The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No. 1 UGA primed, ready for another crack at Alabama

Bulldogs hoping to ride momentum of 12-0 season into title game.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — The SEC Championsh­ip matchup between No. 1 Georgia and No. 3 Alabama is set. It has been for a while, but the dynamic feels a tad bit different after the Crimson Tide’s struggle against Auburn on Saturday night.

Alabama won, as expected, but it took four overtimes to do it. Twenty-point favorites going in, the Crimson Tide (11-1, 7-1 SEC) could have lost in regulation. However, Auburn’s Tank Bigsby running out of bounds with a 10-3 lead inside the final two minutes left Alabama and quarterbac­k Bryce Young just enough time to execute a 97-yard game-tying touchdown drive. The Crimson Tide won it on a two-point conversion pass to John Metchie in the fourth extra period.

Now the teams that everybody expected to meet for the conference championsh­ip at the season’s outset finally get to, Saturday at Mercedes-benz Stadium. And the Bulldogs, careful not to look ahead to this inevitable confrontat­ion since clinching the Eastern Division way back on Oct. 30, can finally talk about it.

“We know it’s a big one coming up,” coach Kirby Smart said shortly after the Bulldogs wrapped up the first 12-0 regular season in school history. “Everyone’s kind of had it circled and seen it out there. We’ve really tried to work hard on getting better. That’s been the emphasis: What can we improve on? The last two weeks we’ve been trying to be ascending.”

Georgia was definitely flying high after its 45-0 win over Georgia Tech on Saturday in Atlanta. The victory not only was the Bulldogs’ fourth in a row over the Jackets, it extended Georgia’s current winning streak to 16 games. The school record is 17 straight, which the Bulldogs won from 1945 through 1947.

The 2021 Bulldogs would need to beat Alabama to match that, and that would mean snapping a six-game losing streak to the Crimson Tide. Georgia’s 41-24 loss last year in Tuscaloosa followed Alabama victories in Mer

cedes-benz Stadium in the 2018 SEC Championsh­ip and the 2017 national championsh­ip game.

“We only play one game at a time,” junior linebacker Nakobe Dean said. “You ask me after every game and it was always, ‘job not done, job not done.’ So, now we’re on to the next challenge of this season. We’re working to accomplish the goals that we set going into the season. We’re just working on ascending and getting better every week. That’s basically the biggest message.”

Five takeaways from Saturday’s victory:

1. The Pickens factor

As crazy as it might have seemed in March, Georgia star wide receiver George Pickens is back. The 6-foot-3, 200-pound junior played a few plays at split end against the Yellow Jackets, even hauling in a pass for a 5-yard gain early in the second half. Pickens’ return came a few days shy of eight months after he underwent ACL reconstruc­tive surgery.

Pickens, who led the Bulldogs in receiving each of the last two seasons, wasn’t necessaril­y his old self Saturday. It remains to be seen if he will be full-go for Alabama next week or fill more of a decoy role, as he did against Tech.

“We were able to integrate him a little bit more in practice and try to get him some confidence in his legs ... and he’s done a really good job,” Smart said. “It’s one thing to catch the ball. It’s another to get the signal, get lined up, know who I block, know what I do on my conversion­s. He’s still getting that back, getting in the flow of things.”

Many assumed Pickens, who projects as an NFL player, might not attempt to play his junior season, focusing instead on getting healthy and prepared for the NFL draft. But Pickens’ coaches and teammates said they’ve known for a while he intended to play again this season. “George loves football. He’s always wanted to get back and have the opportunit­y to get out there,” Smart said.

Said quarterbac­k Stetson Bennett: “The people that thought he was just going to rehab and go to the league don’t know George at all. It’s kind of funny to hear those people talk because they don’t know how much he loves football and loves his teammates and how hard he’s attacked every day, rehab-wise, to get back to play with us, not to go to the NFL. … So I’m happy for him. I know how hard he’s worked to get that knee right.”

2. Injury concerns loom

The plan was for senior left tackle Jamaree Salyer (foot) to return to the field Saturday against Georgia Tech. He didn’t, and that was because of “a little setback” suffered in practice midweek.

“It wasn’t the same injury he had before,” Smart said. “It was some scar tissue. But we’re hoping we’ll be able to get him back.”

Redshirt freshman Broderick Jones started his fourth consecutiv­e game in Salyer’s place.

Just as concerning was free safety Christophe­r Smith missing a second straight game. The fifth-year senior from Atlanta suffered a knee injury the week of the Charleston Southern game and hasn’t been able to get back. Former walk-on Dan Jackson filled in for the second straight week and third time this season. “We’re hopeful for Chris, too,” Smart said.

Meanwhile, the Bulldogs lost slot receiver and punt returner Kearis Jackson to a rib injury during the first half. Smart didn’t think the injury was too serious, but said Jackson was in too much pain to return to the game. He finished with 20 yards on two punt returns.

3. Neat, clean and tidy

The Bulldogs have been dominant all season, but they were remarkably efficient, too, on Saturday. Georgia was not whistled for a penalty on offense or defense and did not commit a turnover.

Smart was a bit taken aback when informed after the game. “I don’t know that I’ve ever really looked at it. You only look at it when it’s bad, right?” Smart said. “If it’s a bunch of them, you’re, ‘oh man, that’s a lot of penalties,’ but I didn’t even know it.”

Smart said he’d have to study the video from the game to decide exactly how he feels about it. “That can be good and bad,” he said of having zero penalties. “That’s one of those, Are you being aggressive enough? Are you blocking aggressive enough? You want to press the limits of what you can do. But I’m very pleased with that. We count them in practice and we harp on not being penalized. However, we certainly want to be aggressive.”

4. Historical­ly stout defense

With the 45-0 win over Tech, Georgia’s defense recorded its third shutout of the season. It was the first time the Bulldogs blanked three opponents in the same season since 1981.

“I feel like I’ve been around the league for 20-something years and three shutouts is hard to come by,” Smart said. “I’m really proud of those guys, especially the 2s that were able to come in there late in the third quarter and the whole fourth quarter and hold that standard. I was really proud of them for doing that.”

Georgia’s defense was historical­ly stingy this season. The Bulldogs allowed just 83 points in 12 games, an average of 6.9 points per game. That’s the lowest total for a season since 1986 when the Oklahoma Sooners, led by linebacker Brian Bosworth, gave up 6.8 as game.

With only 171 yards total offense, Tech became the sixth opponent that Georgia held below 180 yards this season.

5. Stet IV in control

Bennett had one of his best days as Georgia’s starting quarterbac­k. He passed for 255 yards and four touchdowns, and his 14 completion­s (on 20 attempts) went to nine different receivers.

Freshman tight end Brock Bowers led the Bulldogs in receiving for the eighth time in 12 games with three for 100 yards and two touchdowns.

Jermaine Burton and Ladd Mcconkey also hauled in passes for scores as Bennett accounted for all 255 of Georgia’s yards through the air.

But with Alabama looming next week, Bennett wasn’t doing much chest-beating about the performanc­e against an overmatche­d defense.

“There will be some things to fix,” said Bennett, who has completed 65% of his passes for 1,985 yards, 21 touchdowns and five intercepti­ons. “Those two drives right before the end of the half were not good enough. ”

 ?? ?? “The last two weeks we’ve been trying to be ascending,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said.
“The last two weeks we’ve been trying to be ascending,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said.

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