How golfers can celebrate the University of Georgia’s back-to-back national championships

Show that DAWG in you on the golf course.

Tom Hoge probably owes Kevin Kisner a beer.

The University of Georgia dominated TCU 65-7 in the College Football Playoff national title game.

Hoge left Hawaii in between the Sentry Tournament of Champions and the Sony Open to cheer on his alma mater.

While there is no official word on whether or not Hoge lost any bets to Kisner, Russell Henley, Brian Harman, or any of the Bulldogs on the PGA Tour, we can only hope that he will have to publicly pay up in some fashion.

In the meantime, Golfweek has compiled a list of ways you can celebrate your inner Dawg while on the golf course.

Kevin Kisner and the Georgia Bulldogs are having a week: ‘We call it the UGA Tour’

A great week got even better for Kevin Kisner on Saturday.

A great week got even better for Kevin Kisner on Saturday.

The University of Georgia product fired a 5-under 65 at Waialae Golf Club in Honolulu to improve to 13-under 197 at the Sony Open in Hawaii. And yet Kisner isn’t even low Bulldog. That honor belongs to tournament leader Russell Henley, but the way Henley is playing there is no shame being second best among the 10 former Bulldogs pros in the field, all of whom survived to play the weekend.

“We call it the UGA Tour,” Kisner said. “Ten guys out here, ten guys making the cut, one guy leading right now. Heck of a program to produce that much talent and continue to do it. Guys continuing to come out here year after year and pretty it’s impressive.”

Kisner and his fellow UGA faithful gathered on Monday to watch their Bulldogs win the school’s first national championship since 1980.

“We all have a text thread that we send various things to, so I send them a message, and Jay and the Tour and everybody with the Tour associated helped us get a safe room for all of us hang out in. It was really cool,” Kisner said.

Only Chris Kirk and Brendon Todd, who were bunking too far away and stayed at their rental house, were missing as Georgia laid down the hammer on SEC rival Alabama in the fourth quarter. The celebration started early after a late interception was returned for a touchdown by Georgia to seal it.

“I think everybody in the hotel heard it,” Kisner said. “It was quite an epic video taken with people jumping around trying to see the TV. We only had one TV with about 15, 20 people. It was pretty fun.”

“Congrats to Kirby (Smart) and the whole staff and everybody associated with the program,” Kisner said. “Hell of a season, hell of a win.”

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Georgia football play of the day – Georgia vs Auburn (2017)

Watch the Georgia football play of the day here!

It’s Tuesday, September 1, just 25 days until Georgia football is scheduled to kick off versus Arkansas.

Today’s play of the day comes from the 2017 SEC Championship game which featured No. 6 Georgia and No. 2 Auburn.

Auburn had thrashed the Bulldogs in their annual regular season matchup 40-17, so Georgia was looking for some redemption this time around.

We pick up early in the second quarter with the Tigers up 7-0. Auburn has controlled the pace of the game so far and faces a third and six from the Georgia 14 yard line.

Watch what happened next here:

A turning point for Georgia who would go on to score 28 unanswered points and secure its first SEC title since 2005. Truly an outstanding defensive performance by the Bulldogs in this one.

Auburn star quarterback Jarret Stidham was held to 145 yards passing and the Tigers offense tallied just 259 total yards.

 

Matthew and Kelly Stafford’s donation to Georgia totals $1.5 million

Matthew and Kelly Stafford’s donation to the University of Georgia is larger than previously reported and totals $1.5 million.

Last week the University of Georgia announced a new social justice initiative that was being funded via donations from Matthew and Kelly Stafford, along with current Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart and his wife Mary Beth.

The Stafford’s were reported to have donated a large sum of money to the university and $350,000 of that donation was earmarked for the program.

This morning Matthew Stafford was a guest on NFL Network’s “Good Morning Football” and it was revealed that the larger donation totaled $1.5 million.

Here’s what Stafford had to say on the topic:

Obviously we (he and Kelly) both went to the school (Georgia) and we know how it shaped our lives.

I’ve done quite a bit of work in the Detroit area, and hadn’t really hit some other areas that were big parts of our lives. Being able to give back to Georgia. and help college kids that, — it’s some of your most formative years when you’re learning about who you are and who you want to be.

We we’re lucky to partner with the athletic association, the football team that’s creating an incredible program there. We’re happy to be a part of that.

The donation is very widespread. It’s going to help all different kinds of people and athletes, non-athletes, it doesn’t matter. We’re just trying to make as big an impact as we possibly can in a time where we feel like it’s extremely relevant to do so.

Georgia is expected to make a press release later this morning.

Matthew and Kelly Stafford donate $350,000 to social justice program at Georgia

Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford and his wife Kelly are donating $350,000 to the University of Georgia for a social justice initiative.

Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford and his wife Kelly are donating $350,000 to the University of Georgia for a new social justice initiative.

The Stafford’s are joined by current Georgia football coach Kirby Smart and his wife Mary Beth, who are donating $150,000, giving the university a total of a half-million dollars to start up the program.

“The University of Georgia Athletic Association has launched an ambitious program that seeks to implement strategic initiatives in the areas of diversity, inclusion, equity and social justice,” Georgia University Director of Athletics Greg McGarity announced on Friday.

“The generosity of Matthew and Coach Smart allows the Athletic Association to implement strategic initiatives in diversity, inclusion, equity, and social justice,” McGarity continued.  “These gifts will help the Athletic Association educate, implement dynamic programming, and execute service opportunities to achieve our goals, those being to foster critical consciousness, cultural competence and further developing change within the Athletic Association and our greater community.”

This is another in a long line of altruistic gifts the Stafford’s have made during his 11 plus years in Detroit. The Stafford’s have made a routine of surprising families with visits and gift at Christmas time, donating to the Acoustic Neuroma Association after Kelly’s surgery for her brain tumor, $1 million towards a local community center, and in March they donated $100,000 to Detroit communities to fight the COVID-19 crisis.

Lawrence Cager already tight Sam Darnold, a few other Jets

Rookie wide receiver Lawerence Cager is building key relationships with Sam Darnold and other members of the Jets.

Lawerence Cager and Sam Darnold have picked up their relationship right where it left off in high school.

Cager was signed by the Jets as an undrafted free agent out of the University of Georgia this offseason. While Cager never was Darnold’s wide receiver in college, the two got to know each other when they played together in high school all-star games. They have stayed in touch throughout the years.

“Me and him were always together. He was my quarterback,” Cager told the Jets’ website. “We built a relationship there and we’ve been friends ever since. I’ve been talking to him probably since the beginning of high school until now, so it’s been a little relationship brewing.”

Cager had thoughts of attending USC with Darnold because of how close the two were in high school. However, Cager ended up at the University of Miami and then transferred to Georgia in 2019. Now he’ll get his chance with Darnold in the pros.

“I really can’t wait to step on the field and catch a fade from him,” Cager said.

The undrafted rookie also has a couple of friends on the Jets from his college days. Cager attended Miami with TE Chris Herndon and WR/PR Braxton Berrios. Cager has been relying heavily on Herndon to prepare him for life in the NFL.

“I don’t know how many conversations I’ve had with Chris just about how to be a pro and how to attack coming in being a rookie in New York,” Cager said. “To have a guy like him, one of my best friends, I know he gets tired of it, but I talk to him all the time and ask, ‘Hey, what’s this?’ and ask him questions about special teams, the installs, stuff like that so I don’t mess it up. He came in and had a great year and he’s one of my close friends.”

Report: NCAA to allow voluntary football, basketball workouts

According to Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports, the NCAA voted Wednesday to allow athletes back on campus. Dates and details here

According to Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports, the NCAA voted Wednesday to allow athletes back on campus starting June 1 for voluntary football and basketball workouts.

Thamel wrote:

“An NCAA vote Wednesday cleared the return of student-athletes to campus in football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball on June 1 through June 30, multiple sources told Yahoo Sports.”

The decision ends the COVID-19 lock-down on athletic activities on campuses through May 31 and is, though just a small step towards normalcy, great news for sports fans and athletes around the country.

Sources reportedly told Yahoo Sports that the Division 1 council will vote on other sports besides football and basketball as soon as possible.

As far as testing procedures, it will be up to the individual school’s and state’s procedures and guidelines, according to Yahoo Sports’ sources.

“It will be up to the schools and political decision-makers to develop protocols on the tests, which cost approximately $100 each,” Thamel added. ““No one wants to get into that,” said a source. “They want to leave it to your own campus and state.””

The 2020 college football season is set to begin August 29 and Georgia football is scheduled to start its season in Atlanta versus Virginia on Sept. 7. What that will look like remains to be known. Last week, NCAA President Mark Emmert said:

“All of the commissioners and every president that I’ve talked to is in clear agreement: If you don’t have students on campus, you don’t have student-athletes on campus. That doesn’t mean [the school] has to be up and running in the full normal model, but you have to treat the health and well-being of the athletes at least as much as the regular students. … If a school doesn’t reopen, then they’re not going to be playing sports. It’s really that simple.”

If the season does go on, most likely there will be a very limited number of people involved and judging by Emmert’s comments and the NBA’s reported plan of resuming their season without fans, we could also see a start to the football season without people in attendance.

All that is left is R.E.M. Steeple – Celebrating the beginning of Athens’ legendary band

Has it been forty years? Has four decades passed since the legendary indie-rock super group, R.E.M., one of the most consequential bands of the time, and perhaps the world’s greatest alternative rock band, performed for the first time as a group in …

Has it been forty years? Has four decades passed since the legendary indie-rock super group, R.E.M., one of the most consequential bands of the time, and perhaps the world’s greatest alternative rock band, performed for the first time as a group in Athens, Georgia?

The four University of Georgia students who formed R.E.M. captured the spirit of Athens in the early 1980s and took college radio by storm. Over a 31-year run as multi-platinum-selling artists, R.E.M. became international superstars by creating a niche never witnessed before…..oblique lyrics, intellectualism, a quirkiness, all encompassing, soulful music….a new musical language that captured the imagination of a generation and spawned a musical revolution.

Five months before the glorious debut of Georgia freshman running back Herschel Walker and the Bulldogs march to the national championship, R.E.M. began its musical and creative ascent and would help define the Classic City as a world-recognized music and cultural mecca.  From that first performance in the old St. Mary’s Church on April 5, 1980 to selling some 90 million albums worldwide, bassist and vocalist Mike Mills, front-man Michael Stipe, guitarist-mandolinist Peter Buck and original drummer Bill Berry were a pioneer of the genre and always were true to their early, college underground musical roots.

The boys, who called it a day on September 21, 2011, transcended underground and mainstream music but forever held on to that rock-rebelliousness. At the time, Michael Stipe told the Daily Beast, “If anything, in disbanding, R.E.M. managed to do something that’s never been done before in the history of pop music. We did so as friends, with no external forces causing that to happen and without lawyers having to square off. It was just that the time had come.”

Let’s go back to the beginning, to October 1979, because it’s here in the Classic City, that four students became known to the world as R.E.M. Stipe was an art student, where he befriended Buck, an Emory transfer working as a clerk at Wuxtry Records downtown. At a local party, they met UGA students Mills and Berry, Macon natives.

Berry and Mills had played together in a high school band called Shadowfax and were living in Reed Hall, enjoying college life and experiencing the burgeoning music scene around Athens. Stipe and Berry moved into converted apartments at St. Mary’s Church, a place only college kids could appreciate. One of the oldest structures in Athens, the church had been turned into a space where the city’s local artists hung out, practiced and lived.

The boys rehearsed at St. Mary’s in anticipation of their first show at the birthday party of friend Kathleen O’Brien. On Saturday afternoon, they stopped by WUOG, the campus radio station, for a pre-show interview. Some reports said the group appeared as Twisted Kites, but the band later confirmed that they hadn’t yet decided on what to call themselves. The band opened with The Troggs’ “I Can’t Help Myself” and followed with the Sex Pistols’ “God Save the Queen.”

No one had any idea what the significance of that event on Saturday night in St. Mary’s would be. They weren’t even called R.E.M. but that night would be the beginning of 31 years of musical magic.

By the time R.E.M. played their second show on April 19th at the 11:11 Koffee Klub in Athens, they had picked a name (out of the dictionary): “R.E.M.” A reported 150 fans attended the show and true to their alternative form, the police shut the show down at 2:30am. The band was building momentum in May with Athens’ shows at Tyrone’s O.C., Memorial Hall, the 40 Watt Club and the Mad Hatter.

During a May show, R.E.M. opened for The Brains. The Georgia student newspaper, the Red & Black proclaimed, “R.E.M. blew away The Brains.” Mills and Berry moved into St. Mary’s in June and the boys were playing several dates a month.  In July, they had their first gigs out of Georgia, when they played two shows in Carrboro, NC followed by a show in Raleigh.

Shows primarily in Athens continued throughout the fall and in December, the band opened for the Police in Atlanta’s Fox Theater before 4,000 people. In early 1981, the band released Radio Free Europe. The single received critical acclaim, and its success on college radio earned the band a record deal with I.R.S. Records. The band was well on their way to becoming a world-renown icon.

Meanwhile, St. Mary’s slowly began to disappear. History in the South is woven into the fabric of our lives and in Athens, history is as thick as a sultry August morning. Originally designed as a place of worship in 1849 for a local manufacturing company, the church was later decommissioned after the plant closed. The Red Cross revamped the space into residences, setting the stage for an important moment in music history. Within a decade, R.E.M. were international superstars, but the site of their first show was set for demolition.

The building was demolished in 1990 but the steeple was saved. Condos soon rose where St. Mary’s once stood but the steeple began to badly deteriorate.

“The steeple is the iconic symbol of Athens music, I think — what’s left from where we were,” Marc Tissenbaum, a project manager who sought to restore the site, told Flagpole. “When I first got here in 1986, everyone knew that was the R.E.M. steeple. … It’s a landmark. It’s a beacon. It’s a lot of things.”

The condo association gave the steeple to the nearby Nuci’s Space, a nonprofit organization that provides an array of services to assist in the emotional, physical and professional well-being of musicians. A crowdfunding campaign raised $150,000 to cover the restoration of the steeple and provide some needed support for Nuçi’s Space. R.E.M. and Athens alumni like the B-52’s, Drive-By Truckers and Neutral Milk Hotel donated guitars and autographed items for backers.

Today the “R.E.M. Steeple” is known to be a pilgrimage site of sorts for R.E.M. fans or music fans in general. It is a landmark in rock history and one of the most important sites in alternative music. Forty years ago, four college boys who simply wanted to be in a band and create some inspiring music, reached heights no one could ever imagined and inspired a generation.

Father of former Georgia OL Cade Mays sues university over severed finger

On the same day that Georgia OL Cade Mays entered the NCAA transfer portal, we learn that his father, Kevin Mays, is suing the University of Georgia.

On the same day that Georgia OL Cade Mays entered the NCAA transfer portal, we learn that his father, Kevin Mays, is suing the University of Georgia.

Father of former Georgia OL Cade Mays sues university over severed finger (Ugawire)

On the same day that Georgia OL Cade Mays entered the NCAA transfer portal, we learn that his father, Kevin Mays, is suing the University of Georgia.

On the same day that Georgia OL Cade Mays entered the NCAA transfer portal, we learn that his father, Kevin Mays, is suing the University of Georgia.