with them. They'll get there in time- Gary Pinkel recruits too well not to- but not yet.</p>
<p>7)Kentucky- fresh off their season ending triumph over Tennessee, Kentucky celebrated for hours on end. Now, they can play all the mediocre to good SEC teams and be reminded of why they like basketball so much. Josh Clemons emerged as a playmaker last year for them, but he couldn't carry them by himself. There are too many ghosts on this team- Derrick Locke, Randall Cobb, Mike Hartline and Micah Johnson. Now two more join them from last year's team: Winston Guy and Danny Trevathan. The defense can't be all that good, and unless Morgan Newton emerges as the next Cam Newton (there's no relation there) Joker Phillips is in for a long season.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fresh Faces Shine In Spring Game</title>
		<link>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/fresh-faces-shine-in-spring-game.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.inallkindsofweather.com/blog/fresh-faces-shine-in-spring-game.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Apr 2012 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gatorhair</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[<a href="/blog/tags/tag/will-muschamp.html">will muschamp</a>, <a href="/blog/tags/tag/brent-pease.html">brent pease</a>, <a href="/blog/tags/tag/ja]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[It's very hard to recap a spring game with any excitement for one main reason. There's never really anything so great about a spring game, because what's good for the offense is bad for the defense, and vice versa. That said, I was very happy with the ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It's very hard to recap a spring game with any excitement for one main reason. There's never really anything so great about a spring game, because what's good for the offense is bad for the defense, and vice versa. That said, I was very happy with the way both units performed. The defense swarmed to the ball quite often, and there were more big plays by the offense then there were in the last two seasons combined.</p>
<p>But there was nothing better to see than the emergence of two freshmen who played a huge role in the new (exciting, but I'll credit Pease later) offense- redshirt frosh tailback Chris Johnson and true freshman wideout LaTroy Pittman.</p>
<p>Simply put, the two dominated the spring game.</p>
<p>Pittman had several receptions, none bigger than a beautiful bomb thrown by Jacoby Brissett that set up the first score of the day.</p>
<p>And Johnson had several big runs, including a touchdown from 3 yards out.</p>
<p>Other new faces that had big impacts were linebacker David Campbell, recording the only turnover of the game (an interception of Tyler Murphy that he returned 16 yards), Mack Brown Jr., who scored a TD and had a couple other nice runs, and Jabari Gorman, who had a hand in almost every tackle, no exaggeration.</p>
<p>Then there were the familiar names on the offensive side of the ball that we're going to need big time come September- Andre Debose, Quinton Dunbar, Trey Burton and Jordan Reed, who each had huge impacts in the passing game... and the offensive line.</p>
<p>I'd like to take a second to compliment the o-line, last year's main offensive problem. Chaz Green, Xavier Nixon, Jessamen Dunker and DJ Humphries were excellent yesterday, giving their QB (whoever it was) plenty of time to throw and really getting some push at the line of scrimmage on running plays.</p>
<p>But forget all that. Let's keep this in perspective- this WAS just a spring game, us against us, so again, when there's a good play by one unit, it's negative for the other unit.</p>
<p>Instead, let's think about this- finally, FINALLY, we may just have the offense we've all been waiting for since Dan Mullen left in 2009. Brent Pease put together an offensive game plan that was truly masterful- mainly by getting speedy receivers the ball in space, whether that be by a reverse, end around, or a simple deep throw. The end result? Almost twice the point total from last year's spring game (41 to 23), many more big plays and much more excitement for fans.</p>
<p>I don't expect Pease to come in and immediately raise Florida's offense to tops in the nation. No, I learned that lesson with the whole Charlie Weis era. I do, however, expect Pease to eventually lead this team upward to that level, mainly because they looked so good against a defense that we know is nasty- 8th in the nation last year with 10 out of 11 starters returning. The offense started slow, but once the guys got into a rhythm, the points started piling up late in the game.</p>
<p>So there's a lot to be excited about Gator fans, but don't get your hopes up. This could easily be another 7-6 year. Honestly, though, the Gators' schedule sets up very nicely, meaning it could easily be a 10 win season. The toughest game of the year? That would be LSU, and it's right in the friendly (from Florida's point of view, obviously) confines of the Swamp, so there's a chance. We also get South Carolina at home, Georgia in Jax as always, we go to FSU- these three games will make or break our season. Do we win all three? If yes, then the Gators are off to Atlanta with a shot at the BCS Championship. 2-1 in these games and Florida still probably wins the SEC East, even if the loss is in conference, but BCS Title hopes are gone. 1-2, and you're looking at a 9-3 season- which is the most realistic. I don't believe the Gators will lose all three games, because you have to have faith in Will Muschamp at least once here.</p>
<p>The SEC road games are relatively easy- at Texas A&amp;M, at Tennessee, and at Vanderbilt. The remaining home games are Bowling Green, Kentucky, Missouri, Jacksonville State and The University of Louisiana. Come on now. A loss in any of these games would be nothing less than a disgrace.</p>
<p>So it does look very good for the Gators, with a new offense, the same nasty defense, Caleb Sturgis and the special teams returning, and a fiery coach that is full of battle scars from year 1, looking for redemption.</p>
<p>Stay tuned in the coming weeks and months for two major posts- a completely new, radical college football playoff proposal and chronicling the lifelong journey of Percy Harvin.</p>
<p>Oh, and if anybody wants to watch the replay of the spring game, you can do so <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EgHNTYYVJls">here</a>.</p>
<p>On another note, the Gator baseball team is choking. They were once 20-1; now they're 25-7. Cheer them on whenever you can.</p>
<p>Happy holidays!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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