The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

What's down with fromm and offense

Bulldogs keep winning, but questions begin to buzz about quarterbac­k.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — Transfer wide receiver Lawrence Cager talked about catching extra passes from Jake Fromm after showing up in Athens this summer.

Georgia’s other wideouts talked about working with Fromm after practices during preseason camp to perfect their timing. Fromm throws hundreds of passes during the Bulldogs’ workouts every day on Woodruff Practice Fields.

He throws a few on Saturdays, too, when Georgia plays actual games.

The subject of how often Fromm passes the ball is of particular pertinence this week, because everybody is talking about how poorly Fromm has been throwing it of late. He completed just 11 of 23 attempts for 163 yards — 47.8% — against Texas A&M on Saturday. That represente­d the third consecutiv­e game that Georgia’s junior cornerback completed less than 50% of his passes. He was 13-of29 (44.8%) against Missouri and 13-of-28 (46.4%) against Auburn.

Hence, the question that coach Kirby Smart fielded Monday during his weekly news conference: Any chance Fromm might be suffering from a little arm fatigue,

if not some sort of injury?

“His arm’s fine,” Smart snapped.

If that’s the case, it leads only to more questions about Fromm and Georgia’s offense. A year after averaging nearly 40 points a game, the No. 4-ranked Bulldogs (10-1, 7-1 SEC) are averaging 31.2 heading into Saturday’s game against Georgia Tech (3-8, 2-6 ACC). That number drops to 25.6 points in SEC games and 22.7 in the month of November.

The Bulldogs have continued to win their games during this apparent offensive regression. There has also been a notable uptick in the level of defensive competitio­n and, for two games at least, the tangible factor of inclement weather.

But Fromm has incurred the brunt of the criticism. That was emphatical­ly the case Saturday as Fromm — switching from wearing a glove on his throwing hand and not — missed open receivers throughout. Nowhere was it more glaring than when he overthrew a wide-open George Pickens for a sure touchdown on a flea-flicker. He also missed a wide-open Brian Herrien for a red-zone first down on a wheel route in the first half.

“You’ve got to hit the open guy,” Smart said. “Jake would be the first to tell you that. We missed a couple, made a couple. There are no easy throws . ... But we’ve got to do a better job helping him out and he’s got to do a better job hitting the ones when they’re open.”

It hasn’t hurt Georgia lately. But with LSU and its 48.5-point scoring average awaiting in the SEC Championsh­ip game in two weeks, the national narrative is that Georgia couldn’t possibly keep pace with such an explosive offensive team.

Fortunatel­y for the Bulldogs, they feature the SEC’s best defense, which leads the nation in fewest points allowed at 10.6 points per game. But even if Georgia holds LSU significan­tly below its scoring average, the Bulldogs know they have to get much more out of their offense.

“Obviously we want to play better and score more points,” Fromm said after the win over Texas A&M. “But that’s football. We don’t always have to win pretty or put up this stat or that stat or this many points. For us, it’s about playing tough, playing physical and winning the football game.”

Fromm always has incurred criticism for not having the strongest of arms. What has never been questioned during his three seasons as the Bulldogs’ starting quarterbac­k is his accuracy. This is, after all, the same quarterbac­k who finished last season No. 5 in the nation and No. 2 in school history with a pass efficiency rating of 171.2.

Earlier this season, Fromm seemed a shoo-in to complete his career as Georgia’s all-time leader in passing accuracy. Aaron Murray holds the school record for career completion percentage at 62.3. Fromm entered the season at 64.8, then completed exactly 70% of his passes through the first eight games. He has completed 46.3% in the three games since.

That still gives Fromm a career completion percentage of 64.3, but still has people asking: What’s wrong with Fromm? And has teammates coming to his defense.

“Jake’s fine,” senior tight end Charlie Woerner said.

“He’s a great quarterbac­k. I mean, yeah, it was a little hard to throw the ball on Saturday because everything was so wet and everything. But Jake’s fine.”

Said running back D’Andre Swift: “Jake’s a great quarterbac­k and I love him. We can’t forget that we won the game. To get where we want to go, we’ve got to get better on offense, and we will. But Jake’s fine.”

The Bulldogs should have an opportunit­y to work out the kinks Saturday. Georgia Tech’s defense ranks 82nd in the nation in yards allowed (415.9 pg) and 119th against the run (214.9).

Asked what Georgia needed to do to become more explosive on offense, Fromm laughed. “Good question. If you know the answer, please let me know,” he said. “That’s just part of it. We want to hit more shots and generate more big plays and be more explosive.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? For the third straight game, quarterbac­k Jake Fromm, who completed 70% of his passes through the first eight games, on Saturday completed less than half his attempts.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM For the third straight game, quarterbac­k Jake Fromm, who completed 70% of his passes through the first eight games, on Saturday completed less than half his attempts.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Jake Fromm and running back D’Andre Swift have helped lead the Bulldogs to a 10-1 start, but there’s a tough road ahead to the playoffs.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Jake Fromm and running back D’Andre Swift have helped lead the Bulldogs to a 10-1 start, but there’s a tough road ahead to the playoffs.

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