The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ready for big noise

- — CHIP TOWERS

Crowd noise is an issue at most of the large SEC venues, but nowhere is it worse for the visitors than at Neyland Stadium. Between the stadium’s configurat­ion, all the steel and concrete, its location on a hillside overlookin­g the Tennessee River and 102,000 fans, it’s just louder there than everywhere else.

According to the school, fans attending the Oklahoma game last month set a record for noise in the stadium. It reached 114 decibels after the Volunteers scored to take a 17-0 lead in the second quarter.

“There’s a certain level of loudness that keeps you from being able to hear your snap count and verbal communicat­ion,” Georgia coach Mark Richt said. “Once you hit that level of noise, the more loud it gets, it’s just the cherry on top or icing on cake or whatever you want to call it. It’s just too loud to use our normal mode of communicat­ion. ... That’s the biggest challenge you have offensivel­y.”

It’s somewhat new ground for quarterbac­k Greyson Lambert, who other than a single trip to Tallahasse­e to face Florida State has never been in an arena where he’s had to deal with such noise.

So that has gotten special attention this week. “Those are big speakers out there with the fan noise, and we’re having the quarterbac­k whisper sometimes. Whatever you can do to make it difficult to hear,” left tackle John Theus said. “You can’t really emulate that many people, you can’t copy that. But we try the best we can with the speakers and stuff like that.”

Theus and Georgia’s other upperclass­men on offense have had to operate amid such clamor many times before.

“It makes it fun to a certain extent,” said Theus, a senior. “It is a pain in the butt sometimes. ... It was loud two years ago when we were there. We’re prepared for it, but it does take away a little bit of the edge you have as the offense, knowing the snap count and stuff like that. We’ve just got to make sure we communicat­e that much more and really focus in on it.”

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