
Coming up with No. 1 on a list of Georgia's 10 greatest players is easy. But it gets increasingly hard as you move down the list and can produce arguments what will last into the night. (AP Photo)
So as I mentioned on social media yesterday, I’ve been working on a summer project for the AJC in which one of the assignments was to name the 10 “most memorable players” in Georgia football history. Do you have any idea what a maddening and pretty much impossible task that is?
You can say a lot of things about the Bulldogs, but they have produced a lot of great players in their 120-year football history. And I don’t use the term “great” lightly. In all, they’ve had 68 All-Americans and 12 Bulldogs have been inducted in the College Football Hall of Game.
It was so hard to limit to just 10 players that I finally turned to Facebook and Twitter and just kind of threw it out there to get the opinions of Georgia fans. As is usually the case when you present something to the Bulldog Nation, the response was overwhelming and passionate. In the end, the feedback helped me finally whittle down the last few choices. But in other ways it made the whole exercise even more confusing as a couple of names came flying in that I hadn’t considered.
The reality is, when you’re thinking of “great” and “memorable” Georgia football players, you could easily list two dozen without batting an eyelid. But the assignment called for 10, not 24, so here’s what I finally went with:
- Herschel Walker, TB (1980-82): Every conversation about great Georgia players begins and ends with the “Goal-line Stalker” from Wrightsville. All Walker did was come in as a true freshman and rush for 1,616 yards and 15 touchdowns and lead the Bulldogs to their first consensus national championship since 1942. Walker went on to become a three-time consensus All-American and finally won the Heisman Trophy as a junior in 1982. He finished his career with 5,259 yards in just 33 games, an average of 159.4 per contest.
- Charley Trippi, TB (1942, ‘45-46): Trippi is still regarded by many as the greatest all-around athlete to ever play for the Bulldogs. As a senior he led the SEC in scoring and total offense and won the Maxwell Award as the country’s best back and was runner-up for the Heisman Trophy. A member of both the pro and college halls of fame, he is one of only four UGA players to have his number (62) retired.
- David Pollack, DE (2001-04): After being recruited to Georgia as a fullback, Pollack became a three-time All-American as a defensive end. His most famous play is a caused-fumble and one-handed, mid-air scoop-and-score against South Carolina in the 2002 SEC championship season. He owns the Bulldogs’ record for career sacks.
- Jake Scott, S (1967-68): Though he played for the Bulldogs only two seasons, Scott proved to be one of their most explosive play-makers of all time. He led the SEC in interceptions both seasons and led the league in punt return yardage in 1968. He still holds the UGA record for career interceptions (16) and interception return yardage (315). He went on to a long and productive career with the Miami Dolphins and was named Super Bowl MVP in 1972.
- Champ Bailey, CB/WR (1996-98): Bailey proved to be one of the Bulldogs’ most versatile athletes ever. His junior season he played on both offense and defense while also playing special teams. He logged more than 100 plays in seven games and played more than 1,000 snaps that season. Was named an All-American and won the Bronko Nagurski Award in 1998.
- Garrison Hearst, TB (1990-92): Hearst led the Bulldogs in rushing each of his three seasons, including 1992 when he ran for 1,547 yards and scored 21 touchdowns. His 1,910 all-purpose yards that season was second-best in school history, won him the Doak Walker Award as the nation’s best back and led to a third-place finish in Heisman voting.
- Frank Sinkwich (1940-42): Georgia’s first Heisman Trophy recipient (1942) led the Bulldogs to wins in the Orange and Rose bowls and the 1942 national championship. A member of the college football hall of fame, he rushed for 2,771 yards, passed for 2,331 yards and accounted for 60 TDs – 30 rushing and 30 passing in his career. You can’t leave off a Heisman winner.
- Bill Stanfill, DT (1966-68): Stanfill led Georgia to a 25-6-2 record and two SEC championships in his three seasons on the field for the Bulldogs and was team captain, All-American and Academic All-American in 1968. That same year he won the Outland Trophy as the nation’s best lineman. He went on to a highly-decorated NFL career with the Super Bowl champion Miami Dolphins.
- Hines Ward, ATH (1994-97): Ward proved to be one of the most versatile offensive players of all times. During his career, he started at quarterback, tailback and wide receiver while also serving as a kick returner. He set the Georgia bowl record with 469 yards total offense (413 passing) in the 1995 Peach Bowl. He finished his career with 4,788 all-purpose yards (1,965 receiving, 1,063 rushing, 918 passing and 842 in returns).
- Terry Hoage, ROV (1980-83): Former Georgia coach Vince Dooley called Hoage the best defensive player he’s ever coached and “maybe the best I’ve ever seen.” The two-time All-American finished fifth in the 1983 Heisman Trophy balloting. He led the nation with 12 interceptions in 1982 and blocked a field goal against Notre Dame in Georgia’s national championship-clinching Sugar Bowl victory.
A few qualifiers: The numbers don’t reflect a ranking. It’s merely to enumerate and actually reflects the order that I committed to the respective players being on the list; I tried to pay respect to earlier generations of Georgia football but, as you might expect, the list is tilted toward modern football player; and, as you’ll note, there are a lot of truly great players not included.
Here are some that I really struggled with leaving off: CB/PR Scott Woerner, WR A.J. Green, TB Knowshon Moreno, FS Thomas Davis, QB Eric Zeier, QB David Greene, PK Kevin Butler, QB Fran Tarkenton.
So, for better or worse, that’s the list I came up with. I’d love to hear what you guys might have done differently or who you might replace with whom. And who knows, nothing is in print yet. If you can offer a convincing enough argument I might just see if we can get it changed.
Thanks for your input.
401 comments Add your comment
DIT
July 11th, 2012
12:48 pm
Fran does NOT belong in the top 10. Maybe the top 25. Scott Woerner should take his place. Fran did not get his stardom until he played for the Vikings.
Funyums Munchies
July 11th, 2012
12:52 pm
James Jackson – the Thrilla, Wayne Johnson or Preston Jones
adam
July 11th, 2012
12:53 pm
David Green just happened to be there in the right place at the right time….like numbskull sarah plalin
duronimo
July 11th, 2012
12:55 pm
Tarkenton should be there. He didn’t exactly play behind Britt. It was in the days of separate offensive teams within a single team. LSU had the White team and the Go team on offense. And several teams of defense … one being the Chinese Bandits. Britt quarterbacked the mostly running team and Tarkenton handled the mostly passing team. I also like Bobby Walden, who had a fabulouis pro career.
And what about Theron Sapp, another great professional player.
The Grinch
July 11th, 2012
12:57 pm
Whys is Reggie Ball not on the list?
Vandy Simmons
July 11th, 2012
12:57 pm
How could you leave off Georgia’s greatest professional player Pro Hall Of Famer Fran Tarkenton. I don’t know who you have to leave off but someone else has to be taken off the list, only exception Herchel Walker.
Progress
July 11th, 2012
12:57 pm
David Greene was the NCAA’s all-time leader in touchdown passes when he left UGA. He took them to the SEC championship game twice and won the only SEC championship for UGA in a generation, the first since Herschel. He also was the architect of some of the most thrilling UGA victories ever. In short, I think he was the best UGA quarterback ever, although some could argue for the dual threat, Fran Tarkenton. I don’t see how either Greene or Tarkenton gets left off the list.
old dog
July 11th, 2012
1:03 pm
from old dog to Old Dawg;
You are right; Reggie Ball should be considered. However, one of the criteria for consideration was a football IQ over 55, so he got eliminated! lol
The one athlete, who V.D. said was the greatest ATHLETE (not football player; that was Herschel) that he coached was Jake Scott. He proved in the NFL that he could compete in ANY era on any stage, with anybody.
LSU grad
July 11th, 2012
1:04 pm
It’s hard to believe there haven’t been a top 10 entry in the past 10 years. Everyother school in the SEC have atleast 1.
59bulldawg
July 11th, 2012
1:05 pm
Names I didn’t see who are worthy of consideration. Richard Appleby? Jimmy Payne? Freddie “Spiderman” Gilbert? Dicky Clark? Gene Washington? Don Golden? Allan Leavitt? Willie McClendon? And I would also add Ray Goff. Poor Ray has been much maligned as a coach but in his day he was a hell of a quarterback! His arm wasn’t as good as Matt Robinson but he was a winner for sure!
dre
July 11th, 2012
1:06 pm
You can remove the old guys from the list. So what if they were great in their time.They’d look like they were running in mud compared to the athletes of this era. Add Eric Zeier and remove a geezer.
dawgman
July 11th, 2012
1:10 pm
No disagreements with this list… Hershel was the greatest College ‘but not quite as good as a pro’ running back in history….
Blue
July 11th, 2012
1:11 pm
not a UGA fan, but I saw a special on Herschel about a month ago. You would have to convince me that there was ever a better college running back…EVER. Unreal from the first game.
Doug
July 11th, 2012
1:11 pm
If David Greene is not on this list you haven’t done your homework!
Dr. Warren
July 11th, 2012
1:12 pm
Ummmm……Willie McClendon? How can you forget him?
hahauga
July 11th, 2012
1:13 pm
Reggie Ball is not on the list for the preliminary reason that this is the Top 10 players from UGA. They must have not taught reading comprehension down in Athens. Oh wait, you probably didn’t attend UGA, like most of the fans.
DIT
July 11th, 2012
1:15 pm
@59bulldawg
Totally agree about Ray Goff. He was a great bulldawg QB.
“How could you leave off Georgia’s greatest professional player Pro Hall Of Famer Fran Tarkenton.”
Exactly…… He was a great Pro Player. As for college ball, Ray Goff was better. That’s just a fact.
Vince "Coke Head" Dooly
July 11th, 2012
1:16 pm
Jan Kemp did more to change UGA football than any of the player mentioned.
iliketacos
July 11th, 2012
1:25 pm
Kevin Butler. He is by far the greatest college/pro player to come out of athens. No mention of Crowelittle? All I ever heard about him was that he was going to be “better than herschel”.
Patrick Romano WAR DAMN EAGLE
July 11th, 2012
1:25 pm
WOW, Slow News Day/Week/Summer, What NO UGA players were arrested this week???
Herschel’s great, saw him in his best days, Bo Jackson is/was the greatest college athlete I EVER SAW Before CAM Newton…no it hurts Dawgs but you have to move on and NOT Dwell on the past Glory Days…
WAR DAMN EAGLE
Pooch
July 11th, 2012
1:26 pm
Chip,
You left off several multiple All Americans:
Zeke Bratkowski, Pat Dye, Matt Stinhcomb, Terry Hoage
Then Special teams guys that were multiple All Americans:
Rex Robinson. Kevin Butler
Terry Hoage shoud be on the list, CONSENSUS 2 TIME ALL AMERICAN.
Patrick Romano WAR DAMN EAGLE
July 11th, 2012
1:28 pm
NO Knox Culpepper, Lindsay Scott, What a shame-Can argue with this!!!
Call It Like It Is
July 11th, 2012
1:28 pm
What about Buck Belue? I mean name someone better that time after time handed the ball off to Walker. If it wasnt for Belue saying hike, then grabbing the ball and puting it into Walkers gut, there would have been no NC. Should at least be at least #2 on the list.
E Rock
July 11th, 2012
1:31 pm
@Vince ….Jan Kemp situation improved graduation rates to a whopping 55% …I guess it could have been in the 30s or 40s percentile like the 80s…..Requirement for list should be a degree if you spent 4 years at UGA…..
Old Guy
July 11th, 2012
1:35 pm
Richard Tardis…
Pooch
July 11th, 2012
1:36 pm
Ward shouldn’t be on the list.
Sinkwich, Hearst, and Trippi, shouldn’t be on the list, only had 1 great season. By that tune, you’d have to put Moreno in, but I wouldn’t because he only had 1 great year.
Jarvis Jones is well respected around the country, and should he win a 2nd All American, you have to put him in.
It’s Pollack and Herschel at the top. They just dominated.
old dog
July 11th, 2012
1:36 pm
I would put Fran Tarkenton in the top three. No one from the thirties, twenties, or fifties? No one from 46-67? I think your age is a factor in your choices, but I would do the same thing, except I would favor different decades than you. I think you should admit that your age is a factor in your choices. But it’s not a bad list. Talk to some old folks next time. They may not be as smart as you are, but they have seen more.
DIT
July 11th, 2012
1:38 pm
I forgot about Richard Tardis! he could flat out play!
Bob LaBlah
July 11th, 2012
1:40 pm
What about Isahia Crowell? Caleb King? Baccardi Rootball?
mxtexas
July 11th, 2012
1:44 pm
Hiawatha Berry!
Go Jackets
July 11th, 2012
1:45 pm
Some of u youngbloods need to look at older players. NO WAY Pollack is/was better than Rosenberg, Big Bill Stanfill, OR Hoagie. Men among boys…….and they had respect from the Flats!
Rev.ConeDawg
July 11th, 2012
1:49 pm
Butler is the only kicker in the NCAA Hall of Fame. He’s gotta go on the list…. Plus I saw him kick it a hundred thousand miles against Clemson.
confused dog
July 11th, 2012
1:54 pm
That’s your list? Really? Really? Did you see the ‘59 Auburn game? Perhaps change the title of your list so it does not say, “all time.”
ARdawg
July 11th, 2012
1:56 pm
Dr. John
No doubt AJ was a fine one and a fine kid but, IMHO he wasn’t able to “really” develop into the all time great he “would’a could’a should’a” been. There was too much surrounding him including injury that he never was able to just go out and play. I never held selling the jersey against him. I think the rule is wrong
Dooly's Ghost
July 11th, 2012
1:57 pm
What about Hacksaw Reynolds?
LawDawg
July 11th, 2012
1:58 pm
These lists are always odd. 4 of the players played before I was born and two more I was barely alive for. How the people younger than me (who are likely a bulk of the twitterbook responders) can call most of these players “memorable” when they have no memory of the players, and likely have never even seen a rebroadcast of Sinkwich, and may not have even been cognizant of Bailey and Ward, makes no sense.
Things like this have to be confined to the best of an era, better if it is the era when sports were on TV and the people reading were alive.
Billy Bob
July 11th, 2012
2:00 pm
Andy Johnson is not on the list?
He went on to play 10 plus years with the Pats in the NFL.
Last of the great running QBs. Great triple option QB.
GSUAlumBaseball81
July 11th, 2012
2:01 pm
@ Shug Tim Crowe and Philip Ashe are mighty Sone Mountain Pirates that did well at UGA. Ashe was Tarkenton’s center and one heck of an athlete. Three years All State and All American his Senior year in H.S.at the BIG ROCK!!! Kevin Butler should be on this list for sure.
Brainiac(CMR/UGA fan for life)
July 11th, 2012
2:06 pm
A. J. Greene has got to be an alltime Top 10 Dawg!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Probably David Greene too!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
atlnative
July 11th, 2012
2:07 pm
Come on! That’s a no-brainer! It’s Mr. Herschel Walker! No player has impacted the SEC and college football more than “Herschel”. “There goes Herschel”!
Mr. Unknown
July 11th, 2012
2:14 pm
Brice Hunter is missing..
Mr. Unknown
July 11th, 2012
2:15 pm
r.i.p Brice Hunter…
GSUAlumBaseball81
July 11th, 2012
2:15 pm
Gliding Glynn Harrison from Columbia High School was incredible to watch in Sanford Stadium. Also, I vote for the 1980 team as the number one UGA team of all time! It was an awesome season that started with 16 -15 victory over UT in Knoxville at Neyland and ended in New Orleans with an undefeated season and National Championship!
Billy Bee
July 11th, 2012
2:19 pm
dont leave out Crowell……#1 goofball ever
dvs1
July 11th, 2012
2:19 pm
All over the record books. Have not read every entry but bet he ’s not been mentioned more than 3 times if at all. Most under-appreciated record holding great UGA ever had – Terrence Edwards owns career yardage, receptions, and TD’s by quite a margin. Just get over the drop at FLA.
GT 84
July 11th, 2012
2:25 pm
Isaiah Crowell should be on the list.
D Money
July 11th, 2012
2:25 pm
Terrell Davis has got to be in the top 10
ARdawg
July 11th, 2012
2:33 pm
Brainiac
AJ Green doesn’t cut the muster. A great player. All time great? Nah, not so much. David Greene, solid, consistent but great? Nah, not so much
Dawg Dawg
July 11th, 2012
2:37 pm
What about Hymie McFindigler!!!!!??????? Go Dawgs!
Dawg in AL
July 11th, 2012
2:46 pm
Pollack definitely deserves to be on the list. He and Herschel are the only three time All Americans in UGA history. Injuries kept him from a pro career but as far as a UGA football player he is definitely a top 3 choice. Some fine athletes are missing and as time passes some athletes are forgotten (Bob McWhorter, Zeke Bratkowski, Vernon ‘Catfish’ Smith, etc…)