Even after another Dome drubbing, UGA’s progress is clear

Two reasons to be cheerful: Alec Ogletree, Todd Grantham. (AJC photo by Brant Sanderlin)

Reasons to be cheerful: Alec Ogletree, Todd Grantham. (AJC photo by Brant Sanderlin)

It ended as it began:  A massive Georgia contingent arrived at the Dome for a hugely anticipated game against a brand-name opponent, and the folks wearing red went home early. On Sept. 3 the Bulldogs led Boise State 7-0 and lost by two touchdowns; on Dec. 3 they led LSU by 10 points and lost by 32. And now you’re asking: This is progress?

Absolutely. The Boise game was a function of scheduling: Georgia’s choices were either to play or forfeit. The LSU game was for the championship of the nation’s best conference, and the Bulldogs had to win their way there. For the first time since 2005, the Bulldogs graced the big December game in the big city, and to qualify they had to rise from a 6-7 season and a Liberty Bowl to, ahem, Central Florida.

Another way in which the Boise loss wasn’t the LSU loss: Georgia was outfought and out-thought against the Broncos. As tight end Orson Charles admitted not long ago, “The first game was too big for us.” The only thing too big for Georgia on Saturday was its opponent.

The Georgia Bulldogs have played a lot of good teams over their long and distinguished history, but they might never have played one so physically imposing. There have been collegiate teams with greater skill, but as far as running fast and hitting hard the 2011 LSU Tigers might rank near the top of any list you’d care to compile.

To its credit, Georgia started fast and furious. Had it not dropped two touchdown passes and missed a field goal — and had the replay official been more diligent after Tyrann Mathieu flipped the ball to the official at the end of his first epic punt return — the Bulldogs could have led by 17 or 21 points and the game would have changed. LSU would probably have changed quarterbacks. (Coach Les Miles admitted afterward he was considering it at 10-0.) LSU would have had to throw the ball, which isn’t what LSU wants to do. That said …

LSU still might have won. There’s an indomitable nature to these Tigers that comes from being secure in their physical gifts, but such self-assurance is also fueled by the knowledge that they’ve played and won a bunch of big games against teams of comparable worth. Georgia still can’t say as much. Its biggest victories en route to the Dome were against Florida, Auburn and Georgia Tech, which lost a total of 15 games. LSU’s biggest victories were against Oregon, Alabama and Arkansas, which lost a total of five games.

This isn’t to say Georgia can’t ascend to that exalted plane. The Bulldogs could return as many as 16 starters and, apart from tailback Isaiah Crowell and receiver Malcolm Mitchell, the effect of the Dream Team recruiting class hasn’t been felt. Georgia will be a Top 10 pick in preseason and the favorite to win the SEC East. (And with Florida and Tennessee in clear retreat, Vanderbilt might be tabbed third behind South Carolina.)

How will UGA fare in 2012?

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Better still, the Bulldogs proved in 2011 that coaching, which  failed in 2009 and 2010, is no longer an issue. Todd Grantham’s defense was tremendous. (Can’t do any better than holding the nation’s No. 1 team to no first downs in a half.) Mark Richt recommitted himself to offensive scheming, and the results were apparent. He and Mike Bobo stitched together a cohesive attack without benefit of a reliable tailback, which isn’t easy to do.

That said: The key issue over the winter might again be the question of Crowell. His signing topped off the Dream Team last February, and his first appearance against Boise State was greeted with a mighty cheer. Contrast that to the boos spawned by his third and fourth limp-offs against LSU. Clearly Crowell has tried his coaches’ patience: He was disciplined twice this season, and Saturday he drew an unsportsmanlike penalty from the bench. Two weeks ago Richt, casting an eye toward the recruit Keith Marshall of Raleigh, noted the “tremendous opportunity” awaiting a running back at Georgia.

And he’s right. There is opportunity here, not just for a tailback but for a team. Georgia figures to be back in the SEC title game next year, and in December 2012 the Tigers — don’t look now, but LSU is also scheduled to return 16 starters — mightn’t hold the same edge in manpower and mindset.

In his final words to the media Saturday night, Richt said: “I don’t think we’re that far off. I really don’t.”

Right again. A team that couldn’t break .500 last year just played for an SEC championship. The Bulldogs will play for another soon enough, and before long they’ll win one.

By Mark Bradley

507 comments Add your comment

tee

December 5th, 2011
12:52 pm

I am really appalled by all of the Dawg fans who have indicted Richt, Bobo, and Crowell for the loss to LSU…come on!!!!! LSU is GOOD…did anyone notice!!!! This was just a situation, even if we had the coaching, attitude, Crowell running for over 1500 yards or whatever, we still would have gotten beat by those guys. They just made up their minds to make plays and that’s what they did. Did you see how big and chisled those guys were. We have to step it up in weightroom…more than just attitude, they physically whipped us when we were physically and mentally done. We did not quit…face it, they are just better than us. This is from a true, but objective and realistic Dawg fan!!!!

tee

December 5th, 2011
1:04 pm

UGA worries about being “national” on the recruiting scene…no, we need to keep the best players in state!!!! All of Louisiana’s top players go to LSU, Alabama’s to Bama, South Carolina’s to USC, etc. We would love to have Marshall from NC, but what about the kid from small town middle GA or South GA with a heart and desire to be a Dawg, not some kid who has everything thrown to him (Crowell). Yes he is just a kid and I would probably be the same way if I were 18 with apparently no true sound upbringing. Let’s give the kid the offseason to grow up some more…he is probably in attitude no different than some of these other kids who were labeled “great”. I am surely glad someone gave me another chance in life, and as a military officer, I turned out alright.

Dee

December 5th, 2011
2:35 pm

Meanwhile, the Boise State Broncos accept a bid to MAACO Las Vegas Bowl. Ouch. I really feel for those boys. They’re the Rodney Dangerfield of collegiate football. No respect!

Xavier

December 5th, 2011
4:13 pm

I find it unbelievable that people are talking about a loss of that scale as a “good game” or a “close game,” as I’ve heard some say. Sorry, but the dawgs got stawmped. Hard.
I imagine LSU fans think as highly of UGA, as its fans do of Kentucky.
And while A&M won’t be a threat for years to come–they hardly ever were outside their own pitiable conference–Auburn, Florida and, it is hoped, Tennessee will be older and wiser, too. And then there’s South Carolina, which just like the dawgs, leave this year better than they started. We’ll see if UGA stays ahead, or it the others just pull even. Since really the only difference this year was that many teams are rebuilding, I’m thinking it will be the latter.

Old Dog

December 6th, 2011
12:47 pm

“If we had gone undefeated, the negative Richt haters would still be saying fire the coach because the margin of victory would not have been enough”

I certainly would if we had played crap football all season and only won by chance. If we allowed 99 yard kickoff return touchdowns. If we allowed a punt to be blocked with 7 seconds on the clock and only up by 3. If we get unnecessary flags that back us up so far that we are 3rd and 45.

SEC Bama Fan

December 7th, 2011
10:20 pm

Georgia fans….it’s over. Get used to it.

Ybor City Dawg

December 8th, 2011
7:22 am

To a comment above. Nothing wrong with the concepts of our “simple offense”. LSU does nothing tricky schematically . They just execute their simple offense and use their physical strength and maturity to wear down opponents. Time in the weight room for our young guys will help. Crowell will get better if he wants to………. Key phrase “want to”