COMING VERY SOON – The TRC Podcast

Mark your calendars, TRC plans to start doing a weekly podcast on Sunday nights to review/preview Gamecock football games and talk about whatever else comes to our minds.  Our first podcast will be this Sunday, August 14 at 6 p.m.  You can listen live here:

TRC Live 

T-bone will be using a voice-altering device in case the CIA is listening, so don’t worry if he sounds a little like Stephen Hawking.  And hey, if we figure out how all this fancy equipment works, we might even take live callers at some point. 

We will also post archived episodes on the site once they’re in the can.  

We hope you’ll be listening.

Great Expectations and Other Tusings

I need to spell this out for you, because I don’t think you get it.  Going into the 2011 football season, we have:

  1. A Heisman Trophy candidate and potential first team All-American at running back.
  2. A likely first team All-American and fringe Heisman Trophy candidate at wide receiver.

    One of many stars on this Gamecock squad.
  3. A potential All-American at cornerback.
  4. One of the best defensive ends in college football on one of the best defensive lines in college football.
  5. A fifth year senior quarterback (yes, warts and all).
  6. One of the greatest college football coaches in the history of the game.

These observations do not appear through the proverbial “garnet-colored glasses”.  These are things that are widely agreed upon by friend and foe, are they not?  And that doesn’t include the likes of Clowney, Byrd, Cooper, Ellington, Shell, et al (mainly because I don’t trust first-year players, but I fully expect a few to contribute significantly.)

Folks, we’re less than a month away from the kickoff of the 2011 season, and I dare say we have the greatest collection of talent in the history of our school.  And I don’t think it’s close.

Let that sink in, and enjoy the next three weeks.  The season will start, and it will fly by.  I fully expect there will be some heartache along the way.

But as long as it’s August 9, I’m just going to go ahead and assume we’re going undefeated.

Moving on:

  • Consider this – what if USC and Georgia switched teams.  Say we had Aaron Murray and a bunch of question marks, and they had everything listed above.  Where do you think UGA’s preseason ranking would be, and what do you think the line on our game would be?  My point is not that we’re getting screwed, because we’re not, but that perceptions are hard to shake.
  • Two things I’ve been sick of hearing the “experts” trot out for the last several months – variations of “the USC/UGA game is huge/will decide the East” and “USC’s success hinges on the play of Garcia”.  Duh and duh, please hit me with some originality blogosphere.
  • Don’t tell anybody, because as I stated above I don’t trust first-year players, but…/makes sure no one is listening…I’m pretty excited about Ellington and Byrd.
  • How excited?  Not only am I going to predict we return a kick for touchdown this year (boooorrrinnnnng), but I’m going to predict it happens in the first game against East Carolina.  And I HATE predictions.
  • Obligatory Jadeveon Clowney is awesome bullet point.
  • I’m still trying to decide if I like Lattimore embracing the Heisman talk, or if I think it’s a bad move.  I’m going to give him the benefit of the doubt here, because he has made exactly zero mistakes since enrolling at USC.
  • I’m glad T-bone laid the lumber to Ron Morris for that ridiculous column on Sunday.  It deserves a re-linking.
  • We have Steve Spurrier.  Clemson has Dabo Swinney.  That just makes me smile.
  • We learned today that Post and Courier beat writer Travis Haney is moving to Oklahoma (where the wind comes sweepin’ down the plain) to cover the Sooners.  Haney is a good beat writer and seems like a good guy.  His love of sports and his job comes through in his writing, and I appreciate that and will miss it.  I will not, however, miss him live-tweeting Dave Matthews concerts and where he’s having dinner in Omaha.
  • And I guess this is just as good a time as any to admit something to our fair readers.  Please do not hold this against me, but…brace yourselves…I did not care for “Gamecock Glory” /ducks and covers.  I mean, our two victories over Clemson in Omaha are covered in a HALF A PAGE!  WHAT THE HECK IS THAT?!?!

There, I feel better.  Godspeed Travis.

At what price is success for Ron Morris?

[note: the stupid title of this post is a riff on Mr. Morris’s own from Sunday’s issue of The State. I know it doesn’t really flow, or make sense, so blame Ron.  Oh, btw, all quotes herein are taken from The State.]

Yesterday was Media Day for the 2011 Gamecock Football Team, and we all know what that means.  In depth previews of the upcoming season, right?  Position by position breakdowns showing strengths and weaknesses of the team? Player profiles that enable us to identify with and care about the athletes?

Nope, in the Columbia newspaper, The State, we get none of these potentially enlightening write-ups.

Instead we were treated to a big pile of Ron Morris.  And that means more of his tired rehash of anti-Carolina propaganda.  He’s a one trick pony, really – trotting out anything and everything negative he can torture from the recent history of Gamecock sports.  Its kind of sad, actually, watching a grown man so desperate for attention that he has to resort to seeking warmth in the reflected light of collegiate athletes and their coaches when it obvious he has no athletic history of his own.

Look at his opinion piece from Sunday’s edition, for example.  Mr. Morris began thusly:

SOUTH CAROLINA’S handling of the recent G.A. Mangus incident proved to be 
another example of how the athletics department and school are selling their
souls for national prominence in football.
Sad but true.

Couple of things here:  First, his opening sentence is such a hodgepodge of inconsistent tense and mixed metaphor that actually says very little.  “[T]he recent . . incident . . proved to be another example” he writes.  How is that exactly?  How can something “prove” to be an example?  And why does he make it past tense?  “Proved”?  Really?

Then there is the denouement to his initial thought, the fragmentary offering of “sad but true.”  This phrase is effective insofar as it makes the preceding nonsense sound important and ominous, but does nothing to advance his purported thesis.  Let me demonstrate with the following proposition:

Ron Morris spent his entire career toiling over the written word, yet was never able to advance beyond a mere sports op-ed writer for a newspaper in the country’s 83rd largest media market (only 3rd largest in the state).   Sad but true.

See how it works?

That piece of nonsense to the side, much of what follows in the article is either misleading or downright factually incorrect.  He asserts that “allowing Mangus to continue coaching . . . is hardly damning. When viewed in the context of  other incidents, a pattern of eroding principles emerges.”  He then goes on to detail, not the context he suggests, but more on the Mangus incident.

He eventually drops a reference to oft-maligned quarterback Stephen Garcia, but asserts (incredibly) that Garcia hasn’t been suspended for any games or any “significant practice.”   Here Morris betrays his complete lack of understanding of the last four years of Gamecock football history, but more importantly, he reveals that he understands nothing about the game of football.  Missing almost two complete spring practices due to relatively minor incidents (we say AGAIN, the worst thing Garcia has ever been accused of is keying a car), being left out of media appearances (he’s not even on the media guide cover despite being the SEC returning leader in passing)  and having a redshirt forced upon you are not insignificant punishments.  And all of those punishments pale in comparison to being forced to suffer through 5 years of a lynch-mob mentality by the local media for a young man basically accused of having a beer or few in college.

This kowtowing to Steve Spurrier’s program began in 2007 when he threatened
to quit if changes were not made to USC’s special admissions policies. Those
changes were made, and not a peep has been heard since about the special 
admissions made for football players each recruiting season.

The HBC didn’t threaten to quit – but he did openly question the policy.  But again, Morris has his history all wrong.  The policy DID NOT CHANGE.  Hyman et al only promised to inform the coaches earlier in the process to make it more predictable for all concerned.  Oh, and Mr. Morris can learn a little something next month if he watches the ECU game:  the player that brought about the controversy will be on the field – for the Pirates.  That’s right, the player in question (Michael Bowman) was not admitted to USC, despite the HBC’s protestations on his behalf.  That little fact cuts against Mr. Morris’s meme, so he (purposefully?) overlooks it.

More from Mr. Oppositeland:

“I can’t tell the young man that he’s coming to school here” then not have
him admitted, Spurrier said at the time. That statement came back to haunt 
Spurrier this past spring when he signed 31 recruits — three over the SEC
limit at the time — and had to tell several young men who were promised
scholarships that they could not attend USC.

Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.  We didn’t sign 31 recruits this spring.   We just didn’t, and it doesn’t matter how many times Mr. Morris makes this claim:  Morris is either lying, or he doesn’t know his subject very well.  We had 4 early enrollees in January – two of which were hold-overs from the previous year where the HBC kept his promises, held their schollys open, and brought them in after they qualified.  We signed 28 players in February (which qualifies as “spring” to Mr. Morris, I guess, which tells you something about his general knowledge level), the SEC limit.  Of those 28, three did not qualify.  In the end we admitted 25 incoming players, which is the NCAA-approved level.

Geeze, this list of issues with the article is getting long, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t point out the following swing-and-miss by Mr. Morris:

USC is not likely to sign more than 25 in the upcoming recruiting class, but
it appears to be facing another crossroad. At this time, USC will have 14 
scholarships available in the spring. Spurrier and his staff have 18 verbal 
commitments from recruits. Should USC sign 25, more than a handful of young
men likely will have to be told they do not have scholarships to attend USC.

Mr. Morris is apparently ignorant to normal attrition in college athletics.  He is also apparently unaware that players such as Alshon Jeffrey, Devin Taylor, and Stephon Gilmore will probably be early entries into the NFL draft.  There is a reason, Mr. Know-It-All Morris, that the NCAA allows 25 in each signing class when the total scholly limit is 85, but I’m gonna let you put the pen to paper and scratch out the math yourself.

Let’s also not forget the football program remains under NCAA investigation
for athletes allegedly receiving illegal benefits.

Trying to remain calm here.   Lalalalala. Happy Thoughts.

Ahem.

What, Mr. Morris, does this allegation have to do with so-called oversigning?   The NCAA investigation is over whether or not players received reduced rates at a local hotel, and as far as anyone at the AD’s office has been informed, is a back-burner issue for the governing body.  We even kicked one player off the team over the incident, but again, since this is inconsistent with Mr. Morris’s thesis that USC is a rogue program, he simply omits that fact.

Mr. Morris then goes on to compare the baseball program’s history with Chisenhall with the current manufactured situation.  Chisenhall, if you remember, was dropped from the baseball team by Coach Tanner because he was arrested for a felony.  Not an underage beer or barking at a teacher – a FELONY.

Oh, and at the time, Ron Morris repeatedly slammed Tanner for recruiting Chisenhall in the first place. No kidding – he was against Tanner before he was for him.

Seems Mr. Morris looks at USC with both a selective memory and a perpetually jaundiced eye.

Sad but true.

A Random Compliment from “Swing Your Sword”

Swing Your Spur?

I’m in the middle of reading Mike Leach’s entertaining New York Times bestseller “Swing Your Sword” and came across this nugget:

“In my opinion, the loudest place on Earth is the closed end zone at South Carolina. The distance from the back of that end zone to the crowd is about the length of my arm, and the stands go straight up. It’s just this wall of people. The stadium overall isn’t as loud, but that spot at Williams-Brice Stadium is like nothing else in college football. It’s just sheer noise.”

Nice compliment, and I don’t recall ever hearing anything that specific about our stadium from anyone else.

Leach is toxic right now in the college football landscape because of the lawsuits flying between he and Craig James and ESPN. But he’s going to make some team’s fan base very happy when he’s hired in the next year or two.

Maybe a replacement for the OBC one day?  (Please nobody get excited, I’m hoping Spurrier is here for years to come, just throwing it out there to make conversation.)

It’s a long shot, and would certainly stir a lot of debate on both sides based on his recent past and the fact he was Hal Mumme’s right-hand man. But I have to say, I wouldn’t want to be on the other sideline facing him. If not USC, here’s hoping he winds up somewhere on the West Coast.

Foto(shop) Friday: Ellington Shows His Ball Skills

A Scene From Practice, Day Two

Post Practice, Day One: Coaches have an Important Message for Clowney

Guess That Quote!

The wife of a prominent figure in Gamecock Athletics said the following, to whom was she referring?

“He’s a quarterback, and they are different people.  It takes a special person 
to be a quarterback. If you’re going to be a successful quarterback, you have
to have a little bit of all that, a little bit of the crazy, a little bit of 
wild, a little bit of the cockiness, all of that. Sometimes other people don’t
understand it, but that’s what goes with it.”

This was said about which of the following?:

A. Steve Spurrier

B. Steve Taneyhill

C. Corey Jenkins

D. Dickie De. . BWAHAHAHA I can’t even type that one with a straight face

E. None of the above (supply the correct answer)

We Solved the G.A. Mangus Mystery

See Here, and everything is finally explained.

Oh, and you’re welcomed.

 

Sincerely, TRC Investigative Staff.

TRC Year One Retrospective – The Best of the Gman

Gman is the third “member” of TRC.  His best blog posts can be summed up thusly: