The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UGA AD: ‘We all hope’ for a season

Bulldogs’ game dates and two opponents still to be determined.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — Lost in the all the controvers­y over the details and consequenc­es of the SEC’s decision to move to a conference-only schedule is one important factoid — It means college football is happening this fall. Well, most likely.

“We all hope, but we all saw what happened to the Marlins,” Georgia Athletic Director Greg McGarity said, referring to a COVID-19 outbreak after the Miami-Philadelph­ia series last weekend. “You know, no one in college football has practiced yet. So, this is just a date we’re holding. We sure hope we can start then. But as we’ve seen in profession­al sports already, this can change on a dime. At least this puts a marker in the sand and says, ‘This is when we’re going to get started.’ We’re hoping we can do our part to make that date a reality.”

SEC presidents voted Thursday to adopt the athletic directors’ recommenda­tion to play a 10-game conference schedule that will start Sept. 26 and end with the SEC Championsh­ip game Dec. 19 in Atlanta. But the announceme­nt brought forth as many questions as it did as answers. At the top of that list is exactly what the schedule will look like, when preseason practices might commence and how many fans might be allowed to attend games?

And while there remains a chance there could be a setback based on the coronaviru­s pandemic, Thursday’s action sets into motion all the things that are necessary for conducting a football season in the fall.

“It allows us to narrow in on what our revenue will be, as well as our expenses, to facilitate games,” McGarity said Thursday as he fielded reporters’ questions for more than 20 minutes in a videoconfe­rence. Following are some of the answers he provided:

Q: Do you know yet who Georgia will play and when?

A: No. I wouldn’t pay attention to any (existing) dates. The only thing for certain is we’ll play our Eastern (Division) opponents and then Auburn and Alabama, obviously, from the West. And then we’ll have two more. But we have not even started that

discussion. There was an intent to not go there first because it might have swayed some decision-making if we knew who we were going to play. So we’ll start that discussion very soon with the commission­er.

Q: The SEC release said there will continue to be divisions and a championsh­ip game in December in Atlanta. Do you know what the SEC schedules will look like?

A: Yes, the (eight current) SEC opponents won’t change; we’ll just add two. We’ll play two of the other five Western opponents, and we don’t know who they are now. But the (other) opponents will stay intact. Dates? Maybe not.

Q: What about losing the Georgia Tech rivalry for a year?

A: That game means so much to everyone. It’s just unfortunat­e it was affected. But, you know, there’s so much change going on in today’s world. We just need to expect the unexpected and that just needed to be worked out. It’s unfortunat­e, but we look forward to resuming that rivalry in 2021. We’ll just go from there.

Q: Will the Tech game still be played in Atlanta next year?

A: I haven’t talked to Todd (Stansbury, Tech AD, yet). We spoke last week. I’m sure we’ll have a discussion on that and see what we can do. So much has happened today and yesterday with the ACC that Todd and I haven’t been able to huddle up on that. … We’ll take a look at it. That’s something we don’t have to look at right now, but it’s something we’ll revisit over the coming months.

Q: Any chance Georgia-Florida is not played in Jacksonvil­le?

A: No. I talked to (Florida AD) Scott (Stricklin) earlier. The one thing I wouldn’t want to do is play Florida here (in 2020) with a limited crowd and then go to Gainesvill­e in 2021 with 93,000 fans there. I don’t think we want to be in that position.

So, right now, unless something changes, that game will still be in Jacksonvil­le. Q: What’s the outlook for having spectators at games?

A: Well, the conference will set the expectatio­ns. I don’t think they’ll get down into the particular numbers, but the expectatio­n of social distancing, of masking, will be CDC guidelines. I think everybody has seen what’s happened in some NFL stadiums; I would expect college football to mirror that. But the safety of everyone is of the utmost importance. Whatever that will yield in our stadiums will be what we go with. But we have a little time. It’s not pressing right now. Once we have informatio­n on our opponents and dates, then certainly we’ll be able to tackle those things at that time. Q: Any idea what games will look like from a fan’s perspectiv­e?

A: It’s going to be different. Masks will be mandatory. We’ve got a great plan. I give a lot of credit to (senior deputy AD) Josh Brooks and his staff. We’ve had an army of individual­s working on our social-distancing plan. We’re going through the final pieces of that now. Once we release that, I think those that are able to come to our games can feel like they’re as safe as possible. I understand some people might not feel comfortabl­e coming to the games, so we understand that. We just want to create the safest environmen­t for anybody in the confines of Sanford Stadium, whether that’s fans or student-athletes. That’s our charge. Q: Why was SEC-only the best option?

A: We had so many variations of models to look at. We had to narrow them down to two or three, which we did. But in the final analysis, keeping everything in the SEC, from a medical standpoint, from the whole, was best. There are four of us who have ACC rivalries, but there are 10 others that don’t. And so, when you’re able to control your schedule, it’s more efficient. … It’s fair to the other schools, it gives you some flexibilit­y on the back end with the SEC Championsh­ip (game) date, starting later in the fall. All those things came into play, which led to the decision to play SEC games only.

Q: Is there any chance Georgia and Tech could just decide to go rogue and play their game anyway, on an otherwise open date or after the regular season?

A: I don’t think Kirby would be too excited about playing 10 SEC games and then play Tech, hopefully, if we do well this year, the week before we play in Atlanta (in the SEC Championsh­ip game). It’s unfortunat­e. It’s just the way everything fell. We’ll move forward and renew the rivalry next year.

Q: Did the ACC’s decision influence the SEC’s decision?

A: No. It just kind of shocked us. It came after our call. We’d just gotten off our call an hour earlier. We knew they were meeting on Wednesday, but we didn’t expect that to happen. But we actually had our discussion before the ACC announceme­nt came out. Q: When will preseason camps commence?

A: That’s a great question. That’s the next discussion to be had. Do you start 29 days before your first date or do you start next week? There will be a lot of discussion within the medical community on that and with the head coaches. The NCAA may have to weigh in on that as well. That’s undetermin­ed at this point in time.

 ??  ?? UGA AD Greg McGarity
UGA AD Greg McGarity
 ?? JOHN ROARK / ATHENS BANNER-HERALD 2017 ?? “It’s unfortunat­e, but we look forward to resuming that rivalry in 2021,” says UGA AD Greg McGarity about not playing Tech this season.
JOHN ROARK / ATHENS BANNER-HERALD 2017 “It’s unfortunat­e, but we look forward to resuming that rivalry in 2021,” says UGA AD Greg McGarity about not playing Tech this season.

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