Chattanooga Times Free Press

Improved run defense on display for Bulldogs

- BY LINDSEY YOUNG STAFF WRITER

ATHENS, Ga. — To a man — at least those in pads — Saturday’s defensive effort in Georgia’s 38-12 win over Tennessee showed marked improvemen­t.

To head coach Kirby Smart, though, it was still not what he expects.

The Bulldogs limited the Vols to 66 yards rushing at under 3 yards a carry. Ty Chandler’s 17-yard run on the game’s first play was by far the biggest gainer of the day.

Linebacker­s D’Andre Walker, Natrez Patrick and Monty Rice allowed few yards after contact, helping turn the Tennessee offense into something it didn’t want to be.

“I think we are getting better every week at something, and as long as we continue to do that and not become complacent we will continue to become a great team,” said safety J.R. Reed, who led Georgia in tackles with six. “This week it was just tweaking the little things, getting the fundamenta­ls back together, stopping the run and making them become a passing team.”

The return of Rice produced a noticeable difference in the linebackin­g play, according to Smart. The sophomore had five tackles and was a big part of the physical improvemen­t the staff wanted to see this week from the defense.

“It was great seeing Monty back out there,” Smart said. “He gives us a tough physical presence. I don’t know that he is 100 percent, but he’s getting there. I thought we played hard and we’re getting better, though we still had some busts.”

Smart, ever the defensive perfection­ist, downplayed the impressive stats.

“When we played it right, we had success, but at times we were out of position and they got yards,” he said. “We’ve got to execute at a higher clip. Am I happy with the numbers? Yes, but I look at it like this guy didn’t line up right and didn’t play with the right technique and we allowed a 9-yard run.

“But I am proud of the toughness and the striking and the ability to hold the runs within reason.”

The Bulldogs allowed 172 rushing yards a week ago to a Missouri team not noted for its run game, something that obviously didn’t stick too well with coaches and players.

Rice, who missed the game due to injury, echoed his coach’s thoughts about Saturday’s improved effort. He, too, was unhappy with two Tennessee second-half touchdown drives.

“If you let people run the ball on you, you will lose,” he said. “We had a lot of motivation during the week to improve in that area. At the end we had a few busts. We played good, but we didn’t finish as well as we could, in my opinion.”

Smart continuall­y preaches about the “Georgia standard,” and though the exact meaning isn’t known, the Bulldogs’ defense is, if you listen to the players, getting closer to reaching it. With a tough road game looming at LSU, the annual slugfest with Florida and a date against the SEC’s most improved team, Kentucky, getting there might be the key to defending the SEC East title.

“The run game — today is the standard against the run,” Patrick said. “We want to out-rush everybody, and we want to be more physical than everybody and stop the run.

“We have to tighten up as a defense, and we have to play to a certain standard. We have to keep reminding our team that there is a certain standard at the University of Georgia, and that’s where we want to play at. We set the bar high.”

Contact Lindsey Young at lyoung@timesfreep­ress.com or at 423-757-6296; follow on Twitter @youngsport­s22

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Georgia linebacker­s Walter Grant (84) and Natrez Patrick (6) tackle Tennessee running back Tim Jordan (9) during Saturday’s 38-12 Georgia victory at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Ga.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Georgia linebacker­s Walter Grant (84) and Natrez Patrick (6) tackle Tennessee running back Tim Jordan (9) during Saturday’s 38-12 Georgia victory at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Ga.

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