commodore nation, december 2012

28
December 2012 ZAC STACY Senior tailback impresses on and off the field ALSO INSIDE: Bowled over... and over again ‘Dores do good in community Creative Kedren becomes a leader Elan Brown: Jill of all trades

Upload: vanderbilt-commodores

Post on 31-Mar-2016

222 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

http://vucommodore.com The December 2012 issue of the Commodore Nation magazine, the official publication of Vanderbilt Student Athletics

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Commodore Nation, December 2012

December 2012

ZAC STACYSenior tailback impresses on and off the field

ALSO INSIDE:Bowled over... and over again

‘Dores do good in community

Creative Kedren becomes a leader

Elan Brown: Jill of all trades

Page 2: Commodore Nation, December 2012

Member FDIC

usbank.com

All of us cheer ing for you.At U.S. Bank, we team together to support our customers and our communities.

We are pleased to champion athletic programs that enrich the quality of life for everyone. You can count on every U.S. Banker to serve you – and to

cheer on the spirit of teamwork – from the start of the game to the final whistle.

Proud to support (insert organization name here) xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Branch NameBranch AddressBranch Phone Number

Proud to support Vanderbilt Athletics

Page 3: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 1vucommodores.com

My game

P.24

Swimmer Betsy Galenti

Deja Bowl

P.12

Head Coach James Franklin—who carried Mr. Commodore into the post-game celebration after Vanderbilt’s 27-26 come-from-behind victory in Oxford, Mississippi—has led the Commodores to back-to-back bowl games for the first time. The win over Ole Miss last month qualified the football team for postseason play for just the sixth time in the history of the program.

Elan BrownP.21

Soft-spoken senior guard fills stat sheet.

Kedren Johnson

P.18

Sophomore expected to lead men’s basketball team this season.

Zac Stacy

P.9

Football program’s all-time leading rusher is a class act on and off the field.

Compliance corner

P.2

National Commodore Club

P.3

Inside McGugin

P.7

Rod Williamson’s monthly column.

It’s my turn

P.23

CONTENTS

Giving back

P.15

Student-athletes focus their free time on helping others.

Page 4: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 22

Editorial

Publisher: Vanderbilt University

Editor-in-Chief: Chris Weinman

Designer: Jeremy Teaford Director of Communications: Rod Williamson

Digital Image Specialist: Julie Luckett Turner

VU Photography: Daniel Dubois Steve Green Joe Howell Jenny Mandeville Anne Rayner John Russell Susan Urmy

Contributors: Brandon Barca Andy Boggs Larry Leathers George Midgett Kyle Parkinson Weston Pletcher Emily Sane Michael Scholl Ryan Schulz Eric Single

Administrative

Chancellor: Nicholas S. Zeppos

Vice Chancellor for University Affairs: David Williams II

Vice Chancellor for Public Affairs: Beth Fortune

Vanderbilt University Student Athletics’ Mission StatementWe prepare student-athletes to become leaders and cham-pions in life by placing the highest values on integrity, char-acter, sportsmanship and victory.

Vanderbilt University is an equal-opportunity, affirmative-action university.

ON THE COVER: Senior tailback Zac Stacy is a leader on the field and in the classroom. Photo by John Russell, VU Photography.

POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to National Commodore Club, 2601 Jess Neely Drive, Nashville, TN 37212.

SUBSCRIPTION: To subscribe, contact Chris Weinman by e-mail at [email protected]

ADVERTISEMENT: To advertise with Commodore Nation, please contact Vanderbilt IMG Sports & Entertainment Properties.Jeff Miller, general manager 615/322-4468; [email protected]

Commodore Nation is printed using (10% post-consumer) recycled paper.

C O M P L I A N C E

CORNERA hot topic in NCAA news this year has been what determines being a booster. Recently, two student-athletes were suspended for receiving impermissible benefits from a booster, whose status was triggered by a small donation to the program. Please read below:

Am I considered to be an institution’s representative of athletics interests (booster)?

An individual is considered to be a representative of an institution’s athletics interests (booster) by supporting teams and athletic departments through donations of time and financial resources. Further, an individual is considered to be a representative/booster of athletics interest if an individual: •Haseverparticipatedinorbeenamemberofanygroupataninstitution,

which supports specific athletic teams. •Has ever made financial contributions to an institution’s athletic program

or to an athletics booster organization of an institution. •Haseverassistedinprovidingbenefitstoanenrolledstudent-athleteor

his or her family or friends. •Has ever helped to arrange or has provided summer or semester break

employment for an enrolled student-athlete. •Has ever provided a donation in order to obtain season tickets for any

athletics program of an institution. •Has ever promoted an institution’s athletic program in any manner. •Has ever contacted (by letter, telephone, or in-person) a high school

student, grades 9-12, for the purpose of encouraging the student to participate in the athletics program of an institution.

Please note: This is not an all-inclusive list. Should you have questions about any of these rules, or a specific situation you’d like help in addressing, please contact the Compliance Office.

Connect with the Commodores

http://vucommodores.com

facebook.com/vucommodores

twitter.com/vucommodores

youtube.com/vucommodores

@vucommodores on instagram

Compliance questions? Please contact:

Candice Lee George MidgettDirector of Compliance Compliance Coordinator615/322-7992 615/[email protected] [email protected]

John Peach Andrew TurnerCompliance Coordinator Recruiting/Compliance Coordinator615/343-1060 615/[email protected] [email protected]

Q:A:

Page 5: Commodore Nation, December 2012

Renew before December 31

Your commitment through the National Commodore Club is a game changer. Annual NCC gifts help fund needed scholarships, providing our Commodore student-athletes with the education and training needed to win. Renew your NCC membership today, and be a game changer.

Renewing your membership is one of the most powerful ways you can show our student-athletes you care during this season of giving. Make your tax-deductible gift before December 31 to enjoy savings on your 2012 income taxes. This is a win for you and Vanderbilt!

You can begame

changer!a

National Commodore Club2601 Jess Neely DriveNashville, TN 37212

(615) [email protected]

Page 6: Commodore Nation, December 2012

for coming backand giving back

YOUThank

Reunion/Homecoming 2012

Page 7: Commodore Nation, December 2012

2012-13 Giving Levels and Benefits

$150$2,500

$1,000$10,000 and above

$500$5,000

Some benefits include a T-shirt, autographed 2012 SEC Tournament Championship photograph, invitation to a pregame reception and chalk talk, and dinner with Coach Stallings.

Benefits vary by level.

Support the Vanderbilt Men’s Basketball program with a gift to the NCC Excellence Fund for Men’s Basketball. The NCC Excellence Fund allows fans to be key contributors and gain more access to the program as we continue to build and improve the future of Vanderbilt Men’s Basketball. You have the opportunity to become involved with a host of basketball-related activities through six giving levels.

NCC Excellence Fund for Men’s Basketball

(615) 322-4114

NationalCommodoreClub.com

[email protected]

Excellence winsCHAMPIONSHIPS.

Page 8: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 26

Page 9: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 7vucommodores.com

Inside McGugin

Notes from the athletic department

F ormer Vanderbilt pitcher and Tampa Bay Rays starter David Price won the 2012 American League Cy Young Award

in one of the closest votes ever. Runner-up two years ago, Price was the pick this time for the league’s top pitching prize, beating out 2011 winner Justin Verlander by only four points in balloting by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. The lefty turned in one of the best seasons of his short career going 20-5 with a league-best 2.56 ERA for the Rays.

l Ten varsity programs recently were named recipients of the NCAA Public Recognition Award. The honor is bestowed on teams with an NCAA Division I Academic Progress Rate in the top 10 percent of all squads in their respec-tive sports based on the most recent multi-year report that covered teams competing in the 2010-11 season. A total of 26 Southeastern Con-ference teams were honored for their academic achievement. Vanderbilt’s winners are baseball, bowling, men’s and women’s cross country,

men’s and women’s tennis, men’s and women’s golf, soccer and football.

l Former St. John’s pitching coach Scott Brown has been named to the same position at Vanderbilt by Commodores Head Coach Tim Corbin. Brown joins the ‘Dores after nine sea-sons with the Red Storm, where he helped lead St. John’s to seven NCAA Tournaments and five Big East championships. He has coached three All-Americans, four major league pitchers and had 15 pitchers sign professional contracts. n

David Price

Jan. 3Women’s basketball SEC openerThe January 3 SEC opener against Mississippi State will be Take a Kid to a Game Night. When a parent buys one adult ticket, they’ll receive one youth ticket for free.

Calendar

December highlights

By The Numbers

1set dropped by Ryan Lipman in six matches as the junior defeated the top three seeds at the USTA/ITA Ohio Valley Regional en route to capturing the Mem-phis championship.

9 strokes by which the men’s golf team secured its second victory of the fall sea-son, besting 12 teams to capture the 2012 Arkansas State Fall Beach Classic title.

28 minutes for Golden State Warrior rookie Festus Ezeli in his first NBA start, a 114-110 win over the Clippers that saw Ezeli score eight points and pull five rebounds.

5,003 pins totaled over five victories by the bowling team to open the 2012-13 season with a championship at the Alabama A&M Bulldog Challenge.

Dec. 7Reading Day/SAAC Holiday PartyThe Student-Athlete Advisory Committee again will use Vanderbilt’s Reading Day—the day between the last day of classes and the first day of final examinations—to host children from nearby Ross Elementary School for a holi-day party at Memorial Gym.

Dec. 22Women’s basketball vs. College of CharlestonThe final non-conference home game for the women’s basketball team will pit the Com-modores against the College of Charleston. Single-game tickets for women’s games are available for five dollars each during the month of December.

Dec. 17Men’s basketball vs. CornellThe Commodore men will play three home games during Vanderbilt’s winter break, playing host to Cornell (Dec. 17), Butler (Dec. 29) and William & Mary (Jan. 2) while VU students are home for the holidays. Single-game tickets in sections G, H, I and J are available for those games starting at $22 each (processing fees may apply).

GET

TY I

MA

GES

Page 10: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 28

For the perfect products for your kitchen or bath, stop by a Ferguson showroom. It’s where you’ll fi nd the largest range of quality brands, a symphony of ideas, and trained product experts to help orchestrate your dream. With showrooms from coast to coast, come see why Ferguson is recommended by professional contractors and designers everywhere.

Let us orchestrate your dream.

APPLIANCES FAUCETS FIXTURES LIGHTINGPASSIONATE PEOPLE

Murfreesboro: 540 New Salem Rd (615) 890-5599

Nashville: 3201-B Powell Ave (615) 385-3054

Lebanon: 713 E Main St (615) 444-2111

Clarksville: 1369 Ashland City Rd (931) 647-0276

©2012 Ferguson Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.FERGUSON.COM

Page 11: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 9vucommodores.com

For the perfect products for your kitchen or bath, stop by a Ferguson showroom. It’s where you’ll fi nd the largest range of quality brands, a symphony of ideas, and trained product experts to help orchestrate your dream. With showrooms from coast to coast, come see why Ferguson is recommended by professional contractors and designers everywhere.

Let us orchestrate your dream.

APPLIANCES FAUCETS FIXTURES LIGHTINGPASSIONATE PEOPLE

Murfreesboro: 540 New Salem Rd (615) 890-5599

Nashville: 3201-B Powell Ave (615) 385-3054

Lebanon: 713 E Main St (615) 444-2111

Clarksville: 1369 Ashland City Rd (931) 647-0276

©2012 Ferguson Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.FERGUSON.COM

Stacy breaks football records, educational barriers

T he question is not whether you will remember Zac Stacy. The question is simply how you will choose to look

back on an illustrious career that has been as impressive off the field as it has been on it. The school’s all-time leading rusher, Stacy has helped lead the Commodores to back-to-back postseason berths for the first time in the program’s 123-year history this season. But it may be his accomplishments away from the gridiron that are truly the most remarkable.

A native of Centreville, Alabama, Stacy got his start in football at the age of 7, playing in a local instructional league. Stacy’s mother, Barbara, recalls her son’s first game.

“I remember it like it was yesterday,” Barbara said. “The first time he ever played,

on the very first handoff from scrimmage, he scored a touchdown.”

Zac was a three-sport athlete through his junior year of high school, when he decided to put baseball aside in favor of concentrat-ing on football. That season he was named a 4A Mr. Football finalist in the state of Alabama after scoring 35 touchdowns for Bibb County. Zac still played basketball that winter to stay in shape, but come February he was signing a National Letter of Intent to play football for the Commodores. He would make an immediate impact in Nashville that fall.

“I worked really hard to get the playbook down with the coaching staff and was able to contribute a lot as a freshman,” Stacy said. “I even got a start in the first game of my college

career, and that was probably one of my big-gest moments of my life.”

Stacy exploded onto the scene with 20-carry, 133-yard performance in a season-opening rout of Western Carolina. Proving that game not a fluke, he gained 103 all-purpose yards the fol-lowing week at LSU. But those numbers would be hard to come by on a team that won a total of four games in the 2009 and 2010 seasons.

Seven-hundred forty-two days elapsed before Stacy would rush for over 100 yards again, this time helping the 2011 Commodores move to 3-0 with a 169-yard day against Ole Miss. Stacy credits Head Coach James Franklin’s staff with improving his understanding of all aspects of the running back position.

“I definitely feel like my first couple years

PHOTO BY JOHN RUSSELL

By Chris Weinman

Page 12: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 210

here I was playing just off talent,” Stacy said. “I didn’t really have an exact knowledge of the game. That’s one thing Coach Franklin and his staff have taught me these last two years. They’ve helped me become a better student of the game, learning fronts and coverages and the different little things. I’m playing a lot smarter, and that allows you to play a lot faster as well.”

In the past two seasons, Stacy has had a number of noteworthy performances under Franklin’s tutelage. His 198-yard day against Army midway through last season ranks third all-time among single-game Commodore rushing totals. Three weeks later, Stacy capped a 135-yard, three-touchdown day against Ken-tucky by dragging the entire Wildcat defense more than 10 yards to get into the South end zone of Dudley Field.

Stacy helped secure only the fifth bowl berth in Vanderbilt history by ending the 2011 regular season with 184 yards and three touchdowns at Wake Forest as he captured the Commo-dores’ single-season rushing record. In the 2011 AutoZone Liberty Bowl, Stacy scored his 14th

rushing touchdown of the year to tie another Commodore record.

While Stacy’s final season in black and gold has had its ups and downs, the highs have greatly outweighed the lows and Stacy has shown great maturity as a senior leader on the squad. Never was that more evident than at the end of Vanderbilt’s 19-15 victory at Missouri.

With the Commodores in their four-minute offense looking to run time out on the Tigers, Stacy took a third-and-9 handoff—his career-high 29th carry of the day—around the left side of the offensive line. A hearty stiff-arm gave him room down the sideline, but Stacy wisely slid down in-bounds after picking up a first down to allow Vanderbilt to kneel on the ball and kill the remainder of the clock.

Two weeks later, Stacy would become the Commodores’ all-time rushing champion. A 27-yard dash in the fourth-quarter of a 17-13 victory over Auburn moved Stacy ahead of Frank Mordica’s previous school record of 2,632 rushing yards (1976-79). Stacy has a chance to run for 1,000 yards in back-to-back seasons and become the Commodores’ first 3,000-yard rusher.

But simply concentrating on Stacy’s on-field highlights would tell only a small part of his story. When discussing which accomplishments he takes the most pride in, Stacy humbly avoids his gridiron accolades in favor of focusing on other aspects of his life.

“Being able to graduate from Vanderbilt is definitely a big accomplishment for me,” Stacy said. “My mom always took pride in academics. She’s a school-first, ball-second type, so I’ve had that mentality all throughout my career.”

Stacy is on pace to graduate this month, earning his degree from Vanderbilt’s Peabody College of Education and Human Develop-ment in just three and a half years. In a recent conversation, Stacy’s mother stressed the importance of a strong finish to his academic career even as the Commodores prepare for their postseason opponent.

“I told him, ‘When the season is over, I know you all are going to a bowl game, but first you’ve got the grades bowl,’” Barbara Stacy said. “The goal is to get that degree. And he could not get a better education in the United States. It’s just awesome. Sometimes I just have to pinch myself.”

Stacy is taking a total of 18 hours during his final semester in order to finish six months early and use the spring to prepare for the NFL draft. He doesn’t mind the extra course load, however. A large portion of those credit hours involve Stacy’s student-teaching responsibili-ties at John B. Whitsitt Elementary School. Stacy is studying special education at Vanderbilt, and spends a couple days each week with second, third and fourth graders in the resource room at Whitsitt with Dr. Joanne Woods. She noticed early on that Stacy had a knack for reaching the children in her classroom.

“It’s been obvious to me from the first couple of weeks with Zac that he has a great gift with relating to children,” Woods said. “He’s very kind and nurturing with the younger ones. And with the older ones, he can be firm and yet still be nurturing. He has expectations, and he works with them to let them know that he expects them to behave as well as to perform their tasks to the best of their abilities.”

Special education is more than an under-graduate major for Stacy, it’s a passion. His 16-year-old brother, Justin, has Down syn-drome, and is a major inspiration in Stacy’s life. Barbara and Justin can be seen at most of Vanderbilt’s football games, and Zac loves see-ing his younger sibling after each game—win or lose.

“He’ll always give me that big brotherly hug,” Stacy said. “And I just can’t help but smile. It’s always good to have him at games. He’s pretty much the reason why I do the things I do out there on Saturdays.”

Stacy acknowledges that he did not always understand his brother’s disability, but a special education class he took during his freshman year with Dr. Kimberly Paulsen turned him toward his current course of study.

“I just fell in love with it,” Stacy said. “We talked about [Justin’s] disability in that class. And I knew I wanted to do something with that—not only to learn about his disability, but also to be able to help accommodate other kids as well.”

Outside of his normal routine at Whitsitt, which often includes breakfast duty at 7:45 a.m., Stacy recently spent a day with Dr. Woods in IEP (Individualized Education Program) meet-ings—which coordinate parents and teachers

Zac Stacy with his mother, Barbara, and his younger brother, Justin.

STA

N J

ON

ES

“When he sets his mind and his heart to something, he’s going to do his best.”

Page 13: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 11vucommodores.com

Just like Vanderbilt fans, we at PPG Porter Paints® haVe a lot of PRIDE IN OUR TEAM.

Visit your neighborhood PPG Porter Paints store to talk with our paint experts about:

• Choosing the perfect paint for your project

• Environmentally friendly paints

• Precise color matching

• Color consultations

• And more!

The ultimate home advantage since 1921.

PRIDE IN OUR TEAM

71695 PPG Vanderbilt ad.indd 1 10/5/11 3:51 PM

to promote a learning plan geared specifically toward each child.

The skills and knowledge Stacy has gained through his work and schooling are directly relevant to the care of his brother back in Ala-bama. When Stacy returns home to Centreville, he tries to visit Justin’s high school class.

“He’ll go over to the school to the resource room and visit with Justin’s class and the kids,” Barbara Stacy said. “He just has a special bond with children. He just has a big heart when it comes to kids, especially those with disabilities.”

Stacy’s mentor at Peabody, Dr. Paulsen has noticed that his teaching style marries that empathy for children with a discipline likely instilled over 15 years of organized athletics.

“He runs the classroom kind of like a football camp,” said Paulsen, an associate professor of the practice in the department of special edu-cation. “He’s very direct in his approach with them. He praises them all of the time, encour-ages them all of the time. He takes time to listen to what they’re saying and the issues that they might have out of school. He talks to them a lot about how to be a good person and being respectful, and they just really listen to him.”

When Zac Stacy steps off the collegiate playing field for the final time after Vanderbilt’s bowl game this winter, he will have left quite a legacy—both in the Commodore football

record books and in the hearts and minds of the children he has worked with. For his part, Stacy hopes that the lasting memory his peers have of him steers less toward the X’s and O’s, and more toward the lives he has helped.

“I want the people around me saying I was

a great person not only on the field but off the field as well,” Stacy said. “I would say my biggest accomplishment was being elected a captain on this team. My coaches putting their trust in me, and my teammates looking up to me, that’s what is most important.” n

Stacy was carried off the field by teammates after breaking Vanderbilt’s all-time rushing record vs. Auburn on October 20.

JOH

N R

USS

ELL

Page 14: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 212

BOwL BOuNdWith its sixth win of the season coming at Ole Miss on Nov. 10, the Vanderbilt football team became bowl-eligible in consecutive seasons for the first time in school history. To order tickets for the bowl game, visit Vanderbilt’s bowl central web site at vanderbilt.edu/bowl

PHOTO BY JOHn RusseLL

Page 15: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 13vucommodores.com

Page 16: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 214

Sporting events • Airport transfers • Conventions Corporate transportation • Day trips • Weddings & receptions • Bachelor/Bachelorette parties Family reunions • Concerts The Ground Transportation

Partner for Vanderbilt Athletics

The DriVe To WinThe DriVe To WinThe DriVe To WinThe DriVe To Win

Support Vanderbilt at home and away with Grand Avenue. our fleet accommodates groups of all sizes. Start your tailgate party on the road and leave the driving to us.

Corporate, special occasion and customized transportation

BE DRIVEN.

never miss another away game.

GA

T 3

03

.12

| C

n |

11

/12

MARK YOUR CALENDARSand book your

TRANSPORTATION for these upcoming away

VANDY fOOTBALL gAMES

DATE LOCATIONMILEAGE SAVED BY USING GRAND AVENUE

11/3 University of Kentucky Lexington, Ky.

426 milesround trip

11/10 The University of MississippiOxford, Miss.

474 milesround trip

11/24 Wake Forest University Winston-Salem, N.C.

893 milesround trip

FREE APP AVAILABLE

Call us today at 615.714.5466 or toll-free 866.455.2823

or visit GrandAvenueWorldwide.com/app

GAT303.12 CN_Ad_11.12.indd 1 10/4/12 2:33 PM

Page 17: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 15vucommodores.com

Giving Back

GABBY SMITHFriday is the only day of the week when senior Gabby Smith does not have an 8 a.m. class on her busy schedule. But instead of sleeping in, the Cincinnati native chooses to give back by volunteering at the Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt.

For the past year, Smith has spent time going around to the hospital’s waiting areas with a cart loaded full of board games, coloring books, crayons and construction paper. Volunteers like Smith help to lessen a child’s stress and anxiety while he or she passes the time before an appointment.

CONNOR HARRELLConnor Harrell is one of only four seniors on Tim Corbin’s 2013 roster. The leadership skills he has learned on the baseball diamond have translated well into his work throughout the community. A Monroe Carell Jr. Scholarship recipient, Harrell is an active member of Vanderbilt’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee.

The Houston, Texas native has served as a youth mentor with Young Life—a national ministry for high school kids—at Nashville’s Franklin Road Academy for the past two years with teammate Keenan Kolinsky and football’s Jordan Rodgers.

“I was in Young Life in high school, and it became a pretty big part of my life during that time,” Harrell said.

“[Here it] gives us an opportunity to use our platform as Vanderbilt athletes to have an impact on kids in a way that we are passionate about.”

“I think saying, ‘I don’t have enough time,’ is the easy way out,” Smith said. “[That] is kind of selling yourself short. Everyone has time for whatever they want to do, you just have to make it.”

Commodores in the community

Page 18: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 216

ANDREW EAST The son of a construction consultant, sophomore Andrew East may have been destined to major in civil engi-neering. The Indiana native has made two trips to Mexico as part of Youth With A Mission, helping build houses for impoverished families in Tijuana and Ensenada. The Commodores’ long snapper is also an eagle scout, a rank he attained in part because of his service through the Wheeler Mission in his hometown of Indianapolis.

East also has taken time to work with Seven Bridges to Recovery, an orga-nization in metro Atlanta that battles homelessness, addiction and abuse.

KATE GOLDINWhen senior Kate Goldin graduates this spring with a double-major in biological sciences and Spanish, expect the former defensive midfielder to be ready to tackle either field. Instead of merely doing traditional second-language acquisition tasks, Goldin has worked with Vanderbilt professor Elena Olazagasti-Segovia for the past two years, teaching English to Spanish-speaking adults and children across Middle Tennessee.

Additionally, Goldin has found time to volunteer at a local pet adoption center and to help coach a pair of youth soccer teams in the area.

“Helping young kids and their families learn English has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my life,” Goldin said. “The families have always accepted me into their homes with open arms and treated me like a part of the family. I hope I am able to stay involved in the community in the future.”

“I want my life to be more than football, more than school and more than a career, East said. “I want to leave a legacy that is more about what I’ve done for others. I’ve found that when you give, you find your-self receiving more than you could ever have imagined.”

(2/4) than what Ive done for myself..”

Page 19: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 17vucommodores.com

www.abraauto.com1-888-USA-ABRA • 1-888-872-2272

Right the First Time...On Time.™

®

are now

Full-Service Collision Repair

Auto Glass Repair & Replacement

Five Convenient Locations in the Nashville Area... Over 125 Nationwide

America’s Most Recommended

Page 20: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 218

By Chris Weinman

Vanderbilt trailed top-seeded Kentucky by seven points in the closing minutes of the championship game of the 2012 Southeastern Conference Tournament in New Orleans. That’s when Head Coach Kevin Stallings put freshman Kedren Johnson back in the game alongside four upperclassmen.

The point guard from Lewisburg, Tenn., was not satisfied to just be a bit player in that game full of stars.

“It was just a close game and I was trying to be aggressive,” Johnson said. “During that time, most freshmen would probably tighten up. I was just trying to embrace it. Most people don’t get the chance to play in the SEC championship game, so I just wanted to make the most of it. Plus, we were close to winning, so I was just try-ing to push us over the top.”

As the 6’4” guard brought the ball up the court with less than two minutes to play and the game knotted up at 62-62, he saw an open-ing. After a slight hesitation at the three-point line, Johnson needed only two left-handed dribbles to get by his defender and under the basket, where he switched the ball to his right hand for a reverse layup.

Fouled on that drive, Johnson made his free throw to convert the traditional three-point play and give the Commodores a lead they would not relinquish. Vanderbilt ended up finishing the game on a 16-2 run to capture its first SEC Tournament title since 1951.

Thinking back on the play eight months later, Johnson cannot recall his exact thought in that moment, but he believes the play came naturally to him after years of preparation.

“I’ve done that move like 600 times, so it’s hard to remember exactly what I was think-ing,” Johnson said. “But I just know I was trying

to be aggressive and I just really wanted to win that game.”

As a freshman Johnson embraced his role off the bench, seeing action in all 36 games while averaging the seventh-most minutes on the team. With all of the talent and experience on last year’s team, Johnson knew he’d be allowed to slowly adjust to the speed of the collegiate game with-out being expected to put up huge numbers in that first season.

He also realizes that having John Jenkins, Festus Ezeli and Jeffery Taylor all selected in the draft—while five other Commodores were lost to graduation—will change dramatically what is expected of him.

“I knew we had a stacked team last year and it was going to be tough not knowing anything when these guys had been together for three or four years,” Johnson said. “I wasn’t expecting to come in and play a crazy amount of minutes. I knew I was going to have to come in and wade into it.

“[Now] I’m still just trying to do whatever the team needs me to do. We have a totally different team from last year. This team requires me to be a little more aggressive, so I’m trying to do that.”

Johnson’s Commodore teammates have known that he is capable of filling up the scoresheet while also providing opportuni-ties for them to score points. And they expect Vanderbilt fans to see more statistical output from Johnson this year.

“He can make plays for other people. He’s an excellent passer,” fellow sophomore Shelby

Spotlight shines on sophomore

Kedren Johnson averaged 3.1 points per game a year ago, but is the Commodores’ leading returning scorer.

On a team that featured a total of six seniors and three 2012 NBA Draft selections, no one expected that the play of the year would come from a freshman. Not one who had been averaging just three points per game.

One year later, sophomore Kedren Johnson will now be relied upon to be a team leader for a reloaded Commodore squad with just two upperclassmen—a pair of juniors.

JOH

N R

USS

ELL

Page 21: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 19vucommodores.com

Moats said. “But he’s also stepped up as a leader and a scorer. We always knew he had it in him and now he has the opportunity to do that.”

The Commodore coaching staff also is look-ing to Johnson to step into a bigger role both offensively and defensively. Johnson and his coaches both mention his jump shot and his defense when asked about the parts of his game that improved the most over the course of offseason workouts.

Johnson—a product of Marshall County High School, located one hour south of Nashville—could score at will in high school, once netting 55 points against East Hickman to break a single-game Tiger scoring record which had been untouched for 50 years. He departed as the school’s career record holder in both points and assists. Johnson had a number of offers from other schools in the southeast, including Florida and Alabama, but chose to stay close to home.

“I just wanted my parents to be able to come to the games,” Johnson said. “My sister had just had my niece right around the time I was making my decision and I had to factor that into it, too. Plus, Vanderbilt did a great job recruiting me.”

Home is where Johnson gained his love for music, a passion that he still regularly explores by writing and recording his own original songs.

“I’ve been doing it since I was 10 years old,” Johnson said. “I have a lot of family members that are really into music. Around the time I was 16, it started to pick up a little bit and it was getting better, and now it’s really good.”

Johnson sees music as a good way to focus his creative energy, and notes that there are parallels between his mindset on the court and in the studio.

“You can be creative in basketball or in music,” Johnson said. “I don’t know what to expect when I sit down to write a song, just like I don’t know what to expect when I’m going out on the court to play a game. Both of them are unpredictable. And I guess that what’s I like about both of them.”

While the fate of the 2012-13 men’s bas-ketball season also may be unpredictable, Commodore fans can look forward to seeing Johnson’s creativity featured prominently at Memorial Gymnasium this year. nJO

E H

OW

ELL

EARN A GRADUATE DEGREE

FROM VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY

www.vanderbilt.edu/mlas

Johnson hails from Lewisburg, Tennessee—one hour south of Nashville.

JOH

N R

USS

ELL

Page 22: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 220

T he early signing period for next season’s prospective student-athletes opened on November 14 with both of Vanderbilt’s basketball programs making headlines.

Kevin Stallings announced the signing of Damian Jones—a 6’9” forward from Baton Rouge, La., regarded as one of the best big men in the class of 2013. A product of Scotlandville Magnet High School, Jones is considered a consensus top 100 prospect and top 10 big man by many recruiting services. Jones averaged eight points, eight rebounds, and four blocks per game as a junior as his Scotlandville team won the 5A Louisiana state championship.

On the women’s side, Melanie Balcomb signed three standouts for next season, receiving National Letters of Intent from Rebekah Dahl-man, Marqu’es Webb and Kylee Smith. All three players can be found on ESPN’s HoopGurlz Top 100 and each ranks among the top 20 at their respective positions.

Dahlman checks in as the No. 16 recruit on the HoopGurlz Top 100 list. The 5-9 guard is already the all-time leading scorer in Minnesota girls basketball history with 3,895 points through just three seasons.

Webb ranks 21st according to HoopGurlz. The 6-1 post player has won a pair of Alabama state titles with Montgomery’s Brewbaker Tech and Hoover.

Smith is the 62nd-ranked player in the nation according to HoopGurlz. She already holds the Alpharetta High School career scoring record after averaging better than 17 points per game during all three seasons in high school. n

” n

Damian Jones (left) and Rebekah Dahlman will be among those donning the black and gold as freshmen next season.

Basketball teams sign four in early period

BA

TON

RO

UG

E A

DV

OC

ATE

GLE

NN

NEL

SON

/ESP

N.C

OM

vs. Arkansas - Sunday, Jan. 13 (2 p.m.) PRE / POST - Jam the Gym (all tickets just one dollar)

- Quick Change halftime performance

vs. Tennessee - Thursday, Jan. 24 (8 p.m.) - Vanderbilt Employee Celebration Night

- Red Panda halftime performance

vs. Ole Miss - Sunday, Feb. 3 (2 p.m.) PRE / POST - Alumni Reunion, featuring 1993 Final Four Team

- Honor Roll Day

vs. Kentucky - Sunday, Feb. 10 (3 p.m.) PRE - Pink Out

- Girl Scout Day

vs. Missouri - Thursday, Feb. 14 (7 p.m.) - Diversity Night

vs. Texas A&M - Sunday, Feb. 24 (4 p.m.) PRE / POST - Military & Hometown Heroes Appreciation Day

- Women’s Basketball Camper Reunion

- Jr. NCC Day

- Divas For Dores Day

vs. Auburn - Thursday, Feb. 28 (8 p.m.) - Senior Night

PRE - Kids Zone opens 90 minutes prior to game

POST - Postgame autograph session

Women’s Basketball 2013 Promotional Schedule

Page 23: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 21vucommodores.com

Senior guard Brown leads behind-the-scenes

W hen the 2011-12 season came to a close last March, five members of the Commodore women’s basketball team earned postseason honors from Southeastern Conference

writers and coaches. Sophomore Christina Foggie, the league’s leading scorer, was a unanimous first-team All-SEC selection. Junior Tiffany Clarke and sophomore Jasmine Lister earned second-team honors, while sopho-more Stephanie Holzer was an honorable-mention selection and Kady Schrann was named to the All-Freshmen squad.

Not found on that list was Elan Brown. The Atlanta native played in every game of her junior season, starting 23 contests. Brown led the Commodores in steals, was third on the team in rebounds, fourth in both minutes and assists, and sixth in points.

That statistical diversity is a hallmark of Brown’s game. At 6-feet-tall, Brown has little trouble challenging shots on the perimeter or clog-ging up passing lanes with her length. That also gives her a rebounding advantage against most every guard she would be matched up against. While Brown is a confident scorer, she sees the importance of contribut-ing to the team in a variety of ways.

“Sometimes it’s the hustle stats that matter the most,” Brown said. “Because when we need that spurt or that one play to get us over the hump, it’s a great feeling to be able to do that for my team.”

Brown was an SEC All-Freshman selection in 2010. She made eight of her 10 starts that season against league competition, scoring in double-figures three times against conference foes. She has missed only three games in her VU career.

As a sophomore, Brown contributed two double-doubles to the Com-modores’ cause. She paired a career-high 18 points with 10 rebounds in a win over Quinnipiac in the Vanderbilt Thanksgiving Classic. In SEC action, she pulled 11 boards and added 11 points during a convincing victory over Ole Miss.

Last season, she would narrowly miss double-doubles no fewer than four times. On three occasions, Brown scored 10 or more points and pulled down exactly nine rebounds. While she may not be lighting up the scoreboard or receiving the accolades from those outside observing Vanderbilt’s program, Brown is just fine with her role on a Commodore team that returned its top eight scorers from last season.

“After my freshman year I realized how I could contribute to the team,

especially with my knowledge,” Brown said. “Now I think my role is best as a leader, especially defensively, getting people where they need to be, and leading both on and off the floor.”

Brown considers the off the court portion of her leadership responsi-bilities an easy task as part of a team that is extremely connected to one another. She instantly had an ally on the squad her freshman year, as she and fellow senior Tiffany Clarke came to Vanderbilt in 2009 as club team-mates for the nationally respected Georgia Metros. But bonding with a group that Brown refers to as “16 sisters” was no problem. She says the entire team enjoys each others’ company and makes a point to hang out and have fun away from the court.

“I think that we’re all kind of like that,” Brown said. “We’re pretty goofy when we’re together. It is kind of a big family reunion whenever we’re together. It’s fun.”

A psychology major with a minor in financial management, Brown has found an outlet at Vanderbilt through the art department. She has taken classes in drawing, ceramics and performance art. Brown recently has filmed music videos with her teammates for a multimedia class, and notes that her favorite ceramics projects included an African mask and an 18-inch-tall traditional coil pot.

“I didn’t really think of it as something that I’d be that interested in, but it’s pretty relaxing because you kind of have to focus on what you’re doing,” Brown said. “You don’t have time to think about anything else. You don’t have time to worry when you’re making stuff.”

On the court, Brown and her teammates are focused on another suc-cessful season under Head Coach Melanie Balcomb. The ‘Dores were picked the finish third in the SEC this season and are poised to make their 14th consecutive trip to the NCAA Tournament. n

DA

NIE

L D

UB

OIS

By Chris Weinman

A native of Atlanta, Elan Brown has been a steady contributor for Melanie Balcomb’s Commodores for her entire career.

JOH

N R

USS

ELL

Page 24: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 222

Page 25: Commodore Nation, December 2012

C O M M O D O R E NAT I O N 23vucommodores.com

your expectationsGo Beyond

Come to Harpeth Hall!

your daughter with excellence everyday . . .individualized learning, exceptional faculty,

innovative curriculumsupportive and safe environment

Surround

The Harpeth Hall School • 3801 Hobbs Road • Nashville, TN • 615-297-9543 www.harpethhall.org

Limited bus service available • Financial aid available

It’s My Turn

By Rod Williamson

D ecember is a time for reflection, usually recalling the past year before making New Year’s resolutions. But just for fun,

let’s look back over the last 24 months and see what has transpired.

Two years ago, Commodore Nation was anxious, uncertain and possibly disillusioned. The football team had just turned in its second straight 2-10 worksheet, prompting a change in direction. The sporting public felt we were a college football nobody and discounted other successes. Rumors swirled about our ability to attract a top coach.

Then in mid-December David Williams and Chancellor Zeppos intro-duced a relatively unknown assistant coach by the name of James Franklin. Things have gone rather nicely since.

In December, 2010, McGugin Center needed a facelift. Locker rooms were outdated, meeting space cramped. It was inefficient for our current teams and not impressive to recruits.

Flash forward 18 months and virtually every varsity team was enjoying new locker rooms. McGugin Center sported a terrific addition featur-ing new meeting rooms for all teams. A large, modern auditorium is the cornerstone.

Just a year ago, Vanderbilt Stadium had an antiquated video board, subpar lighting and natural grass that limited usage. Today the stadium utilizes a beautiful video board, a lighting system that enhances the net-work television image, cutting edge artificial sports turf and even an grass berm that quickly became popular for families.

Until this past summer, manicuring the sacred turf on Hawkins Field required full-time attention. In times of rain or thawing, the field was soggy. Today Hawkins Field is totally covered with a modern sports turf, a carpet that doesn’t affect the game itself but gives the Commodores the ability to better prepare.

Speaking of weather, for over a century when Mother Nature was finicky, Commodore coaches had to choose between toughing it out or canceling practice. Preparation was compromised.

Today work is in high gear to complete a $31 million multipurpose facility by next September that will allow our teams to prepare in ideal conditions while expanding the campus community’s fitness options. A renovation to the attached Recreation Center will benefit the bowl-ing team and—with an eye toward program expansion—also contains another gymnasium.

Two years ago, we had never won an SEC women’s cross country cham-pionship and had not captured a men’s basketball tournament title since 1951. Two years ago, men’s golf struggled and we had never hosted an NCAA Women’s Golf Championship; today new facilities are on the horizon and both golf programs are rated in the Top 20.

We could go on, but you see the big picture. It could be said there has been more progress within Vanderbilt Athletics over the last two years than at any time in history, especially in terms of team achievement and facilities.

The biggest change, however, lies not with brick and mortar, but within the psyche of Commodore Nation. We rightfully see ourselves as winners—in the classroom, in the community and on the fields of play. We are proud, we are enthused and we are thankful. n

Page 26: Commodore Nation, December 2012

D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 224

My Game

Betsy Galenti

O f the estimated 11,842 lakes in her home state of Minnesota, VU senior swimmer Betsy Galenti claims she has swum in only three. With her hometown of

Stillwater averaging 42 inches of snow per year, she split her time competing in indoor pools and with her high school’s cross country skiing team.

Commodore Nation: After growing up in Minnesota, how have you adjusted to life in the South?

Betsy Galenti: Last year I found myself sitting at a football game, and I was in a sun dress, wearing cowboy boots and drinking sweet tea. That’s when I realized I’d been corrupted. I did not foresee that at all. My favorite thing [about Nashville] is probably the country music scene.

CN: Do you still ski when you get back home?

BG: Yes. And in the summer, I roller ski. YouTube it. It’s these little skis with two wheels and you just ski normally. It’s really fun, so I do that sometimes at home to cross-train. They’re the same width as regular skis, but they’re short. And you use the same ski boots, but change out the tips on your poles.

CN: As cold as it gets in Minnesota, what makes swimming so popular?

BG: It’s dark most of the time in the winter and it’s miserable out-side, so you might as well go inside and swim. I still always go back and train with my high school team. It’s fun to see those guys.

CN: You list dentistry as your career goal. What made you choose that?

BG: As a kid, it terrified me. The dentist freaked me out; I could not handle it. I always thought, maybe I could do this better. Now I’m a medicine, health and society major, so I’ve been taking a lot of pre-med classes, lots of lab sciences with all the National Merit kids. It’s been interesting. n

PH

OTO

BY

JOE

HO

WEL

L

Page 27: Commodore Nation, December 2012

Comments: hi res pdfInks: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, BlackFonts: Myriad Pro, Apex SansImages: RM_AB_Univ_Vanderbilt_layered_9x8-SF.psd (300 ppi), MGB_VZBRN-0001-H-L-FLYER bar-SF.psd (307 ppi), VZ_Vand_vrt_g_p_rev.ai

Job Number VSPO COSE F3782

Job Type Ad

Project Vanderbilt Football Program

Version Code None

Pages/Panels 1 of 1

Component Vanderbilt Football Program

Identifier Vanderbilt Football Program

Inks Side 1 4.0

Inks Side 2 None

Finishing None

Template None

Paper Stock SF

Hardward orEquipment None

Scale

Resolution

Bleed

Trim

Safety

Finished Size

Full Size (W” X H”) Reduced Size (W” X H”)

1” 1”

300 dpi 300 dpi

8.625” x 11.125” 8.625” x 11.125”

8.375” x 10.875” 8.375” x 10.875”

7.25” x 9.75” 7.25” x 9.75”

8.375” x 10.875”

Project Title: VSPO COSE F3782 Vanderbilt Football Program

Team Proof Approval (Initial and Date)

Art Director None

Copywriter None

Studio Katy Baird

Prod. Mgr. None

Acct. Exec. None

125 E. Broad St. Greenville, SC 29601P: 864.271.0500 | F: 864.235.5941

622 Third Ave, New York, NY 10017P: 212.905.7000 | F: 212.370.0781

Coverage not available everywhere; see vzw.com. 4G LTE is available in more than 200 cities in the U.S. © 2012 Verizon.

Stay up-to-the-minute with Vanderbilt football news, stats and scores with blazing-fast 4G LTE speeds. Download ringtones and wallpapers to show your Commodore pride. It’s like having Mr. Commodore with you all the time. All on Verizon, America’s Fastest 4G Network.

KEEP UP WITH THE COMMODORES RIGHT ON YOUR PHONE.

Official Wireless Provider of Vanderbilt Athletics

S:7.25”S:9.75”

T:8.375”T:10.875”

B:8.625”B:11.125”

Page 28: Commodore Nation, December 2012

Proud Sponsor of Vanderbilt University