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wlayton was right

14 years 4 months ago #32357 by sadlerdawg
Replied by sadlerdawg on topic Re:wlayton was right
kentdaddy wrote:

I think he is suggesting something good coming from something bad.

I would disagree a bit because if the bad people on Wall Street are good at anything it is cover their own butts.

That being said where did that UF troll from 3 weeks ago run off too? What was his user name?


OK, so then is he suggesting that it's good coaching or bad coaching that Richt waits until the wheels fall off to do things he should have done to begin with (same as '07, when after the UT blowout and barely beating Vandy we "become" one of the best teams in the nation the 2nd half of the season).

The SMART era CONTINUES!!!!!!

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14 years 4 months ago #32358 by kentdaddy
Replied by kentdaddy on topic Re:wlayton was right
sadlerdawg wrote:

OK, so then is he suggesting that it's good coaching or bad coaching that Richt waits until the wheels fall off to do things he should have done to begin with (same as '07, when after the UT blowout and barely beating Vandy we "become" one of the best teams in the nation the 2nd half of the season).


I think that would be open to interpretation. To me it is bad coaching to wait until the house has burned down to call 911.

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14 years 4 months ago #32366 by wlayton
Replied by wlayton on topic Re:wlayton was right
sadlerdawg wrote:

kentdaddy wrote:

I think he is suggesting something good coming from something bad.

I would disagree a bit because if the bad people on Wall Street are good at anything it is cover their own butts.

That being said where did that UF troll from 3 weeks ago run off too? What was his user name?


OK, so then is he suggesting that it's good coaching or bad coaching that Richt waits until the wheels fall off to do things he should have done to begin with (same as '07, when after the UT blowout and barely beating Vandy we "become" one of the best teams in the nation the 2nd half of the season).



Love to create controversy.

Simply saying.....we lose 4 games, everybody's pissed, pressure is now on the coaches, now they perform for a better second half season, still equals a lousy season.

Sadlerdawg.....equating your comments that if AJ had played and the team hadn't played so badly the coaches wouldn't have had to make adjustments to actually improve and win games we may have lost the second half of the season, hence, the silver lining.

I hate silver linings, I want to win from start to finish......and if AJ didn't pull that bonehead sale, we would be leading the East right now.

oh...the crash='s our season.....the good thing ='s either the coaches (bad apples of Wall St) "step up" or they are .......weeded out (gone) hence the silver lining.

Still a BAD losing season......(you know who I blame)

Now I'm confused. :blink:

PVBDAWG

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14 years 4 months ago #32369 by sadlerdawg
Replied by sadlerdawg on topic Re:wlayton was right
OK, wlayton, I got'cha now (I think)!!!!

I'm definitely understanding neither of us (plus many others) are happy with the current state of affairs on the football field!

The SMART era CONTINUES!!!!!!

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14 years 4 months ago #32371 by wlayton
Replied by wlayton on topic Re:wlayton was right
sadlerdawg wrote:

OK, wlayton, I got'cha now (I think)!!!!

I'm definitely understanding neither of us (plus many others) are happy with the current state of affairs on the football field!



BUMP, BUMP and another BUMP. :woohoo: :woohoo: :angry:

PVBDAWG

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14 years 4 months ago #32444 by wlayton
Replied by wlayton on topic Re:wlayton was right
Sorry guys but had to "raise up the dead horse post".

KD....you probably saw this in the paper this morning.





BY: Marc Weiszer | Oct 21 2010
A.J. Green caught his first pass in last Saturday’s game against Vanderbilt more than halfway through the second quarter, but the star receiver’s presence on the field already had made a difference for Georgia.

The Bulldogs had built a 19-0 lead by then en route to a 43-0 rout against the Commodores.

“It was great to see,” Green said.

Vanderbilt unveiled coverages tailor-made to contain Green that Bulldogs coaches had not seen on film.

It did not matter, as Georgia moved the ball anyway.

Kris Durham beat single coverage for a 55-yard completion.

Washaun Ealey broke free for a 58-yard run – the Bulldogs’ longest of the season.

Green, one of college football’s most electrifying playmakers, all but demands defenses to change their normal coverages.

“I don’t think there’s much doubt that he’s drawn the most attention of anybody I’ve coached,” Georgia coach Mark Richt said. “There has definitely been an A.J. Green plan so far. He changes everything.”

That’s saying something considering that Richt coached at Florida State in the 1990s when his offensive stars included receiver Peter Warrick, the No. 4 overall NFL draft pick in 2000.

“Defenses have to know where he is and they’ve got to account for him,” Georgia offensive coordinator Mike Bobo said. “That’s going to take a lot of focus away from just lining up and playing ball.”

Despite their efforts, Green still caught three passes for 64 yards and a touchdown against Vanderbilt. He has 16 catches for 279 yards and four touchdowns in three games since returning from a four-game NCAA suspension for selling his Independence Bowl jersey.

The 6-foot-4, 212-pound junior caught six passes for 96 yards and a touchdown in a 41-14 win over Tennessee the week before Vanderbilt.

“You just can’t get yourself caught up there in a lot of one-on-one matchups, he’s such a special player,” Tennessee coach Derek Dooley said. “What happens is it’s robbing Peter to pay Paul. You’re so focused on trying to handle A.J. It really puts a lot of pressure on the rest of your defense, whether it’s in the run game or in pass coverage away from A.J.”

Georgia has averaged 37.0 points and 452.7 yards per game since Green’s return and 24.3 points and 352.3 yards without him.

“A.J. brings a whole new dimension to the offense,” quarterback Aaron Murray said. “It definitely changes defenses up a lot. They have to put a safety over top and shade a linebacker to his side. It just opens up other players to make plays and everyone else has really stepped up.”

Durham took advantage against Vanderbilt, catching four passes for 112 yards and a touchdown.

“We did a little bit more in the coverage in the back end than we had and we didn’t execute really well,” Vanderbilt coach Robbie Caldwell said. “Of course, Georgia had a lot to do with that.”

Georgia rushed for 124.3 yards per game while Green was suspended and has averaged 185.3 per game since he’s been back. Tight ends Orson Charles and Aron White combined for six catches for 66 yards in the four games without Green and 12 catches for 193 in the three with him.

“He keeps those safeties out of the box,” tailback Carlton Thomas said. “Ain’t too many guys can cover that guy one-on-one, so you’re going to have to take somebody out of the box and give us more running room and some more space to get in and out of the backfield. A.J. does a lot from scoring touchdowns to demanding that double team.”

With good reason.

Green is fourth in program history with 18 touchdown catches and sixth among active FBS players in receiving yards per game at 78.8.

“When you start seeing coverages you’ve not seen before,” Richt said, “then you know it’s because of A.J.”



BINGO........huh, KD?

PVBDAWG

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