The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UGA’s Smart won’t speculate about when sport will start up again

Coach conducting daily meetings just like usual in spring.

- — CHIP TOWERS

Georgia coach Kirby Smart answered a lot of questions Tuesday in a teleconfer­ence with reporters. However, he refused to offer a guess as to whether college football will be played as scheduled in the coming season.

“I don’t want to speculate,” Smart said. “I know you’ve got a job and it is to make me speculate, but I can’t speculate on what I don’t know. And we don’t have a large amount of informatio­n right now. It’s no fault of anybody. I’m not trying to point any blame, but we don’t know a lot about the future and what that holds.”

Like all spring sports, spring football was canceled by the SEC amid the coronaviru­s pandemic March 13. Since then, all NCAA spring sports and their respective championsh­ips were canceled. Now there is speculatio­n it could affect the college football season.

The Bulldogs are scheduled to open Sept. 7. That means they would begin preseason camp about a month earlier. There is also discussion of FBS teams possibly playing a truncated season of only conference games or of delaying the start of the season.

Smart was asked how much time he thought his team would need to be ready.

“I think you’d have to leave that up to the medical people,” Smart said.

ATHENS — Kirby Smart saw all the fuss about the bizarre reality show “Tiger King” on Netflix, so he tuned in.

“I got through two episodes, and I just couldn’t do it, man. I couldn’t stomach it,” Smart said. “Everybody continues to talk about it, but my patience wears thin. I’m looking for a little more plot. I’m not sure what the word is, but that’s not my cup of tea. I’m more of an ‘Ozarks’ guy myself.”

That was one among several revelation­s Smart shared as he spoke with beat reporters Tuesday on a conference call arranged by UGA’s sports-communicat­ions department. Smart said he, like probably everybody else, has found himself with a little more time on his hands as everyone deals with the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Smart was among many individual­s who found themselves on a 14-day quarantine as soon as he returned from spring break last month. Smart and his family visited Costa Rica and “multiple places down that way” during UGA’s spring break March 6-13. As soon as he returned, he found himself in lockdown at his house in Athens.

“It really wasn’t any different than anybody else in the country,” Smart said. “It was I think a State Department declaratio­n that if you came in from outside the country you had to do that, and we had multiple players and multiple coaches and other people who had to do the same thing. But once I got back, basically the whole country was on quarantine. There was nowhere you could go.”

Smart did say the timing of country’s shutdown might have put Georgia football at a bit of a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge because the school and players were on spring break when the shutdown was implemente­d.

“A lot of schools were in session when this happened, and they were able to have a team meeting, they were able to have an exit strategy. We were all over the place,” Smart said. “Everybody was out, and we didn’t feel comfortabl­e about bringing everybody back in together back in Athens. So that’s been hard because we had to call each player individual­ly. We have ways to connect with them through Zoom and FaceTime. But not having that exit meeting to say ‘this is where we’re headed’ was probably the toughest point.”

Georgia was scheduled to begin spring practice March 17. The Bulldogs would have been conducting their seventh of 15 practice sessions Tuesday.

Smart said things have improved considerab­ly now that UGA is back in session as a school. The university resumed classes online Monday, and the SEC is now allowing member institutio­ns to communicat­e daily with players via digital conference calls.

However, limitation­s remain.

“We’re not allowed to have but a few people (in the office), and they have to be ‘essential people’ as defined by the (University

System of Georgia),” Smart said. “But we’re not asking for people to come into the office. Most of us are able to work from home.

The coaching staff has daily Zoom meetings — we’re in a Zoom meeting now — with offense, defense and special teams, all separate as a staff. That’s exactly what we’d be doing if we were in spring ball.”

As for player interactio­ns, Smart said: “We have to be careful on that one. We can have unlimited contact with our players, calling and checking on them and their health, their well-being. That’s certainly something that we can do with our staff. … But as far as the activity they’re doing, we can’t mandate any activity for our players, that they get this done or that done. Anything in that regard they have to do on their own, and we have a clear separation on that.”

Meanwhile, Smart has found himself at home way more than he typically would be this of year. In the past, he would have been at the Butts-Mehre football complex literally from dawn well into dark. Now he’s home all day.

How does that look? He said he “doesn’t have the patience” to help his wife, Mary Beth, with home-schooling their three children. But he’s doing a lot of other things he usually doesn’t do. Like watch shows on Netflix and exercise daily.

“It has been a unique experience for me; I can say that much,” Smart said. “It’s not just being at home for me as much as it’s being outside exercising, you know, going on walks, on runs, on jogs. It’s probably been better for my real health than anything because I’ve had more time to do things like get out and go exercise. I certainly don’t like sitting at home at all, but that’s what we’re all having to do.”

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Kirby Smart and his family visited Costa Rica during spring break and were quarantine­d when they returned. “We had multiple players and multiple coaches and other people who had to do the same thing,” he said.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Kirby Smart and his family visited Costa Rica during spring break and were quarantine­d when they returned. “We had multiple players and multiple coaches and other people who had to do the same thing,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States