The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

O-line has potential but is light on experience

Position group is stocked with many 5-star recruits.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — To look at a list of Georgia’s offensive linemen available for the coming season, one might be left to wonder, what’s the big deal?

Including Netori Johnson — who could play either offensive or defensive line in 2020 — Georgia has 16 scholarshi­p players available on the offensive line. Many of them carried 5-star ratings when they signed, or a skosh below that. All of them are exceptiona­lly large and possess SEC-level physical qualificat­ions.

But a half-dozen of that number won’t yet be on campus when the Bulldogs gather to start spring drills next week. Another onethird of the remainder has never taken a snap in a college game. Only one can lay an undisputed claim to the label of returning starter.

These are some of the reasons coach Kirby Smart expressed concern about Georgia’s offensive line in February. The Bulldogs have fielded inexperien­ced offensive lines in years past, but they will be hard-pressed to find a greener group than this one.

“These guys are going to have to develop, lift, work,” Smart said. “What’s going to be unique for us is a lot of these guys are going to be living across the two-deep just because our numbers are really down. These guys are going to have an opportunit­y to come in and compete and start. They also will be going against guys that are going to need to get better and grow.”

The mass exodus on Georgia’s offensive line includes the losses of left tackle Andrew Thomas, right tackle Isaiah Wilson and left guard Solomon Kindley to the NFL draft, each with a season of college eligibilit­y remaining. It includes the bizarre transfer of part-time starter Cade Mays — easily the team’s most versatile offensive lineman — to Tennessee.

With them went 115 starts and 133 games played.

This was not totally unexpected. Thomas and Wilson project as first-round picks. The Bulldogs have been recruiting the past couple of years with an eye on 2020 being a year of transition on the offensive front.

The coaching staff has done an exceptiona­l job in that regard, by all accounts. The only blemish on that work is that none of the six offensive linemen Georgia signed in its No. 1-ranked 2020 recruiting class was able to enroll early. That means the group will be inordinate­ly thin as the Bulldogs are scheduled to embark on 14 practice dates plus the G-Day game over the next month or so.

Fortunatel­y for Georgia, it was able to land former Ole Miss coach Matt Luke to succeed line coach Sam Pittman just a week after Pittman accepted the head coaching job at Arkansas in December. Luke was able not only to step in during the recruiting and evaluation process, but also to coach the current players through bowl practices and the Sugar Bowl and develop an informed opinion about the group he inherited.

“We anticipate­d this being a large offensive line class,” Smart said. “I’ve been very pleased with the transition from coach Pittman to coach Luke, and (Luke) being able to recruit these kids and bring them to our place. … Getting (Luke) on staff fast was probably one of the critical roles of that transition. It wasn’t a long process where (recruits) had to sit in the unknown.”

Depth and versatilit­y will have to be developed, but Luke has a lot of options when it comes to a top five. Junior center Trey Hill is the only full-fledged returning starter, starting every game last season. But he played in every game and started four at guard as a freshman in 2018.

Likewise, junior Jamaree Salyer started in Wilson’s spot at right tackle in the bowl game and one other time, but he actually has more game experience playing guard. Senior Ben Cleveland, who missed the bowl game because of an academic suspension, started six games last season and 15 in his career at right guard, but can also play right tackle.

Redshirt freshman Warren Ericson, who started the bowl game at right guard, came to Georgia touted as a center and is a strong option there, as is Clay Webb. The Bulldogs are fortunate to have Justin Shaffer back after he missed the final eight games last season after a neck injury. He started two games at left guard while Kindley was sidelined last season, but also is a candidate at tackle.

And so on.

The obvious focus of spring is going to be at left tackle. Georgia lost a player in Thomas who might be the first lineman off the board in April’s draft. The Bulldogs’ offensive line got a lot of criticism last year for not being as good as advertised, but it should be noted the Bulldogs’ quarterbac­ks attempted the third-fewest pressured passes in Power Five football, according to Pro Football Focus.

Redshirt freshmen Xavier Truss (6-foot-7, 320 pounds) and Warren McClendon (6-4, 320) and sophomore Owen Condon (6-7, 310) were recruited to compete for Thomas’ spot when he left. They’ll be in spring camp to do just that. Broderick Jones, Tate Ratledge, Devin Willock, Sedrick Van Pran, Chad Lindberg and Austin Blaske, Georgia’s freshman signees, will not. They’ll join the fray this summer.

Regardless, whoever emerges will be a first-time starter. The Bulldogs are prepared for that.

“They wanted to compete and play at a high level,” Smart said.

And so they will.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? UGA center Trey Hill (55) started every game last season, and right guard Warren Ericson started against Baylor in the Sugar Bowl.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM UGA center Trey Hill (55) started every game last season, and right guard Warren Ericson started against Baylor in the Sugar Bowl.

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