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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

The Recent Rash





'A Samford University football player has taken the recent rash of off-field arrests to new heights - by robbing a bank.

Michael Sherrod Hall, a 20-year-old defensive end, was arrested and is being held on federal bank robbery charges after allegedly holding up a Hoover bank last Friday.

"This totally shocks me," first-year Samford head coach Pat Sullivan said in a statement on Monday. "Right now, Mike is suspended from our football team."

Hall, a 2006 transfer from Arkansas, was arrested in Douglas County Friday morning, just two hours after a man with a pistol robbed an AmSouth Bank in Hoover, police said.

Local authorities say they found about $18,200 during a search of the vehicle Hall was in when he was picked up.

Hall started nine games for Division I-AA Samford last season, finishing the season with 13 tackles and two sacks.'



It's the total shock that gets UD. How totally shocked do you think the head coach really was? Even if he was first-year? It's like this poor guy Akey at the University of Idaho. (UD thanks Dave, a reader, for sending her the following, from The Idaho Statesman.)


'Next month, Idaho football coach Robb Akey will head to Wallowa Lake in Joseph, Ore., for an annual fly-fishing getaway with friends.

If anyone deserves such a vacation, it's Akey.

Hired in December to rebuild the Vandals (the University of Idaho football team] — and provide stability to a program that has had four head coaches since 2003 — Akey has instead spent more time handing out punishment than scheming Xs and Os.

Seventeen players have been removed from the roster in Akey's short tenure for a variety of reasons — family obligations, academics, stealing textbooks, dealing drugs, violation of team rules and just plain quitting.

Some Vandals have a longer rap sheet than Pacman Jones and Lindsay Lohan.

Combined.

"I didn't anticipate this many disciplinary issues," said Akey, his normally enthusiastic voice dipping slightly.

"When you tell people things are going to be done one way, it needs to be backed up. That's not why I signed on to be a football coach. Being the principal isn't the job I wanted. But it's my responsibility to make sure that things are done that way."

In setting the tone for his program, the first-time head coach believes he has made the Vandals better on the day that matters most — Saturday afternoons.

"We've increased the character of our football team. We've increased the strength and base we're going to build from," Akey said. "If we've got guys doing the wrong things in the community, it makes it tough on everybody and we get looked at in the wrong light."

Athletic director Rob Spear is selling sunshine as well.

"We have a solid foundation now. And I think the message has been sent and there is a way we're going to do things and a way these student-athletes are expected to do things," he said.

"I'm not going to predict we'll never have another problem, but I do think we have a solid foundation and are moving in the right direction."

Akey, Spear and the rest of the Idaho athletic department can spin this as positively as they want.

I'm not buying it.

Nor do I think Vandal fans should.

I'm not buying that having to dismiss roughly 15 percent of your football team for disciplinary reasons is a positive.

If Akey's efforts are to be applauded — and I believe they are — then it also raises alarming questions about the state of the program.

If it's a testament to Akey's character — and I believe it is — it's also an indictment of the previous regimes and, in many ways, the leadership in the athletic department overall.

"The instability with the head coaching position has had an impact. I do think we were in a rush to fix things quickly rather than doing it over a long period of time," Spear said. "I'm not going to be critical of coach (Dennis) Erickson and coach (Nick) Holt."

Why not?

If character is so important to building a winning program, then why weren't the former coaches held to such a standard? And the quick-fix argument doesn't hold much sway.

After all, Idaho is 20-61 since 2000. The Vandals went 9-27 under Holt and Erickson.

If the problem requires this drastic of a solution, how come it wasn't uncovered sooner? And would these problems have come to light if Erickson — not exactly noted for his devotion to discipline — were still the coach?

Spear said he told coaching candidates that they would have to carefully evaluate the personnel on the team. He knew there were some problems, but did not realize they ran so deep.

"There were enough things happening that I was concerned about, which is why I was up front with the coaches we interviewed," Spear said.

And if tearing down is the only way for Akey to build the type of program he and Vandal fans can be proud of on and off the field — and again, I believe it is — then why weren't others tasked with the same objective?

It simply sounds too convenient.

Yes, it's great that Akey is cleaning up the program, but that doesn't mean you ignore the fact that it needed such a drastic cleaning in the first place.

The actions of this spring will not go away soon. Idaho will feel the effect in future NCAA Academic Progress Reports, which could lead to a loss of scholarships.

"We're making a conscious decision. We will sacrifice an APR score for good character," Spear said.

And they will be felt on the field this fall. Akey is likely to shift to a 3-4 defensive alignment because of the number of defections along the defensive line. Depth will be a huge issue at several positions.

"We've improved our football team by doing this," he said. "Sure, it'd be nice if the guys you got rid of were slow and not good football players, but it's not that way."

Akey better enjoy that fishing vacation. Something tells me this fall will be even more difficult than the spring.'