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ESPN? or the message boards?bigBUXfan;903818; said:I heard on ESPN he was going to Tansfer? anyone else hear this?
bigBUXfan;903818; said:I heard on ESPN he was going to Tansfer? anyone else hear this?
bigBUXfan;903833; said:Sorry,
He is Injured, NOT Tranfering!
MililaniBuckeye;903853; said:Yeah, I can see how you can get those confused...
Moody to Transfer
Ryan Abraham
USCFootball.com Publisher
According to published reports, sophomore tailback Emmanuel Moody has decided to transfer.
Moody to transfer
Moody started four games in 2006 as a true freshman and was the 2nd leading rusher on team, despite missing the final four games with a sprained ankle.
Moody finished 2006 with 459 yards on 79 carries (5.8 average) with two touchdowns. He also caught three passes for 39 yards.
The Sporting News named him Pac-10 Offensive Freshmen of the Year.
Entering 2007 the Trojans listed 10 scholarship tailbacks on their roster, 9 of which were ranked by Rivals.com as 4-stars or better.
After falling behind in the spring with a hamstring injury, Moody then bruised his knee in fall camp and did not practice this week.
Before Wednesday's practice he was seen in workout clothes walking away from the practice field and into student housing.
Moody prepped at Coppell (Tex.) High where he ran for 1,170 yards and 14 touchdowns his senior season.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
?VIVA SANCHEZ!
By Jorge Arangure Jr.
Click-clack, the players march down the sidewalk, through a corridor and onto a paved street. Students watch and shout encouragement as this sonorous procession trudges to the opening summer practice of USC's 2005 season. At first, few notice the highly touted freshman quarterback, Mark Sanchez, as he passes by the crowd.
Sanchez chose USC not just because of the program's star power, but also because it kept him close to his family in Southern California. He didn't care that it meant he'd likely sit on the bench for two seasons, maybe three. He didn't care that, for awhile, he'd be as faceless to fans of the program as the Trojans water boy.
Or so he thought.
As he click-clacks through the gate and onto the practice field this summer day, Sanchez sees them before they see him: men in Mexican wrestling masks and serapes, flanked by other fans carrying signs of support. For him. When the crowd finally recognizes him, a cry goes out: "?VIVA SANCHEZ!"
It is at this moment that Sanchez realizes he is playing for not just himself, his family and his team. Whether he likes it or not, he's playing for people whose names sound like his; for those from south of the border who work thankless jobs for little pay; for those who are reminded daily that they live in a country that does not know what to do with them. These are the fans who once cheered for Valenzuela and Plunkett and now cheer for Garciaparra and De La Hoya. They are his fans too. On this day, Sanchez has arrived in Los Angeles...