Georgia vs Florida Prediction, Game Preview

Georgia Bulldogs vs Florida Gators prediction and game preview.

Georgia vs Florida prediction and game preview.


Georgia vs Florida Broadcast

Date: Saturday, November 7
Game Time: 3:30 ET
Venue: TIAA Bank Field, Jacksonville, FL
Network: CBS

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Georgia (4-1) vs Florida (3-1) Game Preview

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Why Georgia Will Win

The Florida defense rose up against Missouri last week, but the secondary has still been a bit questionable, giving up over 200 yards in all four games with just one interception.

Georgia might not be Alabama bombing away, but it’s possible for Stetson Bennett to have a decent enough game to go along with a strong performance from the SEC’s best defense.

Bennett was hardly perfect against Alabama and Kentucky, but he threw over 200 yards in each of the first four games with seven scores, and he’s got the weapons to push the ball deep on a group that allowed 7.7 yards per pass.

Bennett’s job is to keep the chains moving without making big mistakes. Georgia is fantastic at dominating the time of possession battle, and it has to keep Kyle Trask and that Gator offense off the field.

CFN Experts Picks: NFL

Why Florida Will Win

The offense has been tremendously consistent.

The running game has worked when needed, but it’s the passing game that’s been dominant. It’s not time to call Kyle Trask the next version of Joe Burrow, but …

Trask has thrown for over 400 fewer yards over Burrow’s 2019 four-game pace, but he has thrown for one more touchdown pass – 18 to 17 – and the same number of interceptions with three. He’s not quite bombing away deep like Burrow did over the first four games, but the 9.6 yards per pass are excellent.

The Georgia secondary is outstanding, but it’ll be without star Richard LeCounte – who’s recovering after a frightening traffic accident – and it had major problems with the Alabama passing game a few weeks ago.

Florida has the offense that can crank out yards and points in chunks. Georgia doesn’t.

CFN Experts Picks: College Football

What’s Going To Happen

Florida might be just rocky enough defensively to have issues with a Georgia offense that will keep up the pace, but Bennett hasn’t been strong enough over the last few weeks.

He’ll put up yards, but he’ll also throw two key picks. Trask and the Gator offense will be steady for a full four quarters.

Week 10 College Football Schedule, Predictions

Georgia vs Florida Prediction, Line

Florida 27, Georgia 24
Bet on Georgia vs Florida with BetMGM
Georgia -3, o/u: 52.5
ATS Confidence out of 5: 1.5

Must See Rating: 5

5: ANYTHING to take your mind off of …
1: EVERYTHING in the real world

CFN 1-127 Rankings | Bowl Projections
20 Most Important College Football Thoughts Ever
Week 10 College Football Schedule

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Kirby Smart previews Georgia-Florida, talks current state of UGA football

Georgia football coach Kirby Smart previews the UGA vs Florida game and talks the current state of the Bulldogs

OPENING STATEMENT

“I will open with a quick comment about Richard LeCounte and his situation. Obviously, thoughts and prayers go out to his family and Richard. I was updated by Ron [Courson] — he was moved from an ICU room to a regular room, which was a good step, good news. Our thoughts and prayers are with him and his family. He’s got wonderful parents and we’ve been in communication with those guys. They have been up here, been able to be with him during this time. I know our team sent a bunch of video messages and things like that to him yesterday, and we are all hopeful and expect a full recovery.

“With that, I will move on to Florida. Dan [Mullen] has done a great job there with their team preparing those guys. They are high-powered, got a lot of really good skill players, an experienced quarterback. They throw and catch the ball really well. They have a really good unit and a good team. I thought the defense played really well against Missouri. Todd [Grantham] has them playing really hard. It was the first time they had lot of their core guys back up-front, and they’ve got some big guys up-front. They’ve got a really good team, really good special teams, so — as always — it should be a great game.”

ON STETSON BENNET AND THE QB SITUATION

“The only physical limitations [with JT] are still coming off the knee, which he hasn’t shown a lot of ailments coming off the knee. He’s been out of the brace, been able to throw the ball. He’s done a good job. He actually comes down and throws on the scout team and competes and does a really nice job down there with us. Again, the decisions we make as coaches are decisions we have to make. They are tough decisions, no different than they are at who plays corner, who plays tackle. There are a lot of really good competitions out there going on. Ultimately, we feel like Stetson gives us the best chance to win right now. D’Wan [Mathis] gets a lot of work, a lot reps, and competes really hard at that and continues to improve. When he shows us that he is the better guy, then he will be the guy up. Same thing with JT — JT probably doesn’t get as many opportunities as Stetson does and D’Wan does because we works with us some down there on the scout team. But, at the end of the days guys, the decision has to be made by us that gives us the best chance to win. We do that based on the total body of work. Those are decisions that have to be made.”

DEFENSIVE INJURIES

“It’s a laundry list. You would probably be better off asking me specifically about guys because I do not really know — we haven’t had a chance to practice, so I will find more out throughout the week, throughout the day. We think Quay [Walker] is going to be fine, we think he is going to be able to play. Julian [Rochester] is probably out. Jordan [Davis] we are going to find out more on. We are hopeful he is able to play. Lewis [Cine] we think is going to be fine. He had an ankle sprain. Obviously, Richard [LeCounte] is probably out — I mean Richard is not going to be able to play. We do not know when we will be able to get Richard back. Past that, I do not know who you would be asking about.”

ON JORDAN DAVIS AND THE SAFETY POSITION VS FLORIDA

“Chris [Smith] has played a lot for us. Richard came out of the one game for targeting, and then he came in and played for Lewis the other day. We feel like Chris has gotten a lot of experience. Chris works really hard in practice and he is ready to play. Tyrique Stevensonhas worked back there, [Latavious] Brini has worked back there. We’ve had Major Burns work back there, so that’s what it looks like at safety.Then, like I said on Jordan [Davis], we will find out more as the week goes on.”

HOW TO STOP UF TE KYLE PITTS

“He’s really a great player. Anytime you play a great player you’ve got to have a good game plan. Like you said, I don’t think anybody is stopping him. It’s limiting explosives, matching up, winning some 50/50 balls — that’s what he’s best at. It’s impossible — people think you can just double cover him. You can’t do that. They put him in places where you can’t double him and you’ve got to do other things to other people. They’ve got other good players besides just him and the quarterback knows where to throw the ball to give him a shot. There’s not an easy answer for that. It’s not like a text book answer of this is how you stop him. You are not going to do that. What you do is contain him and hope that you don’t get hit on explosive and that the team understands where he is.”

ON OFFENSIVE INJURIES AND KENNY McINTOSH, MATT LANDERS AND BEN CLEVELAND 

“Ben [Cleveland] should be fine. George [Pickens] and Kenny [McIntosh] are continuing to work and do what they did last week. We are hopeful they’re able to play. They’re certainly further out from their injuries and we are hopeful they’ll be able to. I can’t tell you anymore other than that because I don’t know a lot. They’re rehabbing every day, Ron [Courson] updates us every day and we are hopeful they’re able to play. Matt [Landers] should be able to go.”

ON TYRIQUE STEVENSON AND JORDAN DAVIS 

“Jordan [Davis] is going to be day-to-day. Jordan has a chance to be able to play and we are hopeful he’s able to play. It is his elbow, his injury.  We’re hopeful to be able to get him in a brace and don’t know if he’ll be able to play or not, we haven’t practiced. Tyrique [Stevenson] is fine.”

ON THE CURRENT QB PLAY

“We can improve in a lot of ways. We can improve by protecting the ball, sliding once you make a good decision to run and when you get near contact you can get down. Making good decisions with the ball, in terms of if you’re going to throw it out of bounds, throw it out of bounds and if you’re going to hit the check down, hit the check down. There’s a lot of places we can improve. We can improve with our route-running, route-communication, our ability to finish blocks on the perimeter when we get the ball on the perimeter. There’s tons of places we can improve.”

ON DEFNEISVE LINMAN JULIAN ROCHESTER

“He is out.”

ON HOW GEORGIA WILL WORK AROUND ELECTION DAY 

“They can do their voluntary activities and then we also have a speaker that we have scheduled for them. Some in-house things. We were able to do a little bit yesterday, in terms of a light walk-thru. We didn’t get back from Kentucky until late in the afternoon and were able to do some things yesterday (Sunday), just really light, not a full-fledged practice. So, we’ll practice today and practice Wednesday and Tuesday we’ll have a speaker.”

MORE ON DEFENSIVE INJURIES AND HOW IT WILL IMPACT THE DAWGS

“It certainly affects you.  You don’t have as many guys available so it limits your availability and your ability to play more players. At the end of the day we have a lot of guys that practice who don’t get to play and now will get an opportunity to play. Those guys work really hard for those opportunities. I look forward to seeing them play, to be honest with you. That’s what they came to Georgia to do, to play in some of these big games. We’ll have some guys that have to step up, play more snaps. And it may put a little more of a burden on some of the guys that were already playing, probably play more snaps in regards to that. Everybody in the country is going through that. It’s something that you go through when you play this kind of schedule, you’re going to have injuries. We have been very fortunate, so far, in terms of COVID and we hope that continues because that could limit us even more. These guys are competitors.  I don’t know how it’s going to affect things because a lot of it depends on what we’re having to defend. With Florida, they have a very versatile attack.  They can be many forms of offensive; in terms of vertical passing game, screen passing game, run game. They have good backs- thick, heavy backs that run the ball at you and a big offensive line to do it with.”

MORE ON RICHARD LECOUNTE 

“It doesn’t matter what kind of player he is, it’s one of our players, one of our family members. When you get news like that, it’s crushing, it’s disheartening. It just makes everything flash before you, all of the experiences I’ve had with him, and it was a scary moment. It was a very serious crash. He’s very fortunate to have his helmet on and to be where he is now. He is very fortunate, according to Ron and the doctors, considering what most people have when they have one of those motorcycle accidents. Certainly was scary for our team, for everybody in our family, everybody in our organization. It was scary for him and his family. It makes you hug your kids a little more at night for sure.”

MORE ON ELECTION DAY 

“In terms of the NCAA, the decision was made a long time ago and they didn’t realize how proactive these athletic departments would be in terms of, number one, registering student-athletes to vote and getting them to vote. We think over 90 percent of our guys have already voted. Our guys have done a really good job. The few that haven’t would be because they were already registered back home, and we had some guys who weren’t here when we went to register, and they might not have registered yet. But we have over 130 players and we’ve got less than nine who haven’t voted. So, the intent was to give them the ability to go do that. Well, it’s unique now that it was such a point of emphasis on our athletic department and our athletic administration did a great job of getting 100 percent of our student-athletes to vote. We’ve almost done that, so tomorrow will be more of an opportunity for them to work on other things: academics, to clear their mind, for whatever they want to do. But we’re going to have a speaker for it. It’s not whether I’m for it or against it, that’s not important. What’s important is getting our kids an opportunity to vote and that’s what most of them have done.”

TALKING THE BRAWL THAT TOOK PLACE AT HALFTIME OF THE FLORIDA-MISSOURI GAME

“I was aware of it. I think I was coming back from the hospital with Richard when somebody texted me the video of it. To be honest, I haven’t seen much of it since then because it’s been a whirlwind since our game and Richard, and the sped-up pace of this week. I haven’t had time to really think about it, it’s not pressing for us. Obviously, it’s a teaching moment for all of us, but it concerns me every time a player gets tackled on the sideline or gets close to the sideline, of an altercation between two teams in rivalries breaking out. They all know. Dan [Mullen] knows and Eli [Drinkwitz] knows that you can’t have that. They understand that, they know. You’ve got some people within your staff that prevent those things from happening, and we don’t want them in the SEC and you’ve got to do a good job. It could happen to any program in the country, you don’t want that.”

ON HOW UGA USED THE BYE WEEK TO PREPARE FOR FLORIDA

“We looked at everybody during the off week that we play after Kentucky. So, for us, our traditional off week is three days. We take the final opponents, we watch them. We say, ‘Who does something that we don’t see?’ If they do something our offense does, we see it every day, so what’s the point. If we see something that we don’t see, then we’ve got to work on it. Along with Florida, South Carolina, Mississippi State, Missouri, Vanderbilt, all those teams, we went through them and we did some work on those teams. Then, towards the end of the off week, we worked on Kentucky.”

TO BAN OR NOT TO BAN MOTORCYCLES?

“No, I haven’t really thought about it. I think making good decisions and choices is important. I think sometimes when you try to ban things, you do more harm than good. A lot of guys use them around campus, mopeds and scooters. Georgia has a history of mopeds and scooters have been an issue, and some of our players have them, and it’s been an issue ever since I got here. It was an issue for Coach Richt, but this was different because it was a dirtbike or motorcycle, whatever you classify it as, which probably brings a little more danger. Not a lot of our guys have those.”

ON ZAMIR WHITE

“Opportunities would be the first thing. I felt like he’s always been really effective, to me, in terms of toughness. He’s getting more comfortable with our run-game. We’re probably doing a better job putting a hat on a hat. When you have the run-game you have you get better at it as you do it. Now, teams get better at defending you as you do it as well, so you have to decorate it different ways. I think we’ve gotten better in the run-game because we’re running similar runs and carrying them over from week to week. He’s certainly, I thought last week was one of his [better performances]. There were times that he had contacted in the backfield that he turned into a five-yard run. He turned three-yard runs into six-yard runs. He ran behind his pad, he kept his balance. I thought he did a really good job.”

ON HOW HE AND TODD MONKEN WORK TOGETHER IN TERMS OF PLAY-CALLING

“I would say he has total autonomy when it comes to offensive decisions, in terms of selecting what he carries into a game, play-calling—that’s what you hire people to do, to do a job. You turn it over to them and say, ‘Hey, what’s the best job we can do?’ Now, he has a tremendous staff with great experience. Matt Luke is a guy that has great experience. Cortez [Hankton], Dell [McGee], [Todd] Hartley—all of those guys are a concerted effort in terms of making game-plans, making decisions about personnel and plays. He is really highly organized which is what I really like, in terms of each coach having a responsibility to present to him their thoughts for that game plan of the week. He does a really good job of that. In terms of quarterback-play, we’re aligned perfectly. We talk about it each week. We talk about it before each game. We talk about it after each practice. We talk about where guys are, what their strengths are, what their weaknesses are, and how we think their strengths can benefit our game plan. We go through that. We go through that after each game. We have a lot of communication about it.”

ON KYLE TRASK VS UGA DEFENSE 

“Experience, number one. You have some quarterbacks in our league who have experienced and seen everything, and you see the maturation of quarterbacks as they play against teams. They’ve seen that look, they’ve seen that two-trap, that quarters, that quarter-quarter has that man, that extra-overload blitz—they’ve seen it so they know how to attack it. The maturation that he’s had is he has played in our league now. Once you get that valuable experience, it’s hard to trick them. You don’t trick guys—they’ve seen it before. You have to ultimately be able to defend their people with your people. You’re not going to win a scheme battle with, ‘Oh you’ve got a guy free.’ You’re not going to scheme somebody free. They have to win one-on-one. You’ve got to cover Kyle Pitts, and Kyle Trask knows that, and he does a good job at finding him and finding the other guys he has as weapons. He’s a really, really good football player because he has savvy and awareness.”

HOW TO GET ALL UGA PLAYERS INVOLVED

“It’s a conditioning element. There are a lot of things that go into it. How do guys practice? How do they prepare? How do they protect the quarterback? How reliable are they with ball-security? I thought Zamir [White] and Dell [McGee] did a great job subbing those guys last week because Zamir was running the ball really well. He was running the ball physical. I am comfortable with where we are and how we’re playing our backs because to get through our league, as you see with Kenny [McIntosh], you’ve got to be able to have multiple backs. You certainly draw on that experience when guys go down.”

ON D’WAN MATHIS

“I talked to him before practice—I talked to him for a while. We kind of visit each week with the quarterbacks to keep them updated on where things are… He wants to play. He is a competitor. He wants an opportunity to get in and compete. We gave he and JT [Daniels] a lot of reps in the off-week. We will continue to give guys as we can get ready reps to grow those guys and get them ready to play.”

SEC suspends five players from Florida-Missouri brawl

The SEC has announced the repercussions for Florida and Missouri following Saturday’s halftime brawl between the two teams.

The SEC has announced the punishments to the Florida Gators and Missouri Tigers following the brawl that took place during Saturday’s game, according to multiple reports.

Florida head coach Dan Mullen is being fined $25,000 and Florida defensive linemen Zachary Carter and Antwuan Powell will be suspended for the first half of this Saturday’s game against Georgia.

Missouri linebacker Chad Bailey, offensive lineman Dylan Spencer and defensive lineman Markell Utsey will also be suspended for the first half of the Tigers next game, which is November 14th and also against Georgia.  Missouri has a bye week this weekend.

The Gators have had several positive COVID-19 tests and were playing their first game since October 10th where they lost to Texas A&M.

The brawl happened just after the final play of the first half of Florida’s 41-17 victory over the Tigers.

WATCH:

Missouri defensive lineman Trajan Jeffcoat had a questionable late hit on Florida quarterback Kyle Trask which started it all.  Dan Mullen completely lost his cool, screaming at officials over the possibly dirty hit.

“There is no place in college football for the kind of incident that took place,” said SEC commissioner Greg Sankey in a statement. “Everyone involved is responsible for meeting sportsmanship standards throughout each game. Running on the field to confront a game official, the gathering of teams in an on-field confrontation and student-athletes throwing punches are all disappointing at any time, but even more so as we work to support healthy competition during a pandemic.”

Great news for the Dawgs, bad news for the Gators and Tigers.

Saturday’s matchup between No. 8 Florida (3-1, 3-1) and No. 5 Georgia (4-1, 4-1) is set to kickoff in Jacksonville at 3:30 ET on CBS.

Georgia-Florida week: Former UGA WR ejected for punching former Gator

Georgia-Florida week: Former Georgia football WR Javon Wims has been ejected from the Saints-Bears game after punching a former Florida DB.

I simply couldn’t picture a more fitting start to Georgia-Florida week than this.

A scrum broke out between former Georgia wide receiver Javon Wims and former Florida defensive back CJ Gardner-Johnson in the Saints vs Bears game on Sunday afternoon.

Gardner-Johnson was shown putting his finger inside the face mask of Chicago’s wide receiver Anthony Miller which then incited Wims to retaliate.

After the finger poke, Wims gave Gardner-Johnson a subtle tap from behind him and then rung his bell with two very powerful punches before being separated.

WATCH:

Wims was immediately ejected from the game and will likely be fined and possibly suspended.

It was an undisciplined move on Wims’ part but man nothing gets you going like a little Georgia-Florida brawl.  Saturday’s matchup between the No. 8 Gators and No. 5 Bulldogs should be one for the books.

Twitter reacts to Florida jumping Georgia

The Twitter world reacts to Florida jumping Georgia in the polls, following Week 1 matchups.

The Florida Gators jumped the Georgia Bulldogs in this week’s Amway Coaches Poll, powered by USA TODAY Sports.

Georgia stayed put at No. 4 while Florida jumped from No. 6 to No. 3 following a 51-35 victory over Ole Miss.

Here’s how the Twitter world reacted to the changes:

Barrett Sallee picks Florida to win SEC East, projects Georgia record

CBS college football writer picks the Florida Gators to win the SEC East over Georgia football, as well as SEC records.

College football experts have already begun to submit their predictions for the 2020 season.

CBS Sport’s college football writer and analyst Barrett Sallee posted his SEC win total predictions for 2020 on Friday, via Twitter.

Sallee has Georgia as the 2nd team in the SEC East, with Florida as No. 1.  He also predicts the Dawgs to drop two games on the season, both being to SEC teams.

UGA has a rather tough schedule this season, playing Alabama away in Tuscaloosa. Georgia also has tough matchups against Auburn, Florida, Tennessee and Kentucky, all of which could be ranked meetings.

The Dawgs have won the past three matchups against the Florida Gators, and have a massive wave of new talent coming in with the No.1 recruiting class in the country for 2020.  Florida had the No. 9 2020 recruiting class.

The Gators and Bulldogs face off on Halloween (Oct. 31) this year in Jacksonville.

FootballScoop predicts Georgia will be featured in two College GameDay matchups

Georgia football is projected to be featured in two College GameDay matchups this 2020 college football season.

I know, you’d rather be reading about which early-enrollees are turning heads at Georgia workouts. I’d rather be writing about that. Unfortunately, that’s not the world we are living in right now.

Instead, we are in a constant state of speculation, which can actually provide some entertaining stories like the one Zach Barnett of FootballScoop posted this week.

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He wrote a story predicting where ESPN’s College GameDay show will visit during each week of the 2020 college football season.

In his predictions, he had Georgia being involved in two College GameDay matchups.

The first one is a sure-thing…Georgia at Alabama on September 19 in Tuscaloosa.

From FootballScoop:

Speaking of sure things, Georgia at Alabama is perhaps the surest thing of the entire season. A rematch of the 2017 national championship and 2018 SEC title game, this game comes three days shy of the THIRTEEN YEAR anniversary of Georgia’s last trip to Tuscaloosa.

The other one is on Halloween, where Barnett predicts College GameDay will visit Jacksonville for the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party. Not a bad prediction, as both teams will likely be in the top-ten playing for a spot in the SEC Championship Game.

Florida has finished second to Georgia in the SEC East in each of Dan Mullen’s first two seasons and, with a returning quarterback in Gainesville and a new offense coming in Athens, there’s a belief that the Gators can climb the hump this year. Florida vs. Georgia will be the ultimate trick or treat for Mullen.

Athens, Georgia was also mentioned as a possible destination on October 6. The Bulldogs will be hosting Auburn in The Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry, but there’s also plenty of other top-tier matchups taking place that weekend.

October 6 matchups include: Texas-Oklahoma, Clemson-Florida State, LSU-Florida, Auburn-Georgia, Minnesota-Wisconsin, Iowa-Ohio State, Rutgers-Purdue.

Oklahoma vs Texas gets GameDay that weekend in his predictions.

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Georgia, Florida fans roast each other with Valentine’s Day poems

The Georgia Bulldogs versus Florida Gators football rivalry is as contested as it has ever been.

The Georgia-Florida rivalry is as contested as it has ever been. The World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party is help in Jacksonville every year and neither team or their fan base ever backs down.

This Valentine’s Day, a poem tweet from SBNation helped renew the rivalry on Twitter between Bulldog and Gator fans. Here’s the Tweet that sparked the clash between Georgia and Florida fans:

Seems harmless enough right? That’s not the case in arguably UGA’s most fierce rivalry:

Auburn got caught in the crossfire as well:

It’s a long way away, but the Georgia versus Florida rivalry will be renewed on October 31st in Jacksonville. Should be an interesting Halloween!

Both teams have the week off before facing each other in the rivalry game. The winner of the match-up has gone on to win the SEC East in each of the past five seasons. While UGA has dominated the series winning the past three games and six of nine overall. Despite the surge under Kirby Smart, the Gators and Dawgs have split the past sixteen games.

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Ranking the top Georgia football wins of the decade: #4

UGA Wire reveals it’s No. 4 Georgia football win of the decade

In honor of the start of 2020 Wednesday, we decided to put together a list of the Top 10 Georgia football wins from the past decade.

Folks, the moment you all have been waiting for. We have reached the Final Four.

Let’s get to it. Coming in at No. 4 on our list is the 2012 Georgia-Florida game, which will always be a fan favorite. Everyone remembers exactly where they were and who they were with when Jarvis Jones punched the ball out from Jordan Reed at the goal-line in Jacksonville, after a huge Malcolm Mitchell touchdown earlier in the game.

The hated Gators were about to score late in the game to try and tie things up at what was then Everbank Field, but Jones’ forced fumble helped to preserve a 17-9 Bulldog win on the St. John’s River.

A few weeks later, the Dawgs would clinch their second-straight trip to Atlanta, to play in an unofficial semifinal game for the BCS National Championship. And… that’s all we’ll say on that. We don’t need to go into detail.

Take a look:

He’s a badddddddd man!

Georgia football’s defensive stats are absolutely nuts

These Georgia football defensive stats are literally nuts.

[jwplayer br8XgTUT-er0jUifI]

This Georgia defense is the best in the conference and it’s one of the NCAA’s elite defenses. In nine games this year, the defense has allowed a high of 17 points.

Here’s each game so far:

6, 17, 0, 17, 14, 13, 0, 17, 0.

Remember, in the South Carolina game Georgia’s defense actually only allowed 13 points. The Gamecocks got seven when they returned an interception back for a touchdown.

That’s three shutouts, and two of those came against SEC teams Kentucky and Missouri.

This defense is something special.

Saturday proved that again as Georgia held Missouri to 0 points, 198 total yards, 148 passing and 50 rushing.

In the fourth quarter, Georgia almost saw its nine game streak of no rushing touchdowns allowed come to a close. But the defense prevailed and not only did not allow a rushing score, but no score at all for that matter.

The passing defense could be cleaned up a little bit, but the Dawgs are still fine in that category, ranking 17th nationally.

A big part of Georgia’s solid passing defense can be credited to the run defense. Georgia takes away its opponents run game. It’s a sure thing. Basically, if you think you want to run the ball against Georgia, think again.

With the Dawgs being so stout against the run, teams are forced to throw it. And just because the Georgia pass defense is not as elite as its run defense, don’t take that secondary lightly. There are some big name players back there just waiting for you to throw it at them.

Compared to the rest of the SEC, there’s no questioning that Georgia has the conference’s best defense.

Just look at these stats and where they rank among the SEC and the nation.

10.1 points per game allowed (2nd nationally, 1st in the SEC)

260.3 total yards per game allowed (5th nationally, 1st in the SEC)

4.32 yards per played allowed (4th nationally, 1st in the SEC)

185.8 passing yards per game allowed (17th nationally, 3rd in the SEC)

5.6 yards per attempt (5th nationally, 2nd in the SEC)

74.5 rushing yards per game allowed (4th nationally, 1st in the SEC)

2.77 yards per carry allowed (4th nationally, 1st in the SEC)

29.6% opponent 3rd down conversion rate (11th nationally, 1st in the SEC)

57.14% opponent red zone score conversion rate (1st nationally, 1st in the SEC)