Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

For Smart, legacy on line in title game

- By Charles Odum

Kirby Smart did his best to get ahead of the questions about Nick Saban while acknowledg­ing the topic was inevitable.

It seems the Georgia coach can’t avoid Saban, when championsh­ips — and Smart’s big-game legacy — are on the line.

Smart is 0-4 against Saban, his former boss at Alabama. That includes Georgia’s

41-24 loss to Saban’s Crimson Tide in the SEC championsh­ip game Dec. 4 in

Atlanta.

Smart fielded questions about Saban prior to that game before earning a rematch when the Bulldogs beat Michigan 34-11 on

Friday night in the College

Football Playoff semifinal.

The Georgia coach insisted Monday that the Georgia-Alabama rematch for the national title isn’t about Smart versus Saban.

“Each game has been different,” Smart said. “And it will never be about he and I. I know he won’t make it that and I won’t make it that, because that’s for you guys to do that.”

Smart’s Georgia legacy is on the line. That’s about more than how he compares with Saban, already assured of being remembered as one of the greatest coaches in college football history.

As Smart wraps up his sixth season at his alma mater, the national championsh­ip game will help determine his place in Georgia history. That includes how he will be judged in comparison with his predecesso­r, Mark Richt, as well as Vince Dooley, who won Georgia’s last national championsh­ip in 1980.

Smart was hired to give Georgia the push it lacked to win the biggest games. He was hired to bring championsh­ips to the Bulldogs.

So far, Smart trails Richt. Thanks to the humbling loss to the Crimson Tide last month, Smart remains stuck on one SEC title, in 2017. Richt won two SEC championsh­ips in his first five seasons in Athens.

Smart’s big-game history also includes an overtime loss to the Crimson Tide in the 2017 national championsh­ip game.

By bringing the Bulldogs to another national title game, Smart has made Georgia a regular part of the championsh­ip picture. He has brought Georgia to the biggest games.

Saban has blocked Smart’s path to big-game success. Smart can change that script by winning the biggest game of all in his second national title appearance against Alabama.

Saban has won seven national championsh­ips, including six in the last 12 years at Alabama. He’s looking for backto-back titles with the Crimson Tide.

Smart was the defensive coordinato­r on Saban’s Alabama staff before he was hired to lead Georgia’s program.

Smart’s Bulldogs were 12-0 following their first undefeated regular season since 1982 and on track for their first national championsh­ip in 41 years before the SEC title game loss to Alabama.

Sure, Smart doesn’t deny that Saban and Alabama are a hurdle the Bulldogs haven’t yet cleared. Smart says he’s not alone.

Smart said the Crimson Tide “have also been a problem and a thorn for any team they’ve played besides ours. We have that in common with a lot of teams.”

Smart knew better than to celebrate Friday’s runaway rout of Michigan in the Orange Bowl. He called a timeout and put a firm roadblock on plans by running backs Zamir White and James Cook to empty a watercoole­r on his head at the end of the game.

Playoff semifinal wins don’t merit watercoole­r baths. Only minutes after the game, Smart already was looking ahead to Alabama.

“I was wanting to get a real shower, not a Gatorade bath, because I want to get focused on Alabama,” Smart said after Friday’s win, before adding, “To be honest with you guys, I’m not interested in celebratin­g that.”

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? Georgia coach Kirby Smart, above, is 0-4 against Nick Saban and Alabama.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP Georgia coach Kirby Smart, above, is 0-4 against Nick Saban and Alabama.

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