When I was in elementary school, my mother would tell me
that I was handsome. I was very overweight, I had the worst pair of eye glasses
ever made, and apparently my mother was the only girl on the face of the earth
who thought I was handsome. The thing was, I wanted to believe her. By the time
I got to high school, I realized that my looks weren’t going to take me very
far, but that my overwhelming wit and charm would have to be my ticket. Thus, I
write this blog very infrequently.
The old saying goes that the first step to fixing a problem
is admitting that you have one.
No, I haven’t decided to start writing about my personal
thoughts on life, because I am sure that would chase away both of the
non-family members that read this.
Georgia football has a problem, and we need to be honest
about it for a couple of reasons. First, I desperately want to enjoy the
upcoming football season. Without proper expectations, enjoying your favorite team
is impossible. If you cheer for Vanderbilt, then you can’t expect to win a
national title, or else you are just setting yourself up for certain failure.
Second, without recognizing the reality of where the program
is, and quite frankly, where the program has been, we won’t be able to truly
appreciate where the program goes next.
Finally, without recognizing the mistakes of the past few
seasons, we as a fan base, are doomed to repeat those mistakes again in 2017.
Ok, so I have laid the foundation, maybe even made you laugh
a little with that first paragraph, and now is the time where I have to make
you a little, or maybe more than a little sad.
The reality of the Georgia football is this: Georgia is not
and has not been one of the top ten programs in America.
Doesn’t it feel nice to say it out loud. It is like a weight
has been lifted. Go ahead, read that last sentence again and just feel your
anxiety both melt away and build up again like the sound of an oncoming freight
train.
A year and a half ago, when Georgia decided to fire Mark
Richt, I wrote on this blog that Georgia didn’t have to settle for an unproven
assistant coach like Kirby Smart. My argument was that Georgia was not the kind
of program that had to take a chance on a guy who had never been a successful
head coach before.
Not many people responded to that line of thinking, most
notably, Greg McGarity, Georgia’s Athletic Director who hired Smart about four
days after I wrote that blog.
There is a reason that Georgia didn’t go out and hire a
proven head coach, and it is because Georgia isn’t the type of program in
2016/2017 that a proven winner is going to leave his current job for.
Don’t you
think Georgia would have liked to hire Nick Saban, Urban Meyer, Dabo Swinney,
Mark Dantonio, Chip Kelley, or Bob Stoops? Of course they would have. Those
guys have been successful head college football coaches.
Think about it this way, if you are an athlete who tears his
ACL, do you want to go to Dr. James Andrews who has repaired the torn ligaments
of every major athlete in the past 20 years, or do you want to go to someone
who just graduated medical school but has the chance to really make something
out of himself?
You go to James Andrews, of course.
My point isn’t to knock Kirby Smart, only to illustrate the
point, that outside of the state of Georgia and the Bulldog Nation, Georgia isn’t
thought of in the same way as the elite programs in the country.
So why do we think differently? The answer is very simple.
There was a brief time when we were one of the best programs in that nation.
From 2002 to 2007, Georgia’s winning percentage was tied for
6th best in the nation. During that time, Georgia had two SEC
titles, one more SEC title game appearance, and 3 BCS Bowl game appearances.
Additionally, if you count players on the 2007 team, there were 5 first round
draft picks that played for Georgia during that time period, including the number
1 overall pick in Matthew Stafford.
Georgia was on fire as a program and everything was looking
up.
But then everything changed, and the program went back to
where it had been in the five seasons before 2002, a solid Top 25 team, but not
a national power.
I have said many times that the turning point for the
program was the 2008 “Backout” game against Alabama, and I stand by that. I
also believe that no program in America, other than LSU, has suffered more at
the hands of Alabama’s dominance than Georgia.
Alabama has taken players from Georgia any time they want,
and the level of talent at Georgia hasn’t been the same since Saban got to
Alabama.
When you run the numbers from 2008-20016, Georgia ranks 18th
in winning percentage among FBS schools.
18th.
We aren’t a Top 10 program.
Here are some stats that make it worse.
Of the Top 30 teams by winning percentage since 2008,
Georgia is one of only four teams who hasn’t won or played for a national
title, played in the college football playoff, or even played in one of the old
BCS, or one of the new New Year’s 6 bowl games. The other three teams?
Nebraska, BYU, and Navy.
While teams like Auburn and Texas fall behind Georgia in the
win percentage rankings, they have both played for, and Auburn has won a
National title in the last 9 seasons.
Want to hear some of the schools behind Georgia in winning
percentage from 2008-2016 that have accomplished one or more of those feats?
Well I’m going to tell you anyway.
Houston, Cincinnati, Iowa, West Virginia, Northern
Illinois, and Washington.
Read that list again.
One more time, please.
That is where Georgia football is in 2017.
I am, as you may know if you have read this blog before, an
eternal optimist. I have always seen the glass as all the way full, even when Georgia’s
team couldn’t hit water if it fell out of a boat. Because of that, I believe
with all my heart that Georgia is on the right path with Kirby Smart.
Recruiting has improved. Facilities have improved. Energy in
the fan base has improved.
But, until we start winning big games consistently, we are
what we have been: middle of the road at best.
None of us know what 2017 will hold. On paper, Georgia
should contend for the SEC East, but that has been the case every year since
2012, and Georgia hasn’t been back to the SEC title game. If we look back at
2017 as the turning point in the Kirby Smart era, we should know now that Kirby
didn’t come aboard a rocket ship already launched, and ride it to the heavens.
He came aboard a really nice boat that was stranded in the middle of the ocean
for a decade.
If 2017 is another building block, let’s say a 10-3 building
block including a win over Tech and a win in a bowl game, the last thing we
need is the stupid people coming out of their mom’s basement saying we should
fire Kirby.
Georgia isn’t Alabama. Georgia isn’t going to be Alabama by
the end of 2017 or the end of 2018. There will probably never be another run
like Alabama is on right now. Alabama isn’t the standard that we should be
judging the program by.
We should want a National Title. That takes steps. Look at
Clemson. They started going to BCS games consistently in 2013, had to get over
the FSU hurdle in the ACC, lost a title game, and then got their payoff last
season.
Georgia is heading in the right direction, but we should all
be aware of just how high the Dawgs have to climb in order to get where we want
to go.
88 Days until kickoff.
Go Dawgs.
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