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Sunday, March 23, 2008

A ranking of the teams that consume us

In the past several months, Atlanta sports fans have witnessed the firings, scorched-earth reassignments or sudden exits of three coaches and three executives, which is a remarkable achievement considering the Hawks’ season hasn’t even ended yet and the Thrashers’ general manager isn’t going anywhere (except, of course, the draft lottery).

If you’re wondering why the masses are counting down to Opening Day and already getting lost in 2009 BCS dreams, it’s because the landscape otherwise looks like desert. For that reason, we submit our inaugural rankings of the eight area sports teams that most consume our thoughts. Should indoor football or women’s basketball unexpectedly raise a pulse in the coming months, we’ll adjust to a top 10 next year.

Until then, the countdown begins at …

8. THRASHERS

Before being hired in 1998, Don Waddell made his mark building minor-league organizations in San Diego and Orlando. The problem: He’s still building minor-league organizations. Other than retaining Ilya Kovalchuk (for now), the Thrashers fail in every conceivable category: ownership (Bruce Levenson, the “hockey guy” in the Atlanta Spirit group, has fumbled in management and public relations), roster building, player development, coaching, franchise stability, direction and fan development. The worst news isn’t that things are bad now, but that there’s no reason to believe they’ll get better any time soon. Oh, and ticket prices just went up.

7. GEORGIA BASKETBALL

Now that we’re past Euphoria Weekend, a question: was the SEC tournament a jumpstart or an aberration? Coach Dennis Felton deserved to return for another season regardless of last week. But one improbable run doesn’t discount that the program had significant issues. If Felton’s players don’t go to tutoring sessions or they obliterate the conduct code, that’s on him, not athletics department policies or the result of a Jim Harrick hangover. If fan support doesn’t increase, it’s at least partly because Felton needs to throw himself into more pep rallies. But if Felton’s players suddenly are tuning him in and this recruiting class is as good as he thinks, they won’t need any more miracles.

6. GEORGIA TECH BASKETBALL

Four years ago, the Yellow Jackets reached the national finals. The fact that it wasn’t the start of something big doesn’t mean Paul Hewitt can’t coach or recruit. But it does mean he has failed to accomplish the one thing we presumed was a lock: building a consistent, winning program. Never mind going to the Final Four once in a while. The Jackets lost to UNC-Greensboro and Winthrop in the first 10 days of this season. They are 27-37 in the ACC with one NCAA tournament win in the past four seasons. Not good enough. Hewitt, notwithstanding his oversensitivity to criticism, certainly knows it. We’ve seen his upside. But the upside is collecting dust.

5. HAWKS

Here’s the dichotomy: The Hawks have a good starting five and a solid bench. But it’s almost like having nice oriental rugs under a leaky roof. Players can’t win if they’re poorly coached (Mike Woodson). Since GM Billy Knight dragged his feet in getting a point guard, he needs to draw some blame for this playoff scramble and the team being slow to gel. Knight’s also the one who hired Woodson, only to decide belatedly to fire him, only to be shot down by owners. Who will be in power after this season - and what gives you confidence the right decisions (starting with Smith’s contract) will be made? Until then: wet rugs.

4. GEORGIA TECH FOOTBALL

Ran into Paul Johnson at the airport the other day. Saw him charm a Georgia fan, who then wished Johnson good luck this fall (other than in the season finale). So there’s one step up the mountain. Credit athletics director Dan Radakovich for trying to shake up a sleepy athletics department and apathetic fan base. His decision to fire Chan Gailey probably had more to do with that than seven-win seasons. But Johnson still has to prove he can: 1) recruit in a major conference; 2) win with his triple-option offense in the ACC; 3) excite the masses. If he can do the first two, the third will follow.

3. FALCONS

I know: Why so high? Thomas Dimitroff gets a blank slate. In this town, the unknown trumps the known of others. An NFL team can change its fortunes quickly if it makes the right moves, and Dimitroff’s off to a good start. He has trimmed payroll, dumped gimpy veterans and malcontents and stockpiled draft picks. He signed running back Michael Turner. Six wins next season would be an accomplishment. But Dimitroff seems like he knows what he’s doing. The big unknowns: the quality of the draft picks, the head coaching abilities of Mike Smith and the ability of owner Arthur Blank to actually let his football people make football decisions.

2. BRAVES

They’ve had a longer run of success than any other Atlanta sports entity, even with missing the playoffs the past two years. This season, either the starting rotation explodes or they’re in the World Series. But they’re in the conversation again. John Schuerholz-to-Frank Wren has been a relatively seamless transition. Bobby Cox: still here. The lineup: Chipper Jones-Mark Teixeira-Jeff Francoeur-Brian McCann hitting 3-4-5-6. The operation: Still a model for anybody looking to start a franchise. If there’s one question, it’s ownership’s payroll limitations that could submarine the chances of re-signing Teixeira.

1. GEORGIA FOOTBALL

Yes, preseason projections have mutated beyond even the usual absurd Georgia standards. I believe AJC.com now has a rule that we must have at least a five-inch blog every time somebody burps in Butts-Mehre Hall. That said, this program has no flaws right now. The Dogs are north of everybody in money, fans, stability and direction. Mark Richt, who always had the ability to recruit, last year became a better coach. Gauge the program this way: It’s not merely that this year’s Bulldogs will be in the national-title hunt, but that it’s difficult to project when they won’t be. They stand alone.

Permalink | Comments (126) | Post your comment | Categories: Braves/MLB, Falcons/NFL, Hawks/NBA, Tech/ACC, Thrashers/NHL, UGA/SEC

 

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