The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ALSO INSIDE

- By Steve Hummer shummer@ajc.com

» Back from injury, veteran receiver Cager shines,

JACKSONVIL­LE, FLA. — There has been so much uncertaint­y and angst spent on Georgia’s receivers from the beginning of spring. That extended to all the freshmen who flocked to a position filled with opportu- nity. And to one set of “old” hands belonging to Lawrence Cager, the graduate transfer from Miami.

Man, at 6-foot-5, 220 pounds, he sure looked like he could be Jake Fromm’s BFF, especially on third down and around the end zone.

But, “I didn’t know what to expect,” Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart recalled Saturday. “I knew the size. He matches up well with Jake, the things he does well and the things Jake does well. It wasn’t like he had just an unbelievab­le camp. We were like, shoot, I don’t know what this guy is going to be. Is he going to be The Guy or one of the guys?”

Cager was very much The Guy on Saturday. Return- ing from shoulder and rib injuries that cost him the last couple weeks, he put together a career-best per- formance in Georgia’s 24-17 victory over Florida.

His vitals: Seven catches, 132 yards, the 52-yard scoring reception that provided the winning margin. And of Georgia’s nine third-down completion­s that extended drives, Cager pulled in a third of them.

Point proven. Georgia is a much better offensive team when Cager is on the field and has full use of all his ball-and-socket joints.

“He makes this offense better,” quarterbac­k Jake Fromm said. “He ups the game of everyone around him. Really smart, really high-IQ football player.” Cager played in the first half of the Oct. 12 loss to South Carolina with a separated shoulder, until he re-aggravated that and compounded it with rib issues. He missed the next week against Kentucky. With the benefit of a week off before this rivalry matchup with the Gators, a game that would establish supremacy in the SEC East, Cager had no inten- tion of missing more time.

“I wasn’t going to miss this game for anything. If I had a broken leg I was going to play,” he said.

“I never doubted Lawrence would play,” Smart said. “I had no idea what role that would take on. I didn’t know how many hits he’d be able to take, how many blocks he’d be able to make. He’s a warrior, he’s a compet- itor, I never doubted that.”

Cager had plenty of presence Saturday. When he broke lose down one sideline for the touchdown five minutes into the fourth quarter — “A great play call by (offensive coordinato­r James Coley), we had practiced it all week, a new play that we thought we could get it in there on man coverage,” Cager said — his day was pretty much com- plete. There was no question about Georgia receivers being able to get separation, for he was as alone as a patient in quarantine. There were no more concerns about Flori- da’s cadre of talented receivers, because it was the grad transfer at Georgia who had the biggest day of anyone.

There has been plenty of static concerning the Bull- dogs receivers, the noise these players keep saying they are good at ignoring.

Cager reiterated how good he is at noise-cancel- ling, while at the same time repeating at length just what that noise entails.

“A lot of people say we have no game-changers, no playmakers,” he said. “I heard during the South Carolina broadcast how no one could get open. To me, that’s like, c’mon man. You learned to shut it out, being a vet. You learn as you keep going to block that stuff out.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? In Georgia’s crucial win Saturday over the Gators in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, Bulldogs WR Lawrence Cager helped silence any concerns about the receivers, hauling in seven catches for 132 yards and one TD.
CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM In Georgia’s crucial win Saturday over the Gators in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, Bulldogs WR Lawrence Cager helped silence any concerns about the receivers, hauling in seven catches for 132 yards and one TD.

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