Posts tagged Marc Curles
Dawgs' Ten Defining Moments of 2009
Jan 5th
In an attempt to put the 2009 football campaign to rest, I have compiled a list of ten moments that I beleive will forever define this season for the Georgia Bulldogs. The order is debatable and there are probably some that I missed. I welcome your comments.
10. Cox sees Kentucky blue
After building a 14 point halftime lead, the Dawgs could not finish the drill against the Wildcats. Not content to run the ball and bleed the clock, the Dawgs were pass happy and Cox threw two of those passes to the other side. Many will point to the fumble by Ealey, but the game should have been decided by then.
9. Georgia goes Grambling
Perhaps it was designed to confuse historians generations from now, I have no idea, but Georgia came out a little yellow shy of being Grambling. They then proceeded to play exactly like Grambling. The uniforms were ridiculous looking, but not as ridiculous has the motivation behind wearing them, whatever that motivation could have possibly been. This was the lowest point of the season for me.
8. Caleb King takes it to the house against Tech
Perhaps the high point of the season, Caleb showed he has the speed to take it to the house. The run was the defining moment of a night where Georgia was committed to running the ball. It was beautiful and made me wonder why it took so long. Sure, the line gelled that night, but we lacked a commitment to the running game all year.
7. Boykin Kick return for touchdown against Gamecocks.
In a game that produced many highlight clips, Boykin’s 100 yard kick-off return really took a lot of wind out of the Gamecock’s sails. Branden Smith’s reverse was great, but Boykin’s came at a time when it looked as though the Gamecocks were going to run us out of our own stadium.
6. Rennie saves day against Gamecocks.
This game was not over until the Gamecock’s final play. Ironically, it was the Dawg linebacker’s inability to cover the South Carolina tight end that kept the Gamecocks in the ball game. Fortunately, when it counted most, Rennie stepped up and made the play.
5. AJ Green jumps to the 300 level to block field goal.
In horrible conditions, the Dawgs let an inferior team stay in the game. If not for AJ Green’s Superman assault on the Sun Devils’ field goal attempt to take the lead late in the fourth who knows what would have become of this season.
4. Opening kickoff in Knoxville
Perhaps it was just the hangover of the LSU game, perhaps it was a case of not taking an opponent seriously. Whatever the case, the Dawgs just did not have it in Knoxville. The defense and special teams put more points on the board than the offense. It was truly “beyond Crompton.”
3. The excessive celebration penalty against LSU
A story book ending had been pinned. All Joe Cox ever wanted to do was be the quarterback at Georgia. A late drive, a miracle catch. The Dawgs had just taken the lead late. Dawgs are congratulating one another, the crowd goes crazy and so does Marc Curles when he reaches in his pocket and throws a flag for reasons no one has yet to define. LSU gets field position, is not forced to be pass only, and Rennie misses a tackle. A confluence of events sure to break the Dawgs’ collective hearts every time.
2. The second offensive drive of the Oklahoma State game
After running the ball down the Cowboys’ throats and mixing in a little play-action on the opening touchdown drive, the Dawgs come out in the spread formation on their second series. I still maintain our coaching staff fell in love with Mike “I’m a man” Gundy’s offense after watching it on tape all summer. We would not get back to Georgia football until the Tech game.
1. Richt dismisses three defensive coaches
I admit, I did not think Richt would do it, especially after Richt’s decision to have Walsh attempt an uber long field goal with the game in the balance against Tech. That decision spoke as much about Richt’s confidence in Willie’s boys as it did his confidence in Blair Walsh’s ability. Ultimately, the decision was probably made in Knoxville and confirmed in Jacksonville. Of course, Arkansas, South Carolina and Kentucky were all decent enough reasons to make a change. One thing I am sure of, there is no more defining moment than this.
So what do you think? Did I leave anything out? Is the order wrong?

Oh, that crazy BCS
Nov 12th
Perhaps Mike Slive and Rogers Redding should dispatch Marc Curles or Penn Wagers to take care of these flies in the ointment.
How about a Boise-TCU matchup? — latimes.com
With the potential of five schools being undefeated, this much is clear: It is in the vital interests of the BCS that undefeated Texas Christian and Boise State earn BCS bowl berths.The BCS might be stupid, but could it be a monopoly if TCU and Boise State earn half of the four at-large bids? There is even a good chance that, if Texas slips up, TCU could play for the national title.

In the 4th quarter, SEC referees follow orders
Nov 8th
The Southeastern Conference Officials, once again, had a major effect on the outcome of a big-time game. As expected, all questionable calls went the way of the conference’s chosen team, Alabama. The play went to review and end the end, the conference’s goal of having two undefeated teams arrive in Atalnta trumped substantial video evidence. Vince McMahon is very proud of Mike Slive. Don King a fan.

If the Bryant-Denny field could talk ... it may confirm that Patrick Peterson had one foot inbounds during the disputed INT. By Andy Staples/Special to SI.com
LSU’s starting quarterback and running back were both knocked out of the game. Still, the SEC could not risk LSU having the ball with a chance to go ahead in the fourth quarter. Video evidence be damned, the SEC has a product to market and cannot be concerned with athletic fairness.
LSU loss marred by missed-INT call – Andy Staples – SI.com (h/t Senator Blutarsky)
Because when officials went to the video with 5:54 remaining in Alabama’s 24-15 win to determine whether Peterson intercepted McElroy along the right sideline, the replay official didn’t see what most impartial eyes watching at home saw: Peterson got his left foot down with possession. He may have even gotten his right foot down. Officials on the field ruled Patterson caught the ball out of bounds. After a few minutes, replay official Gerald Hodges upheld that call, even though numerous replays shown on the CBS telecast seemed to show Peterson getting that left foot down with possession. Later, LSU players would say Peterson’s left shoe left an obvious gash in the grass. (After interviews, I even took a photo of said gash.)
My guess: Marc Curles proved himself so effective that the league offices decided to have him give seminars to the other officiating crews during his “suspension”. What do you think, are bad calls as random as “bad bounces” or is something else afoot in the SEC?
