Ten@10: Richt says Isaiah Crowell must master pass protection to be ‘full-time back’

Isaiah Crowell will have to do more than run the ball well to play extensively as a freshman, coach Mark Richt said. (Photo by The Ledger-Enquirer reprinted with permission)

Isaiah Crowell will have to do more than run the ball well to play extensively as a freshman, coach Mark Richt said. (Photo by The Ledger-Enquirer reprinted with permission)

THE TEN AT 10:

1. Georgia coach Mark Richt, speaking at a UGA Alumni Association event in Gainesville on Tuesday, reiterated that true freshman Isaiah Crowell will likely be a big part of the Bulldogs’ running game this season. But he also cautioned that Crowell will have to compete with Caleb King and the other tailbacks and that his ability to master pass protection would dictate how much he’s able to play.

“Backs have responsibility to protect on certain blitzes,” Richt said. “If one guy doesn’t know how to do it, he’s a liability at that moment. Can you turn and hand the guy the ball or toss it to him on a sweep or throw him a screen? You can do all those things and he doesn’t have to block anybody. But to constantly pull him in and out of the game every time you’re going to throw the ball with a six- or seven-man protection, you have to give the defense some credit, too. They’re going to know what’s going on or have a pretty good understanding. And when a rookie back is in the game, they’re going to test that. They’re going to bring pressure and see if they’ can pick it up.

“He has to learn that if he wants to be a full-time back. He’s got to.”

That said, Richt said that he’s confident in Crowell’s ability to run the football effectively at the SEC level. “That’s why we recruited him.”

2. Blocking in general is now of paramount concern after this week’s news that A.J. Harmon is leaving the program for “personal reasons.” The 6-foot-5, 320-pound junior was competing for the starting job at right tackle during spring practice. His departure leaves the Bulldogs perilously thin on the offensive front. They presently have only eight returning linemen heading into the summer and three of those aren’t healthy at the moment — Brent Benedict (knee), Austin Long (back/pectoral muscle) and Dallas Lee (respiratory problems).

Nor surprisingly, Richt said that offensive line will once again be a recruiting priority in 2012. The Bulldogs are already bringing in five linemen in this year’s class, six if you include long snapper Nathan Theus. Richt said they’d probably sign at least that many this year.

“I’d imagine we’ll sign at least five or six,” Richt said.

Georgia currently has extended offers to seven prospects, including five-star tackles John Theus of Jacksonville, Avery Young of Palm Beach Gardens and D.J. Humphries of Charlotte. More than likely they’ll have to bring in at least one or two junior college linemen as they are slated to have no senior linemen for 2012.

3. Georgia’s 9-4 win over Kennesaw State in baseball Tuesday night was just what the doctor ordered. The Diamond Dogs (27-26) led 9-0 through six innings in that game and were able to play for once without angst.

Now their entire season is on the line in a humongous, mega-colossal, three-game series against Vanderbilt, which starts Thursday night. The Commodores (42-8) are ranked No. 1 in at least one of the many college baseball polls and Georgia could only enhance its increasingly shaky NCAA resume by winning the series or, better yet, pulling off an unlikely sweep.

“We’ve got a shot and we’ve got to do something special this weekend,” coach David Perno told reporters after the Kennesaw game. “We needed a win tonight and we got it, although Kennesaw helped us a bit. It’s been a while since someone played poorly against us.”

On his postgame radio show, Perno urged Georgia fans to come out strong in support of the team Thursday night. The game is being televised by ESPNU as its SEC Game of the Week. First pitch is set for 7:30 p.m.

4. Georgia coach Mark Fox and his staff entertained basketball prospect Ryan Harrow in Athens on Tuesday. Harrow, a 6-1 point guard from Marietta, is seeking a transfer from N.C. State after playing at the ACC school as a freshman. He was spotted having lunch with Fox at a Longhorn’s restaurant Tuesday afternoon. Fox canceled a scheduled speaking engagement in Gainesville Tuesday evening to remain in Athens with Harrow and his mother. Assistant coach Kwanza Johnson filled in for Fox at the UGA Alumni Day function at the Gainesville Civic Center.

Harrow is taking a barnstorm tour of visits this week. He has already been to Kentucky, Louisville and Texas in addition to UGA and will visit St. John’s later this week before making a decision. Harrow averaged 9.3 points and 3.3 assists off the bench for the Wolfpack last season. He decided to leave after coach Sidney Lowe was fired a replaced by former Alabama coach Mark Gottfried. He will have to sit out next season per NCAA transfer rules. Harrow averaged 31 points per game as a senior at Walton High.

Should Harrow choose Georgia his timing would be ideal. The Bulldogs will lose starting guards Gerald Robinson and Dustin Ware to graduation after this season.

The Bulldogs are still actively recruiting at least two players in Harrow and Rockdale County’s Kevin Ware, a former Tennessee signee.

“The way our sport goes, you never know what you’re going to need in the spring,” Johnson said. “You may plan two classes out, but it never works out exactly how you think it’s going to. This is probably a little bit late to still be recruiting. But at the same time we had a unique situation with both Jeremy [Price] and Chris [Barnes] graduating and Trey [Thompkins] and Travis [Leslie] leaving for the NBA.”

5. One player that could help Fox’s Hounds immediately is Nick Marshall. A football signee out of Wilcox County, Richt said Tuesday the plan is still to allow the 6-foot-2 Marshall to play both football and basketball at Georgia. But, he added, that comes with conditions.

“When it’s a two-sport athlete, he has to be doing well academically,” Richt said. “We’ll have to help him through it. We’ll have to help him manage his time. Charlie Ward did it when I was at Florida State. But he redshirted that first year before he started playing basketball. It’s not easy, but it can be done.”

Marshall averaged 28 points per game as guard at Wilcox County. He was an all-state quarterback in high school but is expected to start off at defensive back for the Bulldogs.

6. Richt was asked again by a Gainesville reporter about the testy exchange he had with fan at a Bulldog Club stop in Macon last month. The man was critical of the Bulldogs’ offensive philosophies and assistant coaches and the normally-reserved and always-chaste Richt surprised a lot of people after he shot back, “I know what the hell I’m doing, OK.”

“It’s been publicized that I got on a guy about what he was asking, but even then we hugged at the end and it was fine,” Richt said Tuesday. “He just wanted to give his opinion and I wanted to let him know I was there. It wasn’t really that big of a deal, but that’s really the only time it has gotten a little testy. I appreciated the guy’s passion for his team and the program. I just wanted to let him know I’ve been doing it a long time and still know what I’m doing.”

Richt told the reporter he continues to be well received on his weekly jaunts across the state to speak.

“Everybody’s excited,” said Richt, who will be in Dalton on Thursday and Albany next week. “They’re excited about the football team and they want to hear about the recruiting class. It’s been very good.

7. I also ran into football signee Sterling Bailey and his parents at the Gainesville function. Bailey, an outside linebacker from East Hall, is way ahead of schedule in rehabilitating his right shoulder, which he had surgically repaired earlier this year. Bailey was also recently recognized with for a Senior Leadership Award at his high school graduation.

8. I’ve been kind of slow to get on this story but the Bulldogs have a chance to pull off a pretty magical two-for-one recruiting coup here in the late spring. Grayson linebacker/running back Denzel Nkemdiche ended up meeting freshman eligibility requirements recently. That means he will be able to sign with a school in 2011 instead attending junior college, as was originally planned.

What makes that significant is Nkemdiche’s “little brother,” rising junior Robert Nkemdiche, is the state’s No. 1-rated prospect for 2013 and has said in no uncertain terms he plans to attend the same school as his older brother. Denzel confirmed to me in an email that he visited Ole Miss on Tuesday and plans to check out Georgia this weekend and will likely sign with one of the two.

I’m supposed to talk to Denzel later today so I hope to file a full report soon thereafter. Meanwhile, let me add that, as a color commentator for WSB-TV’s Friday Sports Zone Game of the Week last fall, I got to see Denzel play live and on videotape and he is legitimate FBS prospect in his own right. But, playing last year as a sophomore in the state’s highest football classification, Robert is one of the most dominant defensive linemen I’ve seen in a long time.

9. For the second consecutive year, Georgia’s women’s basketball and men’s golf teams were recognized by the NCAA for being in the top 10 percent nationally in the multi-year Academic Progress Rate (APR) of all programs in their sport. The NCAA annually honors programs which rank among the nation’s top-10 percent covering their latest multiyear APR, which covers a four-year span. The men’s golf program earned a perfect 1000 for the years 2006-07 through 2009-10, while the women’s basketball program scored 995.

“This is a very special achievement for these two programs and we salute their outstanding efforts,” said Ted White, UGA’s director of student-athlete academic services. “Our coaches and student-athletes value the hard work and dedication it takes to excel, both in the classroom and in their sports.”

10. THIS & THAT: Hope you saw my report on Georgia letterman Jake Scott (1966-68) receiving his long past due selection into the College Football Hall of Fame. . . . It’s a huge week for Georgia’s spring sports teams as the men’s and women’s tennis teams land in Palo Alto, Calif., for the NCAA Championships, No. 1-ranked Marta Silva Zamora competes in the NCAA Championships in College Station, Texas; the men’s golf team tries to advance out of a west regional in Colorado, and the No. 6 seeded Lady Bulldogs’ softball team plays host for the NCAA Athens Regional, which will include FSU, Georgia State and UAB.

509 comments Add your comment

BYRDDAWG

May 21st, 2011
9:43 am

Mike & his little P, we’re 4-1 in the last 5 games against awwwwwwburn ……Only one we lost during that time was to SCAM $ newton and his purchased talents!!!!! Put that in your pipe & smoke it down @toomers corner!!! WOOF WOOF

AltamahaDawg

May 21st, 2011
11:32 am

His own interest? how is that? Thats just completely made up, I’m sorry.
I get the whole unhappy when the team loses. Who isnt? but don’t pretend you are going to spend the entire summer in here talking over and over ande over about something that already well documented, in some effort to save the rest of us from our our decisiton to just enjoy being a fan, and letting the coaching work itself out, which it will. Yoru mad about your team not winning and somebody elses did, your are because of very selfish reasons (which I completely understand). And as you state when they start winning, you are back on board. I realize you frame it as something more noble, but really its that simple.

AltamahaDawg

May 21st, 2011
11:46 am

As far as reality here it is:

Richt is going to be the coach. If you want the team to win, you MUST support him by definition, and if they win he will get a contract extention.

There really is no in between, Not and being a “Realist” about it.

You could claim to want to be wrong I suppose. You could spend the entire summer making one negative comment after another about the situation, while hoping non of that is correct. Do you really believe anyone is buying that? Even if so, what is the point of the exersize? Forget the name of the coach, how is that remotely why you are a fan of a game?

At the end of the season, THAT is when there is another window of opportunity to not support the current coach and still want what best for the team. Its completely counerproductive and completely self centered now.

MikeP

May 21st, 2011
7:34 pm

BYRDDAWG: Auburn has a new QB coming in this year. He was the USA National offensive player of the year. Cam Newton only cost $200,000. This guy cost a half-million so he’ll whup the Dawgs worse than the 49-31 beatdown Cam put on ‘em. If you don’t like Auburn buying players, then prove it and the NCAA will step in.

I have it on good authority that Auburn offered Crowell and Drew 200k each. Everybody knows that. I want to know if UGA had to top Auburn’s offer or just equal it? Find out for us, we’d all like to know.

Mobile Dawg

May 23rd, 2011
9:34 am

Made up my foot, It’s pretty simple to me, AND pretty well documented, he kept his “inept” coaching staff and “inept” coaching ways in tact way to long (because they were his friends), he put up with the tail wagging the dog from the players way to long, the result is the program we have now. Players not caring about showing up, getting whipped by UCF, little to no accountability.

The results speak for themselves, thing I don’t understand is why smart people like you (and many others) have continued to put up with it and still support him. I want his rear end on fire, he “deserves” that for his lack of performance. You’re right, I’m mad, I have contributed $$$ to this program, I currently don’t, I’m a bad fan. Not really, in my world you get what you pay for, if that’s selfish, that’s just your perception. I doubt seriously my comments are going to affect anyone’s opinion other than mine. I log on here once or twice a week to get the latest news, I read the same thing I’ve read for the last 5 years every time I come in here.

Alt, I have an inside source, aqquaintance, business relationship, whatever you want to call it, very close to the Dooley’s, Sabans, Bobo’s family. We have talked extensively about the program on occasion, about CMR’s Leadership, or lack of. It would be easy to question me, say I’m angry, venting, but I speak the truth. I’m one of those Type A’s who’s patience ran out with “Mark Richt” football. Of course I want to win, but winning isn’t everything. It’s how you represent yourself, and the University of Georgia on and off the field.

Mobile Dawg

May 23rd, 2011
9:41 am

I will do my best to stay off of CMR and focus on football for a while. This is just one of my many passions Alt, I promise I’m not one of those bitter, self absorbed, tree poisioners. I’m seriously thinking of getting into politics, I have a hard time standing idly by when I see things deteriorating around me. Have a good week….

AltamahaDawg

May 23rd, 2011
4:03 pm

You might disagree that keeping his coaching on staff the summer they were one of the best team in the country is wrong. You could even argue that keeping his staff in tact after winning 10 games with as beat up of a team as I can remember in Georgia football history was wrong. But that is a disagreement about direction, or the importance of continuity. To suggest its well documented that it was strickly because it was freinds? What? Well documented by whom? People who say that in blogs? Pure opinion, and not very logical to me. That he more importance on one friend of a coach over the other coaches, also freinds, or his wife, his team, his own job. Self interest would be the OPPOSITE of what he puts up with to run things the way be believes it aught to be done. Hell the easiest thing in the world to do for a HC is to fire assistants. Lets say he was dead wrong. YThe part I beleive you are making up is that he is so becasue of putting his own needs about the needs of the program. And oyu know what, I don;t think you actually beleive that.

Factually: he has fired coaches, (and freinds if you insist that even comes into play) the very season that he report thinking it is the best interest of the company. Too long by somes standards, fine. But that is a completely differnt argument than , he knew he should, he knew it would be better for the program, but wouldnt (till fans screamed loud enough). I would also suggest that there has never been an assistant fired that wasnt kept “too long”. Otherwsise he would still have a job.

AltamahaDawg

May 23rd, 2011
4:13 pm

BUT I do agree, I way prefer to just talk football, and you can remind me of that when I do get caught up in these sidetracks of talking about the coach. Particularly since that is settled and really not even an issue till after the season.

Bob

May 25th, 2011
11:22 am

Posted the other day on this but not showing up. The story Chip mentioned regarding recruiting of Denzel Nkemdiche has concluded with him selecting Ole Miss (story in the Gwinnett Daily Post night of 5/23.) Sure wish we could have pursued him more vigorously.