The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, October 31, 2018, Image 9
SPORTS Bill Murphy Sports Editor | 770-718-3415 | sports@gainesvilletimes.com Unties gainesvilletimes.com Wednesday, October 31,2018 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Where a legend was bom ‘Hot Rod’Blankenship kicked 1st game winner at Kentucky BY PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press JOSHUA L. JONES I Associated Press Georgia place kicker Rodrigo Blankenship (98) gets ready to kick a field goal in the first half of a 2017 game against Kentucky, in Athens, Ga. ATHENS — No one is quite sure how Rodrigo Blan kenship sees through those big, thick glasses. Georgia coach Kirby Smart even tried them on. “I don’t understand eye sight,” Smart said, “but I don’t see how those could help anybody see.” Clearly, they work just fine for the kicker known as “Hot Rod,” who has become one of the sixth-ranked Bulldogs’ most reliable players and a bit of a cult hero between the hedges. Inside The season’s first College Football Playoff rankings announced, 2B Let’s start with the glasses. While Blankenship goes with a much more subdued pair of wire-rimmed specs away from the field, he defi nitely needs those black, goggle-like sports glasses to see what he’s doing on game day. They’re not some sort of fashion statement or market ing gimmick. He’s unable to wear contacts, so that’s really his only option. ■ Please see RODRIGO, 2B Georgia Tech QB TaQuon Marshall will start at North Carolina TaQuon Marshall is keeping his starting job as Georgia Tech’s quarter back after Tobias Oliver posted huge numbers as a runner in last week’s upset win at Virginia Tech. Marshall won’t have the position to himself. Coach Paul Johnson said Tuesday he plans to play both quarterbacks in Saturday’s game at North Carolina. He said he won’t take the starting job from Marshall, a senior cap tain, just because Oliver ran for three touchdowns in his first start last week. “They’re both going to play but I’m not going to take a senior captain on the team and sit him down because Tobias played really great against Vir ginia Tech,” Johnson said. Oliver’s performance helped provide new hope for Georgia Tech (4-4, 2-3 Atlantic Coast Confer ence) entering the game at North Carolina (1-6, 1-4). Oliver, a freshman, was dominant in the 49-28 win over Virginia Tech . His 40 carries for 215 yards were the second-highest totals for a quarterback in school history. His only pass attempt was incom plete, making the Yellow Jackets’ spread-option offense even more one dimensional than with Marshall. Associated Press GOLF | On The Fringe Ryder Cup over, Furyk HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL Quite the turnaround returns to full-time job Jim Furyk never quit his day job. It just seemed that way. During the 31 tournaments he played over 20 months, his identity was no longer U.S. Open champion, FedEx Cup champion or 17-time winner on the PGA Tour. He was the Ryder Cup cap tain responsible for everything from team dinners to uniforms, all the while keeping an eye on how the U.S. team was shaping up. What surprised him about a text message Monday afternoon was not the request for his time, but the topic. “It’s been a while since anyone asked about my game,” Furyk said. His role as Ryder Cup captain defined him the last two seasons and ended Sept. 30 in a loss to Europe out side Paris. Now it’s time for the re-entry. Furyk gets back to his real job this week in Las Vegas, part of a field at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open that includes four of his Ryder Cup players — Jordan Spieth and Rickie Fowler, Bryson DeChambeau and Tony Finau. It’s doesn’t feel as though he is start ing over. Furyk, 48, last played 10 weeks ago at the Wyndham Champion ship. He shot 63 in the final round and tied for fourth. But it’s never easy for a player in his late 40s to devote two years to one job and then move on. “I’m excited about trying to get my game back in shape,” Furyk said. “I’m going to try to play three in a row, and use those three events to evaluate where I’m at. That will give me a little body of work to see what I need to improve, see where things are at. “I don’t have any expectations,” he said. “I expect to be rusty.” Furyk was No. 37 in the world when he was appointed captain, the best ranking of a U.S. captain since Tom Watson was selected to lead the 1993 team. Watson was only 42, no longer in his prime but ageless enough that he won twice more on the PGA Tour and nearly added a sixth British Open title at 59. Ryder Cup captains now tend to be at the end of their careers, typically serving in their late 40s, though Furyk would hope he has plenty left. His world ranking is now No. 251. That tie for fourth at the Wyndham Championship at least allowed him to move up 30 spots to No. 141 in the FedEx Cup, giving him conditional sta tus so he can save his two exemptions still available from career money. But while the Ryder Cup is a month behind him, it figures to linger. Curtis Strange has been down that road, though he spent half his time as the lead golf analyst for ABC Sports. He missed the cut at the Michelob Cham pionship when the 2002 Ryder Cup ended. Strange played 12 times over the next two years without cashing a check. “It’s different, because everybody continues to talk about the Ryder Cup and you’re trying to get into your ■ Please see FRINGE, 2B Furyk DOUG FERGUSON dferguson@ap.org AUSTIN STEELE I The Times Gainesville’s Quintavious Hayes runs the ball as Winder-Barrow players give chase during a game on Oct. 9 at City Park Stadium. After two straight wins, Gainesville back in the playoff hunt BY BILL MURPHY bmurphy@gainesvilletimes.com Donning the WWE cham pionship wrestling belt of A.J. Styles during a recent team- centered steak dinner was just part of a two-week span where everything has come up roses for the Gainesville High foot ball program. Holding a 1-7 record on Oct. 24 and rather tenuous outlook on making the postseason, the reigning WWE champion was brought in for a surprise visit by Red Elephants booster club president, Mark Wright, who is also a long-time friend of Styles. The wrestler, whose real name is Allen Jones, shared his personal story about coming from a hardscrabbled background before graduating in 1996 from Johnson High and going on to his national acclaim. Fast forward a week, and Gainesville (2-7, 2-2 Region 8-6A) can lock up the school’s 19th consecutive foot ball playoff berth with a win against Lanier (6-3, 3-1) on Fri day in Sugar Hill. “I’m so happy right now,” Gainesville senior offensive lineman Max Brand said. “We were 0-7 early on, but didn’t give up and kept fighting.” One thing about Styles’ talk really stood out to Brand as it related to football. “He told us we had to learn to hate losing,” Gainesville’s lineman said. While the Red Elephants are assured a playoff spot with a win, other scenarios are in play for the final three spots between Lanier, Gaines ville, Habersham Central and Apalachee. Dacula has already wrapped up the region championship. However, nobody at Gaines ville wants to depend on others for good fortune after a late- season surge few saw possible following a 17-point loss against Habersham Central on Oct. 5. “We’re all out there working like we’re still 0-7 and trying to get that first win,” Red Elephants senior defensive back Rassie Littlejohn said. First-year Red Ele phants coach Heath Webb never wavered in his confidence in his squad, even after finishing the non region portion of the schedule 0-5. After a bye week and 0-7 mark, getting that first win against Winder-Barrow gave Webb a tangible payoff his team could enjoy. “It was a relief to get that monkey off our backs, for sure,” Webb said. Mere days after the team’s first win, Webb got to see the look in his players’ eyes when the reigning champion of the biggest professional wrestling company came in the room with his championship belt, which is adorned with real gold and diamonds, according to Littlejohn. Unaware of the surprise visi tor beforehand, Webb’s play ers immediately grabbed their phones for photos. Gracious with his time, Styles took count less pictures and signed auto graphs, Webb said. Webb even got his chance to pose with Styles and the flashy belt. “Man, that belt was heavy,” said Webb, who said it weighed 20-25 pounds. More importantly, for Webb, was the message Styles had to share about overcoming obsta cles in life. The wrestler’s back ground included growing up poor and being told he wouldn’t achieve his goals of being a pro wrestler. “AJ came from tough cir cumstances, probably much like some of the players on our team,” Webb said. “He was poor and lived in a trailer park as a kid with no heat in the winter. It really meant a lot for our kids to see someone who is from Gainesville be able to make it.... They loved it.” Webb said the tide turned for the Red Elephants on the field during the win against Winder- Barrow. Marred by penalties much of the season, Gaines ville’s players kept their com posure on the receiving end of three personal fouls on one play from the Bulldoggs, setting up first-and-goal at the 5 and a Gionni Williams touchdown run on the next play. Williams’ rushing score put the Red Elephants ahead 7-0 as it went on to win 20-7. “We were so happy to finally score against Winder, because it was a hard game all night,” said Brand. “Once we scored, I looked back to make sure there were no flags before celebrating.” Against Apalachee, the Red Elephants also had to survive a close one, winning 7-6. Midway through the fourth quarter, the Wildcats scored a touchdown, but the kicker’s extra-point try went wide right. Webb said the pressure his squad put on the Apalachee kicker, including a pair of blocked field goal tries, was likely why he hurried the kick that would have tied the game. Now, the Red Elephants can extend that playoff streak dat ing back to 2000 — which is before any of the current play ers were born. Quite a turnaround from a season that just weeks ago was in range of going winless. “I never saw this coming,” Brand said. J Webb