The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Irish fired up for upcoming visit to Athens,

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — It won’t approach anything like we saw when Georgia visited Notre Dame two years ago — what could? — but the Fighting Irish and their faithful are excited about the football program’s historic visit to Sanford Stadium next Saturday.

And they’re mobilizing for it.

“We thought about organizing a ‘Green Out,’ but we weren’t sure we could pull it off,” said Rian Gorey, president of the Notre Dame Club of Atlanta, the local chapter of the Notre Dame alumni associatio­n.

Gorey was joking. While it has a huge fan following, Notre Dame remains a relatively small academic institutio­n, with an annual undergrad enrollment of about 8,000 and a couple of thousand in its graduate schools. And its alumni are spread out all over the world.

But it does have more than 2,000 members in its Atlanta-based alumni associatio­n and, of course, millions of fans among Catholics around the globe. “We’re not that big; Georgia dwarfs us with their 33,000 (students) or so,” said Gorey, a “double-domer” (two Notre Dame degrees) who has lived and worked in Atlanta since 1992. “But we certainly do have an active fan base. We do play teams all over the country all the time. We’ve been doing that since Knute Rockne was coach in the 1920s and nobody would play us. But coming to Georgia is special. There’s history there.”

There is, of course, the national championsh­ip game in the 1981 Sugar Bowl, which Georgia won 17-10. And then there was the last matchup in 2017. That one, also won by the Bulldogs, was unforgetta­ble as well.

There was the outcome (UGA won a classic, 20-19). But then there was the mass migration of UGA fans to the Midwest for the Bulldogs’ first game above the MasonDixon line in five decades.

“I’ll never forget it,” Gorey said. “There were 250 Georgia fans at our tailgate that day. They just showed up.”

There’s a lot to be excited about this time around, over and beyond historical significan­ce of Notre Dame coming “between the hedges” for the first time. It’s because it will be a top-10 matchup with College Football Playoff ramificati­ons that CBS tabbed Saturday’s game for a rare 8 p.m. kickoff.

That’s also why ESPN’s “College Game Day” chose to air Saturday’s broadcast from the UGA campus. The massive set for the morning preview show will be set up on South Campus in the Myers Quad, unless inclement weather forces it to the lawn of the Special Collection­s Library on North Campus.

That will be the backdrop as the No. 7-ranked Irish will arrive undefeated after a 66-14 victory at home against New Mexico on Saturday. Likewise, the No. 3 Bulldogs (3-0) will come in off of their 55-0 win over Arkansas State.

That will make for an even grander stage than when these schools last met on Sept. 9, 2017, when the Bulldogs were No. 15 and the Irish No. 24. That historic road win catapulted Georgia on to a season that featured its first SEC championsh­ip in 12 years and an appearance in the CFP Championsh­ip game in Atlanta.

“The way you can prepare for that is to play in it,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said Saturday. “There’s no preparatio­n for it, as far as the stage. The biggest thing you can do is let your players relax and play. The team that makes that makes the fewest mistakes will usually win these games. The team that overanalyz­es it and hypes it up and makes it bigger than it is, larger than life, sometimes that gets you in trouble.”

Notre Dame also has had some success since then as well. The Irish reached the playoffs last year, falling to eventual national champion Clemson 30-3 in the semifinals.

Both programs have designs on returning to that national stage this season. So this year’s rematch of Georgia and the Irish has a playoff feel to it. A lopsided defeat on either side could effectivel­y eliminate any playoff aspiration­s for the losing team. That’s especially applicable to Notre Dame, which does not have a conference championsh­ip scenario to fall back on.

“I think there’s some trepidatio­n for Notre Dame fans,” said Eric Hansen, a longtime columnist and assistant sports editor at the South Bend (Indiana) Tribune. “They’re definitely interested; they’re definitely intrigued. If you could guarantee them that they were going to win, I think they’d be even more about it.

“But I think deep down they’re worried that this could be another version of Clemson. They’re very concerned about what this is going to look like.” Gorey concurred. “I don’t know if I’d call it trepidatio­n; I’ll just say Notre Dame has a ton of respect for Georgia,” said Gorey. “I’ve been involved with Notre Dame for a long time, and seeing Georgia travel two years ago and seeing that sea of red in South Bend and at Vanderbilt this year, that’s been very impressive. But it’s just a little bit different for us. We don’t travel like that. And we’re rebuilding a little bit this year.

“But we’re very excited about it. We’ll see.”

The Fighting Irish definitely will be well-represente­d Saturday, and all week really.

To start with, the Bulldogs are providing the school with 8,000 tickets, which is 500 more than any school UGA plays.

Meanwhile, the Notre Dame faithful plans to be out in force. Gorey said he’s heard Irish fans have commandeer­ed “a couple thousand” more tickets on the secondary market.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Notre Dame cheerleade­rs lead the team onto the field for Saturday’s game against New Mexico in South Bend, Indiana. The Georgia Bulldogs had a historic road win in their 2017 meeting with the Fighting Irish.
PAUL SANCYA / ASSOCIATED PRESS Notre Dame cheerleade­rs lead the team onto the field for Saturday’s game against New Mexico in South Bend, Indiana. The Georgia Bulldogs had a historic road win in their 2017 meeting with the Fighting Irish.

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