The Daily Courier

Georgia gets the game it wanted all along: rematch with Alabama

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ATHENS, Ga. — As soon as Tua Tagovailoa let go of the pass, the one that ended the national championsh­ip game in the blink of an eye, Georgia has wanted another shot at Alabama.

Oh sure, the Bulldogs tried to play it cool. They insisted that it didn’t do any good to dwell on such a bitter disappoint­ment. Learn from it and move on.

Even after both teams clinched their spots in the Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip game with a month to spare, Georgia’s players wouldn’t get drawn into any discussion about the Crimson Tide. Well, now they can talk about it. The rematch is here. “I didn’t come back this year to not be here,” said senior defensive end Jonathan Ledbetter, who passed on a chance to enter the NFL draft. “We had unfinished business. We intend to go ahead and handle that.”

In what amounts to a play-in game for a spot in the College Football Playoff, No. 4 Georgia (11-1) gets another crack at top-ranked Alabama (12-0) in Saturday’s SEC championsh­ip game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta — the very same place where the Tide won its national title last January, overcoming a 13-point deficit to beat the Bulldogs 26-23 in overtime.

A do-over has seemingly been in the cards ever since that dramatic night.

With Nick Saban still guiding Alabama and protege Kirby Smart running things at Georgia, these talent-rich programs were heavily favoured to win their respective divisions and largely lived up to expectatio­ns.

In fact, the Crimson Tide could go down as one of the greatest teams in college football history by winning out. No one has come close to beating ’Bama — its average margin of victory a staggering 35 points a game.

Tagovailoa is heavily favoured to claim the Heisman Trophy, guiding what can only be viewed as a nightmare scenario for Saban’s opponents: a team that has always been among the best in the nation defensivel­y running up and down the field with a fun-and-gun offence.

Alabama is averaging 49 points a game, twice dropping more than 60 and putting up at least 50 six other times.

“They’ve got a great team. I don’t think anybody would argue that,” Smart said. “They’ve got very few deficienci­es in any area, a talented quarterbac­k, explosive offence, and the first thing you notice when they turn the tape on is how fast and how much they score.

“They play some good teams in our conference, and they still score a lot of points,” he added.

Georgia slipped up once, losing 36-16 at LSU in mid-October, but romped past everyone else. The Bulldogs have scored at least 40 points in seven games, with an average margin of nearly 27 points in those 11 victories.

“They have been a pretty dominant team all season long,” Saban said. “I really thought that, in playing Georgia last year and knowing the kind of players they had coming back and the job they do there and the job that Kirby does with his entire staff, that they would have an excellent chance to come back to this game.”

The Bulldogs certainly gave Alabama all it could handle in the last meeting. Georgia dominated the first half, building a 13-0 lead.

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