The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mondon works on next chapter

After surgery, LB’S focus is on gaining weight, physicalit­y.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

First, about Smael Mondon’s first name: It’s pronounced “smile,” like the grin on his face. Not “smail” or “smeel” or “smell,” or the other curious derivation­s.

“I’ve heard a lot of different things,” the sophomore linebacker said with a laugh.

Fans should get used to hearing Mondon’s name, as he’s a big part of the Bulldogs’ defensive plans. At this point, it looks like either he or Trezmen Marshall will start at the inside linebacker position opposite Pop Dumas-johnson. Regardless, he’ll be part of the rotation and on the field a lot.

Coach Kirby Smart, for one, believes that’s a very good thing for the Bulldogs.

“Smael Mondon is as good an athlete as I’ve seen,” Smart recently said.

Smart has, of course, coached linebacker­s Roquan Smith, Monty Rice and Nakobe Dean at Georgia, not to mention several All-americans at Alabama. But Mondon’s not letting that assessment go to his head.

“It’s an honor hearing that from coach Smart, of course, with all the linebacker­s he’s coached over the years,” Mondon told reporters Wednesday night after the Bulldogs’ practice. “But it doesn’t really change much. It doesn’t change how I work. I just try to keep pushing myself as hard as I can.”

The only thing that has been holding back the 6-foot-3, 225-pound Mondon is injuries. A knee injury cut short his senior season at Paulding County High, where he earned a consensus five-star recruiting ranking as an outside linebacker prospect. Then, after playing all 15 games for the Bulldogs last season as a special-teams regular and defensive backup, Mondon had offseason labrum surgery. He missed spring practice and dropped about 10 pounds in the process.

“He has to increase his physicalit­y, his toughness,” Smart said. “… But he’s put on some good, solid weight, played a lot of snaps on special teams. Core linebacker­s get valuable experience on special teams before they’re the featured guy.”

The Bulldogs see Mondon as part of their solution at inside linebacker. With Dean, Quay Walker and Channing Tindall all getting drafted from last season’s squad, Georgia lost 151 games of experience and 415 career tackles.

Nobody knows that better than Mondon, who hasn’t stopped hearing about it.

“It was great sitting behind them last year, learning from them,” Mondon said. “They taught us a lot. But we’re not necessaril­y comparing ourselves to what happened last year. We’re more worried about being the best version of ourselves that we can be.”

Mondon and his cohorts won’t get to ease into their new roles. They’ll meet No. 11 Oregon in less than 10 days in a Chick-fil-a Kickoff game at Mercedes-benz Stadium. Under the direction of former Georgia defensive coordinato­r Dan Lanning, the Ducks’ offensive front is considered the strength of their team. Nine of their top 10 linemen are returning, including four starters.

Likely to be led by a mobile, veteran quarterbac­k in former Auburn signal-caller Bo Nix, Oregon is expected to hit Georgia linebacker­s with a lot of run-pass conflict.

The Bulldogs just dived deep into their examinatio­n of the Ducks. But for now, Mondon’s not sweating those details.

“We’re real excited,” he said of the opener. “We all play for Saturday nights. But I feel like right now we’re mostly just focused on practice and getting better before then.”

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