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re: Who Are Some Criminally Underrated SEC Players of the Past/Present?

Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:02 pm to
Posted by Hawgwash
Arkansas
Member since Oct 2011
366 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:02 pm to
quote:

TTsTowel Who Are Some Criminally Underrated SEC Players of the Past/Present? HAHAHAHAHA!


An underrated criminal thread might actually be fun. I know a few Razorbacks who could make the list.
Posted by BigOrangeBri
Nashville- 4th & 19
Member since Jul 2012
12271 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:03 pm to
Chuck Webb

Majors said he was the most talented player he ever coached and that he would've won the a Heisman if he hadn't gotten hurt.

This post was edited on 4/6/15 at 7:06 pm
Posted by Tornado Alley
Member since Mar 2012
26500 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:05 pm to

Serderius Bryant, Ole Miss LB, 2011 - 2014
Bird, who is a cool bro who lived down the street from me in college, was a solid LB and anchored the #1 scoring defense in the nation in 2014.

2013: 78 total tackles, 12.5 TFL, 2.0 sacks, 3 FF
2014: 65 total tackles, 8.0 TFL, 1.0 sacks, 1 INT


Andre Woodson, Kentucky QB, 2004 - 2007
Led the SEC in TD passes during the early stages of the seven-year span. 31 TDs in 2006 and 40 TDs in 2007.


Tommy Hodson, LSU QB, 1986 - 1989
Led the SEC in passing yards and TDs in 1986, 1988, and 1989. During his four years as starter, the Tigers amassed a 31-15-1 record.


Shay Hodge, Ole Miss WR, 2006 - 2009
Led the SEC in receiving yards and receptions in 2009 and receiving TDs in 2008. During the first two years of the Houston Nutt era in Oxford, in which the Rebels went 18-8, Hodge amassed 1890 yards and 16 TDs.


Jerious Norwood, Mississippi State RB, 2002 - 2005
Racked up 3222 rushing yards on Bulldog teams which won just 11 games in four seasons. Jerious is the SEC's 25th all-time leading rusher.
Posted by CarolinaCock
South Carolina
Member since Jun 2012
2606 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:06 pm to
Connor shaw

Pharoh Cooper
Posted by Tornado Alley
Member since Mar 2012
26500 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:08 pm to
quote:

Javier Arenas


What? He was a first-team all-American in 2009
Posted by tigerbait2010
PNW
Member since May 2006
29175 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:09 pm to
Whoops...didn't realize he ever got that kind of recognition.
Posted by Tornado Alley
Member since Mar 2012
26500 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:09 pm to
quote:

Tony Taylor.
Had as many or more tackles, sacks, TFLs, and INTs in 2006 as a MLB than Manti Te'O during his bullshite Heisman campaign


The only reason Te'o had a Heisman campaign to begin with was the golden helmet that sat atop his head.
Posted by borotiger
Murfreesboro Tennessee
Member since Jan 2004
10527 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:11 pm to
Jason Campbell never received credit for his ability in college.
This post was edited on 4/6/15 at 7:14 pm
Posted by Tornado Alley
Member since Mar 2012
26500 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:14 pm to
quote:

Connor shaw




Gamecocks went 25-5 under his watch (when he was the starter). 72 total TDs. He was criminally underrated, for sure.

Posted by TTsTowel
RIP Bow9den/Coastie
Member since Feb 2010
91644 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:15 pm to
quote:

The only reason Te'o had a Heisman campaign to begin with was the golden helmet that sat atop his head.
And the whole girlfriend thing...
Posted by Porter Osborne Jr
Member since Sep 2012
39985 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:18 pm to
quote:

Tony Taylor.
Had as many or more tackles, sacks, TFLs, and INTs in 2006 as a MLB than Manti Te'O during his bull shite Heisman campaign



It's all about marketing and playing for ND



I was gonna vote Connor Shaw and Robert Edwards.
This post was edited on 4/6/15 at 7:19 pm
Posted by BluegrassBelle
RIP Hefty Lefty - 1981-2019
Member since Nov 2010
98925 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:23 pm to
Danny Trevathan. Led the SEC in tackles through 9 games in 2011 and wasn't even a Butkus Award finalist.
Posted by TTsTowel
RIP Bow9den/Coastie
Member since Feb 2010
91644 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:25 pm to
quote:

Danny Trevathan.
PFF graded him out as one of the best NFL linebackers in 2013 while he stayed healthy.

He's a beast.
Posted by Korin
Member since Jan 2014
37935 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:26 pm to
Chris Leak.
Especially by our own fans.
Posted by Korin
Member since Jan 2014
37935 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:27 pm to
quote:

Gamecocks went 25-5 under his watch (when he was the starter). 72 total TDs. He was criminally underrated, for sure.

And tough as nails too.
Posted by Doc John
The Cave
Member since Nov 2010
410 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:43 pm to
Kevin Minter in 2012

130 Total Tackles, 55 solo
15 tackles for loss
4 sacks

Overshadowed by Manti Te'o hype


Posted by GenesChin
The Promise Land
Member since Feb 2012
37706 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:45 pm to
Cam Newton was underrated. Not many players can win NCs by themselves
Posted by ljhog
Lake Jackson, Tx.
Member since Apr 2009
19060 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:50 pm to
quote:

Tony Taylor. Had as many or more tackles, sacks, TFLs, and INTs in 2006 as a MLB than Manti Te'O during his bullshite Heisman campaign

Remember Manti in the NCG running around making tackle after tackle. And after losing a heart breaker being consoled by his beautiful girl friend. Y'all remember that.
Posted by gohogs141
Fayetteville
Member since Jun 2011
7512 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:53 pm to
quote:

quote:
I used to hate playing against Arky when Jones was there. Deceptive speed because he had the longest stride of anyone I ever saw. Two strides and he was like 10 yards down the field. Boy was a baller in college.


Him running a 4.3 at 6'6, 240 was incredible. Wish he could have kept his act together.

A few years after him one of my favorite players growing up was Sam Olajubutu. Only like 5'8 but could lay the wood at LB.
Posted by Tiger n Miami AU83
Miami
Member since Oct 2007
45656 posts
Posted on 4/6/15 at 7:55 pm to
quote:

Most Underrated Ever: Lionel “Little Train” James

quote:


As a freshman sitting in the southeast corner of Jordan-Hare, I recall the thrill of watching a tiny halfback dart around Tennessee tacklers and flatten linebackers who outweighed him by 50 pounds. That was The Little Train, Lionel James, whom Pat Dye called “No. 6 in your program, No. 1 in your hearts.”

quote:


Lionel cleared holes for the greatest Auburn Tiger of them all and made clutch run after clutch run. He was also Bo’s mentor in 1982 and ’83. When he was presented the Sugar Bowl MVP trophy, Bo handed it over to Lionel.[/quote]

[quote]Auburn was the only major school to offer James a scholarship to become a member of a particularly unheralded recruiting class.

In James' words, "Their first pick didn't make his grades, and the second guy blew out a knee, and that gave me an opening, 'cause I had good grades and two good knees."


quote:

James' 5-6, 150-pound frame was not large enough to permit two numbers on his jersey, and so he was given number 6.

quote:


James was the first player Dye pointed out at his very first meeting with the team. James recalls, "All the juniors and seniors took all the seats in the meeting room, and I was just a freshman, so I sat on the floor. Coach Dye came in, and he kicked my foot as he was walking by. He stopped and told me to stand up. He asked me what my name was, and how tall and heavy I was. When I told him, Coach Dye said, "Five foot, six and 150 pounds. That's what's wrong with this team. We can't win with people like
you.'"

quote:

James was named the "Most Improved Running Back" on A-Day. By the time the season started, James had gone from an unknown underclassman to a starter. "Right now, Lionel James is the best all-around (running back) we have," Dye said at the time, "and he only weighs about 150."

quote:


"Lionel really took Bo under his wing. I think he had more influence over Bo than any other player. Bo and all his talent didn't intimidate Lionel at all. He wasn't afraid to tell Bo when he did something wrong, and Bo really respected that. Lionel was a real practice player, and he inspired everybody to work harder through his example in practice.

quote:


"I think of that as an eight-quarter game," James says, referring to the Alabama games of 1981 and '82. "In '81, the Alabama players had a solid confidence in their eyes, they knew they were going to win. In '82, I remember looking at the same guys and seeing pure panic. We were the confident ones, we knew we were going to win that thing, no matter what." In the aftermath of 23-22, Dye invited the Auburn players to return to the field and "thank our people." Few who have seen the replays, and no one who was there, can forget the sight of James, lifted off his feet and passed above the heads of the Auburn faithful in that momentous celebration. "I walked out onto the field," he recalls, "and saw all these guys hanging from the goal posts, and thought, 'this place is a zoo.' Then, a guy in the tunnel picks me up and lifts me off the ground. The next thing I know, he's passing me up into the bleachers, and I didn't touch the ground again for half an hour."


quote:

While freshman sensation Jackson got the headlines as the breakthrough player for the Tigers, it was the "Little Train" who was awarded Auburn's Pat Sullivan Award as the season's outstanding offensive player, gaining 793 yards on 113 carries with seven TDs. He added 56 yards receiving with 15 catches, 467 yards on 30 kick returns, and even 43 yards passing, for 1359 total yards.


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