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Uf Talking Smack, Not Good Idea..


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Mincey fills bulletin board

By ROBBIE ANDREU

Jeremy Mincey (57) predicts a Gator Saturday win at Alabama.

t Florida's weekly media gathering, senior defensive end Jeremy Mincey offered up some excellent bulletin board material that no doubt will find its way to Tuscaloosa - and the Tide's locker room - this week.

Mincey said that Tennessee, which UF defeated two weeks ago, is more talented than Alabama on both sides of the ball and that the Gators could possibly produce a "blowout" win in Tuscaloosa on Saturday.

"I would say Tennessee has more talent than Alabama, both sides of the ball," Mincey said. "Alabama has a good defense, but I'd still say Tennessee has more talent.

"Tennessee's (offensive line) was big and athletic and we came out and played them pretty good. We were a couple of mistakes from beating the crap out of (Tennessee). We were a couple of missed assignments from beating them pretty bad. The funny thing is we're going to get better and better."

Mincey is predicting the Gators will win Saturday, maybe big, if they come ready to play.

"Our defense, if we come out with the right state of mind, playing hard, we should come out with a good victory," Mincey said. "I can't say how (good). The way our defense has played the last four weeks, anything is possible. It could be a blowout or just a regular victory."

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"Miami will blow away Alabama"

Los Angeles Daily News article by Michael Ventre

Jan. 1, 1993

NEW ORLEANS -- Miami is No. 1. It will stay that way.

Alabama doesn't have a hope, or a prayer, or a shot in the dark of upsetting the Hurricanes for the national championship in tonight's Sugar Bowl. And it won't even be close. Alabama will be trounced, clobbered, mauled, devastated, humiliated and left for dead. The Crimson Tide will not roll, not even a little bit. Tonight you will experience low Tide. Probably even ebb Tide. You wouldn't even have to hike up your pant legs to wade in what be left of this Tide after the Hurricanes pass through. Here are the reasons why:

      Reason No. 1: ATTITUDE

      The Alabama people are just too darned nice. They're too respectful. All their players act as if Bear Bryant is waiting in the woodshed with a whittled switch if they misbehave. This may be OK in the SEC, where everybody is like that. But how can you build up a nice healthy hatred for a renegade school like Miami if you spend most of your time acting like Sunday school teachers? You may not like Miami, but they have an attitude. And you NEED an attitude. Just listen to Miami wide receiver Lamar Thomas: "I try to talk to the defensive back as much as possible. When he starts listening, that's when I know I have him in my back pocket."

      Reason No. 2: AIR POWER

      Alabama believes in establishing its running game. That's dandy, except for the fact that tonight the only running the Crimson Tide will do is running onto the field, and then running off it. Alabama will not be able to move the ball. It won't be able to BUDGE the ball. You will need calipers to measure Alabama's productivity on the ground. So then the Alabama playres will have to throw. And they won't be able to do that, either. And they'll commit turnovers. And then the Miami players will boogie and gyrate as they create a new dance for the occasion. See, Alabama's quarterback is a guy named Jay Barker. He is a nice young man, and when he regains consciousness late tonight, I hope he has a plan for the future that features him as a constructive member of society. Because when the fraternity brothers of I Slamma 'Bama get through with him, the only football he'll ever want to play is Nintendo. Miami, on the other hand, has a Heisman Trophy winner at quarterback in Gino Torretta, a formidable offensive line and a fine group of receivers. "We're too talented," Miami wideout Kevin Williams said. He speaks the truth.

      Reason No. 3: COACHING

      Don't get me wrong. I like Gene Stallings. He's a terrific coach. He has restored much of the luster to the Alabama tradition. And he has his club on the brink of a national title. But he made a big boo-boo Thursday night. He kept his players at their hotel, the Hilton, instead of packing them up and taking them to some secret location, a la John Thompson of Georgetown and, for that matter, Dennis Erickson of Miami. "They showed Bourbon Street on TV," Erickson said Thursday. "I'm glad I wasn't there. It's unbelievable, all the hoopla....We'll go to someplace so remote even I won't know where it is." That's good. For a game of this magnitude, you have, in no particular order, groupies, derelicts, boosters, maniacs, spouses of boosters, students, drifters, children of boosters and drunken rednecks scattered throughout the teams' hotels, trying to get a piece of the action. This isn't good.. On the night before a game, the team needs to stay together, avoid distractions at all costs and focus on the task at hand. Stallings, though, has chosen to keep his team in the middle of the madness. Big mistake. Most teams look confused and disoriented against Miami anyway. Tonight Alabama will look that way during pre-game introductions.

      Reason No. 4: KARMA

      You just get the overwhelming feeling that its Miami's year again. Little things are adding up. Alabama lost one of its best linebackers for the Sugar Bowl when Michael Rogers was injured in a Christmas Eve car accident. Miami survived the Pell Grant scandal and Hurricane Andrew and the loss of star defensive end Rusty Medaris and is still brazen as ever.

Tonight the Tide won't roll. It will roll over.

;)

That guy's quotes only make me want to win even more! :)

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It isn't smack IF you can back it up. Time will tell. (I don't like any smack from OUR guys. It serves no purpose except to add fuel to the fire.)

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It isn't smack IF you can back it up. Time will tell. (I don't like any smack from OUR guys. It serves no purpose except to add fuel to the fire.)

184438[/snapback]

UA and AU are probably the only two top tier SEC teams who keep their players from talking much smack. I think it shows well on the staff for both of us.

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It isn't smack IF you can back it up. Time will tell. (I don't like any smack from OUR guys. It serves no purpose except to add fuel to the fire.)

184438[/snapback]

UA and AU are probably the only two top tier SEC teams who keep their players from talking much smack. I think it shows well on the staff for both of us.

184471[/snapback]

I totally agree with that, I think both schools have respect for each other.

I HATE SMACK TALK IN A GAME, SO STUPID.

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It isn't smack IF you can back it up. Time will tell. (I don't like any smack from OUR guys. It serves no purpose except to add fuel to the fire.)

184438[/snapback]

UA and AU are probably the only two top tier SEC teams who keep their players from talking much smack. I think it shows well on the staff for both of us.

184471[/snapback]

I totally agree with that, I think both schools have respect for each other.

184529[/snapback]

And at both schools, that tradition goes way back. Certainly neither Bear Bryant nor Shug Jordan would tolerate their players acting in any way except classy in front of the press. Pat Dye and Gene Stallings also believed in doing your talking on the field. I'm not sure how far back that attitude goes before those four gentlemen, but I suspect it's always been there as part of our southern cultural tradition of civility.

I sometimes wonder why some other southern schools don't maintain such standards? Seems like we all came from the same basic conservative southern culture. So why did AU and AUT preserve the southern tradition of graciousness in public (even if you revile someone in private) while it was lost at some other southern schools?

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