The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Newman had chance to build rhythm with receivers before the shutdown
Transfer QB also has worked with respected trainer.
ATHENS — Jamie Newman was able to get in a good amount of work with Georgia’s receivers and, as much as was allowed, with new offensive coordinator Todd Monken before the University of Georgia was shut down. That could be critical if and when college football resumes this year.
Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart updated reporters on the progress of the graduate transfer quarterback from Wake Forest, and some other Georgia players, during a half-hour teleconference call Tuesday.
Newman, a 6-foot-4, 230pound senior from Graham, North Carolina, transferred to UGA in early January. He had been embedded with the team in Athens and going through offseason strength-and-conditioning training for two months when Georgia adjourned for spring break March 6.
On March 13, the SEC announced that spring football was canceled for all conference membership. Later, all spring sports were canceled for the remainder of the 2019-20 academic year.
“That’s the one position where if you had to say, ‘Who does this affect the most? — Is it going to affect the running backs, the DBs, the (middle) linebacker?’ — it’s going to affect that quarterback more than anything, in my opinion,” Smart said Tuesday. “There’s no substitute for reps, I feel, and you can’t argue that we’re not going to lose reps. We’re losing reps.”
The good news, Smart said, was that Newman and the other Georgia quarterbacks enrolled did get a significant amount of time throwing with the limited number of receivers the Bulldogs currently have on campus. The Bulldogs signed five wideouts in the 2020 recruiting class, but only
Justin Robinson of Locust Grove was able to join the team as an early enrollee.
“I feel like he was starting to get some rhythm,” Smart said of Newman’s progress. “He got to throw a lot with those guys in their own time that they elected. He did a good job.”
Newman will compete with junior Stetson Bennett, redshirt freshman D’Wan Mathis and freshman signee Carson Beck for the starting quarterback job when the Bulldogs reconvene. The position is up for grabs since it was vacated by three-year starter Jake Fromm, who elected to enter the NFL draft as a junior.
Walk-ons Nathan Priestley and Austin Kirksey, an offseason transfer from the University of Nevada, also will compete for playing time. They’re redshirt freshmen.
But Newman, because of his experience as a two-year starter at Wake Forest and his designation as the top quarterback on the graduate transfer market after last season, generally is considered the favorite to succeed Fromm.
“They were able to do some 7-on-7s unstructured on their own with the team members,” Smart said of the quarterbacks. “They did a good job with that. But, you know, that’s no substitute for what they would have gotten in spring ball. … We’re going to get all that done when we get the opportunity and ... nobody knows when that is.”
Newman and the other QB candidates are unable to throw with the Bulldogs’ wideouts under the critical eye of Monken, their firstyear offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.
In the meantime, they all are training as much as they can on their own. Newman has been working with respected Atlanta quarterback trainer Quincy Avery. The owner of the QB Takeover camp is well-known for working with Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson when he lived in Georgia and was playing for Clemson.
For now, Smart’s just thankful for the time Newman and the quarterbacks got before the shutdown.
“I mean, we were able to meet leading up to spring practice,” Smart said. “A lot of people forget that we were able to have walk-throughs leading up to spring time. We maximized that time, not anticipating that we wouldn’t have spring, but just knowing that we had new quarterbacks and due to the offensive systems, we had to make sure we spent time with that. So, we spent a lot of time on that.”
Smart said as much as they can, the Bulldogs are trying to “go through spring practice now.” Now that classes have resumed online, they can have two hours of video-conference meetings per week.
“How much of it can be done virtually, I don’t know that,” he said. “That’s something we’re coming across now. It’s really more of how much can they digest virtually, because you want to give the kids everything we can.”