Bishop Media Sports Network

No Time To Be Blue

By: Kenneth Harrison Jr.

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Marietta High School is not a traditional football powerhouse. They have one state championship and that is from 1967. Recently they have been in the news for the wrong reasons.

The Blue Devils had a great year in 2017, finishing the regular season 8-2. They were forced to forfeit all of their eight wins after an investigation by the Georgia High School Association determined two of the players were ineligible.

The program also got a $1,500 fine and was placed on “severe warning status” for the 2018 season.

Marietta began the 2018 season ranked in the top 25 nationally of multiple national polls and No. 1 in Georgia’s Class AAAAAAA.

Marietta’s star quarterback and wide receiver were lost to injury late in the season, and two other Division I recruits never took the field, declared ineligible by the GHSA in preseason.

Marietta finished 5-6 and unranked.

“Our season ended in a disappointing way,” Marietta coach Richard Morgan said. “But the way they came back to work, instead of sulking, showed me we’ve got a shot to be really good. Based on the work ethic I’ve seen in the off season and the commitment and dedication; I’ve got real high expectations for this team.”

On paper, this is the most talented team in the state. The 2019 Blue Devils have nine seniors ranked among the top 100 prospects in Georgia. No other Georgia school in the highest classification has more than four.

Tight end Arik Gilbert, who had 88 catches for 1,210 yards and 14 touchdowns last season, is a five-star recruit.

Quarterback Harrison Bailey, defensive end/tackle B.J. Ojulari, tackle Jake Wray and defensive back Rashad Torrence are consensus four-star prospects.

Running back Kimani Vidal, defensive back Dawson Ellington and wide receivers Taji Johnson and Kobi Stewart all have offers from ACC and SEC schools.

How confident are they? On the school’s website they have all playoff dates including the state championship listed on their schedule.

The Blue Devils start the season August 22 on the road at Rome. The Wolves had their 40-game win streak snapped in the 5A semifinals. They are a good team but I expect a talented 7A team like Marietta to win.

St. Joseph’s (PA) comes to town the next week. I don’t know anything about them but I give the edge to Marietta.

The next two weeks are on the road against Gwinnett County teams. They play Collins Hill and Grayson.

Collins Hill struggled last season so this should be an easy win. Grayson on the other hand will be a tough game. The Rams advanced to the state quarterfinals in 2018. Their head coach resigned at the end of the season so having a new coach might put them at a disadvantage.

After a bye week, the last non-region game is against Edgewater (FL). The Eagles were 12-2 last year and advanced to the Class 7A state semifinal. This game could go either way.

The first region game is at North Paulding and this is an easy win.

That is followed by a rivalry game versus McEachern. The Indians are always one of the best teams in Cobb County and anything can happen when rivals play. This is too close to call.

The toughest remaining game is against last season’s region 3-AAAAAAA champion, Hillgrove. The Hawks are playing on the road and Marietta wants revenge. They lost in 2018 48-24. The Blue Devils will get revenge.

Marietta has so much talent that I expect them to advance to the state championship at the very least.

Florida Baseball In October?

By: TJ Hartnett

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Baseball is a strange and wonderful game. Sometimes incredible things happen; like the Angels throwing a combined no-hitter on the night they honor their fallen teammate Tyler Skaggs. Skaggs passed away a couple of weeks ago.

Sometimes bizarre things happen, like an attack swarm of midges derailing the Yankees’ playoff hopes in Cleveland in 2007.

Sometimes things are both expected and unexpected – like the Tampa Bay Rays finishing the first half of 2019 in 2nd place in the AL East, 6 ½ games behind the New York Yankees and 2 games above the mighty Boston Red Sox.

This is unexpected because the Rays are always overlooked and consistently underfunded. People always seem to forget about Tampa Bay, with their lack of superstars and roster that seems made up of cast offs.

People also always forget that over the past decade or so, the Rays have been pretty good. They’ve been to the playoffs four times since 2008, and made a real run of it just last year and yet I don’t think many expected them to be in this position after the All-Star Break.

But here they are. At one point in May (that’s the second month of the season, mind you) Tampa Bay had the best record in all of baseball.

The Yankees heated up at the opportune time (when the Rays cooled down) and even with two and half months left in the season the Bronx Bombers seem uncatchable, but going into Saturday’s games Tampa is on top of the Wild Card heap by a game over Cleveland and Oakland. If they keep on as they have been, there will be playoff games in Florida for the first time since 2013.

A lot of the winning ways have come from Tampa’s starters, namely Charlie Morton, who brought some Houston Astros winning mojo with him when he signed during the offseason.

He’s leading the American League in ERA with a 2.32 mark and is in the top 5 in strikeouts with 142 whiffs. Assuming more of the same in the 2nd half, the Rays can count on wins every time Morton takes the mound for them.

The offense isn’t leading the pack in the way that Morton is, but they have been consistently average throughout the season so far.

They are a bit of an outlier in 2019, as they are a contending team that doesn’t hit the ball over the fence. The Rays have only 114 runs, outside of the top 10 in the AL.

However, while that’s abnormal for a good team in today’s game, it’s also kind of normal for Tampa Bay to be abnormal. They’ve always found creative ways to win, dating back to when Joe Maddon was at the helm of the team.

Looking ahead, there is a lot for the Rays to look forward to and take advantage of. Specifically, the number of games against the teams looking up at them from below in the AL East.

Tampa plays the Orioles and the Toronto Blue Jays a combined 23 times over their last 70 games. These are bad teams and should be easy wins for the Rays.

Which isn’t to say there aren’t challenges. The Rays have a west coast trip ahead, including a showdown with the Los Angeles Dodgers, far and away the scariest team in the National League.

There’s also the unfortunate scheduling happenstance that the Rays only play the Yankees six more times before the season ends (again, it’s unlikely that they’ll be making up those 6 ½ games).

That being said, if the Rays can stay the course (or even add a little something before the July 31st trade deadline) they should be in a good position to claim a Wild Card spot come this October.

Glynn Set To Terrorize 2019

By: Kipp Branch

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

When I sat down with Glynn head coach Rocky Hidalgo a few weeks ago he said the following: “The 2019 edition of Red Terror football will be exciting. Who plays a tougher non-region schedule than us? We are going to be a good football team”.

That about sums it up for the Glynn Academy faithful. This team is solid across the board and the clear favorite in Region 2-AAAAAA this fall. The Wayne, Ware, and Camden games will have this team peaking by region play in October.

My Regular Season Prediction: 9-1

Game by Game Predictions:

8/23 @ Fort Dorchester SC: The Red Terrors travel to the Charleston area and play a seasoned South Carolina playoff team. Fort Dorchester beat GA on the field in 2018 but had to forfeit the win later.

Glynn sets the tone early in this one with the power run game and wins a tough one on the road 31-21.

8/30 vs Washington: GA blows out this team 49-7, and everyone in the program plays in the contest. Glynn goes to 2-0 on the season.

9/6 @ Groves: Glynn could beat Groves 80-0 if they wanted to do so. Coach Rock calls off the Terrors midway through the second quarter as GA hammers Groves 56-6. The Red Terrors go to 3-0 on the season.

9/20 vs Wayne County: The Jackets beat Glynn in Jaycee Stadium last year, but the 35-mile trip to Glynn County Stadium won’t be kind to the Jackets in 2019.

The Red Terrors physically whip Wayne and win a 28-14 ball game to go to 4-0 on the season. By this point Glynn should be ranked in the top 3-4 teams statewide in 6A.

9/27 vs Ware County: This will be a huge one between the bricks. Quote me later on this “no first-year coach is coming to Brunswick and beating Rocky Hidalgo and Glynn”. Glynn beats the Gators 24-17 to go to 5-0 on the season.

10/4 vs Camden: Camden is going to be really good in 2019. I think the 7A Cats with more depth than Glynn win a tough 24-21 contest on the road. Glynn drops to 5-1 on the season.

10/18 @ Richmond Hill: The Wildcats should be good on defense but can they contain Glynn enough and score enough points to win?

The answer is no, as Glynn goes to 6-1 with a 30-14 win over Richmond Hill.

10/25 vs Brunswick: Glynn owns the town and series at the moment. Brunswick will be improved but not enough.

The Red Terrors win the sixth straight game in the series 27-20 to go to 7-1 on the season.

11/1 @ Effingham: Effingham can’t match Glynn on the line of scrimmage and GA rolls into Springfield and clinches a fifth straight region title 35-10.

The Red Terrors go to 8-1 on the season.

11/8 vs. Bradwell: The Terrors roll over the Tigers 42-7, and enter the state playoffs as a number one seed from region two at 9-1 on the season.

Opposing Coach View on Glynn: “Rocky has built a solid program from the inside out down there. They are always going to be solid on defense, and how far they go depends on how far the QB position takes them.”

They have a good chance to make a run this year and when I say run, I mean final 4 or championship game. They play a great schedule that gets them peaking come region and playoff time.

Camden should be getting close to being the Camden we all know again so watch that game to get a gauge on where Glynn is.

Outside of Benedictine this has been the best program in Southeast Georgia for past 4-5 seasons. They have tough kids who have bought into what they are teaching down there. This is a good high school football program. They have been close a couple of times there.

That 2015 team was better than the team they lost to in the dome, and that 2017 team was peaking and the wheels fell off late at Lee County. This 2019 team has the potential to be better that both.”

Look for Glynn to make a deep playoff run in 2019.

Gators Look To Chomp on 2019

By: Mike Anthony

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

The 2018 season was the best in recent memory for the Gators of Bulloch Academy.

An 8-2 record and a second-place finish in region action was solid in its own right, but the Gators took things a step farther in winning their first state playoff game since 2009.

In fact, Bulloch Academy could have gone even farther if not for how its schedule played out. The Gators lost a non-region contest to John Milledge Academy and missed out on a region title when they dropped a close one against Frederica.

Those turned out to be possibly the only teams that could handle Bulloch last season as the Gators made it to the quarterfinals before being eliminated by John Milledge, which advanced to the state championship game before falling to Frederica.

All of that came in the first season with Pat Collins running the ship for BA. Collins has been the school’s athletic director for two seasons, but stepped into the football head coaching role – a title he has previously held at Portal, Screven County and Southeast Bulloch – during the spring of 2018.

He has seen success wherever he’s gone and while he usually inherits a rebuilding squad, he now has the task of continuing to build on an impressive debut.

“We’ve definitely got our work cut out for us,” Collins said. “We lost 12 seniors, a three-year starting quarterback and 98 percent of our offensive yards from last year. That’s a lot to replace, but we’ve got eight rising seniors who are stepping up and I think we can be a good team again this season.”

Fischer Oglesby is the heir to the quarterback spot vacated by Don Aaron. And while Collins admits that nothing can replace Aaron’s experience, Oglesby has more size and speed that will fit well in the Gators’ offense that showcases plenty of option, with the ability to take long shots down the field.

While the offense settles into an entirely new backfield, it will be the defense that Bulloch relies on early in the season.

Eight starters return, giving Collins hope that his thoughts on the gravity of experience translate into a shutdown defensive unit.

Perhaps the biggest edge Bulloch can take into 2019 is its depth. Not only did plenty of underclassmen get quality playing time last season – including a JV squad that went undefeated in its abbreviated schedule – but the numbers continue to creep up on the roster in general.

The Gators figure to have at least 40 – and possibly 45 – players in uniform to open the season. That’s up from the normal roster of 30-ish Gators from just a few years ago and will allow the team to avoid too many instances of two-way players that can become an issue late in the season as fatigue mounts.

Bulloch will once again kick off its season against arch-rival Pinewood as part of the Erk Russell Classic at Paulson Stadium on the campus of Georgia Southern University.

The Gators will face familiar non-region foes – including Westfield and a rematch with John Milledge – early in the season before playing the entirety of its Region 2-AAA schedule over the final four weeks of the regular season.

Wolves On The Hunt

By: Kenneth Harrison Jr.

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Buford High School has been a powerhouse for quite some time.

The Wolves won their first state title in 1978. Then starting in 2001, they won 10 state championships with the last one in 2014. They advanced to the state final 2015 and 2016 and lost close games.

They are trying to get back on track and prove they are the best team in 5A.

John Ford took the top job at Buford in 2017 after coaching Roswell to a 14-1 season and a 23-20 loss to Grayson in the class 7A championship game.

After two seasons, he resigned. He went 21-5 in two years as head coach, taking both teams deep into the state playoffs.

Ford led Buford to last year’s state quarterfinals, where they were upset, 23-20, by Bainbridge. That was the program’s first Elite Eight loss since 2006. That loss ended Buford’s state-record 35-game winning streak in home playoff games.

The Wolves won the Region 8-AAAAA championship and lost in the regular season to Class AAAAAAA semifinalist Archer and to Florida power Deerfield Beach.

They also won the region championship in 2017 and reached the state semifinals with an 11-2 record. That season ended with a rough 45-7 loss to Rome.

Buford promoted defensive coordinator Bryant Appling to head football coach. Appling has been on Buford’s staff the past 15 years through seven state titles and five runner-up finishes. He was an assistant for two seasons at Lithonia before coming to Buford.

The Wolves are ranked No.5 in the state in the 5A preseason poll. They have a lot of talent on the team. Corner back Jalen Huff is the highest ranked recruit on the team. He is the 53rd ranked player in the state and he’s a Georgia Tech commit. Huff is a bigger corner, listed as 6’0.

Center Seth McLaughlin is 6’4, 270 pounds. He’s ranked as the tenth best center in the nation and he committed to Alabama.

Willie ‘T’ Lee is listed as an athlete and he plays wide receiver and cornerback. He is a three-star recruit and an Arizona State commit. Lee is 5’11 so he also has good size for the position.

Running back Elijah Turner is also a three-star recruit.

The season opens August 23rd in the Corky Kell Classic at Coolray Field. They play Milton, the defending 7A state champs. Milton lost a lot of talent from last year’s team so I think this will be a very close game.

The next week is home against Jonesboro and that will be an easy win. Last season Buford beat the Cardinals 58 – 7.

Life Christian Academy from Virginia comes to town after a bye week for Buford. They were 2-6 last season so this will be another easy win.

Newton, another 7A opponent comes to town. Buford beat them 54 – 27 in 2018 and I expect more of the same.

They play a better 7A team September 27th when Archer comes to town. The Tigers beat up on Buford last year, 48 – 24. I think the game should be closer but I expect Archer to win.

They begin region play October 4th and Buford will slaughter these teams. Last season they beat all five region 8 AAAAA opponents and scored 253 points while only giving up 9 points.

I know they’ll make it to the playoffs but can they get over the hump and win another championship? That is the burning question.

The Coach’s Corner

By: JJ Lanier

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

There are a few things I look forward to ever summer: vacations, beautiful weather, and SEC Media Day.

I have no idea why I look forward to Media Day with the enthusiasm of a teenage boy on prom night; maybe it’s because the summer months are fairly slow and it’s something to write about?

Could it be that sometimes they’re actually a tad bit entertaining? Regardless of the reason, with media days approaching here is what you can expect to see or hear from all 14 SEC coaches.

Dan Mullen. Mullen will start things off that Monday morning wearing a 2019 Florida Gators SEC Championship t-shirt, assuming the Gators are favored to win the conference title because he’s going ahead of Nick Saban and Kirby Smart.

Ed Orgeron. Reporters will bring in those interpretation headsets used during U.N. Conferences and still nobody will understand what the hell Orgeron is saying. Still, odds are at least one reporter will try and run through a wall.

Barry Odom. Most of Odom’s time will be spent asking the media to put in a good word with his fellow coaches, just in case he’s looking for a job at this point next year.

Kirby Smart. Smart will bring the transcript of all Nick Saban’s answers from last year’s media day and recite them accordingly. Things will get a bit dicey when he makes a reference to his quarterback, Tua Tagoviaola.

Matt Luke. This session will be one of the shortest of the summer. Luke will merely state “Still not Hugh Freeze”, will receive a standing ovation, then turn and leave.

Jeremy Pruitt. With Phillip Fulmer by his side, all questions will be directed to the Tennessee Athletic Director; nobody loves Phil Fulmer more than Phil Fulmer.

Jimbo Fisher. Fisher will spend most of his time subliminally mentioning Willie Taggert’s name whenever something negative comes up.

Nick Saban. The part of Nick Saban will be played by Bill Belichek. Everyone will be confused as to why “Saban” is talking about the Miami Dolphins and the leap Sam Darnold will make in his 2nd year with Jets. Yet, no one will question his remarks in fear of being yelled at.

Chad Morris. If it wasn’t bad enough Morris was at the helm during Arkansas’ first ever 10 loss season, he gets stuck with this slot at media day. Good news is most of the media will probably be eating lunch, so it may not be too painful.

Joe Moorhead. Moorhead will appear on the podium wearing a “My Name Is Joe Moorhead” sticker. No questions will be asked.

Will Muschamp. The final media day will begin with the South Carolina coach. If a coach nobody really cares about answers questions that don’t matter, does anyone really pay attention?

Gus Malzahn. I’m pretty sure Malzahn will spend his entire time reciting Chris D’Elia’s “Brinks” standup routine, because that’s what I would do if I were being paid $7 million a season with his coaching record.

Mark Stoops. This may be the first year Stoops doesn’t spend most of his time answering questions about Kentucky basketball or what his brother Bob is up to. Who am I kidding, that’s still going to happen.

Derek Mason. As the final session approaches all of the reporters but two will have already left, forgetting that Vanderbilt is still part of the SEC and that Mason has actually done a decent job.

Braves Tomahawk First Half

By: TJ Hartnett

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

The Braves will be entering the All-Star Break sitting pretty atop of the heap of the National League East.

That fact, plus a three-All-Star showing in the personages of Ronald Acuna, Jr., Freddie Freeman, and Mike Soroka, should make baseball fans all across Braves country rejoice.

It’s especially sweet given the potential offseason improvements made by the Washington Nationals (adding Patrick Corbin, among other things) and Philadelphia Phillies (adding Bryce Harper, J.T. Realmuto, Andrew McCutchen, and Jean Segura, among other things), both of whom are tied for 2nd place in the East at 6 games back going into Sunday’s contests.

The Mets too, made moves to improve themselves (blockbuster trade for Robinson Cano and Edwin Diaz), and they sit under .500 at 13 games back going into Sunday.

The Braves, for their part, made very few headlines in the offseason other than signing Josh Donaldson to a hefty $23 million contract for a year and he has only really been bringing the rain for the past two weeks or so, offensively.

So, the fact that the Bravos have managed to put a relatively nice cushion between them and the rest of the NL East at the end of the first half is truly an impressive feat, though maybe not an entirely surprising one, as they did win the division last season.

The question is: can they maintain the lead they’ve carved out for themselves during the second half of 2019? And if they can, are they capable of playing deeper into the playoffs than their fairly unimpressive showing against the Los Angeles Dodgers last October?

The answer to the first question is a resounding yes. The Mets are being the Mets and seem to be on the verge of implosion, so let’s table them for the time being.

The Phillies are a talented squad but the Braves have shown that they can handle them, winning the last two series against them and outscoring them 50-25 over those six games.

The Nationals are a bit more of an unknown factor. The Braves have only played them five times so far this season, and have gone 2-3 so far. Granted, they took 2 out of 3 from them in the nation’s capital two weeks ago, so recency bias has the Braves at an advantage for their season exchange going forward.

The Braves have won with a nearly unstoppable offense in 2019. They’ve set a new season record for home runs before the break and tied the franchise record for most players with 15 bombs in the first half – both records set by the 2003 squad (note: if Ozzie Albies knocks one out on Sunday, the new record will be set with six – SIX – players with 15 homers).

The pitching for Atlanta in 2019 has been more inconsistent, which is partially why the answer to the second question is probably a no.

Mike Soroka has earned his All-Star selection, but the Atlanta rotation just hasn’t shown it can get the job done day in and day out. Obviously, the team has been winning, but that doesn’t mean that if the Braves draw the Dodgers in the first round again that they won’t get spanked.

There’s potential here. However, Julio Teheran has found his old self in 2019, though he still has his poor streaks.

Mike Foltynewicz has proved that he can be better than he has been this year, and I feel confident we haven’t seen the best of Dallas Keuchel in an Atlanta uniform yet (he just got started, after all).

But these guys need to find another gear if this second exciting year atop the NL East is going to end differently than the last one.

Pirates Set To Sail In 2019

By: Kipp Branch

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Sean Pender starts year three at Brunswick High with 16 starters from 2018 returning with a year of varsity football experience.

The 2019 Pirates expect to compete for the Region 2-AAAAAA football championship.

When asked about what to expect from the 2019 Pirates Pender said “We have had more intensity and competiveness than we had in all of last year in our spring and summer program. The kids have worked extremely hard and I expect good things out of this football team once we get healthy at the QB position.”

Schedule and my predictions:

August 23rd vs Coffee: The Trojans look very good along the lines of scrimmage. Coffee is always big and strong. This will be a tough matchup for the Pirates, but Coffee has historically struggled at Glynn County Stadium. Give me Coffee 28-20.

August 30th vs Bartram Trail: Brunswick moved the ball up and down the field last year in St. Augustine. Bartram makes the return visit to Brunswick and I think the Pirates will be ready and beats a solid Florida state playoff team 34-28 to go 1-1 on the season.

September 6th vs MCA: The Bucs from Darien come “Between the Bricks” and get drilled 49-7. Pirates go to 2-1 on the season.

September 20th @ Camden: The Pirates tangle with the Cats in the first road game of the season and it will not end well for the Pirates. Camden is on the way back to being a factor in 7-A and the Pirates get clawed 38-20 to go to 2-2 on the season.

September 27th@ New Hampstead: Pirates travel to Savannah for this one and I’m putting them on upset alert. Pirates win an exciting game on the road 35-22 to move to 3-2 on the season.

October 4th@ Monroe Albany: Long drive to Albany, Georgia and the Pirates roll home with a 42-14 win to go to 4-2 on the season.

October 11th @ Richmond Hill: The Wildcats embarrassed the Pirates in 2018, but lost pretty much their entire offense to graduation. Brunswick returns the favor on the road at a place they have never lost. Brunswick beats Richmond Hill 28-21. Pirates go to 5-2 on the season.

October 18th vs Effingham: The Rebels ran up the score against the Pirates in Springfield last year throwing TD passes with less than two minutes left up by 24 points. Circle game at home for Brunswick. Expect Brunswick to return the favor if that opportunity presents. Pirates go to 6-2 with a 38-21 win.

October 25th @ Glynn Academy: In a game with the region championship on the line BHS tries to avoid a sixth straight loss. Anything can happen in a rival game but I will not believe it until I see it. Glynn 27-20. Pirates drop to 6-3

November 8th vs Bradwell: BHS locks up a number two seed with a 41-14 win over the Tigers and finishes the regular season at 7-3 and will host a first-round state playoff game.

Opposing Coaches view on Brunswick: “When Sean gets solid QB production his offenses are the best around.

I know he made some really good hires on the defensive side of the ball during the winter and I think they get a lot better there because they played a lot of sophomores on that side of the ball last year.

Will that community let Sean build this thing? You will see this team get a lot better this fall and Sean has worked hard to keep his kids from being cherry picked by the private school in the county.

They are on the way back. Maurice and Victor built a solid program there and they made a mistake letting Victor go, and the guy behind him ran that thing over a cliff.

Sean is the right man for that job, and he has some nice young talent cycling his way in that school system. They will be a playoff team this fall then that program takes off in 2020.

They have good facilities down there and they have those kids all on the same NFL team in Detroit. The skill talent is always there.

Sean built that thing in Pierce and will do the same in Brunswick.”

Milton To Soar Again In 2019?

By: Kenneth Harrison Jr.

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Last season Milton defeated the Colquitt County Packers 14-13 in the 7A championship game to become the first team not from South Georgia or Gwinnett County to win in the state’s highest classification since 1995.

The Packers had rolled over many of the state’s top teams while on its way to a 14-0 record and a top-5 position in several national high school polls.

Colquitt was playing in its fourth championship game in the last five seasons. They were hailed as a 21-point favorite by the computer Maxwell Ratings. This was the biggest upset in a state championship game that I can remember.

“They believed and trusted each other as cliché as that sounds,” head coach Adam Clack said after the monumental Milton victory. “This is one of the greatest teams – TEAMS in capital letters – a coach has ever had.”

Going in to 2019, the Eagles are the top team in the 7A preseason rankings. They have several great players that graduated in 2019.

Milton graduated 11 players that made first-team all-region in 5-AAAAAAA. Those include player of the year Jordan Yates (a quarterback signed with Georgia Tech), co-offensive player of the year Dylan Leonard (a tight end/wide receiver to Georgia Tech) and defensive player of the year Jordan Davis (linebacker to West Georgia).

Some additional graduates were 1,000-yard rusher Joshua Edwards, linebacker Allen Walker (Louisiana Tech) and Joseph Charleston (Clemson) and Nasier Currie-Sudler (UMass), whom Clack called the best safety combination in the country.

The 2018 team possessed plenty of playmakers of both sides of the ball. The 2019 team, on the other hand, will be anchored on the lines of scrimmage. Paul Tchio, a four-star offensive guard committed to Clemson, will be the team’s marquee player. Tchio is rated as the No. 7 recruit in Georgia. Zander Barnett, Alec Hutchinson, Anthony Minella and Marcos Rangel are other linemen who got all-region recognition last year. Most will play significantly on both sides of the ball.

Jack Rhodes had over 100 tackles at linebacker last year and he is a Senior in 2019. He will play defensive back/wide receiver this season. The replacement for Yates – who passed for 2,590 yards and rushed for 1,134 – is uncertain. Senior Jackson Weaver, Yates’ backup will probably be the starter.

Milton played a very tough non-region schedule in 2018.  They opened last season by upsetting No. 3 Archer in the Corky Kell Classic, then beat Cardinal Gibbons of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., 42-17 in the first Freedom Bowl, a six-game event that Milton hosted. Cardinal Gibbons went on to win Florida’s Class 5A championship.

The schedule will be tough again this season. The Eagles will open against Buford (#5 in 5A) in the Corky Kell. Then on Sept. 13, Milton will become the first Georgia high school team to play a game in California. The Eagles are set to play JSerra Catholic in The Trinity League vs. USA Showcase outside of Los Angeles.

JSerra was 9-3 in last season and ranked No. 17 nationally in the MaxPreps’ final computer national rankings.

The following two games are also against stiff competition. They play at Roswell September 20th. The Hornets have 3-star recruit, offensive tackle Trey Zimmerman who is committed to North Carolina.

No. 6 Parkview comes to town after that. The Panthers beat Milton by two points last season. The Eagles begin region play after this game.

I expect Milton to easily win their region and get back to the playoffs. I don’t believe they will make a deep run once they get in.

Saban Rolling Out?

By: JJ Lanier

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

The other day the Southern Sports Edition posted a story “The Question of the Day”, which consisted of 50 questions the southern sports fan should ask concerning sports in our region.

There were a lot of intriguing questions asked- you should give it a read if you haven’t already- but the one that stuck out to me was “How much longer will Nick Saban coach?”

I knew Saban was older than I originally thought (he’s 67 to be exact), but I hadn’t really spent much time pondering how much longer he’ll actually continue to coach.

It’s difficult to gauge the happiness of someone who is obviously allergic to smiling and showing joy more than once a month, but when you’ve dedicated your life to something and had the type of success Saban has achieved, you just don’t think of that person giving it up.

I admit, I don’t really pull for anyone in the SEC, so I can understand how that conversation may come up a little more often amongst fans.

If I had to guess, and that’s strictly what this is, I would say it’ll be at least 4-5 more years before Saban calls it quits.

Since 2008, Saban’s second season at Alabama, the Tide have finished tied for first or won the SEC West outright in every year except two, 2010/2011.

Over his tenure he has won 5 National Championships, 6 SEC titles, regularly finishes in the top 3 in recruiting and just happens to be the highest paid college football coach.

I realize at some point all those things pale in comparison to allure of stepping away from the stress of the job, but when you’re on a roll like that, it makes it more difficult.

No matter when Saban decides to hang it up, part of the fun is trying to predict who will take the reins once it happens.

I think the first call obviously has to be to Dabo Swinney. I don’t think he’d take it- Clemson gave him an opportunity and you could argue they are premier program in college football- but he does have a history with Alabama and you can never underestimate just how convincing some boosters can be.

The second call I’m making- it’s at this point you may throw whatever you’re reading this on against the wall and figure out some way to put a voodoo curse on me- is Kirby Smart.

Again, much like Swinney I’m not saying Smart would take the bait, but depending on what happens over the next few years in Athens, I wouldn’t completely discount it.

After those two, it’s a who’s who of coaches they could go after. Do they stay within the Saban coaching tree and go after someone like Jimbo Fisher or Mark Dantonio? Or, do they go outside the “family” and hire someone with nonties to either Alabama or Saban?

Outside of Swinney and Smart, it would probably be in Alabama’s best interest to look outside the program. There are plenty of decent coaches with a connection to Alabama, but I think you’d be looking at Matt Doherty with UNC type situation as opposed to their current one with Roy Williams.

There are more pressing questions with immediate repercussions, but when it comes to our region’s most popular sport and the one man who has had a stranglehold in the SEC, the timing of his departure, and what may follow, just might be the most important one of all.