Mike Anthony

Bears With Bite?

By: Mike Anthony

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

As Mercer enters its sixth season of play since reviving its football program in 2013, the biggest question is whether the Bears can get over the hump.

After bursting onto the scene with a 10-2 record in their first season back on the field, Mercer made the jump from the Pioneer League to the much more challenging Southern Conference. For the last four seasons, the Bears have shown their teeth at times, but have always settled near the middle of the pack.

Mercer has finished a combined total of 8-8 in league play over the last two seasons, but with plenty of question marks around the SoCon outside of prohibitive favorite Samford, 2018 seems to be the perfect time for the Bears to make a move.

As the season begins, the most dependable facet of the team remains its head coach.

Serving as the head Bear since the team’s return to competition, Bobby Lamb – formerly of Furman – has been a steadying force. He faced the steep task of starting a program from scratch and has quickly made the Bears a concern on any team’s schedule.

So, when it comes to 2018, the question remains the same as the last couple of years. Can the Bears take the next step?

To ask the SoCon media that question, you’ll get the same, tepid maybe? Mercer didn’t get a first-place vote in the preseason poll and is picked to finish fourth – right in the range of another 4-4 conference mark.

But the Bears have plenty of reasons to hope for more than that. First and foremost, in that optimism is the return of quarterback Kaelan Riley. Pressed into action as a redshirt freshman last season, Riley responded with over 2,000 yards of offense, including 13 touchdown passes and four more rushing touchdowns.

Riley will continue to lead the Bears’ shotgun, no-huddle attack that will be further balanced out by the return of 2017 leading rusher Tee Mitchell.

Experience across the board will be Mercer’s biggest offensive asset as Lamb’s years of guidance, Mitchell’s seniority, and Riley’s proven leadership will have the Bears confident in any situation.

The defensive side of things also hints at an upward trend for Mercer. The Bears allowed a respectable 23.4 points per game last season and return six of their eight leading tacklers from the 2017 squad.

Highlighting the returners on defense is Will Coneway who was involved on 66 tackles last season, with six of those tackles going for a loss and three fumbles forced.

Mercer should continue to put up workable offensive numbers each week. The Bears’ ultimate fate this season will lie in how well its defense can adjust and perform from week to week.

Pass-heavy Samford and run-heavy Furman are the favorites in the SoCon. Running down the preseason rankings, the conference is full of teams whose offensive attacks will force defensive coordinators to vary their schemes wildly from week to week.

With the Southern Conference strong enough to send two or three teams to the playoffs, this will be a barometer season for Mercer. The Bears have been and should continue to be playoff-caliber on certain Saturdays.

The next step is to keep it consistent through an entire season and clinch the Bears’ first FCS playoff appearance.

Knights’ Quest

By: Mike Anthony

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

A handful of ‘Group of Five’ teams have been able to make runs that put them into the national title discussion over the years but the 2018 edition of Central Florida will be the first of its kind since the Boise State squads of the mid-2000’s with a legitimate shot of making a second consecutive Cinderella run.

The Golden Knights checked off nearly every box in the ‘exciting dark-horse’ checklist last season. They had a young, explosive, dual-threat quarterback. They had a young head coach with name recognition. They had one of the most explosive and high-scoring teams in the country. And they had a linebacker with only one hand who was better than 99 percent of other collegiate defenders with two hands.

That took care of all of the talking points but UCF also backed it up with its play on the field, rolling to the only perfect record in FBS.

But now everything resets back to 0-0. Scott Frost and his staff set sail for Nebraska while NFL draftee Shaquem Griffin and some other key components from last season are gone.

Many G5 titans would be set up for a big fall with those losses but the Knights are still set up for more success.

The key to bridging the winning streak into the new season will focus on quarterback McKenzie Milton. Pressed into action as a freshman in 2016, Milton had a trial by fire that prepared him for a 2017 campaign that saw him put up over 4,500 yards of total offense. Still just a junior, Milton has already proven to be a leader that can will his team to wins.

Also providing a potential path to more success is a schedule that bodes well for the Knights.

Of Central Florida’s two games against Power Five schools, both are very winnable. The Knights take on a North Carolina squad that was just slapped with 13 suspensions midway through September and will host a Pittsburgh team that isn’t projected to be much of an ACC contender to close out the month.

Looking at UCF’s American Athletic Conference schedule brings more good news.

Those stepping up to fill holes in the depth chart will face the conference’s weaker teams throughout the first two months of the season, with the Knights’ biggest division rivals filling out the month of November.

There is enough continuity on both sides of the ball to believe that the Knights can contend again this season but the biggest question will be how the team adjusts to an overhaul on the coaching staff.

Taking the reins of the program after the departure of Frost is former Oklahoma quarterback Josh Heupel. The 2000 AP Player of the Year didn’t accomplish much in the NFL but began his coaching career at Oklahoma in 2004 and has been rising ever since.

Heupel coached Sam Bradford to a Heisman trophy at Oklahoma and worked his way up to offensive coordinator. He spent a year each at Utah State and Missouri before landing what is his first head coaching gig.

There are sure to be some growing pains with new starters and a new coaching staff but there is no reason to think that the Knights aren’t a contender for another AAC title and – with a little luck – another run at a New Year’s Day bowl.

After all, if UCF can go from 0-12 to 13-0 in just two years, anything seems possible.

 

Non-Sports Day

By: Mike Anthony

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

It probably won’t come as much of a surprise to people that my radio is always on. For as long as I can remember, sports have always been my biggest interest. While baseball and college football are my favorites, I can get wrapped up in just about anything.

A few weeks ago, in the waning hours of a program where the hosts were trying to fill out their last segment of the show, the topic of the ‘sports calendar’ was brought up.

Obviously, there is no right answer to the question. Plenty of sports jump the normal calendar from December into January and there is enough of a following in each sport to keep one from being the league that opens or closes a ‘sports year’.

But I’d like to nominate today – July 18, 2018 – as the official unofficial singular day of the sports offseason.

This being the day after the MLB All-Star game, we’ve arrived at one of only two days each year in which none of the United States’ major professional leagues host games.

And that’s what makes today perfect for ending one year of sports and starting another

In this way, we’ll have wrapped up the last sports season with tennis’ most popular major at Wimbledon and the most watched all-star game of all major sports. We can all take inventory today and begin again tomorrow with the start of the British Open.

Using this timetable, the next ‘year’ should be an exciting one for sports fans in Georgia.

When MLB play resumes, the Braves will pick back up just half a game out of first place.

Atlanta is now popping up in many trade rumors as they look to add a piece that can put them over the top and each passing day is reaffirming that the success of the young roster is no fluke.

One of the newest sports on the scene in the Peach State is also turning some heads as the sports year begins.

Soccer is still trying to gain a strong foothold in the hierarchy of American sports, but it always gets a boost after the World Cup and those who give Atlanta United a chance will be pleasantly surprised.

The second-year franchise had a solid expansion season and has kept up the momentum in year two as United currently leads the Eastern Conference.

As fall arrives, the biggest fun starts as football returns.

On the pro side of things, the Falcons again figure to be a playoff team and will get a good barometer check from the get-go as they visit defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia in the first NFL game of the season.

Down in the college ranks, UGA fans might still be having nightmares of a national title game that got away but the Bulldogs have every reason to believe they can contend for a national title once again.

Football undoubtedly carries the bulk of the weight in this unique calendar and takes us into the early days of February. Georgia fans will face a lull for a month or two as Atlanta has no NHL team and the Hawks are only an NBA team by the most charitable of definitions.

But Georgia Tech, UGA and Georgia Southern all have solid baseball teams that will be in full swing by March and April brings The Masters, easily the most prestigious golf tournament in the world, to Georgia.

The end of the Masters coincides with the beginning of the MLB season, taking us into the dog days of summer where the head and grind call for this solitary day of rest.

Now enjoy your one day of sports offseason and get to bed early. The first groups at the British Open tee off at 1:35 a.m. Eastern time.

 

Braves Run Over?

By: Mike Anthony

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

For any Braves fans out there, who haven’t been kicking around the Earth for the same 32 years that I have, this season has to be a strange and exciting one.

You grew up rooting for a juggernaut of a team that was a threat to win it all throughout the 90’s. There were also some truly bad stretches of play where Braves hats were traded out for the fan’s college football team of choice by the Fourth of July. And there were a few years mixed in where Atlanta was expected to be thoroughly average and did just that.

But this is something new. Many preseason predictions had the Braves as a young team still squarely in the middle of a rebuild. While they weren’t expected to lose 100 games, they were overwhelmingly picked to finish third or worse in the National League East.

I’ve encountered plenty of Braves fans who aren’t sure what to think. Sure, they’re excited, but it’s hard to look at some teams like the Yankees, Red Sox and Astros with a lineup full of superstars and not wonder if the other shoe is set to drop.

Braves fans in the 25-35 age group spent the first half of their lives knowing that the regular season was a formality leading up to another division championship. Following that long run, there were a few lean years that everyone saw coming.

A bounce back from that saw an improved lineup from 2010-13 that was expected to contend and did, making a wild card game and two division series while winning another division title.

Then came another swoon that was expected to only be showing the first signs of a turnaround in 2018. Instead, the Braves are on pace for 90 wins.

Only time will tell in that matter, but I’m here to tell you to enjoy it, because these surprise seasons are the best of all.

If you’re around my age and a Braves fan, the only comparable season to 2018 that you might remember is 1991.

It’s my reference point as one of my first concrete memories of watching a game was seeing Kirby Puckett hit his Game 6 home run. Sorry for the cheap shot, but that really is the first baseball memory I can put into context.

I’m sure that the summer of ‘91 was spent with a lot of Braves fans not quite sure if they should allow themselves to get wrapped up in a run that always feels like it could stop at any moment.

Don’t do that. Lean in. It will be a summer to remember. And if not. Well, there’s always next year.

Flying Back To Old Heights

By: Mike Anthony

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

The comparison is often made that good teams – like wild animals – can be most dangerous when backed into a corner. There is obviously some truth to that for the saying to have become cliche, but there is more than one law to both nature and sports.

Sometimes, the most danger stems from guard being let down with a known threat that has become so commonplace that people have taken it for granted.

For nearly its entire modern existence, the Georgia Southern football program has been a powerhouse.

In just their second season of Division I-AA (now Football Championship Subdivision) competition, the Eagles claimed a national title. One year later, they became the first team ever to win consecutive championships at that level.

The next quarter century saw Georgia Southern rise as the unquestioned dynasty atop its level of competition, with ‘bad years’ being more commonly recognized as early playoff exits than losing records.

And when the time finally came to move up to the Football Bowl Subdivision, it was like a refresher course in GS Football history.

The Eagles’ first season in FBS resulted in a 9-3 record with two very-near upsets against ACC opponents. And it would have ended with a bowl if not for a useless NCAA bylaw that kept them out of consideration.

2015 brought about another stellar season and a game against Georgia that went into overtime and has kept the Bulldogs from releasing any comment on future dates for what had been a renewing rivalry series.

That season culminated in the first-ever bowl for Georgia Southern – a date with Bowling Green in the Go Daddy Bowl. The Eagles thoroughly disassembled the Mid-American Conference champs in that game and seemed poised to become an immediate player in the perennial ‘G5’ discussion.

But a funny thing happened on the way to more Georgia Southern dominance.

The 2016 season seemed to be set up for even more success than the previous year’s bowl-winner. Newly-hired head coach Tyson Summers got off to a 3-0 start in his tenure, but then the wheels fell off.

And then those wheels careened off of a cliff… And then the truck itself slammed into a mountain… and then the remains of that truck also fell off of the cliff.

The 2016 campaign ended with a 5-7 record and no return to a bowl. The next season began with a losing streak that nearly doubled the previous school record and Summers had been relieved before the Eagles saw their first win.

But the good thing about a program that can barely comprehend such a bad run of results is that it doesn’t take much to build up optimism for the next go-round.

Chad Lunsford was named the interim head coach midway through 2017. And while Georgia Southern won just two of the six games during that stint, a change in mood and culture was palpable and led to Lunsford being named the official head coach before the season concluded.

Some firings and hirings took place, while other members of the existing staff remained.

The first ‘early signing day’ of the new NCAA recruiting rules saw GS fall behind Sun Belt rivals, but the staff made more hires, ramped up the recruiting efforts, and by February ended up with the top-rated recruiting class in the conference.

The ultimate judgment on whether or not the Eagles have turned things around won’t come until the fall, but it’s hard to argue that Georgia Southern hasn’t had a great offseason that is quickly erasing a disastrous 2017.