Sunday, August 28, 2011

A Little Air of Optimism


Surviving Preseason Predictions might be the toughest fight for the Game Cocks. Well that, and their wonderfully outspoken quarter back Stephen Garcia- who don’t worry, doesn’t have a guaranteed job yet.
 
Last year South Carolina thought they were a little bit of a big deal and that’s because they did a lot of big things for the first time ever. Beating a No. 1 team, Alabama, won their first game ever in the Swamp, won the Eastern Division for the first time and made it to Atlanta.
            Of course we all know they lost there, but still they seem to be pretty proud even if head coach Steve Spurrier tries to keep them in reality. He particular mentions that the team needs to realize that Florida, Tennessee and Georgia all had down years last year and that helped them a great deal.
            “It was a good year. It wasn’t a great year,” he said. “We stretched our dimensions a little bit, but we’ve not hit where we believe we can go yet.”
            That being said, Spurrier has declared this a “new time” for the USC program. There are a lot of things he worries about but if you were to ask him what freshman he’s most excited about be prepared for his exuberant smile and ecstatic answer.
            “You ever heard of Jadeveon Clowney?”
            Football fans may remember the frenzy the young teenager caused as he debated which school to star at and for weeks his decision hinged on South Carolina, Clemson and Alabama. Clowney is a South Carolina native, which no doubt helped in the decision but Clowney’s decision to go to the Game Cocks makes Spurrier giddy just the same.
            “Shoot five, six years ago there’s no way he would pick South Carolina,” Spurrier said. “Now he thinks, ‘hey, we could win big at South Carolina’.”
            But its not all smiles in Columbus. Drama with their quarterback Stephen Garcia has left a bad taste with Spurrier who commented on his “stupidity” several times at SEC Media Days.
            “I guess we don’t want to kick [Garcia] out for stupidity,” Spurrier said to the laughter of reporters.
            The reason, he says, for the unlimited amount of patience with Garcia’s transgressions off the field has been the faith in the type of person Garcia is.
            “Basically we do believe he’s a good kid, a good person,” Spurrier said. “With this latest incident, we told him he could go play somewhere else if he wanted to but he wants to stay here.”
            Spurrier says Garcia has made lifestyle changes after several incidents where Garcia’s behavior was called “unruly and rambunctious”. When Garcia comes back, assuming he can keep his mouth shut for that long, he will be competing with Connor Shaw for starting quarter back. 
            A lot of Spurrier’s struggle this year is just the kind of thing that Garcia embodies- over zealous confidence and thinking he is invincible. Spurrier knows that the success the team had last year doesn’t mean they’ve accomplished anything yet.
            “There’s a little air of optimism which you have to have, that’s good,” he said. “Hopefully we’ll be smart enough to know that its not going to be easy, and we’ve got to play extremely well, prepare well to give ourselves a chance to do it.”            
             Keeping tabs on that confidence will be on the agenda as long as it takes for players to buy in to the fact that this is 2011, not 2010.
            “Its one thing to be competitive and another thing to win the game,” he said. “We’ve not won a huge majority of games yet. We’ve been competitive. We got enough players to get in the action, to compete with everybody we play. But taking that next step and winning a whole bunch of games, winning the SEC, that’s what we’re trying to do. We haven’t got there yet.”
            Keeping tabs on fan’s confidence will be another Spurrier struggle.
            “[The fans] are going to tell the guys how great they are. Hopefully we’ll be smart enough to handle it and go from there. But historically we’ve not, so it will be a challenge to see if we can handle some pre-season predictions, ‘cause we’ve never had much of those before in the past.”
            A strong component you will no doubt know the name of is running back Marcus Lattimore who again is expected to star on offense. His confidence is quiet but ever-present, even as he talks about his Heisman chances, saying he has studied a lot of film and thinks he has a chance. But chance, at least right now, is all he has before taking a regular season snap even if his coaches praise his hard working mentality.
            “Marcus gets the hardest worker in the weight room award every spring,” Spurrier said.
            Another hard worker on offense is receiver Alshon Jeffrey who Spurrier says you can brag on him but doesn’t affect him at all and says now he’s “a lot faster than he’s ever been.”
            Alshon, true to form, did remain modest when he spoke to reporters at Media Days saying it doesn’t matter to him who scores, “as long as we win.” Alshon hasn't forgotten that the trip to Atlanta last year did not have a favorable outcome. 
            “We didn’t win the whole thing,” he said. “We’re not anything special.”
            Alshon says he is working on running better routes and using his quickness to work on his overall game. He says its instrumental the team learns from last year’s experiences.
            For defensive tackle Travian Robertson, this year puts a lot of pressure on defense.
            “Its tough being on the defensive line in this conference, you don’t get anything that’s free,” Robertson said. “We’re going to take it one game at a time to eliminate mistakes from last year. We know its gonna be tougher than it was last year.”
            Robertson explains that the “little air of optimism” is actually a very important characteristic to keep on this team in particular. 
            “Lack of confidence has been a problem with our program in the past,” he said. “We’ve been working on that.” 
            Confidence seems to be on a better track but Spurrier has more to worry about. He says third and one defense needs to improve along with pass protection and special teams. But talent is not the main concern- getting player’s minds ready is.
            “Our talent level is by far the best it’s been since I’ve been there,” Spurrier said. “But now we gotta go play you know? We gotta go play.”
            Spurrier knows if you can win in Atlanta you can win the National Championship and he knows that its been proven the last five times its been put to the test.
             “We’ll see if we can do it.”

No comments:

Post a Comment