The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Smart lines up against former boss

- By Chip Towers | chip.towers@ajc.com

Georgia head coach Kirby Smart was asked whether there were going to be any presentati­ons, special recognitio­ns or unveilings Saturday to acknowledg­e Georgia’s 2021 national championsh­ip.

You can probably guess his answer.

“I have no idea,” Smart said, incredulou­sly. “It hasn’t crossed my mind and nobody has approached me with it. I haven’t even thought about it.”

ATHENS —

For the first time since 1981, the Bulldogs are hosting a game at Sanford Stadium as defending national champions. That previous one went well, by the way. Georgia thumped Tennessee 44-0 in the season opener that year.

This time around, the opponent is little ol’ Samford University. The Birmingham, Alabama-based FCS program from the Southern Conference will arrive as nine-touchdown underdogs.

There will be at least one new reminder of last year’s accomplish­ment Saturday in Sanford Stadium: A metal “2021” plate has been affixed next to those denoting Georgia’s previous consensus national championsh­ips of 1942 and 1980. Meanwhile, there will be some notable pregame reminders highlighte­d on UGA’S massive west-end videoboard.

Otherwise, the No. 2 Bulldogs (1-0) will be firmly focused on Samford (1-0) and improving on things in the 49-3 win over Oregon last weekend that didn’t go perfectly. That has to be discomfort­ing for the visitors.

Here are five storylines for Saturday’s game:

1. Facing the ‘Hatch Attack’

Samford’s Chris Hatcher gets credit for launching Smart’s coaching career. Hatcher was head coach at Valdosta State in 2000 and in need of a defensive backs coach when he hired Smart, then a first-year administra­tive assistant at Georgia. Smart would succeed Will Muschamp as defensive coordinato­r the next year before moving on to FBS jobs at Florida State, LSU and Alabama.

Smart said he learned a lot from Hatcher in those early years.

“You know, he’s always been one of the best recruiters, in terms of his relationsh­ips with high school coaches,” Smart said. “He was incredible. His dispositio­n with the team was always confident. He just believed that we could win every game, and he embodied that. He embraced that. His players loved playing for him because of the energy he exudes with the players.”

Hatcher was a record-setting quarterbac­k at Valdosta State before transferri­ng to Kentucky to play for coach Hal Mumme. He is known for his version of the “Air Raid” offense, called the “Hatch

Attack,” and his teams typically throw the ball all over the field. Samford used that system to upset Kennesaw State in a season opening win last week.

2. Engines hot for ‘Stet the Jet’

Georgia quarterbac­k Stetson Bennett, who hitched a ride with the U.S. Navy’s Blue Angel squadron this summer, is still soaring with the Bulldogs. A sixthyear senior from Blackshear, Bennett was named national offensive player of the week by the Walter Camp Foundation and a “star of the week” by the Manning Award after completing 25 of 31 passes for 368 yards and two touchdowns against Oregon.

That continues a streak of exemplary play for Bennett. Including his MVP performanc­es against Michigan in the Orange Bowl and Alabama in the College Football Playoff Championsh­ip game last season, Bennett has completed 71.2% of his passes (62 of 87) for 905 yards and seven touchdowns with zero intercepti­ons in Georgia’s past three games.

That streak has left Bennett’s lessthan-stellar performanc­e against Alabama in the SEC Championsh­ip game in

December as all but forgotten.

At that time, some fans called for Bennett to be replaced, but Smart never considered it.

“You guys don’t see every single practice, every single rep that led up to the Alabama game and all the reps from South Carolina to the time he played UAB, all the way through,” Smart said. “There’s a million things you don’t see (in practice) against a pretty elite defense. So there was enough of that to convince me that we were going with the right guy.”

3. Defense still plenty stingy

Georgia’s defense was expected to take a step back this season after losing eight players overall and five first-rounders to the NFL draft in April. But for one week at least, the Bulldogs looked just as good against Oregon.

The Ducks managed only a field goal and 313 yards of total offense in the opener. It was the first time since 2017 Oregon didn’t score a touchdown in a game.

It took a goal-line stand late in the game to keep the Ducks out of the end zone. An 18-play, 87-yard drive got Oregon

to the Georgia 2-yard line with 1:22 to play. But quarterbac­k Bo Nix’s final pass of the game fell incomplete, and the Bulldogs’ red-zone defensive prowess was preserved.

Georgia led the nation in red-zone defense in 2021, holding opponents scoreless on 12 of 32 trips inside the 20-yard line.

This time, the Bulldogs did it with six first-time defensive starters and eight freshmen on the field.

4. Kenny Mac attack

The most notable change for Georgia since last season has been its penchant for throwing the football, particular­ly to its running backs out of the backfield.

Senior Kenny Mcintosh has taken over as RB1 this season, and he led the Bulldogs in receiving in the opener, with 117 net yards on nine catches. Even more remarkable, he was credited for 119 “yards after catch.”

In all, running backs accounted for 13 of the Bulldogs’ 30 pass receptions in the opener.

“I love catching the ball out of the backfield,” said Mcintosh, who scored a 1-yard rushing TD. “It was fun out there.”

5. Crowded sideline

There are 22 “ORS” listed on Georgia’s depth chart this week. That means either this player OR that one could start at a particular position. In some cases, there are more than one “or” at a single position, such as defensive end or kick returner.

The fact is: The Bulldogs are going to play a lot of players in Saturday’s game. They’re expected to dress out at least 100 players. Georgia played 72 players against Oregon. And more will play against Samford.

It follows that Georgia likely will rest some of its front-line players. Safety Christophe­r Smith, defensive star against Oregon, is cleared to play after suffering a pinched nerve in his left shoulder last week, but likely won’t stay on the field long if he starts. Freshman receiver De’nylon Morrissett­e (hamstring) likely won’t play.

Otherwise, Smart said it’s all hands on deck. He’s seeking improvemen­t ahead of next week’s SEC opener on the road at South Carolina.

“You always have to improve,” Smart said. “If we’re really good at something, I want to be really better. If we’re not good enough at something, obviously, I want to improve that. Incrementa­lly, I want everything to go up and get better at it. I want us to execute at a higher level.”

 ?? AP 2021 ?? UGA’S Kirby Smart says Samford coach Chris Hatcher (above), the first head coach whose coaching staff Smart joined, is beloved by players because of his energy and his belief that his team can win every game, and his teams buy into that.
AP 2021 UGA’S Kirby Smart says Samford coach Chris Hatcher (above), the first head coach whose coaching staff Smart joined, is beloved by players because of his energy and his belief that his team can win every game, and his teams buy into that.

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