Georgia’s top five priorities heading into preseason football camp are . . .

Georgia coach Mark Richt, here flanked by All-Americans Bacarri Rambo (L) and Jarvis Jones at the Atlanta Sports Awards this past February, will be leaning hard on his defense in 2012.

Georgia coach Mark Richt, here flanked by All-Americans Bacarri Rambo (L) and Jarvis Jones at the Atlanta Sports Awards this past February, will be leaning hard on his defense in 2012.

ATHENS – The Georgia Bulldogs will take their first steps toward becoming the team they will be in 2012 when 105 players jog onto Woodruff Practice Fields on Thursday for the first of 28 practices.

Despite a tumultuous offseason, there is an underlying optimism. The Bulldogs, 10-4 last season, are favored to repeat as SEC Eastern Division champions largely because they return 15 of the top 17 tacklers from a top-5, nationally-ranked defense and an All-SEC quarterback in Aaron Murray.

But for Georgia to realize its goal of returning to the SEC Championship game — and winning it this time — several issues have to be resolved during preseason camp. Here are the top five priorities going in:

1. IDENTIFY OFFENSIVE LINE

Nothing is more crucial to the Bulldogs’ success this season than being able piece together a competitive offensive line. It’s hard enough to replace three starters that totaled 19 feet, 2 inches in height and 983 pounds of mass and will all play in the NFL this season. But then you add the uncertainty surrounding the lineup and therein lay the possibility of disaster.

Heading into Tuesday night’s team meeting, nobody was sure whether Kolton Houston was going to be available this season or not. That’s a big deal considering the Bulldogs determined in the spring he is their best option at right tackle. Houston was suspended for a year by the NCAA for violating one of their policies and must be cleared by the college football’s governing body for his eligibility to be restored.

Richt’s last word on the subject was, “I wish I had an answer for that. I still don’t have an answer on whether he’ll be eligible.”

With Houston, the Bulldogs appear set at right tackle and could possibly move an experienced player to center. Without Houston, undersized and rarely-used sophomore David Andrews will have to get the job done at center and true freshman John Theus may be the next best option at right tackle. Whatever combination Georgia goes with it needs to get established quickly and because continuity is often key to consistent offensive line play.

“They’re a little bit of a focal point as far as needing to prove they can do it,” Georgia coach Mark Richt said. “In offensive line play, just coordinating five guys to hit the right guy is big. But these guys are very sharp. If we can get five guys that will fight like mad and put the right hat on every guy we can function pretty well; if you have the right skill people at quarterback, which we do.”

2. ESTABLISH CHEMISTRY

Perhaps number 1-A as far priorities preseason camp is establishing good team chemistry and positive momentum for the season. The Bulldogs encountered a tumultuous offseason that saw players arrested, dismissed or suspended. Some transferred and some left and came back. As a result, the program has been questioned about the character of the players it recruits.

Such scrutiny can tear teams apart or it forge them together in an unbreakable bond. Obviously Georgia players believe the latter will be the case.

“As a team, we’re going to lose individuals,” All-American linebacker Jarvis Jones said. “But we’ve got to stay focused on what we have. We’ve got some leaders on this team, myself, Abry [Jones], Aaron [Murray], T.K. [Tavarres King]. All of us have stood up and had words. We told the guys, ‘y’all know what we have here; y’all know why we came back; y’all know what the goal is.’ We have one of the best [coaching] staffs in the nation and we’ve got the whole Bulldog Nation behind us. So the more we stick together and the more things we do right, the more we can pave our way to where we want to go.”

3. RESOLVE SECONDARY SITUATION

With the exception of announcing a two-game suspension for cornerback Sanders Commings, who pleaded guilty in a misdemeanor domestic violence case this past February, Georgia has never acknowledged reportedly-imminent suspensions for three other defensive starters. Two of those players – All-America free safety Bacarri Rambo and senior cornerback Branden Smith – also play in the defensive backfield.

Based on personnel moves made in the spring, the Bulldogs clearly expect something to come down. They moved Malcolm Mitchell, arguably their most explosive wide receiver, over to cornerback. And while he’s expected to eventually play both sides of the ball, he’ll be concentrating on defense in camp. That’s a risky proposition that has to work for Georgia to get past pass-happy Missouri in Game 2.

“The main reason for [moving Mitchell to defense full time] is we want him to be able to function on any given down, distance or situation,” Richt said. “I’m not saying he’s going to play every single down on defense. I don’t know if anybody plays every down any more. But I want him to be able to understand our scheme will enough where coach [Todd] Grantham will have every opportunity to do whatever what he might want to do or call in the game. So we’re getting him ready to play as much defense as he can.”

Less discussed and just as critical is having little-used sophomores Corey Moore and Connor Norman come through at safety.

4. DETERMINE PECKING ORDER IN BACKFIELD

Of course, the most publicized departure for Georgia in the offseason was the dismissal of tailback Isaiah Crowell after his summer arrest on weapons charges. All the talk of losing a bad apple aside, the fact is the Bulldogs lost their most talented and proven rushing threat. In fact, coupled with the transfer of rising senior Carlton Thomas, Georgia lost 1,221 yards rushing and 7 touchdowns off last year’s team.

The Bulldogs have somewhat of a known commodity in redshirt sophomore Ken Malcome, who enters camp as the No. 1 tailbacl. But to address depth concerns, they will again depend on Richard Samuel to ride to the rescue. The 6-foot-2, 243-pound senior was their best option at fullback before Crowell left. Now he’ll move back to tailback fulltime and, early on at least, be counted on as the dependable back who knows every assignment and can be on the field in any situation.

Meanwhile, Georgia inked a player in Keith Marshall that many recruiting services rated the No. 1 tailback prospect in America. The Bulldogs signed four-star back Todd Gurley, too. But since Marshall was able to enroll early and participate in spring practice, he stands as the most likely newcomer to be able to step in and contribute early. Georgia needs him to come through.

“Keith is the only one I could say how ready I think he’ll be,” Richt said. “He certainly has been diligent about learning what to do and that’s more than half the battle. He’s lived through a spring now, even though he had a hamstring injury. So he’s got a pretty good idea of what’s coming.”

That doesn’t even address the situation at fullback. Walk-on Merritt Hall enters camp atop the depth chart but everyone is eager to get a look at freshman Quayvon Hicks in action. He reportedly is a “rock-solid” physical specimen who now carries 265 pounds on his 6-foot-2 frame.

5. DEVELOP THE KICKING GAME

Georgia was supposed to have one of the most formidable kicking games in the nation this past season with punter Drew Butler and place-kicker Blair Walsh at the helm. Though it didn’t actually materialize that way, both players were snapped up by NFL teams and are gone now.

The Bulldogs will learn their true worth quickly as they break in freshmen at those respective positions. Punter Collin Barber of Cartersville and place-kicker Marshall Morgan were both rated among the best in the nation in high school. But being able to come through before 90,000 fans and national-television cameras as NFL wannabes bear down at full speed is a proposition nobody can prepare them for until they go through it

“It’ll be interesting,” Richt said. “I’m sure they will be nervous. Kickers and punters, maybe more than any other position, the better fundamentals they have and the more reps they can accumulate will help them. . . . They have powerful legs. There’s no question in my mind they have all the tools to get it done. But the first time you do anything I’m sure they’ll be nervous. I’m sure they’ll be nervous in practice. Certainly they’ll be nervous in ballgames if in fact they win the jobs. They have a good chance.”

None of the walk-on candidates distinguished themselves in the spring, so the Bulldogs need the newbies to come through.

155 comments Add your comment

StackedDeck

August 1st, 2012
7:03 pm

This UGA Team will make it’s own name in the game…’get hungry and ‘nasty you young dawgs and make us proud. GO DAWGS!! Hooorah!!

UGA / ‘74

LogicalUS

August 1st, 2012
7:38 pm

“On a better note ——tenn–ur–say——is even with VANDY”

Hate to point out that UGA needed a desperation trip by their punter to stave off a loss to Vandy last season, so I wouldn’t crow too loudly.

Seriously, UGA has to somehow find an offense consistent enough to take all pressure off Murray. Unfortunately, the load of possession recievers and the state of the OL\RB situation means that the burden falls on Murray and that means more forced passes and more turnovers.

Defensively, will the defense figure out that a football game does not end at halftime. Grantham has been consistently out-adjusted by the better coaches in the league so that must improve to lessen the number of collapses.

AltamahaDawg

August 1st, 2012
7:44 pm

Reminds me of our ole buddy Hunk Erdown. Every now and then he posted.”adjustment” to make fun of guys like you.

GtDawg

August 1st, 2012
8:01 pm

Rock Solid 6-foot-2, 265 pounds??????? Good Gracious!!

Tampa Gator

August 1st, 2012
8:39 pm

Number one priority should be…….beat at least one team that ends up in the top 25 this year….not lose by more than 30 points in the SEC Championship game….and then beat a Big Ten team in a bowl game.

Tampa Gator

August 1st, 2012
8:42 pm

If you guys are worrying about beating Missouri…..then you should not even be talking about winning the SEC East….much less the SEC championship game….and certainly not even considering a trip to the national title game.

Game Changer

August 1st, 2012
8:52 pm

1. Beat a team that finishes the season in the top 25
2, Stop all drug testing during the season
3. Keep their mouth shut during the game and not taunt the opposing team during game
4. Act like a team and or player that has been on the field and competed before
5. Repeat 1 to 4

Game Changer

August 1st, 2012
8:54 pm

logicalus: AM sucks and is the reason UGA does not perform well on offense. We need a quality QB

dwagdawg

August 1st, 2012
8:56 pm

Game Changer,

shouldn’t #2 say “PASS all drug testing during the season” ?

Sheeple excuse # 21

August 1st, 2012
9:20 pm

AltamahaDawg

August 1st, 2012
6:31 pm

Leading the league in sacks, no line, a freshman RB, and a QB throwing a few ints, will make a guy’s foot pretty light on the peddle I would imagine. …..Have you ever imagine that its because CMR just cant put down the peddle and really never has except for maybe the cream puffs?

fencedawg

August 1st, 2012
9:23 pm

Dengue, You are an idiot and definitely not a Dawg, but you do live in a wonderful world.

Dawggrad85

August 1st, 2012
9:28 pm

No here’s the pecking order – play with heart – loads and loads of heart and passion – like there’s no tomorrow. Play off field like your Mama / Pops or Grandmother is with you and saying baby now don’t do that or I’m gonna whoop your behind with a hickory stick. Remember this is once in a lifetime experience – don’t blow it – bring your A game every game and remember this is no tomorrow. When all is said is done walk off the field saying I gave it my all and I didn’t embaress my family or name. Drop to a knee and thank the Almighty God for your good fortune and then say “Ain’t it Great to Be A Jawja Bulldog ! ” And don’t you ever forget it. There are a million guys who would want to be in your place. Thank your lucky stars and God you are there. Then kiss UGA and get a good education. Don’t give my university a bad name or Mikey B will come looking for you. You can count on it. Thank God I’m a Jawja Bulldog.

Mobile Dawg

August 1st, 2012
9:48 pm

Champion, please put down the kool aid before you hurt yourself. Why should we really be any more optimistic than we have been the last five years. Richt’s record has been abysmal, personnel attrition has been excessive, IMO the only positive thing that has happened in Athens has been Granthams defense, and that has been shadowed by poor decision making by those that should be among the team leaders, player wise.

Why is it that Alabama recruits the same players as UGA, yet they have “three” consensus first team All Americans on their OL. Ours is in shambles year after year. We have no plan, no leadership. Until Richt shows he deserves respect as a coach I will continue to petition for change. Of course this is JMO.

kingdaddy

August 1st, 2012
10:22 pm

#1. Stay out of trouble.
#2. Practice 1st team offense with 1st team defense.
#3. Give O-line help with fullback, two tight-end sets, don’t call plays that require Murray to hold the ball too long.
#4. Special teams, Special teams, Special teams.
#5. Make better adjustments for second-half on offense and defense…

Tampa Gator

August 1st, 2012
10:33 pm

Looks like a top priority for next year for Richt should be to learn how to recruit the state of Georgia….Brandon Langley committed to South Carolina. Wow.

PIERCE DAWG

August 1st, 2012
10:39 pm

QUAYVON HICKS IS THE MAN AND WILL CONTRIBUTE EARLY. I HATED LOSING HIM OFF OUR HIGH SCHOOL TEAM. HE WAS A MAN AMONG BOYS HIS SENIOR YEAR IN HIGH SCHOOL. I SEE HIM PLAYING EARLY. GO PIERCE COUNTY DAWG.

A guy that I can like is ............

August 1st, 2012
10:42 pm

UGA has a walk on fullback at 6′4″ and 255. He is from S Georgia?, smart, and tough as nails and loves to hit AND he can catch the ball. HE IS A WALK ON. The coaches say he is simply a tough, old time football player. I like it !!

He simply was over looked by big schools as a senior in HS and he says ‘it is fine, because I wanted UGA anyway”. He is smart, tough and will do what it takes to win and is not a heroin addict. I say he is ONE OF US> GO DOGS

He is like guys that I knew in the freaking 60s. Go Dog

UGA man 71 & 73

GATOR Slayor

August 1st, 2012
10:44 pm

TAMPA GATOR we beat you last year and will again this year. It was 2 or three years ago you lost to a bid ten team. You sure has a brain lapse. You did not beat a top ten team the last two years.

Tampa Gator

August 1st, 2012
11:10 pm

GatorSlayor…..

What does Florida have to do with the top 5 priorities for Georgia? Florida top priority every year is to win the National title. The Gator have not done that since 2008. Georgia has not done that since….well that is an old, old story. And what does Florida losing to a Big Ten team 2 or 3 years ago have to do with Georgia beating a Big Ten team this year in a bowl game? Florida did that last year….not 2 or 3 years ago….and every team in the country that played a Big Ten team in a bowl….won against that Big Ten team….except one….and that was….well, another old story.

William

August 1st, 2012
11:21 pm

Off season conditioning is important. But, you get in game shape by practicing football. Coach Richt has to practice them to get in game shape. It was obvious last year that we were not in “football” shape early in the season and never really caught up late in the year. I coached high school football for 25 years and if I learned one thing it’s important to get them in football shape while in practice.

Fair n Balanced

August 1st, 2012
11:50 pm

dawghater

August 2nd, 2012
6:45 am

Top 5 Priorites
1. Drug Sweep of all players lockers
2. Gun Sweep of all player lockers
3. Book all players in class – Beat the Rap 101
4 Continue to try to steal some Penn St.players
5 Come up with some good excuses why you didn’t win the SEC again

dmr

August 2nd, 2012
8:30 am

Play as many young players as you can against Buffalo, especially in the mid-3rd and all of the 4th quarter. Georgia has the opportunity to build early and keep it rolling. You heard it here first. If Coach Bobo goes into happy pass mode against Missouri and Georgia throws the ball more than 25x’s and doesn’t manage the clock, Georgia gets beat due to suspensions in the secondary. Also, after watching replays of the South Carolina game from last year, Georgia has got to capitalize on opportunities, limit turnovers, and make sure we are sound in the kicking game.

Butter Bean Floyd

August 2nd, 2012
8:39 am

1. FIRE MARK RICHT 2.FIREMARK RICHT 3.FIRE MARK RICHT 4.FIRE MARK RICHT 5.FIRE MARK RICHT

bawbie

August 2nd, 2012
8:41 am

Fire Dave Perno!

00mpa L00mpa dawg

August 2nd, 2012
8:47 am

Better Qb play from our dwarf.

Joey

August 2nd, 2012
8:52 am

I remember what happened the last time we played without both Rambo and Ogletree – against a “pass-happy” team. Our worst defensive showing of the season vs Boise St.

We’re gonna miss those two at Mizzou. Our offense better be ready to put up about 35.

Sir Since Vince

August 2nd, 2012
9:00 am

Sir Since Vince

August 2nd, 2012
9:01 am

Beat the gaters and South Cackalacky or send Richt packing!

AltamahaDawg

August 2nd, 2012
9:20 am

No #21 I havent considered that because that seems pretty irrational to think that he invites mistakes by being conservative. (But I would be glad to listen you you explain that point.) Not to mention when playing “cream puff”, it’s certain that we will be seeing the deep reserves in fairly early and running pretty basic stuff, so not sure how you consider that a foot on the peddle.

AltamahaDawg

August 2nd, 2012
9:24 am

We are much more prepared at LB Now, (partly because of Tree going out in that game) than we were that day. And our pass rush is considerably more mature now.

And their QB ain’t K. Moore.

jerry

August 2nd, 2012
9:43 am

“The Bulldogs, 10-4 last season, are favored to repeat as SEC Eastern Division champions largely because they return 15 of the top 17 tacklers from a top-5, nationally-ranked defense and an All-SEC quarterback in Aaron Murray.”

Nah, it’s because the Gators and Vols are down.

Joey

August 2nd, 2012
9:44 am

K Moore ain’t James Franklin either. He put up a little less than Murray’s passing numbers, and rushed for almost 1000 yds also. Got about 400 yds rushing and passing vs Oklahoma.

He’s probably the best QB we will see this season.

MR

August 2nd, 2012
10:20 am

Georgia’s top five priorities heading into preseason football camp are . . .’

1. Make sure plenty of bail money is available.
2. Print and issue phony ID’s early.
3. Coordinate beer and alcohol deliveries directly to campus dorm rooms.
4. Store adequate supply of clean urine samples from Antartica in the lab.
5. Work with choreographer on new dance routine.

AltamahaDawg

August 2nd, 2012
10:36 am

But you made the comparison to Boise state and why we were vulnerable (at specific spots) in this game, just like that game. I am just saying, while he may be very good at any number of things, the specific things that Boise was able to do were different because the situation is different. With his style, and with our lineup ,then and now. Obvious a great QB (generally speaking) is always a challenge.

AltamahaDawg

August 2nd, 2012
11:09 am

Could we list, getting a much better class of trolls in here, as a priority? Somebody a little sharper than a 12 yr old.

Crack Dawg

August 2nd, 2012
11:09 am

This crack pipe is burning my fingers!

Joey

August 2nd, 2012
11:16 am

Yeah, that’s true. We are better off at LB than the start of ‘11 – not so sure at DB. They will get a workout.

Franklin’s in a tougher defensive league now so it will be interesting to see what numbers he puts up, but as a sophmore, his stats rival or exceed the last couple of dual-threat, college QBs, Cam Newton and RG3 at the same stage.

He will be fun to watch for the next couple seasons – at least against everybody else . . .

johnnygriffith

August 2nd, 2012
11:24 am

This year-another year with high football expectations. Enter Mark Richt-higher the expectations, the more Richt disappoints. Missouri game remind anyone of an inept Colorado team several years ago? Kicked Richt around like a ragdoll. Same old Richt, deja vu all over again. Against Spurrier, in Columbia, this year, same thing, the inept Richt disappoints again. He may not be done disappointing when Florida and Auburn come up later. Unless. and that’s a big unless, Auburn and Florida show up limping and Richt gets a virtual free pass. If either or both show up with a decent to date record, Richt won’t be able to compete, but UGA will continue to say, “that’s okay Mark, if you can just get a ten win cupcake record, that will be fine, and maybe we can line up a bowl even you can win against someone easier than Mighigan State this year”.

johnnygriffith

August 2nd, 2012
11:51 am

This is Mark Richt we are talking about here people. Richt is what he is. Not any where near one of the SEC best coaches Other schools, mainly Bama, LSU, Arkansas, S. Car., love him. You know, if Richt does get a free pass to the SEC Champ game this year, the opposite alumni is much more comfy against Richt as an opponent that against someone who can actually coach in a big game. It would be an SEC west team’s dream to draw Richt in the Champ game. You could smell a win a mile away against another underachieving Richt team.

l smith

August 2nd, 2012
12:08 pm

how many games have you naysayers won.go dawgs.

aprilglaspie

August 2nd, 2012
12:21 pm

“Dual -threat” QB generally indicates, boy can run but throwing? IC, smoove way to cover your own ineptitude. Racist nitwit.

simply the best

August 2nd, 2012
12:36 pm

Let’s get this season kicked off…..enough with the garbage vitriole of the haters. We’ll show up, will they?

Joey

August 2nd, 2012
12:45 pm

Dual threat: James Franklin

Passing: 238 of 376 for 2865 yds, 21 TDs, 140. passer rating

Rushing: 217 for 981 yds, 15 TDs

That work for ya, aprilglaspi?

Honky Talkin

August 2nd, 2012
1:39 pm

Does UGA have any players left that aren’t suspended for the first few games? Mizzou will be out for blood so be careful.

AltamahaDawg

August 2nd, 2012
3:19 pm

Out for blood. Thanks for that insightful warning.

as if: Tn will be just going through the motions, SC will be taking it easy, Uf is just going for the party, and AU is pretty much just coasting on thier trophy now. And tech really doesnt care much about Georgia.

Take a number and go stand in line, Mizzou.

FaithfulDawg86

August 2nd, 2012
4:06 pm

I LOVE Jarvis Jones!! What a DGD!

GATOR Slayor

August 2nd, 2012
4:44 pm

TAMPA GATOR THAT CHAMPIONSHIP IS IN THE PAST. WE WILL WHIP YOUR A$$ again this year and that is all that counts. Your head coach needs to be a defensive coordinator again. Gators going backwards. Remember i told you so. URBAN CRYER IS GONE.

[...] Bulldogs’ top five priorities heading into camp [...]

truedawg

August 3rd, 2012
5:01 pm

Bobo..He’s got to learn how to mix some plays AND use the players he has acording to their abilities. He knows the X’s and O’s but he has to see what is workign that day and change with the personel. I think the O line will be fine… Not great, but good enough. AM needs to learn to throw it away or slide. No turn overs. No pick’s . If we can protect the ball, we will be fine. GATA!!!