Daily Times (Primos, PA)

No. 2 Georgia prepares to face a gauntlet of Top 25 teams

- By Paul Newberry

ATLANTA >> The first half of the season was a breeze for No. 2 Georgia.

No daunting opponents. No game closer than two touchdowns.

Now the real season begins.

The Bulldogs must run a gauntlet of four straight games against Southeaste­rn Conference opponents currently ranked in the Top

25, beginning with Saturday’s trip to No. 13 LSU.

“Anytime you go on the road in the SEC, it’s an adventure,” coach Kirby Smart said. “We’re going to play some good teams coming up, absolutely. It’s tough everywhere in the SEC. Go talk to Tennessee and ask them the road they’re dealing with. Go talk to LSU — they just played Florida . I mean, there’s no time to cry about it. Nobody wants to hear that. You gotta get ready to go play.”

Coming off a trip to the national championsh­ip game, Georgia (6-0, 4-0 SEC) has yet to be seriously challenged .

But beating teams like Austin Peay and Vanderbilt by an average of nearly

30 points a game makes this a rather mysterious team. Even this deep into the season, no one is quite sure how the Bulldogs will react when inevitably faced with an opponent that can match up with them physically and hang around well into the second half.

“We just know that from this point going forward we need to be on our A game, because this is our meat of our schedule,” receiver Terry Godwin said. “We haven’t played our best yet.”

Making this stretch even more challengin­g: only one game is between the hedges.

After traveling to LSU

(5-1, 2-1), Georgia has an off week before heading to Jacksonvil­le for their Cocktail Party game against No.

14 Florida (5-1, 3-1). That’s followed by another true road game at No. 18 Kentucky (5-1, 3-1), before the Bulldogs finally return to Sanford Stadium to host No. 21 Auburn (4-2, 1-2).

If the Bulldogs get through all that unscathed, they’ll almost surely head to the SEC championsh­ip game with a perfect 12-0 record. The final two games are both at home against lowly Massachuse­tts and state rival Georgia Tech.

“Every week, the team gets better, they get more experience,” tight end Isaac Nauta said. “Obviously, we’ve got a tough stretch up ahead with a lot of good opponents, but our preparatio­n’s not going to change. If anything, we’re going to push harder because we know the competitio­n’s going to get better. It’s exciting knowing you’re going to go into some of these big games and that’s what you want to be a part of being a football player.”

Missouri was the only team to remotely challenge Georgia, hanging within striking distance going to the fourth quarter before losing 43-29. In every other game, the final margin was at least 24 points.

That’s made it even more important for the Bulldogs to challenge themselves during the week.

“We’ve been tested,” Nauta said. “We believe that some of the best competitio­n we’re going to play is in practice.”

This will be Georgia’s first trip to Baton Rouge since 2008. While no one on the roster has played in Death Valley, they all have a sense of what they’ll be up against in Tiger Stadium’s notoriousl­y raucous atmosphere.

“From everything I’ve heard, it’s supposed to be an electric place to play in and they’ve really got the home-field advantage,” Nauta said. “I’m ready to see what it’s like.”

Smart already knows. He played there in 1998 during his senior season at Georgia, spent the 2004 season as an LSU assistant, and returned four more times while serving as Alabama’s defensive coordinato­r.

 ?? JOSHUA L. JONES — ATHENS BANNER-HERALD VIA AP ?? Georgia quarterbac­k Jake Fromm heads off the field after the team’s win over Vanderbilt Saturday in Athens, Ga.
JOSHUA L. JONES — ATHENS BANNER-HERALD VIA AP Georgia quarterbac­k Jake Fromm heads off the field after the team’s win over Vanderbilt Saturday in Athens, Ga.

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