The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fondness remains between Bulldogs, Hogs coach Pittman

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com Jamaree Salyer

ATHENS — When Sam Pitt- man’s name is brought up to his former players at Geor- gia, smiles immediatel­y creep across their faces. And that’s during game week as the Bulldogs get ready to play Pittman’s new team, the Arkansas Razorbacks.

Pittman coached Geor- gia’s offensive line the past four seasons, and he had a hand in the recruitmen­t of every linemen who will suit up for the Bulldogs today.

Pittman was especially pivotal to the Bulldogs landing Jamaree Salyer. He was a con- sensus 5-star prospect and the No. 1-ranked guard in the nation when he signed with Georgia in 2018. But he first got to know Pittman while playing alongside Andrew Thomas at Atlanta’s Pace Academy.

“I’ve got a lot of love for coach Pitt,” Salyer said this week. “I’d tell him that right now if I could talk to him. He poured a lot into me while he was here, and I got better.”

Salyer did. He will start at left tackle for the Bulldogs in Fayettevil­le.

Asked to share some mem- ories about his old coach this week, Salyer immediatel­y began to laugh. His thoughts turned to the pants Pittman was wearing the day Salyer and Thomas visited Georgia’s spring practice in 2017.

“Coach Pittman, he’s always trying to look good, you know, always looking for the new, hip thing,” Salyer said. “That’s just his style. So, he had on these really tight pants and these wild shoes. He had on these joggers and, yeah, they weren’t his style, let’s just put it like that. He looks at me and says, ‘You like these?’ I just said, ‘Nah, coach, I don’t think so.’ And then he said, ‘How ’bout these shoes?’ I said, ‘Yeah, coach, I like those.’ ”

“The Pants” became a topic of discussion for Pittman and Salyer every time they saw each other over the next two years.

“The next time I came up, I asked him, ‘Where’s those pants?’ ” Salyer continued. “He says, ‘Ah, man, I burned ’em. You never have to worry about them again. They’re gone.’ He’s just a character.”

A character indeed. But that interactio­n also illustrate­s why Pittman is considered a world-class recruiter. He has an extraordin­ary ability to find some way or another to connect with everybody he recruits.

With Salyer, it was the pants. With Isaiah Wilson, it was the family Yorkie named “Jax,” which Pitt- man brought a treat for every time he visited in Brooklyn. With sophomore Owen Condon — who is slated to start at right tackle for the Bulldogs — it’s that they’re both from Oklahoma.

That knack for connection was apparent even before Pittman got to Georgia. It was the case when he worked with Bret Bielema at Arkan

Georgia guard

sas before Kirby Smart hired him away, and it was the case at Tennessee and North Carolina before that.

It’s almost forgotten now that Pittman’s offensive line at North Carolina, where he left in 2011, had six players make NFL rosters. Georgia’s Thomas, Wilson and Solo- mon Kindley are the latest Pittman players to make it. Thomas and Wilson were both drafted in this year’s first round as underclass- men. Kindley, who went in the fourth round, is starting for the Miami Dolphins.

In his own words, Pitt- man took his recruiting “to another level” while at Geor- gia, and that’s the main reason he is now Arkansas’ head coach. But his personal connection with the players is why they play so hard for him.

“They always talked about their relationsh­ip with Sam and how they felt about him, cared about him,” Smart said of Georgia’s O-linemen this week.

Pittman left abruptly. He won over Arkansas’ leadership during an interview in Athens the week of Georgia’s

Championsh­ip game appearance against LSU. He left Atlanta and flew straight to Fayettevil­le and was intro- duced as the Razorbacks’ new coach the next day.

Pittman has been all Hogs ever since. There was no backyard barbecue, as had become a custom with his Georgia linemen, or anything in Athens to say goodbye or give closure to the players.

Pittman explained this week.

“I sent them all a text and talked about how much they meant to me,” Pittman said on the SEC coaches’ tele- conference call Wednesday. “I’ll be honest with you, I’m a crier, and if I had to step in front of them I would’ve balled my eyes out. I love those guys to this day.” They love him back. “I respected just how family-oriented he was and his energy on and off the field,” junior center Trey Hill said. “What you got on the field is what you got off the field, the way he takes care of his players and the love and support he gives them.”

Georgia wasted no time in making what was considered a home run replacemen­t of Pittman. The Bulldogs hired Matt Luke, who had recently been fired as the Ole Miss coach, the same week Pittman left for Arkansas.

Now all parties will get an impromptu reunion in Fayettevil­le.

“It’s going to be weird, for sure, since he’s the one who recruited me,” Condon said of seeing Pittman. “But we’re focusing on what we’ve got here in coach (Matt) Luke and we all love playing for him, too.”

As for Pittman, he didn’t think he’d have to deal with the emotions from leaving his Georgia players for a while. Initially, he was able to put his focus on rebuilding a team that hasn’t won an SEC game since 2017.

But then the coronaviru­s pandemic turned college football upside down. As fate would have it, the SEC’s altered, conference-only schedule called for the Bulldogs to open the season at Arkansas.

“Never in my wildest dreams when I took the job did I think Georgia would be the first opponent, but it is,” Pittman said.

No. 4-ranked Georgia landed in Fayettevil­le on Friday afternoon as four-touchdown favorites. But that’s not what is on Bulldogs’ minds.

“We are going against a very good friend of mine in coach Sam Pittman, who did just an unbelievab­le job while he was here,” Smart said. “He and his wife, Jamie, meant so much to the community here in Athens and so many of our kids. He helped build the foundation of what we have now. I am extremely happy for this opportunit­y he has gotten.”

‘I’ve got a lot of love for coach Pitt. He poured a lot into me while he was here, and I got better.’

 ?? SAMANTHA BAKER / AP ?? Sam Pittman is considered a world-class recruiter with an extraordin­ary ability to find some way or another to connect with everybody he recruits.
SAMANTHA BAKER / AP Sam Pittman is considered a world-class recruiter with an extraordin­ary ability to find some way or another to connect with everybody he recruits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States