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Tennessee 35, Georgia 14

In an odd quirk of scheduling, the Tennessee Volunteers had back-to-back open dates on their slate. The Big Orange did not have to face a football team on September 29 and they did not have to face a football team on October 6. At least, that was the way it looked for much of this afternoon.

Rarely will you see a good team more totally dominated than the Classic City Canines were during the first half in Knoxville. The Vols did everything right and the 'Dawgs did everything wrong. On both sides of the ball, Tennessee always knew what Georgia was about to do and was ready to counter it, but the Red and Black were deceived on a regular basis, often to disastrous effect. Between halftime of last year's game and halftime of this year's game, U.T. outscored Georgia by a 65-9 margin.

There were bright spots, of course. Tripp Chandler played his best game of the year and Demiko Goodman reemerged after disappearing following last year's Ole Miss game. Knowshon Moreno showed occasional flashes and it was good to see Kregg Lumpkin back in the lineup, where he averaged 6.5 yards per carry. After being completely outclassed before intermission, the defense allowed only seven points in the second half.

The coaching staff's ability to make halftime adjustments was attested to by the fact that the Bulldogs began the second half with a defensive stop and scored a touchdown on the visitors' ensuing drive. When Tennessee then methodically marched down the field on its next possession, aided by a fourth-down conversion, a dropped would-be interception, and penalty yardage, to extend its lead to four touchdowns once more, though, the handwriting was on the wall.

Mark Richt has achieved such a stellar road record because his teams regularly are well prepared. Today, there was no question which team was more ready to play and it wasn't the Red and Black.

From 2000 to 2003, the Bulldogs won four in a row over the Volunteers. From 2004 to 2007, the Big Orange took three out of four from the Red and Black.

In 1988, Georgia opened the season with a win over Tennessee between the hedges in the first game played after I became a University of Georgia undergraduate. Later that fall, the 'Dawgs defeated the Gators in Jacksonville in the first game played following my 20th birthday. I have been practicing law for ten years and I will turn 39 next month . . . but I have not seen my alma mater beat both Tennessee and Florida in the same season since Vince Dooley's final year on the Sanford Stadium sideline. I will not see it this autumn, either.

This was Georgia's 19th loss in Mark Richt's six-and-a-half-year tenure with the Bulldogs. In his first 11 setbacks, the Red and Black D surrendered 14, 24, 24, 20, 20, 17, 16, 34, 19, 24, and 14 points, respectively. The only honest-to-goodness skunking suffered by the 'Dawgs during that period came in the 2003 S.E.C. championship game against the eventual national champs.

Since the 2005 Cocktail Party, though, Mark Richt has lost eight games, in which the opposing team has scored 31, 38, 51, 24, 21, 24, 16, and 35 points in succession. While the defense's performance against South Carolina earlier this autumn looks better and better as the Gamecocks continue to play impressively, it appears clear that it was an aberrational outlier rather than an encouraging indicator.

Since the 2005 homecoming win over Arkansas, the Bulldogs have gone 16-9 overall, 8-8 in conference play, and 2-7 against the S.E.C. East. Against divisional foes, the 'Dawgs have lost six in a row.

I understand that there are no easy Saturdays in the S.E.C. East. Florida is the defending national champion. Tennessee rebounded from a disappointing 2005 campaign to win nine regular-season games and make it to a New Year's Day bowl game last year. Vanderbilt has been markedly more competitive under Bobby Johnson, Kentucky just last Thursday saw what had been a 10-1 run snapped, and Steve Spurrier's division-leading South Carolina squad has won eight of its last nine games.

I want to be careful not to overstate the point. Mark Richt is the right man to lead this program. I do not presume to have easy answers and I do not know what specific changes need to be made.

What I know, though, is that Georgia went to Knoxville and got embarrassed. The Bulldogs didn't just lose . . . they got embarrassed. I will assume my share of the responsibility---the two times I have declared game co-captains (against South Carolina and Tennessee), the Red and Black have lost; you may rest assured that there will be one and only one honorary game captain from now on---but there were many more problems with such fundamental matters as blocking, tackling, discipline, coaching, and execution.

A spark is absent from this team. There was a fire, an energy, to the Bulldogs and their style of play that has not been seen since the win over L.S.U. in the S.E.C. championship game two years and a lifetime ago. Mark Richt lit a flame under this program when he arrived from Tallahassee; we saw it in mat drills, in second-half shutouts, and in finishing the drill.

That flame began to falter when David Greene, David Pollack, and Brian VanGorder left Athens and it began to flicker after D.J. Shockley departed. Where is that flame now? Who has it? Where did it go? How do we get it back?

Make no mistake about it; this team has talent and this team showed character and heart by continuing to fight in the second half---indeed, by fighting harder in the last two quarters than they had in the first two---even after the game was out of reach. For that, the team and the coaches deserve credit. However, a top 15 team should never be that far down against an unranked opponent . . . not even on the road, not even when that opponent is coming off of a bye week, not even when that opponent's coaches are battling to keep their jobs, not even if Vishnu is on vacation like she was last weekend.

Something is wrong, maybe even badly wrong, in Bulldog Nation. Mark Richt is the man to get it fixed, but, six games into the season, youth no longer is an excuse. It is time to correct the problems that ail the Georgia football team . . . now.

Go 'Dawgs!

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I disagree
I appreciate your optimism and Kyle trying to find the silver lining, but the way I see is this.
We got embarrassed.
We have 2 SEC East losses.
We have issues on the team (and with the program as Kyle suggested).

We need to put any talk about winning the East or the SEC away for now.
We need to get ready for Vandy.
We need to find a way to get pressure with our front 4, make sure the 7 guys behind them know how to tackle and cover.
We need to improve the blocking.
We need to improve the passing game- cutting out the drops, settling feet before passing and getting open.
And if we aren't coming into games with good gameplans or making adjustments, then that issue needs to be resolved.

We can keep crying young. Most of the teams in this conference are starting young kids. Auburn seems to have found a way to get better, we need to do the same.
If we play as good as we can and lose, I will eventually accept that, but playing horribly and putting yourself in a position not to win, is unacceptable.

Focus on getting better. Win each game and if the stars align, that's gravy, but right now, it's win the game you are playing.

by fotodog on Oct 6, 2007 8:43 PM EDT to parent up reply reply actions actions   0 recs

agree, different tack
i totally agree that dawg fans could benefit from comporting themselves with a bit more rationality, but then i've always felt that to be the case.

so let's talk about rationality.

i think that a rational response to uga football is the recognition that a clear pattern has emerged since the 2005 auburn game: the inability to shut down an opponent's running game.  i have long been a cwm detractor because of what i see as his fundamentally passive notion of defensive football.  i don't mean that good defenses have to blitz on every down or stack the line, but, based on my observation of good defensive teams over many years, they are committed to stopping the run first.

an irrational response to uga football at this point, in my opinion, is to excuse every loss since auburn 2005 (which i have always maintained was the first loss of its kind since cmr's first season which seemed in large part attributable to profound defensive problems) as isolated, unrelated to other observables, easily corrected, and simply a temporary setback on uga's inevitable triumphal march toward college football dominance.  now that's irrational.  some uga fans seem to believe that it is a law of nature that uga cannot but progress.  i think the signs of programmatic regression on the field since auburn 2005 are unmistakable.

it's all up to cmr--i don't think he's going to be the least bit influenced by anything the public says nor should he be.  of course, part of me, like most other fans, wants to win every week and inflict humiliating ass-whoopin's on tn., fl., auburn, and gt. every year and win the sec a whole hell of a lot and throw in a couple of national championships now and then, too.  and yet i know that's not possible.  so what is a rational expectation of successful uga football?  a consistently winning team that manages to win the sec sometimes and is usually in the conversation about the sec's best teams?  a universally admired head coach who is a fine ambassador for the entire university?  a financially prosperous athletic program underpinned by revenues generated by football?

we've already got all of those things, folks.

so maybe i'm wrong to feel dissatisfied, even embarrassed, by what i saw in knoxville yesterday.  if on-the-field performance is the only metric by which we wish to value our football program, then i don't think that any rational person who has watched the games since auburn 2005 could conclude anything but that uga has regressed.  does that trump all of the positive aspects of uga football under cmr's stewardship?  i don't think so--at least, not yet.

by baltimore dawg on Oct 7, 2007 2:40 PM EDT to parent up reply reply actions actions   0 recs

Fair enough
You'll notice that I didn't call for anyone to be fired (which I did last year); I agree that the sky is not falling, but there are real problems in need of addressing and correcting.

Your calm and rational approach is appreciated. I believe this afternoon's loss ends any hope of an Eastern Division title---because of the head-to-head tiebreakers, Georgia would have to win out and both South Carolina and Tennessee would have to lose two more conference games apiece, which will not happen---but a solid season with a strong finish and a New Year's Day bowl game remains within reach.

There are, however, issues in need of immediate attention that must be fixed. There is no getting around that reality, no matter how much confidence and optimism we may have.

by T Kyle King on Oct 6, 2007 8:09 PM EDT reply reply actions actions   0 recs

Kyle, it could be worse...
you could also be a UCLA fan.

The ability of Georgia's coaching staff to at least make second-half adjustments is something I can always point to as a sign of competence.

On the other side of the fence, the lack of second-half adjustments that UCLA's 'coaching staff' makes pretty much always leads me to attempting to remove my eyeballs from their sockets with a fork.

I think everyone's right, though.  This team has a very large leadership gap, and that can't continue if we hope to get back to where we were as a program two or three years ago.

by CAJason80 on Oct 7, 2007 1:51 AM EDT to parent up reply reply actions actions   0 recs

Someting HAS to change.......
And I am not sure what it is either. One thing I always took pride in was the fact that win or lose the Dawgs were always prepared to play. Since last year I can't honestly say that I feel that way each Saturday. I don't know what they are doing in practice, or film study (if they do that at all anymore), but something needs to change. We consistantly get top rated recruiting classes, yet fail to produce results. It's like these guys get to Athens and never get any better, which is a direct reflection of coaching. Eason has to go, bottom line. The play of our WR's and TE's is beyond pathetic. If I see one more receiver drop a catchable ball I am seriously coming down out of my seat and beating the ever loving hell out of him. Totally inexcusable to be a Division I football player at a (used to be) high level SEC program and not be able to make a routine catch. I also have to address the recruiting and development of our Oline over the past few years. The neglect (for lack of a better term) of the coaching staff to recruit and develop HEALTHY O lineman over the past six years is another inexcusable failure. Why in the world do we have 10 or 11 scholorship WR's (who can't frigging catch) and 6 game ready OLineman 3 of whom are true or redshirt freshman? We are dangerously close to sinking back into a second division SEC team, no one fears us anymore (and quite frankly why should they?) and we can't seem to beat anyone in our own stinking division for Christ sake. At least with Donnan you expected to lose to TN FL and AU, possibly beating one or two of them in the odd year, but you knew that 8-4 or 9-3 was pretty much a given. It seems these days that not even the Vandy or KY wins are a given. Someone needs to take charge of this team and light a fire under their ass or this is going to be a long year.

by RocketDawg on Oct 6, 2007 8:33 PM EDT reply reply actions actions   0 recs

exactly
you said: "We consistantly get top rated recruiting classes, yet fail to produce results. It's like these guys get to Athens and never get any better, which is a direct reflection of coaching."

and then i said: "We recruit like nobody's business but it just seems like of late some people are not producing.  Here's to hoping Deangelo Tyson becomes the next Glenn Dorsey"

I absolutely agree with you on the coaching.  Glad im not the only who sees this.

by loran smith on Oct 6, 2007 8:45 PM EDT to parent up reply reply actions actions   0 recs

the spark
I couldn't agree with you more Kyle.  It just seems that there is no one person that the whole team can just lean on (maybe knowshon can assume this role). But it is most noticeable on defense.

Now, I don't know much about football but across the d-line, no one seems to want to make a play.  Marcus Howard IS NOT A DEFENSIVE END.  Why is he playing there?!  Jeff Owens has done nothing in three years and the reason I am so harsh on him is because of how highly touted he was coming out of Florida.  Even last year with two grown ass men in Quentin Moses and Charles Johnson (two guys that should have had 10 sacks a piece last year) did cause as much disruption that should have come.  When you have two  absolute studs like them and you can't have all american years out of them then something is wrong.

I just think Willie Martinez can not coach.  On UT's first couple of drives, we did everything completely the opposite of what should have happened.  UT scores rushing TD, we play safetys in box and then Ainge picks apart defense. Next drive we play soft zone and then get blown to hell off the ball and so on and so forth.

Am I extremely angry and mad? Of course (after UT made it 28-0 off that run where Asher did not hold contain I threw my remote in the air and walked out of the room when i saw coker? bounce outside not even looking at what happened until I heard scott howard announce the impending doom.)

It just seems like we would have blitzed them to hell after they got up 14-0 and basically told Ainge, "ok we're going to MAKE you beat us and if you do, so be it but we're at least going to force you to make some decisions and hopefully we can get a break".  But no, we sit in a soft zone and don't make a play.  We recruit like nobody's business but it just seems like of late some people are not producing.  

Here's to hoping Deangelo Tyson becomes the next Glenn Dorsey

by loran smith on Oct 6, 2007 8:39 PM EDT reply reply actions actions   0 recs

a few thoughts...
I was going to post some thoughtful, insightful diatribe, but the more I type, the more I realize that I'd need an editor, a publisher, and probably a lawyer.  Plus, I'm not as articulate when I'm sober.  Therefore, I'll just say:

This one is on the coaches.  Your recruiting is A+, but your teaching is just slightly north of Tommy Bowden.  Coach 'Em Up, Dammit!

by DavetheDawg on Oct 7, 2007 9:24 AM EDT reply reply actions actions   0 recs

My $.02
Nobody should be surprised by the performance.  We all should have seen this coming since the Spring game.  The defense couldn't stop our offense that day and they haven't got much better.  The difference yesterday is Tennessee is a team that can expose and exploit those weaknesses.

There must be accountability in the program.  Even if that means assistant coaches must leave.  If there is no accountability then the program will become divided like it did during the Ray Goff Reign of Terror.  Remember the fight the fans got into in the parking lots after the Vandy homecoming debacle during Goff's tenure?  Lose to Troy and things will get real ugly.

I'm tired of hearing we are a young team.  Why are we a young team?  We are young because of recruting errors.  There is no excuse for having to start true freshman on the OL for the second time in 4 years.  We must stop recruiting athletes and then try to turn them into football players.  We need to recruit football players first.  These two facts get overlooked because our coach is a good christian man (as uttered many times on the call in show).  

It is getting more clear by the game that Willie Martinez is in over his head.  It is time he is held accountable.  It is clear that UGA has a problem catching passes.  It is time John Eason is held accountable.  If they aren't, then this program is heading in the wrong direction and losses like yesterday are going to become more frequent.

by RedPantsDawg on Oct 7, 2007 10:50 AM EDT reply reply actions actions   0 recs

For what it's worth...
Just wanted to say thanks for such a well-thought out piece.  

Maybe I'm a little fixated on some things but I wanted to hear what other people thought.

  1. I don't mind even-keeled, slow-burn head coaches (ala Vince Dooley).  I like Mark Richt, I think he's a great coach and a great guy.  As many others have said, I think he is the man to lead this program.  However, on every sideline there needs to be a spark.  My father-in-law played O-line at UGA while Erk was there.  He thinks Coach Dooley was a fine coach, but Erk was a "player's coach".  He told me that it didn't matter which side of the ball you played on, when Erk Russell was out there...you got fired up.  I recall a Defensive Coordinator in the not so distant past that used to get his players fired up and the players loved him and they came to every game loaded for bear...then he left for the NFL and Georgia Southern.  I have yet to see any fire, any ranting, any head-bleeding head-butting motivation from the UGA coaches in a while.  I begrudgingly respect the Ol' Ball Coach and appreciate when he loses his cool and throws this, that, or the other.  (And how about the moxie that Les Miles showed on fourth down last night...moxie, indeed!)  It just really gets under my skin when a coach says "Well, the kids weren't motivated..."  I use the words kids because many of them are one or two years out of high school and many of them can't (legally) buy alcohol and none of them earn six-figures.  I know the players  are compensated but I really don't think Erk got compensated like our current Defensive Coordinator does and I'd really be surprised if someone can find me a soundbite where Erk says "It's all there fault they didn't get motivated...I couldn't figure out how to get them ready."
  2. I'd like the see a retrospective analyzation of the statistics eluded to in this piece.  Since the departure of Coach VanGorder we have had some monumental, embarrassing defensive implosions.  I know the offense is not firing on all cylinders but for arguments sake let's isolate the defense.  Most striking in the last few years was last nights surrender of 28 unanswered points in the first half and another defensive debacle where 28 were hung on us by WV before someone could help Coach Martinez pull his pants back up.  Quite frankly, I'm tired of watching this slide.  Georgia had a defensive tradition...what we have become since Coach Martinez took over tarnishes the title "JunkYard Dawgs".  As someone else stated, Coach Martinez is simply out of his league.  Three years in the MAC at Central Michigan as a secondary coach just is not an adequate pedigree in my humble opinion.  The "bend, don't break" philosophy has elated every opposing offensive coordinator we have faced...Cutcliffe and Spurrier must have felt like the Vegas pro that has shown up at the neighborhood texas hold 'em game.  Martinez didn't stand a chance.  My grave concern is that Coach Richt is too much of a nice guy to invite his former teammate to leave before Coach Mullen exposes us yet again in Jacksonville.
Yes, it is very much about accountability...and the captain of the ship is always responsible for every crewman's ability to perform his duties.

by Volthead on Oct 7, 2007 3:18 PM EDT reply reply actions actions   0 recs

Brown out 4-6 weeks
Broken collarbone. Let's hope Lumpkin steps in and does what Brown and Knowshon were doing before. That sucks for Thomas who was having probably his best season.

by loran smith on Oct 7, 2007 8:01 PM EDT reply reply actions actions   0 recs

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