Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2013 9:10:43 GMT -5
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2013 15:27:12 GMT -5
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2013 15:29:33 GMT -5
Morrison doesn't have a previous record so I don't expect much to come of this. Get it settled Huntley Johnson:
UF linebacker Morrison released from jail By Kevin Brockway Staff writer
Published: Monday, June 17, 2013 at 4:09 p.m.
Last Modified: Monday, June 17, 2013 at 4:09 p.m.
Florida sophomore linebacker Antonio Morrison was released Monday from Alachua County Jail on his own recognizance.
Morrison, 19, is facing a misdemeanor charge of simple battery. He was arrested early Sunday morning after police said he punched a bouncer outside the Kava Bar and Hookah Lounge in Gainesville because he wouldn't give him a discount on a cover charge.
Morrison's attorney, Huntley Johnson, said he is hopeful that the case will be resolved within a timetable of two weeks to two months.
“At this point, he would enter a plea of not guilty, but we need to talk to witnesses,” Johnson said.
Morrison, 6-foot-1 and 240 pounds, is a projected starter at middle linebacker in 2013. He had 34 tackles and one sack as a freshman. His biggest play came on a hit and forced fumble of Florida State quarterback E.J. Manuel last November. Florida recovered the fourth-quarter fumble, a momentum-turning play in UF's 37-26 win over the rival Seminoles.
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2013 15:39:09 GMT -5
Monday June 17, 2013The Top 10: Chris Harry's Top UF Team Moments of 2012-13
GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- Talk about ending a year in style.
The very last athletic event of the University of Florida’s 2012-13 sports calendar proved to be one of the biggest and best -- a championship instant, no less -- and thus took its appropriate place on my list of the top 10 memorable moments for UF’s sports teams.
You may disagree with the order and probably will disagree with several of the entries -- that’s what we’re here for -- but the chances are excellent you were either watching at the time or beaming with pride when learning of these accomplishments during a year when UF won or shared eight Southeastern Conference titles and two national championships.
Not surprisingly, the latter rate the top spots.
For gymnastics ... finally
After so many close calls -- including the .075 heartbreak of 2012 -- it wasn’t just that the UF gymnastics team captured the first NCAA title in school history that warrants them a spot at No. 1.
It was how they did it.
After watching both Kytra Hunter and Ashanee Dickerson spill from the balance beam on UF’s very first rotation, the Gators easily could have cashed it in.
Instead, Coach Rhonda Faehn reminded her troops of what still could be done (rather than bemoaning the damage already done) and freshman Bridget Sloan led her team from there.
Floor? Nailed it.
Vault? Money.
Bars? Spectacular.
The Gators nudged past Oklahoma and Alabama in that final rotation to claim the longtime elusive crown.
Men’s track makes it two straight in dramatic fashion
Sometimes, champions have to be opportunists.
Ask UF’s 4x400 relay team.
The Gators trailed SEC rival Texas A&M by nine points heading into the final event of the NCAA meet June 8. The only way UF could defend its national title was by running a perfect race combined with some sort of disaster or controversy to the A&M relay team (the top-ranked 4x400 unit in the nation by the way).
Guess what.
The Aggies dropped the baton on the first exchange, while the third-seeded Florida team of Najee Glass, Hugh Graham, Jr., Dedric Dukes and anchor Arman Hall sped to victory in the event. The Gators got the accompanying 10 first-place points, while the Aggies, in finishing eighth, got one point.
Tie meet.
Co-national champions.
For UF coach Mike “Mouse” Holloway, it was his fifth NCAA crown in the last four seasons, with three straight indoor titles (2010-12) and now consecutive outdoors (’12-13).
“Johnny Football” meets Gators football
Raise your hand if you’ve heard this regarding UF’s win at Texas A&M and the utter shutdown of Johnny Manziel and that ridiculous Aggies offense last September.
“Yeah well, it was his first college game.”
True.
But in “Johnny Football’s” first half of his first football game, Manziel and his offense ripped the Gators for 269 yards and 17 first downs on 46 plays, and never punted.
In seven second-half possessions, A&M gained just 69 yards, tallied four first downs, punted six times and were three-and-outed four times as the visiting Gators came from behind to win 20-17 and hand the Aggies a loss -- remember, they went to Tuscaloosa and ran circles around that Crimson Tide defense in one of the upsets of the year -- that ultimately cost A&M the SEC West title.
No one knew how significant that half of football would be at the time (for both teams); or how spectacular a certain player on that field would become.
Yes, it was Manziel’s first college game and the first taste of the SEC for A&M coach Kevin Sumlin.
But I don’t think either forgot how to play football at halftime.
Instead, I think the Gators made some adjustments at intermission and went out and played one of the best defensive 30 minutes of the college football season.
A 320-minute softball game
It started just after 6 p.m., Oklahoma City time, and ended at 11:21 after 15 innings and 534 pitches.
UF’s thrilling 9-8 marathon defeat of Nebraska in the NCAA Women’s College World Series was a 5-hour, 20-minute testament to endurance and fortitude -- by both teams -- and gave Coach Tim Walton’s team a signature moment to sock away with those SEC regular-season and tournament titles.
The Gators blew a three-run lead in the bottom of the seventh, a one-run lead in the 10th and nearly let the Cornhuskers come back from two down to tie the game in Nebraska half of the 15th before left fielder Jess Damico and third baseman Stephanie Toft came up with the kind of defensive play the overachieving squad thrived on all season.
With the tying run at first and two outs, Nebraska’s Gabby Banda ripped a shot up the middle that ricocheted off pitcher Hannah Rogers and carried into the hole between short and third.
With the Husker runner headed to third, Damico charged, scooped and fired to Toft, who took the throw, blocked the bag and made the game-saving tag in one of the epic games in program history.
What a night in Tallahassee
When we last saw the Gators football squad, it fell to an inspired Louisville team in the Sugar Bowl, hardly representative of what the team accomplished in winning 11 of 12 regular season games.
The game before that one was a different story.
The Gators jumped on host and 10th-ranked Florida State, let the Seminoles back in the game (even let ‘em take a late third-quarter lead), only to quiet the crowd at Doak Campbell Stadium with a statement-making finish of defense and running game that defined Will Muschamp’s second season.
First, it was Antonio Morrison leveling FSU quarterback E.J. Manuel early in the fourth quarter and forcing him out of the game. From there, it was senior Mike Gillislee and freshman Matt Jones trampling the Seminoles for 117 rushing yards in the final period as the Gators scored 24 straight points to pull away for a 37-26 upset win.
In the end, a banner year
The UF men’s basketball team took a lot of heat for some frustrating and confounding losses.
But winning a conference basketball championship in a league that features Kentucky is something to be celebrated. Always.
And for two seniors, Kenny Boynton and Erik Murphy, it was a second SEC title in three years.
The Gators clinched the league's 2013 regular-season crown with a second-half blitz of Vanderbilt on the way to a 66-40 victory that capped an emotional Senior Night and final home game of the season.
The joyous post-game, net-cutting scene was reflective of just the sixth SEC championship for the Gators, all but one having come since the arrival of Coach Billy Donovan in 1996. The team went on to win 29 games and become the only team in the nation to reach the Elite Eight the last three years. Along the way, Boynton became just the second player in school history to eclipse 2,000 points for his UF career.
Historic lacrosse beating
Northwestern, with seven NCAA titles in the previous eight years, came to UF to try and wrap up sole possession of the American Lacrosse Conference title.
The Wildcats lost the opening draw and were down a goal after 30 seconds. They were down two goals barely a minute in; and three goals after not even 90 seconds.
When the carnage was complete, Florida -- in its fourth year of existence, mind you -- had taken down the perennial power by the score of 22-4, handing Northwestern its worst loss in 22 years and holding the Wildcats to their fewest goals in 210 matches.
Men’s swimming unseats Auburn after 16 years
The last time Auburn’s men swim team did not win the SEC title, most of its Florida counterparts were in kindergarten or pre-school.
The year was 1996.
But Auburn’s 16-year stranglehold on the conference crown -- the third-longest such streak in SEC sports history -- was wrestled away by the Gators in February, as UF raced to four individual titles and 10 top-three finishes, with junior Marcin Cieslak’s championships in both the 100 and 200 fly leading the way.
It was Florida’s 34th SEC swim title, but first since 1993 and the first for Coach Gregg Troy.
Softball sends an early message
What was supposed to be a rebuilding year debuted at the Kajikawa Classic in Tempe, Ariz. The Gators went in ranked 14th in the nation and by the end of the tournament had upset No. 5 Oregon, No. 3 California and No. 13 Arizona.
Walton’s bunch went on to steamroll its way to 17 straight victories to open the season, including an 8-4 defeat of reigning national champ Alabama in a non-conference game.
The fast start set in motion a surprisingly satisfying campaign (complete with a sweep of the SEC crowns) that ended with a fifth trip to WCWS in six years.
No one saw that coming, including Walton.
Battleship Game
Florida-Georgetown met on the deck of the USS Bataan in Naval Station Mayport to open the college basketball season, but after condensation on the court made the floor too slippery to play, the game was cancelled at halftime. The Gators led 27-23.
Too bad.
And not because the Gators had the lead.
That the game had to be cancelled was an absolute shame but the run-up to the spectacle and emotional patriotism that accompanied it still warrant mention here.
The aura of the once-in-a-lifetime experience far outweighed the outcome.
Or non-outcome.
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2013 15:47:05 GMT -5
Monday June 17, 2013The Top 10: Scott Carter's Top UF Team Moments of 2012-13
GAINESVILLE, Fla. – The soccer team won another SEC Tournament title. The football team returned to relevance nationally. The women’s basketball team made a deep run in the WNIT. Billy D’s team dribbled its way back to the Elite Eight. The women’s tennis team nearly pulled off a three-peat.
Those are some of the highlights from the 2012-13 school year for UF’s athletic teams.
There are more, including a pair of national championships.
In closing the book on last season, here is my list of the top 10 team performances by the Gators in 2012-13. My list might look different from yours. You can click here to visit the official Facebook page of GatorZoneScott and share your thoughts on the year that was.
Let’s get to it. The drumroll please …
When you fall, get back up
Rhonda Faehn gathered her stunned team in a corner of Pauley Pavilion and told the Gators they could still do the unthinkable.
Not many outside that huddle believed Florida’s gymnastics team had a chance after the Gators fell twice on beam to open the NCAA Gymnastics Championships.
The Gators nailed the next three routines and a year after a runner-up finish, they were all smiles and tears as streamers fell from the rafters to celebrate the school’s first national title.
For a program that had come so close so many times, the memorable scene in Los Angeles is one they will cherish for a long time.
The Big Four added a fifth member as Florida joined Utah, UCLA, Georgia and Alabama as the only programs to win NCAA gymnastics titles.
Down to the wire
The UF men’s track team defended its national outdoor title in dramatic fashion.
As everyone counted the Gators out, they came through with a clutch performance that will surely go down as one of the best in school history. The Gators got some help from Texas A&M, too.
Trailing the Aggies by nine points in the final event of the NCAA Track & Field Championships on June 8, the Gators’ 4x400-meter relay team knew it had to win if there was going to be any way for UF to repeat as champions.
The team of Najee Glass, Hugh Graham Jr., Dedric Dukes and Arman Hall pulled off a flawless race for the win. The Aggies could not say the same, dropping the baton.
Florida’s victory earned the Gators 10 points. Texas A&M’s eight-place finish was good for a point. The final outcome: co-national champions as the UF men’s track team earned its fifth national title (three indoor, two outdoor) in the past four years under head coach Mike Holloway, named national coach of the year.
Knocking out the Noles
The Gators rolled into Doak Campbell Stadium in late November needing a win to stay in the national title conversation and clinch a BCS bowl berth.
They trailed the Seminoles by a touchdown at the start of the fourth quarter. And then, boom!
Caleb Sturgis kicked a field goal. Antonio Morrison forced a fumble. Mike Gillislee broke free. Jeff Driskel hit Quinton Dunbar. Matt Jones gets loose.
Game over.
Florida scored 24 consecutive points en route to a 37-26 victory over FSU, snapping a two-game losing streak to the Seminoles and punching a ticket to the Sugar Bowl.
A night to remember
Seven innings were not enough. Neither were eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, 13 or 14.
In an elimination game at the Women’s College World Series on June 1, the Gators and Nebraska squared off in an epic thriller the country got to watch on ESPN.
Here is how long the game lasted: The game was in extra innings when the Gators baseball team took off for the flight home after its season ended in Bloomington, Ind.
When the Gators landed in Gainesville two hours later, the UF softball team was still playing. The Gators finally won 9-8 in 15 innings in the longest game in school history.
Meanwhile, the Gators baseball team – with several players watching on their smartphones -- was on the tarmac waiting for their luggage to be unloaded from the plane when the softball game finally ended.
Slamming Dunk City
The biggest story after the first weekend of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament belonged to upstart Florida Gulf Coast University.
The No. 15-seed Eagles upset Georgetown in the first round and then knocked off San Diego State to reach the Sweet 16. FGCU acquired the nickname “Dunk City” for the way it won those games, using an array of dunks to put away opponents.
The Gators were not impressed.
Facing the Eagles at massive Cowboys Stadium with nearly everyone in the stands rooting for FGCU to pull off another upset, the Gators dismissed the Eagles without much of a problem to advance to the Elite Eight for a school-record third consecutive season.
Back to the WCWS
The Gators softball team was a regular in Oklahoma City from 2008-11, making four consecutive appearances in the WCWS.
But a disappointing end to the 2012 season cast doubt over how good the Gators would be in 2013.
In the end, the Gators turned out better than anyone could have imagined on the way back to OKC.
Florida returned to the WCWS in a thrilling 1-0 win over UAB when freshman second baseman Kelsey Stewart made a spectacular defensive play to end the game, throwing out the potential tying run at home for the final out.
Running over LSU
“That was typical 1980 SEC right there,’’ Florida football coach Will Muschamp said after a 14-6 win over No. 4-ranked LSU.
By the time the Tigers visited the Swamp in October, the Gators already had impressive road wins at Texas A&M and Tennessee.
The win over the Aggies in the SEC opener came before the legend of Johnny Football, so Florida still needed a signature win in the eyes of many to claim it was back.
The Gators got one over the Tigers and did it Muschamp style, physically beating LSU up at the line of scrimmage.
Here is a 2012 stat straight out of 1980: the Gators finished off the Tigers with 25 consecutive running plays.
Everyone in the pool
Florida swimming coach Gregg Troy jumped right in with the rest of the Gators.
Why not? If there was a moment to get drenched in street clothes, this was it.
The UF men’s team did something in February that no school other than Auburn had done since 1994 – win an SEC Swimming & Diving championship.
Florida snapped Auburn’s 16-year grip on the men’s title by pulling away from the Tigers on the meet’s final day, finishing 212 points ahead.
Several Gators made a splash, perhaps none more than SEC 100- and 200-meter fly champion Marcin Cieslak.
A fight to the finish
The UF women’s tennis team has ranked high on my list the past couple of years for winning back-to-back national titles.
The Gators failed to three-peat in 2013, but they still easily made the cut. If I’ve learned nothing else covering UF sports, it’s that Roland Thornqvist’s teams don’t go down without a fight.
Facing Stanford in the NCAA semifinals and with Gator Nation plugged in via Twitter and watching online, Florida fell behind 3-0. It looked as if the Gators might go away quietly.
Not so fast. They won the next three matches and didn’t concede anything until Stanford’s Krista Hardebeck outlasted Alexandra Cercone in three sets.
No three-peat but plenty of respect for what senior Lauren Embree and Co. accomplished the past three years.
Down but not out
Gators soccer coach Becky Burleigh’s 18th season was one of her most challenging.
And one of her most rewarding.
Florida endured injury after injury, including a knee injury to senior All-American defender Kathryn Williamson that would have crippled many teams.
Burleigh juggled lineups and the Gators responded to adversity by winning its second SEC Tournament title in three seasons.
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2013 20:49:00 GMT -5
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2013 21:06:54 GMT -5
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 18, 2013 8:46:11 GMT -5
Donovan's emphasis on 'team' for Team USA By Kevin Brockway Staff writer
Published: Tuesday, June 18, 2013 at 6:01 a.m.
Last Modified: Monday, June 17, 2013 at 7:16 p.m.
In his second season as a head coach with Team USA, Florida coach Billy Donovan has stressed the importance of “team.”
Last summer, Donovan guided Team USA to the a gold medal in the FIBA Americas 18-under championships in Brazil. This time around, the two-time NCAA championship coach faces a more daunting challenge. Later this month, he'll lead Team USA to the FIBA 19-under World Championships in the Czech Republic (June 27-July 7).
With assistants Shaka Smart (VCU) and Tony Bennett (Virginia), Donovan is wrapping up tryouts this week in Colorado Springs, Colo.
“The biggest thing is getting 12 players who understand that they are playing for something bigger than themselves,” Donovan said. “That takes a level of commitment, a level of sacrifice.
“Until a few weeks ago, I didn't realize that in our last 26 world championships in this age group, we've only won the gold medal twice. So I think our guys understand the level of competition that we're going to face.”
The tryout roster was trimmed from 26 players to 16 players on Sunday. The final 12 players will be announced on Tuesday.
Donovan said he likes the potential makeup of his roster from a length and athletic standpoint. He thinks it has the chance of being a strong defensive and rebounding team. An offseason emphasis on improved perimeter shooting led to the invitation of Oregon forward Damyean Dotson, Georgia Tech forward Marcus Georges-Hunt, Duke guard Rasheed Sulaimon and Florida guard Michael Frazier II. All four are in the final 16.
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 18, 2013 14:52:37 GMT -5
Michael Frazier II makes US 19 Team:
Frazier makes USA roster By Kevin Brockway Staff writer
Published: Tuesday, June 18, 2013 at 9:36 a.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, June 18, 2013 at 9:36 a.m.
Florida guard Michael Frazier II survived the final cut late Monday and has made the Team USA 19-under roster.
Enlarge |
Florida guard Michael Frazier was selected to the Team USA 19-under roster late Monday. Matt Stamey/Staff photographer
Frazier was one of 12 players picked for the team by Florida coach Billy Donovan and assistants Shaka Smart (VCU) and Tony Bennett (Virginia). Frazier and Donovan will represent the Gators at the FIBA 19-under World Championships from June 27-July 7 in the Czech Republic.
Frazier will most likely be counted on as a 3-point shooter off the bench, similar to his role during his freshman season with the Gators, when he shot 46.9 percent (52-111) from beyond the arc.
Also making the Team USA 19-under roster were guard Marcus Smart (Oklahoma State), forward/center Jarnell Stokes (Tennessee), guard Rasheed Sulaimon (Duke), forward/center Mike Tobey (Virginia), forward Montrezl Harell (Louisville), guard Elfrid Payton (Louisiana-Lafayette), forward Jerami Grant (Syracuse), center Jahlil Okafor (Whitney Young H.S., Chicago), forward Aaron Gordon (Archbishop Mitty H.S., San Jose, Calif.), forward Justise Winslow (St. John's High School, Houston, Texas) and guard Nigel Williams-Goss (Findlay Prep, Happy Valley, Ore.)
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 18, 2013 20:18:48 GMT -5
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 18, 2013 23:49:14 GMT -5
Looks like Rutgers is dragging its feet on Eli Carter's basketball transfer probably waiting to see if he enrolls with UF in Summer B:
June 18th, 2013 11:35pm
Carter still awaiting word on waiver
by Kevin Brockway
The chance that Eli Carter can play right away at Florida remains up in the air.
The 6-foot-3, Rutgers transfer guard is still awaiting approval from his former school before the process can move on to the NCAA.
There is thought that Carter could receive a waiver due to the player abuse scandal involving former Rutgers coach Mike Rice. Rice resigned after a videotape released to ESPN showed him throwing basketballs at players and verbally abusing them.
“Still no word,” Carter’s father, Dale Carter, said Tuesday night. “The interim AD, Carl Kirschner, he was very supportive. He has kids so he has expressed wanting to do what’s best and right for the kids involved. But there’s a new regime and it’s in their hands.”
New Rutgers athletic director Julie Hermann started on the job Monday and has plenty on her plate. If Hermann makes the recommendation for a waiver, it still must be approved by the NCAA.
Unlike the recent flip-flop by point guard Jerome Seagears, who returned to Rutgers last week after initially transferring to Auburn, Carter is committed to seeing his transfer through at Florida. Carter will arrive in Gainesville next week and enroll for the Summer B session, which starts July 1.
“He’s excited about it,” Dale Carter said. “He can’t wait to get started.”
Dale Carter said that his son has been working out in New Jersey, sometimes training with Cleveland Cavaliers point guard Kyrie Irving. The two have been friends since middle school.
“They’re inseparable,” Dale Carter.
Dale Carter also said his son has been approached to play for the Jamaican national team this summer, but said the family will leave the decision whether he can play to Florida coach Billy Donovan.
“I know that Eli will have some responsibilities with summer school and workouts,” Dale Carter said.
If Carter’s waiver is approved, it could provide a boost to UF’s thin depth at backcourt. Florida point guard Scottie Wilbekin has been suspended indefinitely for violation of team rules, a suspension which could stretch into the regular season. Carter was a combo guard at Rutgers and could provide minutes both at shooting guard and to spell incoming freshman McDonald’s All-American freshman Kasey Hill at point guard.
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 19, 2013 12:58:11 GMT -5
Gator Country's Take On OL Tyler Moore:
Today we take a look at Nebraska transplant Tyler Moore.
History
Moore was an Army All-American at Countryside High School in Clearwater, Florida. Moore chose to attend Nebraska over schools like California, Clemson, Georgia, Florida State, Miami, Stanford, Michigan, Ohio State, Tennessee and, yes, Florida.
Moore’s career got off to a great start, as he became the first ever true freshman to start the season opener on the offensive line in Nebraska football history. He started four games and made appearances in nine total games that year on his way to being named to the Freshmen All-BIG 12 team.
Following his freshman season, Moore decided to sit out a season for personal reasons and relocate closer to home, taking classes at St. Petersburg Community College. Moore comes into this season as a redshirt sophomore and will have three seasons to play at Florida.
Player Evaluation
Strengths
Moore’s biggest strength will be his experience. He played at a very good school and was able to start four games and earn Freshmen All-Conference honors. He’s a very strong, physical mauler who plays with great upper body strength. Moore also has the kind of mean streak that offensive linemen need to have.
Based on his performance this spring and his body type, Moore might be better-suited playing guard in the SEC rather than tackle, which he played at Nebraska and this spring at Florida.
Moore shows a good ability to get to the second level in his blocking.
Weaknesses
Moore lacks an explosive first move when run blocking and can often get too high off out of his stance. He doesn’t have the quick feet or fluidity in his technique to be reliable in pass protection either. He was too slow against players like Jon Bullard, Dominique Easley and Dante Fowler. While those are some of the best linemen in the SEC, Moore will get a steady diet of similar freaks throughout the SEC schedule.
What to Expect
Moore started at right tackle throughout the spring mainly due to the numbers that Florida had available to them. With only six, sometimes only five, healthy linemen for the spring, Moore was able to get a lot of reps and knock some of the rust off.
However, based on what we saw during limited time at spring practice, Moore is not a SEC caliber offensive tackle. That doesn’t mean he won’t be a good player for the Gators or that he won’t contribute this season. He needs to slide inside where some of his stiff technique can be covered up. He is strong enough to take on defensive tackles and even nose tackles but he doesn’t have the feet to be able to stay with speed rushers off of the edge.
Moore is still listed at right tackle on the post-spring depth chart but with the addition of Trenton Brown, expect Moore to slide inside and backup Max Garcia and Jon Halapio while Brown and Chaz Green battle for the starting job at right tackle.
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 19, 2013 13:44:09 GMT -5
Athlon Names 10 Gators To All-SEC Team: www.gatorzone.com/story.php?id=25889Athlon Sports 2013 Preseason All-SEC Team OFFENSE 1st Team 2nd Team 3rd Team 4th Team QB Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M AJ McCarron, Alabama Aaron Murray, Georgia Connor Shaw, South Carolina RB Todd Gurley, Georgia Keith Marshall, Georgia Ben Malena, Texas A&M Jeremy Hill, LSU RB T.J. Yeldon, Alabama LaDarius Perkins, Mississippi State Tre Mason, Auburn Jeff Scott, Ole Miss WR Amari Cooper, Alabama Mike Evans, Texas A&M Odell Beckham Jr., LSU Dorial Green-Beckham, Missouri WR Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt Donte Moncrief, Ole Miss Malcolm Mitchell, Georgia Bruce Ellington, South Carolina TE Arthur Lynch, Georgia Rory Anderson, South Carolina Malcolm Johnson, Mississippi State OJ Howard, Alabama C Travis Swanson, Arkansas James Stone, Tennessee Ryan Kelly, Alabama Jonotthan Harrison, Florida G Gabe Jackson, Mississippi State Chris Burnette, Georgia Jon Halapio, Florida A.J. Cann, South Carolina G Anthony Steen, Alabama Aaron Morris, Ole Miss Jarvis Harrison, Texas A&M Zach Fulton, Tennessee T Cyrus Kouandjio, Alabama Wesley Johnson, Vanderbilt Ja’Waun James, Tennessee La’El Collins, LSU T Jake Matthews, Texas A&M Antonio Richardson, Tennessee Cedric Ogbuehi, Texas A&M John Theus, Georgia DEFENSE 1st Team 2nd Team 3rd Team 4th Team DE Jadeveon Clowney, South C. Bud Dubree, Kentucky Denico Autry, Mississippi State Dee Ford, Auburn DT Dominique Easley, Florida Kelcy Quarles, South Carolina Daniel McCullers, Tennessee Isaac Gross, Ole Miss DT Anthony Johnson, LSU Bryan Jones, Arkansas Donte Rumph, Kentucky Brandon Ivory, Alabama DE Chris Smith, Arkansas C.J. Johnson, Ole Miss Walker May, Vanderbilt Dante Fowler, Florida LB Jordan Jenkins, Georgia Lamin Barrow, LSU Benardrick McKinney, Mississippi State Trey DePriest, Alabama LB A.J. Johnson, Tennessee Adrian Hubbard, Alabama Antonio Morrison, Florida Chase Garnham, Vanderbilt LB C.J. Mosley, Alabama Denzel Nkemdiche, Ole Miss Avery Williamson, Kentucky Steven Jenkins, Texas A&M CB Andre Hall, Vanderbilt Desharzor Everett, Texas A&M E.J. Gaines, Missouri Jalen Mills, LSU CB Loucheiz Purifoy, Florida Marcus Roberson, Florida Damian Swann, Georgia Charles Sawyer, Ole Miss S Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Alabama Kenny Ladler, Vanderbilt Eric Bennett, Arkansas Demetruce McNeal, Auburn S Craig Loston, LSU Nickoe Witley, Mississippi State Cody Prewitt, Ole Miss Jaylen Watkins, Florida SPECIAL TEAMS 1st Team 2nd Team 3rd Team 4th Team K Carey Spear, Vanderbilt Cody Parkey, Auburn Zach Hocker, Arkansas Taylor Bertolet, Texas A&M P Kyle Christy, Florida Steven Clark, Auburn Tyler Campbell, Ole Miss Cody Mandell, Alabama KR Andre Debose, Florida Marcus Murphy, Missouri Trey Williams, Texas A&M Bruce Ellington, South Carolina PR Marcus Murphy, Missouri Jonathan Krause, Vanderbilt Odell Beckham Jr., LSU Christion Jones, Alabama
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 19, 2013 15:03:18 GMT -5
It's not good that the police went back to Aaron's home for a second day:
The Associated Press
Published: Wednesday, June 19, 2013 at 12:19 p.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, June 19, 2013 at 12:19 p.m.
NORTH ATTLEBOROUGH, Mass. — State police returned to the home of New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez on Wednesday, two days after a body was found about a mile away.
Two troopers knocked on the door of Hernandez’s sprawling house in an upscale subdivision Wednesday morning, but no one answered. The night before, police spent hours there as another group of officers searched an industrial park where the body was found Monday. No more details about the body have been released.
Sports Illustrated, citing an unidentified source, reported that Hernandez was not believed to be a suspect in what was being treated as a possible homicide. The magazine said police had spoken with Hernandez.
|
|
Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
Deleted
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 19, 2013 15:06:15 GMT -5
UF has a known key man down plan for defensive coordinator: UF's next D-coordinator already in place? Postby Zach Abolverdi » Wed Jun 19, 2013 10:05 am Here's what 5-star LB Raekwon McMillan told the AJC ... What was your impression of Florida? “Florida is an SEC squad. Coach (Will) Muschamp is the head coach. And even if (defensive coordinator DJ Durkin left), he told me that one of my favorite recruiters, Coach Travaris Robinson, the cornerbacks coach, (Muschamp) said he would probably be the next defensive coordinator -- and that nothing would change. That’s very intriguing for a defensive player because if lose your defensive coordinator, everything you learned that last year would go down the drain. But at Florida, it would be the same.” Where’s Durkin going? “No, (Muschamp) was just saying if he were to leave, you know, to get a head coaching job.” www.ajc.com/weblogs/college-recr ... cial-visi/
|
|