Houston Chronicle Sunday

Bulldogs earn revenge, likely playoff spot with dominant win

- By Paul Newberry

ATLANTA — What a difference three weeks can make.

Bouncing back from a blowout loss to Auburn, No. 6 Georgia turned the rematch into a rout of its own. Roquan Smith came up with two crucial turnovers, freshman Jake Fromm threw a pair of touchdown passes and the Bulldogs cruised to a 28-7 victory over the No. 2 Tigers in the Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip game.

Georgia (12-1) is almost certainly headed to the College Football Playoff in just its second year under coach Kirby Smart, who learned a thing or two about what it took to get there in his previous job as Nick Saban’s defensive coordinato­r at Alabama.

“We were ready,” Fromm said. “We wanted to show that we could play better than we did.”

Boy, did they ever. Championsh­ip dreams

As the final seconds ticked down on a thoroughly dominating performanc­e, Smart took the customary drenching with a gleeful smile and bounced up and down on the sideline with his players, having guided the Bulldogs to their first SEC championsh­ip since 2005.

Of course, they’ve got their sights on a bigger prize.

Georgia hasn’t won a national title since 1980, a drought that has only grown more and more irritating to the red-andblack faithful as schools all around them — Alabama, Auburn, Florida, LSU, Tennessee, Clemson, Florida State — finished No. 1 in the years since.

Auburn (10-3) was the hottest team in the country, rolling into Atlanta after wins over Georgia and then-No. 1 Alabama in its last three games. But the Tigers were stymied by their own mistakes, including a blocked field goal, and they had no answer for a Georgia team eager to make up for its embarrassi­ng 40-17 defeat .

“They flipped the script on us from the last game,” Auburn coach Gus Malzahn said.

Nick Chubb, Sony Michel and freshman D’Andre Swift provided a much more effective running game , which opened up things for the young quarterbac­k. Fromm completed 16 of 22 passes for 183 yards, including a 2-yard touchdown to Isaac Nauta in the second quarter and a 6-yard score to Terry Godwin with just over 13 minutes remaining to seal Georgia’s victory.

The Bulldogs struggled to an 8-5 mark in Smart’s first season, but the former Georgia defensive back insisted he was establishi­ng a culture that would return his alma mater to national prominence. It happened in Year 2. Georgia (12-1) will surely move into the top four after its dominating performanc­e against the Tigers. Auburn managed only 259 yards after piling up 488 in its Nov. 11 rout of the Bulldogs.

Swift, another impressive Georgia freshman, finished off the Georgia’s rout by breaking loose for a 64-yard touchdown run with 10:34 remaining . The Georgia line opened up a huge hole through the left side, receiver Javon Wims made a key block on the perimeter and Swift dashed to the end zone without being touched, sending the Georgia fans into a raucous celebratio­n that figured to go on well into the night.

Swift rushed for 88 yards, Chubb had 77 and Michel added 45 before he left the game in the third quarter with what is believed to be a minor knee injury. In the first game, Chubb was held to 27 and Michel 21 — their lowest outputs of the season. A crippling mistake

Auburn started out the game like it was headed for another big win.

Jarrett Stidham capped the opening possession with s 6-yard scoring pass to Nate Craig-Myers, and Auburn pushed into position to extend its lead early in the second quarter.

That’s when the game suddenly turned.

Stidham dropped back to throw, couldn’t find anyone open and didn’t sense Davin Bellamy coming up behind him. The Georgia linebacker stripped the ball away and Smith fell on it for the Bulldogs at the 16.

Smith picked up another prize after the game: the MVP award.

 ?? C.B. Schmelter / Chattanoog­a Times Free Press ?? Georgia coach Kirby Smart, left, returned the Bulldogs to the top of the SEC, their first conference title since 2005, in only his second year as head coach.
C.B. Schmelter / Chattanoog­a Times Free Press Georgia coach Kirby Smart, left, returned the Bulldogs to the top of the SEC, their first conference title since 2005, in only his second year as head coach.

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