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I used to wonder how Bama fans could have such great success and yet be so crushed after one big loss.......but I feel pretty down right now

My brain knew a loss was possible, but my experience and my gut told me we would beat Notre Dame and Penn State.
My gut said Gunner would do fine, and my experience told me that ND and the State Penn were being inflated through a midwestern influence. Just avoid turnovers....which to be fair, if we had avoided turnovers we likely would have won

They had a mediocre kicker hit all 3 of his field goals. A kickoff return for a TD. Just one of those things, I guess. I'm looking forward to some "hot stove" college football now.

Help Me Understand the Buster Faulkner "Stuff"

@Blayne Gilmer is giddy, not poking fun just saying what I am seeing on this board.

We're UGA, an elite college football program that has been extremely good to top Assistants moving into better career opportunities since Kirby took over. If (and I hope when) we tell Mike Bobo it's time for him to go, why wouldn't we expect a plethora of amazing OC resumes from college and the NFL to appear? Monken is elite, why wouldn't we want another tenured and successful OC that resembles his background in Athens instead of a young and promising OC like Buster still proving himself in a lower tier ACC program?

Buster may be fantastic, but he's a risk if you elevate him to OC at a program like ours. Can Kirby take that risk with our Offense after whiffing on Coley and now Bobo (Chaney was vanilla too)? Not saying Kirby is going anywhere and he has all the job security in the world, but we need to bounce back quickly in 2025 and in a big way.

Why go down the path of a 50/50 decision? Monken was a great hire from Day 1.

Will never forget this trip

Personally, still a little shaken having been at and staying so close to where the attack took place.
Still praying for those killed and injured.
Was heartwarming to see all the support given to the first responders. Major respect for those folks, along with the many police agencies down there.
As for the game, obviously disappointed and surprised that Georgia did not play better.
Thought Gunner did the best he could under the circumstances, but when you don’t win the line of scrimmage, you’re going to have a tough time.
I know everyone wants to know about potential changes. I don’t have a crystal ball and writing this I’ve heard of nothing imminent.
Will it surprise me if something does? Absolutely not. But right now we are just in the wait and see stage.
Still thinking there will be portal movement - additions and subtractions.
Lastly, continue to say a prayer for Coach Smart’s dad.
See y’all back in Athens. Can’t tell you how good it will feel to get home.

The game, the events leading to the game…

Happy new year vent fam. Wanted to just get some thoughts out as I get going today. If I ramble I apologize as getting back to Atl from Nola at 3:30 am will do that to you…

My whole family was on bourbon street and left at 1:15am. Thank the lord everyone is safe and YES, I thought police presence was very good

Woke up the next day and all hell broke loose. The UGA student was the niece of a friend of ours and her mom was NOT in Nola. So my wife went to the hospital as a liaison to the family (let’s just say my wife is a DR who knows what to do at the hospital) and was with the young girl for 4-5 hrs. I don’t want to get into all of that but my wife was exhausted and worried about the game. She had to see patients in the 2nd so she decided to take the 6:30 am flight that we were scheduled to take.

With that said, the rest of the fam decides to stay. This was going to be my 60th straight game home and away going to, and my soon to be DIL brother (88 Mitchell Evans) played for ND (he had some big catches). We tried talking to delta(that was a ****ing joke all the way around) and decides to rent a car and drive home. .. after the game. Our mental exhaustion was def being pushed, but we are LUCKY

As for the game. I always feel we will win the coaching battle, but not going to half down 6-3 and NOT kicking the ball in EZ to try to pin them back cost us the game. I def want to add some points but after the game drove straight to Atl and got home at 3:30

I will say 3 weeks ago I posted I was really happy winning the SEC.. this was a GRIND yr. Most exhausted o have been from a. Football season. We just missed something.. and I do not know what it is. But I look ahead to 2025. Don’t worry about Kirby.. he is built different and will push us

Go dawgs, hug your loved ones

Physicality of these two teams .....

Very seldom do our teams play less physical than our opponents under Kirby, especially for an entire game. The only group that seemed to be more physical than ND was our DL. Every other position we appeared to play less physical than them just IMO. I don't think ND is able to out-physical us anywhere unless something is way off

If you agree with this, what is your theory? Were we just worn out from what could have been the most lopsided schedule in CFB history? Was it lack of coaching preparation to get our guys in the right mindset? Lack of in game adjustments that put our guys in less than ideal situations? I don't know but it bothers me worse than the actual loss. especially given we experienced it several times throughout the season at various times. Just appeared to be a lack of focus and motivation to me.

Wonder what this was

Scoring Margin

National Champions Scoring Margin has been +18.5 or higher against FBS opponents since 2016. Below is the list:

YearWinnerScoring MarginRankGeorgia Scoring MarginRank
2016Clemson+18.58+0.461
2017Alabama+24.42+205
2018Clemson+30.41+16.68
2019LSU+24.84+16.111
2020Alabama+291+12.315
2021Georgia+26.91+26.91
2022Georgia+26.41+26.41
2023Michigan+25.51+23.23
2024+8.326

Of the teams left for 2024, Ohio State is 1 with +24.3, Notre Dame is 2 with +24.1, Texas is 5 with +18.9, and Penn State is 6 with +17.9. 2024 was Georgia's first time with single digit scoring margin since 2016.
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Interesting thought on the over reaction show

Someone said that there wasn’t enough time to make wholesale changes to the offense leading up to the sugar bowl.

So my question is what in the heck happens if Beck would’ve gone down earlier in the year? If you have two different quarterbacks, you better be smart enough to be able to scheme plays for both of them because you never know when that quarterback is gonna have to go into play.

Another reason Bobo needs to go!

VIDEO WATCH: Georgia's postgame comments

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COACH SMART: I want to open with a lot of credit to Notre Dame and their staff and their team. They played exactly like we expected them to play: Physical, tough, don't beat yourself. And they did that. They did those exact things. They got two turnovers, and we didn't. And they returned a kickoff for a touchdown. So, we basically spotted them probably 14 points off of that, and costed ourselves a possession in the red area when we fumbled down there. But they did a really good job. They played really hard, physical brand of football. So do we. Those two mirror each other. I think both defenses played well, and we turned the ball over and they didn't. And they gave us problems in the pass game with the sack and the sack fumble. So give them a lot of credit. That takes nothing away from these men on the stage and the seniors that are a part of this class. I mean, absolutely incredible. I just told them, what they went through this year and what they played and how they played, the resiliency, the injuries that we've had, and to win an SEC championship -- which I have so much respect for our conference -- and to win some of the comeback games they won and never quit, even in this game, never quit, that's the attitude you've got to have to get better as a football program. So, we've got a lot of guys moving on. A lot of guys are hurt in that locker room because we didn't get the outcome that we wanted, but that's part of life. I give Notre Dame credit for how they played and give our seniors and our leaders credit for what they've done for this program.

Q. Can you walk us through the final 33 seconds, the final minute of the first half, and going forward there, throwing the ball, and what happened.

COACH SMART: Yeah. Typically when you're down, you need every possession you can have. And we made a decision that we were going to be aggressive and we were going to try to go two-minute. And that's what everything says you should do. You can't give up possessions when you're trailing. So we're down 6-3. We felt like we had a little quick-game pass. Certainly not counting on getting beat that quick at left tackle. And got a sack fumble, which gave them some momentum. But at the end of the day, we got a great red-area defense. We should stop them. We don't play passive here. We play to be aggressive, and we're trying to go score.

Q. If I could follow up on that question, how much did you take into account that the offense hadn't really been moving the ball? And obviously Gunner [Stockton] was making his first start, as he contemplated playing aggressively?

COACH SMART: No, I don't think so. I think we did move the ball. We turned it over. We had more yards than they did at the time, and we had more passing yards than they did at the time. So I don't see it as just going to the shell. We got an opportunity -- we got timeouts. We got an opportunity to go score. We worked two-minute every week, and we stay aggressive with it. We've got a really good pass pro team, and we didn't pick him up on that play. Made a great rush, and he got a sack and fumble. I don't question that call because I really agree with the decision to be aggressive and try to go score.

Q. The opening second-half kick return for a touchdown, what happened there? And how much do you feel like that influenced the way the rest of the game played out?

COACH SMART: Well, I don't think it affected us because we bounced right back. Spotted an extra touchdown. It made it a harder comeback. But we an unblocked player that missed a tackle. And usually when that happens, you give the other team credit, but it's not a mistake. We just missed the tackle, right? And when you don't play for a while, sometimes you miss tackles. We had leverage on the ball, and we had somebody that couldn't get him on the ground. And that's what football is. It's fundamentals and tackling. We tackle him there, then we got a chance to stop them. But obviously, it played a huge momentum swing for them, but our guys didn't shy away.

Q. The fourth and one late in the football game, they run the punt team off. Was there a thought to call a time-out there? I know you guys were down.

COACH SMART: Didn't want to because that's what they wanted. They wanted us to burn a timeout there and try to do it. And we subbed. So it's really unfortunate, because I've been told by our head of officials in the SEC that you can't do that. You can't run 11 on, 11 off. We did it in 2017 against Tennessee. We've carried that. We practiced that and repped that because teams try to do it, and we were told by officials you could not do that. And so we were trying to say you couldn't do it. We got our defense out there. We were fine. I mean, I would have gone for it, if I was them. I don't think they were planning on going for it. They were going to hard-count us. We prepare for that. We do it every week. We jumped offsides, you know? But we also were told you couldn't do that in our league.

Q. Obviously, very defensive game. Notre Dame only had 90 yards passing. Have you ever kind of remembered a game like this where the opposition had 90 yards passing and still somehow managed to get the win?

COACH SMART: Yeah. When you have two turnovers and a kickoff return for a touchdown, that's what happens. I mean, I have been part of those games. I've been part of really good defenses, and they stop people. And we weren't able to get a lot going. And the turnovers are the difference in the game, guys. It's not an exact science. I mean, you should know when you turn it over twice and they return a kickoff for a touchdown, you're not going to have a lot of success.

Q. You had a long completion down to Arian Smith and get a sideline warning -- sideline interference there. The ball comes back. Walk us through what happened there. What were your thoughts?

COACH SMART: Yeah, very unfortunate. We had -- they said a coach but I think it was a player, from what I've been told -- in the white, and the white is reserved for the officials. That's a safety concern. Most of the time, they'll grant you a warning on that; but it was not a -- it was a situation where it cost us 15 yards. We still had first and ten and didn't take advantage of it. But, again, I call those things undisciplined, self-imposed wounds that you lose momentum on. So, it's just something you can't have happen.

Q. We've discussed a couple of fourth-down plays, special teams plays. I'm curious, how much do you think Notre Dame's success is built on the fact that they challenged sort of every play and are really willing to do lots of different things to sort of get the opponent off balance?

COACH SMART: I think everybody is as good a football team as that. I don't think that's a Notre Dame trait. I mean, every team we play in our league, they're going to try to create a competitive advantage. We knew they were really aggressive on special teams with what they do. They come after kicks. They had two roughing the kickers that were running into the kicker. That's a subjective call, right? So that's a decision he has to make as to what it is. Those could be first downs. But there's nothing different they do that's -- I mean, we prepare for it, you try to out-execute people. We had the same situation as them.

Q. You were told previously in a different game you can't run 11 on, 11 off. I saw you trying to talk to the officials. Did they ever come over and talk to you, the head official, or anything like that?

COACH SMART: Never gave me a real clear answer. Never gave me a real clear answer.

Q. My real question was about Gunner Stockton's first start, your thoughts.

COACH SMART: Gunner did some good things. Any time you don't have pass pro, it's tough. He had some tough moments out there. When it's your backside and you can't see it coming, it's tough. I thought he tucked it down and ran. He got us out of a couple sacks with his feet and legs, threw the ball away. Did some good things there. But obviously, it wasn't enough with the two turnovers, and we got to be better for sure.

Q. Kirby, you had mentioned the missed tackle on the kickoff and said you hadn't tackled in a while. You talked before the game about the layoff. I'm curious how much you felt that was a factor.

COACH SMART: I really didn't. I really didn't. I thought we tackled well as a defense, better than I expected. We built a wall on the run game. They had some success with quarterback run late and got some things out as we started to take more chances. But I thought our guys were in good shape, good condition. I wouldn't change anything we did leading up to it. I mean, I thought that our preparation was good. We got to run extra yesterday. I was really pleased with that. All the players felt confident about that. I did not think we had a conditioning issue, and I did not think it was a tackling issue. We did miss one on the kickoff, but that was an offensive player. He doesn't tackle as much as anybody because he plays on offense.

Q. Jalon, your first year, you guys win the national championship. Last year, you guys get left out of the playoff. You talked about it earlier in the week saying you felt slighted, saying you weren't there. Now you fall here in the Quarterfinals. How does this feel in comparison to last year?

JALON WALKER: Yeah, it hurts. Last year, we didn't have our appearance in the College Football Playoff, but we did have the appearance in the Orange Bowl. And we ended that off the right way against Florida State. Unfortunately, we didn't end it off in the right way this year. I just know that we played and gave it all. Offense and defense gave our all. So I wouldn't trade this moment for anything at all. It was just a great, hard-fought battle. All respect to Notre Dame. Physical offense. Hard-fought offense. Well-coached. And they just did what they needed to do.

Q. Tate, you look kind of beat up there. Talk to us about how you feel right now.

TATE RATLEDGE: Just hurt. A lot of emotions after that kind of loss and this kind of situation. So, I mean, of course, we'd rather go the other way but just a lot of emotions going through the head right now.

Q. Just to follow up on that, how were you guys able to kind of play after what happened yesterday and kind of focus on ball?

TATE RATLEDGE: I mean, this team's got one goal, and it's all the same goal, and that was to win a national championship. And it started here. And just knowing that we have one goal all together is how we ended up getting through that and showing up to play today.

Q. Apologies if this has been asked. It probably has. Any thoughts on all four teams that had byes losing in the first round? Do you think that played a factor at all?

COACH SMART: What played a factor? The fact that they --

Q. The fact that they had a game last week versus we had three weeks without playing football, or at least to play in a game.

COACH SMART: I don't know. I mean, I look at what Vegas says;and it went kind of what Vegas said, you know what I mean? I mean, at least in those two games. I guess ours was a -- I don't know what it was. It was close. But two of those teams were better than the other teams, to be honest with you. And that is what it is. That's more about the seeding process and where it is. But I'm not here to complain about anything. Given the opportunity, Notre Dame lost probably their best defensive player. So I don't know how that's an advantage.

Q. Given how hyper-scheduled football programs are at this level, how did you approach the uncertainty yesterday of figuring out when you're going to play, how you deal with practice in that 24-hour waiting period?

COACH SMART: Same as we do everything. We got a little group, we huddle up. We FaceTimed. We made a decision on what we would do. We brought the players down and met with them and said, This is the plan moving forward. We put it on the screen, and they said, Let's go. Put the ball down and get ready to go play. That's what our guys do. We change a lot of our plays. When change happens, it does not affect people. What you can't measure is the families of the Notre Dame players and the Georgia players that are -- you're concerned about your family, because they're in New Orleans and you don't know where they are. And I don't think you can put a -- quantify a measure of concern for both teams, their families. All of our players were on the phone checking on their family, and that's the biggest concern.

Q. Kirby, you've had a number of games this year where you haven't scored a lot of points. Any thoughts about your offensive identity, and what do you attribute that to?

COACH SMART: I attribute it to, number one, some really good defenses we've played. I mean, that one was a really good defense. We've played some really good defenses. We've had a rotating lineup with guys that have rolled in and out, and we haven't created the same thing on defense we've done in the past. If you go to years-past defense, we created more turnovers, better third downs to get the ball back. There's a lot of things we can do better to help our offense, but we certainly have to play better and do better. And a lot of that has to do with health and the schedule we play and having some playmakers that can make some plays, too.

Q. Kirby, you talked about the uncertainty of yesterday and kind of the concern. I'm curious, was there any carryover to today? Once you all started playing, did it feel like a normal game?

COACH SMART: Oh, guys, I'm not desensitizing what happened, okay? That was a very traumatic event. But this team was focused and ready to go play. So, I'm not going to sit here and talk about the tragedy affecting our team. Notre Dame played well. We didn't play great. But when we turned the ball over twice and have a kickoff returned, that's what I attribute the loss to. Not to the tragedy or what happened. And that's not any disrespect to the community of New Orleans or the people with tragic losses.

Q. Coach, I thought Smael Mondon had a really good game. He's a guy that's been with your program for four years. Georgia native. This year with the transfer portal, that's kind of a rare thing. How much of an impact has he had on your program?

COACH SMART: Yeah, he's an incredible kid. I mean, he had a really bad injury, guys, and then he had a really bad injury on top of his fixed injury. So, I got so much respect for him. He could have shut it down, not played this year. He sat out for three or four games to let it heal. And then he came back with just -- and played so good down the stretch. And I'm so happy for him because he's got to go into the NFL process with a pretty significant injury that he's had, and he's played with good tape. So, somebody's going to get a really good football player out of Smael. I've got one thing I want to say about these two guys before we break. I don't know who picked these guys to come, but they would have been the guys I picked because when we do our captains -- and rarely have I ever seen this where we did our captains -- and two guys got more votes than anybody we've ever had. A combination of an offensive player and a defensive player. Well, that's picked by the 130 players on the team. So they picked these two guys at about a 95% rate. Meaning out of the 130, 95 guys put these two guys in their combination. So what they did with this team in the toughest year of at least my tenure, easily the toughest year, they dominated the room. They controlled the room. They led the room through hard games and situations. There were some hard games and situations. I'll never forget this guy against Georgia Tech chasing everybody down telling them to stay in the game, hope's still alive. This guy doing the coin toss and saying we're about to win this game in overtime. And I know today will be written about and that's fine. But these two guys right here are as special as they come. Thank you, guys.

TATE RATLEDGE: Appreciate it, Coach.
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It’s Not Bobo

We can complain about Bobo all we want to, but the fact is that you can’t run an offense under constant defensive pressure. To me, our OL let us down (I can’t remember a time when we did less with more talent). Seareles is not the answer. He was not the first time that he was here and he is not now. I just hope Kirby sees that (and if I can see it, I know that he can). Everything starts with the OL.

Explain the crashing inside by the ends to me?

Outside runs have killed us all year and even last year. I watched 32 crash inside multiple times and they just jump outside. Our linebackers aren't there or take bad angles. Running back or leonard just ran outside for over 5 yards. If we have a Big DT clogging up the middle, do we use this same strategy .

Bobo getting blame

Last year he did very well imo. The SECCG no Bowers was huge. 13-1 and screwed from playoffs, big Orange Bowl win. Excited about CB coming back but the OL was garbage and couldn't run or pass block, pathetic and WRs not getting open dropping balls. That's not on Bobo, Bobo can't turn water into wine. Those 2 positions need help bad. Better OL coach but I think Bobo stays @Anthony Dasher @Radi Nabulsi would love see article on your thoughts

Saban and Kirby

Saban is the GOAT because of many things. But, my observation is that he shares many attributes of great leaders - whether in the military, business, or coaching. 1) he was not friends and never wanted to be friends with his employees; 2) he adapted (handing over the reigns/philosophy to innovative offensive minds when his philosophy was no longer as successful); and 3) he was willing to make changes clinically and coldly - including firing people quickly - things that had to be done - based on evidence - for the greater good. Kirby has an opportunity to step into this next level of leadership. I really hope he can make that next step.

Reflecting on watching the game last night, really only one thing makes me smile...

On the long pass to Arian Smith (in which the official ran into Parker), immediately after the reception, my wife bounced up off the sofa, fist-pumped into the air, and screamed ''HE CAUGHT THE BALL!".

Still cracks me up just thinking about it.

Hey, it's not much, but I'm going to try to make that my one good takeaway memory from an otherwise miserable game.

On to 2025.
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