No. 9 Georgia Bulldogs will play their eighth game of the season on Saturday, while visiting the South Carolina Gamecocks for a Week 13 competition. The game is scheduled for 7:30 pm ET and will be broadcast on the SEC Network. Georgia defensive lineman Jordan Davis traveled to South Carolina. The defensive striker has not played since the game against Kentucky.
Related: Live football updates from Georgia and South Carolina
Georgia comes from a 31-24 victory, in which quarterback JT Daniels was the star of the game, throwing for 401 yards and four touchdowns. He will start again for the Bulldogs, while they visit 2-6 South Carolina Gamecocks.
Georgia lost to South Carolina last season, when the Gamecocks had a 20-17 loss in Athens. South Carolina will try to do the same on Saturday, with former Georgia offensive coordinator Mike Bobo serving as interim coach.
Georgia-South Carolina Football: TV Channel
The football game between Georgia and South Carolina will be broadcast on the SEC Network. Taylor Zarzour, Matt Stinchcomb and Alyssa Lang will broadcast the game.
Georgia-South Carolina football: playing time
Georgia football game time with South Carolina is 19:30 Eastern Time.
Georgia-South Carolina football: how to watch online
You can watch Georgia’s football match against South Carolina using WatchESPN. You must have a subscription to watch.
Georgia-South Carolina Football: Odds
According to Vegasinsider.com, Georgia is a favorite of 21.5 points against South Carolina. The game over / under is 49.
Georgia-South Carolina Football: Radio
Georgia fans can listen to Georgia’s football game against South Carolina at the 95.5FM WSB or the AM750 WSB.
What Georgia football coach Kirby Smart said about South Carolina
About Smart and Mike Bobo’s family history in coaching that makes them effective at what they do …
“Obviously, you grow up around that. It’s in your DNA. Every coach doesn’t want his son to be a coach, he wants him to be something better – so they end up being a coach anyway, because that’s all they’ve grown up with. My father never discouraged me from training, but he never encouraged me either. From Mike [Bobo] my father would probably say the same thing. When you see it in your parents as it was in our two parents who grew up – Highway 84, South Georgia football, lots of great matches and Friday night being the most important thing in town – it’s just in your DNA. So it was like that for both of us, and we are both competitive people because of our parents ”.
On whether he expects to see South Carolina launch an attack similar to the state of Mississippi against Georgia’s defense …
“You will probably have to ask Mike Bobo what he is going to do, not me. I do not know. Most offensive coordinators – the state of Mississippi is not a big game to watch. If you see defenses the way they play in Mississippi, it doesn’t continue. Like most offensive coordinators we speak to, they don’t even put this game in a meltdown because it is irrelevant, since the defenses they are watching are not the ones they are receiving. That would be a question for him. In terms of what the state of Mississippi did, they were very efficient in their ability to play those standards down. We could have done many things, but the teams that did them were unsuccessful. You have to change, you have to have pitches. We felt that we would be able to stop them. And sometimes we did. In the second half we played the same defenses and stopped them. So we haven’t changed anything, it’s not a magic potion. It is the way we choose to play them, just like many other teams have chosen to play them. It does not make you right, wrong or indifferent. I am very concerned about South Carolina, not the state of Mississippi. “
About the potential of quarterback JT Daniels as he gains more experience …
“We had the same game plan that we really had with the other defenders. I think everyone likes to make a big splash, especially in the media, how much control is the quarterback, how much is the offensive coordinator. The game plan is set up where you run checks, pass checks and have flexibility in protections to redirect things. Nobody is really different in college football in terms of that. Some defenders can control more than others. We will not be limited by what JT can do. We will be limited by what we can do with our offensive line, our tight ends, our receivers and backs, because everything you do with JT, they must also be able to do. You cannot repeat 100 different checks each week. JT understands our system. He has the flexibility to do some things on certain calls and not others. It just depends on how the game is going. If you are running the ball for eight meters per clip, you do not need to attach an RPO. If you are not controlling the ball for a long time, then you put the decision in the hands of the quarterback and sometimes give him more flexibility. But all of this is based on how the game is going and how the game plan is defined. JT is certainly fine with that.
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