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Mark Richt the Second Coming (And Going) of Tommy Tuberville?



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Grumblings have been heard out of Athens, GA this week for the first time following Georgia's pounding by Tennessee, 45-19. Georgia is now 3-3 on the year and people are starting to talk about Richt's future--in the open. The Birmingham News' Kevin Scarbinsky thinks that parallels can be drawn between Richt's future and that of the recently departed Tommy Tuberville.

It looks like the second coming (and going) of Tommy Tuberville, another nice guy who finished his otherwise productive tenure by finishing last. No one expects Georgia to finish last this season, though the Bulldogs will find it difficult to win even the B flight of the SEC East. No one expects Richt's tenure to end this season, either, but these things tend to follow a pattern. A popular coach becomes unpopular gradually, and then suddenly, and no one can foretell exactly when the slow descent will pick up enough mass and speed to become a runaway snowball.

Few would dare believe that Richt is in trouble at the end of this year, but never underestimate that snowball metaphor. Should Georgia drop one to Vandy tomorrow, then all bets would be off, especially with the meat of the Dawg's schedule coming up with Florida, Auburn and Georgia Tech.

In an email to the Atlanta Journal Constitution this week, Georgia AD Damon Evans had this to say about their 3-3 record:

I do have some concerns about where we are at this point of the season. Beyond that, I have total confidence that Coach Richt will properly evaluate our team, address concerns and prepare the right path that will direct us back into the position we all want to be in --competing for championships.

Although there is a chance that Georgia could drop all three of their biggest rivalry games, the odds are that they will finish with a winning record, making them bowl eligible, something that Tuberville and the Auburn Tigers were NOT last year.

The one clear thing that Richt may have in common with Tuberville is that he may eventually be a victim of his own success. Georgia fans have enjoyed eight years of 10+ wins average. Have they no recollection of how times were under Ray Goff and Jim Donnan? Other than losing to Florida, much has changed since the years of obscurity following Vince Dooley. To think that you can't ever have a down year is very unrealistic but so typifies the average SEC fan.

Scarbinsky thinks that Nick Saban rode Tommy Tuberville out on a rail and that eventually, Urban Meyer will do likewise to Richt:

If perception is reality, Richt is to Meyer as Tuberville was to Nick Saban as the lamb is to the lion. Sooner or later, the lamb is lunch.

But it was the Auburn administration that had it in for Tubs. He was toppled more by a palace coup than an attack from the outside. You have to love how easy Bama apologists like Scarbinsky so quickly connect the dots, and their favorite conspiracy theory of all time is that Saban caused all this by merely showing up. I call it The New Sherrif in Town theory, and we Auburn folk were helpless in that part of The Process. Ouch!! That hurt!

But Tubs' troubles are a problem that Richt doesn't have. He has the full support of the powers that be between the hedges and will be given ample time to right his ship. With Tennessee possibly resurging under Kiffin and the Old Ball Coach still lurking in the east, Richt will have at least a year. ONE year.

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Great Article...

Richt should survive, but next year could be big trouble. Speaking of Tubs, I’m sitting at a high school game where his son plays and was behind his wife in line. Man, she gets better looking by the year.

Track'em Tigers.com

by Jay Coulter on Oct 16, 2009 6:52 PM CDT via mobile reply actions  

I agree with this except that

Scabs is certainly no Bama apologist. Having read him and Melick for six years now, the biases there appear to be Melick towards Bama and Scabs toward Auburn, with both throwing in a column every 2 months or so that takes the opposite position seriously enough to try to ward off the bias accusation.

by rtr on Oct 16, 2009 9:23 PM CDT reply actions  

I think...

……Both guys are big pot-stirrers. They’ll turn on any school. If there’s nothing negative to write about, they’ll make something up. Both guys learned at Finebaum’s knee, back about 20 years ago.

by Acid Reign on Oct 17, 2009 5:04 AM CDT up reply actions  

School of F'baum......

Exactly what I was thinking also Acid. It’s a shame when that’s what newspapers have to lean towards. I’ll try to never read another article by Paul F. Never being such a long time and all.
Let’s beat the fur off these ’Cats coming to town!

WAR EAGLE!

"An armed man is a citizen. An unarmed man is a subject"-Thomas Jefferson

by KoolBell777 on Oct 17, 2009 6:34 AM CDT reply actions  

Huh?
The one clear thing that Richt may have in common with Tuberville is that he may eventually be a victim of his own success.

You’re kidding, right?

by xotus on Oct 17, 2009 9:23 AM CDT reply actions  

I think that WEA is right on with that assessment.

Georgia fans want to win, yes, but they also want Championships and National Titles. Richt has proven that he can get the Bulldogs to win, but is he a good enough coach to take them to the next level. If you look at the Georgia seasons, they are played well with winning records, but there is always something missing……Fans will become anxious, if they have not become anxious already.

by Tiger on the mountain on Oct 17, 2009 9:57 AM CDT up reply actions  

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