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Gators recruits to visit practices


Over the next few weeks Florida will host dozens of top prospects, not only in the 2013 class, but 2014 pair of top 2014 prospects as well.

Those prospects will flock to Gainesville for spring practice and eventually the Orange and Blue Debut at 1 p.m. on April 7.

This weekend, at least 18 known prospects are planning to attend spring practice, including seven of the 10 prospects who have made verbal commitments to sign with Florida.

Here's a look at the visitors:
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Quarterback battle kicks into high gear


John Brantley is gone.

That simple sentence may make some of the fans who lamented the oft-criticized signal caller’s two-year reign at quarterback rejoice, but there’s no such enjoyment from Florida’s coaching staff.

The fans are excited about the future, but coach Will Muschamp knows what Brantley brought to the table was more than most give him credit for.

“It’s not an indictment on either young man,” Muschamp said about the poor play of then-freshmen quarterbacks Jacoby Brissett and Jeff Driskel a year ago. “I think they’re going to be really good players, but playing as a freshman at that position is different.”
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UF lacrosse thwarts Stony Brook’s plan


Standing 16-meters away from the goal, junior Kitty Cullen received the ball. She looked up the field at the goal, and then she was off.

Cullen spun to her left to get around the first Stony Brook defender. She then sprinted straight ahead to split two other defenders. Finally, she faked left, but ran right to cause two more defenders hesitate for a moment.

In that moment, Cullen cocked back her stick and launched the ball into the back of the net for a goal.

Rally Cat Report: New semester, new goals


Kicking it back up in full force is what the Rally Cats have been doing this past week. School work, workouts, practice and sleep are the only things that have been on all of our minds as we get ourselves re adjusted to the new semester. We are all enjoying the little amounts of free time we have left, because after this weekend, practices pick up, games are constant, and workouts are a must. Even though we have a very intense and busy schedule ahead of us, we are all looking forward to spending even more time with each other than we did last semester, and we look forward to growing together as a team.

We are currently in the process of learning a variety of different halftime performances that we will perform at the rest of the home basketball games. We are very excited that we will be able to dance more and show off our skills during all of these important games that are quickly approaching. On Tuesday, January 25th, we will be performing an entertaining hip hop routine that was choreographed by our very own Junior Captain, Christi King. It is great getting back into the swing of things with the team, and being able to learn fun, new, high energy halftime routines that we will be able to perform for the public. Since the basketball schedule is tightly packed into the next three months, we will constantly be learning new routines and perfecting them, so we look our best when we step out onto the court.

On top of the intense home basketball schedule, we are also hoping to travel to the ACC tournament with the team in mid March. If Clemson makes it into the tournament, six lucky Rally Cats will be traveling with them on the exciting journey, cheering them on every step of the way. Not only are we looking forward to that opportunity, but we are also looking forward to traveling to Daytona Beach in mid April for the NDA national competition! We have a lot of preparing to do for that competition, which is what our future weekends will consist of; Nationals practice!

As it was very exciting to watch the Tigers play at UNC this past Tuesday, we are all hoping to cheer the Tigers on for a Win when they have another match up in Littlejohn on Saturday, February 12th! However, we have three games that lead up to the UNC game that start next Tuesday, when the Tigers take on NC State in Littlejohn at 7pm! Come out and help us Rally Cats cheer on our Clemson Tigers, and enjoy a very entertaining hip hop halftime show performed by yours truly, The Clemson Rally Cats!

GO TIGERS!

Welcome to our STATE


This is our “State”. By now, you’ve seen the billboards or at least glanced at a photo of one. You know the one, Dan Mullen welcomes travelers to our great state with the clear message that MSU is the leader in Mississippi. My initial thought was simply, “what a great snapshot of where Mississippi State stands right now… on top”.

That’s right… on top! The Bulldogs are leading the way in the state of Mississippi and you need not look any further than the current leadership to see why.

For the first time in a very long time the Bulldogs are united from Dr. Keenum to Scott Stricklin, Dan Mullen to the ticket taker, everyone is on the same page with the message we’re here to win. It isn’t just talk; they’re backing their promises up with wins on the field and growth on campus. If Mississippi State is involved the clear goal is to lead the way.

This newfound attitude didn’t happen overnight, it has been and continues to be a process, a process that requires dedication and determination to push the “People’s University” to the forefront.

Just this morning State’s athletic director gave a great example as to their purpose in one of his early morning tweets.

“Our 3 “Foundations” for success: 1) focus on student-athletes; 2) possess great integrity & 3) aggressively promote Mississippi State,” this was his message. It is just a simple reminder that Mississippi State knows who they are and where they are going.

This philosophy that guides State has led them into uncharted waters, at least from my vantage point. They are going places and doing things they’ve not dared to dream of. Sure, there have been successful periods in the past, but never has MSU had the leadership it needed when the opportunity was present.

Bulldog Club memberships are up. University donations are increasing. They are on the verge of announcing a multi-million dollar gift. Facilities are improving. Stadium expansion plans are in the works. The bottom line is that Mississippi State has become an intelligently aggressive university.

Time to step forward…

For the first time in my lifetime, Mississippi State is in a true leverage position in the state. And the time has come for the fans to realize the opportunity the University has in front of it.

I’m not being critical of the MSU fan base, you’ve been amazing. Record season ticket sales, stadium sellouts, and wearing Maroon with pride. No question the Bulldog faithful have been doing their part.

That being said, it is time for the fan base to take the next step, changing the mindset. I’m not talking about the woe-is-me attitude… I’m saying it is time to think and act like leaders. You do it every day in your day-to-day lives. You run your company as a leader. You lead in your community. Now it is time to lead as a fan of Mississippi State.

The time has passed where you’re overly concerned with the antics and tactics from a rival university. As a leader you will always be attacked and undermined, but because you are leader you’re prepared for those events.

I’m not suggesting you turn the other cheek… just the opposite. By leading the way you handle the threats as they come at you not ignore them.

Case-in-point… our rival university is currently employing the tactics to slander Mississippi State, spreading rumors and false information with the goal of impacting State’s current recruiting class.

The plan is designed to get a reaction from the MSU fanbase, not MSU leadership. They want fans to react with venom and disgust, ultimately taking the focus off of the 9-4 season and Gator Bowl victory, not to mention back-to-back Egg Bowl victories.

The one flaw in the plan is that it requires a negative fan reaction. If the fans don’t react … the plan doesn’t have the desired impact.

So the challenge is with us… are we going to help the adversary’s cause by reacting in a negative fashion or will be react with the realization they have made themselves irrelevant?

For years the guys up north have lived with the completely misplaced attitude that MSU is inferior. They simply projected the falsehood as a fact. Now the shoe is on the other foot and you have the chance to factually tell them they are no longer relevant. The Bulldogs are now driving the bus and there is simply nothing they can do to change that fact.

Mississippi State has moved past the days where the only game that matters is the rivalry game. Sure that game is big, bigger than the others, but State is now about competing for and winning championships and that requires goals that are much bigger than beating your rivals. The players believe it, the coaches believe it, the administration believes it and now it is time for the fans to live it!

Winning is a learned behavior…

From day one we’ve heard Greg Byrne, Dan Mullen and Scott Stricklin preach the message of changing the culture to a winning culture. It took time. It took an aggressive plan. Now your university is in position to win and win consistently and with that comes a new set of difficulties.

When you win you’ll have an increase in coaches leaving for other jobs. You’ll have more attacks from your rivals. You’ll have to learn how to deal with expectations. And I think we all would agree…what a great set of problems to have!

As fans we all need to learn to trust in the plan and the people in place at MSU. They have proven they can adapt to change and make good hires when needed. Gone are the days when there is a need for panic when a coach leaves.

As a group we need to learn from others who have experienced winning at a high level for an extended period of time. Take Florida for example… for years their coaches have been plucked from their system yet they don’t panic, they just make a solid hire. When Urban Meyer stepped down they just went out and got the guy they wanted. Texas didn’t panic… they hired Manny Diaz. That’s just how it works with programs that win. The time has come to accept that Mississippi State is moving in the right direction and with that will come the problems of winning.

Know that the Bulldogs are there yet, but with a couple more seasons of winning and New Year’s day games, Starkville will cease to be a mere stopover until something better comes along.

At the end of the day…

When you stop and think about it, Mississippi State has come a long way in a very short period of time. The mindset has changed. Expectations have increased. The passion for the Maroon and White is off the charts. Know that the leadership at Mississippi State is focused on delivering a product and a reputation we can all be proud of.

We’re not going to win every game. We’re not going to get everyone recruit. However, you can rest assured Mississippi State is focused on the task at hand… win with integrity.

Isn’t it time we’re all on the same page…

Gator staff sporting a distinct NFL flavor


Nothing is more crucial to the success of a new head coach than the staff he assembles. This is especially the case with the hiring of an assistant by a rookie head coach. With the announcement of Bryant Young as defensive line coach and the elimination of the Seattle Seahawks from the NFL playoffs, Will Muschamp’s coaching staff is fully assembled and free to fully devote its time to Florida football.

The primary difference between the coaching staffs assembled by previous Florida coaches and this one is, that Muschamp’s has a distinct NFL flavor to it.

For possibly the first time in its history, Florida will have a head coach, offensive coordinator, and defensive coordinator with NFL experience.

While Muschamp’s experience was limited to one season on the staff with the Miami Dolphins, that is more NFL coaching experience than Urban Meyer had upon his arrival in Gainesville.

New offensive coordinator Charlie Weis, a former offensive coordinator with the New England Patriots at their height of their Super Bowl runs and for the Kansas City Chiefs this season, also spent time as a position coach, coaching running backs and wide receivers. New defensive coordinator Dan Quinn has almost a decade of NFL experience coaching defensive lines in San Francisco, Miami, New York (Jets), and Seattle.

The NFL flavor is not limited to the coordinators, either.

In addition to Quinn and Weis, Muschamp has turned both interior lines over to coaches with significant experience in the NFL.

The offensive line will be coached by veteran Frank Verducci, who worked for the Bengals, Cowboys, Bills and Browns.

Young, who will coach the defensive line, spent 13 seasons in the NFL as a defensive tackle for the San Francisco 49ers. He won Rookie of the Year honors in 1994, Comeback Player of the Year in 1999, was a four time Pro-Bowler, and won a Super Bowl (XXIX).

Both Verducci and Young will add considerable NFL experience to positions absolutely critical to success in the SEC where virtually everyone has elite talent in the trenches. Verducci and Young were on Weis’ last Notre Dame staff as offensive line coach and as a defensive graduate assistant, respectively, and Quinn coached Young on the defensive line for one season with San Francisco. So, there should be plenty of familiarity among the new assistant coaches as well.

Florida should benefit from the assembled NFL experience on the staff in several ways. First, their experience should give new coaches instant credibility with returning players.

There may be evidence that this is already the case, as Florida’s coaching staff lost no players to transfer. The NFL credential may have influenced John Brantley decision to return for his senior year, despite his tumultuous 2010 season.

Not coincidentally, Janoris Jenkins also decided to return for the 2011 season despite the possibility that he would be a high draft pick in the NFL Draft come April. Additionally, one would think the players will respond positively to a Pro Bowl defensive lineman coaching them, or a coach who helped Matt Cassell have one of the best statistical seasons in the NFL in 2010.

Second, the NFL-laden staff should pay dividends on the recruiting trail. While it will be tough to say how the staff will do in closing out the class 2011, their combined experience should make for an easy sell to recruits down the road.

It’s no secret that most, if not all, recruits aspire to play in the NFL one day. What better way for Florida to sell that opportunity than to point out the mass of NFL experience at the coordinator and position coach level on the staff?

Florida hasn’t exactly struggled in recruiting recently. Nevertheless, the possibility of pitching NFL coaching while in college can only help with the most elite of recruits (particularly at quarterback, running back, and the offensive line).

Finally, with their backgrounds, the preparation and game-planning of the new coaching staff figure to be highly professional.

Between the retained coaches, Muschamp himself, and the coaches brought in from the NFL, there should be nothing they haven’t seen on film before.

In a league has challenging on a weekly basis as the SEC is, the fact that Charlie Weis has game-planned for Super Bowls and Dan Quinn was just coaching in the NFL playoffs this week should give Florida fans and players alike every confidence that the coaches will be prepared no matter the opponent.

It’s important to point out that in addition to the NFL coaches on the staff, Muschamp did a fine job blending retained coaches and well-connected college football coaches to give the staff the best of all worlds.

Hiring former Gator player Aubrey Hill from Miami to coach the wide receivers was a big plus, as Hill is intimately familiar with the Gators program and is well connected in the fertile recruiting grounds of south Florida. He’ll make a fine recruiting weapon along with Stan Drayton and the other holdovers from the Meyer staff that know the targets and targets areas well.

Finally, don’t forget that Muschamp himself has been in some of the biggest stages in college football as a defensive coordinator for LSU, Auburn, and Texas. No one is more intimately familiar with the college game or with recruiting the southeast than Muschamp.

The Florida coaching staff has more of the NFL experience than it has ever has and that should be a good thing. Between their abilities to coach up the returning players, recruit in the future, and to work alongside veteran college coaches and recruiters, the Gators should have no problem competing in the SEC and continuing the momentum established over the past two decades.

Cam Newton’s adventure


For all those critics out there who thought the balance of power in college football had shifted and that the Southeastern Conference had lost some its luster, think again.

Auburn wrapped up the perfect season Monday night, completing the “Cam Slam” and bringing the crystal ball home to the SEC for the fifth straight season, thus concluding the remarkable adventure of quarterback Cam Newton. Newton’s improbable journey from junior college anonymity to the big national stage, from the doghouse at Florida to the penthouse at Auburn, was one of the most epic transformations in college football history.

The former Florida quarterback, who once backed up Tim Tebow, led his team to a 22-19 victory, relying on a stout defense led by defensive tackle Nick Fairley and true freshman Michael Dyer. Even though he didn’t win the offensive MVP — it went to Dyer — Newton already has plenty of bling in his trophy case. Fairley was defensive MVP.

Although he got off to a slow start and didn’t play his best game of the season, Newton was the beneficiary of outstanding performance by his defense in a game that produced a little more than half of the total points expected to be scored by the two high-powered, fast-moving offenses.

It wasn’t a great night statistically for Cam Newton, but a great night nonetheless.

Asked to describe his journey from Blinn Junior College to the BCS championship, Newton said:

“It’s just a God thing. I thank God every single day. I’m just His instrument and He’s using me on a consistent basis. He’s using me to extend His word. And I’m a prime example of how God can turn something that was bad into something that was very great.”

He said what he and family learned from this experience:

“Anything is possible. I guarantee you five or six months ago, nobody would have bet their last dollar to say that Auburn University was going to win the national championship. January 10, 2011, we’re smiling right now, saying we did it.”

So Auburn won the national title, the SEC and produced the Heisman trophy winner in 2010. Now Tiger fans just have to hold their breath and hope they get to keep all the loot.

* * *

To paraphrase Dickens, these have been the best of times and the worst of times for Cameron Newton.

For one day, unbeknownst to the entire football universe except the utmost highest at Auburn, Newton was actually declared ineligible in December, the week before the SEC Championship game. In one fell swoop, Auburn reported an NCAA violation involving their star, suspended him and applied for reinstatement. We learned about it after it was over when Newton was reinstated.

Just one more bizarre incident which added to the intrigue of the back-story and fueled the drama of the national championship game.

By all accounts, Newton was liked by his teammates at Florida. Joe Haden was among those who publicly hailed him. And as a Gator, though his legacy was marked by scandal, Cam had a chance to learn a new persona he would unveil at a later date.

Meanwhile, think about this: Had Newton stayed at Florida and accomplished all the things that he did at Auburn, he would have been the fourth in the Gator Heisman genealogy as “son of a preacher man” to win a Heisman and a national championship.

Oddly enough, it was his minister father whose unethical practices nearly cost him all of it — and leaves a giant shadow cast over Auburn’s program and his son’s glory.

* * *

If you watched Newton closely, he brought the Tim Tebow paradigm with him, crow-hopping around the field to fire up the fans, leaping in the stands after a touchdown, taking a victory lap after beating South Carolina to win the SEC.

At Auburn, he also seemed to bring a certain joy to the fans in the Loveliest Village on the Plains. Amazingly, Newton played with grace and poise, like a man with a clear conscience. That is the greatest testimony to his intentions.

One advantage to playing behind Tebow is that he could take notes of the model he would someday try to emulate.

Tebow’s former teammate and understudy might be able to someday match his skills on the football field, but Newton could never have lived up to the true Tebow icon. (Not that anybody else could, either.) On that count Newton failed after his brush with the law over his purchase of the stolen computer which he then ditched out the window when police came to his door. And then there was the story charging him with being caught cheating on an exam one or more times.

It has never been proven why Newton suddenly decided to withdraw from Florida and enroll in junior college — the Newtons say it’s because Tebow chose to come back is senior year — but little did he realize what a profound impact it would have on college football.

Never mind that he wound up winning the Heisman and playing for the BCS championship. How might have he changed the destiny of the 2011 Florida Gators?

Think about this Part II: Urban Meyer had two Heisman Trophy winners on his roster at once, both playing the same position.

* * *

The paradoxical ride of Newton defies the stereotypical image of a football hero. In American sports culture, college stars are deities. They are paragons of virtue, gifted with physical and mental strength, roles models to youth and inspirational voices of their community — an image that borders on the impossible. On that count, the 2010 Heisman Trophy winner comes up short. Yet he also seemed gracious in victory and by all appearances may find redemption of sorts.

Then there was Cecil Newton, who comes off as the villain in this story because he was in the eye of the storm of an FBI and NCAA investigation about soliciting money in return for his son’s talents. Cecil was practically banished and reportedly didn’t attend the BCS title game Monday night. He had become an embarrassment to Auburn, college football and maybe even to his family. Yet his son continued to say his father’s support gave him peace and confidence.

Even if Cam really didn’t know his father was peddling his wares on the open market, allegedly asking for upwards of $180,000 for his services at Mississippi State, there is still Cam’s poor lifestyle decisions while at Florida.

* * *

Heisman winners don’t always plays lights out in championship games and quite often come out on the wrong end of the score — as Ohio State’s Troy Smith and Oklahoma Sam Bradford did against the Gators.

How would Newton perform against Oregon?

We kept wondering if there was enough bad karma to impact the plight of Newton and his team’s mission. Perhaps that riddle was solved in part Monday night in Arizona. He played well enough to lead his team to victory after a season of scrutiny perhaps like no other college football player has been forced to endure.

For the first quarter he did struggle, but it was a scoreless period and that gave him time to refocus. He did miss two other chances for touchdown passes, under throwing a wide open receiver in the end zone and overthrowing wide receiver Darwin Adams, who had beaten the Oregon secondary and would have easily scored.

Yet it was two defensive plays — a safety and a goal line stand — which sparked Auburn’s victory. After a slow start, Newton warmed up and finished with a pair of touchdown passes, 280 yards (258 in the second quarter alone) and a 16-11 lead at the half.

Thanks to a brilliant goal line stand at the 1-yard line and a near second half shutdown of the high-powered Duck offense, Newton only had to do just enough to win the game. However, he almost became the goat, because Oregon’s Casey Mathews stripped him of the football with just under five minutes to play while the Tigers were trying to protect at 19-11 lead. Oregon drove it in from 40 yards out, however, scored on the shovel pass, went for two and scored to tie the game at 19.

It was a bizarre play in a bizarre season for Auburn that finally decided the game. With under two minutes to play, true freshman Michael Dyer ran for a short gain and appeared to be down, but was encouraged by the players and coaches on the Auburn sideline to keep on running and restarted, rolling 34 yards down to the Oregon 24. And it was Dyer who broke off a long run to the ½-yard line with 10 seconds left in the game.

Taking no chances, Gene Chizik elected to go for a field goal instead of punching the ball in, sending Wes Byrum on the field to kick it. However, Oregon took a timeout and Chizik sent the offense back on the field to kill eight seconds off the clocked, calling time out after the play and putting Byrum back on the field.

Again, more irony — two explosive offenses, but the only points in the second half were field goals. And a field goal decides the outcome.

It took nothing away from Cam Newton’s Adventure, however, and the remarkable ending. There was the matter of Newton being slammed to the ground at the end of the game and appearing to be injured. He cut short his interviews and went to have X-rays, presumably of is back, which has been troubling him. Asked how he felt, Newton said, “I’m fine. I just feel blessed.”

Newton’s future as a football player will depend on whether he elects to return to Auburn for his senior season or leave early for the NFL draft. For now, however, there is plenty of glory in his present to carry him for a long, long time.

Nobody could see Auburn’s title run


Here on the final day of the 2010 college football season, when we reflect back on the expectations from Day One, we are struck by just how little we could see around the corner.

Oregon, perhaps — the Ducks were among the top 10-to-15 of most preseason polls. But nobody had Auburn contending
for a national championship last August. In fact, nobody had the Tigers in their top 15. The AP poll projected them as the 22nd best team, the USA Today Coaches poll 23rd.

In fact, Alabama was everybody’s darling and ranked No. 1 in all the polls, so Auburn wasn’t even the seen as the best team in its state — let alone the SEC West.

Giving credit where it is due, the one person who saw Gene Chizik’s team as a contender in the west was Kirk Herbstreit of ESPN, who picked the Tigers to beat the Tide in the Iron Bowl and go the Atlanta.

Worst picks? Clearly Florida and Texas.

A look at the AP’s SEC top 15:

1. Alabama
2. Ohio State
3. Boise State
4. Florida
5. Texas
6. TCU
7. Oklahoma
8. Nebraska
9. Iowa
10.Virginia Tech
(Oregon No. 11)

USA Today’s top 15:

1. Alabama
2. Ohio State
3. Florida
4. Texas
5. Boise State
6. Virginia Tech
7. TCU
8. Oklahoma
9. Nebraska
10. Iowa
(Oregon No. 11)

* * *

If Michael Vick throws that last pass just a bit higher, Riley Cooper might be a hero today for catching the winning touchdown toss against the Packers. We’ve all seen Coop go up and battle for the ball and, given an equal opportunity, I like the Eagle rookie’s chances of coming down with it instead of Packers cornerback Tramon Williams turning it into a game-winning pick.

* * *
Janoris Jenkins has decided to come back for his senior season — apparently after conferring with his family, his head coach and NFL sources — and that might prove to be a good thing for both he and Will Muschamp. It would give Muschamp a shutdown corner, providing Jenkins rehabilitates from surgery.

“Coach Muschamp was very supportive throughout the whole process, regardless of my decision, but he wanted to make sure I had all of the facts. I’m looking forward to working towards my degree, completing my rehab and getting back on the field with my teammates,” Jenkins was quoted as saying in a press release. Muschamp commended him for making a “mature decision.”

* * *
Good News, Bad News: Eight early enrollees, including Jeff Driskel, expected to be announced at Florida. The bad news: Florida State’s verbal commitment from Glades Central wide receiver Kelvin Benjamin. It’s still three weeks away from national signing day, however, and these are just “verbals” —- there still could be some movement one way or another among other recruits.

* * *

I’m wondering what Billy Donovan’s team might look like once everybody gets on the same page and the games of Alex Tyus and Kenny Boynton start to ascend. Perhaps we’ll find out some of that Tuesday night in Knoxville. Actually, we saw flashes of Boynton Saturday night in the win over Ole Miss and he has started to move in that direction the last couple of games.

* * *

My Belated New Year’s Resolution: I vow this year not to blow up untested freshmen who’ve never taken a snap –- no more Andre Debose is “the next Percy” or even that Jeff Driskel as the next superstar. Let’s let them compete and play it out, because they’ve got a long way from high school stud-dom to Gator stardom.

* * *

More and more it looks like Urban Meyer is leaning toward an ESPN announcing career. I’ve heard he signed a five-day contract with the Boys From Bristol, having used at least one or two of those with his studio work at the Las Vegas Bowl.

Next he will show up for the BCS title game tonight to work with Nick Saban. ESPN is only saying that if Meyer decides to pursue TV full time they are “interested.” Methinks that’s a big understatement.

* * *

Gatorade (Pepsi) sold 553 million cases last year. I know it seems like a lot, but the fact is that Powerade (Coca-Cola) is moving in on the market. Sales of Powerade were up 32 percent in the third quarter of 2010 and its market share was up 27 percent for the first nine months of last year, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. You wonder if the fact that it’s “Gator”ade factors in Powerade’s grips on markets like Tallahassee and Athens, Ga.

* * *

Whatever happened to one of the best walk-on players who ever suited up for Urban Meyer — Joey Sorrentino? Well, he’s already one year deep in dental school and says that when he tells fellow students he played for the Gators, they star at his 5-7 frame and then give him a funny look.

“Being a smaller guy, most people laugh when they hear I play football, ‘There’s no way,’” said Sorrentino. “Which is fine with me. I’ve always enjoyed the unassuming underdog role.”

* * *
I’ll have ask my friends in Denver to interpret these words of John Elway, who re-explained his position on Tim Tebow with this Tweet:

“To clarify my thoughts on Tim Tebow. I think he’s a very good football player, and if anyone can turn themselves into a great quarterback, Tim can. Myself and our entire organization think very highly of him. We are pleased with his first year as a Bronco. Any speculation that the Denver Broncos are considering moving Tim is completely false.”
* * *
Incidentally, if you were wondering whatever happened to the re-airing of Tim Tebow and Everything in Between, small wonder. ESPNU had planned to show twice Friday, but because it contained NFL footage there were rights issues. Seems ESPN has the rights — ESPNU does not

Will Muschamp takes center court — briefly


Football took center court briefly as the 19th head coach at Florida received a warm ovation and mini-standing ovation at the O’Connell center, saying briefly and to the point that football was “only 238 days away.”

Will Muschamp met briefly with the media and said hello to part of The Gator Nation Saturday night during the first time out, reminding everybody that football was just around the corner.

Then he got out of the way so Billy Donovan’s team could get back to the business at hand of trying to win its first SEC encounter of the season, which it did by beating Ole Miss, 77-71.

Muschamp has come out smokin’ since the Outback Bowl, working hard to make the transition smoother so as not to have a break in recruiting momentum. He’s had his Gator pom-poms out and has been checking in on the talk radio circuit with interviews in Orlando, Miami and the Dan Patrick Show on Fox radio.

In the short meeting with the media Saturday night, he talked about filling the last coaching spot and the process of hiring: “When I hire somebody, I really just describe what I want at the position, the critical factors — a lot like recruiting a player. You decide what you want, what you’re looking for, then go get it. We’ve been very fortunate. The support of our administration’s been outstanding. (I am) real pleased with where we are.”

Although he didn’t say who it was or what the spot would be, Muschamp said he did have someone in mind. He also explained that Charlie Weis fit all the criteria he had in mind for an offensive coordinator, with both pro and college, and that he was not surprised that he could hire Weis because “It’s Florida. It’s a great place. A lot of people want to coach here.”

Of course he’s working hard to catch up on recruiting, but doesn’t feel that having his two coordinators away in the NFL playoffs have hurt the process at all.

“I think it’s great,” Muschamp said.” We’re watching the Gator coaches coach tonight and tomorrow. I think that’s exciting. If I’m a high school football player and I have aspirations of playing on the next level, which most kids do, they’re going to come to a great institution at the University of Florida, they’re going to get a great education and they’re watching their future coaches coach and coordinate in the National Football League in the playoffs.”

He bragged on his new defensive line coach, Dan Quinn, and called him one of the best he’s ever seen.

“He and I were together at the Miami Dolphins,” he said of Quinn. “Jason Taylor texted me the night before we announced him, realized we’d hired Dan, and was shocked that we were able to get Dan here. That’s how much he thought of Dan as a coach, how he helped him further his career. He was NFL Defensive Player of the Year under Dan’s tutelage. That tells you what kind of coach he thinks he is.”

His biggest challenge as a head coach, he said, was having to deal more with the media because of time constraints.

“To me it’s all time management, balancing the entire team instead of just one side of the ball — obviously a lot more obligations in what you’ve got to do, but it’s been fine.”
So our first official meeting with the 19th head coach of the Gators since he was announced was the impromptu, on-the-fly chat outside Gate One. I would characterize it as pleasant, business-like and pretty much to the point.

Little by little, Will Muschamp’s portrait is emerging with each interview.

Because he is so animated on the sideline and therefore nicknamed “Coach Boom” prompted by his spontaneous chest and hip bumps, some people tend to think of him as somewhat playful — almost cartoonish. He admits he gets carried away and said in an interview that his wife Carol tends to chide him about it a bit.

He told Dan Patrick that Carol wonders “who I am” on game day sometimes and wants to know if he’s having an
“out-of-body experience” on sidelines.

Some of the other things we learned on his talk show tour:

—He’s glad to have Urban Meyer around and that he (Muschamp) says he’s secure, doesn’t have a big ego and “I know what he (Meyer) has accomplished here.”

—UF academics and the setting of The Swamp are big recruiting advantages. He says of Florida Field, where he grew up watching the Gators play and later coached: “I’ve been on the wrong sideline of it too many times and it’s not an easy stadium to walk into.”

—As for the “Coach Boom” moniker, he owns up to it, but don’t expect him to walk around acting out his John Madden routine. Mike Bianchi tried to coach a “Boom” out of him on the radio and Will declined with “No, not on the radio.” He did say, “I’m excited the direction we are headed and I want our guys to play physical.”

—He will pull for Auburn against Oregon, naturally, because he coached here and the Tigers have “about nine defensive players I recruited or coached.” One of this was star defensive lineman Nick Fairly.

—He told Patrick he’s had “a lot of contact with Urban — Urban’s been great. I talked to Urban an hour the day I took the job. I also attended about 4-5 practices I was able to evaluate the team and the players.”

—As for the report that he almost got the Auburn head coaching job before Gene Chizik, he said that was a case of mistaken identity. “I was never contacted,” he said. “I think there’s a little confusion. They got confused and when it was said ‘a former defensive coordinator’ at Auburn would get the job.” Wrong defensive coordinator.

—And, finally, as far as how much longer Mack Brown will coach: “The only once person who can answer that is Mack. When we started the coach in waiting, I felt real good about it – and still I still did. But there was no timetable for Mack – we had a great relationship. It was going to be up to him.”

So Muschamp is on the loose, sprinkling a little orange blue into the lives of Floridians and maybe even writing a little imaginary graffiti on the walls. Contrary to what you may hear, however, he did not paint this real live alligator orange in Venice:

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20110106/BREAKING/110109882/-1/sports?Title=Orange-gator-turns-heads-in-pond-at-Nokomis-subdivision

It could be an omen, though.

Jackie Sherrill: The Recruiting Season


This time of the year, you have recruiting going full steam ahead. But you’ve actually been recruiting for the whole year and also for the next class for 2012. I’ve always said that recruiting is like shaving – if you miss a day you don’t look very good. So it is a 365-day affair if you are going to recruit well.

If you look at the schools that win, they approach recruiting as very, very important and they spend a lot of time and energy to stay on top of things. They are always trying to find the best way to contact kids and evaluate kids, especially when those kids come to campus for visits.

At this point of the year, you have some kids that have not made that final decision. And even if a kid has committed, other schools are still calling and recruiting them. That is why I have always been in favor of an early signing period like basketball has in their sport. That way a kid that knows can go ahead and sign. Then you can spend your energy on other recruits instead of constantly having to babysit your commitments. You always have to babysit and make sure you don’t lose a kid that has already chosen your program and that is just as important as getting new recruits.

But I always felt if a kid gave a commitment and you then lost him, then he likely wasn’t going to come to your school anyway. I never got overly concerned or over reacted when a kid didn’t decide on our school and it goes back to the way I was recruited and also how I recruited as a coach. We are professional salesmen and head coaches can get a kid to say ‘yes’. But that may not be what the kid wants in the long run.

When I was in high school, Coach (Bear) Bryant never asked me to come to Alabama. He just talked about the school and their players. I did the same thing as a coach. I felt if you recruit that way then you would rarely lose any kids because it was truly their own decision.

Because of the internet and high-profile sites, there is a lot of mis-information out there and a lot of information that is planted by these sites. That causes coaches to constantly chase their tails in recruiting. You may read something a kid said but he was also mis-quoted. It may turn out to be false but you still have to chase it and put out the fires. Again, you end up babysitting kids that have committed.

You also now have other kids that will go down to the last week or last few days before National Signing Day. And sometimes those late additions will make a big difference on your football team. So the intensity and buildup to signing day because a 24-7 ordeal. With obviously the head coach and the assistant coaches, you want to be involved with all of your recruits, committed or not. You are stretched from one player to the next as a head coach. That is why it is so important to have coaches on your staff that are good recruiters. You evaluate each year what coaches bring in what players and of course that changes from year to year. You also note every year on a list what assistant coaches signed who so to give you a good evaluation of your assistant coaches and their recruiting abilities.

Now, switching gears a bit but staying with recruiting. I’ve always felt if you have a successful football program, you’re gonna lose assistant coaches because a lot of people will come after them. That is the reason Texas came after Manny Diaz because of how impressive our defense was this year. So coaches will always be in demand. A year ago Manny was at Middle Tennessee State and then comes here and now is at Texas in basically a year span.

But it’s not necessarily how good a coach is but also how good your players are, too. And we have a lot of good defensive players back for the next few years. And in recruiting, you have to be wise in how you handle losing coaches. If a kid picks a university then he is picking your program. If they are choosing your school because of an assistant coach then they are picking a school for the wrong reason. There is never a guarantee that an assistant coach ever stays for their entire careers.

So as a head coach, you tell these guys their choice was the university. Sure, coaches might change but your program is still here. The head coach is the one who sets the program. There are a ton of assistant coaches out there but not many head coaches. But it is the head coach that designs the program and puts the stamp on the program. So you assure those recruits that everything in the past on the field will continue and nothing will change.

During my years of coaching, it was more important to find good football players and we found a lot that not many other schools wanted. David Stewart from north Alabama is a good example. He was in the area of Alabama and Tennessee but they didn’t know how good of a football player he would be. Sometimes when coaches go to evaluate, saying looking at a wide receiver, they see his growth pattern that may not allow him to be a wide receiver. He may turn into or grow into a tight end or defensive end. We saw that with his size, David Stewart was not going to stay at defensive end or linebacker. But we knew he had all the tools to be an offensive lineman and a good one at that.

And then there were the obvious ones. We knew Eric Moulds would be a great player. Then we saw Dicenzo Miller and Keffer McGee, both from small towns, and knew they would be very talented performers. Dicenzo was not as highly recruited as Keffer but we knew he had all those certain attributes to be an outstanding player.

You could also go down a long list of guys we signed that turned out to be productive, guys that were not recruited highly by other programs. Those were guys like Wayne Madkin and Cornell Menafee.

To break it down, you really have four types of players or recruits. You have the player that is good but knows he is good. He has been spoiled for a long time and he may be a five-star player that has already reached his own level of maturity and development. Then you have good players that don’t know they are good, guys like Menafee, Stewart and more recently, like Chris White. Those guys you just give them time to develop and grow and you have great players.

Then you also have a player who is average but doesn’t know he is average, and lastly, you have guys that are average and they know they are average.

You can win with No.2 and No. 3 but you don’t win with No. 1 and No. 4 in those types of players. The No. 1 group are high maintenance and spoiled and not necessarily team players that will grow and improve. I always wanted coaches that could go find football players. Anybody can pick up a sheet of paper and see where the high-profile guys are. But I wanted our coaches to find football players.

As a head coach, I could care less how many stars a guy had beside his name. All of those stars are just for school to stick out their chest and say ‘we have the best recruiting class’. It means absolutely nothing in the big picture. Like Bob Davie used to say at Notre Dame, there are two seasons – the real season and the recruiting season. The recruiting season is sometimes more important to some but those that often follow recruiting are not the ones going to the games or involved with your program.

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