2020 UGA football schedule: What we know so far

A look at Georgia football’s 2020 SEC-only ten game football schedule, times, locations and networks, so far.

The 2020 Georgia football season is just 24 days from kickoff in Fayetteville, Arkansas.  With that being said, let’s take a look at the complete breakdown of UGA’s schedule so far.

Week 1: @ Arkansas

  • Date: September 26th
  • Time: 4:00 PM
  • Location: Fayetteville, Arkansas
  • Network: SEC

Week 2: Vs. Auburn

  • Date: October 3rd
  • Time: 7:30 PM
  • Location: Athens, Georgia
  • Network: ESPN

Week 3: Vs. Tennessee

  • Date: October 10th
  • Time: TBA
  • Location: Athens, Georgia
  • Network: TBA

Week 4: @ Alabama

  • Date: October 17th
  • Time: 8:00 PM
  • Location: Tuscaloosa, Alabama
  • Network: CBS Sports

Week 5: @ Kentucky

  • Date: October 24th
  • Time: TBA
  • Location: Lexington, Kentucky
  • Network: TBA

Week 6: Vs. Florida

  • Date: November 7th
  • Time: 3:30 PM
  • Location: Jacksonville, Florida
  • Network: CBS Sports

Week 7: @ Missouri

  • Date: November 14th
  • Time: TBA
  • Location: Columbia, Missouri
  • Network: TBA

Week 8: Vs. Mississippi State

  • Date: November 21st
  • Time: TBA
  • Location: Athens, Georgia
  • Network: TBA

Week 9: @ South Carolina

  • Date: November 28th
  • Time: TBA
  • Location: Columbia, South Carolina
  • Network: TBA

Week 10: Vs. Vanderbilt

  • Date: December 5th
  • Time: TBA
  • Location: Athens, Georgia
  • Network: TBA

2020 Georgia Bulldogs Football Schedule: Downloadable Wallpaper

College Wire downloadable 2020 Georgia Bulldogs football schedule. Use as wallpaper for your lock screen on your smartphone. UGA Football.

As we all know, the new football schedule was released this week.

Never miss a game this season with our College Wire downloadable 2020 Georgia Bulldogs football schedule. Use as wallpaper for your lock screen on your smartphone.

Download 2020 Bulldogs football schedule here

The 2020 Georgia football schedule has been released

The 2020 Georgia Bulldogs football schedule has been released

Last month, the SEC announced that the league will switch to a 10 game, conference only schedule for the 2020 college football season with a new start date of September 26.

Georgia kept its eight conference games that were already scheduled, and the Bulldogs also added a match at Arkansas and one at home against Mississippi State to round out its 10 game slate.

On Monday, SEC fans were finally able to see their teams’ complete schedule, as the league hosted a schedule reveal on the SEC Network.

Despite the Big Ten and Pac-12’s decisions to refrain from playing a fall season, the SEC and ACC have not shown any indication that they may cancel their seasons.

Here is Georgia’s full schedule for the 2020 college football season.

Sept. 26: At Arkansas

Oct. 3: vs Auburn

Oct. 10: vs Tennessee

Oct. 17: At Alabama

Oct. 24: At Kentucky

Oct. 31: Bye week

Nov. 7: Florida (Jacksonville)

Nov. 14: At Missouri

Nov. 21: vs Mississippi State

Nov. 28: At South Carolina

Dec. 5: vs Vanderbilt

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Kirby Smart discusses everything you need to know about UGA players returning to campus

Georgia football HC Kirby Smart discusses everything you need to know about UGA players returning to campus following the COVID-19 lockdown.

Georgia football players will return to Athens in early-June after the SEC approved voluntary workouts beginning June 8.

“We’re going to bring them back prior to June 8 so they can get a medical workup,” Smart said on Thursday on a Zoom call with UGA media members.

That’s the protocol director of sports medicine Ron Courson put in place for Georgia’s student-athletes who are returning after the shutdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“They’ve got to have an extensive physical, they’ve got to have COVID tests,” said Smart.

Smart said that some players may even be tested prior to their returning to campus.

If a Georgia player does happen to test positive for coronavirus, Smart said they’ll have the option to return home or quarantine in Athens.

“Each guy will have the option of if they want to go back home if they test positive, or we have a quarantine policy that we’re able to put guys into should they test positive. We’ve also got the ability if it happens during a workout period that we’ll have contact tracing. Guys that have worked out together, those groups will stay the same, and we’ll be aware of those guys.”

Smart said that Georgia will educate its players on the coronavirus and how to stay safe upon their return.

“I promise you there’s some of our players don’t feel vulnerable, they feel like they’re not vulnerable  because of what they have heard, or because they think they have super powers,” Smart said. “So we’re going to educate our guys to be safe and make good decisions and we’re going to have education sessions even when they get back to give us the best opportunity to have a season.”

Coaches are not permitted to oversee these voluntary workouts that are set to begin on June 8.

“It’s not going to be the normal, where I walk in, and I go to my locker, and I can workout, and then I shower — it’s going to be completely different.”

“They will come in and do a light workout initially, because we want to bring them back slowly,” Smart said. “They will work out in smaller groups. Twenty or so guys to a group. Then, of the 20 that come in, they’ll be subdivided into groups of seven. So you’re looking at a 7-person rotation in a 12,000 square foot weight room and they will be spaced out.”

Smart said that there will be a cleaning crew handy to disinfect the area immediately following each session.

He then discussed the actual decision that allowed the return of players and a possible return of college football this season.

“I certainly think that fiscally and financially it’s going to benefit if there is a football season, but that has nothing to do with the decisions that go into it medically,” Smart said. “A lot of people have said, ‘Well, the SEC has had to come back really strong with comeback dates and return to sports, and they’ve had this protocol to allow us to play football. But every decision that’s made at the SEC level, I can assure you, is made by infectious disease people. It’s based on information about the safety and well-being of the student-athletes.”

Smart said most of the parents and players would prefer them workout at UGA, where the equipment and venue will be professionally cleaned rather than at a local gym.

“Wherever it is they are working out, at a  local local high school or a local gym that has opened back up … is that environment any more safe than one that is professionally cleaned, monitored and taken care of by our staff? Most of the kids we talked to, they are more comfortable saying, If I’m going to workout, then I’m gong to do it there.”

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‘Last Dance’ doc has Georgia players thinking national championship

Watching the Last Dance doc has Georgia football players thinking about winning the CFB national championship this year.

Whether it be the older folks reliving the greatest era of NBA basketball or the younger fans finally getting to see how special Michael Jordan really was, ESPN’s ‘The Last Dance’ documentary was exactly what America needed during the coronavirus pandemic.

We may not have experienced the same rush of emotions that we do when watching live sports, but this evoked a different kind of emotion. Seeing how badly Jordan wanted to win and then seeing the passion pour out of him when he did win struck a chord with fans and athletes.

As for Georgia defensive end Malik Herring, a senior, he is longing for that feeling that Jordan had when he won his sixth title in 1998. He also made mention of LeBron James, who is considered to be his generation’s Jordan, and referenced LeBron’s first title in 2012 with the Heat.

“Seeing Jordan get his sixth ring and Lebron get his first ring. Their emotions is everything. I just want that feeling man I swear I do,” Herring wrote on Twitter.

Herring was a member of that 2017 team that came so close to bringing a national championship back home to Athens. He was a freshman at the time, and has had to live with that bitter feeling since that day.

Since, Herring and Georgia have fought and fought but have not been able to return to the College Football Playoff.

And then there’s wide receiver Demetris Robertson, also a senior, who transferred to Georgia after that 2017 season.

As a member of the Dawgs, he’s come close as well, losing to Alabama in that heart-breaking 2018 SEC Championship Game and then making it to Atlanta last year just to lose to LSU in a blowout.

“Time to get ours this year,” Robertson said, in response to Herring’s tweet.

Both Herring and Robertson return for one last dance at UGA in 2020, and they don’t want to leave with anything less than a national championship.

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A look ahead to the Georgia football season opener vs Virginia

The Georgia football season opener will feature a UGA vs UVA matchup in Atlanta. The Virginia Cavaliers have not played Georgia since 2000.

Georgia and Virginia have met 19 times in the history of the two programs, with the first meeting dating back to October 30, 1897, a game that UVA won 17-4.

More recently, Georgia and Virginia met three times between 1995-2000. The Bulldogs are currently on a two-game winning streak against the Cavaliers.

The programs are again meeting on Monday, September 7th at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta for their season openers.

Georgia is coming off of another SEC Championship appearance and has hopes of returning to the College Football Playoff, while Virginia is a team that represented its division in last year’s ACC Championship Game against Clemson.

Both teams played in big bowl games. Georgia beat Baylor in the Sugar Bowl and Virginia fell to Florida in the Orange Bowl by a score of 36-28.

For Virginia, there’s absolutely zero pressure to go out and win this game. Georgia’s going to be the one with a top-five ranking playing in its home-state with lofty expectations.

Virginia’s offense will look different than it did last year, losing quarterback Bryce Perkins and some other offensive starters. But nine of its top ten tacklers return on defense.

That’s similar to Georgia’s scenario, though. UGA lost a ton of talent on offense, including star quarterback Jake Fromm, running back D’Andre Swift and four starting offensive lineman.

For both teams, we are asking the same question:

How will Georgia’s revamped offense do against Virginia’s experienced defense? 

How will Virginia’s revamped offense do against Georgia’s experienced, but also extremely talented defense?

Virginia did not play Wake Forest last season, so for many of these player it will be their first time facing Georgia QB Jamie Newman, a Wake Forest transfer. Expect them to bring pressure all night and try to make life difficult on Georgia’s offensive line, which will be starting a number of inexperienced players.

When Virginia has the rock, don’t expect it to be able to do much of anything. The Georgia defense is going to be just as, if not more ferocious than last year’s FBS-leading group.

Virginia’s running game ranked 12th in the ACC last season, and Georgia boasts the nation’s top run defense. At receiver, Virginia will be ok but if it can’t move the ball on the ground it’s going to be a long night for the Cavaliers.

Georgia hopes to end the season in the same stadium it starts it in, so look for the Dawgs to come out and make a statement, much like Alabama does when it plays these Power 5 programs in Arlington every few years.

Prediction: Georgia 38, Virginia 14

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2020 Georgia football schedule with predictions

A look at the 2020 Georgia football schedule with game-by-game predictions.

Here we take a look at Georgia’s 2020 football schedule with game-by-game predictions.

Georgia’s offense will look very different, with the departures of Jake Fromm, D’Andre Swift, Lawrence Cager, Andrew Thomas, Isaiah Wilson, Solomon Kindley and Cade Mays.

On the other hand, Georgia has recruited well to replace those guys, brought in Wake Forest transfer quarterback Jamie Newman, hired Todd Monken to run the offense and former Ole Miss head coach Matt Luke to coach the offensive line.

On defense, expect more of the same. Physical, sound football with a ton of players rotating in to keep each other fresh.

The schedule is by no means easy. A road trip to Tuscaloosa, games against Auburn and Tennessee and the annual meeting against Florida in Jacksonville will all present challenges.

Below is our game-by-game predictions for how Georgia’s season will unfold.

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ESPN FPI projects outcome of every 2020 Georgia football game

ESPN FPI projected the outcome for every Georgia football game in 2020

The ESPN Football Power Index (FPI) has been updated to project the outcome of every Georgia football game in 2020.

First, what is the FPI?

ESPN defines it as a “measure of team strength that is meant to be the best predictor of a team’s performance going forward for the rest of the season. FPI represents how many points above or below average a team is. Projected results are based on 10,000 simulations of the rest of the season using FPI, results to date, and the remaining schedule. Ratings and projections update daily.”

Related: 2020 Georgia football schedule – Game-by-game predictions

Before looking at the FPI’s game-by-game projections for next season, here’s a look at how the software thinks the Dawgs will do this season.

Projected win-loss: 10-2

Chance of winning out: 2.5%

Chance of winning conferenceL 23.6%

SOS rank: 37

Here’s the game-by-game projections:

Week 1: Georgia vs Virginia in Atlanta:

ESPN FPI’s percent chance to win: 95.3


Week 2: Georgia vs ETSU:

ESPN FPI’s percent chance to win: 99.9


Week 3: Georgia at Alabama:

ESPN FPI’s percent chance to win: 27.5


Week 4: ULM vs Georgia:

ESPN FPI’s percent chance to win: 99.2%


Week 5: Georgia vs Vandy:

ESPN FPI’s percent chance to win: 98.3


Week 6: Georgia vs Auburn:

ESPN FPI’s percent chance to win: 66.4


Week 7: Georgia at Missouri:

ESPN FPI’s percent chance to win: 90.2


Week 8: Bye week

ESPN FPI’s percent chance to win: N/A

College football without fans? Thanks, but no thanks

Notre Dame AD Jack Swarbrick went on Finebaum Show to discuss possibility of 2020 CFB season being played with no fans due to coronavirus

On Tuesday, Notre Dame Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick spoke on The Paul Finebaum Show about the effects of COVID-19 on the 2020 college football season. 

Swarbrick said:

“I don’t think you can conduct a season that way, I think spectators are too central to the experience.”

Now, although Swarbrick may have concerns more on the financial side of things, he is still right.

As we college football fans well know, there is nothing quite like a Saturday home game.

The atmosphere is the most electric you will feel across the sports world. 

Think of some of the most exciting games in sports that you look forward to each year. To name a few, the CFP, the World Series, the NBA Finals, the Masters, etc…

Compare how it feels watching those events on TV to being in the Classic City for a top-10 matchup on a fall Saturday. 

Picture that moment as Dawg Nation points to the upper-deck southwest corner of Stanford Stadium. 

Goosebumps, right?

Can you imagine a year of college football without those incredible feelings of excitement and loyalty?

Like when the lone trumpeter plays the Battle Hymn of the Republic as 93 thousand people stand silent in respect, while the late Larry Munson narrates the history of UGA football. 

Or when the third quarter buzzer sounds and Sanford is lit up with lights during the Red Coat’s performance of Krypton.

The single greatest sports experience of my life was last fall, when I watched a sell-out crowd raise their hands in unison for the fourth quarter of Georgia vs. Notre Dame.

Would a season with no fans level the playing field? Sure it would. But that’s not the point. The fact is, years and years of tradition and success have earned these bigger programs like Georgia the right to play in front of their hostile fans that make life tough on the opposition.

I’ve been to some crazy road games. The most electric atmosphere I’ve ever witnessed in person was actually in Williams-Brice Stadium when Georgia got blown out by South Carolina in Columbia. The fans 100% won the Gamecocks that game, and though I left feeling angry and fearful that Georgia’s season was over, I would not have traded that experience for anything.

That is what college football is about, unity. Thousands of people coming together, regardless of background, to support their team to victory.

Something that we will miss if football is played without fans in attendance…

I would rather have the season postponed, than have to watch a game without those traditions that I have grown to love. 

Could you accept a football season without fans? 

Can Georgia football go undefeated in 2020?

Does Georgia football have what it takes to go undefeated in the 2020 CFB season?

Yes, it’s a broad question, but now that we all have plenty of time, we can figure out what the Bulldogs would need to do in order to finish next season without a blemish.  

Kirby Smart is entering his fifth season leading UGA. Although the last few seasons have left Georgia fans with broken hearts, there is no denying the reputation that he and the Bulldogs are building in Athens. 

Bleacher Report’s Brad Shepard wrote:

“When you consider just how much talent the Bulldogs have on defense and project to have on offense, it’s not a stretch to think Georgia is a favorite to at least be in the College Football Playoff.”

Georgia has dominated recruiting in the last few years, signing the No. 1 class two out of the last three years, so talent and play-making ability will not be an issue. 

Players like Kelee Ringo, Broderick Jones, Jalen Carter, Mekhail Sherman and Darnell Washington joined the already loaded team. 

Georgia solidified its roster when Smart went fishing in the transfer portal and landed Jamie Newman, a transfer quarterback from Wake Forest. 

Newman has an incredible deep ball and will be aided with a talented run-game and on the outside, one of the highest graded receivers in the country, George Pickens. 

The true hurdle that the Bulldogs will have to navigate is their schedule. 

Georgia will kick off the season in Atlanta against a Virginia team that won the ACC Coastal last season. 

The Dawgs will also have to deal with South Carolina, Kentucky and Missouri on a four-week road trip that starts with Alabama on Sept. 19 in Tuscaloosa. 

Bama on the road in week three will be a major test for the Bulldogs, especially after Nick Saban is stuck in his house right now probably watching 16 hours of film a day. 

After the road trip the Bulldogs come home to Athens for five of the last six games excluding the game against SEC East runner-up Florida in Jacksonville. 

If Georgia can last through the regular season, its quest for perfection would only just be beginning, as it is not the only team that returns a stable of talent.

Clemson, LSU, Alabama and Ohio State always recruit well and return some very good starters in 2020.

However…

If the Dawgs can stay healthy and navigate the tough schedule, Georgia could wind up undefeated or at the very least find itself playing in the CFP in 2020.