The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Murray State was simply no match for Georgia,

Sellout crowd of 92,746 honors legendary coach as Dogs maul overmatche­d Racers.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — Georgia’s extended tune-up before the Notre Dame game continued Saturday as the No. 3-ranked Bulldogs played host to nowhere-close-to-being-ranked Murray State in what shall always be remembered as Dooley Day at Sanford Stadium.

It certainly won’t be remembered for the lopsided football contest that was waged on this date. The Bulldogs defeated their FCS-division visitors 63-17. But few came to see that. Most of the sellout crowd of 92,746 showed up to see the field named for Vince Dooley, the school’s longtime head coach and athletic director.

Georgia’s $550,000 date with the Racers — that was the guarantee to play the game — came a week after the Bulldogs’ season opener at Vanderbilt and a week before Saturday’s game against Arkansas State. Fans will have to wait until the No. 8-ranked Fighting Irish come to town Sept. 21 to see the Bulldogs truly tested.

Though Georgia did find itself briefly in a contest. Murray State did in the first nine minutes something Vanderbilt couldn’t do the whole game last week in Nashville — score a touchdown.

After the Racers notched their third first down of the first quarter, quarterbac­k Preston Rice faded back and hit wide receiver DaQuan Green perfectly in stride on a deep post route. Nickel back Mark Webb not only was beaten on the play, but he failed to make the tackle as well. After he fell to the ground, Green rambled the rest of the way untouched for a 60-yard touchdown.

Coupled with Jake Fromm getting sacked and the Bulldogs having to punt on the previous possession, it was a bad look for Georgia to find the score tied at 7-7 with 6:36 remaining in the first quarter. But things would turn around quickly for the Bulldogs in the second quarter. Thirty-six seconds into it, Brian Herrien plunged into the end zone from 2 yards out to cap a 78-yard drive that began in the first quarter. Thirty-three seconds after that, J.R. Reed scooped up a fumble by Murray State’s Jared McCray and returned it 14 yards for a score.

Most notably, it was Webb who made the hit that caused the fumble.

And with that, normalcy was restored. It wasn’t another five minutes before the Bulldogs scored again. This one was D’Andre Swift’s second of the day, a 10-yarder to make the score 28-7. That would end up being the second of five touchdowns that Georgia would score in a 13-minute span.

The 35-point second quarter was the most in a quarter since the Bulldogs scored 42 points against New Mexico State in 2011.

By halftime, Fromm and Swift were done for the day and Georgia led 42-7. Fromm was 10-of11 passing for 166 yards and a touchdown, and Swift averaged 11.2 yards on the way to rushing for 67.

There were some memorable moments within all that, most of them recorded by freshmen.

George Pickens, the ballyhooed 5-star receiver out of Hoover, Ala., showed what the fuss was all about with three highlight catches, each of them grander than the last. His first was an offbody snatch for a 10-yard gain early in the second quarter. His second was a diving leap on a deep ball down the Georgia sideline for a 43-yard gain.

Two plays later, Pickens scored his first collegiate touchdown by hauling in Fromm’s fade pass for a 15-yard TD in the southwest corner of the end zone. Pickens’ catch made the score 35-7.

On Georgia’s next possession, the Bulldogs were able to get Zamir White in on the act. The redshirt freshman affectiona­tely known as “Zeus” scored his first touchdown. It came on a 6-yard, tackle-breaking run. He finished as Georgia’s leading rusher with 72 yards on eight carries.

And Dominick Blaylock, another 5-star signee, caught three passes, including his first TD, a 25-yarder from Stetson Bennett.

There was a lot of goingthrou­gh-motions after that. Coach Kirby Smart will surely bemoan the big plays Georgia gave up to a Murray State offense that specialize­s in them.

But there remains another full week of tune-up to work out the kinks. Then, Notre Dame.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Georgia linebacker Nolan Smith levels Murray State quarterbac­k Preston Rice for a sack during the first half of the first game played on the newly named Dooley Field at Sanford Stadium in Athens.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Georgia linebacker Nolan Smith levels Murray State quarterbac­k Preston Rice for a sack during the first half of the first game played on the newly named Dooley Field at Sanford Stadium in Athens.

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