6 Alabama players named to ESPN’s ‘Top 2020 college football players’

Here are the six Alabam players named to ESPN’s top 2020 college football players.
10. Patrick Surtain II – CB .
13. DeVonta Smith – WR .
14. Najee Harris – RB .
18. Jaylen Waddle – WR.
19. Dylan Moses – LB .
20. Alex Leatherwood – OL

Here are the six Alabam players named to ESPN’s top 2020 college football players.
10. Patrick Surtain II – CB .
13. DeVonta Smith – WR .
14. Najee Harris – RB .
18. Jaylen Waddle – WR.
19. Dylan Moses – LB .
20. Alex Leatherwood – OL

6 Alabama players named to ESPN’s ‘Top 2020 college football players’

Here are the six Alabam players named to ESPN’s top 2020 college football players.
10. Patrick Surtain II – CB .
13. DeVonta Smith – WR .
14. Najee Harris – RB .
18. Jaylen Waddle – WR.
19. Dylan Moses – LB .
20. Alex Leatherwood – OL

Here are the six Alabam players named to ESPN’s top 2020 college football players.
10. Patrick Surtain II – CB .
13. DeVonta Smith – WR .
14. Najee Harris – RB .
18. Jaylen Waddle – WR.
19. Dylan Moses – LB .
20. Alex Leatherwood – OL

Gators News: September 1, 2020

September is finally here, and with the promise of football around the corner, we brace ourselves for the coming weeks that lead into it. 

[jwplayer QyyBFkar]

September is finally here, and with the promise of autumn and football around the corner, we brace ourselves for the coming weeks that lead into them.

Erick Smith of USA TODAY Sports tries to make sense of a college football season of uncertainty in our top story today with his bowl projections. He has Alabama and Georgia both making it to the playoff, with ‘Bama facing Clemson in the title game.

Speaking of the Crimson Tide, head coach Nick Saban joins athletes and coaches in a march against racial injustice. Over a hundred University of Alabama athletes, coaches and support staff marched from the Mal M. Moore Athletic Building to Foster Auditorium on Monday afternoon, protesting racial injustice.

In other SEC news, another junior starter on the LSU football team is skipping the 2020 season. Defensive tackle Tyler Shelvin has told LSU coaches he will be leaving the program to prepare for the 2021 NFL draft.

Finally, Auburn has 16 football players currently sidelined due to COVID-19 concerns, grinding its preseason schedule to halt. Head coach Gus Malzahn: “We had a pretty challenging week last week.”

Around the Swamp

It’s great to be a Florida Gator!

[lawrence-related id=21313,21153,21120,21086]

Watch: Nick Saban leads student-athlete march in Alabama

The boycotts, protests, marches walkouts throughout the sports world continued in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and was led by Nick Saban.

(Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

The boycotts, protests, marches walkouts across the sports landscape continued today and this time it was in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, where legendary football coach Nick Saban led a march of hundreds of the university’s student-athletes which was organized to protest racial injustice in the United States.

It was the latest powerful show of solidarity by athletes all around the country.

But it wasn’t only ‘Bama football players.

According to a report from AL.com:

Saban was at the front of a large crowd of players who walked from the Mal Moore athletic facility to Foster Auditorium’s schoolhouse door.

Senior running back Najee Harris walked next to Saban wearing a T-shirt reading, “Defend Black Lives.” Other players walked behind Saban holding a banner reading, “Black Lives Matter.”

Saban later spoke in front of the schoolhouse door, where Alabama governor George Wallace infamously resisted federal desegregation efforts in 1963.

“Today I’m like a proud parent,” Saban said at the end of the march. “I’m proud of our team, I’m proud of our messengers over here and I’m very proud of the message. I’m very proud of the ’All lives can’t matter until Black lives matter’ video that we did early on that I think had a very positive impact. That was something we did together as a team.

“This is something that the team decided to do together as a team, so I’m very proud and supportive of what they are trying to say, and in a peaceful and intelligent way. I’m very pleased to be here today.”

“Sports has always created a platform for social change,” Saban said. “For each of us involved in sports, I think we have a responsibility and obligation to do that in a responsible way and use our platform in a positive way to try to create social change in positive ways.

“Through this process, I’ve learned a lot from our players. I don’t get to see the world through the same lens that a lot of our players do. I think I respect and appreciate the lens they see the world in and they live the world in. We had various speakers that I think contributed that education as well, whether it was Condoleezza Rice, Charles Barkley, Stephen A. Smith, Joey Galloway, Tony Dungy. All those people had an interesting way that we could all make positive change.

“So this is what helped me grow in my role as a leader: to listen to the players, to learn from the players and to give them the opportunity to do things that could impact social change today.”

He was joined by a group of speakers that included Harris and Alabama athletics director Greg Byrne.

 

 

Latest CBS Sports NBA Mock Draft has Kira Lewis as 20th overall pick

According to CBS Sports latest mock draft, Kira Lewis would be drafted by the Miami Heat in the 2020 NBA Draft as the No. 20 overall.
Other mock drafts have Lewis between the No. 15-25 overall pick of the draft.
Some analysts say Lewis could sneak his way closer to the top 10 as the NBA Draft gets closer

According to CBS Sports latest mock draft, Kira Lewis would be drafted by the Miami Heat in the 2020 NBA Draft as the No. 20 overall.
Other mock drafts have Lewis between the No. 15-25 overall pick of the draft.
Some analysts say Lewis could sneak his way closer to the top 10 as the NBA Draft gets closer

Latest CBS Sports NBA Mock Draft has Kira Lewis as 20th overall pick

According to CBS Sports latest mock draft, Kira Lewis would be drafted by the Miami Heat in the 2020 NBA Draft as the No. 20 overall.
Other mock drafts have Lewis between the No. 15-25 overall pick of the draft.
Some analysts say Lewis could sneak his way closer to the top 10 as the NBA Draft gets closer

According to CBS Sports latest mock draft, Kira Lewis would be drafted by the Miami Heat in the 2020 NBA Draft as the No. 20 overall.
Other mock drafts have Lewis between the No. 15-25 overall pick of the draft.
Some analysts say Lewis could sneak his way closer to the top 10 as the NBA Draft gets closer

Notre Dame announces fan capacity for their 2020 home games

Schools around the country–primarily in the SEC–have announced upwards of 25 percent fan capacity at home games this football season…

Schools around the country–primarily in the SEC–have announced upwards of 25 percent fan capacity at home games this football season while, as everybody knows at this point, two of the Power Five conferences will not be playing (as things stand today).

For those SEC schools the numbers stand as follows:

25 percent capacity: Texas A&M, South Carolina, Tennessee, Missouri, Ole Miss, Mississippi State

20-25 percent: Georgia

21-23 percent: Arkansas

20 percent: Alabama, Auburn

No plan yet: Vanderbilt, LSU, Kentucky, Florida

 

So, news came out that Notre Dame–a member of the ACC this season–will plan for upwards of 20 percent capacity at home games this season.

Yes, Notre Dame is in the same state as Big Ten schools Purdue and Indiana.

Notice the disconnect in the sport yet?

Even Iowa State from the Big 12, obviously in the same state as Iowa, is planning for 25,000 fans.

25,000 vs not playing. Conferences and schools can’t be so separated on such an important issue.

I talked about it on the 3rdAndRun Podcast last week. Long story short: the conferences need to somehow get on the same page or the future of the sport will not be a bright one.

The cross-conference disconnect is expected given how the sport is structured–a problem I gave a solution two a few weeks ago. But now it’s even within states.

Leadership and unity matter during a time like this, and I can only hope for the future of the sport to trend in a good direction after a season occurs with two conferences siting at home while three play with thousands of fans in the stands.

Don’t Feel Sorry for the Big Ten or Pac-12 Now

college football never left, only certain conferences and teams did

Let me preface this by saying that I feel awful for the student-athletes that lose a football season, some the last they were ever supposed to play, with almost half of college football calling off the 2020 season and I feel bad for the coaches who don’t get to spend the fall game-planning as well.

But I don’t feel sorry for the Big Ten, specifically those in the most power of the conference.

Ari Wasserman does a great job covering college football for The Athletic.  So great in fact that he just received a well-deserved promotion in becoming their national college football recruiting reporter.

But.

There’s always a but.

His suggestion that those who didn’t prematurely cancel college football for 2020 couldn’t possibly be a worse thought.

 

Wasserman is certainly right that it would be better if all teams and conferences were included, certainly.

But it’d also be better if the world was empty of hate, if everyday was 75 degrees and sunny with a very slight breeze and if your childhood pet lived forever.

Unfortunately that isn’t the case for any of those.

Let’s start by recognizing that if something doesn’t ever leave then it is impossible for it to come back.

If I never leave my house to go to the office then I can’t possibly come back home from being at the office. Simple enough, right?

College football, for 76 of 130 FBS programs, was never canceled.  Perhaps delayed a couple of weeks but it was never called off.  In other words – college football never left, only certain conferences and teams did.

The Big Ten felt the need to try and force the hands of the other Power Five conferences to join them in calling football season off.  God forbid the others think on their own (save the Pac-12) and figure out a way to salvage the season.

If I decide on my own that I’m going to show up for work late on Monday and not be present for my first meeting, do I just get to tell my boss to hold up and wait for me until I’m ready for it to get started?

If my best friend is getting married and I decide to leave my house late to get to the chapel, when I walk in after his bride has already walked down the aisle do I get to push open the doors and demand the restart the entire service?

The Big Ten presidents and Kevin Warren were the ones that rushed to a decision while business owners in college towns nationwide wondered to even a greater extent how they’ll survive this fall.

The Big Ten presidents and Kevin Warren felt the need to be first to cancel out of conference games, which forced the MAC’s hand and then first to call off the entire 2020 season.

The Big Ten presidents and Kevin Warren made those decisions almost a month before the season was scheduled to kickoff and thought because they’re the Big Ten, that everyone else would just follow their lead.

Again, this flat out sucks for the student athletes it effects, especially those who won’t have a senior season as a result.  The best thing I can say to them is that it’s not their fault and hope their respective conferences can get their acts together sooner rather than later.

The Big Ten, Pac-12, MAC and Mountain West all made theses beds.

Sure, it was the University presidents and not those in the athletic departments making those calls in several cases, but these decisions were made unnecessarily early.

Just over a week ago Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren doubled down on the conference’s decision, saying their postponement of fall sports “will not be revisited”.

Nobody told the Big Ten University presidents that a decision had to be made on August 11.

Nobody told the Pac-12 that they had to follow suit just hours after the Big Ten made their announcement.

The Big Ten presidents and Kevin Warren made their bed.

As did those in the Pac-12.

Now it’s not the ACC, Big 12, SEC, AAC, Conference USA or Sun Belt’s responsibility to have to sleep in it.

Sports Illustrated names Tua Tagovailoa as Offensive Rookie of the Year candidate

Sports Illustrated’s Conor Orr predicts Tua Tagovailoa may be a potential candidate to be named the NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year.
If Tagovailoa wants to add another award to his lengthy resumé, it would likely have to be the 2020 Offensive Rookie of the year.
Orr includes Tagovailoa’s name alongside Joe Burrow, Jonathan Taylor, and Clyde Edwards-Helaire

Sports Illustrated’s Conor Orr predicts Tua Tagovailoa may be a potential candidate to be named the NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year.
If Tagovailoa wants to add another award to his lengthy resumé, it would likely have to be the 2020 Offensive Rookie of the year.
Orr includes Tagovailoa’s name alongside Joe Burrow, Jonathan Taylor, and Clyde Edwards-Helaire

Sports Illustrated names Tua Tagovailoa as Offensive Rookie of the Year candidate

Sports Illustrated’s Conor Orr predicts Tua Tagovailoa may be a potential candidate to be named the NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year.
If Tagovailoa wants to add another award to his lengthy resumé, it would likely have to be the 2020 Offensive Rookie of the year.
Orr includes Tagovailoa’s name alongside Joe Burrow, Jonathan Taylor, and Clyde Edwards-Helaire

Sports Illustrated’s Conor Orr predicts Tua Tagovailoa may be a potential candidate to be named the NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year.
If Tagovailoa wants to add another award to his lengthy resumé, it would likely have to be the 2020 Offensive Rookie of the year.
Orr includes Tagovailoa’s name alongside Joe Burrow, Jonathan Taylor, and Clyde Edwards-Helaire