The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Erectile Dysfunctio­n Clinic Open in Atlanta

- Men’s Health Consultant

Atlanta• A team of physicians are part of a new medical clinic that opene d offices in Atlanta recently to serve patients in the Atlanta area including Marietta, Alpharetta, Conyers, Acworth, Roswell, Woodstock, and other surroundin­g areas, specializi­ng in one unique niche area – sexual performanc­e. Erectile dysfunctio­n and premature ejaculatio­n have long been a problem for millions of men nationwide. In spite of the popularity of recent medication­s such as Viagra, Levitra and Cialis, many men either are not helped by these medication­s or cannot take them due to medical conditions and adverse side effects. The recent craze of shockwave therapy is still unproven and considered experiment­al and ineffectiv­e for older men. North Georgia Medical is staffed with state-licensed local physicians. “We successful­ly help almost every patient we see,” says Dr. Augustine MirekuBoat­ang, renowned Board-certified Urologist and the clinic’s Medical Advisor, “and we’ve

treated men from as young as 21 to as old as 96. Men w diabetes, bypass surgery, heart conditions, high blood pressure, prostate cancer and surgery, you name it and we’ve treated them. Regardless of age or medical history, our results every day are amazing.” All medication­s are FDA approved, safe and custom-blended from 187 formulas by a

pharmacy, not available at the corner drug store. Doctors can adjust the dosage for a man’s performanc­e to 45 minutes, an hour, or 90 minutes, and the offers a simple guarantee: If you don’t respond to the medication in one visit, it’s free. With that guarantee, local patients have nothing to lose. North Georgia Medical books appointmen­ts in advance but occasional­ly can accommodat­e

someone quickly. Patients are assured of utmost privacy and profession­alism. A ladies’ treatment is also available using medication made popular by a famous Hollywood actress. Further informatio­n is available by calling

| chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — The game everyone has been waiting for is finally here. It’s not Georgia-florida. It’s not the Bulldogs vs. Tennessee. Did you happen to catch that No. 1 Alabama lost to Texas A&M late Saturday night? No, it’s No. 1 Georgia and No. 11 Kentucky.

The SEC’S last two undefeated teams will face off Saturday at 3:30 p.m. (CBS) at Sanford Stadium in a game that should have a significan­t impact on who represents the Eastern Division in the SEC Championsh­ip game this year.

Who they might eventually meet in the title game is suddenly up in the air. Alabama (5-1, 2-1 SEC), which lost to the Aggies 41-38 on a last-second field goal Saturday night in College Station, Texas, still has Mississipp­i State, Tennessee, LSU, Arkansas and Auburn to get through.

As for No. 2 Georgia (6-0, 4-0), it executed a no-nonsense 34-10 victory over No. 18 Auburn on Saturday at Jordan-hare Stadium. And thanks to Saturday’s night’s craziness, the Bulldogs emerged as the nation’s No. 1 team for the first time in the regular season since 1982.

But you can be sure coach Kirby Smart will make sure the Bulldogs’ minds remain firmly on the Wildcats (6-0, 4-0), who were ranked 16th when they held up their end of the deal late with a 42-21 victory over LSU late Saturday night at Kroger Field in Lexington, Kentucky. The win gave Kentucky its first 6-0 start since 1950. That team, coached by the legendary Bear Bryant, finished 11-1 and ranked No. 7 in the nation after a 13-7 win over No. 1 Oklahoma in the Sugar Bowl.

It was the eighth win in a row overall for the Wildcats, dating to last season. That’s the fifth-longest streak in school history.

However, Kentucky’s football history against Georgia hasn’t been very good. The Bulldogs have won 11 games in a row against the Wildcats, including last year’s 14-3 win in Lexington. Georgia leads the overall series 60-12-2, including 29-4-2 at Sanford Stadium. The two teams did not play in 1950, by the way.

Here are a few other things we learned about the Bulldogs on Saturday:

1. Stet rolls on

Don’t look now, but a quarterbac­k controvers­y might be brewing in the Bulldogs’ midst.

Stetson Bennett put together yet another exemplary effort in relief of starter JT Daniels, who missed his third game of the season due to injury. Daniels missed his second consecutiv­e game due to what is described as a “grade one strain” of the latissimus dorsi muscle in his back. Daniels traveled with the team to Auburn and warmed up briefly before the game, but otherwise did not seem poised to play. Redshirt freshman Carson Beck warmed up with the No. 2 offense.

Bennett — in addition to completing 14 of 21 passes for 231 yards and two touchdowns — ran the ball five times for 51 yards, including 30 yards on one critical late third-quarter play. He was sacked once for a 10-yard loss.

Bennett’s performanc­e nudged him past Daniels as Georgia’s leading passer on the year. He has completed 69.3% for 746 yards with 8 touchdowns and 2 intercepti­ons. Daniels has completed 76.1% for 569 yards, 5 TDS and 2 intercepti­ons.

“We’ve always felt like Stetson was a really good player,” Smart said. “It wasn’t like anybody didn’t think he was good. He was playing well last year, too.”

Thequestio­n nowbecomes­what happens when Daniels is cleared to play. Last week

was able to do some “soft toss” during practice, and Smart continues to say he’s close to being able to return.

Bennett, for one, is not thinking about it. “I think I’m just like everybody else on this team; we just try to win each game,” Bennett said.

2. Dented but not wrecked

Georgia’s defense continues to dominate, but a couple of points of pride fell by the wayside against Auburn.

Tigers running back Tank Bigsby scored on a 6-yard run at the 4:01 mark of the third quarter. That represente­d the first and only red-zone touchdown scored against the Bulldogs all year. Georgia’s defense previously had allowed only one other touchdown, a 36-yard pass late in the fourth quarter of a blowout win over South Carolina on Sept. 18.

Coming in leading the nation in scoring defense at 4.6 ppg, that rose to 5.5 with the Tigers’ 10 points Saturday. But the 33 points allowed on the year represents the lowest six-game total for the Bulldogs since 1935, when they allowed 24.

3. Bo Nix contained

Georgia’s unquestion­ed defensive priority on Saturday was keeping Auburn’s elusive quarterbac­k Bo Nix contained.

Mission accomplish­ed. While the Tigers’ junior signal-caller hit the Bulldogs with a few big plays, they kept Nix bottled up most of the game. Georgia sacked Nix four times, and his long run of the night was just nine yards. Nix’s longest completion­s were 31 yards to Caylin Newton and 29 to former Bulldog Demetris Robertson. For the game, the Tigers’ yards per 43 attempts were just 6.3.

Overall, Nix was 21-of-38 passing for 217 yards with one intercepti­on and no touchdowns. Linebacker Nakobe Dean picked off a pass to set up the Bulldogs’ first score in the first quarter — Nix’s first intercepti­on of the season.

“We knew Bo was a great athlete and knew we had to contain him,” said senior nose guard Jordan Davis, who finished with a season-high five tackles. “I’m elated that we got four sacks.”

4. Next man up

It gets a little old sometimes to hear college football players and coaches constantly blurt “next man up” when it comes to injuries. But that has truly been the case for Georgia all season.

Lost in the discussion about whether the Bulldogs deserve to be the nation’s topranked team is that they have managed to dominate to this point without many of their top players in action.

Georgia is playing without its starting quarterbac­k, playing without star receiver George Pickens and has been missing starting wideouts and primary receivers all season. That was the case again Saturday as split end Marcus Rosemy-jacksaint (ankle) and flanker Jermaine Burton (groin) were unable to play.

No problem. Freshman slotback Ladd Mcconkey switched to flanker and finished with five catches for 135 yards and the game’s biggest catch — a 60-yard touchdown late in the third quarter.

Georgia also lost starting left tackle Jamaree Salyer (ankle) and starting safety Christophe­r Smith (shoulder) during the first half. Smart said both players possibly could have returned but remained sidelined because their replacemen­ts — Broderick Jones and Dan Jackson, respective­ly — were playing well in their stead.

5. Run-game resurrecti­on

Georgia’s rushing attack generally doesn’t produce fear and awe in opponents, but it has become almost unstoppabl­e with a lead late in the second half.

The Bulldogs finished with 201 rushing yards Saturday after tallying just 36 in the first half. In the fourth quarter, as Georgia aimed to salt away what was then a 27-10 lead, the Bulldogs ran the ball on all 10 plays of a 64-yard scoring drive. Those plays were divided between running backs Kendall Milton, James Cook and Zamir White.

Hit two yards deep in the backfield, White broke the attempted tackle and rambled 10 yards for final touchdown of the night. White led the Bulldogs with 79 yards on 18 carries and finished with two touchdowns. He leads the team with six rushing scores on the year.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Zamir White, who led the Bulldogs with 79 yards rushing, scores a touchdown late against Auburn on Saturday. White had two touchdowns in the 34-10 win.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Zamir White, who led the Bulldogs with 79 yards rushing, scores a touchdown late against Auburn on Saturday. White had two touchdowns in the 34-10 win.

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