Dawgs Post Notch 11th Win:
With today’s 38-7 victory, seventh-ranked Georgia completes the regular season with a 11-1 record, marking the 10th team in school history to win at least 11 games in a season and the first since 2012. The seniors improves their record to 39-12. Also, Georgia has reclaimed the Governor’s Cup Trophy and extended its advantage in the series to 66-39-5. Georgia’s 38 points was the most against Tech since 2013 (41-34 OT win).
Stout Defensive Performance:
The Dawgs came in ranked fourth nationally in Scoring Defense, allowing only 14.4 points a game and held Tech’s option attack to just seven points and 226 total yards (188 rushing). Tech was averaging 30.2 points/game and 319.3 rushing yards a game. Today’s leading tackler for the Dawgs was junior Roquan Smith with eight stops, 3 TFL and one sack. He has a team-best 99 tackles on the year.
Tech was blanked in the 1st quarter, tallying 57 yards on 13 plays. For the year, Georgia has outscored its opponents in the first quarter, 118 to 29. Tech became the eighth team this season to be held scoreless in the first quarter. In the 2nd quarter, Georgia stopped a 12-play Tech drive that lasted 6:23 on a fourth down attempt at the Dawg 34. Georgia’s offense responded with a touchdown drive and a 14-0 lead. Tech scored a touchdown with 48 seconds left to make it 14-7, driving 75 yards on 12 plays in 6:17. It gave them 161 yards of total offense in the first half on 35 plays. Tech failed to score in the second half.
Tech was blanked in the 1st quarter, tallying 57 yards on 13 plays. For the year, Georgia has outscored its opponents in the first quarter, 118 to 29. Tech became the eighth team this season to be held scoreless in the first quarter. In the 2nd quarter, Georgia stopped a 12-play Tech drive that lasted 6:23 on a fourth down attempt at the Dawg 34. Georgia’s offense responded with a touchdown drive and a 14-0 lead. Tech scored a touchdown with 48 seconds left to make it 14-7, driving 75 yards on 12 plays in 6:17. It gave them 161 yards of total offense in the first half on 35 plays. Tech failed to score in the second half.
Points to Ponder:
Georgia tallied 38 points and 471 yards of total offense (247-rushing, 224-passing) on 60 plays. The Dawgs came in today averaging 35.3 points a game including leading the nation in Red Zone Offense, going 40-for-41 with 30 touchdowns. Today, Georgia went 4-for-4 in the Red Zone (3 TDs, 1 FG).
Georgia built a 17-7 edge in the first half. On its opening drive, the Dawgs put together a 12 play, 61-yard TD drive in 5:29, going 2-for-2 on 3rd down conversions for a 7-0 lead. The drive was capped by a 1-yard plunge by senior Nick Chubb for his 46th career touchdown including 42nd rushing. Georgia made it 14-0 on a 21-yard TD pass from freshman Jake Fromm to senior Javon Wims with 7:05 left in the first half. It was a team-leading sixth TD catch for Wims and the 18th of the season by Fromm. The drive was five plays for 65 yards in 2:11. Wims now has 13 catches of 20+ yards this year. Fromm was 8-for-10 for 91 yards in the first half and finished 12-for-16 for 224 yards, 2 TDs. He had a career-long 78-yard TD pass to junior Ahkil Crumpton to make it 38-7 with 11:21 left. It was Crumpton’s first TD as a Dawg. Wims finished with five catches for 77 yards.
Georgia built a 17-7 edge in the first half. On its opening drive, the Dawgs put together a 12 play, 61-yard TD drive in 5:29, going 2-for-2 on 3rd down conversions for a 7-0 lead. The drive was capped by a 1-yard plunge by senior Nick Chubb for his 46th career touchdown including 42nd rushing. Georgia made it 14-0 on a 21-yard TD pass from freshman Jake Fromm to senior Javon Wims with 7:05 left in the first half. It was a team-leading sixth TD catch for Wims and the 18th of the season by Fromm. The drive was five plays for 65 yards in 2:11. Wims now has 13 catches of 20+ yards this year. Fromm was 8-for-10 for 91 yards in the first half and finished 12-for-16 for 224 yards, 2 TDs. He had a career-long 78-yard TD pass to junior Ahkil Crumpton to make it 38-7 with 11:21 left. It was Crumpton’s first TD as a Dawg. Wims finished with five catches for 77 yards.
Rushing Into History:
Senior Sony Michel tallied 85 rushing yards on 13 attempts to move up to third place in school history for career rushing yards with 3,314, trailing only Herschel Walker (5,259) and Nick Chubb (4,522). Michel had a four-yard TD to make it 24-7 with 9:08 left in the third to cap a six play, 77-yard drive. Freshman D’Andre Swift had a two-yard TD run for a 31-7 lead with 1:23 left in the third as it finished off an 11 play, 67-yard drive in 5:44. It was Swift’s second career rushing TD.
Blankenship Booming Kicks:
With his first touchback on the opening kickoff, redshirt sophomore Rodrigo Blankenship set a school record for touchbacks in a season as that was his 52nd, passing the mark of Hall of Famer Kevin Butler who had 51 during the 1981 season. Today, Blankenship had six kickoffs with four touchbacks. For the year, Blankenship now has 76 kickoffs with 55 touchbacks. Blankenship added a 37-yard field goal as time expired in the first half for a 17-7 edge. He is 13-for-15 in field goal attempts this year.
Points off Turnovers:
Georgia is +3 in Turnover Margin, scoring 62 points off 16 turnovers. Opponents have forced 13 turnovers and turned them into 41 points. Dawg junior DB Deandre Baker notched an interception in the endzone and returned it 15 yards with 12:52 left in the game. It was his second of the year, the other coming versus Miss. State. Georgia turned today’s turnover into a TD and a 38-7 advantage.
For Starters:
Senior strong safety Dominick Sanders made his 50th career start which ranks in a tie for fourth most in school history and the most by a defensive player. For the second straight week, redshirt freshman Ben Cleveland got the start at right guard. Senior tailbacks Nick Chubb and Sony Michel both started. It was the 37th career start for Chubb and 10th for Michel, but first of the year for Sony.
Captains:
Today’s captains were seniors Sony Michel and Dominick Sanders plus junior Roquan Smith.
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