Let's see if this article's made out of straw, or truly is a Brick House. YEAOW! A few weeks ago Sports Illustrated featured a 6-page spread on the Vanderbilt Commodores  for its primary college football coverage. Eschewing my SEC Snobbery  for just a moment, let’s dig a little deeper to discover just what it is  about Vandy that required the spotlight of a national magazine.
  The roar needs no explanation, but an onlooker provides one anyway: "Yeah. He's here." The he  in question is Nick Saban, and his devotees have filled the lobby of  the Wynfrey Hotel in Hoover, Ala., hoping to glimpse the Crimson Tide  coach.
  Yes, those amazing Commodores! Why, I can’t wait to  begin my feature article about their pluckiness, high IQ and winning  ways! Hmm? What’s that? Why did I choose to use the first 200 words of  my story on the Vanderbilt Commodores talking about how Nick Saban “is  like a fiftysomething Justin Bieber?” Pay you no mind, see! 
  Appearing  before the media alongside Saban and the three Tide players, almost for  bookkeeping purposes, are the representatives for the Vanderbilt  Commodores. They have a new coach, 39-year-old James Franklin, but the  same old story. They have finished with a losing record in 27 of the  last 28 years. They have not had a winning conference mark since 1982.  Of the 1,050 credentialed reporters, fewer than 10 are there to cover  Vanderbilt.
  I can almost see the wheels churning inside this  reporter’s head while forming his storey. “Say, based on this here  credential list, less than 9 % of the media members are here to cover  the Commodores! That’s a real shame. Wait, I’M not here to cover  Vanderbilt, EITHER. Maybe I can build up their coach and speak about  their academic success. Nobody will be talking about it because it  doesn’t matter!”
  Since  becoming coach last December, Franklin has filled every single media  request that has hit his desk. He cohosted a Nashville morning radio  show and has invited radio personalities to broadcast live from  practice. (They accepted.) 
  Yes, compared to the most successful coaches in the SEC, like Nick Saban and Les Miles, who routinely close practice to both the media and NFL scouts, Franklin isn’t afraid to have the whole Commodore gameplan revealed Live and On Air!
  He  spoke to the leaders of Vanderbilt's student government and the Black  Student Alliance. He has visited every fraternity and sorority on campus  ... twice. He has spoken to Kiwanis clubs and Rotary clubs. Sometimes  it's hard to tell if he is trying to win the SEC or a seat on the city  council.
  City Council! City Council! Is James Franklin using  the Vanderbilt job as a showcase for his determination and media savvy?  Perhaps that’s unfair to say. I did have to make sure that this wasn’t  creative license and embellishment by the author, which it is not. Franklin really does rotate his weeks among (the four) fraternities and sororities in Nashville, trying to drum up interest in his program. Get this guy some coverage, dammit!
   
  I also had to look up what a Kiwanis club is. At first, this embarrassed me. Until I discovered that I simply have to send you here, rather than even attempt to explain what they are myself.
  "I'll do birthday parties," he says. "I'll bring balloons."
  Alas,  I could not find any information on the web to verify this, but I know  this is 100% true. If you live in the Nashville are and are looking for a  great gag gift for your buddy’s bachelor or birthday party, Franklin is  available. 
  And he’ll answer on the first ring!
  Also,  if I were a supporter of the Vanderbilt program, the thought of my coach  walking around time, begging for attention and showing up for birthday  parties with Commodore Kazoos would almost certainly offense my  sensibilities.
  If the  folks on Vanderbilt's campus think Franklin is passionate when he speaks  to them, they should see him with his players. During one practice in  August, Franklin, a former Division II quarterback for East Stroudsburg,  stepped in against the Commodores' defense. Linebacker Archibald Barnes  intercepted his coach's pass and tried to return it for a touchdown.  Franklin sprinted toward Barnes and leveled a defensive back blocking  for Barnes. The coach was not wearing pads.
  I believe this  may be my favorite part of the article. So, without pads, COACH FRANKLIN  lines up under center, and throws an interception. Not to be outdone by  this outstanding example of football skill, he then decides to level a  poor defensive back that was presumably wondering what the hell he’s  supposed to do with a crazy person in position of authority is foaming  at the mouth and intending to nail him. Also presumably, he decided that  avoiding giving his COACH FRANKLIN a concussion would probably be  better than the endless shit he’d be taking for letting a 40-year old  take him to school.
  I seem to remember another brash, outspoken coach with a penchant for irregular and incomprehensible acts of intended inspiration. So, this is going to end well.
 
   
 Single-ing out a winner, or just another loose cannon?
 Last Saturday night in  Nashville, before the Commodores played Connecticut, Franklin surprised  his players with all-black uniforms, including black helmets. 
   This would be quite the act of leadership and inspired, innovative  thinking – just the kind of thing a fresh young coach with loads of new  ideas is brought in for? Unless of course the exact same thing was done just a few years ago by a coach within his own division.
  The color was symbolic. 
  “Just give it a few quarters, men! Soon you’ll be seeing the same color from within your helmet, as from the outside!”
  "We're  going to play like a big-time program," Franklin says. "We're going to  act like a big-time program. They're going to be treated like [they play  for] a big-time program."
  “Hey, Coach. We’re tired of being treated like a small-time program. Why does that even happen?”
  The  Commodores beat the reigning Big East champion 24--21 to improve to  2--0—matching their win total from each of the last two seasons. 
  “Oh,  yeah! That’s why! Our 4-20 record the last two years has been  destroying our cause! Guess I’m so mentally stuffed with quadratics I  forget how terrible we are each year!”
  By the way, I love that  the writer is sure to mention “Big East champion,” as if everyone in the  country isn’t collectively wondering, “wait, the Big East is still  around?” Vanderbilt went on to win its next game, I’m sure delighting  the author who wrote this story, then promptly lost its next three by a  combined 88-31. 
  Franklin  said it would have been more fun to blow out the Huskies, but winning  at the end, largely with defense, might have been better. "I actually  think we'll get a lot more out of winning that way than we would the  other way," he said. "That was the kind of game that in the past,  Vanderbilt didn't find a way to win."
  “Now that I think  about it,” said Franklin, “We also lost the games that were decided  largely with offense and special teams. We lost the close ones, but we  definitely seemed to always be on the wrong side of the blowouts. We  lost day games and night games, September games and homecoming games.  I’m sorry what was the question?”
  Winning SEC  football games at Vanderbilt may be the toughest task in any of the  major American sports. It is like managing a major league baseball team  with the Cubs' history, the Royals' resources and the Rays' fan base in a  division with the Yankees and the Red Sox.
  And your winning  meaningless baseball metaphor of the story is…paragraph number 38!  Translation – Vanderbilt sucks and the SEC is hard.
  Or  as former Vanderbilt safety and NFL Pro Bowler Corey Chavous puts it,  "It's like trying to climb a mountain with a truck on your back."
  That’s  better. It’s like trying to climb a mountain of success, but you have 3  tons of suckiness on your back. Chavous must have been a valedictorian.
  Vanderbilt is in the SEC, but it is not of the SEC. Vanderbilt is 17th in the most recent U.S. News & World Report college rankings. The next SEC school is Florida, at No. 53.
  Academics!
  Since  1987, 11 of the conference's 12 schools have been found guilty of a  major NCAA violation in football. The 12th is Vanderbilt. The SEC may or  may not be out of control, but it certainly seems way out of  Vanderbilt's control.
  Rule following!
 There are literally a million reasons why Vanderbilt has not had any  violations. Sure, you can let complete assholes like Jay Cutler into  your school, but try admitting LaDaniel Thompson (not real), who just  ran the 40 in 4.2 and has a 5” vertical at 6’5” 210 pounds.  
   Franklin  knew this when he took the job last winter after serving as offensive  coordinator at Maryland (2008--10) and Kansas  State ('06 and '07). He  understood that before he could install his offense, he had to instill  hope.
  Shit! These players seem to actually know they PLAY  for Vanderbilt. It’s uncanny! MAYBE DIFFERENT COLORED UNIFORMS WILL  CONFUSE THEM?
  "The biggest battle," he says, "is getting [players and fans] to believe."
  “The  biggest battle,” truth-telling COACH FRANKLIN doppelganger says, “is  trying to win games with players far less talented and athletic than our  opponents.”
  Beginning in  2002, Bobby Johnson went 29--66 in eight seasons, but his reign is  still considered a success, for one reason: In '08, he led the  Commodores to a 7--6 record, including a win in the Gaylord Hotels Music  City Bowl in Nashville. The trophy sits alone at the entrance to the  Vanderbilt coaches' offices.
  God, this is just sad. Can’t you imagine the trophy merely sitting in an empty chair outside in the hallway?
  The thing about Vanderbilt is that it seems as if it should be able to compete. 
  The thing about this article is that it seems as if it should have a point.
  The  university is nationally respected. The campus is beautiful. The  schools it most resembles have thrived—Stanford won the Orange Bowl last  season; Northwestern has been to several January bowl games, including  the Rose Bowl.
  This can’t have anything to do with the  Commodores’ conference, and the degree of difficulty in playing better  opponents in every facet of the game, or Vanderbilt’s multiple and  glaring recruiting disadvantages, or lack of private or University  financing, or really anything of note that you could be talking about  but are choosing not to? No? Okay, then.
  With  no chance to be the best team in its conference, Vanderbilt has sought  to be the purest. In 2003 then school president Gordon Gee disbanded the  athletic department and folded it into a division of student life.  Johnson banned profanity on the football field. 
  I have no idea what “pure” means in this context, but my spidey sense is telling me it won’t help you win football games.
  Having  the brightest players in the league does not necessarily mean having  the brightest team. As he watched film at a recent staff meeting,  Franklin expressed disbelief at one player, who could not grasp a new  scheme. "He got almost a perfect score on the ACT, and he's struggling,"  Franklin told his staff. An assistant cracked, "[But] he'll split the  atom for you."
  I love that the coaches are shown here  ripping their own players. “Say, how come these fellas are so smart, but  they can’t learn them some football? By the way, does anyone know what  I’m supposed to do with that screen that sits in the middle of my desk  and plays the soothing trance symbols all day?”
  One problem is that the Vanderbilt community generally expects to lose. 
  The Vanderbilt community, we can say now with confidence, is not delusional.
  Franklin  is trying to change that thinking. Other coaches, and even some people  at the school, can rattle off a list of reasons why Vanderbilt loses. 
  None of which you have mentioned in your story, sir.
And  if you say that Vanderbilt can't possibly win in the SEC, he says that  at Vanderbilt, players can get a world-class education while playing in  the nation's toughest conference.
"What he also does not say, however, is that the Vanderbilt can possibly win the SEC."   
Can Franklin pull this off?  History and 11 other rabid fan bases say no way. Franklin can't match  the credentials of other coaches in his conference, but he is trying to  make up for it by being closer to his team. 
 Can Franklin pull this off? Every logical, statistical and thoughtful  measure available says there's no prayer in the world powerful enough  to help Vanderbilt win. Coach Franklin makes up for all of this,  however, by being purer with his team.
 When the Commodores saw the movie Horrible Bosses in August, Franklin realized, Uh- oh, that's me, I'm the boss now. He looked around. Nobody was in his row. He grabbed a few freshmen and made them sit next to him.
 This absolutely, positively needs no snarky comment. It's good on it's own.
         "The first thing he said to me  was, 'We're not taking no for an answer,'" said quarterback Josh Grady, a  three-star recruit who signed with Vanderbilt in February, two weeks  after Franklin offered him a scholarship. "He was like, 'We're going to  change the culture.' Whenever I would say, 'Maybe if I come,' he'd be  like, 'No. You're gonna come.' I'd say, 'I understand we're gonna try to  change the program.' He'd say, 'No. We're gonna change the program.'  Little things like that made me buy into it."
 Wouldn't it be awesome if everyone was as gullible as a 17-year old jock?
 "So, Ben, if we give you this raise..."
"No, 
when you give me this raise."
"If I come home with you tonight,"
"AFTER YOU COME HOME WITH ME TONIGHT" 
Franklin is dotting all the i's and crossing all the t's, and still, it will be a challenge to avoid all the L's. 
 Because his team is just so darn P-U!
 Atlanta, the site of the SEC championship  game, could not seem farther away. The history is almost suffocating.  Fact: No Commodore has ever played in two bowl games.
 Fact: as evidenced by your opening line about media coverage, nobody cares about this fact.
     "Ultimately we're going to have to put a product on the field that people are proud of," he says, "and I understand that."
 So, like, a Hyundai?
   The number in the Win column is the one  inescapable truth for the biggest underdog in college football, the only  SEC team that the rest of the country can love. Franklin embraces that  truth as enthusiastically as he embraces everything else. Vanderbilt has  been waiting for the future for 50 years. It has to arrive at some  point. Doesn't it?
 I absolutely adore this logic. I've been playing the same numbers in  the powerball for 38 years, dadgarmett! My payday has to come sometime,  don't it?
Editor's Note: Georgia barely beat Vanderbilt this weekend. Plucky!
   On to this week's wagers! A reminder of what's at stake:
LOSER - Swift kick in the ass. No bullshit. Velocity of kick dependent upon kicker (kick-ee likely to ask for more)
WINNER - Bottle of his choosing.
BONUS - Winning Percentage more than 10% differential? Georgia home game football ticket
SEASONOBJ9-9
J-Rock9-9
This Week's PicksOBJGeorgia (-11) Over Vanderbilt
Last week requires a retraction: Georgia has actually beat the spread 
four weeks in a row (plus a push). Count on them to make it five.
Michigan (+2.5) Over Michigan State
Is  it just me, or does it seem like halfway through the CFB season, Vegas  collectively says, "Okay, that's enough. You had your fun, now we're  going to start trying."
Boise State vs Colorado State UNDER 54.5
Indiana (+40) Over Wisconsin
Wisconsin  has averaged nearly a 40-point differential this season. Indiana's  played (and lost) some really close games. I like the Hoosiers 
not not get beat by 40!
Especially  with important games at Ohio State and at Michigan State, this is a  recipe for some 3rd-string in the 3rd-quarter brew for Wisconsin.
J-RockGeorgia Tech (-7) Over Virginia
South Carolina (-2.5) Over Mississippi State
Toledo (-7) Over Bowling Green
Kansas State (+3.5) Over Texas Tech
GEORGIA IS A GIRLEach        week we're going to bring to you what the University of Georgia        football team is, metaphorically speaking. In terms of a woman you   are      sexually/intellectually/spiritually interested in:
Week of 
10/3
This  week Georgia's the chick you met a party, but the more you try to  remember the more she seems like simply part of your imagination. Did  she 
really make out with you on the hood of your car? You didn't tell her you loved her, did you?
Then a friend reminds you the girl's in one of your classes. While it's Spring Break, you're guaranteed to see her.
So play it cool, mates. Don't call her, don't masturbate to her. And  don't get too excited. You never know if you spent the night sucking  face with a sea donkey or a true bangin' chick. You'll know real, real  soon.