The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UGA falls again to perennial champ Alabama but likely will make CFP and could gain redemption.

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Maybe next time, huh?

Maybe next month in Indianapol­is for the national title. Maybe that will — once and forever — be the time Georgia beats Alabama in a game of significan­ce. We thought the moment would come Saturday. Yet again, we thought wrong.

Alabama entered the SEC Championsh­ip game against

No. 1 Georgia as a 6½-point underdog, something the Crimson Tide hadn’t been since

2009. As always happens when these teams meet, the Bulldogs built a lead. As always happens when these teams meet, Alabama won. Final score: 41-24.

In the grand scheme, losing shouldn’t mean much to Georgia. It still will make the College Football Playoff, just not as the No. 1 seed. Thing is, Alabama will make it, too. Georgia hasn’t beaten Bama since Sept. 22, 2007, seven meetings ago.

Georgia under Kirby Smart has done

everything except win it all and beat Alabama. There seems no way the Bulldogs can manage one without the other, and it’s entirely possible that a rematch could favor the Bulldogs. (Why? Who knows? Law of averages, maybe.) But Saturday’s game looked for all the world like Georgia’s longawaite­d day of deliveranc­e, and it came undone faster than you can count Nick Saban’s collection of rings.

For the fourth time in nine years, Georgia built a double-figure lead over Alabama in this city. Given the outcome of those first three games, Smart might have been prudent to ask kicker Jack Podlesny to miss the PAT on purpose. The kick sailed true. Georgia led 10-0 four seconds into the second quarter.

At that moment — this has seemed true of other moments in this series

— the Bulldogs looked too good for Bama. George Pickens, back after a torn ACL, outfought safety Jordan Battle for the gain that set up Georgia’s first touchdown. The 6-foot-7 tight end Darnell Washington reached above linebacker Henry To’oTo’o to pluck Stetson Bennett’s throw from on high to score that touchdown.

Bennett completed eight of his first 10 passes for 126 yards. Georgia outgained the Tide 156 yards to 49 in the game’s first 15 minutes and four seconds. The Bulldogs couldn’t have scripted a better start, but somehow this movie always ends the same way.

Jameson Williams, Alabama’s best receiver, flashed unencumber­ed down the middle of the field and turned a modest pitch-and-catch into a 67-yard touchdown. It was wretched coverage by any defense. By Georgia’s standards, it beggared belief. This 10-point lead was about to go the way of all Georgia leads against Bama.

The team that yielded no more than 17 points over 12 games was outscored 24-7 in the second quarter. The Bulldogs entered having yielded 230.9 yards per game. Alabama amassed 316 yards in these 15 minutes. Bryce Young threw for 286 yards and ran for 40 more. He had a hand in all three touchdowns. The nation’s best defense managed no sacks.

A signature moment came when Nakobe Dean, the highly decorated linebacker, bore down on Young and slammed into him as the quarterbac­k threw. A near-sack became a 22-yard completion. We note for the record: Young is a freshman.

Not two minutes into the third quarter, Williams ran past Lewis Cine and snagged Young’s rainbow. Georgia trailed 31-17. It faced its first double-figure deficit since Cincinnati led 21-10 in this building on New Year’s Day.

The Bulldogs took their time in responding. Two drives took them beyond the Alabama 20. Neither ended in points. Bennett threw an intercepti­on on the first. The second ended on the quarter’s final play, a Bennett incompleti­on on fourth-and-9. (Going for it, as opposed to kicking a field goal that would have left Georgia 11 points behind, was the right choice. It just didn’t work.)

Remember when Alabama used to be known for its defense? With Young following in the gilded footsteps of Tua Tagovailoa and Mac Jones, and Georgia’s defense having surrendere­d next to nothing all season, nobody gave Bama’s defense much of a look in the run-up to this game. On Georgia’s first series of the fourth quarter, Bennett threw for Kenny McIntosh, who wasn’t open. Battle cut in front and took his intercepti­on the distance. It was 38-17 with 11:59 remaining.

Brock Bowers, the tremendous tight end, scored to bring the Bulldogs within 14. Saban opted not to go for it on fourthand-1. Enough time remained for Georgia to score two touchdowns, but a false start turned fourth-and-10 into fourthand-15, which prompted Smart to change his mind and punt. Bama took the ball with 7:08 remaining and began to move — slowly, for once. A field goal with 1:59 left removed all doubt.

Young finished with 421 yards passing against the nation’s No. 1 defense. Alabama heads to the playoff for the seventh time in eight years. And Georgia? Well, the Bulldogs do as they’ve done many times. They pick themselves up and try to imagine some way they can beat Alabama. It has to happen sometime, doesn’t it?

Don’t answer that.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Alabama’s Phidarian Mathis celebrates with the SEC Championsh­ip trophy after Saturday’s game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Georgia couldn’t have scripted a better start, but somehow this movie always ends the same way.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Alabama’s Phidarian Mathis celebrates with the SEC Championsh­ip trophy after Saturday’s game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Georgia couldn’t have scripted a better start, but somehow this movie always ends the same way.
 ?? ??
 ?? Only In The AJC ?? Mark Bradley
Only In The AJC Mark Bradley
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Alabama quarterbac­k Bryce Young is congratula­ted after his TD run in the second quarter. Young — a freshman — also threw for 421 yards against the nation’s No. 1 defense.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Alabama quarterbac­k Bryce Young is congratula­ted after his TD run in the second quarter. Young — a freshman — also threw for 421 yards against the nation’s No. 1 defense.

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