Things working against Georgia in 2008
We continue a high-level look towards the football season by acknowledging that winning even an SEC East title in any season is a difficult challenge with very little margin for error. Other than the usual caveats about injuries, these factors will be potential obstacles for the Dawgs in 2008:
» The schedule. It’s going to be tough. In the SEC part
of the schedule, you replace Ole Miss with LSU. That LSU trip comes a week before
the Florida game. The Dawgs will have three interesting and challenging nonconference
opponents: Central Michigan pushed Purdue in the 2007 Motor City Bowl. Georgia
Tech will present a unique offensive scheme to challenge the defense at the
end of the season. Then there’s the trip to Tempe.
Playing Arizona State will test the Dawgs in three ways. First and most basic,
the Sun Devils are a quality program, and Dennis Erickson looks to have injected
some energy into the program. The game will also bring a tremendous amount of
hype; it’s Georgia’s first regular season trip outside of the southeast since
1965, and that fact alone will add to the circus of a quality midseason lineup.
Finally, there’s the human element. The Dawgs must play at South Carolina (often
a night game), return, prepare for, and travel to Arizona State, absorb that
game and the effects of cross-country travel, and then prepare to host a motivated
Alabama team the next week. Should they survive that three-game swing, a bye
week awaits before Tennessee comes to town.
Georgia will face nine teams next year that played in a bowl this season. The two 2008 Division 1 opponents that aren’t coming off a bowl trip are South Carolina and Vanderbilt – two teams that gave Georgia plenty of problems in 2007.
There is one bit of good news peeking through the schedule gloom and doom: no SEC opponent will have a bye week before they play Georgia.
» The offensive line. Hear me out. Stacy Searels and
his troops were magnificent this season. But we’re not out of the woods yet.
As young and inexperienced as line was in 2007, the Dawgs still had a rock to
anchor that line: senior center Fernando Velasco. Velasco’s contribution to
the success of the 2007 squad might be one of the most underrated stories of
the year. Senior Chester Adams was also a key; his versatility at guard and
tackle enabled the coaches to experiment until they found the most effective
combination of linemen.
Those two seniors will be replaced by another round of newcomers. While the
Dawgs might have the "luxury" of using redshirt freshmen instead of
true freshmen this time, the difference in experience is marginal. Where the
line, and even the entire offense, could look to Velasco as a leader, that role
will now fall to sophomores Boling, Davis, and Sturdivant. Vince Vance, a junior
reserve tackle, and senior long snapper Jeff Henson will be the lone upperclassmen
on the line.
» The hype. There’s no escaping it. There will be no going under the radar. Big things will be expected of the Dawgs next year. Expectations are always high at Georgia, but the Dawgs will have the additional glare of the national spotlight. Teams can wilt easily under that pressure. On the other hand, we’ve seen plenty of instances where a team can get full of itself and try to coast on its ranking. Embracing and coming to terms with high expectations will be a key factor of success in 2008.
I think that Mark Richt has had the right attitude so far when asked about high preseason rankings: it’s a good thing. Teams want to be ranked high, and it’s every team’s goal to play for the national title. Why field a team if that opportunity doesn’t excite you? But Richt is quick to caution that a high ranking entitles a team to nothing. Sure enough, Georgia won’t be the only SEC team with a top 10 ranking. If the team approaches the expectations with the right mindset, the hype will be motivation for the offseason. "We got a taste of just how close we might be to getting that ultimate goal," Mark Richt said. "And everybody’s gonna be really working hard toward that end."
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