AAF winners, losers: Steve Spurrier sets tone with his team and mouth
In the first two weeks of play in the fledgling Alliance of American Football, coach Steve Spurrier has proved he can still be a straw that stirs the drink.
The 73-year-old Orlando Apollos coach boasts the leagueâs most dynamic offense, and his entertaining presence has given the AAF instant visibility.
In Week 2, Spurrierâs Apollos engineered a come-from-behind 37-29 win again against the San Antonio Commanders. Spurrierâs latest edition of the Fun-and-Gun offense generated three pass completions of 50 or more yards.
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Spurrier also hasnât disappointed as the leagueâs No. 1 salesman. In the first two weeks, he has tried to recruit Tim Tebow, took a tongue-in-cheek jab at the Washington Redskins and then trolled the Tennessee Volunteers Sunday when he said the Commandersâ Alamodome was just as loud as Tennesseeâs Neyland Stadium when fans sing âRocky Top,â the schoolâs official fight song.
Creative Spurrier is a winner in our Week 2 Winners and Losers. Here are others on the list:
âș Winner: Garrett Gilbert, Orlando Apollos: With 393 passing yards this week and an AAF-leading 620 in two weeks, he might be earning another hard look from the NFL. He has made some impressive throws in Orlandoâs 2-0 start.
âș Loser: Memphis Express: Coach Mike Singletaryâs Express is 0-2 after blowing a fourth-quarter lead to fall 20-18 to Arizona Hotshots. The teamâs offense hasnât blossomed under quarterback Christian Hackenberg. Over two weeks, he is 24-for-48 for 183 yards. The Memphis crowd of 11,980 for the first home game was also a disappointment.
âș Winner: San Diego Fleet: More than 20,000 (announced) fans showed up for their first home game, and they delivered a 24-12 win against the Atlanta Legends. Elusive JaâQuan Gardner ran 15 times for 104 yards and two touchdowns. The former Humboldt State star was cut by San Francisco last fall.
âș Loser: Salt Lake City Stallions passing game: The team, coached by Dennis Erickson, has used three different quarterbacks (Austin Allen, Josh Woodrum and Matt Linehan) and they are a combined 32-for-66. A completion percentage below 50% doesnât work in any league.
âș Winner: San Diego QB Philip Nelsonâs no-look pass: While it wasnât the best of days for Nelson in his first start (14-of-30, 142 yards) he completed a ridiculous granny-style, over-the-shoulder, pass that will appear on football highlight films for years to come.
âș Loser: AAF quarterback parade: While the AAF is supposed to be a development league, quarterback play in general hasnât been as sharp as coaches hoped. The eight AAF teams have used 18 different quarterbacks. Only four quarterbacks have averaged more than 200 yards per game.
âș Winner: Defensive end Karter Schult, Salt Lake Stallions: Had two sacks, six tackles, four quarterback sacks and had a fumble in a loss to the Birmingham Iron. He has three sacks over the first two weeks. He was cut by the Carolina Panthers last fall.
âș Loser: Atlanta Legends: The team is 0-2 with 18 points scored over two weeks, despite having quarterback Matt Simms completing 60.4% of his passes. One major problem: Atlanta's defense gives up 161 yards per game rushing.