Georgia vs. Texas Preview Article/Discussion Thread

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Georgia vs. Texas SEC Championship Game Betting Picks

Georgia Bulldogs vs. Texas Longhorns
Saturday, December 7, 2024 at 4 p.m. ET at Mercedes-Benz Stadium

The First Meeting


These two teams played each other on October 19 in Texas. Georgia won 30-15.

Georgia might seem appealing because it won in Texas.

But, given the way in which Georgia won, location did not matter.

As we saw when Kentucky physically overwhelmed Ole Miss in Mississippi, physical advantages persist regardless of location.

The Bulldogs were too physical for Texas, which is why many folks, after the game, were talking about how difficult it must be for the Longhorns to adjust to SEC football. SEC teams are notoriously more physical than teams in Texas' previous conference, the Big 12.

My point here is that Georgia did not win, because it has some kind of talent or matchup-related advantage over Texas, but because the game took place in October and Georgia happened to be Texas' first real test in the SEC.

Texas' Improved Physicality

We are now in December. Since that game in October, the Longhorns have become a substantially more physical team. They have grown to the point where we cannot simply expect what happened in October to repeat itself.

This growth, this improved physicality was evident in Texas' win over Texas A&M last week.

Rather than relying on trick plays or other forms of cuteness, the Longhorns asserted themselves physically in a way that they could not have done in October.

Improved Ground Game

The Longhorns, objectively speaking, do have a high-caliber offensive line, although its lack of physicality made it appear feeble against Georgia's front.

My point here is that the talent is (and has been) there. Texas is a Joe Moore Award semifinalist — this award is given to the nation's top offensive line.

Because Texas has become much more physical, its offensive line is displaying greater productivity in alignment with its level of talent.

When the Longhorns lost to Georgia, they almost had as many yards. They'll have more yards this time because their rush attack has become more productive.

Whereas their running back, Quintrevion Wisner, is averaging five YPC on the season, he averaged 6.1 and 5.6 YPC in his last two games, respectively.

He amassed 158 rushing yards against Kentucky and 186 against Texas A&M.

Georgia's Vulnerable Run Defense

Without exhibiting the physical advantage that it did in October, Georgia's defense will be exposed for what it is: a unit that has declined significantly relative to its quality in recent years.

Most recently, the Bulldogs allowed 260 rushing yards to Georgia Tech. Their run defense ranks middle-of-the-road overall.

Georgia's Porous Pass Defense

They are even worse in pass defense largely because of their issues with pass coverage.

A lot of opposing wide receivers get lots of room to operate against Georgia's secondary.

These are not only Alabama's wide receivers who thrive against the Bulldogs' secondary, but even lower-caliber competition, like the offenses of Mississippi State and UMass, achieve numerous big plays against Georgia both on the ground and through the air.

In the offseason, the Bulldogs lost significant talent in their secondary as well as their defensive backs coach. They clearly haven't recovered from these losses.

Texas' Weapons

The Longhorns are stacked with pass-catchers.

It says everything that Silas Bolden, who partly due to his elite speed was Oregon State's leading wide receiver last year before transferring to Texas, is one of the Longhorns' lesser options.

With the likes of Isaiah Bond, as well, Texas has tremendous speed in its pass-catching group, which helps it achieve big plays at a relatively high rate.

Efficient quarterback Quinn Ewers has the accuracy especially in the short and intermediate passing game to help his pass-catching weapons sustain drives.

Georgia Can't Keep Pace

A lot of pressure will be on Georgia quarterback Carson Beck because Georgia's rush attack is so inefficient. The Bulldogs rank toward the bottom in rushing yards per game.

Beck will face his toughest test of the season against Texas' top-ranked pass defense, which features both one of the top pass rushes and one of the best secondaries.

Intelligent scheming gets credit here. So does player talent. For example, Texas's Jahdae Barron has been lauded by PFF as an elite-rated cornerback.

Beck has also been notoriously inconsistent, which is most apparent in his team's tendency to start slow — last week, Georgia Tech led 17-0 at halftime — which will be problematic against a
team that, with its elite pass defense, is tough to come from behind against and that, with its improved physicality, will not gift Georgia good field position like it did in October.

His wide receivers let him down with poor route-running and drops, but he also makes bad decisions, which is leading him to throw a lot of interceptions.

Takeaway

The rematch will play out differently because Texas has acclimated itself to SEC competition by becoming more physical.

Georgia won't bully Texas this time around, so it will simply be outmatched.

Texas has the improved ground game and pass-catching weapons to exploit Georgia's weaknesses on defense.

The Longhorns are too tough against the pass for Beck to have a decent game, yet Beck won't be able to count on his rush attack for support.

Best Bet: Texas -2.5 at -115 with BetOnline
 
Probably makes sense to have this be the SEC Championship Game thread rather than start another one. I'll do a bowls/playoff thread next week.

I'm torn on this one. I thought Sark would have had a great gameplan the first time to take advantage of a lesser UGA defense than years past, and that's not what happened at all. I was correct in thinking that Beck could be a liability, but the defense overcame the turnovers.

I think I'm going to end up on UGA here. For one, even though I think they are in no matter what, Kirby can sell that they could be left out if they lose. And the main reason, and something I said in the preseason, is that UGA has played a really tough schedule that has prepared them for this game and the ones in the CFP way better than their schedules over the last 4 years. In those seasons, they cruised until they finally ran into a team that could hang with them talent-wise and they struggled to find an answer (Alabama '21 and '23, Ohio St '22). This year there will be no shock to the system. It won't be a true road environment, so I expect Beck to play a cleaner game than he did at Alabama, Texas, and Ole Miss. I do think the matchup favors both defenses, but I'm not really interested in the under due to the fact that both QBs can be loose with the football. Should be a pretty good game with all the talent on the field.

I do wonder if in this game, and the B1G champ game, with both teams pretty much assured of a spot in the CFP regardless, do we see a difference in how the game is managed? More of a late season NFL type game? I think conference championships are still important, but these coaches will be judged based on national championships, not SEC ones. Do they play more vanilla? Or keep out dinged up starters? Interested in seeing the unintended consequences of playoff expansion, if any
 
Georgia has seen this game so many times and has already beaten the Horns so I think both make it a tougher coaching job for Smart. On whether you manage it differently, I firmly believe that Sarkisian wants this game badly. It's a legacy cementer going into the SEC in season 1 and wining a conference championship. I think he coaches the game as if a FF or even (nat'l) championship game.

After seeing how Ga Tech and King consistently beat Georgia on the zone read I'll be shocked if Sarkisian doesn't put together a like package for Manning in this game. Not only will I be shocked but I'll also be pissed. On QBs overall Ewers still makes me uncomfortable. Nothing's going to change with that, injured or not.

Really interested to see the crowd split. The 75 mile drive from Athens will most benefit GA of course but I'm guessing it's still only 60/40 Dogs. Our fans are going to travel for this one.
 
Ugh...Laughable coaching by the Horns.

- Haynes King toyed with Georgia on the zone read, just a week ago. With marginal talent. Toyed with them. Perfect fit for Manning and his legs tonight, should have seen 10 - 15 snaps minimum. Not at all, for whatever reason. Some else can ask. Stupidity.

- Georgia scrub backup QB thrown into a bad situation at the half. He's taking notes with 2 minutes left in the 1H, talking to his girlfriend and clueless. Okay. Fucking blitz his ass over and over from the get-go, you have elite DBs to secure Georgia's marginal WRs. No. Instead, let the shit QB get comfortable off the bat in the 2H for the key drive in the game. We saw what happened to this guy deep in the 4Q when pressured. Hindsight, DC, you dumb fuck. Earn your money.

- Special teams....coach Banks...place kicking, pathetic punting, a fake punt that decided the game. Dear lord.
 
Ugh...Laughable coaching by the Horns.

- Haynes King toyed with Georgia on the zone read, just a week ago. With marginal talent. Toyed with them. Perfect fit for Manning and his legs tonight, should have seen 10 - 15 snaps minimum. Not at all, for whatever reason. Some else can ask. Stupidity.

- Georgia scrub backup QB thrown into a bad situation at the half. He's taking notes with 2 minutes left in the 1H, talking to his girlfriend and clueless. Okay. Fucking blitz his ass over and over from the get-go, you have elite DBs to secure Georgia's marginal WRs. No. Instead, let the shit QB get comfortable off the bat in the 2H for the key drive in the game. We saw what happened to this guy deep in the 4Q when pressured. Hindsight, DC, you dumb fuck. Earn your money.

- Special teams....coach Banks...place kicking, pathetic punting, a fake punt that decided the game. Dear lord.
Absolutely spot on observation. Watching this gm was thinking many of the same points you stated
 
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