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Not-Clemson related, but a general question about recruits who de-commit / flip: Where does the money go?

I just saw the news about that QB recruit flipping from ND to Auburn… and it got me wondering about something:
When these kids commit, then flip…. do they give the money back to the team who paid them first? How does this work? Maybe the new team pays a “buyout”?
Since there are no contracts, what prevents a kid from doing this a few times?
** PS- I’m not referencing this exact situation (as I realize it’s “possible” ND is not in the inducement game), but how does this now work?

Led by Manny Diaz, undefeated Duke may be this college football season's biggest surprise

Led by Manny Diaz, undefeated Duke may be this college football season's biggest surprise

By Ross Dellenger - Yahoo! Sports

DURHAM, N.C. — Within Manny Diaz’s new office here at Duke University, a commemorative football sits emblazoned with the score of a football game:

Duke 45.

Miami 21.


On Oct. 22, 2022, 10 months after the Miami Hurricanes fired Diaz as coach, the Duke Blue Devils beat them in a stunner at Hard Rock Stadium. Diaz wasn’t a part of either program then. In fact, he was on the staff at Penn State.

And, yet, that football sits in his new office.

It makes little sense until the backstory is revealed. Duke’s current strength coach, David Feeley, was on the staff that beat the Hurricanes in 2022. He gifted the football to Diaz with, perhaps, an understood meaning: We won that one for you.

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Manny Diaz's Duke Blue Devils are 5-0 heading into their Week 6 matchup with Georgia Tech. (Grant Halverson/Getty Images)


Almost exactly two years later, Diaz is five games into his second chance as a head coach and hasn’t yet lost.

The Blue Devils are 5-0 for the first time in 30 years, are two wins shy of a school record-tying nine-game win streak and are — somehow — not ranked in the Top 25.

That’s only the half of it. Diaz’s team did not receive a single vote in the poll.

“It doesn’t matter,” Diaz said Tuesday in an interview with Yahoo Sports. “Nobody remembers who was ranked after Week 5 a year ago. We didn’t get to be 5-0 by valuing that.”

Their absence from the rankings is with reason. Few, if anyone, expected them here.

The fact that Duke is one of the 19 remaining undefeated teams in the Football Bowl Subdivision is one of the sport’s stunners a month into the college football season, right up there with unbeatens Army, Navy, UNLV, Indiana and Rutgers.

After all, Duke has a new coach (Diaz), a mostly new staff, a new quarterback (former Texas backup Maalik Murphy) and an almost completely rebuilt defensive front. Maybe most surprising of all: This team practiced with five healthy offensive linemen in the spring and now it's a unit that has emerged as a bright spot with eight linemen transfers this offseason.

It was no easy chore reaching this point, of course. The Blue Devils trailed in the fourth quarter in three of those five wins. They needed a last-gasp, tying field goal against Northwestern just to send it to overtime; they were down by four to UConn before a 56-yard, lead-taking touchdown drive; and, most recently, they stormed back from a 20-0 deficit to stun rival North Carolina, 21-20.

Comeback Kids? More like Sewer Rats.

The program’s motto — drag opponents into the sewer — is derived from Feeley’s offseason conditioning program of fighting until the bitter end with grit, getting nasty at times and pushing the opponent for four quarters. Duke has outscored opponents 40-6 in the fourth quarter this season.

“Guys believe we get stronger as the game goes on,” Diaz said. “There is a belief in that.”

There is belief, too, in Diaz, a 50-year-old who landed his dream job (Miami in 2019), was unceremoniously fired from that dream job (after three seasons), returned as a defensive coordinator (at Penn State) and is now back in the big chair.

Duke athletic director Nina King hired Diaz after Mike Elko left for Texas A&M.

“I talked to a lot of people at Miami,” King said. “I felt I had a good understanding of what went on there. I thought, ‘Let’s give him a chance.’”

So, what exactly went on at Miami?

Diaz finished with 21 wins and 15 losses, never had a losing record in conference play and, he believes, fielded a team in 2020 that would have won 11 games (not eight) had the Hurricanes played a traditional schedule and not a COVID-altered slate.

The ending played out publicly. In his final season, the Hurricanes won five of their last six games, ending the year with, as it turns out, a 47-10 win at Duke. The late-season run did nothing to quiet the speculation over Diaz’s job status and the intention of the school to pursue Oregon coach and former Miami lineman Mario Cristobal.

After that final game over Duke, Diaz and staff began recruiting. For a week, as they traveled around visiting with players, the speculation continued, and the school — then without an athletic director — made no public statement supporting its coach.

His message to the staff then: We’re not out of it until they tell us.

“You’ve got to continue to press forward,” he said.

It wasn’t easy.

“There was a state of unsettlement,” said Feeley, who was Diaz’s strength coach at UM before moving to Duke to join Elko in 2022. “Guys were a little nervous. They knew something was wrong. Everybody knew it. That was pretty tough.”

The late-season run had enlivened Diaz. His team didn’t give up. The locker room began to bond. Things were coming together.

He’s been searching for that feeling ever since he was fired.

“When the plug gets pulled on that, you have an eagerness to try to recapture that,” Diaz said.

He was hurt enough by the firing that Diaz moved to Pennsylvania to join Penn State as defensive coordinator, a move that he describes as “geographically far from Miami, but also as far away as you can be in every way, shape or form.”

He calls his time with coach James Franklin a “reset” and a “recharge,” and he was afforded the ability to be “choosy” when head coaching jobs came open. He turned down interest in several jobs, including one back in his home state (South Florida).

It was too soon to go back down there, he thought, and surely, there will be a better option, right? “I never doubted that,” he said.

But why Duke?

The connections started with Feeley, a person that King leaned on for advice. After all, he spent all three seasons with Diaz at Miami. He knew him well.

Separately, Diaz’s own son, Manny III, applied to Duke for college well before the interview process. A week after Diaz’s hire, Manny III was accepted and he's now a freshman.

But for Manny Diaz, there was something even more important in making this decision. In the evolving landscape of college athletics, would Duke invest enough to win and be included in whatever iteration is ahead for college football?

“I straight up asked President (Vincent) Price in a one-on-one interview,” Diaz said. “What if this happens and that … is Duke committed to stay at the highest level of college athletics? He looked me dead in the eye, ‘Duke is absolutely committed to compete at the highest level of football.’’

That’s echoed too by King.

“We do not want to be left out. We feel like we are putting in the investment, whether resources or people or facilities, etc.,” King said. “We want to make sure our program is in the next iteration, whatever it is. We are in a good position right now. Not sure you could have said that 5-10 years ago. We will be attractive. We’ll be able to go in with that next group of schools, whoever they are and break off.”

That doesn’t mean King isn’t anxious about the future.

As one of the country’s elite academic private schools, Duke’s tuition is as much as four times the cost of its public school competitors. That’s a financial disadvantage for an athletic department charged with funding the majority of those scholarships.

A full scholarship at Duke is about $90,000, King said. For comparison’s sake, in-state tuition at Clemson is about $16,000.

Like most administrators, King and her administrative staff have working models for possible athlete employment and/or athlete revenue sharing. These concepts could soon become a reality.

What then? Many schools don’t have enough revenue through ticket sales, donations and television money to fund a broad-based athletic department.

“It gives me anxiety,” she said. “What if football, men’s basketball and a few others are our only sports? We’ve cried wolf a lot in the NCAA, but I really do think the financial challenges … we are coming to a head soon.”

In the meantime, on the field, the Blue Devils continue to prove they belong. Duke is on the way to a third consecutive winning season for just the second time since 1960-62.

They can move closer to that Saturday, when Diaz and the Blue Devils meet Georgia Tech (3-2) in Atlanta. Games against Florida State and SMU follow before a Nov. 2 game at … Miami. The Hurricanes, like the Blue Devils, are undefeated but find themselves, unlike the Blue Devils, ranked No. 7 nationally.

It’s true. Diaz’s old team and Diaz’s new team could meet in Diaz’s hometown as unbeatens almost exactly two years after the date on that commemorative football resting in his new office.

Perhaps that would be too perfect.

Defensive Alignment

I know we’ve experimented with a 3-3-5 plenty in the past. I’m wondering if that would be our best alignment this year. DE is not strong this year and Woods is probably more suited to play on the edge with three down linemen rather than four.

With our personnel it would look something like:

Woods-Cape-Parker with frequent subbing in of Page, Tre, Green, etc.

Woodaz-Brown-Carter. You could probably line Brown up on the edge and have him playing more as a blitzing, downhill ‘backer to minimize his lack of knowledge and experience still.

Terrell-Barnes-Mickens-Hampton-Lewis.
This is where it gets dicey as I’m not sure we have the DB depth to consistently play this way as I only really trust Lukus off the bench. Venables is too slow, Covil and Griffin often seem out of position and haven’t seen much from Strozier, Feagin or Gipson to believe they’re ready for tons of snaps.

So maybe it wouldn’t be a long-term solution but at least an alignment we should consider employing with more frequency as Sammy Brown continues to emerge?

Game experience, development in practice give Brock Glenn confidence

Game experience, development in practice give Brock Glenn confidence

By: Bob Ferrante - The Osceola

Early playing time for a quarterback is a blessing and a curse. The opportunity presents itself, but often the situation is less than ideal.

Brock Glenn was rushed into a starting role last December against a pair of ranked opponents, first the ACC Championship game vs. No. 15 Louisville and then the Orange Bowl against No. 6 Georgia. Glenn’s stats don’t say much, just 19 of 51 for 229 yards and two interceptions, but it’s more about the experience he gained as a true freshman in the long haul.

“Both were great opportunities. They’ve given me good game experience,” Glenn said after Wednesday’s practice. “Obviously, two good teams, Louisville and Georgia. Just seeing how fast the speed of the game is in a real game has helped a lot. That’s helped me translate it to practice as well.”

Glenn has had his good days in practice, ones where he’s been accurate from the pocket and on the move. He’s shown a good connection with veteran receivers as well as younger ones. He’s also had days in practice where his passes have been off the mark or intercepted. It’s all part of the growing pains for a young quarterback.

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Brock Glenn is set for start No. 3 - and all have come against top-15 teams. (USA Today Sports)

FSU fans likely have an impression of Glenn from his two games in December, but the situations he was forced to start under were, understatement, challenging for any quarterback, let alone a true freshman. And his injury last fall in the Southern Miss game also sidelined him for a chunk of the fall.

Where has Glenn grown the most since his first two starts?

“Probably just grown the most in my headspace,” Glenn said. “Understanding how fast the game is and how fast everything closes down. And just getting a good pre-snap, post-snap clarification, just going through my reads.”

What should help Glenn is candidly something Uiagalelei did not have, or did not have yet in the FSU offense, which was an internal clock to feel the pressure. When Glenn says “how fast everything closes down,” that’s a reference to the knowledge that the pass rush is coming and he must quickly go through his progressions and get rid of the football. Or throw it away.

FSU’s coaches have had a view of the development of Glenn and Luke Kromenhoek in practice. Glenn’s progress and development will be on display as the Seminoles play host to Clemson on Saturday (7 p.m. on ESPN).

"It is overall understanding. Anticipation, but even with anticipation, trusting your eyes, trust what you see, to be able to go through what you anticipate to happen and then not guess," FSU coach Mike Norvell said of where he hopes his quarterbacks grow after a year in his system. "That is where I think Brock is very smart. Him, Luke (Kromenhoek), that quarterback room is a very smart room. It is about trusting the timing, technique, fundamentals, because there are times you might see it, you might anticipate what is happening. But if you are almost too quick in your timing, it takes time for the receiver to get to the spot or things to happen.

“I think that is one of the areas where I've seen him grow. I've been really pleased in how both of those guys have prepared each and every week leading up, because you never know when that is opportunity is going to present itself. Obviously, the door is open now and I am excited to see them go through it."

If there was a plan to use Glenn earlier in the season, optimistically thinking the Seminoles would be comfortably in front in second halves, that never materialized. The Seminoles (1-4) have rarely led in games and often were playing from behind. It’s less than ideal that Glenn didn’t play in any of FSU’s first four games and his only two drives came late in the SMU game, where he didn’t complete any of four passes (although one was a clear-cut drop).

FSU’s offense has been stagnant, second-worst among P4 offenses at 15.2 points per game and 126th among the 134 FBS teams. Plenty of that is a reflection of Uiagalelei, who has completed just 53 percent of his passes. But responsibility falls on receivers and tight ends, who have dropped too many passes, and not blocked well enough.

And FSU’s offensive line, which was viewed as a strength, has instead battled injuries as Darius Washington, Richie Leonard, Jeremiah Byers and Robert Scott missed games. Leonard is now out for the season with an injury, and coach Mike Norvell has been critical of FSU’s guard play. That opens the door, potentially, for first-time starters at guard in Andre’ Otto or Brock Estes, who are in position battles with T.J. Ferguson and Keiondre Jones, respectively, at their guard spots. If Otto or Estes start, it would mean FSU is using a sixth different offensive line group to begin a game.

So it’s under these circumstances that Norvell and the coaches turn to Glenn. Yes, as a result of Uiagalelei’s injury. But also, yes, to take control of an inefficient offense.

There’s simply no assurance the offense will look better with Glenn as the quarterback. But he offers a new dimension with how he runs as well as his ability to process the plays faster.

“We have a lot of confidence in Brock,” offensive coordinator Alex Atkins said. “It’s not like a lack of confidence in Brock. But Brock has also been taking his steps to show his command. It’s still a responsibility to show when you do this, you can do it.”

It’s now Glenn’s show to run as he operates the first-team offense. And it’s not ideal that Glenn is starting against a third top-15 opponent, although it has happened a few times with mixed success around the FBS.

Glenn said he has been working diligently with Kromenhoek and Trever Jackson, reviewing plays that worked and didn’t in practice. These conversations and film study, along with time talking to Uiagalelei before practices, have helped.

“Just watching a ton of film,” Glenn said. “Giving me great confidence in what I’ll see and what I’ll get.”

Glenn has also talked with receivers about plays, route depths and discussing where a ball will be thrown on a given play and what adjustments will be made based on various coverages.

“I see Brock with more confidence, him being him,” wide receiver Ja’Khi Douglas said. “He’s making the calls and being more vocal. The ball is in his hands but he’s getting more comfortable.”

Glenn has the advantage of time to prepare this week, knowing he would be earning the start. His time with the first-team offense will help him ahead of his latest start against a top-15 opponent.

“I’m just going to go out, be me, do what I can do and just have fun doing it,” Glenn said. “That’s what you play the game for. When you’re a little kid you go out and you go out, you truly enjoy playing the game. That’s how I’m going to go out there Saturday night, just have fun."

I re-watched the 4th quarter of the Gator Bowl

And it didn’t give me a warm fuzzy (I have meds for that) considering how much of the personnel who played will be playing on Saturday. I know we remember the final drive fondly, but I had completely forgotten about the intentional grounding that almost snuffed it all. Nice play by Cade/AW to get it back, but yikes.

Besides the normal Cade/OL gripes, WTH happened with the secondary in that game?

in the meantime, I’ve decided that I’m going to go back to SpongeBob episodes to maintain my rosy and cheery outlook.

Boat lift repairs

Anyone work on or have a connection for boat lift repairs (Lake Greenwood). I think the rising flood waters may have fried my switch for it. It was submerged for awhile (no power) but the power came back on today and when I got out here the reset switch thing was still plugged in and super hot. Doesn’t work though and my boat is currently stuck on the wooden posts 😀.
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