Georgia Secures Its Second Consecutive National Title with a Perfect Season
GLORIOUS
On the cover
FRONT COVER: Quarterback Stetson Bennett, left, and coach Kirby Smart each celebrate with the national championship trophy after Georgia defeated TCU 65ā7 on Jan. 9, 2023.
PHOTOS JOSHUA L. JONES / ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Copyright Ā© 2023 by Athens Banner-Herald
All Rights Reservedāā¢āISBN: 978-1-63846-056-5
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright owner or the publisher.
Published by Pediment Publishing, a division of The Pediment Group, Inc.āā¢āwww.pediment.com
This book is an unofficial account of the Georgia Bulldogsā 2022ā23 season and is not endorsed by the National Collegiate Athletic Association or the University of Georgia.
Printed in Canada.
Credits
Athens Banner-Herald
Fletcher PageāUSA TODAY GEORGIA SPORTS EDITOR
Ryne DennisāATHENS BANNER-HERALD SPORTS EDITOR
Marc WeiszerāATHENS BANNER-HERALD UGA BEAT WRITER
McClain BaxleyāATHENS BANNER-HERALD REPORTER
Chris StarrsāCONTRIBUTING EDITOR FOR THE ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Special thanks to Aaron Murray, former Georgia quarterback, for addressing fans in the foreword
Photography
Joshua JonesāATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Special thanks to USA TODAY Network photographers
Our condolences to the families of UGA football player Devin Willock and staff member Chandler LeCroy, who each died in a car crash shortly after the Bulldogs national championship parade and celebration.
Kirby Smart and Georgia flip the page from national title. āWe will not be hunted at UGAā
BY MARC WEISZER ⢠ATHENS BANNER-HERALDATLANTA ā In a quiet moment before the hustle and bustle of making the rounds for hours Wednesday morning at SEC Media Days, Kirby Smart declared himself ācaffeine activated.ā
Smart is about the last one that would be considered needing a jolt of energy, but winning a national championship has the danger of making one fat and happy.
Especially since Smart just led Georgia to the promised land of a national title for the first time in 41 years.
āIām not wired that way,ā Smart said. āIām wired to worry the day after the game about who we were going to sign. I kind of told our team when we came back, I said, āLook guys, I believe in these mind tricks where when people tell you something it triggers something.ā Every time someone tells me congrats on the national championship ā and there have been a gazillion of those ā I tell myself
each week, this week Iām going to call three more recruits. Next week, Iām going to think about what we can do on third down better.ā
So he asks his players like a motivational speaker, āWhat have you done today to be better for tomorrow?ā
Now Smart is entering his seventh season as head coach looking for more.
āPeople ask the question, āHow does it feel to be hunted?āāā Smart said. āWe will not be hunted at the University of Georgia. I can promise you that. The hunting we do will be from us going the other direction. Weāre not going to sit back and be passive.ā
Smart spoke 190 days after Georgia won the national title on the night of Jan. 10 by slaying Alabama.
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, who had both the winning and losing team in the game in Indianapolis, was struck by Smartās postgame moment.
āIāve never seen a head coach running up and chest bumping people as much as Kirby did after the victory,ā Sankey said. āHe started to do the same with me. I looked at him and say, āIf you do that to me, youāll probably knock me down and hurt me.ā We had a handshake moment.ā
Neither Smart nor any of the three Georgia player representatives sported their national championship rings on Wednesday at the College Football Hall of Fame.
āAbsolutely not,ā center Sedrick Van Pran-Granger said when asked if he had any thoughts of flashing the bling for the cameras Wednesday. āThatās something I feel personally I can look at when Iām done at the University of Georgia.ā
In an area out of public view inside the Omni Hotel before they each took the stage Wednesday morning, Kirby Smart and former Bulldogs offensive line coach Sam Pittman gave each other big
UGA shuts down FCS opponent Samford as defensive dominance keeps rolling
BY MARC WEISZER ⢠ATHENS BANNER-HERALDThere will probably be some Saturdays to come for No. 2 Georgia where they will have to dig deep, to make a big defensive stop or convert a crucial third-and-long with a game on the line.
Thereās no guarantee it will be a cakewalk for the Bulldogs to get back to Atlanta for the SEC Championship game. Maybe next weekās noon game at South Carolina will offer Georgia its first bit of significant resistance from an opponent this season.
Samford, an FCS team picked to finish sixth in the Southern Conference, certainly didnāt provide much in the Bulldogsā home opener Saturday.
āOur defending national champion Georgia Bulldogs!ā Brook Whitmire announced during the starting lineups.
Georgia has looked the part again with another lopsided win after a 49ā3 takedown of a top 15 Oregon team in the opener. Samford held Georgia to just 3 second-half points, but the fourth quarter was shortened to 12 minutes by mutual agreement with the threat of inclement weather a factor.
āThey were outmanned and outmatched today,ā Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. āThey played really hard and physical today. They did the best job they could. Weāve got to play better. We didnāt play our best game. We know that. Our kids acknowledge that.ā
Here are five takeaways from Georgiaās easy win with a score that wasnāt as big as might have been expected:
Georgia football defense pitches a shutout
Georgiaās defense will head into the road game in Columbia, S.C., still not having allowed a touchdown this season
āWe donāt worry about that,ā outside linebacker Nolan Smith said. āWe just play football. If they donāt score, they donāt win.ā
Samford, a team that went to Florida last November and lost a 70ā52 shootout, was held to a single first down in the first half and 59 total yards for an average of 2.6 yards per play.
Samford finished with 128 total yards. It was the fewest yards Georgia had given up since holding Vanderbilt to 77 on Sept. 25, 2021.
āYou win championships with great
Georgia football great and former NFL No. 1 overall pick Charley Trippi dies at 100
BY MARC WEISZER ⢠ATHENS BANNER-HERALD ⢠PUBLISHED OCT.19, 2022
One of Georgiaās greatest football players and athletes, who had the distinction of being the oldest living former NFL No. 1 overall pick, has died.
Charley Trippi, who turned 100 last Dec. 14, passed away peacefully Wednesday morning at his home in Athens, according to UGA.
Trippi hailed from Pittston, Pa., as the son of a coal miner but made a name for himself for the Bulldogs when the halfback burst onto the scene in the 1943 Rose Bowl against UCLA. He went on to become a Heisman Trophy runner-up in 1946 and landed a $100,000, four-year deal with the NFLās Chicago Cardinals.
Trippi scored on a 75-yard punt return and 44-yard run in the 1947 NFL
championship game win over Philadelphia. He later played two seasons at quarterback and another three at defensive back during his nine-year NFL career and was named to the NFLās all-1940s team.
No wonder the Georgia football teamās most versatile player award is named for Trippi, who was the NFL No. 1 overall pick in 1945.
During World War II, he served in the Air Force and was named to the all-service team and returned to Georgia to play the final six games of the 1945 season.
āYou know, football has enriched my life in so many ways that it also gave me a lifetime ambition, and made me set many goals, but this goal today is probably the greatest,ā Trippi said at his Pro Football
Hall of Fame induction ceremony in 1968.
Trippi made Athens his home where he lived with wife Peggy. Wally Butts, his coach at Georgia, hired the former twotime All-American after his pro career to coach the UGA backfield.
He shared a backfield with another alltime great, Frank Sinkwich, but ankle injuries sidelined him for the Rose Bowl during that 1942 season. Trippi rushed for 115 yards on 27 carries.
Georgia went unbeaten and won a national championship in 1946 with Trippi as a senior All-American. He led the SEC in scoring and finished second to Armyās Glenn Davis for the Heisman. Trippi threw a 67-yard touchdown pass in a Sugar Bowl win over North Carolina.
Trippi was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1968. He was also a baseball All-American at Georgia and played professionally in 1947 with the Atlanta Crackers.
He was still signing autographs on football game weekends at the UGA bookstore during his 90s.
āHe is proud to be a Bulldog,ā Georgia coach Kirby Smart said while visiting Trippi when he blew out the candles on his 100th birthday. āHis legacy, like that of so many of the great players who have come through here, has enabled us to develop one of the great traditions in college football.ā
Trippiās No. 62 jersey is one of only four that Georgia has retired.
RIGHT: Ohio State place kicker Noah Ruggles (95) misses a possible gamewinning kick in the final seconds of the second half.
JOSHUA L. JONES / ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
OPPOSITE: Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett (13) hugs his brother Georgia walk-on Luke Bennett (29) after the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl NCAA College Football Playoff semifinal game.
JOSHUA L. JONES / ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Stetson and Kirby deserve a statue, and hereās the perfect legendary tribute
BY RYNE DENNIS ⢠ATHENS BANNER-HERALDStetson Bennett and Kirby Smart have led Georgia football to a back-to-back college football championships.
Bennettās improbable story reached its climax in Mondayās 65ā7 beatdown of TCU. His legacy legendary, and Smart, in just his seventh season at Georgia, has joined the all-time greats.
So, we ask: How should their statues look, and where should they stand?
UGA doesnāt do much when honoring its legends. No named streets around the stadium. Only a handful of āretiredā numbers for greats and no statues in Sanford Stadium.
Georgiaās lone athletic statue sits on the far south corner of campus and honors Vince Dooley. Itās a nice recognition for the late Georgia coach, but itās nowhere near the schoolās stadium where his name is on the field.
Thereās nothing at Sanford Stadium for Bulldog fans to praise. The only Herschel Walker statue in Athens stood inside Creature Comforts Brewery before being sent down Pulaski Street on the northwest corner of downtown. It was sculpted by an alumnus and sits next to
a railroad track.
The university has to do more for Bennett and Smart.
For Stetson, thereās too many memories for inspiration.
There could be a statue of him holding up the national championship trophy. Maybe a replica of him with his hand next to his helmet like a cellphone as he mocks Tennessee fans who called incessantly the night before that November matchup.
Perhaps the bronze figure could be of him with double gun fingers, like heās waved before when celebrating a touchdown. Or simply him in his mailman cap while sipping a 23-year-old bourbon straight out of the bottle.
Smartās likeness could be holding up a national championship trophy, or passionately pulling his headset microphone aside as he screams orders to the defense. Maybe heās clapping, hands up just under his chin with a slight smirk.
Nope.
Thereās no need for two statues. Only one will symbolize this remarkable achievement.
The University of Georgia needs to build a statue of Smart with his arm around Bennett as they walk with smiles on their faces.
Every Georgia fan will understand. Theyāve seen it a million times the past three years.
In the good times and the bad. Throughout the highs and the lows. After touchdowns and interceptions.
Many times there werenāt smiles when Smart had his arm around Bennett.
Smart always critiqued. Bennett always listened. Smart analyzed while Bennett learned and grew.
Together, they became two-time national champions.
The smiles on the statue would reflect the end of their journey.
What a monument it would be.
Respect and friendship. Like father and son. It would epitomize their relationship.
āI got a long story to tell you, I can assure you that,ā Smart said on Saturday during Georgiaās media session. āYou think about the things he and I have been through, decisions made. I mean, from the recruitment process to his official
visit to what will happen Monday night. I mean, where to begin?ā
It began with Bennett mimicking Oklahomaās Baker Mayfield in 2017 Rose Bowl practice. The story includes a departure and return. An implausible rise from walk-on to starting on the only 15ā0 team in Georgia history.
Through it all, Smart saw something most didnāt. He believed in the 5-foot-11, 190ish pounder as much as Bennett believed in himself ā which weāve learned is saying a lot.
Bennettās results are remarkable. He closed his career Monday with a 6-touchdown performance that goes down as one of the best of all time. His list of MVP performances include two national championships, a Peach Bowl, an Orange Bowl and an SEC Championship.
Smart called a timeout on Monday so that Bennett could soak in the glory as he came to the sideline. The pair embraced.
āHe told me he loved me,ā Bennett said after the game. āThe journey that weāve been through together.ā
āItās hard for people to go back and do what got them there, and thatās why it