Gus Malzahn and Hugh Freeze have been friends for 25 years.They both began their careers as successful high school coaches who advanced through the ranks. Freeze got his first college head coaching job in 2011 at Arkansas State. After one year he got the job at Ole Miss.Who replaced Freeze at Arkansas State? That would be his friend, Gus Malzahn. Malzahn coached there for one year and then became the head coach at Auburn.Now Freeze and Malzahn are both in the SEC West and Saturday will square off for the fourth straight year. The past three meetings have been memorable:2013: Auburn 30, Ole Miss 22 Auburn jumped out to a 20-3 lead and held on to win. The Tigers went on to win the SEC title and play Florida State for the BCS national championship.2014: Auburn 35, Ole Miss 31 Auburn was ranked No. 3 and Ole Miss was No. 4. The game billed as a playoff elimination game and it did not disappoint. Trailing by four points, Ole Miss receiver Laquon Treadwell was tackled at the Auburn one-yard line and fumbled the ball. Auburn recovered to preserve the win. It was a tough, emotional loss for Freeze as Treadwell suffered a season-ending leg injury. It was a sickening way to lose, said Freeze, who was consoled on the field by Malzahn after the game.2015: Ole Miss 27, Auburn 19 Ole Miss racked up 558 yards of total offense, including 381 yards passing from quarterback Chad Kelly to keep its hopes alive in the SEC West. Ole Miss finished 9-3 and went to the Sugar Bowl. Auburn went 6-6 and went to the Birmingham Bowl.Freeze and Malzahn have a standing golf game in Destin, Fla., every year for the SEC Spring meetings. Over the years their conversations have changed.Now that were in the same conference and the same division we dont talk much about football specifics, said Freeze. Its no fun playing friends but I still want to beat him and he wants to beat me.Here are some other key storylines for this Saturday in SEC football: Georgia (4-3, 2-3 SEC) and No. 14 Florida (5-1, 3-1) meet in their annual party down in Jacksonville.It will be Kirby Smarts first trip to Jacksonville as Georgias head coach. The Bulldogs have had a week off to recover from a disappointing 17-16 loss to Vanderbilt on Oct. 15 in Athens.Jacob Eason, Georgias freshman quarterback, will test his skill (and his courage) against the best defense he has ever seen. Florida is No. 2 in the nation in scoring defense (12.0 ppg), passing defense (132.8 ypg) and total defense (252.0 ypg). Kentucky (4-3, 3-2) kept its bowl hopes alive last Saturday with a 51-yard field goal on the last play of the game to beat Mississippi State 40-38. Now the Wildcats go on the road to play a Missouri team (2-5, 0-3) that is really struggling.Last Saturday Missouri scored 45 points, ran 104 plays and gained 629 yards and still lost to Middle Tennessee State 51-45.A victory would put the Wildcats within one win of going to a bowl, which was their stated goal before the beginning of the season. Kentucky finishes the season with Georgia, Tennessee, Austin Peay and Louisville. No. 18 Tennessee (5-2, 2-2) had a week off to heal up from its 49-10 loss to No. 1 Alabama on Oct. 15. Now the Volunteers must regroup as they travel to South Carolina (3-4, 1-4).Tennessees task is simply defined. The Volunteers, who have lost to Texas A&M and Alabama from the SEC West, still have a path to the SEC East championship and a trip to Atlanta. First, the Volunteers have to win their final four conference games with South Carolina, Kentucky (4-3), Missouri (2-5) and Vanderbilt (4-4).Then Tennessee must hope that Florida loses one of its final four SEC games with Georgia, at Arkansas, South Carolina and at LSU. If Tennessee finishes in a 6-2 tie with Florida, the Vols own the tiebreaker with a 38-28 win over the Gators on Sept. 24. Mississippi State had its heart ripped out at Kentucky last Saturday and has now lost three straight games. The last time the Bulldogs lost four straight was 2005.Mississippi State (2-5, 1-3) gets a break from conference action as it hosts Samford (6-1), an FCS team from Birmingham. Samfords only loss this season has come against Chattanooga, the No. 3 rated team in the FCS. Texas A&M (6-1, 4-1) led No. 1 Alabama 14-13 in the third quarter last Saturday but then the Crimson Tide scored 20 unanswered points to win 33-14. But the Aggies arent out of this thing yet. They only have three conference games left with Mississippi State (2-5), Ole Miss (3-4) and LSU (5-2). Win them and Texas A&M will have an outside shot at getting into the four-team playoff. Of course they could still win the SEC West if Alabama loses twice down the stretch.The No. 9 Aggies also take a break from conference play to host New Mexico State (2-5).Padres Jerseys 2019 . But now that hes in the NHL, the Calgary Flames centre showed big improvement in that department by scoring the winner in the eighth round of a 5-4 shootout victory over the Winnipeg Jets on Monday. Padres Jerseys China . -- Los Angeles Lakers guard Jordan Farmar will be out for roughly four weeks after tearing his left hamstring. https://www.cheappadresjerseys.us/ . Nigeria beat surprise package Ethiopia 2-0 in the second leg of their playoff for a comfortable 4-1 aggregate victory. Victor Moses converted a 20th-minute penalty after an Ethiopian handball, and Victor Obinna made certain of Nigerias place in Brazil with his powerful free kick in the 82nd at UJ Esuene Stadium. Custom San Diego Padres Jerseys . Ibaka equaled a career high with 20 rebounds, adding four blocked shots and 15 points as the Thunder smothered the Milwaukee Bucks offence in a 92-79 victory Saturday night. San Diego Padres Pro Shop . With his new coach and six-time Grand Slam singles champion Boris Becker watching him during an official match for the first time, Djokovic appeared tentative early against the Slovakian player, who often appeared content to keep the ball in play.Maybe Id had a bad week (I had). Maybe I was hungover. Maybe Im emotionally fragile (no maybe about it). Or maybe it was simply this colourless corner of Londons greenbelt getting under my skin. Whatever. Out there at the crease, it felt more like I was kicking around the fag-end spillover of a provincial nightclub than a cricket match on a sunlit Saturday. And I felt it.We were winning the game. I was a few not-out. It wasnt especially tense - they hadnt got enough, and their failure to do so had left a sour taste in the air. Throughout the course of tea, their No. 4 whinged on loudly about his dismissal, which had clearly carried to second slip (I was at first). But this is second XI cricket, where a neutral umpire is a rare treat, and so theres a vacuum. And, in effect, this bloke was filling it with slurs about an oppo players probity. But thats OK, right? Because its all part of the game.Wed had a little wobble, so I was trying to bat my age and see us home. When they saw I was on the block, they crowded me. The skipper, some portly defeat in a tattered cap, announced he was getting right under his nose. And then it started. The yob cacophony.I know I should brush it off. Just a bit of banter. Come on fella, its just a laugh! And look, when the games over its a different story! Alls well that ends… with a limp handshake and a swift half before buggering off.Hes gotta be the most boring man in Essex! was the only line in amongst the standard rubbish vaguely worthy of a smile (not least for its dramatic irony), so I offered one. Because its only a game, right? And yet, as I studiously prodded the pitch between overs, I couldnt help thinking that the scavenging around the joke by the rest of his team for the next half an hour had rather undermined the bravura precision with which it was delivered in the first place.And that was my problem: I couldnt help thinking. Finally, with just a few needed: Six or gay, mate! Six or gay! A few balls later, I drove a boundary. Two to win. Next ball I ran down the pitch and skewed it straight to cover. They went berserk. Oooooooh, said mid-off as he skipped past me. Can I have your number?I didnt give it to him.A few weeks later, in the same league, our opening batsman - an old-fashioned walker - played and missed at a young bowler, whose appeal was turned down by the onfield umpire, who himself had been batting just an hour ago. The bowler gave the usual histrionics - head in hands, turf-kicking, chuntering - and went back to his mark. Very next ball, big nick, and our man walks off. The bowler turns to the umpire and spews a volley of abuse. Our umpire, not unreasonably, tells him where to stick it. It then takes five men - including two of ours, both of whom ran on to the pitch - to restrain the bowler, whod lost it completely, from kicking off there and then. Their captain was full of apologies, but the bowler, even at the end of play, remained unrepentant. In his eyes, it was all fair game.****Ive played cricket for most of my life. I love its spirit and I believe in it. Im not about to pretend that its all cress sandwiches, ice and a slice, and clapping the batsman for managing to walk to the wicket. Most teams round our way have got a couple of bigmouths who can turn the whitest air blue, and spend large portions of their Saturday afternoons seeking to do precisely that. I know ours does. Hell, even my workplace does. You know the sort - the bantz-merchants, team geezers, the chieftains of chirp. Its sometimes delivered with a smile but not always, and who cares if it hits the spot or not? The sole point is to create tension, turn the atmosphere uglier, unsettle the opponent and win the day.These are austere times for sports participation. Its a battle out there - for central funding, schools commitment and next-generation engagement. In this regard, cricket is no different.Yet in other regards… The game still means something. And how many sports can truly lay claim to that? So what about the kids who retreat from this great idea because the edges are too sharp? Or the veterans, fed up with being insulted all afternoon on their only day off? The umpires, walking off halfway through an innings and heading straight for their car, their old off-white robes of once-unimpeachable authority fluttering in the wind, as happened in our league this season? And what of the sideline pundits - invariably parents - whove never made a single mistake in their lives, vocally refusing to accept the scandalous notion that others have, and do?Second XI club cricket seems to hold a specific antipathy towards a good, fair game, says Jamie Mann, captain of the twos at Walton-on-Thames CC. All-too-common suspect club umpires, egotistical middle-aged men and testosterone-filled blokes who hhavent become the cricketers they had hoped to be, all help push that line where behaviour becomes hostile and unnecessary more often than most would like.ddddddddddddYou wouldnt think the question Any chance hell use the bat? would lead to the offer of substituting leather and willow for fisticuffs in the car park, but it happens, and it happens a lot.Just as neutral umpires help keep the peace, so their absence leaves a hole. The lower down the levels, the fewer paid-for umpires, and that brings its own problems. But Nick Cousins, senior executive officer at the ECBs Association of Cricket Officials (ACO), is concerned that the higher levels are being affected too. Subjectively, I think there are two negatives. One is players who would in the past have come into umpiring now saying, I dont want any of that, thank you very much. I dont want to be abused on a Saturday afternoon. And the second one, where undoubtedly existing umpires walk away from the game, certainly at Premier League and top-level recreational cricket, because they no longer enjoy their afternoons.Steve Vear, chairman of the Southern Premier League Disciplinary Committee, agrees. Sometimes what umpires are expected to put up with, in terms of poor player behaviour, can get too much. He says that educating players is the key to protecting crickets distinctive reputation. We had one example of an ex-pro, who didnt know swearing on the field of play was actually cited as illegal in the leagues code of conduct. The younger generation are often less adept at expressing their disappointment towards an umpires decision in alternative ways than to get themselves in trouble by showing dissent.If we try and pretend that the attitudes of players have not changed, then I think were deluding ourselves, says Cousins. I tend to get a bit defensive because I think its not just a problem for cricket or cricket officials. Its more of a societal issue where youre no longer conditioned to do as youre told by teachers, police, anybody in authority, including officials.And then you add into that the quite brilliant methodologies by which we can now check decisions on the big screens in major games, and you put that together and you have a rather pungent mix, which means that if an umpire gives you out on a Saturday afternoon, you dont just put your bat under your arm and walk off anymore. You give them a stare, or if you think youve hit it you point your bat at them.So is the game becoming a little less attractive for the way some of its players and watchers choose to conduct themselves? Last year there were five games abandoned because there was fighting on the field of play. Now, on the one hand you can say thats five games from many thousands. On the other, you can say its five more than we had five years ago. The idea that youd have a game abandoned because of fighting was once unheard of. And in each of those games the umpires cant do anything. Theyve got no onfield authority to send people off. Thats why we at the ACO fully support and endorse the MCCs proposal to give the onfield umpire full authority to actually deal with this behaviour.The MCCs proposals would give umpires the power to send players off for stepping out of line. We may lament the times we live in, writes Scyld Berry in the Telegraph, and the erosion of respect for authority in society as a whole. But the MCC, as guardian of the games spirit and laws, has to do something to arrest the quantifiable increases in physical violence on the field. There are obvious procedural problems here. What would have happened in our game, say, if our non-independent umpire had attempted to send off the very bowler who was giving him verbals? And should he, as a stand-in doing his 10-over stint, even be allowed to do so? As ever, the captains must show the way. The hope is that having a deterrent in place would safeguard against it kicking off at all. Im a 22-year-old skipper, says Mann, and I play cricket with my mates. But if one of my lads is completely out of order on the field, then Id happily send him off. The integrity of the game is far more important than potentially losing out on a pint from a teammate on a Saturday night.Crickets always reflected the times. I get that. Its unrealistic to hope that the game be an island. But those stolen Saturdays spent running after cricket balls and praying for an early finish are precious, and perhaps more precious than ever. One reason for crickets enduring grandeur lies in the steaming piles of grimness off the field. So lets not be reminded of it until Monday morning at least.This article first appeared in All Out Cricket magazine. ' ' '