Jun 292010
 

Ah, the steamy days of summer. A young man’s thoughts turn to swimming pools, the beach, barbecues and, of course, college football.

And every summer, about the time those pop-up storms hit Gainesville in the afternoon, I keep thinking it’s almost time for the Dooley Decimal System. I have to be patient because too early is too early, but too late is also too late. If that makes any sense, you’ve been out in the sun too long.

But it’s here, the DDS is ready to make its annual appearance. Every summer, I rate the programs of the SEC based on a number of criteria including head coach, coaching staffs, facilities, fan support, revenue, recruiting and some other intangibles.

One thing that makes this difficult is the seventh- or eighth-place teams probably rank in the top 35 in America. That’s how good the SEC is and how strong the commitments are in this conference.

So here we go:

1. Alabama: Nick Saban has it going. This ranking is not based only on last year’s national title and the expected preseason ranking, but on everything that is Alabama football right now. There is stability in the program for the first time since Gene Stallings was the coach. There is nothing lacking in this program right now. Incredible facilities and the most passionate fan base in college football.

via Alabama tops Dooley Decimal rankings of SEC programs | Gatorsports.com.

 Posted by at 9:00 am
Jun 282010
 

TUSCALOOSA — If R.C. Slocum could see Bryant-Denny Stadium now, there’s no telling what he would say.

He was truly speech­less in 1994 when he visited the home of the Alabama Crimson Tide. Texas A&M’s head football coach was too polite to insult a longtime friend.

“When I first got out of coaching, he called me and wanted to bring a couple of donors and an architect to look at our facilities,” said Alabama Athletics Director Mal Moore, then an associ­ate athletic director.

“He told me, ‘Mal, we’re going to Tennessee, North Carolina, Florida, Florida State and Alabama.’ I said, ‘We’ll be glad to show you around.’ ”

In addition to other facili­ties, Slocum saw the sta­dium, which at the time had one upper deck and seated 70,123.

Borrowing ideas from elsewhere, Texas A&M went on a building spree. It was one of the schools Moore and others from Alabama visited roughly seven years later when they set out to examine model facilities.

“I told him we were get­ting ready to do a $100 mil­lion enhancement to our fa­cilities,” Moore said. “And this is what he said. ‘Man, I’m glad to hear that, Mal. . . . I’ll never forget when we came through there . . . how disappointed we all were.’

“That said more to me than anything. Like a slap in the face.”

Now, above and beyond that $100 million enhance­ment, a third Bryant-Denny expansion in the past dozen years is nearly complete.

The last big crane was scheduled to come down Saturday. By the end of July, 17 months of work will end on the $65 million South End Zone project.

As dust literally begins to settle on Paul W. Bryant Drive, there’s a new site and a new sight to behold on Alabama’s campus. What once was a modest home became a mansion, and now it’s a castle that could become the envy of the college football world.

“Everything in college athletics is an arms race,” said Thad Turnipseed, who has overseen the construction as Alabama’s director of athletic facilities. “We’ll put ours up against anybody’s.”

With a previous seating capacity of 92,138, Bryant-Denny Stadium was the nation’s eighth-largest college football stadium. The expansion brings the seating capacity to more than 101,000.

via Crimson castle: Work is winding down on Bryant-Denny expansion that completes ‘magnificent stadium’ | al.com.

 Posted by at 2:21 pm
Jun 282010
 

JOHANNESBURG — FIFA will censor World Cup match action being shown on giant screens inside the stadium after replays of Argentina’s disputed first goal against Mexico fueled arguments on the pitch.

Angry Mexico players protested to referee Roberto Rosetti after the screens in Johannesburg’s Soccer City showed Argentina forward Carlos Tevez was offside before he scored the opening goal in a 3-1 victory on Sunday.

“This will be corrected and we will have a closer look into that,” Maingot told a news conference Monday. “We will work on this and be a bit more, I would say, tight on this for the games to be played.”

Maingot said the screens were used to broadcast a FIFA “infotainment program” to fans before the match and could be used to replay some match action.

Responsibility for operating the screens falls to South Africa’s World Cup organizing committee, which took charge of the 10 stadiums during the tournament.

Organizers’ spokesman Jermaine Craig said he had spoken to the stadium broadcasting team about the incident.

via 2010 World Cup: FIFA to censor in-stadium replays – ESPN Soccernet.

 Posted by at 2:18 pm