Tuesday, December 02, 2008
What Happened to Georgia?
This one's for you, Free Man.
The embattled Georgia Bulldogs, heir apparent to the championship flag that has been hoisted in Gainesville and then Baton Rouge successively, has turned in another typical season under coach Mark Richt.
Richt is a good coach, turning the Bulldogs into must-see TV and flaunting with greatness along the way. This season the Bulldogs played everybody straight up and honest, and found themselves 3 weeks in the season as far back as No. 3 and No. 4. Richt has never politicized the BCS, never selfishly promoted his team like some coaches. Took his losses like a man.
But that latest loss, the one to Georgia Tech?
That's bad football, many in Athens say.
But what many in the nation say is how could a preseason No. 1 that dismantled some good SEC teams get run over by a middle-of-the-road ACC team?
Let's recap:
Georgia led 28 - 12 at halftime.
But Georgia had to score a TD just to pull within three points on Matthew Stafford’s last touchdown throw to A.J. Green with 4:04 to play. Tech melted the clock with the most basic, and apparently devastating plays ever crafted in football: the option.
To say UGA had no answer to Tech's option is like saying Mark Richt is a little younger than Bobby Bowden.
Tech churned out 400 yards on the ground and turned in a 26-point third quarter that went as fast as Jackets quarterback Josh Nesbitt could toss his two-yard laterals to his halfbacks.
To make matters worse Bulldogs senior split end Mohamed Massaquoi (11 catches for 180 yards) had the field to himself. It was like Tech made a concerted effort to give Stafford (407 yards passing) the game ball. It still wasnt' enough for the Dawgs.
To be sure, the Bulldogs will play in a decent bowl game on New Year's Day. But it will be another year of what-ifs and what-might-have-beens.
Which, under Richt, is a typical UGA season.
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Saturday, November 29, 2008
LSU Loses Heartbreaker to Arkansas, 31-30
I could say it was a heartbreaker, but truth be told, the hearts of LSU fans have been broken weeks ago, sawn in two, actually seven pieces (the number of Jarrett Lee interceptions run back for scores). The Arkansas loss just reminds us that we should have been expectant of a letdown after a championship-winning season. If anything this game showed us that Jordan Jefferson could play quarterback on the road, in a noisy SEC environment and produce, albeit with many transgressions. The defense simply didn't keep its poise in the end, with costly personal fouls aiding Arkansas' offense on its final drive. Les Miles will have quite a decision to make next year with Jarrett Lee, Andrew Hatch and Jefferson all want to line up behind center. As for now in Tigerland, it's basketball season.
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