UGA Sports Communications
The third-ranked Dawgs opened their 2019 season with a 30-6 victory over Vanderbilt in front of 40,350 fans at Vanderbilt Stadium and an ESPN nationally televised audience on Saturday evening.
With the victory, Georgia improved to 96-27-3 in season openers and 13-10-1 in openers against SEC opponents. Saturday’s win was the first opening game at an SEC opponent since a 24-21 Dawg victory at South Carolina in 1994.
Junior quarterback Jake Fromm began his third season under center for the Dawgs (1-0, 1-0 SEC) with a 15-of-23 passing performance for 156 yards and a touchdown. Along with Fromm’s passing, the Georgia offensive attack was bolstered by a dominant ground game that amassed 325 yards. Junior tailback D’Andre Swift led the Dawgs with 149 yards rushing, the fifth time he has eclipsed the century mark in his career.
The Georgia defense also turned in a stout effort, allowing 225 total yards of Vanderbilt offense and only five plays of over 10 yards. The Dawgs were especially impressive on third down, with the Commodores (0-1, 0-1 SEC) only converting on 3-of-14 opportunities. Junior defensive back Mark Webb and junior inside linebacker Monty Rice tied for the team lead with seven tackles, while redshirt freshman outside linebacker Azeez Ojulari followed close behind with six tackles and a half-sack.
“We’ve still got a long way to go,” said coach Kirby Smart. “But, I’m proud of our guys. I don’t take it lightly when you go on the road in a SEC opener and you open up with a couple touchdowns. We had a lot of young guys on defense step up and play well…We wanted to come in here and play physical, establish a brand of football that we play. I thought we did that.”
The Dawgs opened the contest with an impressive 8-play, 75-yard drive, asserting their strength on the offensive line with six rushes for 60 yards before Fromm found junior wide receiver Demetris Robertson in the back of the end zone for a touchdown, the first catch of his Georgia career. After Vanderbilt’s first possession stalled near midfield, Georgia turned toward the air with Fromm connecting again with Robertson on a 17-yard completion and redshirt sophomore receiver Matt Landers for 15, finishing with sophomore running back James Cook scoring on an 18-yard rush to cap off a 10-play, 89-yard drive. On their first two drives, the Georgia offense exhibited remarkable efficiency, tallying 11 first downs with an average pickup of 8.8 yards per play.
Following a tremendous open-field tackle by senior linebacker Tae Crowder on third-and-2, the Commodores retained possession with a successful fake punt, followed by a 23-yard rush from Justice Shelton-Mosley that brought them into Dawg territory. The momentum proved to be short-lived for Vanderbilt as a pair of penalties forced a third-and-31 that shorted the drive.
Fromm and the offense continued to roll on the ensuing possession, highlighted by a game-high 38-yard strike to graduate receiver Lawrence Cager and a 16-yard run from Swift. After a Commodore pass interference penalty in the end zone, the Dawgs extended their lead to 21-0 on a 1-yard touchdown run by senior running back Brian Herrien, completing a 7-play, 80-yard drive.
On the following sequence, Vanderbilt finally broke through with its first trip to the Georgia red zone, but the Commodores had to settle for a 26-yard field goal from Ryley Guay that sneaked inside the cross bar despite being deflected at the line by sophomore defensive lineman Jordan Davis. The Commodores tacked on another score with a 46-yard Guay field goal, narrowing Georgia’s 21-6 halftime lead.
After Georgia stopped Vanderbilt on its first drive of the second half, the Dawgs slowly made their way down the field on an 8-play, 48-yard drive, culminating in senior kicker Rodrigo Blankenship’s first field goal of the season from 50 yards out. During the drive, redshirt freshman running back Zamir White made his on-field debut for Georgia with a 3-yard run, completing his comeback from two ACL injuries.
On their next possession, the Dawgs opened the drive in Commodore territory following a 27-yard punt return from senior Tyler Simmons, but came away empty when Swift was stopped at the 17-yard line on fourth-and-1. Georgia then pinned Vanderbilt deep in its own territory, leading to a thunderous third down sack of quarterback Riley Neal by Ojulari and sophomore inside linebacker Channing Tindall.
Georgia’s next score of the game came from the foot of Blankenship as he converted a 37-yard field goal. On the following Commodore possession, the Dawgs defense forced their first turnover of the season when junior defensive lineman Devonte Wyatt recovered a Neal fumble at the Vanderbilt 45-yard line. Later in the fourth quarter, Blankenship finished the evening’s scoring with his third field goal of the evening, hitting from 31 yards away.
“We have a chance to be explosive offensively, and we’re going to try to be aggressive defensively,” said Smart. “We’re going back to work Monday, and go out there and go good-on-good, and put the hammer down and find out who’s going to get better.”
Next, Georgia opens its 2019 home slate against Murray State (1-0) at Sanford Stadium at 4 p.m. on ESPN2. Prior to the game, the playing surface at Sanford Stadium will be dedicated as Dooley Field in honor of legendary head football coach and athletics director Vincent J. Dooley.
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