Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

’Dogs vs. ’Dogs — who’s best?

-

ATHENS, Ga. — Who’s the best team in the SEC?

Once you get past topranked Alabama, that is?

The answer should be a bit more apparent after tonight.

In a game between unfamiliar rivals sharing little beyond a nickname, No. 11 Georgia hosts No. 17 Mississipp­i State in an early season showdown that will help shake out the balance of the power in the SEC.

“I really don’t think there’s anybody really clear-cut, head-and-shoulders above in the SEC, probably outside of Alabama,” Georgia Coach Kirby Smart said. “So we’re going to find out.”

Mississipp­i State (3-0, 1-0) is coming off a 30-point blowout of then-No. 12 LSU, a dynamic performanc­e that suddenly stamped coach Dan Mullen’s team as a potential threat in the conference race. That one was in Starkville. A victory at Georgia (3-0) would be even more impressive.

“One of the great things about the SEC, unlike just about every other conference, is usually when you get a big-time win over a top 15 team, you load up and play a team ranked even higher the next week,” Mullen said. “We get to do that this week, going on the road to Georgia and playing a top team in the SEC East.”

The teams, both known as the Bulldogs, will be meeting for the first time since 2011

and only the 24th time in their history.

This is the first time they’ve faced off with both were ranked in the Top 25.

“We don’t play Georgia very often,” Mullen said. “There’s some uniqueness in it.”

Mississipp­i State quarterbac­k Nick Fitzgerald will be returning to his home state, to go against a school that didn’t recruit him out of high school.

The 6-foot-5, 230-pound junior is coming off a breakout night against LSU, rushing

for a pair of touchdowns and passing for two more.

He doesn’t view this game as a chance for payback against Georgia.

“It’s just another game and just another opponent we’ve got to beat,” Fitzgerald said. “I don’t really have a chip on my shoulder or anything like that. I know the reasons why people were not looking at me. It’s hard to take a chance on a guy that hadn’t started at quarterbac­k until his senior year. Mississipp­i State did, glad I’m here and it couldn’t have worked out better for me.”

Jake Fromm will be making his third consecutiv­e start as Georgia’s quarterbac­k while Jacob Eason continues his recovery from a knee injury.

When Eason returns — and he was back at practice this week, though in a limited role — there’s no guarantee he’ll reclaim the No. 1 job. Fromm has played like a veteran since stepping in during first quarter of the season-opening game.

The freshman has completed nearly 60 percent of his passes for 449 yards, with 5 touchdowns and just 1 intercepti­on. This will be his first chance to show the home folks what he’s made of against a ranked opponent, but he’s already guided Georgia to an impressive victory at Notre Dame.

“He continues to improve,” Smart said. “He’s making better decisions more consistent­ly, which for us, the quarterbac­k position is a decision-making position. We’re not asking the guy to go out there and scramble around and make runs. We have to get him to make good decisions. As long as he does that, we can play winning football.”

Georgia has perhaps the best 1-2 punch in the country at running back.

Nick Chubb and Sony Michel have combined for 450 yards and 6 touchdowns over the first 3 games, averaging nearly 6.2 yards every time they take a handoff.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States