<<Hampered by injuries throughout his career, Moody said he is healthy and
``pain free'' for the season opener against Miami of Ohio on Saturday. 

``It's my fifth year and my mind-set has changed a lot ever since I was a
sophomore and junior,'' said Moody, who admitted he let a poor attitude
affect his personality early in his career.>>

 

I read those two lines - and I'm thinking - great - Moody realizes this is
his money year - do or die year - and the light has come on.  

 

<<``I'm to the point where I'm just going to handle what I can handle and
not think about [if] I'm going to be a 1,000-yard rusher.''

, if Moody's ankles can't remain healthy for an entire season>>

 

Then you read this and think - same old Moody

 

Moody has a lot of talent.  Hope he shows it off this year.  

 

 

From: gatorn...@googlegroups.com [mailto:gatorn...@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Juno Gator
Sent: Wednesday, September 01, 2010 8:10 AM
To: gatorn...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [gatornews] Gatornews from the Palm Beach Post and Miami Herald
courtesy of Junogator

 

 


Florida's Emmanuel Moody looks to be big-time contributor BY JOSEPH GOODMAN

        

Florida running back Emmanuel Moody high steps into the end zone for a
touchdown against South Carolina during an NCAA college football game on
Saturday, Nov. 14, 2009 at at Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, S.C. 

It wasn't until Emmanuel Moody's second season of youth football before he
had a chance to play running back. That first season in Coppell, Texas,
Moody said he was discriminated against because of his appearance.

``They actually wouldn't let me play running back that first year because
most people saw me as Asian, unless I told them I was half black,'' said
Moody, whose middle name is Pan-Sok (Korean for ``Peter''). ``I didn't
really get a chance the first year, and finally the second year, they saw
what I could do with the ball.''

This will be Moody's third season as a running back for the University of
Florida. Four years since he transferred from the University of Southern
California, and the same question about his ability remains: What can he do
with the ball? He begins his senior season Saturday, but like Florida's
offense as a whole, Moody still is somewhat of a mystery. He never has
rushed for more than 460 yards in a season.

Florida's backfield is loaded with talent this season. In theory, Moody
(5-11, 215 pounds) is the Gators' most complete running back. He's big. He's
fast. He can catch. He can block. He's experienced. Hampered by injuries
throughout his career, Moody said he is healthy and ``pain free'' for the
season opener against Miami of Ohio on Saturday. 

``You're talking about a mature kid -- a mature kid in Moody,'' said Stan
Drayton, UF's running backs coach.

Moody and junior Jeff Demps are listed on UF's first unofficial depth chart
of the season as first-string running backs. Behind Moody and Demps,
sophomore Mike Gillislee and freshman Mack Brown have received early praise
from their coaches. There was a time in his career when Moody would loathe
playing on a team with so many talented running backs.

After all, that's the reason why he left USC in 2006. Moody was named the
Pacific-10 Conference Offensive Freshman of the Year in 2005 but left the
Trojans on the eve of his sophomore season because then-USC coach Pete
Carroll had stockpiled no less than eight highly rated rushers.

``It's my fifth year and my mind-set has changed a lot ever since I was a
sophomore and junior,'' said Moody, who admitted he let a poor attitude
affect his personality early in his career.

``I'm to the point where I'm just going to handle what I can handle and not
think about [if] I'm going to be a 1,000-yard rusher.''

Moody wanted to be a featured back when he came to UF. The irony in that is
that he transferred to a school where a 245-pound quarterback did most of
the power rushing in a spread-option offense. Moody actually ran for more
yards his freshman season at USC (459) than he did during his first and
second seasons at UF (417 and 378 yards, respectively).

It didn't help Moody's cause that the running backs coach who helped recruit
him to Florida (Drayton) split for Tennessee before Moody played in a game.
At the time, Drayton had a falling-out with UF coach Urban Meyer and left to
work with then-Tennessee coach Phillip Fulmer.

After one-year stops at Tennessee and Syracuse, Drayton mended his
relationship with Meyer and returned to the staff. Moody was in his car this
offseason when he received a phone call informing him that Drayton was
returning to UF. Moody said he was so excited, he screamed.

New assistant coach and no more Tebow -- none of it matters, of course, if
Moody's ankles can't remain healthy for an entire season. Sprained ankles
and bone spurs limited his carries in 2008 and 2009. He had two surgeries on
his right ankle during the offseason and said he feels no pain for the first
time in more than a year.

``I'm just healthy right now,'' Moody said. ``For running backs, healthy is
everything.''

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