The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY UGA IS HOPING HISTORY REPEATS IN SMART’S 2ND YEAR

Year 2 in a program usually brings success for college football head coaches.

- By Seth Emerson

As former Georgia quarterbac­k David Greene remembers it, Mark Richt’s first season as Georgia’s coach in 2001 was marked by players and coaches still trying to figure each other out, players trying to learn a new system and people being mentally and physically exhausted well before the season was over.

Then came Year 2: a five-win improvemen­t, an SEC championsh­ip, a Sugar Bowl victory and what ended up being the best season of Richt’s tenure at Georgia.

“Year 2, everybody kind of knows what to expect,” Greene said. “They understand what coaches expect. The offense

and defense and special teams, you’ve got a nice foundation and you’re kind of building off it. I think that’s why you see so much growth in Year 2, especially when you’ve got the right pieces in play.”

It’s not at all unique in college football. The second year of a head coaching tenure, which Kirby Smart is about to begin at Georgia, is often wildly successful.

Bob Stoops, Jim Tressel, Urban Meyer

and Gene Chizik all won national championsh­ips in their second year at respective schools. Other coaches have seen big jumps in Year 2 at some stops, including Nick Saban, Pete Carroll and Will Muschamp.

“It definitely happens a lot,” said ESPN analyst David Pollack, another star on that 2002 Georgia team. “It’s confidence. It’s familiarit­y with the coach. It’s knowing expectatio­ns and rules. Because here’s the thing: When a coach comes in and changes, there’s always griping and moaning because it’s not the way it used to be. And just like with you at your work, you like it the way it is. You get accustomed to it.

“So when you make a change, there’s griping and moaning. It takes a little bit of time to realize, OK, this dude’s got my best interest, he’s going to push it, this is what he’s going to expect, these are his parameters.”

In the past two decades, there are four examples of coaches winning it all in their second year at their school.

Meyer won the national championsh­ip his second season at Florida, after going 9-3 the season before. At his previous stop, Utah, Meyer went 12-0 in his second season, after going 10-2 his first season. Now Meyer is at Ohio State, where he finished 12-0 in first season, was 12-2 in his second and a national title in his third.

Stoops went from 7-5 his first season at Oklahoma to 13-0 and a national title the following season in 2000. Stoops has parallels to Smart: Both were defensive coordinato­rs with no head coaching experience before being given the head job at a major program. Both lost five games in their first year.

Tressel won the 2002 national title at Ohio State, a year after a 7-5 debut.

Chizik won the national title in 2010 in his second year at Auburn, after finishing 8-5 the previous year. But that Year 2 success also coincided with Cam Newton on Auburn’s campus.

Plenty of other coaches — some who ultimately soared, others who ultimately were fired — had a big Year 2.

Muschamp’s best year as a head coach came in Year 2: After going 7-6 in his debut season at Florida, the Gators went 11-2 and played in the Sugar Bowl in 2012.

Saban went from 6-7 his first year at Alabama to 12-2 and the Sugar Bowl. His team won the national championsh­ip the next year. When he was at LSU, Saban went from eight wins his first season in 2000 to 10-3, a division title and the Sugar Bowl. (It took longer at Saban’s first major coaching job, Michigan State, where he was 6-6 his second season and stayed there until his fifth year, when the season ended at 9-2.)

Carroll, who took over at USC in 2001 and finished 6-6 that season, saw his team go 11-2 the following year and win the Pac-10 title.

What about Georgia history? Richt wasn’t the only one to make a big second-year leap.

Jim Donnan also saw a huge improvemen­t in Year 2. After the program finished 5-6 in 1996, Donnan’s second team at Georgia went 10-2.

Then again, Vince Dooley went from 7-3-1 in his first season (1964) to 6-4 in his second year. In the third season, Dooley’s Bulldogs finished 10-1 and won the SEC championsh­ip.

Greene, who follows the program closely now, said he sees similariti­es between Richt entering his second year and now Smart doing the same. Both were assistants on national championsh­ip teams under legendary coaches — Richt at Florida State under Bobby Bowden and Smart at Alabama under Saban — so they know what it looks like to be at the top.

“I could see from both of them in their first years at Georgia they are extremely hungry to get better and to get to a championsh­ip level,” Greene said. “You could certainly see it with Coach Richt when he got to Georgia and now you do with Kirby. He eats, sleeps and breathes football. He loves it and he’s a Georgia guy.”

 ?? BUTCH DILL / AP ?? Kirby Smart finished 8-5 in his first season at Georgia. With a stellar 2017, Smart would join Mark Richt and Jim Donnan as former Georgia coaches who made significan­t strides in Year 2.
BUTCH DILL / AP Kirby Smart finished 8-5 in his first season at Georgia. With a stellar 2017, Smart would join Mark Richt and Jim Donnan as former Georgia coaches who made significan­t strides in Year 2.
 ??  ?? SEASON OPENER Appalachia­n State at Georgia, 6:15 p.m. Sept. 2, ESPN, 750, 95.5
SEASON OPENER Appalachia­n State at Georgia, 6:15 p.m. Sept. 2, ESPN, 750, 95.5
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