Orlando Sentinel

Kentucky ‘D’ to face stiff test vs. Georgia

- By Gary B. Graves

LEXINGTON, Ky. — No. 9 Kentucky has been dominating opponents defensivel­y this season.

The Wildcats will face possibly their stiffest challenge Saturday against No. 6 Georgia with the SEC East title on the line.

Kentucky (7-1, 5-1 Southeaste­rn Conference) hosts the Bulldogs (7-1, 5-1) in a nationally televised showdown that will decide the division. The Wildcats have the nation's top scoring defense, giving up 13 points per game and just 12.3 in league play. They haven't allowed more than 20 points all season, though the Wildcats are facing a Bulldogs offense averaging 38.6 points per outing.

“They're just ballers up front,” senior linebacker Josh Allen said of Georgia. “They can run the ball really well, and their quarterbac­k is real efficient. They're real balanced on everything.

“We're going to have a good challenge up front, but I like our odds, I like how we've been practicing and I like the scheme we have to affect them.”

Kentucky's multiple looks from a 3-4 alignment have worked all season and particular­ly after halftime, when it has allowed just 33 points. Those defensive shutdowns have either preserved slim leads or created opportunit­ies for the Wildcats' offense to overcome slow starts and close strong, which they first showed in their 27-16 upset win at Florida in September.

While that victory jumpstarte­d Kentucky's best start in 41 years, last week's impressive defensive effort at Missouri is why it's playing for a possible trip to Atlanta for the SEC championsh­ip.

Trailing 14-3 at halftime and sputtering on both sides of the ball, the defense regrouped to hold the high-octane Tigers without a first down on eight second-half possession­s. Kentucky was finally able to rally in the fourth quarter with Lynn Bowden's 67-yard punt return for a touchdown before quarterbac­k Terry Wilson drove the team 81 yards and threw his game-winning 2-yard TD pass on an untimed down with time expired for the improbable 15-14 victory .

“We held ourselves to a standard that we gave up too much in the first half and I'll take a lot of blame for that,” junior linebacker Kash Daniel said. “We came out in the second half and said we've got to stop this, stop that and play our defense. We did that and the results speak for themselves.”

Though Kentucky expected its veteran defense to lead its quest toward becoming a league contender, several players have gained attention for turning the unit into the SEC's second best at 295.3 yards per game.

Allen (56 tackles) returned for a final season to boost his NFL draft prospects and has become arguably the SEC's most disruptive defender. His 10 sacks — including two last week — and 14.5 stops for loss lead the conference while his handful of pass breakups demonstrat­e his all-over-thefield play.

Georgia coach Kirby Smart said Allen is the “total package” this week, adding, “You've got to know where he is at all times. He's what you want when you design a 3-4 defense. He's your prototype guy, and he has been disruptive to everyone in this conference.”

 ?? BRYAN WOOLSTON/AP ?? Linebacker Josh Allen has helped spearhead the Kentucky defense as the Wildcats head into a showdown against Georgia.
BRYAN WOOLSTON/AP Linebacker Josh Allen has helped spearhead the Kentucky defense as the Wildcats head into a showdown against Georgia.

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