The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

White showing glimpses of what can be expected

Running back already turning heads after injury.

- By Seth Emerson DawgNation

ATHENS — Za m ir White doesn’t do much at Georgia practices right now. When the tailbacks are doing basic drills he does basic runs. When contact drills arrive, White takes a football and goes to the side by himself. A trainer might join him.

But the mere sight of White can be enough to tantalize. There are few people at his position who look as big and athletic when they put on football pads.

“Yeah, he looks pretty good,” Georgia tight end Isaac Nauta said, adding with a grin: “He looks pretty good.”

It will be a while before White does anything more than just look good. He tore his right ACL late last season and has spent this spring rehabbing at Georgia after enrolling early.

But White is already ahead of schedule, and it’s becoming time to assume he will be a factor at some point this season. And considerin­g he was a 5-star prospect when the Laurinburg, N.C., product signed with Georgia, he will be a considerab­le factor if he’s healthy.

“I’ve watched tape,” Georgia senior defensive end Jonathan Ledbetter said. “All of the guys that have come to Georgia, who have committed, I like to know who’s going to be my teammate so I watch. … He’s one of those players who’s just electric. A great athlete. So I’m really excited what he will bring to the table.”

Mecole Hardman, the junior wide receiver, also has noticed White, even if it’s just when the freshman is participat­ing in non-contact drills. White’s physical presence and running style reminds Hardman of Nick Chubb.

The physical resemblanc­e is close: White is listed at 6-foot and 210 pounds, Chubb at 5-11 and 228. And Chubb brought more than size to the position, obviously, blending it with speed and elusivenes­s. White, by all reports out of high school, does as well.

“Seeing him out there running and cutting a little bit he’s doing well. But I’m ready to see him full speed and healthy, seeing what he did in high school,” Hardman said. “A big power, physical back. He’s got a little wiggle to him, speed.”

The departures of Chubb and Sony Michel leave a void, although the return of D’Andre Swift means there is a clear top back. Juniors Elijah Holyfield and Brian Herrien are competing to be the next back, and 4-star recruit James Cook arrives this summer.

So the pressure on White to return should be minimal. But he might be too good not to play. This is, after all, someone who averaged 14.1 yards per carry as a high school senior. In the game in which he got hurt, in the state playoffs, he still had 145 yards and 3 touchdowns on just 8 carries.

“He’s shifty,” Ledbetter said. “You can just see going through drills it just looks like he’s in a zone with what he’s supposed to be doing.”

 ?? STEVE COLQUITT/UGA ?? Freshman running back Zamir White chats with position coach Dell McGee at practice.
STEVE COLQUITT/UGA Freshman running back Zamir White chats with position coach Dell McGee at practice.

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