The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Defense: Tigers ‘haven’t seen us yet’

However, Smart says he hasn’t seen anything like the LSU offense his Bulldogs will face Saturday.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — In nine years as a defensive coordinato­r and four as Georgia’s head coach, Kirby Smart has schemed for some of the most prolific offenses in college football history.

And although he has prepared for a total of nine SEC championsh­ip and national title games, he admitted during his weekly press conference Monday that he hasn’t seen anything like the LSU offense his Bulldogs will face Saturday in the SEC Championsh­ip game.

“As explosive a team as I have probably ever watched on tape,” said Smart, who was Alabama’s defensive coordinato­r for nine years. “I don’t even know what the numbers say. Obviously, the numbers say they’re really good. But I don’t go by that. I go by what I see on tape.”

And what has he seen on tape? “That there really aren’t weaknesses,” Smart said. “I mean, (they have) arguably one of the best backs in the country, just a vicious, attack-you, spin-you, hityou back. In the biggest games, Clyde Edwards-Helaire has been one of the biggest players. (Quarterbac­k) Joe Burrow speaks for himself. I could go on and on (about) wideouts, tight ends, they’ve got five, really, returning starters on their offensive line.”

Add it all up and it comes out to an LSU offense that is averaging 48.7 points and 560.4 yards per game. Georgia has not faced a team like it this season. But there’s also this: LSU has not faced a defense like the one the Bulldogs will bring to Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

No. 4 Georgia leads the SEC and is ranked second nationally in scoring defense at 10.4 points per game. The Bulldogs are one of just two teams in the country to have not allowed more than 20 points in a game this season (Clemson is the other).

Georgia is the only team in at least the last 20 years to not allow a rushing TD through the first nine games. Only Georgia’s 1968 SEC championsh­ip team has given up fewer points (9.8) in a season, and no other team has come close in the era of 12-game seasons.

As Georgia outside linebacker Azeez Ojulari pointed out, “We haven’t played our best game as a defensive unit yet . ... (LSU has) good players, great players ... But they haven’t seen us yet.”

LSU coach Ed Orgeron doesn’t disagree. The LSU coach speaks of the Georgia defense with the same level of admiration Smart does of the Tigers’ offense.

“The best defense we faced all year,” Orgeron said. “They’ll pressure, they’ll play man, they’ll play zone. It’s overall comprehens­ive, with the pass rush that they have and their abilities to cover one-on-one. I think that’s what makes it outstandin­g.”

The closest game the Tigers played all season was a 23-20 win in Baton Rouge over Auburn. That’s the only defense Orgeron could compare to Georgia. “They’re very similar,” he said. “A little bit different in a couple of spots, but very similar.”

LSU’s offensive accomplish­ments this season boil down, mostly, to what the quarterbac­k is doing with the forward pass. Burrow has 4,366 yards and 44 touchdowns with just six intercepti­ons and a 78.3% completion percentage. But that’s not all the Tigers do. Edwards-Helaire is fourth in the SEC at 102.8 yards rushing a game and has scored an SEC-best 16 rushing TDs. The Tigers have two 1,000-yard receivers in Ja’Marr Chase (1,457) and Justin Jefferson (1,092). They’re all working behind a veteran offensive line of juniors and seniors.

While Smart has a pair of defensive coordinato­rs in Dan Lanning and Glenn Schumann working for him, he still is heavy-handed when it comes to strategy and implementa­tion. He was asked Monday if any part of him relished the challenge of finding a way to slow down LSU.

“I probably did until yesterday afternoon,” Smart quipped. “Then I started watching the tape. There are no weaknesses.”

The bottom line for Georgia: It must be able to cover LSU’s receivers one-on-one. The Tigers regularly line up with four wide receivers and often go with an empty backfield and five receivers or four wideouts and a back split-out.

The Bulldogs actually might be better suited to defend that than any team LSU has faced this season. SEC Nation analyst Greg

McElroy recently pointed out in a video breakdown how Georgia has one of the best man-coverage secondarie­s in college football. That has only improved with the recent return of Tyson Campbell from a foot injury.

With Campbell and follow cornerback­s Eric Stokes and D.J. Daniel, Georgia deploys three of the SEC’s fastest players and also brings in coverage-specialist­s Tyrique Stevenson and Divaad Wilson in nickel and dime situations. Meanwhile, the Bulldogs have veteran safeties J.R. Reed and Richard LeCounte in the back end and both are capable of picking up one-on-one coverage. More importantl­y, they make sure everybody gets lined up correctly and nobody gets behind them.

Smart wasn’t ready to brag on his secondary until he sees what it can do Saturday. But the Bulldogs

are confident. “I think you find out around the game time,” he said of their ability to cover the Tigers one-on-one.

Another advent in the second half of the season for Georgia has been the developmen­t of freshman linebacker­s Nakobe Dean and Nolan Smith. Increasing­ly they’re on the field at inside and outside linebacker, respective­ly, on passing downs. But it’s Georgia’s defensive-line play that has impressed Orgeron the most.

“I’ve watched a lot of their tape because I study the offensive lines that we’re going to go against and I think that they’re very well coached,” said Orgeron, a defensive line coach by trade. “I think Tyler Clark is probably one of the best defensive lineman we’ve played all year. This is the best defense we’ve played all year and it starts with their defensive line.”

 ?? SEAN GARDNER / GETTY IMAGES ?? “(They have) arguably one of the best backs in the country, just a vicious, attack-you, spin-you, hit-you back. In the biggest games, Clyde Edwards-Helaire has been one of the biggest players,” UGA coach Kirby Smart said. He has scored an SEC-best 16 rushing touchdowns.
SEAN GARDNER / GETTY IMAGES “(They have) arguably one of the best backs in the country, just a vicious, attack-you, spin-you, hit-you back. In the biggest games, Clyde Edwards-Helaire has been one of the biggest players,” UGA coach Kirby Smart said. He has scored an SEC-best 16 rushing touchdowns.

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