Monthly Archive for February, 2008

Page 3 of 6

Replacing the backfield

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When Auburn begins spring practice Sunday, it will mark a new era in the Tigers’ defensive backfield.

AU must replace four scholarship seniors from last year’s secondary, including longtime standouts Patrick Lee, Jonathan Wilhite and Eric Brock. The new look for the secondary extends to the coaching ranks, where Paul Rhoads replaces Will Muschamp as defensive coordinator and secondary coach.

Rhoads’ goals for the secondary in spring practice are simple: Fill the gaps in the starting lineup, then find at least three reserves who can help the Tigers in the fall.

“We’ll get our starting four first, and then we’ll get five and six and seven,” Rhoads said.

The new era also means changes for at least one AU veteran. Junior Aairon Savage, who started 13 games at safety over the past two seasons, will move to cornerback.

Savage is penciled in as the starter at left cornerback, opposite returning starter Jerraud Powers.

Savage’s move to corner gives Auburn four players at the position: Savage, Powers, junior Walter McFadden and sophomore Ryan Williams.

“We want to get Aairon over there to give us four corners for the first day of spring practice and see where we are over there,” Rhoads said.

Rhoads expects Powers, AU’s most experienced cornerback, to provide leadership at the position. Savage has never played cornerback, and McFadden and Williams played sparingly last season.

But Powers is up for the challenge. He started 12 games last season and finished with 63 tackles, the fourth-highest total on the team. His 2007 production caught Rhoads’ eye when the coordinator watched video of last season’s defense.

“I’ve probably noticed him more on film than other people, and that’s not to slight other people,” Rhoads said. “That’s a compliment to Jerraud. He’s a dang good football player.”

Moving Savage to corner has eased the depth shortage at that position. But it’s left Auburn somewhat shorthanded at his former spot, safety.

Sophomore Zac Etheridge, the team’s second-leading tackler, returns at one safety spot. Sophomore Mike McNeil will join him in the starting lineup after a productive freshman season.

But there’s not much depth. Redshirt freshman Mike Slade, who spent last fall at cornerback, is the only scholarship reserve safety currently on the roster. Senior walk-on Jonathan Vickers heads into the spring as the other second-team safety.

Auburn signed six defensive backs earlier this month, and Rhoads isn’t ruling out the possibility that one or more will step into the breach at safety.

“When those kids get here in practice and we start practicing, I’ll go in there with the mindset that, if they’re better than what we have, then they’ll play,” Rhoads said.

Depth not a problem at linebacker
While Rhoads is searching for players to fill out his playing rotation, linebackers coach James Willis has a different problem.

Auburn will only play three linebackers in most situations. With a depth chart that features five former starters, Willis has more players than he can play at any given time.

It’s a good problem to have, of course.

Senior Chris Evans, junior Tray Blackmon and sophomore Craig Stevens will open the spring as the starters. But a deep group of reserves including senior Merrill Johnson, sophomore Josh Bynes and true freshman Da’Shaun Barnes will push the first-teamers throughout spring practice.

Evans, who started every game last season, returns as the top weakside linebacker. He leads a group of three seniors which also features Johnson and reserve Courtney Harden.

Combined, Evans, Johnson and Harden have played in 85 games and have 161 career tackles.

Blackmon is back as the starting middle linebacker. He missed four games last season with an ankle injury, but still finished with 45 tackles. The junior is Auburn’s fastest linebacker and one of the team’s hardest hitters.

Stevens won the starting strongside linebacker job last spring, but was in and out of the lineup in 2007. He started seven games and finished with 35 tackles, but will have to fight for his job this spring.

Harris, who started on the strongside against Alabama, won’t participate in contact drills due to offseason shoulder surgery. That could create an opening for Barnes, who graduated from high school in 2007 and signed with Tennessee, but never enrolled.

He sat out last season and signed with AU; he’ll have a full four years of eligibility.

another tide player arrested

Talk about it in BOL Round Table

Alabama defensive back Rashad Johnson was arrested for disorderly conduct early Saturday morning, marking the sixth scholarship player to be arrested in the last year.

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Crimson Tide coach Nick Saban has yet to release a statement on the incident.

According to police reports, Johnson, an All-Southeastern Conference defensive back, pushed a security guard from the Legacy Bar on University Blvd. to the ground before being taken into custody. According to police, Johnson was attempting to intervene as security escorted another patron out of the bar. He was released on a bond of $500 from Tuscaloosa Metro Jail.

Johnson led Alabama with 94 tackles as a junior, with six interceptions from his safety position. A team captain, he enters his senior season as one of the top defensive backs in the conference. Johnson was the only person arrested in the incident.

The Legacy was also the venue when a trio of Alabama players – defensive end Brandon Deaderick, running back Roy Upchurch and linebacker Brandon Fanney – were arrested last summer.

Johnson’s arrest comes less than a week after Alabama freshman Jeremy Elder was charged with first-degree robbery and subsequently suspended indefinitely from the team.

Former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman’s Case – On 60 Minutes This SUNDAY

This sunday, tune into CBS for a special 60 MINUTES story on the details behind the Siegelman case.   Help Dana and I get the word out that this is something that needs to be brought to the attention of everyone.  This is not only a story dealing with Alabama, but a story involving the entire nation, beginning with Washington DC and the White House.  

www.donsiegelman.org – has access to news articles to catch up to speed on the process behind the former governor  and his trials. 

Karl Rove’s Dirty Politics in Alabamaby Lou Dubose | November 1, 2007 Mayberry GOP—

Mayberry GOP—The 2002 Alabama gubernatorial election included the plot elements of a bad Southern Gothic: a Klan rally in the backwoods; a political operative stealing the opposition’s signs and planting them at the rally; a lawyer stalking and photographing the operative; incriminating photos used to extort a political candidate; and a cabal of lawyers maneuvering a man into the courtroom of a judge who promised to “hang” the defendant. There was even a prosecutor “messing up” the case to see that the defendant made it to the gallows.
What reads like a script written for Fred Thompson sent former Democratic governor Don Siegelman to jail for eighty-eight months, eliminating the politician Alabama Republicans called the “golden child” of state politics. The story pivots on two politicized U.S. Attorneys put in office by President Bush and former White House senior aide Karl Rove, before Rove retired and returned to Texas. Unlike the account of the firing of nine U.S. Attorneys, which exposed former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales’s partisan zeal and utter incompetence, this story features U.S. Attorneys who remain in office. It also suggests that Rove played a critical and questionable role in Siegelman’s prosecution.

The former governor is serving time for appointing former HealthSouth CEO Richard Scrushy to a medical licensing board after accepting a $500,000 contribution Scrushy made to a political fund the governor was using in his public campaign to legalize gambling in the state.

The story is laid out in the deposition of Jill Simpson, an Alabama attorney who worked on the campaign of Bob Riley, the Republican who defeated Siegelman in the 2002 governor’s race. While working for the Riley campaign, Simpson followed a lawyer supporting Siegelman, who was then the incumbent, to a November 2002 KKK rally and photographed the lawyer planting stolen Bob Riley campaign signs. When Simpson delivered the photos to the Riley campaign, she was told they would be used to force Siegelman to concede the race. What a lawyer for the Riley campaign told Simpson motivated her to file an affidavit with the Alabama Bar Association. In mid-September, Simpson expanded on her affidavit, in a sworn deposition before House Judiciary Committee attorneys.

Simpson testified that a Riley campaign lawyer said Siegelman would be told the photos would be released if he didn’t concede. If the release of photos of one of his supporters planting stolen signs at a Klan rally wasn’t enough to drive Siegelman out of Alabama politics, he would be prosecuted under federal charges.

Simpson also described a conference call in which Bob Riley’s son Rob Riley argued that the photos should be turned over to the press to ensure that Siegelman would be so badly damaged that he would have to give up politics. Bill Canary, a Republican Party official in Alabama was also on the conference call. According to Simpson, Canary said involving the press wouldn’t be necessary: “His girls” would take care of Siegelman. Canary’s girls were U.S. Attorneys Leura Canary (his wife) and Alice Martin, both appointed by Bush. According to Simpson’s affidavit, they would see that Siegelman was prosecuted. In Washington, Karl Rove, then at the White House, had “spoken to the Justice Department” about pursuing Don Siegelman. The case would be filed in district Judge Mark Fuller’s court.

Simpson said Rob Riley told her that federal judge Fuller was also a federal contractor, whose company had fuel and clothing contracts with the Navy and the Air Force. Bush had appointed Fuller to the federal bench. Fuller, Riley said, would “hang Don Siegelman.”

Everything Simpson was told came to pass, suggesting that Don Siegelman’s conviction was pre-scripted and pre-ordained. Scott Horton, who writes the Harper’s No Comment blog, helped move the Siegelman case onto the hearing agenda of the House Judiciary Committee. After postponing one meeting, Committee chair John Conyers (D-MI) held a hearing on October 23. The first hearing should be a prelude to document demands at the Justice Department, the White House, the Alabama U.S. Attorneys’ offices, and the office of Judge Fuller. Siegelman has denied all allegations against him, calling them fabrications. The White House, speaking on Rove’s behalf, has denied that Rove interfered at the DOJ. Judge Fuller did not respond to our questions. Only one party, Jill Simpson, has told the story under oath, facing the prospect of prosecution for perjury.

LSU suspends Perrilloux indefinitely for team rules violation

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Ryan Perrilloux, the heir apparent at quarterback for defending national champion LSU, has been suspended indefinitely.

LSU coach Les Miles made the announcement Monday, saying Perrilloux violated team rules. Miles said Perrilloux’s status for spring practice was unclear. The Tigers open spring workouts on Feb. 29.The New Orleans Times-Picayune, citing university sources familiar with the situation, reported on its Web site that Perrilloux missed classes, workouts and at least one team meeting.

This was supposed to be Perrilloux’s shot to take over the quarterback duties full time at LSU. A rising junior, he stepped in for an injured Matt Flynn to lead the Tigers to a 21-14 victory over Tennessee in the SEC championship game last season. Perrilloux also played in the Tigers’ 38-24 win over Ohio State in the BCS national championship game.

Perrilloux, a highly touted high school prospect from LaPlace, La., has already been suspended two other times during his LSU career. He didn’t make the trip to the Alabama game last season after allegations surfaced that he was involved in a fight at a Baton Rouge nightclub. Perrilloux was not charged following the police’s investigation. Last May, he was suspended by Miles after being cited for allegedly trying to use his brother’s drivers license to get onto a casino gambling boat. Perrilloux was reinstated to the team in time for the start of preseason practice. With Perrilloux’s status in limbo, that means junior Andrew Hatch, who began his career at Harvard, and redshirt freshman Jarrett Lee will move to the top of the Tigers’ quarterback chart.

Like I said…Criminals

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Alabama freshman defensive lineman Jeremy Elder has been arrested and charged with two counts of first-degree robbery.

Elder was arrested Sunday and remained jailed Monday morning on $120,000 bond. 

No further information was immediately available on his arrest by university police, which was first reported by The Tuscaloosa News and The Birmingham News. Elder’s arrest was included on the Tuscaloosa County Sheriff’s Department’s Web site.

A Crimson Tide football spokesman had no immediate comment.

Elder, a 6-foot-3, 271-pounder, was redshirted last season.

Under state law, first-degree robbery involves either a “deadly weapon or dangerous instrument” or someone causing “serious physical injury to another.” Both charges are Class A felonies.

Jeremy Elder

Further details were unavailable as TCSO declined a request from BamaOnLine.com to obtain the arrest report because its records office is closed for President’s Day. A message left for TCSO public information officer Andy Norris was not immediately returned.

Alabama head coach Nick Saban said Elder has been suspended for the time being.

“He is indefinitely suspended from all football-related activities,” Saban said. “I won’t have an announcement on his future status until I have had a chance to review all of the information. The University and football program have strict guidelines regarding legal issues of this magnitude.”

Elder was signed from College Park (Ga.) North Clayton High in February, 2007. Heat-related problems cost him a week of practice during fall camp and he was subsequently redshirted. Elder (6-3, 271 pounds) worked with the third team at defensive end for most of the season, but did not see action in a game.

Days since Auburn last lost to Alabama


HD-DVD Death Made Official

Toshiba put HD-DVD out of its misery today. Reuters confirmed this afternoon that it will cease manufacturing HD-DVD equipment, following earlier reports from Japan’s NHK public broadcasting network.

This leaves Blu-Ray as the presumptive victor in the irrelevant optical disk format war. It now must face up to the real competition: the continuing success of DVD and the growing popularity of downloads, both on the internet and on-demand cable TV.

The end comes only a day after Wal-Mart announced it would no longer carry HD-DVD stuff. This will go a long way to confirming the view, long-held by cynics, that the mega-retailer always held the executioner’s axe to begin with, and was merely waiting until it was clear which format’s camp had the most densely-stuffed brown envelopes to throw at Hollywood.

2008 Slam Dunk Competition (final round)

SEC Recruiting: What is all means

Fox sports runs down the SEC teams recruiting classes

5. Auburn

The class is heavy on … Skill players. The best prospects are on the defensive line, led by JUCO transfer Raven Gray and end Andre Wadley, but with the offense switching up to more of a spread under offensive coordinator Tony Franklin, the team needed players who fit the system. JUCO transfer QB Chris Todd will battle for time early on, while DeRon Furr and Barrett Trotter will provide depth over the next few years. Keeping RB Onterio McCalebb was key, while the real coup was getting speedy receiver Harry Adams to lead a fast group of targets. New WR Philip Pierre-Louis might be the team’s fastest player.

The player who’ll someday be a really big deal … LB Deshaun Barnes

The player you might care about this year … DE Raven Gray

What it all means to the real world of college football … Much has been made about the Auburn class and the players it lost, but the late defections don’t take away from a strong haul. With new coordinators coming in late in the game, it was hard to come up with an elite of the elite class. Now there has to be a nervous twitch around the program after Alabama came up with one of the nation’s best classes. There aren’t a lot of sure-thing stars from the Tiger class, but there are more than enough good players to develop.

ive got a secret