Archive for the 'Media' Category

Tradition II

We are all aware of this wonderful word, “tradition”. Clemson is ripe with it. Since day one of becoming a Tiger and becoming a member of the Clemson Family I have defended every Clemson tradition I am aware of. Tigerama, First Friday, Mac’s, singing the alma mater, homecoming floats and of course running down the hill. We have all found ourselves, at one time or another, debating with some joker from another school claiming how a screaming chicken on the loudspeaker, or a deacon on a motorcycle, (dare I say it) a guy with a tuba doting an “i” or how everyone wearing white is a site to behold. We have all found ourselves standing toe to toe debating how running down the hill and Howard’s Rock are the greatest football traditions in the nation until we are blue in the face. Clemson tradition usually can find itself somewhere in a top 20 list every year, usually to be found around number 20, mostly due to our lack of a journalism school. Every now and then, we find ourselves in a top 10 which is pretty sweet, these can be found typically on ESPN after a solid win. Now, now we can say we are number one, from a very Florida biased paper none the less. Please enjoy…

Tradition

Maybe the best ESPN article on Clemson tradition, ever. Make sure you have Quicktime to enjoy the 360 picture of the run down the hill before the FSU game this year.

The whole worlds a watchin

From last weekend’s football broadcasts and their viewing audiences:

Day Date Time Netw Visiting Team Home Team Rating HHs
Thu 30-Aug 6:58pm ESPN2 Tulsa Louisiana-Monroe 0.33 320,222
Thu 30-Aug 8:00pm ESPN LSU Mississippi State 2.36 2,271,380
Fri 31-Aug 8:00pm ESPN Washington Syracuse 1.65 1,588,791
Sat 1-Sep 12:00pm ESPN East Carolina Virginia Tech 2.52 2,423,320
Sat 1-Sep 12:00pm ESPN2 UAB Michigan State 0.55 531,673
Sat 1-Sep 3:00pm Classic Southern Florida A&M 0.07 47,306
Sat 1-Sep 3:30pm ABC Wake Forest Boston College 2.15 2,427,457
Sat 1-Sep 3:30pm ABC Washington State Wisconsin 2.15 2,427,457
Sat 1-Sep 3:30pm ABC Nevada Nebraska 2.15 2,427,457
Sat 1-Sep 3:30pm ESPN2 Missouri Illinois 0.87 837,885
Sat 1-Sep 6:45pm ESPN2 Oklahoma State Georgia 1.27 1,219,546
Sat 1-Sep 7:45pm ESPN Kansas State Auburn 1.80 1,728,724
Sat 1-Sep 8:00pm ABC Tennessee California 3.26 3,677,434
Mon 3-Sep 4:00pm ESPN Texas Tech SMU 1.75 1,687,796
Mon 3-Sep 8:00pm ESPN Florida State Clemson 5.03 4,842,356

That’s right, almost 5 million people laid their eyes on the Tigers reigning supreme on Monday night. Hello, recruiting opportunity, yes thankyou.

That’s a Cute Idea

So “The News Star”, a newspaper publication in the wonderful partying state of the Union, has interviewed LaMo’s safety. What comes first in the article, but a reference to App State. This is by no means a cut on the Mountaineers, your win is one for the books, but let’s be real here. I suppose LaMo has a better statistical chance of defeating the Tigers, but let’s be real here. I got an even better chuckle out of the “if we decide to beat Clemson” comment, but let’s be real here. If the power of positive thought was “real”, then I choose to stomp Ohio State in the Ultraverse Bowl this year. What a party that win will be.

Reporting Time

Apparently it is time for the yearly reporting of NCAA violations and other wrong doings. Now I expect that at some point or another an over-eager assistant in any given sport is likely to do something they shouldn’t. I belief these are considered Level II violations and result in silly punishments like letters of reprimand or a day or two off the recruiting trail (can you say more time to analyze tape and fill out paperwork). Half the time I am guessing they don’t realize their actions are against the rules until after the fact or someone tells them so. Anyway, we had a few of these but no sports were listed except the oft discussed (at least on this site) Women’s Rowing Team. Lueck’s “relief of duties” was mentioned after some preferential treatment including lodging was given by the coach to a student. Gee, I wonder who was involved. The article also mentioned the coach was let go a day prior to a match on Lake Hartwell and two weeks prior to the ACC’s. No additional details were spoken about and the new coach coming from Louisville was quoted, and I am paraphrasing, that the infractions were not to a degree that the program would lose stability. I would love to agree but only time will tell on that one. Nice media sound bite though as most probably have no clue what all is/was going on.

What irks me is this: One, the sidebar headline read “Ex-coach committed violations.” Now this was on the ESPNU College Sports (I assume this is the page for most of the non-revenue sports) that I linked just by hitting the “ESPNU” link at the top of the college football page. Now, I wasn’t differentiating the sport types at the time, but I was still surprised to see this. I figured this was the story but they spoke a lot about this and didn’t mention anything about names, teams, sports, etc on any of the other violations. As we all know ESPN is a huge outlet. Had I not gone back to reference the other stories on this page, I could have easily been pulled in thinking they had Danny Ford on something from 20 years ago, or something screwy going on with the basketball team. Either way a Clemson fan, or rival fan looking for a talking point would easily pick up on a headline like this and run with it. This wasn’t something on page 6 of 5 in the Anderson daily newspaper. I’ll be interested to see how the whole saga shakes out but now that the media attention is a bit more widespread. I’m wondering if the ripples (no pun intended) will build more into waves instead of fading out as I thought they were.

Reliable Sources

One month to game day and I’m going to give you all the news fit to print on the big boards (re: the stuff the little guys pay for). This is pretty much a flash news style that should not infringe on any posted copyright laws or other such potential problems. Please excuse the short hand in the mean time and enjoy.

As everyone knows, summer practices have been initiated and with them comes some position changes. With the announced position changes come one that seems to be a Clemson tradition, that being a QB moving to another position. The player filling this prophecy is Michael Wade, who probably pulled a Coleman and asked the coaches for a move after seeing the depth ahead of him this year as well as in the future. The QB forces include Cullen Harper, who seems to have an immeasurable gap on the rest of the competition as of now, followed up by the proclaimed Clemson savior: Willy Korn. Next year Harper and Korn should still be around only to have a third QB, Kyle Parker, who has just finished off an elite 11 camp with more than enough compliments on his performance. Needless to say, Wade seems to have made a good choice, the only problem is that he has moved into a position that may be developing depth that will push him out as well. Wade is slated to start playing as a safety this season.

Speaking of safeties, Wade fills a hole that has been created by another position move. That being of Sadat Chambers from CAT safety to running back. This move was prompted by the fact that Tommy’s concerns with Ray Ray’s ability to balance his already grueling task of raising his kid brother, school work and fulfilling his team duties. This move would put additional depth at the RB position of course and Chambers came out of HS with high credentials at the position so it should be a smooth transition. The safeties will also be bolstered by incoming freshman talent, Scotty Cooper who could also play at the LB position if they become too thin.

The third move is of Kevin Alexander from linebacker to bandit end. He will fall behind Gaines Adams prodigy (no seriously the kid follows everything that Gaines did when he was in school) Ricky Sapp and Kwam Williams. Not much there really, just spreads out some talent for depth at the position.

Speaking of defense, as mentioned before, this team is stacked with talent. The freshmen and sophomores are running rampant in taking positions and pushing juniors and seniors to second team. The talk of the town is DeAndre McDaniel who, after blowing up spring practice, headed home for personal training before coming back for the summer session. McDaniels is being called a heat seeking missile who is just speed looking to hit something….hard. From what I have heard, he bent more than a few receivers in half through spring training and scrimmage. Most publications are calling for him to beat out either Clemons or Hamlin by the end of the summer for a starting position.

In the corners you have voids left by seniors and virtually filled by their seconds, Chris Chancellor and Crezdon Butler. Butler had an exceptional, almost Justin Miller, freshman year with a few picks and overall excellent play as a true freshman. This may come in handy as the corner position is picking up talent and competition is fierce for the starting position. Along with the “seasoned” Chancellor and Butler you have Byron Maxwell, true freshman Marcus Gilchrist and Haydrian Lewis vying for positions. Most publications have Chancellor and Butler moving back with Gilchrist and Maxwell taking the starting positions and Lewis playing a 3rd man role for extended depth. Overall, the secondary has more than enough young talent to play well this year, the only question is can they handle the “real time” play as not many of them have been on the playing field for much if any time at all.

Returning linebackers are pretty much the three horsemen with Billie, Watkins and Clay. Watkins, being the only “returning” linebacker also comes in as the leading tackler on the team. Billie comes off a season that never was due to injuries incurred in the last practice of the summer in ‘06. Clay comes off a bout with depression after losing his sister to an auto accident that pretty much numbed him through the end of last season. All three have commented that they are ready to play and look forward to terrorizing the ACC with their speed and almost unhealthy appetite to disembowel the ball carrier. The front three are backed up by younger but rising talent: Kavell Conner and Josh Miller. This position, although strong in the front, does not have the ability to go through what it went through the previous year with injuries and mental anguish. Cross your fingers and hope that the front three see starts in all 12+ games this year. If that happens, you can look forward to the Tiger run defense ranking in the top of the ACC.

The D-Line contains a bunch of returning starters, sans the currently stated irreplaceable Gaines Adams. Ricky Sapp may have something to say about that though as he takes Gaines’s spot on the line and has taken his responsibilities seriously by bulking up over the off season. He maintains his speed but takes away the one weakness from last year, his light weight which allowed O-lines to keep him at bay when they beat him on the outside. Sapp is backed up by Kwam Williams and the newly transfered Kevin Alexander. Sapp is mirrored by Philip Merling who is already being slated as an all ACC lineman and has emerged as a leader on the Defensive side of the ball. Inside the two are Dorrell Scott and Rashad Jackson who return and should hold their spots. Jackson was noted as being “unstoppable” in the spring, hoepfully that continues into the fall.

Read more on the D HERE

On the O side of the ball, you have the QB controversy with Harper and Korn battling it out as well as everyone outside the team looking at the potential of a Florida Leake/Tebow tandem. The problem there is that Leake and Tebow had different styles of play while Harper and Korn are pretty similar in their skill sets. Not to worry though as Tommy has confirmed that Willy will see the field more than backups in the past to reduce the potential meltdown that occured last year with the QB ranks and experience.

Unlike the mirroring of the Florida QB’s, the RB’s are looking to the west coast and possibly accessing USC’s past playbooks. Bowden and Spence are determined to get Davis and Spiller on the field together as much as possible to increase the chances of the big breaks by defusing the defensive concentrations on one single back. With Spiller in motion or the slot, Davis in the backfield and WR’s on the outside, defenses will not be so courageous in crowding the box as they were at the end of last season. The only problem that lies in the plan is the increased field time yields increased potential of injury to one of the star backs. Hence the move of Chambers to RB, increasing the stables just in case. Davis has recovered from all injuries and looks to make an impact in his junior year (although he continuously states that he will stay for a degree) and Spiller spent the offseason improving his speed (yes he is faster) with the track team and fellow speedster Jacoby Ford. Spiller has even received some press on a potential Heisman candidate. Along with the RB’s are the unsung heroes, the fullbacks. Alex Pearson ad Paul Macko should ssplit time in this slot but look out for a potential unheralded freshman possibly playing some at FB as well. Chad Diehl could fill a bunch of positions on the team, but from an interview that I read, he seems to want to play a position whose focused on hard hits. He has the build to be a FB or LB and should be a pleasant surprise in the near future.

Wide receivers seemed to have taken a hit after the departure of Chansi Stuckey as no one neared his numbers last year. But then you have to look at the melt down that occured and how much the ball was actually tossed towards the end of the year as well. Aaron Kelly is said to have stepped up into the lead position for the WR’s and has shaken his weaknesses from the previous year to become a Youngblood-esque threat. Add Kelly’s height and ability to catch the tall ball to his counterpart Jacoby Ford’s speed and ability to get the long ball and you have a deadly combination in the air. The jokes running rampant last year on the boards started “Jacoby is so fast…..” when in all reality he was so fast that he couldn’t make the plays. His routes weren’t that crisp and he could out run Proctor’s passes with ease. With the emergence of Harper and his arm strength as well as Ford’s offseason work with his hands and routes it seems that he has become a viable threat. Along with Kelly and Ford are the returning Tyler Grisham and Renderick Taylor. Grisham, who has become a posession receiver and “most complete receiver”, will continue to play the flats as he has proven that he has trusty hands (ok I know the VT game he dropped that one pass) and got alot of looks in the spring game. Taylor will hopefully make it through a season without injury and live up to his LB scaring potential when he gets the ball. Murmurs also have Taylor in the backfield, fulfilling the J-Back position from last year. Incoming freshman Xavier Dye will challenge all incumbents and has natural skills that have shone already on the field.

And then there is the O-line. Aside from the lack of experience at QB, which seems to have the confidence of all the coaches now, this corp is the “concern” on the team. With all but one starter graduating last year, the line is young and lacking in the experience field. Barry Richardson is slated to go early in the draft at the end of the year which is a good thing as he is on Harper’s blind side. Every other position is young but seems to be forming bonds and have improved greatly through the voluntary workouts in the summer. Along with the O-line come the tight ends who can thank Thomas Hunter and his performance over the past season for the success that will develop here. Before Spence, I don’t think Clemson HAD TE’s. After Spence and his spread out offense TE’s are starting to look to Clemson for potential scholarships. Clemson has a pretty good stock of TE’s with Robinson, Barry, Palmer and incoming talent Brian Linthincum. Palmer will lead the pack but look for Linthincum to climb up the charts after he enrolled early and performed quite well at the spring game (36 yrd TD).

More on the O-Line HERE

Special teams……Clemson…….oxymoron. Clemson may have lost one of their coaches when he left for Alabama but they gained a special teams specialist by hiring Andre Powell from UNC. He has gone through every player on the roster and found the guys who fit each special teams position the best. According to some media you can plan on seeing Jacoby Ford, CJ Spiller and Marcus Gilchrist who had an extraordinary career in high school in the return game. Yes Clemson may have walk ons for the kicker and punter but they have edged out the scholarship kids so they have to be good.

That’s all I got right now, I can’t type anymore. Most of this was probably noted on TNet but some of it came through big sites. Hopefully I didn’t trod on any toes, I applogize if I somehow did.

31

That’s our ranking in the on-going article on ESPN.com this week. This ranking is reflective of the past decade and is covering the teams, 25 at a time, starting at the back of the pack. Rankings are supposed to be a combination of on field performance, NCAA compliance, and classroom performance. I’m pretty sure the last two make up approximately 2% of the weighting. Sadly, I pretty much agree with our ranking though a couple of non-bonehead plays here and there add a win or two and we are top 25 based on what I am seeing. Clemson comments are as follows:

RANK TEAM RECORD WIN % TITLES BOWL RECORD

31 Clemson 70-51 .579 0 3-5

ACC expansion has largely turned the Tigers into conference also-rans, as they haven’t won a league title in 16 years. Coach Tommy Bowden has won 60 games in eight seasons at Clemson, leading the Tigers to a bowl game in all but one year. But the Tigers notoriously have fallen short of lofty expectations during his tenure, including last season’s disappointing 8-5 record.

I couldn’t sum it up better myself.

What I do find humorous is the number of ACC foes in this group. GT at 26, MD at 36, NCSU at 40, UVA at 43….oh and USuCk at 46 for the SEC. I don’t know if this means the conference has a lot of unrealized potential or just really upper crust mediocre. That’s the ACC and it confuses me (last year).

Wake is 60, UNC 67, and Duke is waaaaaaaay back at 115 (of 119).

This leaves Miami, FSU, VT, and BC to round out the ACC and secure our fair share of top 25’s. Nine teams in the top 50, fairs pretty good overall for the conference. 5 teams in the upper middle, indicating they usually win 7 or so games and have a some pretty good mixed in years to balance out with some craters. My projections for the remaining four in tomorrow’s rankings (in ascending order): BC - 25, Miami - 13, FSU - 11, VT - 8. These could be a little off as I am giving more weighting to the last five years than the first five; a trend the article does not seem to follow. Otherwise, FSU and Miami are shoe in’s for the top 10 if not 5 and VT gets punished and pushed back at least 5 spots for late season collapses during the Big East years.

I’ll try and update my projections with commentary tomorrow. This gnome should have plenty of time to roam the web.

**********UPDATE*******

FSU came in at 7, Miami 8, VT 12, and BC 22. The two names everyone knows were not penalized as much for the recent slides becasue of the great earlier success and VT was punished for not being able to consistently finish off their seasons with BCS type appearances. When looking at teh top 25, it’s hard to argue the rankings when looking at the competition and reasoning. This also indicates why the ACC has been a bit of a let down since the expansion.

The beauty of scientific polling

And by scientific polling I mean a fan poll done by The State.

1. Most obnoxious fans in the ACC? - Winner: Clemson, with 47 percent of the vote.

2. Nicest fans in the ACC? - Winner: Clemson, with 32 percent of the vote

I’m guessing that 53% of the people have a clue, and that 47% are coots.