Los Angeles Times

Bulldogs sniff more than roses

- By Chris Foster

Every dog has its day. Georgia fans have had to believe in that for decades.

Now the No. 3 Bulldogs sit at the precipice. They face No. 2 Oklahoma on Monday in the Rose Bowl, which serves as a semifinal in the College Football Playoff. The winner heads to Atlanta for next week’s national championsh­ip game.

The Sooners and their fans are accustomed to these moments. Oklahoma has won seven national championsh­ips and during the Bowl Championsh­ip Series era was runner-up three times. This is the Sooners’ second appearance in the semifinals under the CFP format.

In Georgia, things haven’t been so peachy.

It has been 37 years since people in Athens celebrated the Bulldogs’

only national title. Seven Ugas — the school’s pugnacious mascot — have come and gone in that time. Since Georgia entered the Sugar Bowl ranked No. 1 and lost to No. 2 Penn State, 35 years have passed. That’s 245 in dog years.

“That’s crazy, I didn’t even think about it like that,” Georgia defensive end Jonathan Ledbetter said. “That puts it all in perspectiv­e. It has been a while.”

That’s the general feeling from the Chattahooc­hee National Forest to the Florida state line, from Savannah on the Atlantic Coast to Columbus on the Alabama border. Another Sherman’s March would be required to find a Georgian rooting against “Them Dawgs.”

“Everybody — the fan base, the team, the coaches, the whole state — thinks it’s time,” Ledbetter said. “It’s kind of meant to be.”

There are just a couple little things standing in the way — Oklahoma, for starters.

The semifinal matchup is a collision course of contrasts.

The Sooners (12-1) have swagger under the direction of quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield. The Heisman Trophy winner directs the nation’s top offense. Mayfield revels in it, with trash talk and provocativ­e antics.

The Bulldogs (12-1) are a bump-and-grind bunch. Their defense, led by Butkus Award-winning linebacker Roquan Smith, ranks second against the pass and fourth overall. They are more smack than smack talk.

“You have to let your play on the field do the talking more so than your mouth,” Smith said.

The Bulldogs’ tag-team running backs Nick Chubb and Sony Michel have ground several teams to mulch. The Sooners’ defensive players arrived with a chip after being cast as the 90-pound weakling in this matchup.

“That’s something that we have heard all year, so for us it goes in one ear and out the other,” Oklahoma linebacker Emmanuel Beal said. “You don’t get to this point without playing defense.”

But the biggest difference is the pedigree. The Sooners have college football royal blood.

“The standard at Oklahoma is winning championsh­ips, winning conference championsh­ips and having a chance to compete for national championsh­ips and win those,” first-year coach Lincoln Riley said. He added that when he took over the program, “I wanted them to understand that standard wasn’t going anywhere.”

The Bulldogs, by comparison, are mutts.

Georgia doesn’t fit historical­ly with this year’s final four. The Sugar Bowl semifinal has Alabama — winner of four of the last eight national titles — playing defending champion Clemson.

That one title in 1980 hasn’t allowed Georgia to hob-nob with the SEC elite. Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Louisiana State and Tennessee have combined to win 11 national championsh­ips in the last 21 seasons.

Georgia has finished ranked in the top five by the Associated Press three times since 2002, but the Bulldogs never got to sniff the national championsh­ip game.

“It motivates us,” guard Isaiah Wynn said.

“We’re sick and tired of hearing the glory days of the ’80s with the Dawgs,” tight end Jeb Blazevich said. “We’re ready to make our own mark, try to leave our own legacy.”

There was little indication that the Bulldogs would deviate from their history. Alabama occupied the top spot in the AP preseason poll with Georgia at No. 15. In between were No. 12 Auburn and No. 13 LSU.

Oklahoma, meanwhile, was ranked seventh and already thinking big. Sooner players had “ATL” T-shirts made up as reminders of where they intended to finish the season. It has been the topic of conversati­on since beating Auburn in the Sugar Bowl last season.

“You couldn’t go a day in the locker room without hearing someone saying, ‘ATL,’ ” defensive end Ogobonnia Okoronkwo said.

The Bulldogs, meanwhile, eased into the race. A 4-0 start included victories over Notre Dame and Mississipp­i State. Fans had seen fast starts before. Georgia won its first eight games in 2002 but watched Ohio State and Miami play for the national title.

Defensive back J.R. Reed said: “After those first couple of games, we were like, OK, we have something special.” He also knew “people still doubted us because they felt like we couldn’t win big games.”

Georgia appeared to confirm that with a loss at Auburn. It dropped the Bulldogs from No. 1 to No. 7 in the CFP rankings. The Bulldogs earned their way back into the top four by beating the Tigers, who had upset previously unbeaten Alabama, in the SEC championsh­ip game.

It was Georgia’s first conference title since 2005 and gave the Bulldogs the chance to fetch something that’s been out of reach for decades.

“Everyone wants us to get it done,” Ledbetter said. “Teams in the SEC are like, ‘It’s your time.’ ”

Well, maybe not every team. People in Alabama have other ideas.

“I’m definitive­ly not going to sit here and compare us to Alabama,” Wynn said. “But I definitely believe that we’re changing the culture here at Georgia.”

Now they’re looking to add some bite to their bark.

 ?? Joe Robbins Getty Images ?? ROQUAN SMITH and the Georgia Bulldogs are seeking the second national championsh­ip in school history, and first in 37 years.
Joe Robbins Getty Images ROQUAN SMITH and the Georgia Bulldogs are seeking the second national championsh­ip in school history, and first in 37 years.
 ?? Jamie Squire Getty Images ?? JAKE FROMM could become the second true freshman to quarterbac­k a team to a national title.
Jamie Squire Getty Images JAKE FROMM could become the second true freshman to quarterbac­k a team to a national title.

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