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Expect wild ride

The College Football Playoff top 25 is in for an overhaul with contenders facing off this month,

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With Georgia all but eliminated from the Southeaste­rn Conference East race and more speculatio­n bubbling about the future of head coach Mark Richt, the program appears to be in deep dysfunctio­n and headed for major changes that may or may not involve Richt.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitu

tion posted a story indicating Richt has been given a directive to fix the issues within the program that have led to a disappoint­ing 5-3 start and saying dissension among members of the coaching staff has been at the root of many problems.

USA TODAY Sports spoke with multiple people who have insight into the situation at Georgia. They spoke on the condition of anonymity and encompass all levels of the college athletics industry from well-connected supporters of the program to agents to search firms.

Those conversati­ons produced the following conclusion­s:

Georgia athletics director Greg McGarity favored a coaching change after last season but was overruled by President Jere Morehead. Richt was then given a contract extension. However, McGarity told USA TODAY Sports on Thursday, “There isn’t one ounce of truth to that. That is not right.”

Regardless of the ultimate decision on Richt this time, defensive coordinato­r Jeremy Pruitt almost certainly will not be back, as his relationsh­ip with Richt and Georgia administra­tors has grown toxic.

Georgia does not have one or two mega-boosters with the influence to make the call on Richt, but the displeasur­e of the Bulldogs’ high-dollar financial supporters has made its way to Morehead’s office.

If Richt stays, it will be with a coaching staff that looks very different, as first-year offensive coordinato­r Brian Schottenhe­imer has also been viewed as a problem.

It’s an untenable situation for any major program, particular­ly one such as Georgia that should be competing for SEC titles annually but has squandered opportunit­y in the weakened East Division over the last few years.

The personalit­y conflict between Pruitt and Richt stands at the center of Georgia’s failed season. Pruitt, who came up from the Nick Saban tree and was Jimbo Fisher’s defensive coordinato­r in 2013 at Florida State, was given wide latitude to improve the program from its recruiting operation to autonomy over several coaching hires.

But as Georgia has continued to lose, intense and brash Pruitt has butted heads with laid-back Richt, who has never been a fan of the idea that Alabama influence has become pervasive in his program. A lot of the blame internally has also been directed to- ward offensive line coach Rob Sale, who was hand-picked by Pruitt but has coached a unit that underperfo­rmed despite high expectatio­ns.

At midday Thursday, Richt tweeted, “Just so everyone knows, Jeremy Pruitt is our defensive coordinato­r and is in the office working diligently getting ready for Kentucky!”

Many in the industry question whether Georgia will have the stomach to ultimately force out Richt and indicate it might be better for all parties involved if he chose to walk away after this season. Further complicati­ng matters are the facts that Richt has never before willingly entertaine­d the idea of walking away and that Georgia could potentiall­y bring in the nation’s No. 1ranked recruiting class next year.

If Georgia were to make a change at the top, it would be a highly coveted job, perhaps even as attractive as the opening at Southern California.

McGarity, who has been Geor- gia’s athletics director since 2010, has never conducted a coaching search of this magnitude. He previously worked under Jeremy Foley at Florida, and it is expected he would lean heavily on Foley’s advice should he find himself in the middle of a coaching search.

Multiple people told USA TODAY Sports on the condition of anonymity that McGarity had a very high opinion of Mississipp­i State’s Dan Mullen from their time together at Florida. Though that does not necessaril­y line up with Foley’s opinion of Mullen — he was not considered a candidate for the Florida opening after last season — the Georgia job worries Mississipp­i State athletics director Scott Stricklin, according to one person with knowledge.

Georgia’s search, of course, could go much wider than the SEC. Names such as Jimbo Fisher, Dabo Swinney, Mark Dantonio, David Shaw, Jim Mora, Gary Patterson and James Franklin would all come up initially, with others such as Bill O’Brien certain to be linked with Georgia. There is no guarantee any of those coaches would be interested, but that is the kind of list Georgia could and should pursue, according to multiple people in the industry.

Then again, nothing is guaranteed at Georgia, which operates differentl­y from other SEC programs and does not like to be viewed as a cutthroat operation. There is a good chance Georgia could win its final four games and muddle along at 9-3 with no significan­t victories while further falling behind SEC East rivals Florida and Tennessee.

The next few weeks, and maybe even days, promise to be intense around Athens and will determine the course of potentiall­y the next decade of Georgia football.

 ?? TCU’S GARY PATTERSON BY USA TODAY SPORTS ??
TCU’S GARY PATTERSON BY USA TODAY SPORTS
 ?? KIM KLEMENT, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Georgia head coach Mark Richt might survive any changes, but his defensive and offensive coordinato­rs might not.
KIM KLEMENT, USA TODAY SPORTS Georgia head coach Mark Richt might survive any changes, but his defensive and offensive coordinato­rs might not.
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