This just in: The new starting quarterback at Notre Dame is going to be junior Evan Sharpley.
It being July and this being a blog, take that with a grain of saltwater, if you're laying on a beach somewhere. But I talked to Zach Frazer's dad on Friday following up on the quarterback's transfer to Connecticut on Sunday.
Frazer's future was pretty well mapped out when Charlie Weis narrowed the quarterback race to Sharpley, freshman Jimmy Clausen and sophomore Demetrius Jones. The Frazers left on good terms with Charlie Weis but Zach's father David came away with some revealing observations.
"From what we know Sharpley is going to be the guy," David Frazer told me from his office in Harrisburg, Pa. "Jones will be put in for a few trick plays. Clausen won't play this year."
Wow. That lends credence to an unsubstantiated blog that surfaced earlier this summer. It stated that Clausen had surgery on his throwing elbow. No one has confirmed the surgery or Clausen's playing status.
But that would make sense. If Clausen is still healing from surgery it would be wise to sit him out.
"The way Charlie described it, he doesn't think he has the passing game this year," David Frazer said. "He wants somebody to throw it five yards (downfield). They're going to run it more.
"I think the problem is they thought they were going to get (five-star receiving recruit) Arrelious Benn. With (Jeff) Samardzija and Rhema McKnight gone, they really don't have go-to receiver types."
Benn going to Illinois was painful enough for Weis. But Clausen's father (Jimmy Sr.) said shortly thereafter that his son had played his entire senior year in high school with a sore arm. Surgery wouldn't be a surprise but we might not know until August when practice starts, if then.
It was a certainty that Notre Dame would be breaking in a new quarterback after the departure of Brady Quinn. Sharpley, from Marshall, Mich., did not play in 2005. He threw two passes last season. Jones did not play in 2006.
Zach Frazer was highly recruited out of Mechanicsburg, Pa. UConn's Randy Edsall, a central Pennsylvania native, came after him two years ago but knew that he was probably out of his league.
Now Edsall, armed with a new contract, gets a franchise quarterback on the rebound. Frazer, a sophomore, will have to sit out the 2007 season and have three years of eligibility remaining.
"The reason he went to UConn is that the Big East is up and coming," David Frazer said. "You have West Virginia, Rutgers and Louisville. They're all going to lose all their strengths (after this season). That gives the UConns and Cincinnatis a chance." ...
I'm trying to figure out Les Miles. The LSU coach speaks out of context so often I'm beginning to wonder if that stovetop hat he insists on wearing is trapping too much heat around his dome.
I still remember his red-in-the-face defense of JaMarcus Russell after last season's victory at Tennessee. No one in the room was thinking about attacking Russell after he had thrown three touchdowns, the last a game-winner with nine seconds left at Neyland.
Anyway, sometimes Les speaks his mind, no matter what is on it. In the middle of a slow, lazy summer he lit passions from California to Louisiana recently with his rant against USC on a New Orleans radio station:
"I can tell you this, that (USC has) a much easier road to travel," Miles is quoted as saying in the Baton Rouge Advocate. "They're going to play real knockdown drag-outs with UCLA and Washington, Cal-Berkley, Stanford -- some real juggernauts -- and they're going to end up, it would be my guess, in some position so if they win a game or two, that they'll end up in the title (game).
"I would like that path for us. "I think the SEC provides much stiffer competition."
A much easier road? I'll give him the SEC-is-superior posture. Year in, year out, it is the best league in college football. In fact, going in 2007 this might be as good as the conference has been.
But the Pac-10 ain't trash. UCLA won 10 games two seasons ago and returns 20 starters this season. Cal is considered a top 15 program this year and has been turned completely around by Jeff Tedford.
In fact, Les, Pete Carroll is 4-0 against the SEC, including combined victories over Arkansas the past two seasons by 120-31. USC is 17-10-1 overall against the SEC and hasn't lost to an SEC school since 1985.
The Pac-10 is 8-6 against the SEC since 2000. This year USC plays Idaho, at Nebraska and at Notre Dame in non-conference games. LSU plays Virginia Tech, Middle Tennessee, Tulane and Louisiana Tech. I'll take USC in the bravery department.
And don't talk to me about that rough SEC schedule. The Pac-10 is the only major conference that plays a true round robin. This year LSU doesn't play Tennessee or Georgia. It does, however, play Mississippi and Mississippi State every year. Besides, we're talking about USC. The school whose magic number is seven. That's the latest count on both Heismans and national championships at Troy. If this is somehow about LSU having to share the 2003 national championship with USC, then get over yourself, Les. You weren't around. If this is about the SEC having to play a conference championship game, then if you don't like it, change conferences.
If this has something to do with losing New Orleans (and Louisiana native son) Joe McKnight to USC then recruit harder. As McKnight's high school pointed out, you thought nothing of taking Louisiana talent to Oklahoma, Les, when you were at Oklahoma State. Now all the sudden the state's best players are conscripted to go to LSU?
Miles is a coach who uttered one of the most biting comments in Big 12 history. Before the Oklahoma game in 2003, Miles said the Sooners were "the best team in college football -- we are told."
Sufficiently enraged, Oklahoma could barely restrain themselves. The Sooners beat Oklahoma State 52-9.
Miles needs to have a serious talk with his internal monologue. It's great for us (the media) when he speaks out but things tend to even out on the field. Dropping an f-bomb while talking about Alabama this offseason at a public speaking event ("f------ Alabama") already has Nick Saban sharpening his swords. ...
Now for something completely different: Miles is also seen as the likely successor to Lloyd Carr at Michigan. I'll buy that but why are Carr detractors in Louisiana giving him grudging credit for going 22-4 with Nick Saban's players?
A good coach, a good coach is a good coach. The alternative for Miles would be to lose with Saban's players. The Tigers are a top five pick and projected to win the SEC. There is nothing wrong with that in both Louisiana and Michigan ...
At this moment the suspicious death of former Florida player Avery Atkins looks like suicide. Atkins was found dead in the garage of his aunt's home on Thursday.
You can bet this is eating up Urban Meyer inside. If a player is worth saving, Meyer goes the extra mile, sometimes beyond, to give his guys another chance. Atkins, though, was beyond help. He was kicked off the team following his freshman season 2005 after a domestic battery charge surfaced in the offseason. Atkins had been projected to start cornerback in 2006.
He re-enrolled at Florida in the spring, paying his own way, but wasn't allowed to rejoin the team. Since May he had been arrested three times for felony battery; cocaine and drug paraphernalia possession and carrying a concealed weapon; possession of crack cocaine. ...
Leftovers from Thursday's All American Football League story ...
Marcus Katz, financial backer of the AAFL and diehard Georgia fan:
"I'm a Georgia fan. You have a bunch of friends in college football wishing it was the season again. I couldn't help but notice that all the players we came to love, disappeared. Why couldn't they play in Athens in the spring?
"This is something I thought about for years and years and years. What kind of person would it take that would be respected enough for schools to even listen? It turns out he lived right up the street (de facto AAFL commissioner Cedric Dempsey, former NCAA executive director, lives near Katz).
On TV: We wouldn't turn down a TV contract. The people that care about watching Florida play live mostly in Florida. We could make deals with local cable channels. We would do the same thing in each area. If we ever got popular enough in other cities that (TV contract) might be possible.
On the league: I think there's enough money to give the fans a fair shot to decide if they want to like it. Sometimes things aren't just black and white. I fully expect that we're going to sell every ticket in Florida in every game. I looked at the research. Octagon is our sports research firm. It's too good to be true.
"The board of directors hasn't really gotten to the point where they're going to pay quarterbacks more and punters less. ...
"Even high school football is fun if you care who wins. It looks like we're going to play at Arkansas, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Florida State, Mississippi, Texas, Michigan, Purdue, North Carolina State. Of those 10 we'll do eight.
On tryouts that started this week in Orlando:"These are kids that have never practiced together ... I've got my fingers crossed as the beginning of something instead of a finished product.
"Maybe we do that in 50 cities with open tryouts. Look for the handful of players that didn't even play college ball. ...
"I wanted to get (actor Matthew McConaughey) involved with our Texas team. His agent said,' When you get a schedule, give us a call.' "