The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lots of things for Bulldogs to correct

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — You know you’ve reached a different echelon as a football program when you can score a 27-point win in a conference game and walk away with a wheelbarro­w load of teaching points.

That’s where No. 2 Georgia is at the moment following Saturday night’s 40-13 win over South Carolina. Despite the lopsided, relatively stressfree win, there wasn’t a lot of chest-thumping in the Bulldogs’ postgame locker room.

“We’ve got to play better, cleaner football,” junior outside linebacker Nolan Smith said. “We 100% have to understand that the standard is the standard and we have to meet it. But we got the win and we’re going to enjoy that. Then we go to the doctor on Monday and the doc will tell us what’s wrong and we’ll be grown men and take it.”

Georgia broke open a competitiv­e game with five points in the final 24 seconds of the first half and 14 more in the first seven minutes of the third quarter. The rest was dominant but not decisive.

The Bulldogs will have another week to fine-tune with Vanderbilt (1-2) next on the docket. Here’s what we learned Saturday against South Carolina:

Defense getting after it

The Bulldogs are getting after the quarterbac­k. Officially, they were awarded with just three sacks — giving them 13 on the young season. But Georgia was pressuring and harassing and affecting the South Carolina quarterbac­ks on almost every passing play.

Smith finished with 1.5 sacks, he and senior nose tackle Jordan Davis shared a sack on Luke Doty that resulted in a safety, and outside linebacker Adam Anderson recorded another, giving him a team-best three for the season.

“They have like 100 5-star football players on their defense,” South Carolina coach Shane Beamer said. “They have a defensive line- man (Davis) that weighs 340 pounds that runs better than everybody on this Zoom call. They’ve got 5-star defensive backs. They’re big, they’re physical and fast. Other than that, they are really freaking good, that is why they have the top defense in the country.”

Georgia scored 14 points off two turnovers. Corner- back Derion Kendrick, a

senior transfer from Clem- son, recorded his first inter- ception as a Bulldog and returned it nine yards to the South Carolina 9-yard line to set up one score. Smith caused a fumble on his sack, and linebacker Quay Walker recovered it at midfield to set up another Georgia scor- ing drive.

First TD surrendere­d

That said, Georgia’s defenders were having a hard time swallowing giv

ing up their first offensive touchdown of the season. The Bulldogs’ defense actu- ally had outscored opposing offenses 14-3 coming into the game.

That changed when Doty hooked up with Josh Vann on a 36-yard touchdown strike with 10:55 remain- ing in the fourth quarter. Vann, a 5-foot-11, 190-pound senior from Tucker, finished the night with 128 yards on three catches, not counting another 31-yard reception that was nullified by penalty.

“Of course that upsets us,”

Smith said. “The standard is the standard. It doesn’t mean the first quarter or the second quarter or the fourth quarter. We don’t want anybody in out end zone ever in any game.”

Said head coach Kirby Smart: “Josh had a good night, but we’re going to face guys like that every week in the SEC.”

Daniels excels on third down

Georgia’s offense was pretty much lights-out on third down Saturday night, most of that due to the excel- lent work of quarterbac­k JT Daniels. In his first start after missing one game with injury, the 6-3, 210-pound junior was a remarkable 9-for-11 on third-down conversion­s during the game.

On a 90-yard scoring drive in the second quarter, Daniels converted third downs three times.

“I definitely did my job, but it has to be 11 players execut- ing for that to happen,” said Daniels, who finished with 303 yards on 23-of-31 passing with three touchdowns and an intercepti­on. “It’s definitely toughest on third down when there’s a certain yardage you need. But it’s just a matter of everybody doing their job.”

“Impressive,” Smart said when he first heard the stat. “When you’re efficient on third down, you’re hard to beat. And it can be extremely frustratin­g for the defense.”

Georgia had 466 yards on 66 plays, a stout 7.4 yards per snap.

J-pod back on track

It won’t go down as a long, crucial kick, but Smart saw it as an important one for Jack Podlesny.

The junior place-kicker, a former walk-on who was placed on scholarshi­p after last season, made a 36-yard field goal as time expired in the first half. And it seemed pretty important at the time. Georgia had just zipped down the field in the final 19 seconds of the first half following a safety that made it 23-6. Podlesny had missed his last two kicks from a similar distance, 36 yards against Clemson and 32 against UAB.

This one split the uprights as the halftime horn sounded.

“Pod is a great kicker and it was great to get him back on track at the end of the first half,” Smart said.

It was a good day for Georgia’s special teams. Punter Jake Camarda averaged 51.7 yards on three punts, one of which Ameer Speed downed at the 1-yard line. That led to a safety on the next play.

Run game improves

While it won’t exactly resurrect Georgia’s reputation as RBU, Georgia was better on the ground than it has been this year.

The Bulldogs compiled 184 yards rushing on 31 carries, an average of 5.9 yards per attempt. Sophomore Kendall Milton led the way with 66 yards on 10 carries, Zamir White added 51 and touchdown, and James Cook had 51 yards on only four carries, scored on a 23-yard run and also had 4-yard TD reception to go with a total of four catches for 20 yards.

“It’s not taking what the they’re giving,” Smart said of throwing for considerab­ly more yards than rushing this season. “I think we’re just throwing the ball better right now. We weren’t bad running the ball. But if we’re going to be an elite team, we’ve got to be good at both.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CURTIS.COMPTON@AJC.COM ?? JT Daniels, in his first start after missing one game with an injury, was 9-for-11 on third-down conversion­s Saturday night against South Carolina.
CURTIS COMPTON/CURTIS.COMPTON@AJC.COM JT Daniels, in his first start after missing one game with an injury, was 9-for-11 on third-down conversion­s Saturday night against South Carolina.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CURTIS.COMPTON@AJC.COM ?? James Cook scores after breaking through South Carolina defenders during the first quarter at Sanford Stadium on Saturday. Georgia ran for 184 yards on 31 carries, an average of 5.9 yards per attempt.
CURTIS COMPTON/CURTIS.COMPTON@AJC.COM James Cook scores after breaking through South Carolina defenders during the first quarter at Sanford Stadium on Saturday. Georgia ran for 184 yards on 31 carries, an average of 5.9 yards per attempt.

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