Mike Ditka is making a triumphant return to the coaching ranks, albeit for one game. Ditka is joining former 49ers coach Steve Mariucci as the celebrity coaches for the 2011 Under Armour High School All-American game this coming January. The game is being aired on ESPN, and the promo featuring Ditka going full Ditka, complete with sunglasses and signature sweater vest, is hilarious. Of course anything with Ditka bringing back “Da Coach” is awesome. Don’t believe me? Rent that wretched [...]
The Last Angry Fan
Tag Archives: Brings
SEC: Bill Curry brings upstart back to Alabama
SEC links for Thursday:
- Alabama plays host to Bill Curry and Georgia State in a rare Thursday night game tonight, reports Izzy Gould of the Birmingham News.
- At Georgia State, Bill Curry is doing what he loves most, writes Tommy Deas of the Tuscaloosa News.
- Curry is busy building the Georgia State program, reports A. Stacy Long of the Montgomery Advertiser.
- Georgia State is preparing for Goliath, writes Ken Sugiura of the AJC.
- ESPN reports that Bill Bell had outline of the Cameron Newton payment plan.
- Cameron Newton reports fire up again, reports the Anniston Star.
- Could TMZ report be a game-changer in Newton case? asks Tony Barnhart of the AJC.
- The Newton story has blown up again, writes John Pennington of Mr. SEC.
- Ron Higgins of the Memphis Commercial Appeal says it’s time to open the door on the SEC’s ethics policy.
- Tennessee makes the most of a (Trae) Golden opportunity, writes Mike Strange of the Knoxville News-Sentinel.
- Kyle Veazey of the Clarion-Ledger reports on Ole Miss’ convincing basketball win over Murray State.
- Vanderbilt and Tennessee football coaches get new look at rivalry, writes Jeff Lockridge of the Tennessean.
- Tyler Bray has taken command at Tennessee, reports Wes Rucker of the Chattanooga Times Free Press.
- Weaknesses will collide when LSU plays Ole Miss, writes Randy Rosetta of The Advocate.
- Arkansas enjoying third-down success, writes Robbie Neiswanger of the Arkansas News.
- Florida could be without three starters on Saturday, writes Jason Leiser of the Palm Beach Post.
- Ohio State left Florida basketball with a black eye, reports David Jones of Florida Today.
Irons’ death brings surfing community even closer together
Surf culture has always been a fairly close-knit community, and competitive surfing even more so.
In surfing there are no billion-dollar franchises, huge television contracts, or teams of agents and lawyers. There’s barely any press at even the biggest surf events, no monster stadiums, or multi-year contracts. No trades. No playoffs. No paparazzi or rumor mills.
And the truth is, surfers prefer it that way. Not many kids will ever get the chance to shoot hoops with LeBron. And not many will ever kick a ball with Ronaldo. But any surfer can journey down to Florida’s Sebastian Inlet for a chance to share a wave with Kelly Slater.
And any kid can head to the Pinetrees on Hawaii’s North Shore for a chance ride with Andy Irons. Or at least could. The three-times world surfing champion was found dead on Tuesday in a Dallas hotel room.
For the last 15 years Slater and Irons had dominated competitive surfing. Kelly was first, bursting on to the scene in early ‘92 with his perfect drops and unreal speed. In short order he proved there’d never been anything on the seas quite like him.
Slater rode harder and faster than anyone, and brought with him a technical mastery the sport didn’t even realize it was missing. He was untouchable. For a long time the ASP World Tour was pretty much the Kelly Slater show.
Then along came Andy. He grew up idolizing Kelly, but whereas most would crumble when they paddled out with the master, Andy seemed to relish it. Some even said he seemed calmer competing against Kelly than he did just riding among friends.
Andy was Slater’s only real competition for years, besting him to the top of the WSP ranking in 2002, 2003 and 2004. No one could layback like Andy. Or hack like him. He could dazzle on the highest wave or the shortest one.
His rivalry with Kelly, though short in the grand scheme of things, was the subject of incessant chatter up and down every coastline for years. Some stores would even post how many Kelly versus Irons highlight reels they’d sold that month, as though it was some sort of contest, like the Stones versus the Beatles or long boards versus short.
Kelly was one of hundreds to paddle out in the Kauai waters for Andy’s memorial. The two had become close over recent years, dining regularly with their wives, and rumor has it, discussing just about anything so long as surfing never came up.
They made each other better, Kelly and Andy. Not just at the dinner table, but out in the water too. They made the sport better – the two of them, studying one another, mimicking each other, revising and competing; always competing.
Surfing has always been just a small sport that happens to be played across the biggest, wettest arena in the world. The stars are still known by their first names, and the community is just small enough that everyone knows everyone by six degrees. Tales get passed down across beaches everywhere. Stories of the rights at J-Bay, sudden 30-footers off Trestles, or a fabled perfect path at Teahupoo.
Andy was in a lot of those stories. News of his death, at just 32, has shaken the community to the core. The healing will be slow, with the circumstances surrounding his death making the process even harder. Andy always said surfing kept his demons away, that he always came out of the water a better man than when he went in.
Not only did he come out better, but the sport came out better too.
PHOTO: Andy Irons of Hawaii rides a wave during the third round of competition in the Billabong Pro surfing tournament on the legendary reef break in Teahupoo, Tahiti, May 14, 2008. REUTERS/Joseba Etxaburu.
Rebecca Kleefisch brings up dog marriage in Wisconsin campaign
The year is 2010, and American politicians are still comparing gay marriage to marrying dogs.
Although not just dogs, in fairness.
Rebecca Kleefisch, Republican candidate for Lt. Gove…
The Blotter
Cole Konrad: “I’m just looking forward to defending my belt and seeing where this brings me.”
PRESS RELEASE / CHICAGO, Ill. — After posting back-to-back unanimous decision victories to gain entry into the Bellator Season 4 Heavyweight Tournament finals, it took Cole “The Polar Bear” Konrad just four minutes and 45 seconds to finish his most dangerous opponent to date last Thursday night becoming the first-ever Bellator World Heavyweight Champion. Konrad [...]
Five Ounces of Pain
Depth Chart Release Brings Surprises
Prior to the start of his press conference a few minutes ago, Alabama head coach Nick Saban released the much-anticipated depth chart. Some things were as expected, but there were some legitimately surprises as well. As an initial primer, the high points:
- DeQuan Menzie is listed as the starting cornerback opposite Dre Kirkpatrick, while B.J. Scott is in a back-up role. This has to be the surprise of camp to date, no doubt about it. Most expected Menzie to have to redshirt after his Achilles injury, and with him being able to not only come in and play immediately but to beat out Scott as the starting cornerback is hard to believe. Scott and Milliner are listed as the back-ups to Menzie, while Phelon Jones and John Fulton are listed as the back-ups to Kirkpatrick. In reality, though, I imagine that Scott and Milliner are the third and fourth cornerbacks in the rotation.
- Menzie will also be the first choice at the star position, according to Saban. That is big news if Menzie can stay healthy because that will allow Barron to remain at safety — which helps quality depth there — and it likely opens a path for either Scott or Milliner to come in on nickel packages and play outside at corner, much like Marquis Johnson did a year ago. Given the prevalence of the nickel package in Saban’s defense, while not listed as a starter, the third corner will nevertheless play a lot of snaps.
- Chavis Williams is listed as the starting linebacker at Sam, while Jerrell Harris is listed as the starting linebacker at Will. Surprisingly enough, Chris Jordan was not listed as a starter. For what it’s worth, Saban said in his press conference a few minutes ago that Williams’ progress at Sam allowed the coaching staff to move Harris inside, so at least it seems like a move that was made from a position of strength.
- C.J. Mosley is listed as the back-up to Jerrell Harris at Will, and Saban explicitly referred to him as someone who “gets it.” Obviously you can forget about him getting a redshirt, and that likely means that Chris Jordan has been moved full-time to Mike, which is a nice move for him because that will effectively allow him on the field every time we move Hightower to the edge to use him as a pass rusher.
- Josh Chapman is listed as the starter at nose guard over Kerry Murphy, but based on Saban’s comments I don’t think it means anything. He said they had been back and forth all Fall, and that Chapman’s experience is giving him the edge at the moment.
Final Scrimmage Brings End to Fall Practice
Fighting the brutal late August heat, Alabama completed it’s final scrimmage Saturday afternoon in Bryant-Denny Stadium, and in doing so brought Fall practice to an unofficial close. With the final scrimmage in the history books, attention will quickly turn to the season opener against San Jose State. The Crimson Tide players will be rewarded with off days on both Sunday and Monday, and when the team reconvenes on Tuesday afternoon, some players will be greeted with opponent-specific preparations while others will receive scout team assignments. The usual in-season grind will once again become the new normal.
In its format, this scrimmage was a good bit different than what we saw one week ago. Last week’s scrimmage focused extensively on the passing game, not an unusual design given how many repetitions it takes to effectively implement pass protection sets, complex cover schemes, and the requisite timing required between quarterbacks and wide receivers.
This scrimmage, however, was designed to emulate an actual game. Roughly the first 50 snaps — about one half of football in a typical game — were played live with special teams, turnovers, penalties, substitutions, you name it. There was some situational work later, but the point remains that the purpose of this scrimmage was to replicate an actual game as closely as possible.
When all was said and done, the best news today for Alabama was that there were no serious injuries reported. Preston Dial missed the scrimmage with some apparently minor ailment, and both Josh Chapman (thigh) and Trent Richardson (shoulder) were nicked up a bit during the scrimmage itself, but none of those injuries are considered serious, nor are they expected to force any of those players to miss more than a couple of days of practice. In fact, Coach Saban said after the scrimmage that Richardson could have returned had he needed to, but that the coaching staff found discretion to be the better part of valor.
Coming in a close second in the good news department was that the pass defense had at least a competent showing. All three quarterbacks had solid days, but at least they didn’t lead the offense up and down the field like they were playing PS3 back at their respective apartments. It wasn’t perfect by any stretch, mind you, and the lack of any legitimate interceptions on the roughly 60 pass attempts shows you that — Saban said after practice that the two interceptions listed in the statistics were the result of a batted ball at the line of scrimmage and a Hail Mary heave to the endzone at the end of the scrimmage — the defensive backfield wasn’t exactly putting pressure on the passing game, but after last week’s showing, I’m sure we’ll all happily accept today’s performance and move on. It’s still a work in progress back there, and likely will be for a long time, but at least it was competent on this day.
Making matters even better today was that — and I hope you’re sitting down for this one — the kicking game actually looked quite good. Saban had positive words for both punters, and the official statistics show Jeremy Shelley and Cade Foster going 7-8 on field goal tries, with the only miss being a 52-yard try by Foster (who, incidentally, hit another 52-yarder). To whichever RBR reader sold their soul to the devil to bring about those results, I certainly commend you for your dedication and willingness to pay the high price of victory.
All in all, it was largely all you could hope for in an intra-squad scrimmage. No one was seriously injured, and the two main areas that we needed to improve upon — pass defense and special teams — both showed meaningful signs of progress. Rest assured there are many other coaches in the country tonight who wish they could say that about their teams.
And finally, to close, a few player specific scrimmage thoughts:
- Marcell Dareus was credited with four tackles today, and by all accounts is still working with the first team defense. More so than anything else, that ought to tell you that our coaching staff expects him to receive little, if any, punishment for his role in Agentgate.
- Both DeMarcus Milliner (ankle) and Blake Sims (toe) missed the scrimmage as expected. Sims will likely redshirt, and while Milliner will clearly play this season, at this point the goal of the medical staff is likely to just get him as close to 100% as humanly possible for the season opener.
- It may surprise some that neither Marquis Maze or Darius Hanks recorded any stats today, but keep in mind that there were over 100 receiving yards unaccounted for, and in any event everything we’ve seen to date has indicated they still have starting jobs alongside Julio Jones. With that said, though, we do have a deep wide receiver corps and several players will see playing time.
- The battle for the number three tailback job still looks undecided, with both Demetrius Goode and Eddie Lacy earning a lot of carries today. Both posted relatively impressive numbers, and at the end of the day I still say this battle comes down to pass protection. Regardless, both look like strong players to me, and it’s hard to see us going wrong with either one. These two could start for many other schools.
- I’m not sure if the injury to Josh Chapman was actually a new injury or merely the aggravation of a pre-existing injury. Previously this Fall he was spotted at practice with his thigh area heavily taped, so this may be nothing new. One way or the other, whatever the injury is it does not seem to be serious.
- Robert Lester had a nice appearance in the stat column this afternoon with four tackles, an interception, and a pass broken up. If nothing else, he likely made his case for a starting job today. By all accounts, that is the most productive scrimmage he has had since arriving on campus.
- Brad Smelley had five catches for 71 yards and a touchdown, clearly making the most of his opportunity with the absence of Preston Dial. That said, I’m not sure it really means anything or not. Everyone knows Smelley can be a valuable contributor in the passing game, the real question with him is his blocking abilities, and regardless of his contributions as a receiver he will be hard-pressed to find playing time unless he develops his blocking skills further.
- Phillip Sims has operated under the radar screen so far, but I do think it should be noted that he played very well this Fall in his own right, and at just about any other school he would be getting serious consideration for playing time. The battles that he and McCarron will wage one day will likely be epic. Given the early returns on those two, I’m not sure Alabama has had two quarterback prospects of that caliber since Joe Namath and Ken Stabler were both members of the 1964 team.

