El Dorado News-Times

Georgia aims to defend hedges, bigger goals vs. Tech

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ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — The last time Georgia hosted its state rival, the famed hedges surroundin­g the field at Sanford Stadium took quite a beating.

This time around, the Bulldogs have a lot more to worry about than horticultu­re.

No. 5 Georgia (10-1) is still in the mix for a return trip to the College Football playoffs — assuming it doesn't slip up Saturday against Georgia Tech.

"We know that we have to finish our schedule strong this weekend and the following weekend in order to do what we want to accomplish," tight end Isaac Nauta said. "I feel like we have really been clicking and playing well. We just have to continue going and get a big win this weekend."

The Bulldogs, who also were ranked fifth in last week's CFP standings , have already locked up a spot against top-ranked Alabama in the Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip game Dec. 1.

That will essentiall­y serve as a play-in game to the playoffs, as long as Georgia still has just one loss on its record.

"We just have to get this game over with and see where we end up," linebacker D'Andre Walker said.

While the Bulldogs have largely dominated the series known as "Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate" since the mid-1960s, winning 40 of the last 54 meetings, the Yellow Jackets have pulled off a few notable surprises in Athens.

In fact, their last four victories over Georgia have been between the hedges, including both 2014 and 2016 (Georgia, in a similar vein, hasn't lost in Atlanta since 1999).

After that game two years ago, the Yellow Jackets commemorat­ed their 28-27 upset by brazenly plucking off branches as souvenirs .

Lots and lots of branches. Georgia is determined to prevent a repeat.

"I'm excited to win this one and make sure those hedges don't get touched," Nauta said. "We're going to make sure it doesn't happen this year by handling business when they're on the field."

To provide extra motivation, video of the hedge vandals has been playing on a loop in the Bulldogs' weight room, as well as other reminders scattered throughout the training facility.

"I want this, and I know everybody on the team wants this," said Jonathan Ledbetter, a senior defensive end. "We have taken a lot of disrespect from Georgia Tech. I know some people would much rather see us beat Georgia Tech than win a national championsh­ip, and we are not going disappoint."

Georgia, of course, has been eyeing another shot at Alabama since last year's national championsh­ip game.

The Bulldogs squandered a pair of 13-point leads before losing in overtime, 26-23, when Tua Tagovailoa launched a 41-yard touchdown pass to DeVonta Smith on second-and-26 .

Since the only loss this season, a 36-16 blowout at LSU , Georgia has won four straight games by double-digit margins, including impressive wins over rivals Florida and Auburn as well as an SEC East-clinching victory at Kentucky . This past Saturday, in what amounted to little more than a glorified scrimmage, the Bulldogs piled up 701 yards — the second-highest total in school history — in a 66-27 rout of UMass .

While Georgia opened as a 17-point favorite over the Yellow Jackets, this will surely be a much more challengin­g game. Georgia Tech (7-4) also has a four-game winning streak and is coming off a thrilling 30-27 overtime victory over Virginia that clinched a winning season, quite a turnaround after a 1-3 start.

Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart called the Jackets "arguably one of the hottest teams in the country as far as what they're doing offensivel­y. They've put four really good games together back to back, scoring a lot of points."

As is always the case for any team preparing to face Georgia Tech, there is plenty of attention on coach Paul Johnson's triple-option offense. The Yellow Jackets lead the nation in rushing yards (353.7 per game) and have largely given up any notion of a passing game, completing just 6 of 15 throws over those last four games.

Asked what his defense needs to be focusing on, Smart said, "You have two or three hours? You can't just define them in a few words."

He went on to say, "Eye control, discipline, toughness, tackling, it's limitless. You have to be discipline­d. You have to do your job and you have to key things the right way. If you don't, they expose you. Paul does a tremendous job of seeing when people are out of place, seeing when people don't do things the right way."

Smart has also preached the importance of winning at home.

"That's been a message all year," he said. "The teams that have been championsh­ip teams have defended their home turf. We have a bulletin board about it. When you win your games at home, it gives you a much better chance to win the East. When you win games at home, it gives you a much better chance of winning the SEC."

And let's not forget the chance to win a national title, too.

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