Florida football insider talks Georgia vs Florida

Florida Gator insider Tyler Nettuno discusses the upcoming Georgia vs Florida 2020 college football game and how UGA can beat Bama.

The World’s Largest Cocktail Party goes down this Saturday as the No. 5 Georgia Bulldogs (4-1, 4-1) take on the No. 8 Florida Gators (3-1, 3-1) in Jacksonville, Florida.

The Dawgs have dominated the series as of late, winning the past three matchups.  The overall series also belongs to Georgia with a record of 52-43-2.

Florida will be without key defensive linemen Zachary Carter and Antwuan Powell for the first half of the game due to suspensions from their actions in the Florida-Missouri brawl that took place last week.  Georgia will likely be without defensive back Richard LeCounte, who was injured in a motorbiking accident last Saturday night.  LeCounte is expected to make a full recovery soon as he suffered bruised ribs, a concussion and a minor shoulder injury.

Tyler Nettuno from Gators Wire gave us some scoop on how the game might play out and how the Dawgs could leave Jacksonville on top of the SEC East.

“If the Bulldogs pull off their fourth-straight win in the series on Saturday, it will be because they controlled the tempo of the game.” said Nettuno on how the Dawgs can win.  “Georgia’s focus on ball control has thrown the Gators for a loop in the last three games in this series. Especially when you look back at last year’s game, UGA completely neutralized quarterback Kyle Trask and the UF offense with consistent pressure and strong third-down defense. The Gators have a pretty special offense this year, and it’s hard to imagine Georgia could win a shootout against this team. But if UGA controls the pace of the game and forces Florida into a low-scoring game, it has a pretty good chance of pulling out the win.”

And Nettuno isn’t kidding about that special Gators offense.  In one game less than Georgia, Kyle Trask has thrown for 1,341 yards, 18 touchdowns and just 2 interceptions. This, in comparison to Stetson Bennett’s 1,089 yards, 7 touchdowns and 5 interceptions, definitely gives Florida the edge in the passing game.

“I think that heading into the season, most Gators fans felt like 2020 was the year for the team to potentially pull ahead of Georgia in the SEC pecking order.” Nettuno said.  “After the defensive struggles at the beginning of the season, that confidence was tempered quite a bit. But even without three starters in the secondary against Missouri, the defense held the Tigers to just 248 yards. Given that performance, plus UGA’s sloppy win over Kentucky on Saturday, I think Florida fans are definitely much more confident than they were a few weeks ago. But they felt the same way last year and got burned, so I think the fanbase is generally approaching this game with much more uncertainty than it has in the past.”

Richard LeCounte being out for Georgia could be a problem come Saturday.  Florida features one of the toughest matchups in all of college football with junior tight end Kyle Pitts.

Pitts stands at 6-foot-6, 250 pounds and leads all Florida receivers with 355 yards and 7 touchdowns.  No LeCounte means Kirby Smart and the Georgia defense are going to have to get creative with how to contain the red-hot Pitts.

“An already struggling defense being shorthanded is bad news for Florida, but the Bulldogs will also be without a number of key players on defense, including safety of Richard LeCounte.” said Nettuno when asked about the matchup issues Pitts presents. “These absences will make it even more difficult for Georgia to contain UF’s targets in the passing game, such as 6-foot-6 tight end Kyle Pitts, who presents a matchup problem for essentially every defense in the country, as is.”

Nettuno also touched on the fact that the Florida offense has had a pretty big void from players on the COVID-19 list.  Florida had to reschedule two games due to positive tests being discovered on the team.

“We know that starting defensive lineman Zach Carter will miss the first half of the game for his role in the halftime brawl against Missouri last week. Beyond that, it’s a bit murky. Florida has been pretty quiet about who has tested positive for COVID-19, but 15 players were inactive against the Tigers, including starting cornerback Marco Wilson, starting safeties Donovan Stiner and Shawn Davis, as well as starting kicker Evan McPherson. It’s unclear how far along those players were into their mandatory 14-day quarantines, so for now we don’t know whether they will be available against Georgia. But it’s very likely that some of those 15 players won’t be cleared by the game.”

This game really could go either way.  Florida most definitely has an edge on the offensive side of the ball, more so the passing game, while Georgia has the edge defensively.  Nettuno gave his outlook of how the game will finish and who he thinks will win.

“If you had asked me two weeks ago, I probably would have told you the Bulldogs would win a game that played out very similarly to how the last two contests have. But Florida’s defense really looked like it took a major step forward against an improving Missouri offense, and Georgia’s offense hasn’t looked particularly threatening to this point. The Bulldogs still have a talent advantage, especially in the trenches, and Florida’s offensive line (which has been just solid) will be tested more than it has been to this point. But I doubt Georgia can pull this one off if they allow a big day from the Gators’ offense. A slow, physical affair benefits the Bulldogs, but if Florida can score 30+ points, I don’t think quarterback Stetson Bennett and the UGA offense are capable of matching it. I told myself I wouldn’t make this same mistake this year, but I think Dan Mullen has finally gotten Florida to a spot where it’s talented enough to beat Georgia. Florida takes it 35-27.”

Saturday’s matchup is scheduled to kickoff in Jacksonville at 3:30 P.M. ET on CBS.

UGA Football Live with J.C. Shelton: S1, Ep. 7 – Malcolm Mitchell, Kentucky break down and Cocktail Party Preview

In this week’s special UGA vs. UF episode, I talk with former Georgia receiver Malcolm Mitchell about his epic game-winning play in 2012.

Your friends at “UGA Football Live” and UGA Wire present your one-stop shop for all things Georgia football!

We are releasing episodes and interviews each week during the 2020 college football season, with a little bit of everything sprinkled in between.

In this week’s special Georgia vs. Florida episode, I talk with former Georgia receiver Malcolm Mitchell about one of the greatest plays in Cocktail Party history,  break down Georgia’s win at Kentucky and talk everything surrounding the Cocktail Party, including the recent antics by Gator coach Dan Mullen.

Listen here on  Spotify:

And here, on Apple Podcasts:

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/uga-football-live-with-j-c-shelton/id1533295384#episodeGuid=Buzzsprout-6226465

Also I talk:

CFB Roundup 

  • The most important games this past Saturday in college football world.

Dawgs in the NFL 

  • My top preforming former Bulldogs from NFL week-8 action.

Picks with J.C.

  • I update my picks vs. the spread from last week and pick five new games in an attempt to look like I know what I’m doing.

READBowl National Reading Competition

  • Malcolm Mitchell’s 4th annual global reading competition. Winners are announced Super Bowl Sunday and registration opens Nov. 12, which you can reach here.

My Favorite Book in the Whole Wide World 

  • Mitchell’s new children’s book “My Favorite Book in the Whole Wide World” is available now through Amazon pre-order which you can find here.

Make sure to subscribe, rate and review! And check out our other episodes featuring former Georgia greats like Aaron Murray (Ep. 2) Tavarres King (Ep. 3)  Keith Marshall (Ep. 4) and Arthur Lynch (Ep. 6).

 

PFF spotlights Georgia football WRs George Pickens, Dominick Blaylock

Georgia football receivers George Pickens and Dominick Blaylock are due for a big 2020 college football season.

George Pickens and Dominick Blaylock signed with Georgia as five-star receivers in the class of 2019.

Georgia was able to flip Pickens from Auburn on signing day, while Blaylock was all-dawg from the start. Blaylock committed to Georgia in July of 2017 and then signed in December of 2018.

Georgia fans had high expectations for both of them, and both lived up to the hype.

Pro Football Focus spotlighted how the two finished the season with zero drops. See the tweet below.

Pickens was a superstar his freshman season, catching 49 passes for 727 yards and 8 touchdowns. He’s considered one of the top returning receivers in college football for the 2020 season.

Blaylock hauled in 18 catches for 310 yards and 5 touchdowns. He suffered a torn ACL against LSU in the SEC Championship Game.

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How Georgia, LSU stack up ahead of SECCG: Statistical breakdown

How Georgia and LSU stack up statistically ahead of the SEC Championship Game, which is college football’s biggest of the weekend.

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The big one is here.

On Saturday at 3:30 p.m. on CBS, Georgia and LSU will square off in the SEC Championship Game in what will be a College Football Playoff play-in game for Georgia.

Flor LSU, the Tigers can probably afford to drop this one given their undefeated record and body of work to date.

But for the Dawgs, this is it. It’s win or go home. We suffered defeat in the exact same scenario last season and Kirby Smart will put out all the tricks to make sure that does not happen.

Georgia and LSU are two very different football teams.

LSU’s offense is incredible. Georgia’s, well, is not.

Georgia’s defense is equally as good as LSU’s offense. LSU’s defense is nothing special.

How this game plays out will be fun to watch. LSU will score points, less points than usual I would assume. Can Georgia hang in there and match them?

Here are how these two teams match up statistically.

OFFENSE:

Georgia football’s defensive stats are absolutely nuts

These Georgia football defensive stats are literally nuts.

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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)