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RALEIGH, N.C. — There’s conformity among many NHL players. And then there’s Brent Burns.

Breaking up the parade of monotone business suits and well-groomed exteriors while entering the arena is a 6-foot-5, 230-pound defenseman wearing loud patterns, lugging a comically enormous camouflage backpack and sporting a chaotic scraggle of beard around a toothless hockey grin.

That’s the Brent Burns you see. The Brent Burns you hear about is one of the most unique star athletes in all of professional sports, let alone the NHL.

He’s the “big kid” in a 38-year-old body. There’s the menagerie of animals he owns. There’s his hyperintelligence, learning facts and skills so quickly that it’s like his brain was plugged into “The Matrix” and downloaded them. And of course, there’s that mysterious bag.

We spoke with several people who have known Brent Burns in the NHL to hear some tales of the Norris Trophy-winning defenseman who has helped the Carolina Hurricanes to the Eastern Conference finals in his first season with the club.

Here are Hurricanes teammates Jaccob Slavin, Brady Skjei and Sebastian Aho; former San Jose Sharks teammates Logan Couture, Brenden Dillon and Colin White; former Minnesota Wild and San Jose Sharks teammate Dominic Moore; and Mike Potenza, director of performance for the Golden State Warriors and former director of strength and conditioning of the Sharks (2006-2022), talking all things Brent Burns.


The first time I met him

Burns debuted in the NHL in 2003-04, having been selected 20th overall in the 2003 draft by the Minnesota Wild. He played for the Wild until 2011, when he was traded to the San Jose Sharks. He played 11 seasons for the Sharks, winning the Norris Trophy in 2017. In 2022, he was traded to the Hurricanes.

Moore: We were in Minnesota together. Jacques Lemaire was the coach. We were doing a battle drill, all below the goal line, and Burnzie just basically beasted three forwards in a row. It was like watching a Jason Bourne movie where he takes out three guys with one fell swoop. All three guys were still flat on the ice, and Lemaire just chuckled. I knew right away that this kid was special.

Couture: He’s intimidating when you first see him. He’s got all the tattoos and he’s just big. I can’t remember if he had teeth or not back then. I don’t think he did. But then you talked to him and he was just a fun-loving, easygoing guy, joking all the time. He’s kind of like a larger than life character.

Slavin: The first time I interacted with him after the trade [to Carolina], I sent him a text message asking him to come to something. He didn’t text back. He didn’t send a voice memo. He took a video of himself explaining what the situation was. He’s outside at his camper. Hat on, no teeth, in a camo cutoff shirt. Just enjoying the Raleigh humidity. And so that was my first interaction with him. I was like, “Oh, this guy’s hilarious.”

Potenza: I remembered him from Minnesota because he beat [the Sharks] up for four points in one game. He wore No. 8. He had short hair. He was big and he could skate. He was a pest against us. And then we get him and it’s like, “Holy s—, this is great!”

Dillon: I met him in 2014 when I was traded to San Jose. He didn’t have a beard yet. He had played the previous season at forward, but I ended up playing the rest of that season with him on defense. I mean, you’re a little intimidated. It’s Brent Burns. It’s an NHL All-Star. I had to get past the 6-foot-5 mammoth that had been running me the previous two years at forward. Burnzie is one of those bull-in-a-china-shop guys.

Couture: It’s absolutely insane he made the move from forward to defense so well. He played both in San Jose. I played a few games with him as my right wing and with Jumbo [Joe Thornton]. Then you see him winning the Norris Trophy as a defenseman. I couldn’t picture myself going back there to do that.

Potenza: When he showed up in San Jose, I realized he’s got a ton of tattoos — and got even more during his time with the Sharks. I don’t know if I was as surprised at the tattoos as much as I was the snake collection.


The animals

Burns is famous for having a collection of pets, mostly reptiles. It’s a passion for exotic animals he has shared with teammates — for better or worse.

Dillon: You would hear all of these things. Like he’s got a gorilla in his basement or an alligator in his garage.

Moore: In Minnesota, he had all the pets. Fish tanks and snakes and everything at his house.

Couture: When we first traded for him, there was all the stories about the snakes. I think there was a video online that I saw about them. And I was like, “Holy s—.” Because I’m afraid of snakes, so I’m never going over to his place.

Potenza: He had a monitor lizard. Why would anyone have a monitor lizard? You’re better off having a pit bull with a toothache than you are having a monitor lizard. Actually, I would take two pitbulls with toothaches, that were also hungry, over a friggin’ monitor lizard.

Dillon: He invited me over for dinner when I was traded. I didn’t know if had to be worried. I’m not the biggest bird guy. Would there be birds? I’ve never had, like, an iguana or anything. I got over there and he had some smaller animals. I think he actually had to leave most of his animals in Minnesota because his house there was pretty accustomed to hold all of them.

Couture: He told us some wild stories about them. Two of the snakes escaped at his place in Minnesota. They were lost in his house for while a certain amount of time. I was like, “Oh my God, how do you sleep at night? You’ve got two massive snakes roaming around the house and two small kids at that point!”

Moore: I remember he had gone to the zoo on an off day before a game in Columbus with some teammates and got clawed by a bobcat or something.

Couture: I think it was a cheetah.

White: It was an off day. It was me and Burnzie and Jumbo Joe. Burnzie’s into all these animals, right? He had a bunch of snakes and stuff then. I think he has pretty much a zoo now in Texas. Whatever city we were in, he would take us different places where there were animals. Like in Detroit, he took us to a snake farm.

And then we went to the zoo in Columbus. I’m not a real animal guy. I was terrified. He had it all set up where we would take a picture with a cheetah. And that’s when he got bit by one. Right in the ribs. [Laughs]

Moore: I remember thinking, “Oh my God.” Any general manager would cringe hearing that.

White: I was shocked. I was already nervous of this thing. They brought it out and they had treats and stuff, but then they told us to get around it for a picture. And this thing had its eyes on Burnzie the whole time. We got in close. Burnzie got closer to it and it reached over and grabbed him by the ribs. It didn’t get, like, a full bite. But it left these two fang marks.

Jumbo was going crazy laughing. I was laughing. Burnzie didn’t care. He wasn’t mad. He was laughing. We went back inside and they brought out a bunch of different animals. Burnzie knew I was scared of them and stuff. It was all funny as heck.

Couture: The next day we saw them after the cheetah had clawed at them. I was like, “Jesus guys, this is wild.”


What’s in the bag?

Burns carries a large, camouflage backpack around the arena and on road trips. Those who have looked inside were surprised by what they found.

Potenza: Did you ever see “Mary Poppins”? When Mary Poppins has that bag and she pulls out a giant lamp? Brent Burns is like Mary Poppins.

Couture: The bag is full. There’s probably 20 pounds of stuff in there. Like, he’s sweating carrying it. In New York, when we play the Rangers, you have to walk up this hill [from the buses] and he’s got to carry that bag. And he’s just leakin’, because he’s got so much extra weight on him.

Moore: He had the bag in Minnesota, but I think there’s been an evolution with it along with how the game has evolved. There’s more and more recovery and pregame things that players do. So he’s got things in there that he needs to have before or after the game.

Potenza: He’s got some essential oils in there, whether it be to help him be relaxed and calm during sleep or if he’s got soreness in his shoulder or what have you. Some muscle-rub type things.

Couture: In the last few years [in San Jose], he and I sat next to each other on the plane. So I finally really got to see what’s inside the bag. First, he’s got a blender in there. He brings his own coffee on the road — Black Rifle Coffee Company. Three or four bags of it.

Skjei: I’ve gone over to his room for coffee, so I know there’s a coffee machine in there. All that stuff requires a big bag. There’s a lot of moving parts, but the coffee’s good and it works for him.

Couture: He’s got supplements. He has these little things that he rolls on [his body]. He’s got all of his vitamins. He’s got bottles of water he takes from the rink — if a team has Smart Water or Fiji, he packs his bag full of these water bottles because he thinks they’re nicer waters. I think that’s it. Oh, and some knives. He had an axe one time, too.

Dillon: Let’s just say a couple times when he’s gone through security, he’s had to answer a couple questions.

Couture: One of his passions is knives. He always gets his knives from Grizzly Forge. He just loves the finishes on them. I mean, I’m not a knife person, but they’re beautiful knives. He uses one to take the tape off his stick between periods. It’s different.

Potenza: I’ve had to go in the bag to get stuff out for him. If you’ve seen the bag up close, there are probably 30 pockets in that bag. He’s asked me to find something. I’d have to go back to him three or four times. “Like, what pocket is it in?” And he’s like, “The front one with the double zipper, but not the back zipper.” And I’m like, “I don’t know what you you’re talking about.” Then I’d go to pick up the bag — and it weighs pretty much how much I weigh — and I lug it over to him and I’m like, “You find it.”

Slavin: It’s a couple bags now. He’s got his suitcase. He’s got his personal bag. Then he’s got his backpack. He’s just got a lot of stuff. For a one-day road trip, he’s packing over 200 pounds of stuff I think.


The beard

Though he was a baby-faced player for the Minnesota Wild, Burns grew out a bushy beard while with the San Jose Sharks, matching the face foliage of teammate Joe Thornton.

Potenza: Burnzie got going with it and I think he was like, “How long can I go with this thing?” It kind of made him more distinguished. If you see him saw him without the beard, or just a small beard, it’s like, “Man, you look super young.”

Dillon: The playoff beard-turned-lifestyle beard has definitely played a role in making him so recognizable. I remember around 2017, him and Connor McDavid were big Adidas guys. I remember being on the couch with Burnzie when [NBA star] James Harden tweeted at him:

I remember Burnzie kind of being like, “James Harden, why do I know that name?” I was like, “Dude, he’s one of the legends of the NBA right now. You’re one of the legends of the NHL right now.” And he’s like, “Do you think I should ask for an autographed jersey or something?”

I think sometimes when you talk about him being like a big kid, I sometimes think as good of a player as he is and confident in a player as he is, sometimes he maybe just doesn’t see himself in that way. Which is a big positive, because he continues to work hard at his game. But when you think about Brent Burns, I think you could ask a lot of Americans who maybe aren’t the biggest hockey fans and he’d be one of the most recognizable faces in the game.

Moore: On a personal note, he and his wife thought of shaving his beard with the proceeds going to my foundation. Super character guy. And he does a lot for other causes as well.

White: He’s a big military guy. He’s a huge supporter of them. He’s got Burnzie’s Battalion, his foundation that supports veterans.

Couture: He idolizes those guys, for sure. His brother was in special forces. His grandfather was in World War II with the Canadian military. It’s in the family, and that’s something that’s very important to him.

Potenza: He’s a big family man. It’s funny: In San Jose, all the kids seemed to be the same age at one point. [Joe] Pavelski‘s kids and Burns’s kids and [Patrick] Marleau’s kids. I remember blinking one day and I was like, “There’s like 10 boys running around this rink right now during practice. Who’s watching these kids?” And then they all got on the ice after practice.

He also loves being a dad and you can see that when he interacts with other kids. He may see me and my kids at the rink and he would engage with them: “How you doing? How’s your skating?”

White: He looks look like “Duck Dynasty,” but he’s a smart man.


“The most interesting man in the world”

From having a 420-acre Texas ranch where he raises free-range animals and hunts, to a variety of ever-changing off-ice interests, life is always fascinating for Burns and his teammates.

Dillon: He’s like the Dos Equis man. The most interesting man in the world. You love him as a teammate because you can’t stop laughing with some of the stuff he knows.

Skjei: It’s random stuff that you have no clue about. He’s very, very intellectual. Fun guy to go to dinner with. He just can talk about anything.

Moore: I can’t think of anyone else who has any of these kinds of passions or hobbies. If he has an idea, a creative idea, he pursues it. A lot of people, they have quirky, funny passions or ideas, but they don’t have the boldness or the follow through on it. I think that speaks volumes about him in general.

Dillon: You can talk to him for basically 24 hours straight and hockey might not ever come up once. You might talk about animals or the weather or UFC or boxing or football. Literally anything Burnzie does or knows, he’s super, super knowledgeable about it.

Couture: Him and I have very similar interests, whether it was wine or coffee or bourbon or food, our books, podcasts. He’s introduced me to a lot of authors that I read now. He’d sit on a plane and would just talk about anything for an hour. I would sit back and learn from him. He finds something he’s interested in and just digs right in.

Dillon: I remember we had a paintballing event with the Sharks. All of us show up in jeans and a sweater or something. He comes with a head-to-toe custom professional paintball outfit. His gun is basically the machine gun of paintball. We’re just all renting the ones from the place.

Moore: All of a sudden, he got an interest in cycling. He would go out and get all the gear and a brand new bike and he would go to the nth degree with it — just go completely all-in. But then he wasn’t like short-lived with those things. He sticks with them and kind of continues those passions that he picks up along the way. Just a bright, thoughtful guy.

Couture: We went to Tahoe at the start of one year and we were going to go on a two-mile hike. Burnzie shows up in full hiking equipment. He was head to toe in all this hiking stuff. Like, he brought walking sticks. His backpack was full. Probably 30 pounds of s— in there. He fell behind the guys so much because he was just dragging along so much extra weight. It was actually quite a hilarious day.

Potenza: He dives into researching or studying up on something in particular that he’s passionate about. He’s dove into collecting wine and collecting special whiskeys. He got into surfing a little bit early in his career. He’s always impressed me on how he’s read so much. I think that’s how he become so well-rounded.

Dillon: He’s got at least 10 to 15 guitars. He’s an unbelievable guitarist. I forget how he learned how to play, but a lot of it is self-taught. Some people don’t know that about him. They just know him as Brent Burns from the ranch.

Couture: He would always talk about how great elk meat is. I know he cooks quite a bit of that. He’s great on the barbecue. That’s one of his other passions is cooking meat. And he’s very good at it. He studies it and talks to a lot of people about how to properly cook it.

Aho: He has his meats, right? I’ve been over for dinner a few times. He’s a pretty great cook.

Dillon: Master grill man. I mean, he had everything. He had the Traeger [smoker] before the Traeger was a thing. He had the [Big] Green Egg. He had all those different smokers. And he has all his fresh meat from his ranch. So he’s a big, big red meat guy, naturally. But being all organic, he knows where it’s from and all that. He grills pizza and brisket and steak. Never had a bad meal at the Burns house.

Couture: If you ask 20 guys in the locker room, they’ll tell you they feel like they’re one of Burnzie’s good friends just because he’s into so much and so knowledgeable.


Fun-loving guy … to a point

While Burns is one of the NHL’s great characters, when it comes to on-ice action and keeping himself in shape, few compare to Brent Burns.

Aho: He’s unreal. A great guy. He just brings his own personality in the locker room and is a really, really easy guy to get along with. But on the ice, you don’t have to talk about that too much. He’s been doing this for, I don’t know, a lot of years.

Moore: I played with him in Minnesota and then again in San Jose about four years later. I didn’t see any difference really from a young Burnzie to the more veteran Burnzie. I think that speaks to the same kind of thing that [Carolina coach] Rod Brind’Amour has commented on: That he has a youthful presence and personality. I believe he’s unchanged about who he is. It’s the juxtaposition between that adaptability in terms of evolving as a player over the course of a long career to stay in the league, with the reality of being the same person throughout all of that.

White: He’s an amazing athlete. Anybody who’s played with him, I mean, you see what he is doing at 38 years old and he’s on one of the fittest teams in the league, especially when your coach is “Rod the Bod.” So yeah, I mean, I read an article the other day. He finished second in the [Hurricanes’] physical testing at the beginning of the year at 38. He’s a machine.

Potenza: He didn’t love training, but he respected it and he knows how important it is for the longevity and the performance of his career. So that’s where we hit it off. We had some bumpy periods with injuries for him, but we navigated through it and he’s come out obviously as a tremendous player — even though he is a few years removed now from his Norris Trophy, he’s just still dominant.

Moore: He’s not thick. He’s just strong. It’s not the farmer’s strength like we talk about with those guys out West. He’s wiry. It’s just the way he moves, and his natural athleticism gives him his power.

Potenza: He pushed himself. He always wanted to look for things that he could improve, look for new strategies. I think when you’ve been in the league for that long, you do need new stimulus. You do need new training or modes of exercise that can actually keep you developing and adapting.

Moore: If you remember, he had gotten injured one season. Missed a lot of time. If you look at it, he’s been barely hurt since then. It’s like a switch flipped where he was like, “OK, I’ve got to take care of my body and stay on the ice.” You learn from things.

Potenza: I’m always impressed that he keeps such detailed notes. There’s been a few athletes — and Pavelski was another one — who keep notes on all the workouts they’ve done. Like, he has workouts that he did as a rookie in Minnesota in a binder, stored away. Performance coaching culture has gone away from the paper training to more digital apps to track workouts. And Burnzie doesn’t want to use the app because he’s got all these notes. He’s a collector. Maybe he’ll share it with his son one day.

Dillon: That’s the thing that’s so impressive about Burnzie, and what I really took from him. He’s 38 now, but he’s still always asking questions. Like asking the forwards where they want the shot to go. Or asking a teammate what their read is on a play. For a lot of those guys that have had as much success as him, it’d be pretty easy to say, “I know everything.” And that’s not the mentality at all.

Couture: He knows when to buckle it down and be serious, but he is also always there for a good time and he can keep things light. He’s a tremendous leader. He works so hard. He picked some of that up from Jumbo and Pavelski and Marleau, and guys like that. But that’s also one thing that I’m sure he’s always had in him. His work ethic is incredible. That’s why he is still playing, and he is still incredible.

Slavin: I think he’s the biggest kid in this locker room and just loves the game. He’s just one of a kind.

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How little old Vanderbilt is making noise in the big, bad SEC

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How little old Vanderbilt is making noise in the big, bad SEC

NASHVILLE — It’s a memory that flashed through Vanderbilt coach Clark Lea’s mind more than once when the program was in the throes of a 26-game SEC losing streak in 2022, his second season as coach.

The memory presented itself again a year ago as Lea guided Vanderbilt to its first winning season since 2013, its first-ever win over a No. 1 team and a bowl victory over Georgia Tech, all culminating with Lea being named SEC Coach of the Year by his peers.

“I remember watching [assistant coach] Robbie Caldwell and my other coaches line the practice field and mow the grass when I played here,” said Lea, a fullback on head coach Bobby Johnson’s first teams at Vanderbilt from 2002-04. “They did everything.”

Contrast that to the scene last October after the Commodores’ signature win of the season, a 40-35 victory over top-ranked Alabama. Following Vanderbilt’s first win over the Crimson Tide in 40 years, fans ripped down the goalposts, paraded them through Nashville and dumped them into the Cumberland River.

The surreality of it all was matched by the resolve of Lea and his players, and their insistence that, in the words of quarterback Diego Pavia, “the rest of the world might have been shocked, but we weren’t.”

“We’re in a business of messaging, and a lot of what I remember as a player is the disconnect from the university and the athletic department and the team, and especially the lack of resources,” Lea said.

It’s a situation Lea inherited when he returned to his alma mater as coach in December 2020 in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, as did his boss, Candice Storey Lee, when she was hired a year earlier as the SEC’s first Black female athletic director.

Together, they’re trying to change the narrative and not operate, as Lee jokes, like the little engine that could.

“It was the idea that we were going to unhook from the past and take steps that build toward the future that we all believe we’re capable of here,” said Lee, who has three degrees from Vanderbilt and was on campus the same time as Lea as a captain on the 2002 women’s basketball team that won the SEC tournament.

“Sometimes perception does not match reality, but the reality is that there was a narrative that Vanderbilt was not going to do the things that were necessary to experience consistent success. So from the very beginning, we had to set out to show that we were serious about wanting to compete and compete at the highest level, and we are still doing that. That process isn’t complete.”

Lea’s breakthrough 2024 season in his fourth year back on West End sent perhaps the clearest signal yet that the process is yielding results — and not just in football.

For the first time, Vanderbilt’s football team, men’s and women’s basketball teams and baseball team have all been nationally ranked during the same academic year.

But no climb has been steeper than the one faced by the football program, which was plummeting toward rock bottom when Lea arrived and only got worse during his second season, when the Commodores’ SEC losing streak reached 26 games. Lea wasn’t around for all those losses, but the walls were nonetheless closing in even when the Commodores salvaged a 5-7 record.

Then came 2023, when Vanderbilt dipped to 2-10 (0-8 in the SEC), and the heat ratcheted up on Lea. The Commodores lost all eight of their SEC games by two touchdowns or more.

“Hey, there were days where I was face down on the floor here, and it’s just, ‘Get yourself up, dust yourself off and trust in your resilience to do the next right thing the right way,'” Lea said. “For me, once I kind of realized that I may get my ass kicked a few times, nothing was going to knock me off from leading this program day in, day out, and making the changes that unlock the potential for success.”

Lea wasn’t the only one catching heat from the fans, media and some boosters. So was his former classmate Lee, who hired him. Making matters worse for Lee was that the men’s basketball team was struggling under Jerry Stackhouse and went 4-14 in SEC play during the 2023-24 season. Lee fired Stackhouse after the season and replaced him with Mark Byington, who took a team picked to finish last in the SEC to the NCAA tournament.

“One of the things that I know from going through knee replacement surgery recently is that healing and building is not a linear process,” Lee said. “Some days, it’s really good, and then something happens and I wake up and my knee is swollen. I don’t really understand what happened, but you still have to push forward and know there is something beautiful on the other side.

“You just wish it was easy, but it’s not.”


VANDERBILT’S CAMPUS, A short walk to the heart of downtown Nashville, one of America’s fastest growing cities, is dotted with signs that read “Dare to Grow.” Construction sites, cranes and hard hats are everywhere. Right outside Lea’s office window in the McGugin Center, the transformation of FirstBank Stadium continues with the South End Zone project, featuring premium seating and other amenities. It’s part of the Vandy United $300 million campaign, announced in 2021, to rebuild the school’s athletics facilities.

“We reached that $300 million goal pretty quickly, and we didn’t stop,” Lee said. “We have aspirations beyond that number, so we’re going to keep dreaming. We’re going to keep raising the money, we’re going to keep investing.”

The reality is that Vanderbilt can’t stop if it’s going to have any chance to compete with the football juggernauts in the SEC, especially in the current NIL world. But Lee is insistent that Vanderbilt is “beautifully positioned to maximize whatever model is in front of us” when the House settlement is approved and revenue sharing is in place. The current proposal allows for athletic departments to directly pay athletes with a pool up to $20.5 million in Year 1.

On the facilities front, even with the long overdue facelift to the stadium, the McGugin Center is noticeably outdated with a weight room, team meeting room and offices that pale in comparison to those at other SEC schools. Lea is hopeful a new football operations building comes sooner rather than later but said he doesn’t need a complex loaded with bells and whistles.

Lea looks at the new Huber Center, Vanderbilt’s four-story, state-of-the-art basketball practice facility, and sees what’s possible.

“It’s less important to me and for this program to have things like DJ booths and whatever else,” Lea said. “But I want people to walk into our building and recognize that football is really important here.

“What we’ve done really well here is that our people are the best, and if we can combine that with competitive spaces that also optimize our efficiency, we’re on our way to being where we need to be.”

Some of the people Lea, 43, is talking about are hires that were made primarily during last offseason, when he overhauled just about everything that touched his program. In the last year-plus, he has brought in veteran football people such as senior offensive adviser Jerry Kill, senior defensive analyst Bob Shoop, offensive coordinator Tim Beck and head strength coach Robert Stiner, among others. Kill and Beck are both former head coaches. Stiner and Lea worked together for three seasons at Notre Dame, and Shoop is a former Broyles Award finalist with more than 35 years of coaching experience. He was defensive coordinator under James Franklin for Vanderbilt teams that won nine games in 2012 and 2013.

Offensive line coach Chris Klenakis, entering his second season at Vanderbilt, has seen 24 of his former linemen reach the NFL over a 30-plus year career. He’s also been an offensive coordinator and worked with Colin Kaepernick at Nevada and Lamar Jackson at Louisville.

Lea hasn’t been hesitant to evolve, either. He took over the duties as defensive playcaller last season after the Commodores finished 129th nationally in scoring defense (36.2 points per game) and 131st in total defense (454.9 yards per game) in 2023. Lea said former NFL safety and assistant coach Steve Gregory, in his second season at Vanderbilt, will call defensive plays in 2025.

“I think it’s the best coaching staff in the country,” Pavia said. “Guys are going to want to come here because they see what these coaches get out of players. They see how they develop you. I know what Coach Kill did for me in bringing me here and what that opened up for me.”


PAVIA, WHO EMERGED as one of the most electric players in the country last season after transferring from New Mexico State, played as big a role as anyone in Vanderbilt’s revival. He was the only quarterback in the SEC to pass for more than 2,200 yards and rush for more than 800, accounting for 28 touchdowns, and inside the locker room, he was the heartbeat of a team that reveled in doing what people said couldn’t be done at “little old Vandy.”

Last year’s 7-6 season easily could have been a nine-win campaign. Four of the Commodores’ six losses were by a touchdown or less, including a 30-27 double overtime defeat at Missouri and a 27-24 home loss to Texas in which the Longhorns had to recover an onside kick to seal the game.

And the best part for the Commodores? They return many of the key players from last season, which saw Vanderbilt reach five wins before the end of October, only to lose three of its last four games in the regular season when Pavia wasn’t completely healthy.

“We had one guy transfer out that played for us last year,” said senior linebacker Langston Patterson, who was Lea’s first verbal commitment and went to high school in Nashville at Christ Christian Academy. “It’s about culture. The reason some of those past Vandy teams didn’t sustain success is because they had some great players, but no culture. We have great players on top of great culture, and that creates a great team. But you still have to go do it. Coach Lea touches on it all the time. We’re as close to 2-10 as we are 10-2. We’ve got to keep pushing forward.

“Really, to us, last year was mediocre. We fell apart the last three games. Everyone else thinks we had a great year, but to us, we could have been so much better.”

Lea’s idea of culture transcends the football field. He said the program has had six straight semesters with a collective 3.0 GPA or better in the classroom.

“That’s not because we’re recruiting valedictorians,” Lea said. “It’s because we’re recruiting guys that care about how they’re developing as people too, and they allow us to put boundaries in place for them to reach their highest level.”

As Vanderbilt tries to build on its momentum from a year ago, one thing is certain. The Commodores won’t sneak up on anybody, not after wins over Alabama and Auburn and narrow misses against LSU, Missouri and Texas.

“Nothing changes with us,” Pavia said. “We came here to win games. Coach Lea said it, that we want to have the best program in the SEC. For a lot of guys on this team, it’s our last chance, sort of our last dance, to really flip this program.”

Vanderbilt’s success a year ago came largely thanks to a ball-control offense, shortening the game, winning the turnover battle, stopping the run (especially on early downs) and playing lights-out on special teams.

Even with the recent upgrade in player personnel, it’s always going to be difficult for Vanderbilt to “out-Alabama” Alabama and “out-Georgia” Georgia in terms of sheer talent and depth.

“I know Coach Lea doesn’t believe that we can be like every other SEC team philosophically and find ways to break through to the top,” said offensive coordinator Beck, who also has been a defensive coordinator and spent the first 32 years of his coaching career at Division II powerhouse Pittsburg State. “You have to be a little bit different, and we were a little bit unique. I’m not one of these young offensive coordinators that’s just trying to score as many points as we can every game.

“You try to find ways to reduce the margins a little bit, so you’ve got to play complementary football. We still want to be fun and exciting, which I feel like we are, but we’re not going to be in a huge hurry. We led the nation in forced turnovers last year, which was huge for us because the matchups that we had player to player are still not there yet. We’ve got to be smart about what we do on both sides of the ball.”

Vanderbilt beat Auburn 17-7 last season despite finishing with just 227 total yards. But the Commodores pinned the Tigers inside their own 5-yard line twice, started two of their drives in Auburn territory, committed just three penalties and didn’t turn the ball over once.

“They manage the game as well as anybody,” Auburn coach Hugh Freeze said. “They’re smart. They play to their strengths, and they don’t give you anything.”

As stunning as Vanderbilt’s win over Alabama was to the college football world, Tide coach Kalen DeBoer wasn’t surprised by what he saw this season from Lea and the way he reinvigorated the program.

“I’ve known Clark going back to when he was at South Dakota State, and it wasn’t like we were close friends or anything, but I followed the success he’s had as a coordinator and knew that he was really good,” said DeBoer, who started his coaching career at Sioux Falls. “I felt like watching the film before our game that you could see the defense and the team philosophy revolving around making the game as short as possible, and he did a good job in the critical moments of making some calls.

“I knew going in that they were a different team than what they had been in the past. There was no doubt, and I think everyone who played them would tell you the same thing.”

Now comes the hard part for Lea and Vanderbilt: Doing it all over again.

The only time in the past 50 years that Vanderbilt has put together back-to-back winning seasons was in 2012 and 2013 under Franklin.

Lea, who grew up in Nashville, knows the doubters persist and that history suggests sustaining football success at Vanderbilt is more fantasy than reality. Down deep, he’s energized by that doubt.

“I think we as a program, me in particular, can’t help but operate with a chip on your shoulder, and you can’t help but bathe in the doubt that surrounds you,” Lea said. “We love that, and we don’t recruit beyond that, meaning I don’t want people here that are entitled. I don’t want people here that don’t see the work that has to be done.”

Pavia’s take is a bit more on the coarse side, in typical Pavia fashion.

“I mean, [Lea] comes from ground zero,” Pavia said. “A lot of people weren’t believing in him, people wanting him fired a year ago, and now all of a sudden, he’s the biggest star in Nashville. I think that still fuels him, that people gave up on him, didn’t believe in him on his journey or believe in us.

“So it’s like, ‘F— you. Watch us do it.'”

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Corso to end four-decade run with ‘GameDay’

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Corso to end four-decade run with 'GameDay'

Lee Corso will retire from ESPN’s “College GameDay” in August, ending a career with the show that began in 1987.

“My family and I will be forever indebted for the opportunity to be part of ESPN and College GameDay for nearly 40 years,” Corso said in a statement released by ESPN. “I have a treasure of many friends, fond memories and some unusual experiences to take with me into retirement.”

Corso, who turns 90 on Aug. 7, is widely known for his headgear picks and “not so fast, my friend” retort when he disagreed with someone on the panel.

The headgear segment, which started in October 1995 in a game at Ohio State, has seen Corso go 286-144 in his 430 selections. In addition to wearing helmets, mascot heads and other hats, he has dressed up as the Fighting Irish leprechaun from Notre Dame, the Stanford tree and historic figures James Madison and Benjamin Franklin. His affection for the Oregon Duck led to a ride on a motorcycle with the mascot. He once held a live baby alligator in his hands while picking Florida to win and took on pop star Katy Perry in picks from The Grove at the University of Mississippi.

Corso held a No. 2 pencil for most segments; in the offseason, Corso was the director of business development for Dixon Ticonderoga, which makes the famous yellow pencils.

“Lee Corso has developed a special connection to generations of fans through his entertaining style and iconic headgear picks,” ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro said. “Lee is one of the most influential and beloved figures in the history of college football and our ESPN team will celebrate his legendary career during his final College GameDay appearance this August.”

Corso’s final broadcast will be Aug. 30, ESPN announced, saying additional programming to celebrate Corso is planned in the days leading up to that weekend.

Corso suffered a stroke in 2009, which left him unable to speak for a time, but he returned to the show later that year. His travel has been limited in recent years, but Corso was at the site of last year’s national title game in Atlanta.

“ESPN has been exceptionally generous to me, especially these past few years,” Corso said. “They accommodated me and supported me, as did my colleagues in the early days of College GameDay. Special thanks to Kirk Herbstreit for his friendship and encouragement. And lest I forget, the fans … truly a blessing to share this with them. ESPN gave me this wonderful opportunity and provided me the support to ensure success. I am genuinely grateful.”

Herbstreit and Corso have been part of the show together since 1996.

“Coach Corso has had an iconic run in broadcasting, and we’re all lucky to have been around to witness it,” Herbstreit said in a statement. “He has taught me so much throughout our time together, and he’s been like a second father to me. It has been my absolute honor to have the best seat in the house to watch Coach put on that mascot head each week.”

“College GameDay” has won nine Emmys during Corso’s tenure with the program. The show is nominated this year for Most Outstanding Studio Show – Weekly.

“Lee is the quintessential entertainer, but he was also a remarkable coach who established lifelong connections with his players,” said Rece Davis, host of “College GameDay” since 2015. “When GameDay went to Indiana last season, the love and emotion that poured out from his players was truly moving. It was also unsurprising. Every week, Lee asks about our families. He asks for specifics. He celebrates success and moments, big and small, with all of us on the set. He’s relentless in his encouragement. That’s what a great coach, and friend, does. Lee has made it his life’s work to bring joy to others on the field and on television. He succeeded.”

“Lee has been an indelible force in the growth of college football’s popularity,” said Chris Fowler, who hosted “GameDay” for 25 years. “He’s a born entertainer and singular television talent. But at his heart he’ll always be a coach, with an abiding love and respect for the game and the people who play it.”

Corso spent 28 years as a college and pro football coach, including 15 years as a collegiate head coach at Louisville, Indiana and Northern Illinois. He played college football at Florida State, where he was known as the “Sunshine Scooter.” He held the school record for career interceptions for two decades after he graduated and also played quarterback for the Seminoles.

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Sources: UCLA among schools eyeing Iamaleava

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Sources: UCLA among schools eyeing Iamaleava

The wait for where former Tennessee quarterback Nico Iamaleava plays next in his college career continued Wednesday as the spring transfer portal opened.

UCLA is among the schools interested in Iamaleava, but not for nearly the money he was asking for from Tennessee, sources told ESPN. One source said UCLA was content to “sit tight” while Iamaleava considered his options.

“We’ll see if it gets worked out. He’s extremely talented with starting experience against elite competition. That’s sort of where we are right now,” the UCLA source told ESPN.

Sources told ESPN that Iamaleava wanted at least $4 million from Tennessee and that what UCLA was prepared to offer him wasn’t remotely close to that figure. Iamaleava was earning $2.4 million at Tennessee under the contract he signed with Spyre Sports Group, the Tennessee-based collective, when he was still in high school. It’s a deal that would have paid him in the $10 million range had he stayed four years at Tennessee.

Tennessee coach Josh Heupel announced Saturday after the Volunteers’ spring game that the program was moving forward without Iamaleava after he missed practice and meetings Friday and didn’t alert anybody on the team or return any calls or text messages afterward.

Heupel thanked Iamaleava and called the situation unfortunate, but added, “There’s no one bigger than the Power T, and that includes me.”

Iamaleava, a rising redshirt sophomore, officially entered the transfer portal Wednesday with a do not contact tag.

Sources told ESPN that Iamaleava’s representatives asked to redo his deal just before the close of the winter portal in December after Tennessee’s playoff loss to Ohio State, but his deal was unchanged and Iamaleava did not enter the winter portal. His father, Nic Iamaleava, also wanted Tennessee to surround his son with better receivers and a more effective offensive line in pass protection.

Before the start of spring practice this year, Iamaleava’s representatives reached out to Oregon to gauge its interest in the quarterback, but the school said it wasn’t interested, sources told ESPN. Oregon then notified Tennessee that Iamaleava was being shopped to the Ducks.

Iamaleava, a five-star prospect from Long Beach, California, was recruited by UCLA out of high school. His younger brother, Madden Iamaleava, committed to UCLA out of high school but changed his commitment at the last minute and signed with Arkansas.

With Iamaleava a possibility at UCLA, sources told ESPN that representatives for the Bruins’ current quarterback, Joey Aguilar, have been covering their bases and making calls to other schools to gauge their interest in Aguilar, who transferred from Appalachian State this offseason and exited spring practice as UCLA’s likely starter.

A Power 4 general manager told ESPN’s Pete Thamel and Max Olson earlier this week that he thought Iamaleava has “zero market,” and added that it would be an “interesting test of how smart and disciplined colleges are in looking at him.”

Iamaleava helped guide Tennessee to the College Football Playoff last season in his first year as a starter. He passed for 2,616 yards, 19 touchdowns and 5 interceptions, but in nine games against SEC opponents and Ohio State in the playoff, he passed for more than 200 yards only twice.

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