Daily Archives: October 11, 2015

Place your bets.

The line against Missouri may surprise you a little.

Marc’s got a good point there.

34 Comments

Filed under Georgia Football, What's Bet In Vegas Stays In Vegas

Right back where they started from

Same as it ever was…

The Grantham Era has morphed into the Pruitt Era.

111 Comments

Filed under Georgia Football

One small victory

According to Nick Chubb’s mom, the injury he suffered yesterday isn’t as devastating as it first appeared.

… on Sunday Chubb’s mother posted an update on her Facebook.

“Nick has a PCL tear along with two other ligaments. It’s not nearly as bad as it could have been. They will wait for swelling to go down to decide when to have surgery. Possibly two weeks. Nick is in good spirits.”

Good to hear.  That’s something, especially with his determination, he should be able to recover from by next season.

Fingers crossed, Nick.  You deserve it.

49 Comments

Filed under Georgia Football, The Body Is A Temple

Georgia’s coaching problem

As disheartening as the Alabama loss was for us, I think what went down in Knoxville yesterday surpassed that.  Somehow, Georgia managed to blow a three-touchdown lead to a team with a losing record that’s made its reputation this season as one that regularly blows big leads.  And the Dawgs made it look easy.

What’s particularly unnerving about the result is that it reflects a pattern we saw emerging with last year’s Florida game.  Big lead, small lead, no lead, Georgia has games in which it simply fails to deal with adversity in a competent way.  Against Alabama, Georgia went from a 3-3 tie early in the second quarter, to trailing by three touchdowns at the half.  That lead quickly grew to 38-3 in the third quarter. At one point, the Tide managed to score 21 straight points while running one offensive play.

The Vols aren’t nearly as good as Alabama, so instead of watching a tight game bust open and go south, we were treated to Tennessee going on an uninterrupted 28-point run to wipe out a 24-3 Georgia lead, sparked by a two-touchdown flurry at the end of the first half.

Georgia was beaten by a better team in Athens, but that wasn’t the case in Knoxville.  Instead, Georgia beat itself.  And the reason for that is that this team lacks something – call it focus, call it determination, call it mental toughness. Whatever it is, this team doesn’t have a shred of it.

That’s on Mark Richt.  That’s on the coaching staff as a whole.  And it’s always been the case.  Looking back on things, those times when Georgia football under Richt does display a sense of resiliency, it’s not keyed by the coaches.  It comes from a core group of players who have a certain level of moxie in them and manage to pull the team along in their wake.

After Georgia’s loss in Jacksonville last year, I wrote this:

I’m sick of writing these existential posts about the program every couple of years or so.  And it seems like every time we think we’re seeing a real turn around the corner, reality comes back to bite us in the ass with more evidence of the Georgia Way.  This time around, I looked at last season, with a team that fought in every game despite an injury-riddled offense, subpar defense and special teams and thought at least Georgia was hitting a point where it was no longer going to fail to show up on a consistent basis.

Wrong, bacon breath.  What I saw was how much Aaron Murray meant to the competitive spirit of this Georgia program.

The Davids, who, along with leaders like Thomas Davis, led the team in Richt’s first four seasons.  D.J. Shockley, who found that in him when his time came and led the Dawgs to their last conference title.  Murray, Gurley and Jarvis Jones. These are players who didn’t want to lose and more times than not, could drag their team across the finish line with them.

And without those kinds of players, Georgia football is lost.  For whatever reason, mental toughness is not an attitude that Mark Richt, regardless of the assistants he surrounds himself with, can instill in his program.  (Not that he’s alone in that department; I’d argue that Georgia hasn’t been mentally tough since Erk left Athens.)

That’s not to say Georgia can’t win games again.  There’s too much talent to avoid that.  When things click, when Georgia gets the kind of game that plays to its natural strengths, winning field position and turnover battles and getting consistent play from its offensive line, it’ll still beat teams and in some cases quite handily.  But when those conditions are missing, there isn’t that reserve of determination to fall back on to hold the line.

The kind of players Richt needs to elevate the level of the program simply aren’t there.  The defense is either too young in spots, or manned by players who’ve never figured out how to lead. Lambert is too absorbed in getting his own game straightened out to be that kind of kid right now.  Chubb?  Maybe, but he’s become a moot point.

Richt doesn’t have those kinds of players and he doesn’t know how to instill the attitude needed in the ones he’s got.  If you want to talk about one thing that’s not going to change after fifteen years, that’s it.  And that’s a problem.  A coaching problem.

139 Comments

Filed under Georgia Football

Oh Lord, kumbaya…

We’re hurting right now.  As somebody who’s in his fourth decade of following Georgia football, I completely understand your disappointment in the wake of what’s happened in the last two games.  Anger, frustration, bitterness, apathy – any of those feelings are to be expected at the moment.

Whatever emotions you’re experiencing, though, if you comment here at GTP, I’d ask you to take a step back and remember that most of the folks who do the same share one commonality.  They care about Georgia football.  It’s likely they care about it as much as you do.  They’re not bad people.  If they disagree with you about what the problems with the program are or don’t share your perspective on Georgia’s quarterbacks, that shouldn’t be taken as a character flaw, or an invitation to attack them personally.

There is a difference, and it’s one I’ve tried to be careful to observe over the years, between criticizing someone’s argument and dishing out personal invective.  It would be appreciated if some of you took a deep breath and remembered that. Mocking the umpteenth version of why Georgia should start the quarterback who had the best showing at G-Day will always be a thing here. Calling someone names, or wishing someone or his or her family ill because that person doesn’t share your position on Mark Richt shouldn’t be.

I take a lot of pride in how free wheeling our discussions are.  It’s one of the best things about this blog, in my humble opinion. Yesterday was bad, but don’t let it be the spark for making the comment threads a place for people to avoid.  (That’s what the AJ-C threads are supposed to be for.)

As for the handful of you who think the rest of us have missed yesterday’s real lesson, namely, your story of personal triumph and perseverance over the slings and arrows you’ve suffered at the hands of me and your fellow commenters… well, party on, Wayne.  Nobody’s ever been banned here for preening narcissism.

102 Comments

Filed under GTP Stuff