The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Smart wants Dogs to keep focus

As pundits fast-forward to SEC title game, coach stresses ‘the next step.’

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — The Georgia Bulldogs this week heard the story of Joe Simpson.

Not the Atlanta Braves broadcaste­r and former Major League Baseball player. Joe Simpson was a British mountain climber who, in the 1980s, broke a leg on his descent after climbing Siula Grande, a mountain in the Peruvian Andes.

Miraculous­ly, Simpson managed to descend the 20,000-foot mountain on one good leg and saved his own life in icy, treacherou­s conditions. His exploits became the subject of his book,

“Touching the Void,” and several documentar­ies.

What was coach Kirby Smart’s point in sharing that story with his team?

“The next step is the most important step,” Smart said after the No. 4 Bulldogs’ 19-13 win Saturday over Texas A&M. “All (Simpson) talked about was the next step, until he got down. So, for us, the next step is the most important step, and that was tonight. And now we’ll move on to the next.”

The next step is Georgia Tech, this Saturday in Atlanta. Most college football observers are looking right past that to the Dec. 7 matchup against No. 1-ranked LSU in the Dec. 7 SEC Championsh­ip Game.

The Tigers (11-0, 7-0 SEC) beat Arkansas 56-20 this past weekend and will play this same Texas A&M team (7-4, 4-3 SEC) next Saturday night in Baton Rouge. Perhaps then we’ll have a better gauge as to whether Georgia can compete with LSU.

Here are a few takeaways from the win over the Aggies:

1. Defense gets it done

Statistica­lly, there’s no denying Georgia’s defense is one of the best in the nation. It held the Aggies to 274 total yards and 13 points — and minus-1 yard rushing, which should keep Georgia among the top three teams in the country in those respective categories. But whenever those numbers are shared, they usually come with some caveat regarding the quality of competitio­n. Smart has noticed. “Yeah, I keep hearing how we don’t play any quarterbac­ks,” he said sarcastica­lly. “We don’t play anybody that’s any good. They’re just trying to do their job and the staff deserves the credit. The players probably deserve the most credit. The buy-in.”

The Bulldogs haven’t wreaked the havoc Smart sought this season, but once again they won the turnover battle, with safety Richard LeCounte causing and recovering the game’s only fumble early in the third quarter. Georgia recorded two sacks and eight tackles for loss of 33 yards.

More importantl­y, the Bulldogs stopped A&M twice on thirdand-short and again on fourthand-short.

2. Offense struggling

For the third consecutiv­e game, Georgia quarterbac­k Jake Fromm completed less than 50% of his passes, and the Bulldogs struggled again on third down. Fromm is 37-of-80 passing (.462) through the last three games, for 446. He does have six touchdowns and zero intercepti­ons over that period, however. And, of course, Georgia is 3-0 in that span, not to mention 34-6 with Fromm as quarterbac­k these last three years.

“Well, he made some back-shoulder throws that were pretty special,” Smart said of the junior QB. “He hit Kearis ( Jackson), he hit Tyler (Simmons), he hit George (Pickens). He did some really good things. So concern is not there. I want to get better. The kids want to get better.”

Fromm does, too. With most of the game played in a downpour, he tried wearing a glove on his throwing hand at times. It was not on when he hit Pickens with a 16-yard touchdown throw. He was victimized by a couple of drops, but missed Brian Herrien on a wide-open wheel route and Pickens on a flea-flicker play that should have been an easy score.

“Yeah, it was tough,” Fromm said. “Tried a new thing with a glove on my throwing hand. You know, it just wasn’t quite clicking for me.”

3. Special teams win

After losing the special teams battle in several games this season, the Bulldogs have rebounded in the last few games and have gotten the edge in football’s third phase. That was especially true Saturday night versus Texas A&M.

Senior placekicke­r Rodrigo Blankenshi­p got a lot of notice for his four field goals and 13 total points, which were not only critical in the final margin, but also establishe­d the school scoring record of 418 career points.

Lost in all that was a second straight week of great punting by Jake Camarda. The sophomore from Norcross averaged 44.7 yards on six punts, including three that were downed inside the 20, with no touchbacks. That followed his 11-punt performanc­e against Auburn, which earned SEC special teams player of the week honors.

Georgia also got an 18-yard punt return from Dominick Blaylock and should have had an onside kick recovered. The Aggies did manage one 20-yard punt return.

4. Injuries persist

The Bulldogs can only hope their health improves before Saturday’s game against Georgia Tech. Once again, star receiver Lawrence Cager was not a factor. A chronic shoulder injury sidelined him with one catch for 6 yards against Auburn. Cager did not try to go against Texas A&M, though he dressed out.

“We thought he’d be able to go; he practiced during the week,” Smart said. “He obviously was not 100% during the week and we wanted to see him go in warmups and cut it loose, and he didn’t feel that he could.”

Offensive guard Cade Mays (ankle) played only a couple of special-teams plays, and the Bulldogs lost starting cornerback Eric Stokes in the game to an unknown injury.

5. Tech up next

The tendency is to think Georgia might rest a lot of players against Georgia Tech this Saturday in order to get healthy for the SEC Championsh­ip Game. Don’t bother broaching that strategy with Smart, but there is something to be said for not having to prepare for a triple-option team and all those cut blocks.

“I’d say yeah, but watching them the other night, they had some elements working for them,” Smart said of the Yellow Jackets. “They’ve got an athletic quarterbac­k. They can run some of the same things from different looks. So, it’ll be a different preparatio­n for us, but I know our guys are looking forward to it.”

The Yellow Jackets are in their first year with coach Geoff Collins. They’re 3-8 overall and 2-6 in the ACC, but they are coming off their best game of the season. Tech defeated N.C. State 28-26 Thursday night and, thus, will have a couple of extra days of preparatio­n.

Georgia has won three of its last four games against Tech and hasn’t lost at Bobby Dodd Stadium since 1999. The Bulldogs lead the 126-year-old series 67-39-5.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Divaad Wilson (left), J.R. Reed and the Georgia defense had a solid day Saturday against Texas A&M, holding the Aggies to 274 total yards, with minus-1 yards rushing.
CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Divaad Wilson (left), J.R. Reed and the Georgia defense had a solid day Saturday against Texas A&M, holding the Aggies to 274 total yards, with minus-1 yards rushing.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? While UGA receiver George Pickens had 57 yards and a TD catch, QB Jake Fromm admitted trying a glove on his throwing hand during the rainy Saturday game didn’t help him.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM While UGA receiver George Pickens had 57 yards and a TD catch, QB Jake Fromm admitted trying a glove on his throwing hand during the rainy Saturday game didn’t help him.

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