Following is a transcription of comments from Georgia coach Mark Richt and various players from Tuesday’s media luncheon at Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall. The Bulldogs (7-2, 5-1 SEC) play host to Auburn (6-3, 4-2) on Saturday . . .
Head Coach Mark Richt
Opening Statement . . .
“We all know Auburn is the defending national champions. They have impressed me quite a bit, especially how they have fought to win a couple of fourth quarter battles, some very close games that they have prevailed in. Even game one, I remember watching a little bit of that on TV as we were getting prepared to play Boise State. It looked like Utah State had won the game and went up 10 with just a couple of minutes to go. Auburn scored, got the onside kick, and scored again. You can’t do that unless you have a special team, and you can’t do that unless you really prepare for those types of moments. That’s great coaching.
“Coach (Gene) Chizik has done a wonderful job at Auburn. They play hard, they are fundamentally sound, they have great special teams. I know they’ll be well-rested and have a great plan coming off of an open date. It’s going to be a heck of challenge for us. We are looking forward to it. We are hoping to have a great practice today. Today is huge for us.”
On Georgia’s run defense . . .
“I think our run defense is better for a lot of reasons. Number one, we are big. We are big up front. A year ago our nose guard was DeAngelo Tyson. Tyson is a pretty big man, but compared to what Kwame (Geathers) is and what Jonathan Jenkins is, it’s just a little bit different. Now at the end position, to be able to take DeAngelo and move him out along with Abry Jones, they are pretty big, stout guys up front. They’ve taken a lot of pressure off of some young linebackers and inexperienced linebackers throughout the year. If you can get those guys eating up a couple of blockers, all of a sudden your linebackers starting doing extremely well. I think we’ve also grown at the linebacker position. Mike Gilliard has been outstanding. The guy gets his opportunity and does well. You hate to play a freshman, but Amarlo (Herrera) has gone in there and done very well also. Getting (Alec Ogletree) has been big. The other thing is the support from the safeties has been big. I just think we understand what we’re doing better. I think Coach (Todd) Grantham, being in his second year, it’s been very, very good.”
Most striking difference from last year . . .
“Our third down conversions might be the most striking difference from a year ago statistically. We weren’t very good at getting people off the field, and now we are. That’s really another reason why you don’t see as many rushing yards because we are getting them off the field, and when you do that they aren’t scoring. I think offensively we’ve scored enough early enough to get people a little bit concerned about staying with the game plan. If their plan going in was to run the rock, once you get behind a little bit it’s harder to do that. You feel like you are less patient. I think you have to score points offensively too to get people to feel like they have to throw the ball more than they would like to. All those things together I think have been a big reason.”
On whether Georgia will rotate players at kicker again this week . . .
“I’m not going to divulge that right now because I’m not 100 percent sure. I will say I thought it went well. I’m glad we scored touchdowns and all we kicked was extra points, but it would have been a little more interesting to me to see guys attempt field goals under that rotation. We’re going to go through practice too and see how everybody does throughout the week. It’s a highly competitive situation, and I think that’s healthy. I think it’s good for them.”
On facing Auburn’s offensive tempo . . .
“I think we’re in good condition. I think we’ve benefitted from very mild weather. Most of our games have been where it hasn’t been extremely hot, and I think that’s helped us. We’re in the time of the year where it’s very cool. You have TV timeouts happening all the time. It’s almost hard to get tired out there. When a team like that starts running their offense and they don’t substitute, which means we can’t substitute and they get a couple of first downs back to back, you are going to get some people tired, especially the big interior defensive linemen. That’s been part of our strategy too. If you run off about four, five or six plays in a row without changing personnel and without having to punt somewhere along the way, you’ll get some guys a little bit tired.”
On how Aaron Murray has played in big games . . .
“I think Murray has progressed extremely well. I think he is a very good quarterback and I think he’s a great leader. The quarterback is not the only guy out there playing. Everybody is playing. Everybody has to make plays. I’m glad we’ve got him. I think he’s one of the best quarterbacks in our league, if not the best. We’re real pleased with Aaron.”
On Georgia’s youth and how they have matured . . .
“Going into the season I wasn’t thinking in my mind that we were going to be that young of a team, but as it turned out some young players kind of rose up and started making plays for us. They got a little bit more playing time either through their production during camp or through injuries, whatever it might be. I think right now we have three seniors up front on offense, our fullback Bruce Figgins is in the starting lineup, and on defense DeAngelo (Tyson) and (Brandon) Boykin is all we have as far as seniors. Of course our kicker and punter are seniors. We are a relatively young team.
“What happens is when you get into camp and you start practicing and you spend time with your team day after day after day, you just get a good feel for them. By the time we got to game one I knew we had a really good team. I knew we had good unity. I thought the leadership was good. I thought we had just a very positive camp. We had guys who were playing hard. I think guys were totally bought into what our coaches were trying to teach. All those things I felt like we already had. The truth of the matter is when you lose the first two games it basically reveals if you have a close-knit team or not. It’s rare that you’ll have a team that’s not unified, lose two and then all of a sudden you get unified. I don’t think that happens. When you hit adversity, you find out what you’ve already developed and find out what you already have. I just felt like we had a good bunch all along. I’m glad there are a lot of young guys making plays. I think we’re doing a better job of playing more guys period and relying on different people than just everybody feeling like I can’t make a substitution here or this backup is going to not be ready. I think injury has forced us to do that in some cases, and not having an A.J. Green where everybody has to do their part, I think it’s been healthy for the morale of the team, too.”
On the team’s chemistry after an 0-2 start . . .
“Basically, you try to build team. You try to build togetherness. You try to build family. You try to build trust. That’s how you handle adversity when you have trust, when you have unity and when you have guys that believe. But you never for sure until it hits you in the mouth how you are going to react. I wasn’t shocked that they guys reacted in a real positive way. Again, if you back up to game one we just weren’t as ready for that game as they were. That’s just the way I see it, and they are a very good football team. Game two was our first SEC game, so we still knew we had a shot to win our league which is the only thing we can control. When the game was over I don’t think anybody left there thinking ‘my gosh, we’ve got no chance in this league, we can’t do it.’ We left there feeling like if we would be more disciplined and take care of the ball better and not allow certain big plays from happening we had a very good chance to win that game. We felt like as the season progressed we didn’t feel like there wasn’t any team on our schedule that we couldn’t beat I guess is the best way to say it. There wasn’t a whole lot of ‘woe is me’ in the there, it was more of ‘if we get our act together we together we can be really good.’”
On how Richt has personally handled criticism this year…
“I know you never know what tomorrow is going to bring, so it’s not like we’ve arrived or anything like that. But we have played well lately and we’ve won lately so that’s a big deal. Quite frankly, I love the game of football. I love my job. I love Georgia. But what I do is not who I am. I’ve said that before. I think sometimes if we become what we do, and then things aren’t going just right, then all of a sudden our entire world falls apart. I’ve got a faith in my Lord and savior Jesus Christ, and I know that God loves me and is going to take care of me. I just truly believe that. When all the games are done and all the life is lived, I know where I’ll be for eternity. Not to say I don’t care about what happens in this world because that’s not true. Colossians 3:23 says ‘whatever you do, do your work heartily as unto the Lord,’ so that’s what I was doing on a daily basis. I was doing my job as best I could and trying to do it for his glory and try not to worry about anything else. That’s kind of how I navigated that time and there will be more tough times I’m sure. That’s the way life is.”
On if he felt any relief when Arkansas beat South Carolina…
“No. Not at all because now the fact that we are in control of our own destiny really all this is on us. Before we really didn’t have control, and we could only control trying to keep pace. Now that we have control of our destiny I would say that’s even more of a reason to heighten your work ethic and prepare maybe even a little harder.”
On Cordy Glenn’s move from left guard to left tackle for this season…
“It is different. Cordy is a big strong, guy, and he is very athletic. When you play guard it is a smaller space. You’re not dealing in pass protection with quite as much. People talk about a guy being on an island and being on the back side of your quarterback that is a very important responsibility. You’re dealing with a lot more speed as far as the rushers are concerned. I think Cordy has improved every week. I think he’s very comfortable there now. I think his future is very bright. I think he could play tackle or guard in the NFL. I think he made a wise decision to come back and play another year and prove he could be athletic enough to play on the edge too in the best league in college football. Cordy is a man of very few words, but I’ve had a couple times with one moment being after the Florida game that I think he was very happy he decided to come back. Maybe for just that moment alone might have made it worth it for him, but I think he’s also really improved his stock in my opinion.”
On if Isaiah Crowell will start at tailback vs. Auburn…
“Isaiah is the starter right now. I can’t imagine him not being that. We’re expecting big things from him this week. I think he will do very well in practice, and I think he will be focused and ready to go. I don’t think there’s any question he’s learned some things through this and there’s no doubt he will be better and stronger for it I think. “
On any concerns with Isaiah’s maturity…
“I think it’s hard to be a true freshman in major college football. This first semester there is so many things being asked of them. You’ve got all the academic responsibilities – of course, going to class, but also we have tutoring sessions, we have academic mentors, study hall. There’s just a lot of academic support involved in that freshman year. We do micromanage our freshmen. We want them to get off to a good start academically, so because of that there is an awful lot of time and things he has to be held accountable to – and I’m talking about all freshmen. Then you’ve got football. You’re competing at a level that you’ve never competed at before. You’re learning things that you’ve never learned before. You’re being pushed by your coaches. You’re being pushed to your limits because now there’s a lot of great athletes out on the field compared to maybe what it was like in high school. There’s a lot – first time away from home – the list goes on. There’s just not enough time in the day for everything. For all these freshmen, I don’t think I’ve ever had a freshman navigate it without hitting a wall somewhere along the way or just shake his head and say ‘what the heck happened?’ I think all these kids are going through some tough times. I’ve got a lot of faith in Isaiah, and I think Isaiah is going to do real well for Georgia.”
On the BCS championships possibly being an LSU-Alabama rematch and having played Boise State if he thinks the system is fair…
“The system hasn’t played out. It’s just a bunch of people talking about it with what might happen and all that kind of thing. I think Boise State can line up against anybody in America and have a realistic shot of winning. I do think that.”
On WR Chris Conley . . .
“Chris is doing great. He works so hard. He’s very diligent in the meeting room, on the practice field and he stays after practice works on things. I remember just all summer long my office looks out into this green room and if I was in there for whatever reason – grabbing something out of the fridge or whatever – there would be Chris out there trying to get Christian LeMay to through the ball to him or something or trying to find a way to get better. You’d see him over the office getting in the film room or whatever it was. I wasn’t that surprised that he would make a contribution. I didn’t necessarily expect it this year. We weren’t even really sure we were going to play him right away. It took a couple games in until we decided let’s play the kid. Part of the reason why he did play was because he paid attention, he was diligent, he knew what to do and we thought he could line up and not get us beat. Beyond that he started making plays, and he’s really gained a lot of confidence and we’ve gained more confidence in him. As far as freshmen go, Malcolm Mitchell of course made a pretty big splash early on, but Chris Conley has also made a difference for us in some big games so we are proud of him.”
On when the decision was made to not redshirt Chris Conley…
“I don’t even remember when that moment of truth was when we said let’s play him. Whenever that first game he played – was it Ole Miss? – it was that time we said let’s play the guy. It didn’t look like (Rantavious) Wooten was going to play or maybe Wooten had just got hurt. I don’t know what happened, but we had an injury here and an injury there. I think Marlon (Brown) working on an ankle, and we said we had to play somebody and let’s play him.”
GEORGIA PLAYER QUOTES
DE Abry Jones:
LB Mike Gilliard:
QB Aaron Murray
TE Aron White
285 comments Add your comment
dan
November 8th, 2011
9:33 pm
Bingo duronimo! Well said.
I’m tired of this ” Mark Richt is a great man” stuff. That has never been a debate, his head coaching ability has. I’ll give Richt credit for winning the last 7 games vs. weak opposition( hey let’s call it what it is), but I still have yet to see this team lay the hammer on a quality SEC opponent. That could change this Saturday if the Dawgs take care of business vs. the Tigers. I personally don’t think Richt is out of the woods yet. If his team comes out lethargic vs. Auburn and loses the game( sending that horrendous South Carolina team to the SEC title game), then Richt needs to go. The SEC East is SOOOO weak right now. Considering how bad Florida and Tennessee are, UGA should win that division the next 2-3 years straight no if’s and’s or but’s. If Richt does that and wins an SEC title in the next couple of years, he can stay. But if he goes below 8-4 again, he should be let go. That is his reality, and Dawg fans should expect anything less.
TampaGator
November 8th, 2011
9:34 pm
Savannah Dawg……
I do not have once ounce of hate in my body or soul….normally…….other than I hate it when the Gators lose…..so I guess you are right…..I have been filled with a lot of hate lately. But I am sure the Gators will eliminate my hate issues real soon.
Mobile Dawg
November 8th, 2011
9:50 pm
TampaGator can’t be all bad, he did mention Eddy’s in Dunedin. Had a great jukebox, listened to a lot of Muddy Waters, ocasionally felt like I was looking through muddy waters. Ever have a Dawg at the Sand Dollar?
phil
November 8th, 2011
10:18 pm
I’m proud of Coach Richt, but he should still be fired.
Fire MR!
GO DAWGS!!!
November 8th, 2011
10:19 pm
T-G…Not eveyone is religous. Those of us who are Children of God, have a Relationship…Hopefully who/what is irking you will soon come to pass, I for one pray. I have no children at UGA, BUT…….If I did, I would prefer a Godly man under the leadership of the Holy Spirit leading my little ones…For if the blind lead the blind, they would wind up in the ditch…Therefore gaining no ground forward…Keep moving Forward Dawgs…Keep God in Football, school, and politics…The depletion there-of is the problem as we know it, in America. 2 Chronicles 7:14. Sorry to offend….
Snoop Dawg
November 8th, 2011
10:21 pm
These speaking in tongue goofballs like Rocktown Dawg are the reason we are groveling where we are right now. We are where we are IN SPITE OF da PREACH MAN MARJOE RICHT. Figure it out for yourself. Preacha Man’s gotta go. Quoting these biblical passsages during a college sport interview is downright obscene and tacky. We deserve better.
Let’s send da Preacha Man Marked Wrecked back down to southern Florida. The ACC is his speed.
BG
November 8th, 2011
10:27 pm
Bring on Auburn! GO DAWGS!!!!!
TampaGator
November 8th, 2011
10:29 pm
Archdawg…..
Here is a historical lesson for you:
Because Bonheoffer openly challenged Hitler and the Catholic Church’s support of his government, the following historical document was written:
“Dietrich Bonheoffer was a very exceptional person, a Christian clergyman who challenged Hitler publicly (even returning to Germany after having escaped for a time first to England and then to America). The Nazis arrested him in 1943 and Himmler himself ordered him hanged in April, 1945, just a few weeks before the allied liberation of his concentration camp.”
Bonheoffer also wrote the following: “Politics are not the task of a Christian.”
I believe Jesus would agree with Dietrich. Too bad Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson didn’t and don’t.
Now….here is an ORIGINAL though for you to consider:
“The mixing of religion and politics is inherantly dangerous to anything truly spiritual.”
–Tampa Gator
SatillaDawg
November 8th, 2011
10:31 pm
Go Dawgs!
Beat Auburn!
TampaGator
November 8th, 2011
10:33 pm
Go Dawgs……
American was founded because of the mixing of religion and politics…..it was called the Church of England under King James. Check your history books.
Also….we are currently at war with the 3rd world because they are uncapable of not mixing religion and politics.
Religion has no place on the football field, the classroom, or politics. It does have a place in your heart…..and that is personal….and faith should be and remain.
Un-Tank
November 8th, 2011
10:37 pm
Georgia’s lucky to have Richt.
TampaGator
November 8th, 2011
10:40 pm
That would be “incapable”
trupert
November 8th, 2011
10:52 pm
Here’s a video that shows many personal fouls by Auburn that were never called.
I don’t know who deserves more credit for Auburn’s dirty and illegal play. Gene Chizik and his coaching staff are clearly guilty but I also think the officials who just set back and allowed it to continue also deserve alot of credit.
See how many uncalled personal fouls you can find in this video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGB1xguTXLg
I can’t wait to see Ga get some good ol fashioned but legal payback on the dirty cheating Tigers!!!
Dawg48
November 8th, 2011
11:41 pm
Snoop dawg
I have seen some of the post you have put on here toward other bloggers. With your racist comments and have seen you kicked off before……
I would hate to see the person you would choose to be the head coach of Georgia!!!
*All-Involved
November 9th, 2011
12:05 am
There was no ‘10 *NC. What do *AU, *$cam Newton, *Bonds, *Clemens, *Sosa, McGuire, *USC, and *SMU all have in common? They cheated. And they will always have an * in their names. Cheaters don’t deserve accolades.
South GA Dawg
November 9th, 2011
12:10 am
I want to know what Coach Richt is doing about the drug abuse within the football program. We already lost one colored boy this afternoon with several more to follow. Drugs and assaults going down….President and AD needs to get involved to stop the bleeding.
*All-Involved
November 9th, 2011
12:10 am
I hope that every UGA player sees the video of all of the dirty hits that *AU did last season. Then I hope that all UGA fans remember how *AU fans defended those hits.
South GA Dawg
November 9th, 2011
12:15 am
I’m goin to quit givin money to the school unless I can see what will be done to curtail the savage behavior goin on within the school. These boys gettin paid to play football, not smoke weed dadgummit.
L.A. BULLDAWG
November 9th, 2011
12:23 am
PAYBACK IS A BITCH! UGA 37 AUBURN 16!
dawginduluth
November 9th, 2011
12:35 am
How Richt endured criticism early this year? What a pathetic question. Look at what we fans have had to endure for the last 5 years at the hands of this overpaid, underperforming moron. This has to be his last year.
Harvey Updyke
November 9th, 2011
12:57 am
Abry and Gilliard sound like coaches. A sign of being well-prepared, time to GATA
Craig Spinks
November 9th, 2011
1:59 am
In an era of Jim Tressler, Pete Carroll, Jerry Sandusky and Hugh Durham, UGA is fortunate to have a man of Mark Richt’s moral rectitude as its head football coach. And our state’s fortunate to have him as a role model for our youth.
Terry
November 9th, 2011
2:18 am
tide roll, Not by Might, Not by Power, But by My Spirit, Says the Lord! [Zech. 4:6]
Terry
November 9th, 2011
2:34 am
dawgindulut, I’m a fan of UGA, and it has had no effect on me, or my family, at the end of the day, its just a game, if you make a football game more important than your Family or their Quality of life, then you have problems, please go find another team, your an embarrassment to the University, and the State of Georgia.
Terry
November 9th, 2011
2:46 am
TampaGator, God is suppose to be welcome everywhere, if your a Christian you don’t have to hide your faith under a bush, that just tells God your a shamed to be one of his, and if your a shamed of him, he will be a shamed of you on the day of Judgment.
Okie Dokie
November 9th, 2011
6:22 am
Terry,
What if you have a different God, rather than the ancient Jewish warlord Yahweh? Should the prayers of Wiccans or Hindus be led by public school teachers in the classroom, or should they only lead the prayers of Southern Baptist Christians?
RedandBlackDawg
November 9th, 2011
7:12 am
Lost gator fan at 11/8/3:50Pm,
You are a h*** of a fan for your team. UGA hasn’t played anybody. Beat your anybody butt team though didn’t they. How can you call yourself a gator fan? You don’t even make the standard excuses for a fan from a school that this supposedly bad UGA team beat. “Sorry, sorry, sorry, as Jim Nabors would say. Shame on you, I am gonna tell your momma.”
GO DAWGS and GATA
RedandBlackDawg
November 9th, 2011
7:15 am
That can’t be the real Thomas Brown on the first page with those short comments. The real Thomas Brown always fills a page with his statistics, reliable or not, that fill up a page of web space. That little comment will never do from the real T. Brown, as far as blog names go. The real T. Brown was a DGD, and would never be seen berating his team, like the fake one does.
GO DAWGS and GATA
Meh...
November 9th, 2011
7:17 am
Gator fans know first-hand what a good football team looks like. That’s why they understand that there are no good teams in the SEC East this year.
Thomas Brown
November 9th, 2011
7:51 am
“Watch out LSU.” Ha ha ha. That’s a joke right when the only team we’ve beat all of 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011 who belonged in the top 25, would’ve VACATED the win had they beat us, anyway.
“Beating the mighty LSU is suddenly a real possibility” yeah, right. Talk is tough cheap when we’ve beat only 7 teams who have no hope of ending a ranked team this entire year.
Oh I see Georgia tek was only 6-0 because they played cupcakes, and you say this when we are 7-0 vs the SAME EXACT CUPCAKES. “If we had played mighty Western KY, Middle Tennessee and powerhouse Kansas, we’d be 3-0 too.” Think before you post, if you like, next time.
HedgesHeaven, you’ve never posted one-time, not once. Now, you have and it not about football.
Dawg_Mike, I told you we had no Fullbacks. DISNEYdawgs.com told me in reply how great they are. Really ? Seen 1 play from ANY of them ? Even with all the issues with our YOUNG running backs ?
Lotus, Aaron Murray has LOST EVERY one of 7 games vs teams who finished the season ranked and has been on campus with the team since bowl practice December 2008. He has also lost to 2 teams, neither of whom finish in the top 25 without beating him and 1 who did not, even with their win over him.
There is supposed to be a separation in Church and State in this state, which is what the voters said yesterday, me included, about Sunday. Don’t legislate your religion. If you don’t want to drink, don’t drink. Like we all don’t know you do too and on Sunday especially. Hypocrites.
Roll the Hedges
November 9th, 2011
7:57 am
We’re coming!
And we’re bringing TP.
Thomas Brown
November 9th, 2011
8:00 am
11 11 8 “I know that is what every1 wants to talk about anyway” Isaiah Crowell said of drug failed test.
Kerryb
November 9th, 2011
8:04 am
Thomas Brown. You sir are a complete moron.
Roll the Hedges
November 9th, 2011
8:06 am
We’re gonna have to clean up the #2 that we’ll be putting on the Dawgs.
Gainesville Dawg
November 9th, 2011
8:16 am
kudos to you, Chip. Thanks for the factual reports this year. I learn more about my team when reading your articles. Thanks for your reports at AJC, when some others are so slanted.
GO, DAWGS!
MerryMary
November 9th, 2011
8:17 am
@JB
Could you post the link to the YouTube website that you cited? I’d like to see it.
All Saints
November 9th, 2011
8:44 am
Just a little reminder that we’ll be having our regular tribute and moment of silence on Saturday for Saint Jan Kemp, the courageous martyr who exposed UGA and Vince Dooley’s “remedial studies” fraud. Mark Richt keeps the scam going even today, almost thirty years later.
Please approach this special moment with reverence as we honor her sacred name.
DJ Dawg
November 9th, 2011
8:45 am
Roll the Hedges and Thomas Brown are both morons!!!
Priscilla
November 9th, 2011
8:47 am
Thank you, Thomas Brown. You’re one of the few posters on these blogs who makes sense!
DJ Dawg
November 9th, 2011
8:56 am
@Priscilla
I see you dont read many of his post.
Tech fans
November 9th, 2011
9:07 am
Are idiots! You guys were soooo worried about what is wrong with your team after those bad losses. Then all of a sudden you beat an overrated Clemson team that is the biggest choke job of a program there is and now you’re gonna kill us? Hahaha goodluck against that junkyard d. Jarvis jones aka predator will be all over the field destroying your high school offense.
Tobias Funke
November 9th, 2011
9:58 am
it’s most certainly PAYBACK.
Go Dawgs!
ArchDawg
November 9th, 2011
10:05 am
Tampa, this is not the place for this type of debate. Guess I shouldn’t have let myself get suckered in, but it is hard to allow some of the things you say go unchallenged. Only other thing I’ll say about your “history” lesson above is that it is a lie that the Catholic Church supported Hitler’s government. True, German Catholics signed an agreement with them in 1933 so that Hitler would leave the Church alone and the Church would stay out of politics. That didn’t last. Hitler, of course persecuted all Christians, protestant and Catholic alike. By 1937 he was arresting priests. His stated vow was to destroy the Church.
Bonhoeffer was a a very brave and heroic Christian. So were the other thousands of priests, nuns and clergy who were murdered for their faith.
And, I think Mark Richt is just being honest. If God is God and everything a Christian believes about him to be true then you can’t push God to the side and only deal with Him on sunday. God is the God of the whole week. And, one last thing before I let the football smack talk resume. Bonhoeffer says “politics are not the task of a Christian”?? Baloney. If that were true, he would have ignored Hitler and his government and simply went to Church on Sunday and let the Nazis murder and pillage at will. No, he got involved and did something about it. Go and read “Mit brennender Sorge” issued by the Pope in 1937.
I would also recommend this fine essay which says it much better than I ever could: http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2011/11/4256
DawginLex
November 9th, 2011
10:20 am
I don’t know how anyone can say they hate Mark Richt the person.
You can complain, as we all have about coaching decisions, staff decisions etc. but, as he said, when it is all said and done, he is a man of God and I will always respect him for that.
Now, run the ball more!!!!!!!!!
Early Cuyler
November 9th, 2011
10:23 am
Flat Tire on I-95 in Jacksonville,
You and me’s just alike. We both no everthang and all them dang librals is jest dummys. I hate them dummys. Thanks wes come from monkys. Haint no squid never come from no monky!
Early Cuyler
November 9th, 2011
10:25 am
You too ArchDawg! Im a rasin Rusty to be smart jest like you to. I shore hope he gits that GED.
And Ga fans
November 9th, 2011
10:28 am
wanted CMR’s head on a platter after losing to BS and SC, but after seven wins over a bunch of patsies they think they should be playing for the NC
Destin Dawg
November 9th, 2011
10:31 am
Nick Saban going to Penn State ??
ha
November 9th, 2011
10:32 am
“Praise the lawd.” CMR your players are smoking pot and failing drug test. “OH Lawdy let’s suspend them for one insignificant game.” “The Lawd loves the DAWGS and we must win.” “hallelujah,lawdy, lawdy”
DawginLex
November 9th, 2011
10:39 am
and GA fans
No one who truly understands things expects us to play for the national title.
That was an idiotic statement you just made