For people who currently rule the college sports world, Florida players sure seem angry. First, linebacker Dustin Doe was arrested last weekend for being part of a brawl in a Gainesville parking garage, now offensive lineman Ronnie Wilson has been charged with aggravated assault, simple battery and the use or display of a concealed weapon during the commission of a felony (complicated charge, worth a lot of points). According to reports, after he spit on and slapped a man in a nightclub, Wilson allegedly took a rifle out of his car trunk and fired a warning shot into the air because he wanted the man to "know how it feels to be scared." Urban Meyer's take? "Obviously, this is a major concern." Meyer not only has to be concerned for the reputation of his program and the well-being of his players, but also the fact that he has an offensive linemen who feels the need to discharge a firearm for intimidation purposes rather than just using the fact that he's 6' 3" and 300-pounds. What was Wilson going to do to intimidate the 300-pounder lined up against him on game day? Shank somebody during warm-ups? Lob grenades into the opposing huddle?
Unlike Doe, who was not suspended (but will face internal punishment) mostly because his offense was in self-defense, Wilson probably faces pretty stiff penalties, both legally and from the team. He is currently awaiting a court appearance.

Signing Day came and went almost a week ago but recruiting is still a hot topic in college football. The FanHouse has been all
Florida's victory Monday night over Ohio State was a shocker to most everyone, except those living in the nine Southeastern Conference states. For those of us below the Mason-Dixon line, it was validation. In an era where Kirk Herbstreit and Lee Corso have way too much influence, Monday night was a match-up of our brand of football versus theirs. Speed versus Size. North versus South.
The BCS got lucky. Score one for mankind. When it was all said and done on Sunday night, the national championship game was decided by the voters. What a novelty. Those pesky computer polls found a way to deadlock Michigan and Florida and defer to real live breathing humans to decide who plays for the national championship. The polls made the final choice.
First things first. I no longer have a dog in this BCS hunt. My Auburn Tigers have been eliminated. With that said, I'm still hot over this BCS process. Just as Auburn was bent over in 2004, it appears likely that the winner of the Florida-Arkansas contest will face the same fate.
December 2, 1989. That was the day Alabama came to town for the first time. And like Florida's 2006 edition, both were unbeaten and ranked second in the land. On that day in 1989, Jordan-Hare Stadium was louder than its ever been. On Saturday night, Auburn's fans along with its team, matched the fervor and determination of that day 17 years earlier.
It's pretty fun to watch these Florida fans drink the Kool-Aid. They beat a decent LSU team at home and now they think they're headed to Arizona in January. Never mind, that Alabama had them on their heels for three quarters or that they struggled against Kentucky .
After the win over LSU many thought that Auburn's next big defensive test would be against Florida. Then came last week and the upstart Arkansas ground attack. The bad news is Florida hasn't gone anywhere. Florida still remains the best offense the Tigers will face this season.
During game week you always want to check in on the enemy, especially when it's a season defining game like this one. And they don't get any bigger than this weekend's Auburn-Florida game. For you youngsters who don't much about history, 
