July 27, 2005
SEC Media Days to offer hoopla, headlines
By Michael Wallace
mwallace@clarionledger.com
HOOVER, Ala. — On just about any other day, new Ole Miss football coach Ed Orgeron might be the center of attention at his first big-time gathering with reporters and analysts who cover the Southeastern Conference.
Instead, the 44-year-old birthday boy might just barely get noticed when he enters the Wyndham Hotel this afternoon for the start of SEC Media Days.
Especially with a fella named Spurrier crashing the party today.
SEC Media Days are certain to get off to quite a bang on Day 1 — with the return of colorful coach Steve Spurrier to the league, the controversial return of Tennessee coach Phil Fulmer to the state and the unveiling of the conference's plan to install instant replay.
And with three of the league's four new coaches on deck today, the story lines at the SEC's three-day football kickoff event are bound to be as numerous as the record 700 credentials the league office issued to the media.
SEC Media Days lineup
Today
# Ole Miss: Coach Ed Orgeron, QB Micheal Spurlock, LB Patrick Willis
# Florida: Coach Urban Meyer, C Mike Degory, DB Jarvis Herring
# Tennessee: Coach Phil Fulmer, DB Jason Allen, QB Rick Clausen
# South Carolina: Coach Steve Spurrier, TE Andy Boyd, LB Lance Laury
Thursday
# Mississippi State: Coach Sylvester Croom, C Chris McNeil, RB Jerious Norwood
# Georgia: Coach Mark Richt, NT Gerald Anderson, OG Max Jean-Gilles
# Vanderbilt: Coach Bobby Johnson, QB Jay Cutler, LB Moses Osemwegle
# Auburn: Coach Tommy Tuberville, OT Marcus McNeill, LB Travis WIlliams
Friday
# Alabama: Coach Mike Shula, QB Brodie Croyle, DB Roman Harper
# Kentucky: Coach Rich Brooks, DB Muhammad Abdullah, WR Tommy Cook
# Arkansas: Coach Houston Nutt, C Kyle Roper, SS Vickiel Vaughn
# LSU: Coach Les Miles, RB Joseph Addai, DT Kyle Williams
Coaches and marquee players from Florida, Ole Miss, South Carolina, and Tennessee are on deck today. Auburn, Georgia, Mississippi State and Vanderbilt take the stage Thursday with Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky and LSU closing out media days on Friday.
"We are anticipating our largest football media days ever," SEC associate commissioner Charles Bloom said. "I believe one of the main reasons why there is so much interest in this event is the depth of storylines available."
Although plenty has changed, two familiar faces and old division adversaries are sure to command top billing: Fulmer and Spurrier.
Fulmer, whose Volunteers are ranked as high as No. 2 nationally in preseason magazine polls, is expected to make his first public appearance on Alabama soil since he became linked to a defamation lawsuit filed by two ex-Tide assistant coaches against the NCAA and others.
Fulmer, who was a confidential witness in an NCAA investigation that landed Alabama on probation, skipped last year's media day amid threats that he would be served with a subpoena in the recently resolved defamation suit.
Fulmer told the Knoxville News-Sentinel last month that he would attend this year's media day, and the coach re-affirmed his plans to The Associated Press on Tuesday.
"I am going," Fulmer said. "That's all that needs to be said."
And there's a good chance Spurrier, known as the old ball coach, will likely offer a wisecrack playfully intended to get underneath Fulmer's skin — just like old times.
Spurrier, who coached Florida to 12 ultra-successful seasons that included a national championship in 1996, is back in the league after a hiatus that featured a dreadful two-year stint coaching the NFL's Washington Redskins.
Only this time, Spurrier will be representing South Carolina after replacing Lou Holtz. Sharing the spotlight today will be the latest coach trying remove himself from the shadow of Spurrier's visor. Urban Meyer will now try to accomplish what Ron Zook couldn't in the last three seasons at Florida.
Spurrier, Meyer, Orgeron and LSU's Les Miles represent the SEC's biggest incoming class since 1995, when Vanderbilt, South Carolina, LSU and Ole Miss introduced new coaches.
Count MSU coach Sylvester Croom among those intrigued by this year's media days hype.
"Let me tell you something ... Steve Spurrier is going to do well (at South Carolina)," said Croom, entering his second season in the SEC. "The guy doesn't have anything to prove. The fans are interested. I'm sure they want to know about Steve, his NFL deal and coming back to the Southeastern Conference. And Urban coming into the conference with a new offense... it's exciting and it's great for the conference."
Meyer, who guided Utah to an undefeated season in 2004, is one of two recipients of national coach of the year honors who will be in attendance this week. Auburn's Tommy Tuberville, who led the Tigers to a 12-0 mark, is the other.
After serving as a top assistant on Southern Cal teams that won national titles in 2003 and 2004, Orgeron said he won't be intimidated as a first-time head coach in front of 700 reporters.
"I don't think there's a way to prepare for that magnitude, but you go to the national championship twice, it's a pretty big number following you and asking questions," Orgeron said. "So what if it's 500 or 300, what difference does it matter? I'm prepared to have a correct reaction by doing and saying what's right and what's best."