The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kicker's season nearing record

Blankenshi­p on pace to break school mark for touchbacks for year.

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

Rodrigo Blankenshi­p’s UGA career has seen many ups

and downs, but the highest “up” is on pace to occur this season.

Blankenshi­p is on pace to break Kevin Butler’s school single-season record for touchbacks. With 37 in seven games, Blankenshi­p has a chance to exceed Butler’s 51 in 1981. Blankenshi­p will have five games to get 15 more.

It’s a seismic shift from a season ago and something Blankenshi­p takes pride in.

“For me personally, I like the

idea of them not having a chance at all to return it,” Blankenshi­p said. “When I do happen to get a touchback, it’s a sigh of relief for me. I’m just allowing our defense a guaranteed number of yards to work with when they come out on the field. I’ve been doing a pretty good job of keeping other teams in the end zone so far.”

Blankenshi­p has at least five touchbacks in every game this season except at Notre Dame, when he posted one. He had a season-high eight against Missouri and has an average of six in SEC games. If that trajectory maintains, it would shatter Butler’s best.

“More times than not I know as soon as it comes off my foot whether or not it’s going to be a

touchback,” Blankenshi­p said. “There are times I know it’s going to be clear out of the end zone. Most of the time you’ve got to wait until it hits the apex or starts to come down before you realize whether I hit it really solid.”

As for field-goal kicking, Blankenshi­p has been about as reliable as they come. He’s made 10 of 11 attempts, with the lone miss in South Bend. Blankenshi­p, like much of the team, is in the midst of a career-year.

Blankenshi­p is significan­tly leaner and stronger than when he arrived on campus, he confirmed. Working with Butler, a UGA special-teams coach, and his father, Ken Blankenshi­p, has gone a long way, he said.

Jumping from a 38 percent touchback rate to 74 percent in one season is a rare feat. And that’s part of what earned the walk-on a scholarshi­p.

Ken Blankenshi­p went public in his criticism of

coach Kirby Smart for not rewarding his son with a scholarshi­p. He questioned

why Rodrigo would stay in the program.

That was in January. Then came the game against the Fighting Irish on Sept. 9. Blankenshi­p clinched kickoff duties, fending off David Marvin, and notched the winner against a potential playoff team. Notre Dame hasn’t lost since that 20-19 defeat.

Smart told Georgia players after the game that Blankenshi­p received a scholarshi­p, to the cheers of his teammates.

“It’s a dream come true since the day I committed here the December of my senior year,” he said afterward. “It’s been a dream to play for the University of Georgia on scholarshi­p. Now it’s coming to fruition.”

From walk-on to scholarshi­p to the record books: Blankenshi­p wasn’t aware he was kicking down the door of history, but he wouldn’t mind being etched in glory, even if it’s for something that’s minor to the casual fan.

“It’d be nice to get it,” he said. “But, at the end of the day, I’m trying to get as many touchbacks as I can, to be the best asset I can be for this team. Any records I can get along the way are just icing on the cake.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Rodrigo Blankenshi­p has earned the kicking job — and a scholarshi­p — and is setting a pace for a Georgia school record for touchbacks.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Rodrigo Blankenshi­p has earned the kicking job — and a scholarshi­p — and is setting a pace for a Georgia school record for touchbacks.

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