Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SEC’S COVID-19 LUCK takes unfortunat­e turn.

SEC’s luck with virus takes turn

- Compiled by Bob Holt

For three weeks, the SEC played all 21 of its scheduled games while postponeme­nts or cancellati­ons occurred around the country because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

This week, the SEC schedule has been interrupte­d, too, with two games set for Saturday being moved to December.

LSU’s game at No. 10 Florida has been postponed to Dec. 12, the SEC announced Wednesday afternoon, because of a surge in positive tests for covid-19 among the Gators early this week.

The SEC announced on Monday that Vanderbilt’s game at Missouri was being postponed to Dec. 12 because the Commodores don’t have enough players available due to positive tests and contact tracing combined with injuries.

“We all know what we’re dealing with here,” Vanderbilt Coach Derek Mason said. “We’re dealing with times that nobody’s ever seen before. We’re doing the best we can to serve our student-athletes. That’s all about making sure we talk about the health, safety and welfare of the student-athletes first.

“Whether it’s injuries, whether it’s covid-related in response to where rosters sit, we are playing football in a pandemic. I don’t think anybody owes anybody any apologies [for not playing].”

Also Wednesday, it was revealed Alabama Coach Nick Saban has tested positive for covid-19, and Ole Miss Coach Lane Kiffin said his team is dealing with an outbreak as well.

The Alligator, Florida’s school newspaper, broke the story that 19 players had tested positive, resulting in the cancelatio­n of Tuesday’s practice.

Florida Coach Dan Mullen said on Wednesday’s SEC teleconfer­ence that two assistant coaches had tested positive as well as several players.

The Gators have 18 scholarshi­p players who tested positive and three walk-ons, Florida Athletic Director Scott Stricklin told ESPN. He said the players and staff members who tested positive are showing no symptoms or mild ones.

Stricklin told ESPN he wasn’t sure of the exact number of Gators who are quarantine­d because of contact tracing, but he said there would have been fewer than 50 scholarshi­p players available for Saturday’s game.

SEC recommenda­tions call for at least 53 scholarshi­p players to be available for a team to play.

“It can sneak up on you in a hurry,” Stricklin told ESPN. “The key thing is you’ve got to have the ability to push the brake when things start to occur like what we’re seeing right now.

“You’ve got to be willing to hit pause occasional­ly. The SEC schedule was set up with an event like this in mind.”

The SEC set up two open dates for it 10game, conference-only schedule with Dec. 12 — the week before the SEC

Championsh­ip Game — for all schools, and each one also having a midseason open date on either Oct. 24,

Oct. 31 or Nov. 7

“What we’re trying to do is just make sure we can get our teams out there so our kids can play, our fan bases can see football,” Mason said. “When we can’t do that, we’re disappoint­ed.

But it still comes back to the health, safety and welfare of the student-athletes.”

LSU Coach Ed Orgeron said Wednesday — prior to the SEC announceme­nt — he wouldn’t be surprised if the game at Florida was postponed.

“Obviously, in 2020 this is what we’re dealing with,”

Orgeron said. “I really think that the safety of the kids is the primary focus this week.

So if it’s safe for us to play, we’re going to play. If the best thing for us is not to play, we shouldn’t play.”

SEC salaries

USA Today on Wednesday released its annual report on college football coaches salaries, with the SEC having six of the top 10.

Alabama’s Nick Saban tops the list at $9.3 million, with LSU’s Ed Orgeron second at $8,682,500.

Other SEC coaches in the top 10 are Texas A&M’s Jimbo Fisher No. 5 at $7.5 million; Georgia’s Kirby Smart No. 6 at $6,933,600; Auburn’s Gus Malzahn No. 7 at $6.9 million; and Florida’s Dan Mullen No. 10 at $6,070,000.

University of Arkansas Coach Sam Pittman is 14th among SEC coaches and No. 53 nationally at $2.9 million.

Among other SEC coaches, Kentucky’s Mark Stoops is No. 15 at $5,013,600; Mississipp­i State’s Mike Leach No. 16 at $5 million; South Carolina’s Will Muschamp No. 22 at $4,370,000; Missouri’s Eliah Drinkwitz; No. 29 at $3,925,000; Tennessee’s Jeremy Pruitt No. 30 at $3,846,000; Ole Miss’ Lane Kiffin No. 34 at $3,534,250; and Vanderbilt’s Derek Mason No. 38 at $3,534,497.

Gator slayer

It probably shouldn’t have been a surprise that Jimbo Fisher’s first victory as Texas A&M coach over a top-five team came against Florida.

The Aggies’ 41-38 victory over then-No. 4 Florida on Saturday improved Fisher to 8-1 against the Gators.

Fisher was 7-1 against Florida when he was Florida’s State’s coach from 2010-17, including a fivegame winning streak before he left for Texas A&M.

The Gators’ lone victory over Fisher was in 2012 when No. 4 Florida beat No. 10 FSU 37-26.

Since Fisher left, Florida has won both of its matchups against the Seminoles.

‘Dorky’ Drinkwitz

Missouri Coach Eliah Drinkwitz used some self-deprecatin­g humor when asked on the “Paul Finebaum Show” whether he really believed his Tigers could beat LSU, which they did 45-41 last week.

“You live up or down to your expectatio­ns, period,” Drinkwitz, an Alma native, told Finebaum. “No offense, I’m a 5-foot-10 dorky white dude that has no business being a college football coach.

“The reality of it is, we have high expectatio­ns and high goals, and you meet them. That’s really what you have to do, especially when you’re trying to change a culture and establish a championsh­ip mindset.”

Drinkwitz told Finebaum coaches and players can’t simply hope for a desired result and expect it to happen.

“You can’t hope for anything,” Drinkwitz said. “When you hope for something, you hope somebody else screws it up. You’re hoping that they mess up.

“When you set a standard and expectatio­n, you work towards it every single day. For us, it’s about working towards that goal. Set your standard of performanc­e.”

Runs like a Tank

Auburn freshman Tank Bigsby has come on strong for the Tigers with the team having other running backs injured.

Bigsby, 6-0 and 205 pounds, is averaging 161.3 all-purpose yards to lead the SEC. He has 192 rushing yards, 84 receiving and 208 on kickoff returns.

In Auburn’s 30-28 victory over Arkansas last week, Bigsby had 20 carries for 146 yards; 4 receptions for 16 yards; and 4 kickoff returns for 106 yards.

“He loves playing football,” Tigers Coach Gus Malzahn said. “He’s got confidence. He’s got a great positive spirit about him, and he has that edge.

“You see him running it, and he’s got the potential to really keep going. That’s what is exciting for me.”

Malzahn said what’s impressed him the most about Bigsby is his physical play and determinat­ion.

“He’s still learning the plays. He is still learning the schemes and the steps and everything that goes with it,” Malzahn said. “But one thing he’s doing is he’s bringing the wood. He’s running angry with great physicalit­y and with great effort.

“I really think you’ll see, after the game slows down a little bit and he actually can read things and slow himself down, that the sky is the limit.”

Aggies lose WR

Texas A&M sophomore receiver Caleb Chapman, who had 9 catches for 151 yards and 2 touchdowns in the Aggies’ 41-38 victory over Florida, is out for the season after tearing his anterior cruciate ligament

Six picks for UK

Six different Kentucky players intercepte­d a pass in the Wildcats’ 24-2 victory over Mississipp­i State, including an 8-yard return for a touchdown by Jordan Wright.

Also getting intercepti­ons were Jamin Davis, Josh Paschal, Kelvin Joseph, D’Eryk Jackson and Boogie Watson.

The intercepti­on total fell one short of a school record.

Kentucky set the record with seven intercepti­ons against Florida and coach Steve Spurrier in 1993, but the Gators won 24-20.

MSU ‘malcontent­s’

Mississipp­i State’s offense has been in a decline since the Bulldogs shocked the college football world by opening the season with a 44-34 victory at defending national champion LSU.

Arkansas ended a 20game SEC losing streak by beating Mississipp­i State 2114, then Kentucky kept the Bulldogs’ offense scoreless in a 24-2 victory.

“We’re going to have to check some of our group and figure out who really wants to play here,” Mississipp­i State Coach Mike Leach said after the game. “Because any malcontent­s, we’re going to have to purge a couple of those.”

Leach said in his weekly news conference Monday that having some players not buy into a new coaching staff is common.

“I think this happens every time you take over a new program,” said Leach, who previously was the head coach at Texas Tech and Washington State. “We do have a few fence-riders that are trying to decide if they’re going to commit or not to what everybody’s doing here.

“I’ve been through a number of these transition­s, [and you see] who are going to do the wait-and-see thing — ‘Well, I’ll see if I like what I see.’ Well, that’s too bad. The train rolls on. They need to jump on board pretty quickly or the train’s going to roll on without them.”

 ?? AP/L.G. Patterson) ?? Before Saturday’s game between LSU and Florida was postponed, Tigers Coach Ed Orgeron said he wouldn’t be surprised if that happened. “If it’s safe for us to play, we’re going to play,” he said. “If the best thing for us is not to play, we shouldn’t play.”
AP/L.G. Patterson) Before Saturday’s game between LSU and Florida was postponed, Tigers Coach Ed Orgeron said he wouldn’t be surprised if that happened. “If it’s safe for us to play, we’re going to play,” he said. “If the best thing for us is not to play, we shouldn’t play.”

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