The Columbus Dispatch

No. 1 Georgia set for SEC title bout with No. 3 Tide

- Marc Weiszer

Top-ranked Georgia and CFP No. 3 ranked Alabama meet Saturday at 4 p.m. ET in the SEC championsh­ip game in Atlanta. Here are three things to know about the matchup:

Alabama faces a more seasoned Stetson Bennett

Stetson Bennett’s first Georgia road start came at Alabama in October 2020.

He certainly looks like a different quarterbac­k than the one that threw what’s still a career-high three intercepti­ons and completed just 18 of 40 passes for 269 yards and two touchdowns in that 41-24 loss.

The player Alabama will see Saturday is now 12-2 as a starter, including 9-0 this season.

Bennett says his mechanics and understand­ing of the game are better, and a second year in Todd Monken’s offense has done wonders. He also has learned better not to take risks and says running for two or three yards isn’t bad.

“Just knowing that incompleti­ons don’t kill you and you don’t have to win on every play and you can’t win it on every play,” he said. “With our defense and the players we have, just focusing on the strength of our team and not trying to do it all yourself.”

That’s worked out well. Bennett is second in the nation in passing efficiency at 188.5 with 21 touchdowns and 5 intercepti­ons and second in yards per attempt at 10.8.

“It’s just those million reps you have in practice with the mindset of protect the ball and also be a ballplayer,” Bennett said. “It just comes over time I guess.”

Bennett is averaging 6.3 yards per carry on 30 rush attempts.

“He can escape the pocket really well,” Alabama linebacker Will Anderson said.

“He can move sideline to sideline. I think the biggest thing right now is we have to keep maintainin­g the pocket. We can’t let him run all over the field and make long drives with his feet. Watching film, I think that’s one of the biggest things that we’re looking for.”

Georgia led 24-20 at the half against Alabama last season in a game when Bennett had several passes tipped in including one that was intercepte­d.

“He’s played a lot more football now,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. “Certainly has improved in terms of decision making. But it’s a critical piece to every game, is that player at that position makes so many decisions during the game that the outcome is usually affected a lot by the quarterbac­ks that play the game.”

Final Heisman stage

Two defensive players mentioned as worthy of an invite to New York for the Heisman Trophy will be on display in the CBS nationally televised game.

With no slam dunk front-runners for quarterbac­ks or receivers this year, Georgia nose guard Jordan Davis and Alabama linebacker Will Anderson can leave a final impression on voters whose ballots are due on Monday.

It’s a mutual admiration society between Davis and Anderson.

“He’s a great player,” Davis said. “He’s a game wrecker, watching his film and just seeing him. He’s explosive. He’s definitely one of those guys you have to make sure to keep contained.”

Anderson returned the favor. “He’s a great player,” he said of Davis. “He’s big. I think he’s like the unit of their defense honestly. He’s pretty hard to move around. Just watching him, I feel like he’s a really great athlete for that size and he’s a really good player.

Bryce Young, the Alabama quarterbac­k, may be the top offensive candidate, but the Tide didn’t score a touchdown until the final minute in regulation last week at Auburn. Young led them on a 97-yard scoring drive.

Anderson has the statistics that jump out.

He’s third on Alabama’s single season sack list with 14 1/2 and second in tackles for loss with 30 1/2. Both lead the nation this season.

“He’s so explosive, twitchy, and tough,” Smart said. “So he strikes people and really strikes blocks really well. It will be a key part of the game in terms of the way he plays and affects the game.”

The 6-foot-4, 243-pound Anderson was a five-star prospect out of Dutchtown High. He grew up a Georgia fan, but he said the home state school didn’t give him too much attention.

“I’m here at Alabama, and I love it here,” he said. “It’s been great so far.”

The 6-foot-6, 350-pound Davis has modest numbers statistica­lly—24 tackles, 3 for loss and 2 sacks and that one big-man touchdown run—but he’s a run-stopper and the anchor of probably the best defensive line in the nation on a unit that is allowing just 6.9 points per game.

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