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NonDawg Braves clearing salary for...?

Several moves over the past several days have cleared some salary from the Braves' books.
  • Soler traded for Griffin Canning. (net gain of about $11 mil)
  • Bummer/Lopez had contracts reworked. (approx. $7 mil saved for '25)
  • d'Arnaud club option declined ($8 mil saved)
  • Luke Jackson declined ($2 mil)
Are they moving some money around to make a run at a shortstop??? Adames?
Or with Joe Jimenez injured and out awhile, are they looking to bolster the bullpen with several arms?
Max Fried package?

What say you?
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Late to the party

I haven't been around much the last few days. Our oldest, best, most, truly damn good dog crossed the rainbow bridge Sunday a bit unexpectedly. Losing a dog is the worst, especially that guy for my family. My wife and girls were/are devastated. Just a shitty few days to say the least. While everyone was napping it off today I did rewatch the game.

Carson was actually sharp early, feet were settled, he was seeing it very well. He missed the throw to Dom after the throw to Sacovie down the sideline. I bring up that throw because it was a big time NFL type back shoulder throw Sacovie mistimed and tried to 1 hand. Easily fixable freshmen mistake but ironically it took more of a psych toll on Carson from what I saw. Then he misses Lovett, Then he has a good albeit dangerous throw a bit later to Bell for a first. The first pick he was trying to make the WOW throw, same with the 2nd. He is hunting for shots and big time throws and it's getting him in trouble. Still had 2-3 drops. Take some of that away and it was clean. I'm not dismissing 3 picks, that part is ATROCIOUS. But there were stretches early and most importantly late where he was really damn good too.

I don't know if he's in his head about his draft stock or what. But the offense is starting to find some rhythm and "balance" overall. Murray made a good point on his podcast. Shots will be there galore if he lets them come to him. He can't take the misses to Cash early or Sacovie mistiming or a jump or a bad miss to Dom flip a switch within him that feels like he has to make up for those. Because when he starts pressing annd doing that, he loses his mind.

I've been critical of the receivers but we have enough to scare the hell out of teams if 15 plays clean. The perimeter blocking and timing on the outside screens is night and day different from early in the year. Delp is back to not completely yipped to the point of not wanting the ball. Yurosek for all his warts early has come on. Humphrey has a chance to keep producing. Bell has to catch the ball but improved his route running somewhat. Arian hasn't been "featured" but if that guy is nothing else, he's as clutch as it gets when we need him.

Frazier just needs to keep playing, ETN is solid, Phillips is interesting to see if he integrates. The OL for all their warts combined with the better perimeter blocking has made us a pretty good outside run team. Personnel is built for that too. That needs to be built upon so the between the tackle runs and shots deep open up as well. 456 yards should have been in the 5's as did the 34 turning into 40+ It's damn close. Need 15 to stop worrying about the results and just trust the process. It's insanely cliche but it's that simple IMO.

Defense is going to be just fine next week vs Ole Miss. Hated the bust for the TD. I am not 1 to bitch about officiating or buy into any kind of conspiracies. But the 2nd TD their RT blocked Gabe Harris by trying to rip his helmet off by his facemask lol. There were a few INSANE missed holds to the edges. We also had a bit deeper rotation than money games. When it's 13, 93, 52, 97, 11 hovering around the front we are game over good upfront. Not to knock the backups because Gabe, Damon, Chaz, etc. can flat get after it. But we have a few rotations that are saved for have to have it moments that are truly special. Chris Cole is as freaky of a prospect at LB as we've had. He's a super charged version of Quay Walker tracking about like 4th year Quay did instincts wise year 1... He's an animal. Secondary with the main group is also a cheat code. Hopefully Smael comes back healthy to spell 3 some, he's our weak link right now on D but he's close to fixing that at the same time. LB is still fairly new and not natural to him because he's a guesser and not a feeler but when he guesses right, WHOA. If we could put his sheer mass on Raylen we'd have Roquan lol.

I'll get to more Ole Miss later in the week and break them down and how we matchup more. Early thoughts are their ultimate path to victory is counter intuitive to what Lane wants to do. You have a better chance of beating us never throwing the ball instead of doing it every play. Lane loves balance, he is a run to throw coordinator. But he gets greedy and when he can't be flashy he loathes being boring. He calls himself out of things when that happens. He has gets imposter syndrome vs CKS much like he did Saban and is scared of their old days or Kirby torched him in staff B ball or something. Any juice he will create with his guys this week will crap out with his body language as the game wears on. Barring an offensive implosion by us, we should cruise by 2 scores+

Postgame Analysis: Game 1 - Tennessee Tech

Season is finally here, let’s goooooo!

Couple of notes here before we get started:
1) never judge too much from 1 basketball game
2) never judge too much against pretty significantly inferior opponents

Great news: we didn’t lose. South Carolina and Texas A&M would love to switch places right now. Other great news: Asa Newell plays for us!!! What a night. So smooth around the rim. Most of the time we have “hoped” our big men would finish around the rim. With Asa it feels absolutely automatic. Beautiful to watch.

What did we find out tonight:
1) White stayed with a shorter bench. Only 6 guys played over 10 minutes. He seemed to find his better players and let them cook. I feel this is a good sign.
2) Leffew can get hot. He was absolutely cooking from deep. Felt like he was easy money from out there. Extremely confident. Looked very comfortable with the ball on the drive as well. When the kitchen gets hotter and the athletes get bigger and quicker, can he keep it going? If so, BIG addition.
3) Showed some press. We’ve got some athletes, the press is the way to use them to the fullest. We could get some easy buckets this way.
4) Godfrey. He showed some good hustle, heart, and touch around the rim. Not sure his handle is completely smooth, but we are gonna like this one.

Areas that were just meh if not worse than meh:
1) permimeter D. Felt like they were back dooring us to death. Blue is not going to like watching himself on D tomorrow in film. But he wasn’t the only one.
2) the handle felt a little wobbly with Lawrence and Demary. Didn’t always lead to a turnover but it didn’t lead to comfort and buckets either. If Leffew can consistently replicate what he did tonight, we might need to refocus who is getting the offense rolling.
3) Leffew was 4 for 6 from deep. Really good. Rest of the team was 0 for 12. Not good. Blue is going to cook as well. That’s coming. Can Lawrence and Demary give us enough from deep? We shall see?

Others:
1) Cyril - looked like a freshmen tonight. Showed some flash. Got lost some. Had some uh oh moments as well. This is normal. Asa is just crazy what he is doing.
2) James - got lost in the numbers game a bit tonight in rotations. It happens. He did some positives.
3) Abson - reminds me a bit of big Franks role last year.

Game never really felt like it was in doubt. We got to practice some great game situations. We got to respond to a team shooting it really well from deep.

All W’s are good W’s!!!

Go Dawgs!!!

VIDEO WATCH or READ: Kirby Smart's Tuesday presser

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0:00 – How has practice been this week?

0:12 – Has Trevor Etienne practiced and what about wearing extra protection this week?

0:46 – Any expectations of the college football rankings?

1:21 – What makes it difficult to run on Ole Miss’ defense?

1:49 – How has Mykel Williams handled his situation mentally this season?

2:53 – Is Dwight Phillips up to the place where he can take up more responsibility?

3:36 – How does Ole Miss’ receiving weapons compare to what Texas had?

5:09 – How did Malaki Starks do in punt returns last week and is Anthony Evans ready to come back?

6:01 – What did you make of the play of Daniel Harris?

6:28 – How do you think you are at depth at the wide receiver position?

7:05 – In terms of Ole Miss’ offense, does Georgia have to defend the quarterback and coordinator?

7:52 – Does the change in numbers of the College Football Playoff change how you look at it?

9:00 – What stands out about Tre Harris?

9:43 – Tate Ratledge's return

10:10 – How have the backup quarterbacks been in practice?

11:11 – Visor process

11:59 – How is this team doing in terms of players’ leadership?

On practice this week…

“Really good. It's been good.”

On Trevor Etienne…

“He's been great. He did some extra conditioning, taking some reps. Been in a black shirt, but he's toughing it out. You'll have to figure out all the things he can and can't do. Hard to say after the Monday practice, he didn't do much. He was still stiff and sore. Ran around a little bit, loosened up, and then he did some more stuff today. Took some reps.”

On his thoughts on the first CFP rankings…

“Not much. I'm going to do my Tuesday night routine. I don't think you can worry about it much. Certainly, whatever it is today, it won't be next week or the next week or the next week. So, it's great energy and buzz for you guys and for fans, I guess, but every minute you spend worrying about that is one less that I'm worried about our team.”

On the Ole Miss run defense…

“Big humans. Large, fast humans and immovable objects with twitch and twist. They're fast and big. You want to see a good defense, look at fast and big, and they got both.”

On how Mykel Williams has handled this season…

“I don't know if I'd say that. I think he's had a great season. He's had tremendous work ethic. He's had the best camp he's ever had and there's value in that. We have 10-15 NFL scouts at practice. We had that many out there today. We had that many out there in camp. So, the reps he's taken against really good players on our team, I think all that creates value for him. So, he's been really level-headed. He doesn't let things get him down. He's not real emotional. He doesn't take up the highs and lows. He's worked really hard to get healthy, and I still don't know that he's 100-percent, but he's much closer.”

On Dwight Phillips…

“He can do some more things. He's a bright kid. He’s really smart. He's 193 pounds or something. He's a kid that's getting better each and every day, and he's growing a lot. He wasn't here in the spring, so he didn't get to go through spring, and he hasn't played in an offense quite this style. He's growing. What's crazy is you tell him something once, and he remembers it, and he does a good job with learning.”

On if the Ole Miss offense is comparable to Texas…

“Hard to compare. I don't like doing those comparisons because they're different offenses, different style offenses. They're both very talented, and [Steve Sarkisian] Sark and Lane [Kiffin] have a lot of history together. You don't watch the two offenses and think they look the same. Different style, passing game. They have really good wideouts at Ole Miss. They've been through injuries, and yet they've still continued to throw for lots of yards. They’re one of the top passing teams, in my mind, in the country in terms of statistics, passing, throwing. They've done it with tight ends. They've done it with backs. They’ve done it with wideouts. It doesn't matter who it is with Lane. He's going to plug somebody in there. They're going to figure out where your weaknesses are, find matchups, and look for coverages and find ways to beat those coverages. They've got a guy [Jaxson Dart] that can do it. This guy's playing uncanny football when you talk about the accuracy, the completion percentage, the yards he's throwing it for. He's not throwing dink and dunk passes now. This guy's throwing the ball vertical down the field, shots. Then, when you do that, let's say you cover all that, and you do that, he can take off and run. You watch a quarterback run reel on this guy, and you don't have enough people in the box. So, the reason they're successful is because of the scheme and the players that are in the scheme.”

On punt returns…

“It's going to be a matter of whether Anthony's [Evans] healthy enough to. I think Malaki's [Starks] going to do nothing but get better and get more confidence. He's done it before in his life. He hasn't done it in a game. So, that game changed a little bit. We weren't asking him to do that at the point that they lost their quarterback. We got wind. We had a couple opportunities. We wanted to play safe on the punt return team and make sure we defended the fake. We didn't set up returns. So, there were probably some yards there, but we were not asking him to do that.”

On Daniel Harris’ performance against Florida…

“He did some good things. He's got to tackle better. He and Julio both had some situations there. They didn't get the guys on the ground. They've got to do a better job tackling.I don't grade him based on one flash play or one big play. It's more a cumulative effect of where his eyes are. Is he looking at the right things? Is he doing what he's supposed to do?”

On the depth at wide receiver…

“I've told you 100,000 times. Y'all can ask me that question every day. We don't have enough depth at any position. I don't know one coach that will tell you, ‘I got the greatest depth in the world. We're great there.’ I don't feel good about our depth. I don't feel great about our depth at snapper. I don't feel great about our depth at holder. I don't feel great about our depth at field goal protection. I don't feel good about our depth at wide receiver or anything because I don't ever think you have enough to practice the way you need to practice.”

On ‘pitching’ to the quarterback and offensive coordinator…

“Well, when you're pitching to the quarterback, you are pitching to the coordinator - the coordinator and the quarterback. You're doing both because they see it. They can talk in the helmet deal. They're talking down to 15 seconds. So, whatever you're giving the quarterback, you're giving the coordinator. And in some cases, the quarterback does all the control and checks it. I'm sure they have the ability to do that. Jaxson's played a lot of football. This guy, he can do it without them telling him. But that's, that's what good coaches do. They try to figure out what you're in, and then they figure out how to attack it.”

On if the expanded playoff system changes his view on the rankings…

“You don't look a little further down. You would look at 12 last year and figure out does the 12th team have a shot to get to the fourth? What's got to happen for those teams to lose? Now you're looking at 20, 21, 22, you know, the automatic qualifier - who's got the best shot? How are they going to perceive these teams and what's going to change the perception? That's all the talk out there. I couldn’t care less because what is a quality win and a quality loss right now, they've been known to change their mind before it comes time.We’ve probably been a casualty of that probably more than anybody in the country. So, I don't put a lot of stake in it.”

On the challenges Ole Miss wide receiver Tre Harris presents…

“Vertical speed, size. You got somebody that big and that size, I mean, he can take a hitch and go to the house. He can take a post and go to the house. He is a dangerous player, and you see it on tape. Like, I mean, it's amazing what they've done without this guy now. I mean because they've been explosive. And we do those explosive plays and put it up on the chart of all the SEC teams every week. And it's like, theirs is like a dang slot machine just going up. They've done it with and without him, which is a credit to their offensive staff and their players.”

On how Tate Ratledge felt after Florida…

“Sore. We had two guys really sore and hurting in there. Micah [Morris] and Tate both were really tough, tough guys. You can see on the tape they pushed through some injuries and played with some great toughness.”

On how the reserve quarterbacks are developing…

“They get work each and every week. We throw them in there and mix them in. They get reps. Ryan Puglisi gets reps. They come down sometimes and throw with us on the scouts to get even more work. I think every rep you can possibly get right now, you're just like, ‘how many times can I get a quarterback to go back there and have to make a decision and grow as a player?’ And I like to take pride in getting more quarterback development than anybody because we dedicate reps to threes every day. We're going to do something with our threes. And not everybody is willing to do that because you can make a case it's wasted time, meaning it's not going to affect that week's game because you're not going to get to your threes. But we're constantly looking at it saying, ‘okay, this is the future of our program. What do we have? Who can play? Who can't?’ But both those kids and Ryan in that same group do a great job. They sit in meetings, take notes, and continue to be ready. I mean, look at Florida. You just don't know.”

On his visors…

“No process. It's whatever they give me. So, for the game, they put one down there and I wear it, and then I take it off after the game. The next game there's another one there. There's two or three sitting in my office, and I just get one before I go to practice. I don't waste a lot of energy on things like that.”

On player leadership…

“I think we've had player-led teams since I've been here. The degree of which that is might vary, but I've been very pleased with the player leadership of this team. I meet with those guys on a regular basis, and they hold each other accountable, which is probably the most important thing. And they try to hold other players to the standard. And look, Nate [Frazier] made a mistake. He's not a bad kid. He's a good kid. He made an emotional mistake. He knows that. And his players, his brothers, let him know that and I think that's important.”

POD Casters and Data Crunchers VS MSM over the last few days.......

On my way to Jacksonville on Friday I listened to a variety of programing – Morning Console (Mark Haleieron) , Bill Oriley, Meghan Kelley, Sean Spicer, and Ruthless Podcast talk about the upcoming election. Here was their analysis in a nutshell:

  • Harris was in real trouble in Pennsylvania as she had 400K less votes banked than in 2020 in early voting. Moreover, Trump had more banked than in previous time with as much as a 2.5% swing
  • Harris was underperforming in major cities (Detroit, Atlanta, Philly) by 3% -5% in minority early turnout
  • Pubs were sharing their internal polling and it looked good in all the swing states
  • Dems were NOT sharing their internal polling as they normally do
  • Atlas Polling, considered to be the most accurate currently had Trump up in all 7 swing states
  • All Senators in swing states with exception of Lake in AZ was also polling at 50/50 or better


Fast-forward to Sunday on my ride back from Jacksonville and I listened to CNN, ABC and NBC Sunday news shows. Here was their analysis in a nutshell:



  • Harris was now winning in Iowa by 3%
  • In last few days all the undecideds were breaking for Harris
  • Said verbdom, its going to be a tight race but you prefer to be in Harris’s shoes VS Trump
  • A Republican Consultant (Who later was found to be a PBS employee, so a complete lie in credentials) said Trump pollsters were in a meltdown over independents and SR’s moving to Harris
  • Harris’s team had a plan to flood the polls on election day since their early voting was SLIGHLY OFF
  • Trump was becoming unhinged because he was seeing the polling data
  • Dems might be able to keep the Senate at 50/50 as Tester was making a comeback


Its as if I was in alternate universes. The DATA Crunchers saw it one way, the cheerleading MSM saw it another way or was simply lying like a dog. I’ll admit I was totally confused.

Trump will go down as an absolute legend

“We mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor…”

When the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence agreed to this famous announcement, they truly meant every word. Centuries later, now have a president elect that 100% shared these same risks and pledges. All were uncompromisingly committed.

As a political rookie, he goes straight for the presidency and wins against an entrenched lifelong politician. He was essentially ignored and counted out after losing 4 yrs ago, then completed one of the greatest political comebacks of all time.

All the hell they put him through with bogus lawsuits, one after another, in an attempt to make him drop out. The guts it took to face these allegations. All he had to do was quit and they would have evaporated but he stayed the course.

They shot at him and even hit him once. Weaponized every govt agency they could against him. Raided his personal residence. Incarcerated his campaign workers and overcharged his supporters. Shit, that isn’t even the half of it.

Still, he stayed the course the whole time.

He has policies I disagree with, although I disagree with virtually everything his opponent stood for. This economy is fvcked. Nobody is fixing it. This country is in an economic position that neither candidate can fix.

BUT all that aside nobody can argue the grit and fortitude Trump showed through the process of the last 8 years.

The Daily Dawg Caller Phillips takes Eli’s INT to the house at Ole Miss (UGA vs. the Mannings)

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Georgia’s 35-15 win over Ole Miss in 2001 is perhaps one of the more underappreciated Bulldog victories in the early part of this century. The week before during what was Mark Richt’s initial season at Georgia, the Bulldogs had endured a disheartening loss to Auburn on the goal line at home to fall to 5-3. Yet, the very next week, after trailing 9-7 at halftime, Georgia routed the Rebels before going on the road at Georgia Tech the following week and upsetting the Yellow Jackets in Atlanta.

For his game-clinching pick-six in Oxford, Jermaine Phillips snuck under a short slant route playing zone coverage in a “robber” defense and intercepted Eli Manning’s errant pass at his own 18-yard line. Aided by a host of blockers, the senior safety cruised down his right sideline. Around Ole Miss’ 20-yard line, Manning had an angle to possibly make a tackle but, according to Phillips following the game, “I knew I couldn’t let [Manning] tackle me because I’d never hear the end of it from my teammates.”

Mentioned here before, Eli always had a hard time against Georgia, especially when you compare his results to that of his father, Archie, and brother, Peyton. As a freshman in 2000, Eli came off the bench in a 32-14 loss in Athens. This was followed with starts against Georgia in 2001 and 2002, and losses by a combined 66-to-32 score. On the other hand, Archie at Ole Miss (1968-1970) was 2-1 in starts against Georgia; Peyton at Tennessee (1994-1997) was 3-0 (he didn’t play against the Bulldogs as a freshman in 1994).

Of course, coming off the bench a few weeks ago in Austin, the newest Manning, grandson/nephew Arch, became the fourth in the family to face Georgia—and the third Manning to lose the initial time he faced the Bulldogs.

The Mannings career statistics against Georgia (first three appeared in three games; Arch has appeared in one):

ARCHIE: 42 of 84 (50%) for 589, 6 TD, 7 interceptions—115.8 rating (also rushed for 62 net yards and a TD on 33 carries)

PEYTON: 88 of 119 (74%) for 1063, 8 TD, 2 interceptions—167.8 rating

ELI: 52 of 84 (62%) for 497, 2 TD, 4 interceptions—109.9 rating

ARCH: 3 of 6 (50%) for 19, 0 TD, 0 interceptions—76.6 rating (also rushed for minus-1 net yards on 4 carries)
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