ADVERTISEMENT

To make things equitable

SEC teams should replace four of their SEC games with 4 from the BIG. Then the BIg teams should replace 4 of their games with SEC teams.
Then, you would not have Penn State sitting where they are. In this way, the SEC is not at a disadvantage for their schedule. That way, a team like Penn State could go play South Carolina and Auburn at night, then go play Michigan State.
  • Like
Reactions: Boom MFer Dawg

Opinion The Georgia 3-2-1 Report

Three Observations

3. Carson Beck levels up.


It wasn’t that long ago when images of a smiling Carson Beck at Ole Miss caused fans to dream about tossing him and his interception-throwin’ ass into the nearest wood-chipper. How could he grin or laugh when Georgia was getting worked like Warde Manuel’s refrigerator handle?

Kirby Smart had warned us. Beck was Mr. Even Keel. Never up. Never Down. He was the argon of quarterbacks, an inert gas found everywhere but not that interactive.

But somewhere after the first god-awful drives against Tennessee, Beck had enough. He found passion for something other than blondes, tattoos and cars. He stopped trying to be the hero he thought Georgia needed and instead became the leader his teammates wanted. You saw it happen in real time. Mr. Cerebral started having fun, playing with abandon and sacrificing himself like Captain Lawrence Oakes.

Beck didn’t get hurt, thank goodness, when he ran headlong into a Tennessee safety. But he changed. He stood up with a grin and a plan. The game (and maybe the season) changed on that one run. Welcome back, Mr. Beck.

AD_4nXfbVqqtjWtBMMPhOGr62wCDWTsq9GmHFnmMISOcNW0C2asPyzfQv6EwzvQR1wBM1jnnJjpBQ_BqiHTyN2kNPgLzUOhW3KmieY95QioBz6ReajWFL9OACsAElT9SmybL-Sd8Ch6H



2. The premature end of an era

Mark Twain said it best, “The report of my death was an exaggeration.” So too have been the pronouncements regarding the end of the Kirby Smart Era. With Smart’s second loss (gasp!) and subsequent screw job by the Playoff Committee, the overreactions were rampant. The garage-dwelling YouTube pundits declared Georgia’s dominance was over. “They won’t even make the playoffs!” was the cry of the Twitter coaches.

These incels declared Smart only won so many games because he stacked 5-star players at every position. Atilla the Hun would trade his Mongol horde for Georgia’s two deep, according to the TikTok experts.

While it is true that Georgia is not as talented as it was in 2021 or 2022, just look at the past game. Nine true freshmen played in the biggest must-win game of the year. Your sophomores were everywhere. The same transfer portal that saw you lose good players brought in playmakers who saved your bacon.

The Bulldogs are going to lose a ton of talent to the NFL. We may see 25+ players transfer. But Smart is still the nation’s best recruiter, and he’s going to field his Winged Hussars for years to come. It seems every year the pundits like to proclaim the end of the Nick Saban era. I guess they will do the same with Smart from here on out.

AD_4nXd8zUZvgBeNNW5XX3i88W7minJUdZcfjcdxitgcBNqASUmFs6Gi81SpBGTsJSyJ1MKtWM1g4IUI2yOCdQ2zUmBj7Cxis1u-kgAssphEHVGROZaiLX4yQ5Zv-GRi37q7ioTTp_qLXg


1. My way or the highway

Of all the stats, measurements, and analytical data we can chart, I wish we had a way to track buy-in. Many of these players resist doing things the way Smart wants them to and thus they don’t see the field. They can fight it. Call the coaches biased. Claim they are being overlooked. But eventually they either transfer or buy in.

Daniel Harris came in for Jullan Humprey after the latter was flagged for pass interference. Harris played well. So where has he been all year?

Per Smart: “We had a long meeting with him and told him that we needed to see him practice better…. He had really good practices, he competed, he gave great effort, he tackled better…. So, he's played more because of the way he's practiced.”

Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins was ready to transfer at one point. He thought he should be playing more. Now he’s a force on the defensive line. What changed?

Per Smart: “He had considered the portal at one time…. And I remind him every day that he's out there working because sometimes he needs a little motivation to work. …. And he gets a little more juice and practices a little harder. …He's played really good football this year because he had a great camp.”

Ben Yurosek was tossed around like a blow up doll at a Kiss concert when he first took the field for Georgia. Now he’s a starter. What changed?

"I think he's learned the speed and the way to approach practice here…it takes transfers a little bit sometimes. They'll say, 'Golly, I didn't really know what it was going to be like.'...[Now] he plays more physical. He practices more physical. He bought into the idea that, 'Oh, if I actually practice like a game, I'll play better in the game.’”

Oh Captain, My Captain.

AD_4nXd3ByvBXow6nd_gzgS-TQCpVfQAxdao9uJi9zSW5xFoGYaKu-84YMI3S9qVfHvw9GgJzNLErUVLYc-vSygL4nMI38_ir50vtKP5rZ3FDQ4to1ouAJOPgDtZUHYHh0GtxYTPtViTVw



Two Questions

2. Who is going to apologize?


Many of us owe apologies. And not just to the first girl who let us see that bow on the front of her underwear.
For me, it’s to Ben Yurosek. For others, they owe Chaz Chambliss an apology. A lot of us could probably delete our Facebook posts about Carson Beck, Daylen Everette and Oscar Delp.

This is not to say we won't be cussing them again versus Tech, but maybe we jumped to conclusions about ability or desire.

Personally, I started out well. I said folks were going to love Yurosek and that he would be TE1. Yurosek then proceeded to go out and play like a one-eyed, three-legged capybara. I wanted to tell Smart this is the SEC, not Make-a-Wish. But as the season progressed, so too did Yurosek. Now we are seeing what our sources told us he was like in fall camp.

Chambliss is tied for the team-lead in sacks. The previous accusations of “a slow white guy” are now harder to find than a Rhodes Scholar at Auburn. Delp, Beck, and Everette have shown us why the coaches stuck with them while many of us were screaming for their back ups.

So I’m sorry.

This never happens to me.

AD_4nXfNO19Ey5Bf6mvxHd1Q1YGZIzopytCEqPUvyQxyScUUOMGZRMcNBAzJaURc0FCwSw9RWpeBcGeXlWJDFz7NnASlj6bRv2GIjTyvlqE7NaYf6WV3opXQ6HGjccRfqjkilCbZYZGM


1. Who remembers Andy Isaballa?

Jim Donnan warned us in 2018 that UMass had a wide receiver who could pose problems for Georgia. I may or may not have scoffed, secure in my ignorance that UMass posed zero threat on either side of the ball. Isabella torched the Georgia defense for 219 yards on 15 catches. He scored two touchdowns. He’s still in the NFL. Nowadays we’d be watching to see if he wanted to transfer.

AD_4nXf2qwXaPMz3YWr2_IiOpFW_isr1fgxQpedu6CHNoTaH-H6yHLu89Bv4W8Y6X-UchW3C-ZUnLLO18KW0N2XhvZMn7TtFPXUt1dvqFVKs5U5KsLNJAZCBnEb14fsrhwvoN7huR9xMZA


One Prediction

Tomorrow you are going to see the nucleus of the 2025 team show out. Enjoy the preview. Despite starting 45 minutes after the Ohio State-Indiana game, Georgia’s contest will be over first.




We just saw a quarterback prospect flip from LSU to Michigan for a supposed $10 million NIL deal. How can Georgia compete with that? Here’s one way. Try the Sample Pack from Bulldog Snacks. It makes a great gift. Proceeds from the sales of the bars and cookies go to Georgia's NIL efforts. The folks at Bulldog Snacks already sent Classic City Collective a giant check. If everyone changes their shopping habits just a bit, they can do it again.

Untitled design (4).png

Try it here.

Florida does not deserve Billy Napier

Florida is supposed to have either a morally questionable coach or a do@chebag who loses the team when things don’t go well. Napier is humble, nice, and they play hard for him. Poor fit. Surely this will go sideways at some point.

On the other hand, auburn has a perfect fit in freeze - a reprehensible fake evangelist unfit for any profession other than barn head coach.

Took part in another CFB setting yesterday...

Me and the wife looked at the Dawg schedule in the preseason and decided yesterday was the perfect opportunity to go to an Appalachian St. game. She has family in that area and has been a fan for years. I told her it had to be during a bye week or during one of the ridiculous patsies that SEC teams still schedule and yesterday was the result.

The charm of CFB cannot be surpassed by any other sport. Walking into the stadium and you see all of the alums gathered talking about former teams/games, the students tailgating in giant mobs, and everyone chanting as you enter the stadium. It was cold as could be with snow everywhere you looked around the surrounding mountain and in the stands.

The stadium had tons of energy and when they blocked a punt for a TD, people were jumping all around like they had just won the Natty.

All of this because they beat James Madison. The sport is not dying, folks. It's just becoming a bit different. It will never die.

CFB is and always will be undefeated.

From the Dashboard...

If it is indeed what Dash believes, and I believe it too, that these four teams are in as of today

"For now, it’s safe to assume that Georgia will be one of four SEC teams I think will make up the field, which now should include Texas, Alabama, Ole Miss, and Georgia".

What happens if A&M beats Texas in College Station? Will they take 5 teams? Texas wont drop out. @Anthony Dasher

Dawgs 🐶 🦴 vs St. Pitino 11:00 a.m. game thread

UGA MBB



Login to view embedded media


Login to view embedded media




Next Opponent: St. John’s



Login to view embedded media




Login to view embedded media




NYP: St. John’s finding groove from 3-point land after early struggles



NASSAU, Bahamas — The biggest surprise through two-thirds of St. John’s trip to The Bahamas has been the Johnnies’ 3-point shooting.

A perceived weakness entering the season was a strength in the double-overtime loss to No. 13 Baylorand rout of Virginia.

No. 22 St. John’s is 24-for-48 from distance, and is now shooting a robust 39.3 percent from deep in six games this year.



The 24 attempts in the two games in the Baha Mar Hoops Championship were up from the Red Storm’s 21.7 average over the first four contests.

“We put in the work behind closed doors. We shoot 3’s every day. As you can see right now, after practice there’s multiple people working on their 3’s,” said senior wing Aaron Scott, who is shooting 40 percent from distance on the season. “Really, I don’t think anybody can guard us one-on-one. We got Kadary [Richmond], Deivon [Smith], RJ [Luis], Simeon [Wilcher]. They all beat their defenders one-on-one and find open people like me and Brady [Dunlap], spot-up, knockdown shooters. We’re just waiting for the ball. We know they’re going to find us and we know they’re going to beat their man one-on-one and the other team will have to help off of us.”



In St. John’s (5-1) first four games at Carnesecca Arena and the Garden, it averaged 7.2 made 3-pointers.

In this tournament, the Red Storm have hit 12 per game.

Maybe the Johnnies should play more games in a ballroom like this one.



After games on back-to-back nights, you might assume that coach Rick Pitino would give his players a breather.



Well, think again.

After watching the Georgia-Marquette game together on Saturday ahead of the matchup with the SEC school on Sunday, Pitino put his players through a two-hour practice.



“I was kind of surprised,” Richmond said. “We got after it, though. I feel good. No walk-throughs really [here].”



Dunlap (hip) practiced on Saturday.



The hope is he will be available Sunday.

He was held out of Friday’s win over Virginia.



https://nypost.com/2024/11/24/sport...oove-from-3-point-land-after-early-struggles/





NYP: Kadary Richmond slowly but surely showing he can be ‘one of one’ for St. John’s



NASSAU, Bahamas — “It’s coming, slowly but methodically.

Kadary Richmond is getting there.

He’s showing glimpses of the dominant figure he was at Seton Hall.



There was the more aggressive performance in a win over New Mexico, his clutch play to force multiple overtimes in the loss to No. 13 Baylorbefore cramps shut him down for the second extra session, and his efficient effort in the blowout of Virginia.

“Starting to get comfortable picking my spots,” the 6-foot-6 lead guard said on Saturday, as St. John’s prepared to face Georgia on Sunday to end this challenging trip to The Bahamas. “I’m playing with a lot of talented guys who also have the ball in their hands, so just adjusting to that.”



Over the last three games, Richmond is averaging 13.3 points, 5.3 assists, 4.6 rebounds and 2.3 steals, numbers more along the lines of how he performed a year ago.

He’s been more assertive at both ends of the floor, not as passive as he was out of the gate, finding the right balance between getting his teammates involved and taking charge himself.

“He’s one of one,” teammate Aaron Scott said. “He’s an All-American for a reason. Nobody can really guard him one-on-one. He makes everybody around him better. That’s what a point guard is supposed to do.



That’s Kadary — he’s going to step it up when it’s time to step it up.”

This is obviously still new for the All-American — new teammates, new coaching staff, new school.

He’s never been surrounded by so much talent at this level.

Everything ran through him at Seton Hall.



That doesn’t have to be the case for No. 22 St. John’s to be successful.



He’s sharing ballhandling duties with another point guard, Deivon Smith, and sometimes is playing off the ball.

“It was rough because we really didn’t get much practice reps together because we were switching teams and stuff,” Richmond said. “But once we kept it consistent and started playing with each other more, I feel it’s helping for all of us.”



It remains an adjustment, along with his jump shot.

Richmond is still working to get the hitch out of his shot. In practice, you don’t see it, but in games it has been there at times.

He has attempted nine 3s so far, making three.



“I’m about 40-50 percent with my mechanics, changing it,” he said. “I feel good about it though, it’s going well. I just have to get more attempts up. … I try not to [revert back to my old form], but at times it happens. With more reps and more attempts, I think I’ll feel much more comfortable and [get] a lot more attempts and a lot more makes.”

Overall, Richmond is pleased with St. John’s 5-1 start.

They are further along at this point than he expected.



The response to the Baylor loss was impressive, a sign of this group’s toughness when facing adversity.

It has a chance to head home feeling really good about itself by beating Georgia on Sunday before a six-day break.

“It’s a lot of fun, a lot of talented, high-flying guys, a lot of dunking going on, a lot of sharing the ball,” Richmond said. “We’re just showing we’re getting more comfortable playing together and we handled adversity well the other day with that tough loss to Baylor. We’re showing that we’re resilient and that we’re a pretty good team and we can play with anybody.”





https://nypost.com/2024/11/23/sport...ly-showing-he-can-be-one-of-one-for-st-johns/
  • Like
Reactions: lakechatugedawg
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT