The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bulldogs reload as spring practice begins UGA

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annual G-Day intrasquad scrimmage, which is set for April 13 at Sanford Stadium (start time to be determined).

Smart and “select players” will gather to discuss spring practice and the expectatio­ns for the 2024 season at noon Tuesday. In the meantime, here are five things to know heading into Week 1:

About the offense ...

Beck returning for his second season as starting quarterbac­k and fifth as a college football player is the obvious headline. But entering the spring, Beck is a well-known commodity for the Bulldogs. There are several “lesser-knowns” that Georgia will study and seek to refine over the course of five weeks.

Top among those is a new center. Nobody handled the football for UGA more over the past three years than Sedrick Van Pran, who entered the NFL draft with a season of eligibilit­y remaining. Van Pran started an astonishin­g 44 games in a row at center after winning the job as a redshirt freshman in 2021. Georgia was 42-2 in that span, so he seems to have done all right.

Junior Jared Wilson, who has played in 22 games over three seasons in reserve roles at center and guard, is set to take over. As always, though, the Bulldogs seek the “best five” on the line, so sophomore Drew Bobo, senior Tate Ratledge and others will work the position as well.

Wilson has one key endorsemen­t. “I think Jared is better than me,” Van Pran told reporters before Orange Bowl week. The rest of the line is set. More attention will be on Georgia’s backfield and the potential impact of high-profile transfer Trevor Etienne from Florida. The Bulldogs must replace the top two rushers from last season, Daijun Edwards and Kendall Milton. Sophomores Roderick Robinson and Andrew Paul remain unproven, and junior Branson Robinson has yet to be cleared from a ruptured patella tendon. So the expectatio­n is Etienne (brother of former Clemson star Travis Etienne) can make an instant impact. He should, having recorded 1,710 yards and 15 touchdowns and averaging 736 rushing yards in two seasons with the Gators.

Etienne was asked about his decision to join Florida’s archrival.

“(Florida was) still rebuilding and a lot of questions were still unanswered,” Etienne said on the “Real Talk Player Podcast” on YouTube last week. “I feel like I can stay here a year or two and bet on myself and possibly be RB1 and win a (national championsh­ip).”

Georgia’s wide receiver group is well-stocked with transfers London Humphreys (Vanderbilt), Michael Jackson III (USC) and Colbie Young (Miami) joining lettermen Dillon Bell, Dominic Lovett, Rara Thomas, Arian Smith and several others.

Likewise, even with the great Brock Bowers moving on, Oscar Delp, Lawson Luckie and transfer Ben Yurosek (Stanford) will keep the tight end position strong and be a big part of coordinato­r Mike Bobo’s strategy.

About the defense ...

There will be more new faces on defense, but signs point to little drop-off. The secondary will be the primary focus this spring as the Bulldogs seek to replace three starters who entered next month’s NFL draft.

Talent is prevalent, though, with experience­d players ready to take over.

Rising junior Daylen Everette, a former five-star recruit, started 14 games at cornerback opposite the since-departed Kamari Lassiter.

Julian Humphrey pushed Everette for playing time last season and is ready to step up after playing in 13 games as a backup and special teams contributo­r.

Georgia had to fight to keep freshman Daniel Harris out of the transfer portal and plans to utilize him since he didn’t leave.

All-American safety Malaki Starks leads a deep group of crosstrain­ed defensive backs, including Dan Jackson, Justyn Rhett, JaCorey Thomas, David Daniel-Sisavanh, Joenel Aguero and Kyron Jones. Somebody among them figures to become the starting nickel back.

Meanwhile, the Bulldogs are eager to see where five-star signees KJ Bolden and Ellis Robinson fit in.

That Georgia remains confident about inside linebacker despite losing two-year starter/leader Jamon Dumas-Johnson to Kentucky via the portal speaks to the talent accumulati­on at the position.

A big season is expected for senior Smael Mondon, who needs to stay healthy, and rising sophomores CJ Allen and Raylen Wilson represent athletic upgrades with more help on the way via recruits.

As always, defensive effectiven­ess will be dictated up front. The Bulldogs will look much the same as last season there with starters Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, Warren Brinson and Nazir Stackhouse back in the fold. The experiment of junior Mykel Williams moving from end to outside linebacker is critical and needs to work. But young talent abounds, with rising sophomores such as Jordan Hall, Jamaal Jarrett and Christen Miller eager to take the next step up front.

About special teams ...

Georgia is in great shape when it comes to kicking specialist­s, with kicker Peyton Woodring and punter Brett Thorson returning from solid seasons.

As a freshman, Woodring was 21-of-25 on field-goal attempts, with a long of 48 yards. He was perfect on 71 PATs.

Spring should determine if Woodring will handle kickoff responsibi­lities after senior Jared Zirkel transferre­d to Texas A&M. Woodring handled only two of Georgia’s 105 kickoffs in 2023.

Thorson, a personable Aussie, loves to joke about his lack of opportunit­ies to punt with the Bulldogs’ offense being so prolific. But he tends to make the most of his opportunit­ies. He averaged 43.84 yards on 32 punts after averaging 45.0 on 36 as a freshman.

The co-host of a weekly podcast, Thorson continues to plead to run a fake. Perhaps this is the year.

It’s in the returns game where there is some mystery. Primary returner Mekhi Mews transferre­d in search of a scholarshi­p, which he found at Houston. With Ladd McConkey NFL-bound, Anthony Evans, Dillon Bell and Aguero are the only returnees with any experience. Count Etienne among those eager to audition.

About the staff ...

This past offseason tied for the most coaching turnover Georgia has had in the Smart era. He replaced four assistants, which matches the 2022-23 offseason.

The Bulldogs replaced both secondary coaches, though Will Muschamp’s resignatio­n from the co-DC/safeties position had as much to do with getting Travaris Robinson on staff as it did getting Muschamp a step closer to retirement. Robinson worked for Muschamp at Florida and South Carolina. He comes to Georgia from Alabama.

The impact of Donte Williams coming to UGA from USC to replace the highly successful Fran Brown, who become coach at Syracuse, is unknown at this point in terms of being an upgrade or downgrade. He’ll coach the cornerback­s.

Meanwhile, James Coley returning as wide receivers coach certainly wouldn’t be labeled a splash hire. He replaces Bryan McClendon, who went to the NFL’s Tampa Bay Bucs, three years after he was demoted as Georgia’s offensive coordinato­r. But Smart went to some trouble and expense to make it happen.

Coley’s departure from South Carolina after only five weeks there required a $450,000 buyout of his contract. He will make $650,000 at UGA after making $1.1 million at Texas A&M last season. The Bulldogs certainly missed Coley’s recruiting presence in South Florida, where he grew up, coached high school ball and spent four years as a college assistant at FIU and Miami and another two years as an assistant with the NFL’s Miami Dolphins.

Dell McGee leaving last month to take over Georgia State’s program is the most significan­t change. McGee was the last of Smart’s original staff members, coaching running backs since 2016. What with Georgia’s proud running back legacy and McGee’s recruiting prowess, new backfield coach Josh Crawford (hired away from Georgia Tech) has some big shoes to fill. Crawford is a former Colquitt County Packer who knows his way around South Georgia and should be able to hold his own on the recruiting trail.

Meanwhile, there was much activity in the considerab­le space that houses Smart’s support staff.

Between experience­d coaches temporaril­y filling analyst roles and young quality-control specialist­s moving into elevated roles elsewhere, the Bulldogs have incurred extensive change in areas that include advanced statistica­l analytics, video review and recruiting evaluation.

Georgia football’s support group remains at more than 60 full-timers, though, and there are no indication­s of a let-up in any area.

Injuries, other stuff ...

Spring practice will mark a return to action for several players who missed playing time toward the end of the season.

Among those expected to get back on the field are cornerback Humphrey, linebacker Mondon, wide receiver Thomas, defensive tackle Christen Miller and outside linebacker Wilson, all of whom missed Georgia’s 63-3 win over Florida State in the Orange Bowl.

Smart is expected to provide updates on the injury list when he meets with the media Tuesday.

Sophomore running back Branson Robinson will not be among the returnees. He still is rehabilita­ting a major knee injury sustained in preseason camp last year.

The Bulldogs have seen more than 20 players who saw action last season enter the transfer portal.

The latest to leave was junior offensive lineman Chad Lindberg, who decided to seek a new destinatio­n last week after graduating in three years with a degree in finance. He’ll have two seasons of eligibilit­y remaining after playing in 28 games as a reserve lineman for the Bulldogs.

Neverthele­ss, Georgia remains over the NCAA’s 85-man scholarshi­p limit. At last count, the Bulldogs were at 89, depending on the scholarshi­p status of senior safety Dan Jackson.

The transfer portal window currently is closed to nongraduat­es but will reopen April 15 for a 15-day spring window.

 ?? JASON GETZ 2023 AJC FILE ?? Spring practice will be important for linebacker­s Raylen Wilson and Smael Mondon Jr., who are returning from injuries. Mondon should be one of the best inside linebacker­s in the nation.
JASON GETZ 2023 AJC FILE Spring practice will be important for linebacker­s Raylen Wilson and Smael Mondon Jr., who are returning from injuries. Mondon should be one of the best inside linebacker­s in the nation.
 ?? JORDAN KELLY/ICON SPORTSWIRE 2024 ?? Travaris Robinson is a key staff addition for Kirby Smart. Robinson had been Alabama’s secondary coach and is considered an ace recruiter.
JORDAN KELLY/ICON SPORTSWIRE 2024 Travaris Robinson is a key staff addition for Kirby Smart. Robinson had been Alabama’s secondary coach and is considered an ace recruiter.

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