The Nasty Boys Sports Blog

Rehab for the suffering sports fan of Greater Cincinnati.

Posts Tagged ‘South Carolina Gamecocks Football’

Entitlement…

Posted by Baller on September 26, 2008

Entitlement. An amazing word. What do we as fans do that makes us believe we deserve something from complete strangers? We expect kids, 17-21 year olds, to live out what we could not accomplish ourselves. If a coach, who has years more experience attacking a certain situation goes against what we think is right, then we rip that coach apart and say he needs to be fired.

Am I aside from this?

No, I get caught up in the heat of the moment as some of you have seen. I have also been on the coaching side of things as well and understand what coaches go through. Now to be specific I am a South Carolina Gamecock, through and through. But there is one thing I am beginning to get sick of though: The lack of loyalty since Spurrier’s arrival.

It seems to me since Spurrier’s hire that fans have begun to assume or expect more out of our team; but what of our 100+ year history has you expecting more? Building a program takes time and we spent way too long not building one. Lou began building us the right way, like it or not, and Spurrier is continuing. I am a student at USC and I’m sick of reading articles in “The Gamecock” bashing our team. First, they don’t double check their stats and get facts wrong and second, they have not been fans of USC long enough to really care.

My second gripe with USC fans is the booing. How can you boo someone in a Gamecock jersey? Are you serious? Since when do we do that? Are we in Philly? Are we Clemson? Have some loyalty. NO! Have some class. We are known for having the best fans in the country; we need to start showing it. We do not have a top tier program so I am not sure what you are expecting when you step into Williams-Brice. If you are expecting Spurrier’s teams from the 90s, well defenses have caught up and athletes are way more abundant. So how about you cheer for your Gamecocks, rain or shine, because when we finally do shine… it is going feel so amazing.

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South Carolina Dropped the Ball… Again…

Posted by Baller on September 8, 2008

The Gamecocks messed up when Lou Holtz retired by hiring Coach Steve Spurrier.

Now, before you jump all over me, I praised the university for this hire at the time, but as the saying goes hindsight is always 20/20. No coach in the 1990s could outscore or outwit the “Ol’ Ball Coach”, but that was then and this is now. Ever since Steve made the jump to the National Football League he has not been able to catch back up to the college game.

“He doesnt have the athletes he had at Florida though at South Carolina.”  Are you kidding? We had the #2 WR class in the country two years ago and the year before that we had the most kids out of the state of Florida. This is Spurrier’s 4th year and his offense is still not working.   Has the Run ‘N’ Gun ran it’s course? No, the ‘Run N Gun’ is still used across the country with success, even in Division 1A. So we can not use the excuse that his offense doesnt even work.

So whats wrong with South Carolina? I am not even going to begin to believe that I know what is wrong, but when I look back at past UF games, the routes his WRs ran are not being run at South Carolina. His OL at South Carolina is not blocking like it did at UF. And why hasn’t he fired John Hunt? There are better coaches out there that would love to coach at South Carolina. But I digress about Coach Spurrier; he will go down as one of the greatest coaches of the 90s, and possibly ever. That’s it though.

What we should have done: In 2004, when Coach Holtz stepped down, we should have hired Skip Holtz as our new Head Coach. Carolina fans never gave Skip a chance when he was at Carolina because when he was “offensive coordinator” his father had full control over his calls and didnt let him open the offense up. I never remember hearing a Carolina fan saying, lets keep Skip Holtz so I dont want anyone posting that in here.

South Carolina’s future:  So why do we need Skip Holtz? ECU went 4-8, 1-11, and 2-9 before he came. Yes his first year they went 5-6. But since then, they have gone 7-6 and lost their bowl game and 8-5 and won their bowl game. Currently they are 2-0 ranked #14 with back to back wins against ranked opponents. He has done this with two stars and three stars. Last year’s class? Ranked 81st by Rivals. That means he is able to get things done without elite talent. Imagine what he could do with SEC talent like he would have at USC. I think he would have us on the right track in no time. His style of play is that of his father’s, not that flashy but it gets the job done. Hard-nosed defense, wrap-up tackling, turnovers, smart QB play and fast RBs.

Please Skip. Come back to South Carolina.

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Opposites Attracts Flies In The Carolinas

Posted by Doc Hancock on October 11, 2007

A long time ago, I once dated a girl I met in a campus bookstore two days after Hurricane Katrina hit the city of New Orleans while I was attending Southwest Tennessee Community College.

Truth of the matter was the because of our personalities (hers was more quiet and mine’s was much more brash and open) and families (hers was much more close-knit and mine was, well, distant and afraid to love or accept someone for who they were), as well as an intervention with one of my slacker friends, things between her and I fizzled before school let out.

The same thing could be said when it comes to the Tar Heels-Gamecocks rivalry in football, which will be renewed again when the #7 Gamecocks play Saturday in Chapel Hill against a Tar Heel team that is looking for nothing more than a dent in the Gamecocks’ shot at a possible BCS Bowl bid, and another shot at Spurrier, who infamously posed with his Duke squad in front of the Kenan Stadium scoreboard after thrashing them 41-0 in 1989 en route to the 1989 ACC Championship, something that still rankles the feathers of the locals in Chapel Hill nearly 20 years after it happened.

The border that separates the two states could easily be an extra-long measuring tape or, in baseball terms, a tape-measure homer hit by Ryan Howard. when it comes to football.

According to Seth Emerson, who writes for The State newspaper in Columbia, his Tar Heel alum friend, who happens to be an attorney in Washington D.C., spoke about the battle of the Carolinas and he quickly stated that if, by the grace of God, the Tar Heels are ranked #1 and the Blue Devils are #2 in the football polls and a basketball scrimmage is taking place across the street at Cameron Indoor or Dean Smith Center, chances are the people are going to pick basketball over football because it’s something that has been ingrained in them from birth.

Can you blame them?

Read the rest of this entry »

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A Good Run Of Bad Luck In Colombia

Posted by M on September 4, 2007

Author’s Note: This article originally appeared as an exclusive piece with one of our sister sites, Gamecocks Sports Forum. They host our official forum and are a great online community and come highly recommended.

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Unfortunately for Quentin Richardson, a top offensive line recruit in the Gamecocks’ stable, the memory of his June 24th stabbing is a faint one among the South Carolina faithful and thus sympathy for the incident seems to have fallen to the wayside. You see, it has been a tumultuous summer for those who pile in to Williams-Brice Stadium in droves each fall as the South Carolina football program has seen its fair share of adversity. However, the stabbing was neither the beginning nor the end of it all, it was merely the middle-man in a long line of unfortunate incidents.

To begin this roller coaster ride, stud quarterback Blake Mitchell was arrested just last year on charges of hitting a local bouncer, complaints that were later dropped by said employee, leaving one to wonder if the bouncer was trying to make allegations against the football standout to merely bring him down a bit. Bouncers sometimes have a “Road House” complex and have no problems showing off what power they think they have to various patrons, especially if that patron gets as much “face time” as Blake Mitchell. No charges, no harm, then no foul, right? Maybe not so much in the “Court of Gamecock Opinion,” however.

And Mitchell wasn’t the only quarterback to find trouble or, with the way South Carolina’s luck is going, see trouble find him, as freshman quarterback Stephen Garcia (star recruit at the time) was arrested on two occasions within a three week span for public intoxication and vandalism. It can be said that young people are prone to making mistakes and no one person should be crucified without the ability to redeem his, or her, self, but the timing of the incident made it all the more frustrating for “Gamecock Nation.” With two arrests in three weeks, Garcia was beginning to resemble a member of the Cincinnati Bengals, looking to be a part of a running joke that has no doubt ran its course.

But the list goes on.

In an ironic turn of events, the same Quentin Richardson who was stabbed in June, was arrested roughly a month later for possession of marijuana at the same apartment complex that saw his stabbing take place. The “fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me” cliche comes to mind when I ponder the reality of Quentin returning to the locale in which he was recently involved in a stabbing so severe that it required surgery. Nonetheless, Richardson pleaded “guilty” on the simple marijuana charge but had a judge nice enough to give him a “conditional discharge,” meaning six months of toeing the line and the charges are dropped and Quentin’s record clean. Here is to hoping he keeps on the straight and narrow.

Keeping on the straight and narrow path, something that unfortunately cannot be said for others and embarrassingly enough for Blake Mitchell, the star quarterback was in the headlines yet again in August as he was suspended for the first game of the season for missing too many summer school classes; a decision that was later unsuccessfully appealed by Mitchell.

Not to be outdone by the offense, however, the defense offered up their starting safety for legal troubles as Emanuel Cook was recently arrested on gun charges stemming from an incident on campus. Cook has since been reinstated by the footballt eam and the university after immediate suspension and dismissal, respectively, but it remains to be seen if the charges will be dropped.

Furthermore, as if it could not get any worse for head coach Steve Spurrier, sandwiched somewhere between all of these issues was the fiasco of having two football recruits denied entry by University of South Carolina’s Admissions after they had already been offered scholarships last winter and signed their respective Letters of Intent. The University owes Coach Spurrier and the recruits an apology as not objecting to the admittance of these two recruits any sooner than the beginning of August is a disservice to all involved. When these two student-athletes were offered a scholarship, and subsequently signed on the proverbial dotted line, their recruitment by other schools effectively ended. By not allowing them in to South Carolina as late as they decided, it could easily have hindered their chances to attend elsewhere.

I am not sure why the University of South Carolina decided to suddenly become an academic elitist, making this decision without the input of even the head coach, as it could have really impacted these student-athlete’s lives negatively. It is worth adding that this is not an insult to the University South Carolina by any means as, outside of Vanderbilt, there are not many SEC schools looking to dethrone Harvard for academic supremacy and this is something I think that we can all agree on. Regardless of the university’s reasoning, this was an added headache certainly not in order, or even remotely timely, for Coach Spurrier.

But, to make a long story not as long, the real question should be: Is there light at the end of this long tunnel?

I say a resounding “YES.”

Students and student-athletes make mistakes, I know firsthand, and they should be allowed an opportunity at redemption, in most cases.

The past year for South Carolina, as it is for my beloved Bengals (meaning I can wholeheartedly sympathize with “Gamecock Nation”), seems like a classic case of “when it rains, it pours” and, seeing how the majority of the issues were unrelated, the past year can be chalked up to a few odd coincidences and, hopefully, isolated incidents. A good run of bad luck, so to speak.

It is tough being an athlete in a high profile program with a high profile coach, as is the case with South Carolina, and it is tough for some young people to adjust to being in the spotlight and having a target on their back wherever they go.

The majority shouldn’t be judged by the action of a few, and the character of these players, and the team as a whole, should not be judged by the mistakes that were made, but instead judged by how the ensuing adversity was handled.

If there is any coach in America who garners enough respect to “right the ship” and handle said adversity, it could easily be Coach Spurrier. The “Ole Ball Coach” has, himself, gone through adversity in his career with an unsuccessful stint in the NFL after leaving all he had in Gainesville, Florida. After basically being ran out of the NFL, Coach Spurrier has rebuilt South Carolina football and has the program poised to be a competitive force in the SEC East now, and in seasons to come.

As a final message to all of the South Carolina Gamecock faithful: keep your head up as this could have easily happened to any program in America (look how Toledo Athletics is being investigated now). Don’t allow the negative publicity, or the ensuing jokes, to affect YOUR support of YOUR team.

These ill-fated few are a just that, a few players on a team with many more student-athletes who work hard regularly and who have positive situations, on and off of the field, that go completely unreported by the media. For every bad one, there are most definitely 10 good ones.

So here is to hoping for a heavy dose of good luck to the Gamecocks this season!

That is, except for on October 4th…

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