Texarkana Gazette

Bring on the Irish

Georgia, Notre Dame preparing for historic game between hedges

- By Paul Newberry

ATHENS, Ga. — The Georgia players know it’s a big game. They can read the polls. They can hear all the chatter around campus.

That doesn’t mean they’re well-versed on Notre Dame’s storied past.

George Gipp?

“Uhh, no,” tight end Eli Wolf conceded Monday. The Four Horsemen? “That rings a little bit more of a bell,” Wolf said, dropping his head and chuckling a bit but offering no further details.

Rudy?

“Yeah, I’ve seen ‘Rudy,’” he shot back quickly, clearly proud of himself for knowing at least the Hollywood version of a revered chapter in Fighting Irish history. “Some people say they cry at the end. I was never one to get too emotional, but it’s a good movie.”

Of course, it won’t be a history class they’re taking Saturday night.

It’s a football game that could have reverberat­ions all the way to the College Football Playoff.

No. 3 Georgia (3-0) will host No. 7 Notre Dame (2-0) for the first time between the hedges (a.k.a. Dooley

Sanford Stadium), a showdown that has been eagerly anticipate­d in these parts pretty much since the series was announced five summers ago.

“It’s going to be electrifyi­ng in that stadium, that’s for sure,” said former Georgia coach Vince Dooley, whose name was officially added to the massive facility less than two weeks ago.

It will be only the third meeting between these famed programs.

The first came at the 1981 Sugar Bowl, when a Georgia team coached by Dooley and starring Herschel Walker sealed what remains the school’s only consensus national championsh­ip with a 17-10 victory over the Fighting Irish.

For Dooley, who grew up attending Catholic schools in Mobile, Alabama, and listening to Fighting Irish games on the radio, all while dreaming of playing in South Bend, the significan­ce of beating the school of Knute Rockne and the Gipper only added to the celebratio­n nearly four decades ago.

“The main thing was playing for the national championsh­ip,” the 87-year-old Dooley recalled Monday. “We would have been happy playing anybody. But especially Notre Dame.”

Two years ago, the teams met for the first time in South Bend. Under the gaze of Touchdown Jesus, the red-clad Georgia fans stormed into town by the thousands to cheer the Bulldogs to a 20-19 victory that signaled the beginning of their return to national prominence under coach Kirby Smart.

Georgia went on to capture the Southeaste­rn Conference title and make it all the way to the national championsh­ip game, where the Bulldogs lost to Alabama in overtime.

Smart refused to discuss Notre Dame through the first three weeks of the season, which proved to be little more than a run of glorified scrimmages. The Bulldogs romped past Vanderbilt, Murray State and Arkansas State by a cumulative score of 148-23.

Now, finally, he’s ready to talk about the Fighting Irish.

“It’s a great game to have, a nonconfere­nce game you play at home and a school with such a tradition as Notre Dame,” the fourth-year coach said. “I know a lot of Georgia fans have had this one marked on the schedule for a long time. So have a lot of Notre Dame fans.”

Georgia is even bringing in some extra seats, adding temporary aluminum bleachers accommodat­ing 500 people in the west end zone plaza that will ensure a record crowd of more than 93,000.

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