ITKIt was the best and worst of college football all in one night, and it was glorious. There truly is nothing like college football, where the pageantry and exuberance of a new season can be replaced with dismay and dispair from a fanbase in just a few minutes.

Such was the case in Columbia, South Carolina last night, where Steven O. Spurrier got his backside whipped in live and living color for all to enjoy. More on that in a second, but today we award grades to a few deserving organizations for their effort on the first night of the new season.

SEC NetworkThe first grade goes to the SEC Network. They get a high grade on the pregame build-up for the South Carolina-Texas A&M game alone. There were some hiccups, but piping in the stadium music as you watched crowd shot after crowd shot after crowd shot was outstanding. Every SEC stadium has its own fare that makes the build up to the opening kick-off electric, and the coverage inside Williams-Brice Stadium was beautiful. No talking heads babbling on and on…just shots of players getting ready and the crowd going nuts. I hope that is an every week thing for the network, because it was awesome.

The network showed the Aggies and Gamecocks, then transferred to Vandy and Temple. Dave Neal and Andre Ware did the second game, with Brent Musberger and Jesse Palmer calling the first. I used to be critical of Musberger, but there simply is no one better in the business today.

The only hitch I saw in the coverage was their cameras. All of them didn’t appear to be white-balanced the same, meaning the colors didn’t match when you moved from shot to shot. Still, the overall presentation of the game itself was an improvement to coverage we’ve seen from other networks in the past.

SOSFAnd now, without further adieu, the next grade goes to Steve Spurrier. I could say “the Gamecocks,” but instead I’ll award the grade to the face of their program. The one who can’t help himself when he sees an open microphone. The one who loves to beat his own drum and beat down his rivals with his gums.

Once again, Steve Spurrier looked washed up last night. The Gamecocks came out flat, began the contest appearing entitled, and played from behind against a motivated Aggie football team all game long.

I’ve said it here many, many times, but Spurrier is lazy. He is done. Washed up. His best days are long gone. Would much rather be playing golf than doing what it takes make his team great. He’s fantastic at running his mouth and beating hapless opponents, but when big games start rolling in you can count on him to choke on applesauce like he did last night. You ain’t ready for 2014, and you have no excuse. Winning an occasional big game doesn’t mean anything if you’re not ready to play week in and week out, and you don’t have a coach able to get your team ready.

South Cackalacky, you’ve gone as far as you’re going to go. We at Alabama would love nothing more than to meet you in Atlanta to hand you the beatdown you deserve after the 2010 loss, but the problem is you can’t get there because Steve Spurrier is still your coach. Enjoy the Music City Bowl this year.

SumlinNext, Kevin Sumlin. I wonder what it’s like for Steve Spurrier to see himself getting passed on the gridiron by the next generation of dominant coaches? Sumlin is definitely among that group.

At SEC Media Days Sumlin seemed irritated every time someone asked about life after Johnny Manziel. Now we know why. Manziel didn’t make Sumlin, Sumlin made Manziel. There is talk in this league about new coaches some believe are “geniuses.” While the jury is still out on some, it isn’t on Kevin Sumlin. The guy is one heck of a coach, evidenced by his brand-spanking new quarterback Kenny Hill breaking Manziel’s single game passing mark with a 511 yard, 3 touchdown performance in front of a hostile crowd.

But it wasn’t just offense. The Aggie defense looked much improved, holding the Gamecocks to just 67 yards rushing. Some of that was Spurrier having to air it out to catch up, but Texas A&M’s defense looked a lot better from the swinging gate they were in 2013. Sumlin’s team showed on the road in the SEC that they are still the real deal. That is a credit to none other than Kevin Sumlin.

Derek-MasonThe Aggies aren’t a one trick pony, but Vandy sure is. Gone is James Franklin, now the coach for Penn State. The Commodores new head man Derek Mason looked like an African-American Mike Dubose last night. The guy appeared to be completely clueless on the sidelines.

The Dores were whipped by Temple on their home turf––the first of many whippings to come this year. Vandy records of 9-3 will soon be a distant memory. With Mason at the helm, Vandy appears to have returned to take their rightful spot of last place in the SEC East.

Hugh-FreezeHugh Freeze is among those some like to call a genius. He isn’t. His Black Bear Rebel Thingies crapped all over themselves for an entire first half against Boise State, and this isn’t your older brother’s Boise State.

Ole Miss will always be Ole Miss. Improved? Yes. Over the la$t few year$ Ole Mi$$ ha$ done well in recruiting, $igning $ome of the be$t talent in the country, and with that many good player$ it’$ hard not to be good.

But when it counts, the Black Bear Rebel Thingies just appear to be a step behind. That’s not to say they won’t be ready when Bama comes to down in early October…they will. Mainly because EVERYBODY is ready when Alabama comes to town. But sustaining success is something few programs can do, and Ole Miss is one of those programs. The defense was salty, but senior quarterback Bo Wallace looked undisciplined and just downright bad for much of the game. As in other years when the Black Bear Rebel Thingies were supposed to be great, I don’t believe the hype. And you can set that squarely on Hugh Freeze’s shoulders.

Ole-Miss-crowdWorse than the Black Bear Rebel Thingies performance was the Black Bear Rebel Thingie fans. For a minute I thought UAB’s fans had swapped places with them. The Georgia Dome was empty. One shot showed the upper deck completely…completely…empty. As in not one butt in a single-solitary seat.

Come on Rebel Black Bear Thingy fans. Support your team. I know, I know, Boise State didn’t bring many fans to the game. But Bama would fill that stadium by themselves. If you want us to take you seriously, aside from getting a head coach who doesn’t resemble a hayseed Disney character, travel and represent your team on the road.

Overall it was a good night for college football, with many for great games on the horizon this weekend. Thank you Lord for college football! The 2014 season is here!


(Follow ITK on Twitter for Bama news, commentary and smack.)

11 thoughts on “Opening night report card: Gamecocks fail, Aggies still for real”

    1. Haha you(‘re) a joke. Probably the worst article (comment) I have ever read!

      Really, Bobby – put down your sisters laptop and go play outside. You aren’t bringing anything to the discussion with remarks like this. Your name now goes on the list of “people who think they know anything about football and/or writing, but think they have to continue to prove it with their comments”, and I won’t read any more of your missives.

  1. You’re spot-on with the color issues in the network cameras last night That was weird. It felt like watching football in a warzone sometimes.

    And the camera missed a lot of snaps, but that’s a natural, jarring side effect of trying to watch HUNHNS football teams.

    However, I’m not convinced about TAMU’s skill.

    When I watched some of the highlights again this morning, TAMU looked good. But an incredible amount of their throws could have and should have been intercepted or blocked, certainly enough to make the game competitive. South Carolina also couldn’t block, lacked vision (particularly in the secondary all night long), and apparently had spaghetti legs on their offensive line as Dylan Thompson got virtually no protection.

    Thompson actually looked very good last night, but a little bit of relevancy here, it’s visibly better to have a great football team and a servicable QB than the other way around.

    Also, Mike Davis was all but useless due to injury. The Gamecock’s backup RB wasn’t used much at all either, and while that may have been a side effect of being so far behind so quickly, the South Carolina offense was almost completely one-dimensional. When you play a one-dimensional team, you don’t have to be a sensational defense, particularly when your d-line dominates their o-line.

    TAMU gets the best possible setup before coming to Tuscaloosa—-tons of easy games as prep for the big boys. The QB will improve, but I simply can’t tell how good their defense or offense really is yet. I’m more surprised by how poorly South Carolina played, but I’m also not convinced week-one syndrome had no effect.

    TAMU will come into Tuscaloosa at 6-0. By then we’ll know about Alabama. I’m not sure TAMU is the team to beat in the SEC West, but I can’t pretend I’m not more excited for the Aggiese to come to Title Town than I was Wednesday night. Roll Tide.

  2. Is it bad that I was pulling for Boise State last night? I’m not a fan of “Pretty Boy” Bo and I think that they are very overrated every year.

    They did, however, lay a few licks last night.

    1. I thought BSU’s helmets looked really sharp, particularly the chrome face guards.

      Ole Miss eventually got into a groove, but I couldn’t tell if they were the identical Ole Miss we saw last year or if there were week one issues. Bo threw a ton of interceptions, but that’s not exactly uncommon for him. And Boise State threw more interceptions, but from more athletic catches at least several times from the Ole Miss defense. Nkemdiche looked good if not a little inconsistent.

      Freeze, meanwhile, didn’t impress. There were definitely some coaching errors in there. But I will say Bo Wallace was aided by his receivers not just being good at snagging passes but extraordinary for gaining yards after the catch and yards after contact. Boise State had sloppy tackles, but Ole Miss definitely has talent in their WR’s. It felt like a week one game but it was a lot of fun to watch.

      1. Agree completely. When you have that many false starts or penalties all together, the coaches are not doing their jobs. Agree about his receivers. It looked like Boise was kind of gassed at the end. Bo Wallace has a very slow delivery and good DB’s will eat that up this season like they did last season.

        I did like the helmets. The chrome facemasks were awesome.

  3. I thought Spurrier did his QB a disservice by not giving him some easy passes to complete early on. #CONFIDENCE

    also I just don’t agree with using the hurry up to battle a HUNH offense. Spurrier again screwed his defense doing this. The way to beat the HUNH is slow the game down. Dictate the game to them, not the other way around.

    1. I feel for Spurrier, to be honest.

      I mean, I’m not sure what choice he had.

      Mike Davis (RB) was hurt. That wasn’t a surprise (even before the game it was public), and apparently their backup RB wasn’t worth it. Davis is a stud, but without a running game there’s not much you can do.

      And this is a problem Alabama simply doesn’t have. People WILL complain about Henry not playing enough this year. They simply will, and probably any time Yeldon or Drake have a fumble. Henry will play, but saying Alabama is blessed with depth at RB is an understatement, and after the Gamecocks game last night, I think it would also be an understatement to say how important that depth is for any fundamentals-based football team (which also makes me wonder about TAMU’s run game).

      1. spurrier at the half: “we’re being out-coached”.

        spurrier after the game: “we were out-coached”.

        agreed.

  4. Can’t wait to watch Bammer lose to A&M, Auburn and and unknown loss. There could even be 4 losses with Dumb $hit Kiffin running the offense!

    Bammer really beat WVU badly, LOL!!

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