Fan talk: Is Georgia’s defense underperforming or overrated?

The Georgia defense fails to stop Connor Shaw running for another first down. (Bob Andres / AJC)

The Georgia defense fails to stop Connor Shaw running for another first down. (Bob Andres / AJC)

Georgia’s defense, which has failed to live up to preseason expectations, came in for quite a bit of criticism in this week’s Junkyard Mail. Let’s check out a sampling of what some fans are thinking. …

James Colvin writes: I’ve read what [Todd] Grantham and the players have said, but it boils down to this: There isn’t a team that has better personnel than UGA on defense this year. The analysts know this, Grantham knows it, all the players know it. All of these guys will be playing on Sunday next year or the year after. [But] we have not had a team defensive effort except Vandy. During the USC game, I recall seeing safeties not trusting the front seven to get the stop and getting torched on two long pass plays. Our ridiculously talented individual defenders have to play as a TEAM, and when they do, nobody can move against them.

And Jeremiah Johnson writes: I don’t want to blame the offense too much. Granted, they deserve their share, but the defense let the game get way out of hand way too early. … I’m beginning to wonder how dominant the defense actually was last year that allowed for all the hype this year. They were fantastic during the middle of the season, but in the beginning and end they didn’t pull through (the stats for sacks and tackles for loss resemble a bell curve, for instance). They have yet to really control an opponent’s backfield, which I think has led them to be susceptible to big pass plays. I don’t feel like I’m seeing the D blowing up the line to get sacks, it’s either they rush in untouched to get one, or eventually get a coverage sack. … It looks like they play with too much nervous emotion, as opposed to fight, fire, etc. Most of the defensive mistakes early in the game were because they were overcommitting to the run and trying to get too much pressure on [quarterback Connor] Shaw too fast. [Jarvis] Jones, for instance, was trying to outrun his tackle, leaving a huge hole for Shaw to scramble through and the safeties were jumping hard on the play-actions and bootlegs. Once they settled down, the game slowed down; this is why I blame the defense. Even though it was a teamwide meltdown, the defense was the first cog to break down, I think.

I have to agree with both James and Jeremiah. Georgia’s defense is the most disappointing aspect of the 2012 Dogs so far. A friend of mine was ranting along similar lines this week. As he noted, Grantham hasn’t slowed down South Carolina in three games. And playing into the soft-schedule theory, you could argue he earned his huge raise based on seven games where our defense was overwhelmingly dominant — and they all came against struggling offenses. Last season, Georgia had trouble stopping Boise State, South Carolina and Vandy. And while the defense looked like worldbeaters in the first half of the SEC championship game, they fell apart in the second half and wilted in the fourth quarter of the bowl game against Michigan State. My friend pointed out that even the SEC’s worst offense last year — Florida — had some success against the Dogs after being unable to do anything against the rest of the league. And this year’s defense has been troubling with the exception of the Vandy game. A lot of people have pointed to the suspensions and the resulting unsettled nature of Georgia’s defensive starters in the first five games, and that probably was a factor. But the Dogs’ defensive game plan against South Carolina wasn’t very good. A lot was expected of this defense, especially since several members of it could have left early for the NFL. But perhaps all that optimism overlooked the fact that Grantham’s D really hasn’t performed well to date against a top-notch offense. Too harsh? Well, the Florida game should tell us a lot.

Richard Moss writes: I saw a discussion on a couple of UGA fan blogs this week about whether Todd Grantham used his time wisely last week in preparing for the Gamecocks. Someone was complaining that they saw Grantham attending a 5th-6th grade football game in Athens last Thursday night in which his son was playing. The gist of their argument was that he should instead have been watching film and game-planning for South Carolina. What’s your take, Bill?

I certainly can’t argue with the fact that Grantham’s troops looked unprepared for a Gamecocks offense doing basically what everyone expected them to do, but I can’t believe anyone actually would blame that on Grantham taking the time to attend his kid’s game. Talk about overreacting! Football coaches spend little enough time with their families during the season as it is. Besides, complaining that Grantham wasn’t in his office on Thursday night ignores the fact that game plans are made and implemented early in the week, not on Thursdays. And not only was Grantham probably at work before the sun rose that day, but he may well also have gone back to work later, after he’d watched his son. These guys keep killer hours, but part of a college coach’s job is molding young men, and it’s important to show the players that you should never be too busy for your children.

Another popular topic this week among Junkyard Mailers was the Dogs’ poor record against ranked teams. ShreveportDawg writes: Hello Bill, love the blog. Turned 39 this past September and have been a Dawg fan for 30+ years and I cannot remember a game where we looked totally unprepared and gave such a lackluster performance. The one thing that keeps lingering in my head is the stat that Georgia is 0-10 now vs. top 10 teams under Richt and his staff. If something doesn’t change there soon what is Georgia to do in the next couple of years when the playoff system is put into place? If Georgia is wanting to be considered a national contender and be involved in the playoffs we will have to play top 10 teams. I never thought I would say this because I love Richt so much as a person, BUT there has to be a shake up from the ground up.

Along the same lines, DCDawg writes: OK Bill, do you think it is time to consider that Mark Richt is not able to take Georgia to that next level? Since the 2008 sUGAr Bowl, not only has this team looked less like a national power, but ESPN mentioned during last Saturday’s game that in the last three seasons, the Dawgs have not beaten a ranked team. The rest of the country wants to believe Georgia can win, evidenced by the rankings before the South Carolina game, but that is based on talent. You have to coach the talent and maybe Richt is unable to make that adjustment to get there. What do you think?

And Andrew writes: It feels like teams in the Richt era fall short more times than they persevere. I love everything Richt stands for, and I’m not calling for his job just yet, but I would like your thoughts.

First of all, the Dogs’ performance against ranked teams in recent seasons has not been good, but not quite as dire as Shreveport and DC indicate. Georgia beat two ranked teams last year: Auburn and Georgia Tech were Nos. 24 and 25, respectively, in the AP poll at the time those games were played. But, yes, the Dogs’ record against Top 10 teams since 2008 (when the current redshirt seniors started at UGA) is a dismal 1-9 (the last win being over No. 7-ranked Georgia Tech in 2009). Georgia’s record against Top 25 teams in that time period is 6-15. Actually, Richt’s record against ranked and Top 10 teams was pretty good in his early years at UGA but has gotten worse as his tenure has progressed. From 2001 through 2007, Georgia went 24-13 vs. ranked teams and went undefeated (5-0) against ranked opposition in both 2002 and 2007. What happened since then? Believe me, if I had that answer I’d drive over to Athens and slide it under Richt’s door. As for my views on his pluses and minuses as a head coach overall, see the answer to the next batch of letters.

Joe Burger writes: Hey Bill. I’m a fan of coach Richt, but can Richt and his staff ever get this program back to national prominence? Can we beat a nationally ranked team? In other words, can we ever challenge for a national championship? I just don’t know anymore. I’ve continued to see the same problems and issues in our losses and wins over the last several years … unpreparedness, slow starts, special teams, penalties, physicality.

Steve Yearta writes: Bill, Unfortunately my preseason concern about Georgia being overrated was justified in Columbia Saturday night. I take no pleasure in being accurate, and in fact it pains me to see our program in its present state. Your blog after the game spoke to the volumes of frustration that every Bulldog must be experiencing right now. I don’t see the present head coach being able to take the program beyond what it is now: A group of players that win most games based upon sheer superior talent, but when faced with a team of comparable players, the coaching required to overcome the talent parity is inferior and Georgia losses result.

I’m like you, Joe, in that I really like Richt. I think he’s a fine man who runs a program we can be proud of, and he’s the classiest coach in the SEC. But while he got off to a fast start early in his UGA career in terms of success on the field, it’s been much more of a spotty picture in recent seasons. Some problems he’s faced are unique to a particular season and can be written off as tough breaks, but there are some recurring problems that appear to be Richt weaknesses. The most obvious one is special teams, and I’m not very hopeful that will ever change under Richt because he was molded by Bobby Bowden, who rarely made that a top priority. Another recurring problem has been the offensive line. Ever since the linemen Richt inherited from Jim Donnan moved on, it seems the OL has rarely been a strength. That’s probably due to a combination of recruiting and coaching, but Richt ultimately gets the blame since he hired the folks responsible. And then there’s the frequent tendency of Richt teams to either play down to the level of a weak opponent or show up looking ill-prepared and unmotivated for a tough one. I supported giving Richt time to turn things around after a couple of rough seasons, and he got the Dogs back on track, up to a point, last season. But Georgia seems to be settling into a niche in the conference where they’re better than all the midlevel teams but a rung below the elite teams. Is that good enough? Can you seriously consider firing a coach who wins 10 games a season? And then there’s the point that UGA wouldn’t necessarily be better off making a change just because the longtime coach isn’t living up to his early resume. Ask Tennessee Vols fans about that. Next season, when Richt loses a bunch of veteran talent and the schedule gets tougher, may leave Greg McGarity with a tough decision to make. Good but not great wasn’t good enough for UGA in the Donnan years. What constitutes good enough now?

Phillip Joiner writes: Bill, My friend and I got to discussing possibilities for the [SEC] East and we had a question we hope you could answer. Here’s the scenario: Carolina already beat us. If we beat the Gators and the Gators beat the Gamecocks, it’s a 3-way tie where we all beat each other. If the division and league record would be even, is overall record the next tiebreaker? With Georgia Tech being a true “rambling wreck” we should win that one, while South Carolina has Clemson and Florida has FSU. How would that impact who goes Doming?

I’d advise not taking anything for granted in looking ahead, but if the scenario you describe were to occur, here’s how it works: Division standings are based on a team’s overall conference record (much to Steve Spurrier’s dismay last year). If three teams in the division wind up the season tied, the first tie-breaker is the combined head-to-head record among the teams, then their record within the division, followed by their record against the division team that has the best overall conference record. Then they look at their record against non-division teams. After that, the tied team with the highest BCS ranking after the end of the regular season gets the edge unless the second of the tied teams is ranked within five or fewer places of the highest ranked team. In that case, the head-to-head results of the two top-ranked tied teams will determine who is the SEC East’s representative in the championship game.

Who deserves more blame for the blowout in Columbia? Todd Grantham or Mike Bobo? (University of Georgia)

Who deserves more blame for the blowout in Columbia? Todd Grantham or Mike Bobo? (University of Georgia)

Jon Wilhoit writes: Bill, I am an optimist, but also a realist. I have defended [Mike] Bobo, based on decent offensive production, but with a simmering level of frustration because his play-calling has time and again killed momentum and all too often kept opponents in games that the Dawgs should have easily blown the other team out. [Jadeveon] Clowney is the top defensive player in college football. How does Bobo not game-plan for him? How does Bobo not have a fullback dedicated to double-teaming Clowney on every passing down? We experienced [Marcus] Lattimore’s ability for the last two years and Shaw’s dual-threat ability [was well-known]. Is Richt not asking Grantham what his plan is to contain them? How about Alec Ogletree spying Lattimore and a DB on Shaw and make them beat us elsewhere? The point is, there was nothing special about our game-plan to counter what IS special about our opponent’s capabilities.

And Will writes: Bill, after watching South Carolina’s domination, with no bright spots for the Dawgs quite honestly, and [Kirk] Herbstreit’s bashing of essentially the team and the program late in the game on national television, I think this was a realization that under this coaching staff we cannot win the big games, which means we probably can’t win championships under Richt. It’s a hard pill to swallow, but … the state of our program is frankly just mediocre. Not great, definitely not worthy of a top 5 or top 10 ranking, and I believe #14 where we are is just right. If we want to crack top 10 again we have to earn it by beating a really good team in Florida to at least possibly REACH Atlanta. I don’t believe I’m the only one who thinks this. Your thoughts?

Will, even if Georgia beats Florida, it’s going to be up to South Carolina to lose two games in order for the Dogs to make it back to the Dome. And, Jon, you summed up pretty well the frustration most Georgia fans felt watching the game last Saturday night. Most observers figured Georgia’s young offensive line would need help, but Bobo’s plan to have a back “chip” the pass rushers obviously wasn’t enough, and a suitable adjustment wasn’t made. Likewise with Grantham’s defensive game plan. South Carolina has some talented players, but not more than Georgia. And I’m not convinced the Gamecocks wanted the game more. I think what made the difference in Columbia was that Georgia got outcoached.

Finally, on an off-field subject, Limeydawg writes: I have an idea I’d like to see gain some traction. Aaron Murray’s father has cancer. I’ll bet none of us has anything but prayers and good wishes for Murray senior, and for Aaron. As a fan, this hits home as I’m sure it will with many of you. My son, Dylan, was diagnosed with leukemia at age 2, and the American Cancer Society is, therefore, one of my favorite charities. So it struck me that we, the Dawg Nation, have a chance to step up in a big, big way. So, when we play Kentucky on 11/03, how about we call for a pink-out to create a little cancer awareness on the national stage? Maybe the athletic department can collect money at the gates on that date and donate it to the ACS on behalf of the Murray family. To me, this is what Georgia is about. Yes, we’re passionate, unforgiving and slightly off kilter when it comes to our Dawgs. We’re also possessed of giant hearts. I’m locked down in SW Florida, but some of you know somebody who knows somebody. Put a bug in an ear. Show the nation that Georgia has a heart.

I’m not sure a pink-out is in order here since pink is generally used in connection with breast cancer awareness. I’ve seen one organization that touts a teal/pink/blue ribbon to bring awareness to thyroid cancer, which is what Aaron’s dad has, while another uses purple. But I don’t think either idea is well-known enough to be effective. Neither is the lavender ribbon used to bring awarness to all cancers. But I certainly agree that collecting at the gate for cancer research would be a great idea. If not the athletic department, perhaps one of the student organizations at UGA would like to take that on.

Since this is a bye week for UGA, the Blawg also will be taking the weekend off. But we’ll be back discussing the Dawgs next week. Have a good weekend and stay safe, everyone!

I’ll answer more Junkyard Mail next week. Do you have something you want to discuss concerning the current football season or UGA athletics in general? Got a question you want the Junkyard Blawg to tackle? If so, send it to junkyardblawg@gmail.com.

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— Bill King, Junkyard Blawg

253 comments Add your comment

Want Change Dawg Nation?

October 12th, 2012
9:53 am

Whats also comical, is that those of us who dare to criticize our coaching staff are considered the lunatic fringe or we are just fair weather fans.

Stiffneck

October 12th, 2012
9:54 am

Actually it’s both – underperforming and overrated. Not impressed.

Neutral

October 12th, 2012
9:55 am

JB, we play almost the exact same schedule as SC……and Bama doesn’t play UF, UGa or SC. In fact, their toughest game is against a very mediocre LSU. Based on your logic, those teams should also have losses.

Want Change Dawg Nation?

October 12th, 2012
9:56 am

@ neutral…… remember Bama made a change, Florida made a change. Change isnt so bad if its the right change.

Want Change Dawg Nation?

October 12th, 2012
9:58 am

Gosh even South Carolina made a change…. They have now whipped us three years running.

Neutral

October 12th, 2012
9:58 am

Correct “want change” you are totally correct. Which one are you?

Neutral

October 12th, 2012
10:00 am

Yes, and TN made a change, and Auburn made a change, and, and……….

Want Change Dawg Nation?

October 12th, 2012
10:00 am

Im certainly not a Tech fan which many of the apologist love to throw out there.

Want Change Dawg Nation?

October 12th, 2012
10:03 am

Dabo @ clempson made a change in his offensive coordinator which is paying huge dividends. He went out and got Venables who he wanted for his defensive coach. Richt had to settle on Grantham which was about a 4th choice.

Neutral

October 12th, 2012
10:04 am

OK, then that makes you one of the “fair weather” fans!

Want Change Dawg Nation?

October 12th, 2012
10:07 am

Here neutral ….. you get a trophy and we are not keeping score to keep you happy…. Is that ok?

Dawg Tired

October 12th, 2012
10:08 am

It irritates me when folks blame Bobo (no special plan to handle Clowney) and Grantham (no one assigned to spy on Shaw) for our shortcomings, which are obviously many. Isn’t it the responsibility of the HEAD COACH to come up with these kind of things and make sure his coordinators go out and coach the boys up in preparation for the game? This is not a Bobo or a Grantham problem. It is a Richt problem! As a former coach (admittedly at a much lower level than major college), I am amazed at the blame folks put on the coordinators. I always met with my assistants and watched the game film of the upcoming opponent and came up with the game plan. Final decisions are always the responsibility of the head coach. At practice, the head coach has to make sure the game plan is being installed correctly, etc. When it does not work, it is one person’s, and only one person’s fault, to wit: the head coach’s.

Chaz Henry

October 12th, 2012
10:10 am

Grantham’s only talent is giving the choke sign.

John L. Smith

October 12th, 2012
10:11 am

Dawg nation needs to quit bickering amongst themselves. SMILE! Heck even a blind squirrel finds a nut now and then. Look at what my team did last week!

Dawg Tired

October 12th, 2012
10:13 am

Of course, we could just be satisfied with not being able to compete with teams like South Carolina. Wow! I never thought I would see that day! Folks like “Neutral” seem to think it ok to not even be competitive against a team like South Carolina! That is absolutely amazing to me.

Chaz Henry

October 12th, 2012
10:13 am

Richt is involved in the game plan and hears every call that Bobo makes. Unless he had a tannin booth set up in the dressing room at halftime, he helped make adjustments. It falls on his head and no one elses. Either he is a poor HC or a poor CEO. Either way he is overpaid and should be let go.

Joey

October 12th, 2012
10:21 am

Richt should hope and pray SC wins out.

One less humiliation for his team at the Dome . . .

LogicalUS

October 12th, 2012
10:25 am

Tried to tell people, the most overhyped of the UGA coaches was always Grantham. It was always dubious the almost blind reverence which UGA fans have bestowed upon this coach.

Reality is that Grantham has repeatedly been overmatched vs the better coaches he has faced. It should have been obvious last year after his debacle of preparatiion vs Boisy given an entire summer to prepare a strategy? He was embarrassed by the Boisy coaching staff.

Grantham is very bad at making halftime adjustments and he is 0-3 vs SC\Spurrier. And even in his defining glory moment reveled in by UGA fans everywhere when he got into the scuffle with the VANDY coach…it came after a night when his defense was abused up and down the field by the Vandy offense and was saved by Coach Bobo’s offense and a lucky trip by the UGA punter.

But not to worry I am sure that he will be back shutting down UK\GSU soon all to reverence by the local UGA beaners.

DocDawg

October 12th, 2012
10:46 am

Interesting discussion, many fans look at schemes and coaches as well they should because leadership and training starts there. Granted players make the plays but mistakes consistently always lead back to the staff, as has been the case this season. No team anywhere has more talent, case in point last Sat night. The integrity of a program is a huge theme and cornerstone of what athletics stands for in the first place and this staff has that in place year in and year out. That must be respected but really is an administrative necessity from the AD down. There will be a point where on field performance will demand that Mcgarity possibly demand changes in Richt`s staff or tenure and there are great coaches like Richt was years back like Peterson who may jump at Ga`s job. When that day comes Richt will have to make some big staff decisions like he did a few years back w/ Martinez et al. The remainder of the year will tell alot of the story, beginning in Jax. Florida has improved and has a legit D and improving O with alot of different looks and packages designed to create confusion and open big plays. They aren`t in my opinion more talented than Ga, but few teams are. Grantham has to realize by now that multischemes and looks are where D is going, starting w/ the NFL. 3-4s change to 4-3s and 5-3 3s continually to confuse and offbalance the ever faster O pace at all levels now. Failure to do so makes a team predictable and even when less talented teams figure you out, they can hit big plays as evidenced by everybody thus far except Vandy. Vandy is a good squad btw, only truly minced by GA. That intensity and focus was nowhere to be seen w/ Carolina, and we`ll see about Fl. If not, the look in the mirror may be needed at the end of this year if championships are truly what Ga admins want. Coachemup!!!

Cal22

October 12th, 2012
10:50 am

A week after the loss and fans are still trying to determine whether or not they were overrated. Guessing it’ll be February before you guys figure out your schedule is soft, too.

ARdawg

October 12th, 2012
10:58 am

Cal22

Overrated would be a GT team that was slated to win 6 games this year

Macclenny_dawg

October 12th, 2012
11:00 am

Talent we should be ranked top 5. Coaching about 50. Overall ranking about 25. Sounds about right!!! Energy vampire is driving the bus!!! SICK OF RICHT!!!

Cal22

October 12th, 2012
11:01 am

Agreed ARdawg, Tech is actually worse than GA. Not many teams can say that.

Flo-Ri-Duh

October 12th, 2012
11:05 am

Jarvis Jones has been injured ever since the Missouri game…… without him there has been NO pass rush. NONE. Last year Washington got a good pass rush at LB but he was moved to DE where he has not shown much as a pass rusher. Blitzing by the other LBs and DBs has not gotten to the QB fast enough. That has led to a total break down of the pass defense. That has been obvious in every game – even the easy one’s. Special team coverage of kicks was good up until last week when they whiffed on three tackles and Ace Sanders (all 160 lbs of him) ran through arm tackles for a TD. Rambo gave up a long play that he should have intercepted – leading to another blown coverage TD. Voila! 21-0 before the 10 minute mark of the 1st quarter. The interception of the tipped ball over the middle and Murray seemed rattled after that missing at least three wide open receivers. S.C.’s OL is average but whipped UGA’s DL all night long. Even Pollock said on ESPN before the S.C. game that UGA’s defense was awful.

TallaDawg

October 12th, 2012
11:27 am

Richt & Co plan and implement THEIR game-plan. They do not plan for the opponent’s game-plan.

:roll:

October 12th, 2012
11:48 am

Enter your comments here

Desert Fox

October 12th, 2012
12:11 pm

Is Georgia’s defense underperforming or overrated? Both.

ARdawg

October 12th, 2012
12:16 am

Hit the nail on the head. Have some pride and get to the SECCG by beating the opposition and not waiting for them to whip one another allowing your team to get there thru the back door. GA’s become the rodney dangerfield of college football. A joke. Its embarrassing to dawg fans watching season after season of dissappointments. So we/dawgs win 10 games a year (when they play soft sched) its meaningless if the losses are to div foes and the likes of UCF. Blame the players, coaches both do a poor job in big games. The issues have become systemic in nature deep rooted and the cures usually require major fixes. It’ll get worse before it gets better as the dawgs lose a lot of players to grad and early departures for the NFL. Schedule gets tougher. The sooner the AD finds a top notch replacement for CMR and his staff the better. The dawgs need to regain the respect of the college football world. They cannot do it w/CMR as its HC.

joe jenkins

October 12th, 2012
12:29 pm

we have no pass rusher…pure and simple

GR

October 12th, 2012
12:44 pm

Concerning the D:
1) coaches cannot caoch- game prep, 2)players cannot play, 3) players do not care to play or a combo of the above.

Concerning the O: horrible plsy calling at sc.

Concerning motivationb: Erk Russell and the JUNKYARD DAWG IS DEAD !!!!!

There are many reasons. One person draws millions and two others draw lot of $ to cause these things not to happen.

“Nuff said

DAWGGUY

October 12th, 2012
12:44 pm

Nearly as I can tell, Grantham is a blowhard, a total windbag.

DAWGGUY

October 12th, 2012
12:46 pm

Mike Bobo is slightly less than mediocre on his very best day.

DAWGGUY

October 12th, 2012
12:48 pm

Dumpster fire, eh, Sunbury? I like that. Pretty much sums it up.

UA Grad

October 12th, 2012
1:00 pm

Georgia is a proud team with a fine history. It is a top 20 program. UGA alums and people are good, good people.

Mark Richt is a good man. He is a good coach.

However, I truly believe UGA really doesn’t have the “want it” factor. You may disagree. Everyone in your program from the AD & Coach to the students and citizens have to put forth the time, energy and desire to win. You have to have talent plus hard work, coaching and a will to win. Talent alone doesn’t win championships.

Good players that receive excellent coaching, give 110% on every snap, are mentally & physically tough and believe in themselves will beat world-class players who don’t work hard every time. There are exceptions –Herschel, Cam, Tebow.

You can still won the east. Good luck.

UA Grad

October 12th, 2012
1:02 pm

Win the East! Darn mechanical engineering degree of mine :)

dawg

October 12th, 2012
1:08 pm

One of the best coaches in the country for the next head coach at UGA>>>>Kyle Whittingham…head coach at Utah!!!!!!

joe jenkins

October 12th, 2012
1:10 pm

Everybody wants richt replaced….now then…who is going to replace grantham….i’m pretty sure the new coach would not retain such an overated DC

VAdawg

October 12th, 2012
1:12 pm

Kyle Whittingham …. coach at Utah as next UGA coach!!!!!

Hmmmm

October 12th, 2012
1:28 pm

Overrated and under performing! Rambo has eaten too many brownies and looks lost, and the rest of the team are just trying not to get hurt before draft day.

Hotdawg

October 12th, 2012
1:32 pm

They need to quit watching so much game film of their mistakes and study game film of their next opponent. Team looked lost and unprepared for the sc game. Reminded me of the boise state game last year.

joe jenkins

October 12th, 2012
2:08 pm

Well hotdawg…..why is the team so unprepared for big? I think these coaches dont know how to develop players….they are progressing when they are freshmen….but after that, they progress anymore…even malcom micthell has even took a step back…. no special teams coach is the most stupid thing richt has ever thought of

Tayter Salad and Maynaize

October 12th, 2012
2:15 pm

I Think we need to implement and rocket set and allow the receivers to run corner zig zags

Bad Dawg

October 12th, 2012
2:39 pm

Excerpts from the USC Game Planning Meeting with CMR, CTG and CMB:

CMR: OK, gentlemen, let’s make it quick, I’ve got to get over to the Ramsey Center for a diving exposition. You go first CMB
CMB: The big matchup problem is with Clowney. We’ll have the linemen and RBs dive at his feet thereby confusing him so much that he will run away!
CMR: I like your style, Bobo. What about Murray?
CMB: We all know what a big-game QB he is, just let him do his thing!
CMR: Agreed. OK CTG you’re up.
CTG: Well, this week we’ve decided not to take away the pass or the run. They will become so confused, they will simply hand us the ball back.
CMR: That’s never been tried before! Brilliant!
CMB: What about punt coverage
CMR: I’m not familiar with the concept but I don’t want to take focus away from the complexities of the game plan so let’s keep it simple.
CMB: What about the atmosphere and crowd noise.
CMR: I’d be surprised if their fans were into the game. It’s so late at night, most of them probably will wonder off by game time.
CMB: Ok, hadn’t really thought of that. I guess that’s why you’re the head coach and I’m not.
CMR: Good stuff guys. Why don’t you take the rest of the week off. See you in Columbia

John L. Smith

October 12th, 2012
2:48 pm

Bad Dawg….. That made me SMILE!

joe jenkins

October 12th, 2012
3:40 pm

@Bad Dawg….aint that about the truth? anyway’s that was funny as hell!!!

SSIgator

October 12th, 2012
4:28 pm

“Is Georgia’s defense under-performing or overrated?”
_________________

Both, but by the same token, so is Richt. So there you go.

wheels

October 12th, 2012
4:36 pm

I still can’t wear our colors. To have the ESPN commentators degrade us is beyond compare. Have our players heard the comments from ESPN??? Has CMR heard or read these blogs??? Oh, I remember….their looking at themselves on game film trying to figure out what happened!!!!

DAWGrad at the ZOU

October 12th, 2012
4:42 pm

The “stat” that baffles me the most is how successful our players are in the NFL. I think UGA should change its name to “NFL prep school”. The coaches appear to be more concerned about playing in offensive/defensive schemes…(i.e – 3-4 scheme, play-action pass, pocket QB’s, etc) that will prepare their players for the NFL than actually winning ballgames.

It is crazy to me how good these players become when they get to the NFL. All that tells me is that all they needed was a decent coach to turn them from “boys into men”. We just don’t have that in the classic city as of now.

I guess that’s why recruits keep coming here b/c they know they will end up making the big bucks in the NFL, which I guess is more important than winning an MNC in the long run.

Your Matt Leinart’s and Vince Young’s of the NFL world have a heisman and NC to show for their football resume’, but that trophy won’t buy them success/respect in the NFL.

As a Dawg fan and CFB in general….I would prefer the UGA coaching staff put more into winning a MNC than into helping players’ draft stock.

McDawg

October 12th, 2012
4:46 pm

the guy who needs to step up is K. Geathers

McDawg

October 12th, 2012
4:54 pm

and M. Gilliard is getting knocked around all over the place

t2go

October 12th, 2012
4:58 pm

I Have been a Richt basher for years…I feel the guy doesnt motivate or command respect from his players.We got through a couple of tough years and then had that mixed bag of a season last year. I root for the Dawgs and want them to win….but something is wrong with this program…I know winning seasons do not come easily and that we all may be suffering from high expectations…but really this is becoming Georgias identity…a team better than most but not nearly as good as the elite. It is so frustrating. Richt is so slow to make changes…and they just seem content with “good enough”…when does Richt get fired up!? When does he get angry or excited?! This is just not good enough…we have the players…they are not being coached…it has only been obscured by the talent on the field beating lesser opponents and giving them winning seasons…….MAKE A CHANGE…THIS WILL GO ON FOREVER!!!! THIS WAS THEIR BEST CHANCE AND THEY BLEW IT BIG TIME! GET SOMEONE ELSE AT THE END OF THE YEAR!!!!