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WOW Headlines – 5/23/13

Georgia TE Ty Flourney-Smith will likely transfer to a junior college with a return to Athens a possibility
Alabama coach Nick Saban: “We don’t think football’s a dangerous game, so we don’t worry about guys getting injured.”
CBS has announced that its first SEC Game of the Week in 2013 will be Alabama’s visit to Texas A&M on September 14th
ESPN has announced that radio host Paul Finebaum will start a new radio show that will be simulcast on the SEC Network
LSU athletic director Joe Alleva says that Texas A&M will likely replace Arkansas as the Tigers’ end-of-season opponent beginning in 2014
LSU G Corban Collins will transfer from the Tigers’ basketball team
Florida C Will Yeguette had arthroscopic knee surgery yesterday
Follow the SEC every single day at MrSEC.com

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SEC Headlines 5/23/2013

headlines-thuSEC Football

1. Georgia tight end Ty Flourney-Smith is transferring.  Played eight games last year without a catch. Could he return to the team?

2. Indoor practice facility not a priority right now at Georgia.  Mark Richt: “Do we have to have it? I don’t think we have to have it, but like I said it would be nice to have it.” UGA athletic board approves $92.3 million budget.

3. Will Georgia have the best offense in the SEC in 2013?  MrSEC has an opinion. What about Florida State/Georgia in 2016 – “long, long shot.”

4. Alabama coach Nick Saban on high school all-star games.  ”We don’t think football’s a dangerous game, so we don’t worry about guys getting injured.”

5. CBS will kickoff its SEC coverage this fall with Alabama at Texas A&M on Saturday afternoon, September 14th. How the SEC bowl schedule shapes up for 2013.

6. LSU closing 2014 season with Texas A&M?

7. South Carolina A.D. Ray Tanner on non-conference scheduling: “I was very much involved in doing the deal with North Carolina for the 2015 opener in Charlotte.”

8. Why South Carolina “has a chance for a special season.”

9. Vanderbilt coach James Franklin with some Twitter advice.

10. The future is now for senior Ole Miss defensive back Brishen Matthews.

11. Andy Staples on SEC scheduling models: ”The SEC has tossed tradition before, and sometimes with happy consequences.”

SEC/College News

12. Former Alabama A.D. Mal Moore posthumously honored as Athletic Director of the Year.

13. Tennessee’s Neyland Stadium listed as one of the nine most unique fields in sports.

14.  Email from University of Tennessee’s vice chancellor for student life - “intolerable situation.”

15. Tim Tebow’s name brought up in connection with the Ed O’Bannon lawsuit against the NCAA.

SEC Basketball

16. LSU guard Corban Collins leaving, looking to play at another school.

17. None of Kentucky’s freshmen will take part in the U19 World Championships this summer (neither will sophomore Willie Cauley-Stein). John Calipari: “Most of it is, they didn’t want to play. I’m not forcing kids to do anything,”

18. Tennessee’s Jarnell Stokes and Florida’s Michael Frazier II get invited to the training camp.  Bill Donovan is the coach of the team.

19. Florida’s Will Yeguette underwent arthroscopic knee surgery Wednesday.

20. Harvard assistant coach Yanni Hufnagel joining the staff at Vanderbilt. Dan Wolken: “Big -time move”

21.  NBA scout on former Missouri guard Phil Pressey. “I like his energy, he’s a good passer, he just has to realize he’s not Nate Robinson.”

22.  Cleveland has the No.1 pick but it doesn’t mean former Kentucky player Nerlens Noel is headed there.

Extras

23. Sometimes it’s better to say nothing at all.  European Tour CEO tries to defend Sergio Garcia:  ”Most of Sergio’s friends are coloured athletes in the United States…”

24. Auburn one of the 15 fastest-growing cities in the U.S.

25. The cheapest 25 pro sports teams to watch in person.

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Bama’s Saban Says The Only Title That Matters Is The Next One

gfx - they said itNick Saban knows a little something about defending national championships.

He’s done so three times already and this season will be his fourth try at it.  (Though he would say with a brand new team, there’s no “defending” anything.)  After the first two BCS crowns he won (LSU 2003, Alabama 2009) his teams failed to recapture the magic the following season.  His 2011 title-winning squad, however, gave way to another national champion in 2012.

The trick to reaching the top of the mountain again?  Starting from scratch.  Saban knows it and consistently tries to get his players to understand it.  Yesterday, he said the same to a group of Alabama fans at a booster event:

 

“Michael Jordan’s old statement is: No matter how many game-winning shots you’ve made in the past, the only one that matters is the next one.  Well, that’s all that matters to us…

I think we’re still trying to find ourselves and find an identity as a team, which every team has to go through as you re-invent yourself.  So we’ll see how that goes over the summer.”

 

If Alabama could win yet another BCS title this season, it would be Saban’s fifth national crown and the Tide’s fourth in five years.  At that point you go from talking about “historically great” to “legendarily great.”

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SEC Recruiting Headlines 5/22/2013

recruiting-headlines-gfx1. The nation’s top JUCO prospect has changed his mind.  After committing to LSU, wide receiver D’Haquille Williams has had a change of heart. “I decommited from LSU so I can explore all my options. I plan on doing so during the summer and fall.” Williams had 67 receptions at Mississippi Gulf Coast last year.

2. Les Miles reaction? “If a guy wants to decommit and say ‘I’m interested in looking around,’ this is plenty early. We have a scholarship, we’re looking for very good players, we’ll continue to recruit.”

3. Scott Rabalais: “There is every expectation that Williams will make his football version of an Australian walkabout and eventually sign with LSU.”

4. Here’s how LSU’s 2014 linebacking class is shaping up.

5. Why is Tennessee stockpiling wide receivers in its 2014 class?  Here are some theories.

6. For the second time in a week, Florida lost a member of its 2014 class. Fort Myers Dunbar receiver Ryeshene Bronson was the Gators first commitment for 2014 but now says he wants to visit other schools.  A source says it was a mutual decision. Why the Gators need defense in the 2014 class.

7. Palm Bay (Fla.) Bayside defensive tackle Travonte Valentine  lists Alabama, Tennessee and Miami in his top three. He plans to visit both Alabama and Tennessee this summer. One of the top defensive tackles in the country, he has previously been committed to both Florida and Louisville.

8. Ten players from Alabama made the Rivals250 list.

9. How did Auburn coach Gus Malzahn get Georgia running back Peyton Barbour to sign with the Tigers in February?  By greeting him in the hotel lobby at 3:00 a.m.

10. Dallas, TX offensive lineman Jovan Pruitt says he plans to visit Arkansas on June 1. Pruitt has more than 10 offers, including one from Alabama.

 

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Scott Pioli Defends Nick Saban, Calls Out Tim Davis: “Don’t Understand The Mentality”

gfx - they said itScott Pioli made a name for himself in the NFL – first as V.P of player personnel for the New England Patriots and then as general manager of the Kansas City Chiefs.  While at New England, the Patriots did battle with Nick Saban’s Miami Dolphins.  Now Pioli is defending a former NFL rival and current Alabama coach.

Speaking to Mike Florio, Pioli was asked about his reaction to former Dolphins assistant Tim Davis calling Saban “the devil.”

 

“I’ve got to be honest, I was terribly disappointed. You know, I know Nick Saban, I’ve worked with Nick Saban for a number of years back in Cleveland.  First of all, I didn’t like it for Nick.  I know Nick is a tremendous coach and he’s a tough worker and he’s a tough boss but I know a lot of people who are tough bosses.

“I’ll say this about Nick, though:  I think he’s tough but he’s fair. He doesn’t ask anything of people that he hasn’t done himself or that he won’t do himself.”

 

Davis not only worked with Saban at Miami but also took a job under Saban at Alabama and that really got Pioli fired up.

 

[Davis] spends a year out of football, can’t get a job, Nick creates a position at the University of Alabama to help a guy who’s been unemployed he shows his loyalty to the guy, brings him in, creates a position, pays him. This guy made the choice to come work for Nick and now a couple years later, he’s bashing a guy who really helped him… I just don’t understand the mentality of people who are given opportunities, they seize the opportunity, they get paid, and then some time in the future they start to air dirty laundry or their hard feelings toward someone. I just don’t understand why people can’t keep their mouths shut and move on.  So, to me, it’s one of these trends in sports that I see, that I just, truly disappoint me.”

 

And round and round we go.  We’ll see if this latest salvo sets off any more reactions or draws a comment or apology from Davis, who is now Florida’s offensive line coach.  Saban last week called the comments “terribly disappointing.”

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SEC 2012: The Stats That Mattered (Offensive And Defensive Yards-Per-Play)

mrsec stat analysis newOffense or defense?

Running or passing?

We wanted to know which statistics provided a more accurate gauge of overall success during the 2012 SEC football season.  When talking about the SEC, defense is usually the first word out of the mouth of any coach, fan or pundit.  Should it be?

From looking at six key (yet simple) statistics, the answer is yes.

Yesterday, we found that passing defense (opponents’ yards-per-pass-attempt) was more closely related to SEC wins and losses than passing offense (yards-per-pass-attempt).

This morning, we found that rushing defense (opponents’ yards-per-carry) was more closely tied to SEC wins and losses than rushing offense (yards-per-carry).

Now, we’ll compare the yards-per-play numbers of each school on offense and on defense (opponents’ yards-per-play).  Which statistic do you think served as a more accurate predictor of gridiron success?

 

2012 SEC Total Offense / Yards-Per-Play

  School   Yds/Play   SEC Record
  Alabama   6.80   7-1
  Texas A&M   6.63   6-2
  Georgia   6.43   7-1
  Tennessee   5.70   1-7
  Miss. State   5.65   4-4
  Arkansas   5.63   2-6
  Ole Miss   5.38   3-5
  Vanderbilt   5.23   5-3
  S. Carolina   5.17   6-2
  Florida   5.11   7-1
  LSU   4.98   6-2
  Missouri   4.57   2-6
  Auburn   4.24   0-8
  Kentucky   4.15   0-8

 

The top three teams in this category all finished with six of more SEC wins.  Also, the two SEC squads that went winless in 2012 ranked at the bottom of this chart.  Obviously, offensive ability matters.

It just doesn’t matter as much as team’s defensive ability.  Vanderbilt, South Carolina, Florida and LSU all ranked in the bottom half of the SEC in yards-per-play on offense yet those four teams went a combined 24-8 in league play last year.  Meanwhile, Tennessee, MSU, Arkansas and Ole Miss all finished in the top half of the league in this measure while compiling a combined record of 10-22.

If our previous conclusions hold water, teams’ overall defensive rankings (opponents’ yards-per-play) should be the most telling of the six statistics we’ve broken down.

 

2012 SEC Total Defense / Opponents’ Yards-Per-Play

  School   Opp. Yds/Play   Record
  Florida   4.18   7-1
  Alabama   4.24   7-1
  S. Carolina   4.57   6-2
  LSU   4.85   6-2
  Vanderbilt   5.23   5-3
  Georgia   5.29   7-1
  Texas A&M   5.54   6-2
  Ole Miss   5.61   3-5
  Missouri   5.79   2-6
  Miss. State   5.80   4-4
  Kentucky   5.95   0-8
  Arkansas   6.05   2-6
  Auburn   6.55   0-8
  Tennessee   6.68   1-7

 

How’s that for lining up correctly?

The seven SEC squads with winning league marks in 2012 all ranked in the top half of the conference in yards-per-play allowed.  Those teams totaled a combined record of 44-12.  The seven squads with SEC winning percentages of .500 or lower all ranked in the bottom seven of the league in this category.  Those teams finished the year 12-44.

To take things even further, the top four teams in this category (Florida, Alabama, South Carolina and LSU) went 26-6 in the SEC in 2012.  The six teams that ranked in the middle (Vanderbilt, Georgia, Texas A&M, Ole Miss, Missouri and MSU) went 27-21 combined.  And the four teams that the bottom of the table?  Kentucky, Arkansas, Auburn and Tennessee finished a combined 3-29 on the season.

We wanted to know if defense really did trump offense in the Southeastern Conference last year.  The numbers say it did.  Whether it’s rushing defense, passing defense, or total defense, SEC wins and losses are still most often determined by strength on defense, not on offense.

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SEC Headlines 5/21/2013

headlines-tueSEC Football

1. LSU coach Les Miles will go Destin next week with a message on banning permanent opposite division rivals.  “The most important thing the conference has to do is pick a champion in a fair, straightforward way.”

2. Former Arkansas quarterback Brandon Mitchell will play his final season at North Carolina State. ”Bottom line is I want to win, and I want to win now.”

3. Alabama receiver Danny Woodson, Jr. transferring to South Alabama.  Former four-star recruit was suspended for violation of team rules during the spring.

4. Why is former Oklahoma State quarterback Wes Lunt being restricted from transferring to certain schools, including Tennessee and Vanderbilt? One reason –  ”The belief that at least some coaches at some interested schools improperly contacted Lunt.” MrSEC weighed in on transfer limits Monday.

5. Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel can complete a pass blindfolded.  Here’s the video proof and a picture.

6. Why wide receiver Malcolm Mitchell is one of Georgia’s 10 most important players this year. Ten breakout candidates in the SEC this fall.

7. A look at freshman Evan Engram and the tight end position at Ole Miss.  Rebels don’t return a scholarship player to the roster from the tight end spot.

8. LSU defensive coordinator John Chavis on a defense that lost seven starters. “We’re not afraid to play freshmen. We’ll do everything we can to get our best 11 on the field.”

9. In Auburn’s new defensive alignment, only two linebackers will be on the field.  They will have to cover a lot of ground.

10. Tennessee sports publicist Gus Manning on coach Butch Jones: “I’ve been here for 11 football coaches. Butch Jones is the best public-relations man of all of them.”

11. Remember that Alabama BCS trophy that was accidentally shattered?  Broken trophy fetched $105,000 at an auction.

12. Rimington Trophy watch list includes nine SEC centers.

13. Do you realize college football kicks off in exactly 100 days from now? Here’s an SEC checklist.

14. ESPN’s Ted Miller on why so many predictions about college football this fall will be completely wrong.

SEC/College News

15. Florida wins the SEC All-Sports Trophy for the 23rd time.  

16. Georgia A.D. Greg McGarity has made four head coaching moves in the athletic program since he was hired.  Latest move was firing the baseball coach.

17. Towson A.D. Michael Waddell joining the athletic department at Arkansas.

18. Jon Solomon on the Ed O’Bannon lawsuit: “Collegiate Licensing Company had licensing agreements with more than 80 former college athletes from 1995 to 2010.”

19. Stewart Mandel projects how the bowls will lineup for college football’s major conferences in future years.

20. Mountain West Commissioner doesn’t think college football playoffs will stay at four teams.

21. Dan Mullen and Urban Meyer - Parrotheads?

22. Interview with former Alabama and Texas A&M coach Dennis Franchione: “We had a lot of great memories of Alabama and the fans and that program. I wish it could have been under different circumstances.”

SEC Basketball

23. Former Baylor player Deuce Bello transferring to Missouri.  Will have two years of eligibility after sitting out this next season. Sixth Division I transfer to join MU’s program since Frank Haith arrived two years ago.

24. Staff moves announced Monday at Alabama include Antoine Pettway promoted to assistant coach. Team also getting new strength and conditioning coach.

25. Former Tennessee center Yemi Makanjuola enrolls at UNC Wilmington.

Extras

26. How Pac-12 schools divvied up the cash.

27. Former Memphis forward Tarik Black will play his senior year at Kansas.

28. ESPN reportedly laying off hundreds of people.

29. The 20 types of unhappy sports fans.  I think I’ve done about 14 of these.

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One Bad Apple Can Spoil The Whole Bunch: Vols, Dores, Twitter Edition

gfx - honest opinionIn this day and age, all it takes is one dimwit, loser, scumbag with no manners, no shame and no brain to make an entire fanbase look bad.  Twitter makes everything, oh, so easy.

Before diving into this one, let me make a few things clear:

First, I don’t understand people who use Twitter to curse left and right.  I was raised in such a way that I wouldn’t want the whole world to see me tossing F-bombs around left and right.

Second, I don’t get fans who feel that part of the “fun” of sports involves insulting other people.  Likewise, I’ve never understood why some fans are jerks to visiting fans.  I’ve never understood why fans attack rival fans in parking lots.  As a Patriots fans, I was once angered to see fellow New England fans tossing snow (and ice) balls at Jets fans during a snow game I attended in Foxboro.  I’m unable to comprehend how that attitude is created, where it comes from.  What, some people can’t watch a game without trying to hurt someone else — typically whom they don’t know — either with words or fists (or hurled objects)?  What does that say about those folks’ upbringing?

Third, I sure as hell don’t understand fans who take to social media to send nasty comments and messages to athletes or coaches.  If given the chance to spew such garbage in a face-to-face manner, the cowards on Twitter would more likely wet their pants than verbally abuse a coach or player.

And all that brings us to a recent Twitter exchange between a Tennessee fan and a Vanderbilt assistant football coach.  The Vol fan — someone named Julian Bucio — tweeted to Commodore O-line coach Herb Hand the following (edited) message:

 

“@CoachHand dude I think your wife is f****** someone while you coach your pathetic football team #Slut”

 

Now that’s class.  That’s someone I’d want to hire to work for my business.  That’s someone I’d want dating my sister, daughter or friend.

Wisely, Hand took the matter to the next level and guaranteed that the over-the-top tweet from a UT fan was seen by people far and wide.  Hand retweeted the message to Volunteers head coach Butch Jones.  Brilliant.  And he included this message:

 

“Here is what one of your fans sent me on Twitter today about Deb.  Just thought you’d like to know.  If any of our fans were to say something like this about Barb, please let me know so I can personally whip their ass.”

 

Boom.  Outta the park.

Why?

Hand has taken one rube’s tweet, turned it around, and made it a positive recruiting tool for Vanderbilt.  Now, will anyone be swayed to sign with VU over UT — or vice versa — because of a few tweets?  One would hope not (though coaches sure as heck try to use Twitter to recruit, don’t they).  But every program has an image.  Small things help to build up or tear down that image.  And for one day at least, UT’s image has been slightly tarnished by one of its own fans.

Who comes across with more class?  Hand or the fan?  Naturally, then, it looks like the Vol fanbase is made up of juvenile punks while VU’s coaching staff features men willing to try and hush such nonsense in his own ranks.  We live in a world where everything is oversimplified — e.g.: Twitter = 140 characters — so if Harvey Updyke poisons a tree, Alabama fans are all viewed as being nuts.  If a Tennessee fan says nasty things about a coach’s wife, all Tennessee fans will be viewed as classless.

Jones hasn’t yet responded to Hand’s tweet, but Bucio responded by mocking the coach for responding to him.  (Personally, this is a favorite cowardly out of mine.  Someone writes something insulting to me, I insult them back, and then I’m called thin-skinned for not taking a goofball’s insult like I should.  So the obnoxious person holds the upper hand while the public figure has his hands tied?  I think not.)

Bucio also claimed via Twitter that Vandy fans have tweeted him “physical threats,” as if anyone cares.  Dumb fans tweet dumb things to other dumb fans all the time.  A few dumb fans also tweet ugly, dumb things to coaches and players.  But rarely is a coach wise enough — or calm enough — to simply expose the initial tweeter as a no-class buffoon as Hand did by re-tweeting Bucio’s message straight to Tennessee’s head coach.

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SEC 2012: The Stats That Mattered (Opponents’ Yards-Per-Carry)

mrsec stat analysis newOffense or defense?

Running or passing?

We wanted to know which statistics provided a more accurate gauge of overall success during the 2012 SEC football season.  When talking about the SEC, defense is usually the first word out of the mouth of any coach, fan or pundit.  Should it be?

In an effort to find out, we took six key (but simple) statistics from last season and compared them to the win/loss records of each of the 14 SEC schools..  We used only stats from conference games (SEC versus SEC) and we’ve compared only last season’s conference records.  Last year’s SEC title game was not included in our study.

In this piece, we’ll look at the defensive side of the ball.  Below you will find last year’s SEC teams ranked according to their opponents’ yards-per-carry average:

 

2012 SEC Rushing Defense / Opponents’ Yards-Per-Carry

  School   Opp. Yds/Carry   SEC Record
  Alabama   2.55   7-1
  Florida   3.02   7-1
  S. Carolina   3.11   6-2
  LSU   3.37   6-2
  Arkansas   3.57   2-6
  Ole Miss   3.68   3-5
  Georgia   3.85   7-1
  Texas A&M   3.93   6-2
  Miss. State   4.23   4-4
  Kentucky   4.29   0-8
  Missouri   4.43   2-6
  Vanderbilt   4.62   5-3
  Tennessee   5.07   1-7
  Auburn   5.33   0-8

 

Observations

*  Just as pass defense meant a little bit more than pass offense, rushing defense means a bit more in SEC play than rushing offense.  Teams that held their opponents to under four yards per rush attempt totaled 44 wins against just 20 losses in SEC play last year.  Teams that allowed more than four yards per carry finished a combined 12-36 in the league.

*  Again, there were some exceptions to the rule, but there were fewer of them.  Arkansas and Ole Miss stand out among the teams near the top of the chart, but those two squads led the league in giveaways last season, undermining their ability to stop their foes’ ground games.  Vanderbilt was lone winning team ranked in the bottom six of this category, but four of their five league wins came against other teams that allowed more than four yards per carry.

*  Simply put, running the ball effectively helps, but stopping opposing teams from running effectively is much more important when it comes to winning football games in the SEC.

*  To compare these numbers to SEC squads’ rushing ability last season, click here to find our breakdown of teams’ in the offensive yards-per-carry category.  Also, check out our pass game comparisons by clicking here to see yards-per-attempt data and by clicking here to see opponents’ yards-per-attempt data.

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    SEC 2012: The Stats That Mattered (Yards-Per-Carry)

    mrsec stat analysis newOffense or defense?

    Running or passing?

    We wanted to know which statistics provided a more accurate gauge of overall success during the 2012 SEC football season.  When talking about the SEC, defense is usually the first word out of the mouth of any coach, fan or pundit.  Should it be?

    In an effort to find out, we took six key (but simple) statistics from last season and compared them to the win/loss records of each of the 14 SEC schools.  We used only stats from conference games (SEC versus SEC) and we’ve compared only last season’s conference records.  Last year’s SEC title game was not included in our study.

    In this piece, we’ll focus on the offensive side of the ball.  Below you will find last year’s SEC teams ranked according to their yards-per-carry average:

     

    2012 SEC Rushing Offense / Yards-Per-Carry

      School   Yds/Carry   SEC Record
      Alabama   5.56   7-1
      Texas A&M   5.47   6-2
      Georgia   4.59   7-1
      Tennessee   4.39   1-7
      Florida   4.33   7-1
      Arkansas   3.76   2-6
      Kentucky   3.65   0-8
      LSU   3.62   6-2
      Miss. State   3.57   4-4
      Missouri   3.54   2-6
      S. Carolina   3.41   6-2
      Vanderbilt   3.33   5-3
      Ole Miss   3.08   3-5
      Auburn   2.59   0-8

     

    Observations:

    *  Four of the top five teams in the yards-per-carry category — Alabama, Texas A&M, Georgia and Florida — finished with six or more SEC wins last season.  But Tennessee ranked fourth in this statistic and still managed just one league win in 2012.

    *  Tennessee was hardly the only team that was “out of place” record-wise when it came to this stat.  Arkansas (2-6) and Kentucky (0-8) ran the ball more effectively than LSU (6-2) and South Carolina (6-2).  The Gamecocks also ranked behind Mississippi State (4-4) and Missouri (2-6).  Vanderbilt finished with a winning record in the conference yet the Commodores averaged more yards per carry than only Ole Miss and Auburn.

    *  Long-time football fans will tell you that you have to play good defense and run the football to win ballgames in the SEC.  But running the ball effectively — and we’ve seen this hold true in recent seasons — isn’t as important as it used to be.  Yes it’s darn helpful to be able to wear down a defense with a punishing ground game.  It’s a plus to be able to grind out the last few minutes of clock when leading, too.  But there is not longer a clear correlation between yards-per-carry and wins.

    *  Some might be wondering if straight rushing yards would be a better indicator of league success and the answer is yes.  In terms of overall rushing yards per game in SEC contests last year, every team with a winning league record (Alabama, Texas A&M, Georgia, Florida, LSU, Vanderbilt and South Carolina) finished in the top eight of the conference in total rushing yards.  Only Tennessee snuck into the top eight with a losing record.  But those seven schools with winning SEC marks also ranked among the top eight in rushing attempts in SEC games.  That was to be expected.  Teams with leads try to milk clock by running the football (as noted above).  So it can be said that winning teams run the ball more often — possibly/probably because they’re playing with late-game leads — but it can’t be said that winning teams the ball more effectively (yards-per-carry average).

    *  To see the importance of rushing defense, click here for a breakdown of opponents’ yards-per-carry averages.  We have also broken down some numbers for passing offense and defense from last year’s SEC action.  For those results, click here for yards-per-attempt and click here for opponents’ yards-per-attempt.

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