Unverified Voracity Rehabs Bill Simmons Comment Count

Brian

greg-mc-garity Heart anthonytscherne

Explicit Georgia. Georgia athletic director Greg McGarity mentioned that his school wouldn't oversign a couple weeks ago but didn't go nearly as far as Florida's Bernie Machen, who called grayshirting and whatnot "reprehensible." You can't get away with that in the media, however, and after further questioning he laid it down:

First-year UGA athletics director Greg McGarity is strongly opposed to the practice of oversigning football prospects and in favor of legislation to help curtail such activity among SEC institutions.

“It’s just the right thing to do,” McGarity told Dawgs247 this week … According to McGarity, “I think it will be a topic for discussion (at SEC meetings) in Destin this year.”

“I think you will see controls in place,” McGarity said. “Now what that model will look like will be determined later — sooner than later. … I think you’ll see it being dealt with at the conference level much like the Big Ten (Conference) deals with it currently.”

Wow: someone in the SEC suggesting the Big Ten model in anything is worthwhile. Mike Slive is squinting at whichever wall faces the general direction of Athens right now, trying to burn a hole through it with his mind.

Get The Picture suggests that McGarity's optimism that something will get done is probably foolish since eight SEC schools have a vested interest in the ability to "sign half the world in February." He's right, but adding a second SEC athletic director to the chorus of people saying Something Must Be Done is getting close to critical mass. If the SEC isn't willing to do something about it, maybe the NCAA will.

In conclusion, the SEC is a terrible basketball conference.

Excellent decision. Score one for Brady Hoke:

"I'm not a big fan (of Twitter) at all," he said.

Asked if he would join other "cool" coaches who maintain Twitter accounts to keep fans abreast of what's happening in their program, Hoke said he won't join in.

"I'm not cool," he said. "I've never tried to be cool."

No coach* who has tried to be cool on twitter has succeeded in making their exclamation-filled (or, in the case of Charlie Weis, sober, book-length-Bon-Jovi-concert-memoir-filled) twitter account anything better than mildly embarrassing. If you don't speak the language it's better not to try.

*[Head coach. Assistants are fine. Bacari Alexander's cult of #HALOL is going swimmingly.]

Mount Godin settles down. It's a long time until Tim's next recruiting update so a small update on MI DT Matt Godin, who said something to the effect that he was "done with Michigan" in an article on Rivals. Godin immediately sought to clarify/explain/disclaim the quote with Tom. His brother signed up* here to explain, as well:

Matthew is a very competitive person, and he is frustrated because the new staff has not shown any interest in him despite the fact that he is regularly hearing from many other top programs. 

Knowing Matthew's personality, I specifically told him not to say anything negative about any school because I knew some of the reporters would try to elicit such comments.  I am very frustrated and disappointed that he did not heed my advice, but he has tried to rectify the situation as best he can by clarifying things with Tom.  My parents, my sisters and I have all spoken with Matthew today, and we are disappointed in his lack of maturity and composure. 

Each day, Matthew is asked my fellow students at school why Michigan has not offered him, and he constantly has correspondents from recruiting websites asking him about the issue.  I can see why he is frustrated, but I do not condone his behavior. 

Matthew's dream is to play college football, and he has been a UM fan since he was a child.  Both my father and my sister graduated from UM, and I am currently finishing medical school at the University of Michigan.  We would love to see Michigan offer him.  However, if the coaching staff does not find him to be a good fit, then it's not meant to be.  He is extremely blessed to have his current offers, and I know that he will excel wherever he goes.  Go blue!

Godin already has Northwestern and Michigan State offers, so there's a good chance that if he's patient the coaches will offer him.

*[His email address checks out in the UM directory, FWIW.]

Bill Simmons image rehab: complete? Hey, remember three years ago when everyone hated Bill Simmons? I spent some time echoing the zeitgeist so I could say he's still way better than Drew Sharp in 2008. It's not like I didn't understand why people were turning on him—even my defense was maybe two-thirds-hearted. The backlash was met with mild push-back along the lines of what I wrote and it seemed that everyone had settled on the idea that Simmons was old and tired and had lost his fastball.

Then he organized and produced 30 for 30, a series that probably claims 30 of the top 50 sports documentaries of all time. He did this on ESPN, a channel that thinks Stephen A. Smith is a good idea to re(!)-hire. Now even people who blame him for all the Affleck movies about Boston* have to admit that The Two Escobars was awesome and The Ocho seems like way less of a bad idea than it did five years ago.

Presenting sort of the Ocho:

ESPN Gives Web Star Bill Simmons His Own Site

by Peter Kafka

Here’s Bill Simmons’ reward for sticking with ESPN: His own piece of turf, where the star columnist/multimedia experimenter can cultivate a new sports/pop culture site.

Simmons already has his own page on ESPN.com, but this is something much more ambitious, with a dedicated staff and a roster of contributing writers. If you were in Web publishing, you might call it a “vertical”. The rest of you might call it a digital magazine.

He's hiring 8-12 people and the thing sounds like something totally different than a newspaper—the sort of thing Fanhouse probably should have been. Klosterman is on board. It's described as a "sports/literary" website, which kind of sounds like The Run Of Play with more Karate Kid and fewer Baudrillard references. Quickish—the new thing Dan Shanoff is doing—has more details and analysis. He's enthusiastic about it. So am I.

*[Guh.]

Detroit City. (This is irrelevant but one of the Michigan Ultras posted in the comments so there's your tangent.) The Lions In Winter has a great post with lots of original reporting about the guys who bought the Silverdome and are trying to bring an MLS team to Detroit. Their plans are outlandish. I really hope they come off.

There is discussion of a name in the comments; my two cents: it must be Detroit City, and the crest should be a rock, and people should abbreviate them "DRC," and nothing else is acceptable. Here's this thing you can sign on the internet:

Comments that uselessly say soccer sucks will be met by hellacious point drainage.

Etc.: Winner for the most obscure Toomer's corner analogy: "it's more like [Saint] Boniface wiping out Thor's tree and singing amongst the wreckage."

Comments

BRCE

February 19th, 2011 at 3:12 PM ^

Say those allegiances were to teams in a city besides Boston. Say a non-coastal town like Minneapolis and their teams.

There is no chance in hell ESPN would give him the kind of stage they do now since he represents a sacred cow market for them that they think the rest of the nation actually gives a shit about.

Genzilla

February 18th, 2011 at 4:05 PM ^

As an avid fan of soccer (USA, Red Bulls, Arsenal) I can't stress enough how bad it is for players to be playing on turf.  The MLS is pushing all new teams to build soccer specific real grass stadiums.  Current teams are encouraged to make any new stadiums real grass.  The Silverdome would be an awful place for soccer to be played.  Additionally, it is expected that the MLS will want to remain at about 20 teams for a little while because this is the number for most global soccer leagues.  They already have plans for the 19th team in Montreal starting in 2012 and most people expect the New York Cosmos to be the 20th team.  At this time they will probably not add a 21st team in the near future and even if they did they would probably not want a team to play in the Silverdome.

st barth

February 18th, 2011 at 6:02 PM ^

I like the idea of soccer in Detroit and I'm even a fan of the Silverdome...but I don't the the Silverdome would be a good venue for soccer.

And if the team is going to be named Detroit City then it must play within the city limits.  Maybe an adaptive reuse of an old factory (Packard Plant?) could be awesome.

A rock is a nice image...but something evocative of cold, hard steel could be good too, like a piston or an engine block.  A rock is perhaps too organic, natural.  The essence of the D is not just that it's tough as nails but also that it's created by the hands of men.

kevin holt

February 19th, 2011 at 10:25 AM ^

Another sport where New York gets two teams? NO. I WILL NOT LET IT HAPPEN.

I know the Red Bulls play in NJ, but they're called New York. This also discounts the poster who said "If you say 'Detroit' it has to be in the city limits". The Pistons are in Auburn Hills and the Lions used to be in Pontiac so... I understand that it's probably better for the city if it's in the limits, but just saying it's not 100% necessary.

I hate when sports have multiple teams in one city and no teams in other legitimate areas. Look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_League_Soccer#Teams, there are two near LA, but none (NONE) between TX and DC. There's one in freaking Columbus and not FL, not Atlanta, not Phoenix, not Michigan (biased). I don't know soccer areas that well, but I'm assuming the southeast has to have some legitimate interest, before we start giving new york a pair of teams. I heard Chivas USA is doing terribly too, so we could just move that one elsewhere and stay at 20 teams

His Dudeness

February 18th, 2011 at 4:06 PM ^

Is "Ty" from Lions in Winter the same "Ty" from The Big Lead?

Just wondering if I should become a reader because Ty from TBL has thrown the University under the bus numerous times and I won't read anything he is a part of.

adamsojo

February 18th, 2011 at 4:06 PM ^

I've been to two MLS games.  I went to a Seattle Sounders game last fall. They play at the Seahawks' Qwest Field, and only open the lower level for seating.  The atmosphere at the game was incredible, and Sounders FC are known for having great fans. After the game (against the LA Galaxy), Beckham said that this was the first MLS game he'd played in that felt and sounded like a game in Europe. I think it helps that Qwest is a great stadium and naturally loud, so it amplifies and reinforces the crowd.

I've also been to a DC United game. While DC had a decent number of loud, die-hard fans, the game was at RFK Stadium, which is possibly the worst large structure ever built except for that unfinished hotel in Pyongyang. I'd be worried that the Silverdome would be much more like RFK than like Qwest - muted, and visibly too cavernous to re-create the necessary atmosphere.

It's too bad they couldn't have saved the infield portion of Tiger Stadium and then built new stands around the outside of a soccer field there. That could have instantly been the best stadium in MLS.

MGoShoe

February 18th, 2011 at 11:01 PM ^

...the team's creation. RFK is old and tired, but it has it's own charm and appeal from those of us who've been with the club from the start, especially because of its Redskins past.
<br>
<br>Speaking of DCU, they've completed a loan with Sochaux for the services of Charlie Davies. Really looking forward to seeing him use this opportunity to work his way back into his pre-accident form.

bsand2053

February 18th, 2011 at 4:28 PM ^

How awesome would it be to get in on the ground floor of fandom?  You could literally say you have been a fan of Detroit City since its inception.  I want this to happen.

Sgt. Wolverine

February 18th, 2011 at 4:59 PM ^

...the sadness out of the world and makes it a happy place.

Also: until somebody with power holds a gun to its head, there's no reason to expect the Sign Everyone Conference to make a change simply for the sake of ethics.  The SEC's unofficial motto: "Ethics Are For Losers and Vanderbilt."

markusr2007

February 18th, 2011 at 5:39 PM ^

The first foot was David saying he intends to fulfill the duration of his contract in LA with the Galaxy. Any hope that somebody in Michigan could ever convince him to transfer to the safety and tranquility of a Detroit-based MLS squad in the future has been blown up spectactularly like the Death Star. 

I'm despondent. 

Any advice? 

 

 

The Name

February 18th, 2011 at 6:51 PM ^

Whats that Bill your new site will be nothing but talk about the NBA, 1980's movie references and MTV reality shows? No thanks

Ill stick to Mgoblog for my sports info and barstool sports for my pop culture.

 

UMQuadz05

February 18th, 2011 at 7:16 PM ^

If Bill Simmons only did podcasts with Klosterman, and never wrote about sports again, I'd be perfectly fine with it. 

Well, I guess Connelly and Jack-O can come, too.

jmblue

February 18th, 2011 at 8:06 PM ^

But you can't call them "Detroit City" if they're in Pontiac, right?  It's one thing for the Pistons to be in the burbs, but if you go to the trouble to put "City" in there, they can't be outside. 

BRCE

February 19th, 2011 at 4:02 AM ^

The good but overrated 30 for 30 doesn't change that Bill Simmons is a colossal asshole. You'd be hard-pressed to find public figures who believe their own hype more than BS does.

Through self-promotion that his geeky fans eat up with a spoon, Simmons has been able to become this generation's biggest name in sportswriting even though the ONLY sport he's an avid follower of (the NBA) is getting less relevant all the time.

 

 

so bored at work

February 19th, 2011 at 11:10 AM ^

I realize everyone else with something to say probably chimed in on the original thread, but after reading this I find myself really hoping Matt Godin ends up going Blue.  And I think it's great his brother got his back and did so rationally and articulately.  Does this make them the diametric opposites of the Borens? 

Don

February 19th, 2011 at 1:34 PM ^

So far, I can't think of a single thing Hoke has said that hasn't hit the right note with me. He comes across as immensely likeable, and I can understand why Brandon had a high regard for him in the personality department. I just hope it translates to success on the field.

the_white_tiger

February 19th, 2011 at 1:55 PM ^

I would absolutely love an MLS franchise in the D. It would probably be the best thing to get my blossoming soccer fandom going. Rooting for teams outside of the area (or country really) just isn't the same.