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  • in a league that "limits" you to 25 per class....got it....

    and people wonder why the BIG can't recruit with the sec....

    ***********************
    Hutchinson (Kan.) Community College defensive tackle Toby Johnson, the nation's No. 4 prospect in the ESPN Junior College 100, committed to Georgia on Tuesday during a press conference at Hutchinson.

    Johnson chose the Bulldogs over offers from Auburn, Mississippi State and Oklahoma.

    More on Georgia

    DawgNation Everything Georgia, from recruiting to news to game coverage, is available at ESPN.com's DawgNation.
    More:
    ? ESPN.com Recruiting coverage
    ? ESPN.com's SEC blog

    "I called Mark Richt last night and told him I was coming," Johnson said. "He was fired up. They want me to play defensive end, but I will move inside in the nickel package."

    Johnson became Georgia's 33rd commitment and put a cherry on top of an already-stacked Bulldogs' 2013 class. He is the top-ranked defensive tackle and seventh overall defensive lineman in the class.

    Johnson visited Mississippi State over the weekend and was thought to be leaning to playing in Starkville, Miss. The 6-foot-4, 305-pound defensive tackle also visited Auburn the weekend of Feb. 8 and visited Georgia back in December.

    Johnson also made visits to Oklahoma and Missouri in September and December, respectively. But many felt the decision would come down to Mississippi State, Georgia and Auburn because of the relationships built with members of each coaching staff.

    "He had a lot of options, No. 1, but trying to figure out which would be best, it was real tough," said Hutchinson coach Rion Rhoades.

    As weeks passed, however, some thought Georgia -- a program Johnson considered a longtime leader -- was looking more like a dark horse candidate while Auburn and Mississippi State were front-runners.

    But Georgia seemed to creep back in the picture when Chris Wilson left Mississippi State to take a defensive line position with Georgia.

    "I liked Coach Wilson when he was at Mississippi State," Johnson told ESPN's DawgNation in January. "I think he can make me better each and every day. He can make me versatile and help me get to the next level."

    A second-team NJCAA All-American, Johnson finished the year with 37 tackles, three sacks and four pass breakups in nine games. Johnson, who is rehabbing a torn ACL in his right knee, is expected to be an immediate contributor for Georgia.





    Post Extras:
    Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

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    • College Football Stadium Experience Rankings - Stadium Journey

      Over the past two seasons, the correspondents at Stadium Journey have made the rounds to every college football stadium at the top FBS level. Their rankings of the stadium experiences are based on considering many aspects of the stadium experience including food and beverage served, overall atmosphere, the neighborhood, fans, access to and within the stadium, and overall return on investment.

      #6 Memorial Stadium - Home of the Nebraska Cornhuskers

      The outside of the stadium is like a carnival, with people wearing red everywhere, food booths, people looking for or selling tickets and a little further out from the stadium are tons of people tailgating in parking lots. On the east side of the stadium there is the Husker Legacy statue commemorating the Huskers national championships in 1970, 1971, 1994 and 1995.

      Baseball is a beloved sport and greatest past time for sports fans around the world. Line up for peanuts, cracker jacks, and never care if you ever come back from your next sports travel adventure. Find your next ballgame and hit a home run on your next vacation here at Stadium Journey.
      Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

      Comment


      • That is, single-handedly, the stupidest stadium ranking in the history of stadium rankings.
        Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
        Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

        Comment


        • STFU
          Shut the fuck up Donny!

          Comment


          • Originally posted by iam416 View Post
            That is, single-handedly, the stupidest stadium ranking in the history of stadium rankings.

            LOL.. yea.. LSU that low seems odd. they must of attended a game vs a div iAA team
            Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

            Comment


            • Indiana, under no system, is the 4th best venue in the B10.
              Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
              Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

              Comment


              • Oversigning Index: On another front, it's still Alabama and everyone else

                By Matt Hinton | Blogger
                February 19, 2013 7:27 pm ET

                Last week, four Alabama players were arrested on felony charges, suspended indefinitely from the team and barred from campus. In Tuscaloosa, the news prompted opposite reactions.

                Per standard protocol, Crimson Tide fans braced themselves for a tidal wave of schadenfreude, inevitable taunts of "Parole Tide!" and the early lead in the Fulmer Cup. At the same time, though, there was virtually none of the usual handwringing over the impact to the depth chart. This time, the offenders were utterly expendable, for reasons that had nothing to do with the fact that they happened to be backups: Not only can the defending BCS champs afford to lose a handful of potential contributors in one fell swoop, but more so than any other major college football team this spring, it actually needs to. After adding 26 new names to the roster earlier this month -- and landing again in its familiar spot atop the national recruiting rankings -- Alabama is the most oversigned outfit in the nation.

                That should come as no surprise, given that Bama has consistently (and legally) operated on the edge of NCAA scholarship caps throughout Nick Saban's tenure. Ostensibly, teams are limited to 85 scholarship players on the roster at any given time. In practice, because the NCAA doesn't do a head count until the start of preseason practice in July or August, sometimes long after incoming freshmen and other newcomers have already arrived on campus, coaches can cross the line on national signing day as long as they're able to come in under the cap six months later. Yet even after a concerted crackdown on "oversigning" by the SEC over the past three years, no coach in any league overshot the mark this year with such gusto.

                Alabama wasn't very far from the line to begin with. The Crimson Tide only lost a dozen scholarship players from last year's unusually young BCS championship team, including three early departures for the NFL and a former walk-on (long snapper Carson Tinker) who was awarded a scholarship before last season, leaving them with at least 70 scholarship players scheduled to return in 2013 and a maximum of 14 available openings. Still, on signing day, Bama added almost twice that number -- including, yes, a two-star prospect from California, Cole Mazza, who is projected strictly as a long snapper. Few other schools had so few slots to fill, and the ones that did did not come close to overshooting the mark by such a distance: Relative to the competition, Saban and his staff effectively recruited as if scholarship limits do not exist.

                Of course they do exist, and one way or another Alabama must toe the line by the start of preseason practice like everyone else. That can happen any number of ways, and already has: One of the 26 signees in the new class, three-star offensive lineman Bradley Bozeman, has already agreed to "grayshirt," or delay his enrollment until 2014 so as not to count against this year's scholarship cap; a few of his more touted classmates will probably be forced to follow suit. One or two others may fall short academically. As we've already seen, legal and disciplinary issues can unexpectedly thin the ranks overnight. Inevitably, some veteran backups will read the writing on the wall and decide to transfer some place with a more accommodating depth chart.

                If all else fails, it comes down to making cuts, preferably in a fashion that doesn't involve actually having to say, "you're cut," which Saban adamantly denies he has ever done. The first to go are usually fifth-year seniors who are unlikely to contribute, a relatively uncontroversial move as it's common at many schools for veteran backups to bow out quietly after four years with a degree in hand. (Alabama has several candidates for this path, most notably linebacker Jonathan Atchison and defensive linemen William Ming, Anthony Orr and Chris Bonds, all members of the 2009 recruiting class who have yet to earn a letter.) Injured players may be asked to accept a medical hardship, which allows them to remain on scholarship without counting against the cap but effectively ends their career, even if the injury is not necessarily career-ending. (Saban has been criticized in the past for using the hardship more than any other coach, and by players who said they felt pressured to accept a hardship. At least one player who was released for medical reasons has gone on to play at another school, albeit on a much lower level.) Though all transfers are technically voluntary, some may come with a tacit endorsement from coaches -- only looking out for the player's best interest in getting on the field, naturally. Asking an incoming recruit to delay enrollment after he's signed a letter of intent is a last resort. But whatever it takes, there is no way around the fact that somewhere in the vicinity of a dozen players currently slated to wear the Crimson Tide uniform this fall will be culled from the roster over the next six months.

                (For the record, here is a complete breakdown of Alabama's current roster by signing class, including incoming recruits in the class of 2013 and the four recently arrested players -- Brent Calloway, Tyler Hayes, D.J. Pettway and Eddie Williams -- who have been suspended from the team but not dismissed.)

                No other team is facing that level of inevitable, automatic attrition. The closest to Alabama, numbers-wise, is Washington, which also lost just 12 scholarship players from last year's roster but just signed 22, bringing its unofficial scholarship count to at least 91 (not including any former walk-ons who may have earned scholarships). Among teams from the "Big Six" conferences with automatic BCS bids, current rosters indicate Virginia (90 scholarship players), Vanderbilt (89) and Oregon State (88) also have some relatively intensive trimming to do between now and August:

                http://www.cbssports.com/images/collegefootball/13:02:19-Oversigning_Index_Large.jpg

                Assembling those numbers is not only a time-consuming exercise: It's also a quixotic one, no matter how meticulously researched, amounting to a fleeting snapshot of living organisms in a constant state of flux. Walk-ons, medical hardships and other vagaries are not easily accounted for.

                In general, though, it's fair to say that recent rules changes targeting oversigning have largely paid off, especially in the SEC, whose members once dominated the genre to an extent that is no longer true across the conference as a whole. Every team beneath the top two or three on that list is well within the range of "natural" attrition, and most of them will probably end up a little below the cap once grades, legal issues and injuries have taken their toll. In several of those cases -- see Michigan, Notre Dame and Texas, for sure -- the more obsessive factions of the fan base can already predict which fifth-year seniors are likely on their way out. Oregon State has enthusiastically embraced the grayshirt under coach Mike Riley. Kentucky, now under the watch of first-year head coach Mark Stoops, can expect the usual exodus that tends to follow the arrival of a new staff. Spring practice is a reliable filter for players who fail to make a move on the depth chart and opt for a transfer.

                So outside of Tuscaloosa, it looks like business as usual. No, scratch that: Inside Tuscaloosa, it looks like business as usual, too. Nick Saban is just running his business on a slightly different scale.
                Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

                Comment


                • Targeting rule will come with replay

                  Posted by Berry Tramel

                  on February 19, 2013M at 12:30 pm


                  The NCAA is considering a serious penalty for players who target the head area. Ejection from the game.

                  The NCAA Football Rules Committee last week unanimously approved strengthening the penalty for intentional, above-the-shoulder hits. The 15-yard penalty now carries immediate ejection. The Playing Rules Oversight Panel must also approve the plan.

                  My only objection was the often-tenuous ruling on these penalties. Sometimes what looks like the head is actually the shoulder. Sometimes teams get penalized when a player didn’t cross the line.

                  But I’ve heard from some football officials who say the new rule will include automatic replay review. If a player is to be ejected, the play will be reviewed. If indeed the head area was not hit, the player will not be ejected. The penalty will stand, but the ejection will not be enforced.

                  That could make for some game interruptions, but at least an innocent player is not banished.

                  I know people are tired of the targeting penalties and all the concussion discussion, but the truth is, football is growing increasingly more dangerous, and something has to be done. the NFL knows it, the NCAA knows it, hopefully high schools and youth officials know it.

                  Rules committee chairman Troy Calhoun, the head coach at Air Force, said there were 99 targeting penalties called in major college football last season.

                  “It’s not a gigantic number,” Calhoun said of the 99. “Ultimately, our goal is zero.”

                  The rulesmakers are serious. If a player is guilty in the first half, he sits out the rest of that game. If a player is guilty in the second half of a game, he sits out the first half of the next game.

                  College football coaches will cringe at that latter scenario. It just might make coaches stress how players hit and what to avoid.
                  Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

                  Comment


                  • only the NCAA could f up an instant replay... if it isn't targeting, then it shouldn't be a penalty either.
                    Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

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                    • efz
                      Shut the fuck up Donny!

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                      • Right. How can there be a penalty if there was not penalty.

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                        • Bama was at 95 scholarships on signing day, rich keep getting richer. NCAA needs to adopt the B10 rule of only allowing to go over 85 (over by 3) on signing day ONLY if you know where those spots are coming from.
                          Last edited by WM Wolverine; February 20, 2013, 08:31 PM.

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                          • The SEC won't even enforce its own rules... The presidents and commish either have no power or don't care
                            Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

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                            • SIPeteThamel: This will be Fox's big announcement tomo. RT @TomJolly: Fox set to announce new network it sees as rival for ESPN: http://t.co/4MhEkLjoTk
                              Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

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                              • oregon state's new mascot
                                Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

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