KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -- The old Alvin Kamara might have pouted, maybe even lashed out at his coaches as he waited his turn.The new Alvin Kamara just sat back, his fire burning as brightly as ever, as teammate Jalen Hurd got the starts and majority of carries early in Tennessees season. Kamara just told himself somebody down the road was going to pay.That somebody was Texas A&M, which looked as if it was grabbing at ghosts for most of this past Saturday at Kyle Field in trying to tackle Kamara, who tends to have that effect on defenders. He racked up a school-record 312 all-purpose yards in the Vols 45-38 double-overtime loss to the Aggies and showed the college football world what he already knew.That hes an elite running back.We couldnt tackle him, Texas A&M defensive coordinator John Chavis said. We had him hemmed up I dont know how many times for little or no gain, and hed get away. Thats how they got back into the game. You dont see many guys who can change direction the way he can, and hes a lot tougher than people think he is.The truth is, a lot of people had been wondering what Kamara could do if he ever got 20-plus touches in a game. He got 26 on offense against Texas A&M -- 18 rushing attempts for 127 yards and two touchdowns and eight catches for 161 yards, including an 18-yard touchdown to send the game into overtime. Hes the only player from a Power 5 conference to have 125 rushing yards and 150 receiving yards in the same game in the past 20 years.Not bad for a guy who was filling in for Hurd, the Vols injured starter.Oh yeah, I was ready, sort of silent but deadly, Kamara told ESPN.com. A lot of the talk was about Jalen not playing and what the Vols were going to be able to do without him. But all the time, I had a little grin on my face like, Yep, theyll see. Boy did they see. Kamara did his best Barry Sanders impression -- starting and stopping, cutting on a dime and turning no gains into big gains -- to immediately jump on everybodys radar. Then again, to some, it wasnt a huge surprise. At least two SEC coaches told ESPN.com before the season that the player they most feared on Tennessees offense was Kamara. They werent dissing Hurd and agreed he was a very good player in his own right, but they pointed out that nobody on the Vols offensive roster could change the complexion of a game as quickly as Kamara.Thats fitting because Kamara has changed dramatically since his first season of college football at Alabama, where he lasted a semester and got caught up in a ridiculously talented logjam at running back. He signed in the same class as eventual Heisman Trophy winner Derrick Henry, a class that included two other four-star running backs in addition to Kamara. And already on campus were T.J. Yeldon, Kenyan Drake, Jalston Fowler and Dee Hart.You get there and realize that there really is just one ball with that many good backs, said Kamara, who redshirted that 2013 season. I remember thinking not long after I got there, This might not be the best situation for me. Kamara, who just turned 21 this past summer, is the first to admit that he made things even harder on himself at Alabama by the way he acted. He expected to come right in and play, and, when he didnt, he grew less and less coachable and ended up being suspended the week of the LSU game for what Nick Saban said were behavior reasons. Kamara was also suspended for the Sugar Bowl to cap the 2013 season.I was young and immature and ready to take on the world, Kamara said. You think you can do anything and should be out there playing right away. It was hard, and I didnt handle it the best way, the transition from high school to college, because you realize pretty quickly that everybody at Alabama was the best player on their high school team.I dont think the competition was too much for me, but the concept of the coaching and understanding some of the things you have to do on and off the field were the hardest things for me.Kamara got his release from Alabama after the 2013 season and spent a year at Hutchinson (Kansas) Community College. He went the junior college route because he was determined to play in the SEC and didnt want to have to sit out for two years.Looking back, he says the whole junior college experience helped to humble him.I kind of took a step back and was able to see things for what they really were, and that helped me a lot, said Kamara, who chose the Vols over several SEC suitors out of Hutchinson.One of the surest signs Kamara has matured immensely is that he didnt pop off when he got only two carries against Florida or when he got just three carries against Virginia Tech two weeks earlier. He knew his time would come. Moreover, he hasnt spent any time worrying this week about how he and Hurd will be used against Alabama. Coach Butch Jones has said Hurd will return to the lineup.Me and Jalen understand our strengths and what we can bring to the offense, Kamara said. Its going to take both of us along with John Kelly. We all know each of us deserve carries, so theres not any animosity. Its not taking carries away from each other but sharing the load.Its equally telling that the Vols players voted on permanent team captains in the spring and Kamara, a redshirt junior, was the only non-senior to make the cut along with?Josh Dobbs, Cam Sutton and Jalen Reeves-Maybin.Hes a great athlete and an even better person off the field. Its amazing the dedication he puts in and his work ethic and all the film he watches, Tennessee junior safety Todd Kelly Jr. said of Kamara. Even though hes not the No. 1 running back, in the back of his mind, he prepares like that and knew his time was going to come, and when it did, he was going to make the best of it, and you saw that [against Texas A&M]. Everybody on this team has a lot of confidence in him.Kamara has shied away this week from a lot of Alabama talk. He said the games special because of what it could mean for the Vols, not because of his history.One game never defines a season, Kamara said. The main thing is that we can still reach all of our goals as a team. But, yeah, these are the games you grow up watching, especially in the South when its 3:30 on CBS and the TVs on and you hear that little jingle. You know its game time.Even though Kamara is a blur in the open field, he would like to dispel one myth. He has seen his weight listed as light as 192 pounds in some places and jokes that part of the reason people think hes small is that hes standing around 6-4, 240-pound Hurd much of the time.Im 215 pounds, a rock-solid 215, and can promise you I run like it, Kamara said.The Vols would like to think hes just revving up. Nike Air Jordan Sale Uk . Boucher previously coached the Tampa Bay Lightning and had a 97-78-20 record over two-plus seasons. He was dismissed by the team last March after the Lightning struggled in the lockout-shortened season with a 13-18-1 record. Nike Air Jordan Shoes Uk . After Martin Skrtel put the Reds in front from close range at Stamford Bridge after only four minutes, Hazard hit back in the 17th with a superb strike. Etoo gave Jose Mourinhos team a decisive lead from Oscars back pass in the 34th. http://www.wholesaleukairjordan.com/ . 10 VCU 85-67 on Thursday night at the Puerto Rico Tip-Off. The Seminoles (4-0) have scored at least 80 points in each of their games. Cheap Jordan Shoes Uk . The (11-11-4) Jets are seventh in the Central Division with 26 points. Fifth place Dallas and sixth-seeded Nashville also have 26 points, but the Stars have three games in hand on Winnipeg while Nashville has two. Air Jordan Shoes Sale Uk . At a news conference Tuesday where it was thought that the fiery Schallibaum may be shown the door after a dismal finish to the Major League Soccer season, team president Joey Saputo said no decision has been made on whether the Swiss Volcano will be back in 2014. The things that are measured in cricket are typically self-evident. Interpretation is not required to count runs, wickets, deliveries, extras, boundaries or sixes. Other sports have embraced measurements that require interpretation. In tennis a distinction is made between a forced error and an unforced error. In baseball, earned runs and unearned runs are distinguished by judging whether or not a safe hit was the result of a fielding error or not. Baseball also has the concept of defensive indifference. In American football, things like decisive passes and assists and tackles are counted systematically.ESPNcricinfo records a control measurement for every delivery added to its database. This measure is based on the answer to the question Was the batsman in control of the ball? Two answers are possible - yes (in control) and no (not in control), but it is not always self-evident whether or not the batsman was in control or not in control. This is probably the very first attempt in cricket to develop a measure that involves the systematic use of judgement.If the bowler beats the bat, finds the edge, or induces a miscue, then even if no dismissal results, the batsman is said to be not in control. A lofted drive off the middle of the bat that results in a catch at the boundary is not in control. As readers will notice, these conclusions require the exercise of judgment. It follows that some judgements will be easily arrived at, others not so much. A classic example is when a batsman is tested just outside off stump and starts out playing at the ball but withdraws the bat at the last minute. Was the bat withdrawn in time? Whether or not the batsman is judged to be in control of the delivery will depend on the answer to this question.Currently this measure is applied to all types of cricket. This post is about what the control measurement tells us, and what it doesnt. At the end, I propose that T20, and perhaps the limited-overs game generally, requires a second measure to go with control.Here is a summary of the control measurement for the 2016 IPL, based on ball-by-ball details provided by ESPNcricinfo. The summary is prepared as a proportion of 120 balls faced. For instance, the average losing team in the 2016 IPL was in control of 88 out of 120 balls and scored 132 off those deliveries. An earlier analysis shows that on average, the batsman is not in control of one in every four deliveries faced in T20, and this figure holds for the 2016 IPL. The scoring rate off these not-in-control deliveries in the 2016 IPL is about three runs per over. Most dismissals occur when the batsman is not in control (this is due to the way the control measurement is defined).In the 2016 IPL, of the 90 or so deliveries in a T20 innings in which the batsman is in control, winning teams that set targets scored 34 runs more (165) than defeated teams that set targets (131). Winning teams scored, on average, two runs per over faster off those deliveries.For chasing teams, the scoring rate in control was about the same (about 9.5 runs per over) in wins and defeats, but winners remained in control for ten balls more than defeated teams.Put another way, when a team bats first, success depends on their ability to hit as relentleessly as possible.dddddddddddd On the other hand, for a chasing team, success depends on hitting just enough for the longest possible time.Consider a player who makes 50 (off 30 balls) against a spread-out field while being in control for 24 out of those 30 balls faced. This player is in control 80% of the time. By T20 standards, this is above average control. What if the total came with five sixes, one four, 16 singles and eight dots? Against a spread-out field, singles are uncontested. Even the fielders inside the circle stand on the edge, happy to concede one in the hope of saving a couple of extra boundaries. It would be useful to know whether the singles were the result of hard hits that failed to find the boundary, or whether they were simply pushed to the fielders in the deep. While this type of innings may make sense in a chase, it is less valuable when batting first.The control measurement does not tell us this part of the story. In a Test match, this is not particularly significant. Risks are taken far less frequently in Test cricket. Wickets are the single most significant resource by a large distance. Since most Test matches that yield an outright result end before the full 15 sessions of play are completed, it could be reasonably argued that wickets are the only significant resource in a Test. Consequently, the ability to score runs reliably is paramount because it suggests that the player can be relied upon to make runs consistently.In T20, higher control is not necessarily better. Most teams do not use up their full quota of wickets in 20 overs. They could afford to lose a wicket or two chasing a few extra boundaries. In order to measure this effort, the control measurement needs to be accompanied by a hitting measurement. One approach to this measurement would be to provide an answer to the question Did the batsman attempt to hit a boundary? The answer ought to take into account the field setting among other things. Perhaps the measurement could even be termed boundary attempts.Instead of averages and strike rates, T20 batsmen could be measured by how much control they are able to enforce (or in the case of bowlers, how little they are able to concede) and how many boundaries they attempt to hit. For example, take a batsman who attempts a boundary once every three deliveries, or a bowler who forces batsmen to be not in control on 11 out of 24 deliveries. This could then be extended to consider the boundary attempts per dismissal, and the boundary attempts per balls faced. Much like hitters in baseball go through hot streaks and slumps, the form of T20 hitters could be measured on the basis of these measurements. A derivative measure could be control on boundary attempts (since not every not-in-control delivery produces a wicket).Together, control and boundary attempts (or hitting) represent the trade-off in the T20 game and could provide a language to describe T20. If T20 is to emerge out of the mother games vast shadow, such a language, which permits the measurement of merit in T20 on its own terms, is vital for T20 as well as for cricket in general. ' ' '