The Miss Congeniality of the SECGeorgia, Often Good but Rarely Great, Takes
Its Shot at Glory

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By RACHEL 
BACHMAN<http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=RACHEL+BACHMAN&bylinesearch=true>
[image: [image]]Associated Press

The Bulldogs celebrate a touchdown on the field early in their 2007 win
over Florida.

Georgia is a power football program. The Bulldogs play in the powerful
Southeastern Conference. They have a power running game. They even call
their helmet logo the "Power G."

But there is one area in which the Bulldogs have been weaklings lately:
winning the national championship. While SEC brethren Alabama, Auburn,
Florida and Louisiana State have combined to win the past six national
titles, Georgia's last came in 1980 behind chiseled (and now 50-year-old)
running back Herschel Walker.

The drought isn't because the Bulldogs are lousy: Over the last 10 years,
they are the third-winningest team in the SEC. A typical Georgia season is
a top-20 ranking and a nice, irrelevant bowl game. Put another way: Georgia
is the Miss Congeniality of the SEC.

All of that could change Saturday, when the third-ranked Bulldogs face No.
2 Alabama in the SEC title game in friendly Atlanta, just 70 miles from
campus. A win likely will vault Georgia into the Jan. 7 national-title game
against No. 1 Notre Dame.

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[image: image]
[image: image]
Sports Imagery/Getty Images

Former Georgia star Herschel Walker, the 1982 Heisman Trophy winner

So Saturday's showdown is the biggest game in decades for a program that is
often good but seldom great—although Georgia folk don't want to hear that.

"Since I've left, people keep saying, 'What is Georgia after Herschel?' "
said Walker, who won the Heisman Trophy in 1982. "But I'm like, 'Guys, look
at Georgia after Herschel. They put so many great guys in the NFL and
they've been winning games.' "

For better or worse, the Bulldogs' virility has been a theme throughout
their history. In 2001, a last-second Georgia touchdown to beat Tennessee
birthed a legendary call from late Bulldogs radio announcer Larry Munson:
"We just stepped on their face with a hobnail boot and broke their nose! We
just crushed their face!" Before the 2002 Georgia-Alabama game, former
Bulldogs All-American (and ex-Auburn coach) Pat Dye said on a radio show
that Georgia wasn't "man enough to whip Alabama." The Bulldogs won.

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Getty Images

Uga IX, Georgia's mascot

But despite being the flagship program in a talent-rich, football-mad
state, Georgia has just one undisputed national title—1980. (The 1942 team
also was named No. 1 by several polls.) That 2002 Bulldogs team finished
third. In 2008, Georgia was the preseason No. 1 in the Associated Press
poll but finished 13th.

"When they were preseason No. 1, that was a spot that I think they should
have relished. And they just succumbed to the pressure of being No. 1,"
former Georgia and NFL running back Terrell Davis said. "When they play a
team of a higher rank…they tend not to play as well. They have a great
opportunity this year to really just wipe all that away."

Among Georgia faithful, anticipation for Saturday's game began building
Nov. 17, when undefeated Oregon and Kansas State lost, clearing a path for
Georgia to win the national title if it won out. On Thursday tickets to the
Georgia-Alabama game were reselling for an average of more than $480,
according to secondary ticket-market aggregator TiqIQ.

Onetime Georgia student Ryan Seacrest, host of the "American Idol" TV
program, has been talking up the game on his Los Angeles-based radio show.
"Everyone in Georgia, especially in my hometown of Atlanta, has been
waiting a long time for this game," he said in an email.

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[image: image]
[image: image]
Associated Press

Coach Mark Richt gets doused after the Bulldogs' 2002 SEC-title game
victory.

And this isn't just any opponent the Bulldogs are facing Saturday. This is
Alabama, the defending national champion, with whom Georgia has a neglected
rivalry punctuated by a bizarre, long-ago scandal.

In 1963, a story in the Saturday Evening Post accused Georgia athletic
director Wally Butts and Alabama coach Bear Bryant of conspiring to fix the
1962 game, won by 17-point favorite Alabama, 35-0. Butts and Bryant sued
the Post—Butts winning a $460,000 judgment and Bryant a $300,000
settlement—in what became a landmark libel case and helped hasten the
magazine's decline. Georgia and Alabama have played just 17 times in the 50
seasons since then.

In recent years, Georgia has played a secondary role in the giant,
live-action menagerie that is the SEC. There is frowning, flawless Alabama
coach Nick Saban, mad-genius LSU coach Les Miles, explosive, overachieving
Florida coach Will Muschamp and snide, smiling Steve Spurrier of South
Carolina. Lost in the madness is mild-mannered Mark Richt, the 12th-year
Georgia coach most publicly criticized for not punishing players harshly
enough.

"Maybe we're not as flashy as some of those other places," Georgia
president Michael Adams said. "But I think when you put the combination of
our academic standards with our athletic success, we have a pretty good
record." Indeed, only Florida outranks Georgia among public SEC schools on
U.S. News & World Report's best-colleges list.

Georgia wasn't always the strong silent type. In the 1980s, iconic college
football TV announcer Keith Jackson popularized the greeting, "How 'bout
them Dawgs?" said Vince Dooley, coach of the 1980 title team. The correct
response, Dooley said, was "How 'bout them Dawgs!"

Today Georgia football enjoys a massive following. The 93,000-seat Sanford
Stadium regularly sells out. Last year Georgia ranked eighth nationally on
the Collegiate Licensing Company's list of top-selling merchandise—one spot
ahead of Notre Dame.

Some fans see a chance for symmetry with a looming title-game matchup
against the Fighting Irish, whom Georgia beat in the Sugar Bowl to clinch
the 1980 title. "We've got two games left," said Doc Eldridge, former mayor
of Athens and the current president of its chamber of commerce. "If we win
both of our two games, we'll be the king. Of course, Alabama can say that,
too."

*Write to *Rachel Bachman at [email protected]

*Corrections & Amplifications*
Only Florida outranks Georgia among public SEC schools on U.S. News & World
Report's best-colleges list. An earlier version of this article incorrectly
omitted the word public.


-- 
Helen Huntley
(727) 823-3801
www.helenhuntley.com

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