The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Alabama LB (and Georgian) Anderson no longer a Bulldogs fan

- By Mike Griffith

TUSCALOOSA, ALA. — Alabama linebacker Will Anderson grew up following the Georgia Bulldogs, but you won’t hear him complainin­g about the side he’s lining up for Saturday.

“I did grow up a Georgia fan,” said Anderson, who went to Dutchtown High School in Hampton. “I got recruited by them a little bit. I didn’t get too much attention from them, but it worked out well.”

The SEC Championsh­ip game pitting No. 1 Georgia against No. 3 Alabama features no less than three players who have been mentioned as Heisman Trophy candidates this season. Tide quarterbac­k Bryce Young is the most prominent of the three, but UGA nose tackle Jordan Davis and Anderson have also been part of the discussion.

Anderson, named the Football Writers Associatio­n of America Freshman of the Year last season, has arguably been the most productive defensive player in the nation with 86 tackles, 30.5 tackles for loss and 14.5 sacks.

“He’s done as much for our team as anybody ever has,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said Monday. “I think he’s been one of the most productive players in college football as a defensive player. He’s done everything we have asked him to do, (and) he’s very discipline­d in terms of doing his job, and he does it with tremendous effort and toughness.”

Georgia coach Kirby Smart is celebrated for his recruiting prowess, but Anderson is one in-state prospect that got away.

The Bulldogs, who have been loaded in the linebackin­g corps throughout the Smart Era, only had room enough for one linebacker in the 2020 signing class.

Smart made Washington, D.C., 5-star prospect MJ Sherman an early priority and stuck with him after Sherman suffered a knee injury.

Sherman, rated the No. 32 overall player (per the 247Sports composite) in the 2020 class, has appeared in all 12 games this season as a reserve linebacker as well as a member of the kickoff coverage team.

Anderson, who blossomed later in his high school career to finish the No. 17 overall player in the nation, said he’s excited to be playing close to home in

Atlanta on Saturday.

“My family gets to come see me because, of course, I’m from Georgia,” Anderson said. “It’s always good to come back home.”

Kirby’s Iron Bowl view: Smart experience­d nine Iron Bowl games as an assistant coach to Saban, so he could understand how an Auburn team on a threegame losing streak could play the Tide close before falling 24-22 in four overtimes.

“(Auburn) is a really tough place to play, and so is (Texas) A&M,” Smart said. “That doesn’t fall on deaf ears with our staff and understand probably two of the hardest places to play in the country are right there.

“That (Iron Bowl) game is always different. The nine years I was there, you never could judge anything on that game because it’s such an intrastate rivalry.”

Line dance: Georgia is a 6½-point favorite over Alabama, the line jumping from 4½ after the teams’ games Saturday. The Bulldogs’ role as favorites snaps a 92-game streak in which Alabama had been favored in games — dating to the 2015 meeting between Georgia and the Crimson Tide, when UGA was a 2½-point favorite.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States