The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Smart wants 'excited' players

Motivation could play a role with UGA no longer in it for the top prize.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — “Look at the Sugar falling from the sky; look at the Sugar falling from the sky!”

Rem ember those words from Georgia’s legendary radio announcer Larry Munson back in the 1980s? Doesn’t exactly feel that way nowadays, does it?

That’s back when the Sugar Bowl was an ultimate destinatio­n for college football teams. Georgia won its last national championsh­ip by defeating Notre Dame

in the Sugar Bowl following the 1980 season. It’s still a big deal, but considerab­ly bigger on Jan. 13 rather than Jan. 1.

For the second consecutiv­e year, the Bulldogs landed in New Orleans for the New Year’s Day bowl. No. 5 Georgia (11-2) will play No. 7 Baylor (11-2) at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in what many think is one of the best of the “New Year’s Six” matchups.

The Superdome will host the College Football Playoff national championsh­ip game 12 days later and that’s the game Georgia, which opened the season ranked No. 3, focused on playing in this season. Will the Bulldogs be motivated for the Sugar Bowl, especially considerin­g an indifferen­t attitude by some contribute­d to last year’s 28-21 loss to Texas?

“What I found out last year was, for a lot of kids, it was the most important game of their season and meant much to them; and then, maybe for some others, it didn’t,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. “You’ve got to take the guys that are engaged and excited about playing because that matters a whole lot more than how good they are.”

Last year, eventual firstround draft pick Deandre Baker chose not to play for fear of jeopardizi­ng his draft status. The New York Giants ended up selecting the UGA cornerback with the last pick of the first round.

Backup quarterbac­k Justin Fields also made the trip, even though the Bulldogs knew he intended to transfer and would not play. Several other upperclass­men either sat out due to injury or played limited roles.

Georgia has several players who fall into the same demographi­c this season. Offensive tackle Andrew Thomas is a consensus projection as a Top 5 pick. Running back D’Andre Swift’s status is much less certain but he, too, has some first-round projection­s (No. 22 by WalterFoot­ball.com and 247Sports. com). Even Jake Fromm (19,

Walter Football) and guard Solomon Kindley (27, WalterFoot­ball) are getting some first-round mention in those unscientif­ic projection­s.

It’s reasonable to think that Thomas, a 6-foot-5, 320pound junior, would skip the bowl game. “For me personally, I’ll just need to talk to my parents, talk to my coaches,” said Thomas, who was named an All-American on Monday. “I haven’t made any decisions yet.”

Swift had a similar response. “I’ll think about that when it’s time to think about that,” he said after the SEC Championsh­ip game. “Right now I’m just worried about my teammates after we took a tough loss.”

Last year, the Bulldogs felt they had been wronged by not being included in the College Football Playoff following a tightly contested and well-played SEC title game loss to Alabama. This year they can make no such argument following a 37-10 shellackin­g by No. 1 LSU.

Smart acknowledg­ed that an attitude adjustment may be necessary for his team this year. The Bulldogs will need to be at their best against a Baylor team seeking the first 12-win season in school history.

“We learned a lot of things,” Smart said of last year’s trip to New Orleans. “First thing we did when we got back last year, we had a bunch of notes written up by every coach and sports staff member of things we could do better or different ... if you’re playing in a non-playoff situation. So we’ve got some ideas. We’ll look at those.”

It sounds as though Georgia might be leaning harder on younger players rather veterans.

“The bottom line is, it’s your job to go play in a football game,” Smart said. “You get a great opportunit­y, and there’s a lot of teams across the country that would be dying to play in a game like this. So we’re going to sell it that way.

“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y to be Sugar Bowl champs. None of the kids on our team have ever been Sugar Bowl champs. They’re going to get an opportunit­y to do that, and we’re going to take the ones that want to do that and play well.”

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? “You’ve got to take the guys that are engaged and excited about playing because that matters a whole lot more than how good they are,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said of playing in the Sugar Bowl.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM “You’ve got to take the guys that are engaged and excited about playing because that matters a whole lot more than how good they are,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said of playing in the Sugar Bowl.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Some wonder if the Bulldogs will be motivated to play in the Jan. 1 Sugar Bowl game in New Orleans, especially considerin­g that an indifferen­t attitude by some players contribute­d to last year’s 28-21 Sugar Bowl loss to Texas.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Some wonder if the Bulldogs will be motivated to play in the Jan. 1 Sugar Bowl game in New Orleans, especially considerin­g that an indifferen­t attitude by some players contribute­d to last year’s 28-21 Sugar Bowl loss to Texas.

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