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UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FOOTBALL MEDIA CONFERENCE


October 14, 2019


Kirby Smart


Athens, Georgia

KIRBY SMART: I know our guys are excited to get moving forward and get to work on Kentucky which has a physical football team. I thought they did a really good job the other night in their game. A lot of our guys have reached out to me and looking forward to getting together and make sure we have the right kind of practice moving forward. We got really good leadership on the team and I know they're prepared for that. And there's no time sitting back feeling sorry for yourself because you've got good teams each and every week. This is a solid football team that was playing for the east last year. They've had some injuries that have affected them and they've done a tremendous job of running the ball, finding ways to move the ball with different people doing it, and they've got a big front on defense. They had the same thing last year and they've got a lot of guys back. I know our guys will be looking forward to it, as I am, and with that we'll open it up for questions.

Q. Kirby, do you have to have a conversation with your team and say, hey, guys, all of our goals are still in front of us? Do you have that conversation with your guys or do they just know it instinctively?
KIRBY SMART: No. We've had that conversation. We have that conversation in the locker room. This is not the first time we've had to deal with this. Each year we've had to deal with it at different times from different opponents. And they acknowledge that. They understand. Last 20 years or something of the SEC East I don't think a team that's represented the SEC East has been undefeated. Maybe Florida, I think one year they did. But outside of that it just doesn't happen very often. What's more important is that our team gets ready for Kentucky and gets ready to go play than talking about the rest of the year, because we gotta worry about Kentucky.

Q. There's that old football adage, Coach, that you can't let a team beat you twice. As it applies to you guys, how does that go into affect?
KIRBY SMART: It goes into affect on this game. No. 1, you can't turn the ball over. We gotta correct those mistakes, and our guys gotta focus on Kentucky. The most important thing for us is Kentucky. And that's us getting better. And a lot of it has to do with us inherently looking at ourselves and saying, okay, what can I improve upon, but a lot of the things that we can improve upon are based on what Kentucky does, offensively, defensively and special teams, and that's where our focus will be.

Q. Kirby, after the last game, I think a lot of people were taken aback by the lack of physicality and also mistakes which could go to lack of focus. Had you seen any warning signs of that in previous games at all or do you think this was sort of a one-off thing?
KIRBY SMART: No. I don't think I'd seen any warning signs because I really thought we had good practices. The air cooled off. It wasn't as hot. We had really good practices the week of South Carolina. So that's not a major concern. And then you go to the physicality, it's tough because we have measures of being able to run the ball, and our rush efficiency was much higher than it was against say Notre Dame. We rushed the ball more efficient. Efficient is four more on first down, being able to get what you need short yardage. We won both short yardage situations. Goal line, we won the goal line situation. They weren't long carries, but when it's goal to goal one or third and one and you get the yards, it makes you efficient. Rush average was down, and that's an important stat for us, but rush efficiency for us has been something that's been indicative of success. We've never been an efficient rushing team by what we measure it and lost a game since we've been here, which tells me that we were able to run the ball efficiently; we didn't protect the ball, and that in the end didn't cost us.

Q. How about the mistakes on focus?
KIRBY SMART: I don't think that we had a major lack of focus there. I don't think that was the case at all. I thought the guys' focus was tuned in. I thought in pregame warmups, for me, I want to see more physicality, more get going. I thought that had a little bit to do with the early start, getting them going in the locker room. But there was good preparation, good leadup. Really felt good about that. And give South Carolina credit, they had a lot of it. But, again, the focus for us better be on Kentucky, because you can't let South Carolina beat you twice.

Q. On the tempo of the offense.
KIRBY SMART: Yeah. We tried to do that several times Saturday, and when we did that, didn't feel like we were very effective. No. 1, they played us differently when we tried to go faster. And if you look at the game's outlook overall, probably the toughest thing for us is, number one, turnovers. In the SEC, do a study, four and 0 in turnover margin, you're not going to win, period. I mean it doesn't happen. So let's start with that.

Number two, lack of explosive plays, which we've struggled with a little bit. We're not getting explosive plays. Even our runs, we're getting runs, good runs, 10 yards or more, but we're not getting explosive runs, which are longer because there's a lot of people in the box. We're not getting explosive passes. We had a few, but not enough.

So we did not win two-minute. Look at this year what we've been great at, we didn't win two-minute before the half twice, and then we didn't win two-minute at the end of the game. So there was three two-minutes in that game, which is very unique. We really didn't win any of the three of them. And that's one of our big goals is to win two-minute. Every game up until that it seemed like, we had either won defensively before the half or we'd won offensively, and we didn't do that. So those are the three biggest things that we gotta improve on, and we'll continue to work on.

Q. Kirby, are there lessons you can draw from previous regular-season losses like 20-17 Auburn last year against LSU and apply to this week?
KIRBY SMART: Well, the similarity in LSU is the four turnovers. I mean, you turn the ball over four times, and you get zero, which is maybe -- it's just as big of a concern as turning it over four times is getting zero. You gotta find a way to get tips and overthrows when the ball is in the air. You gotta find a way to knock a ball off somebody, to get a strip-sack fumble. You know what I mean? You gotta get some turnovers, and we learn from those lessons each and every time we have them, and I feel very confident in the leadership of this team that they'll respond the right way. They did that in the locker room the other day. And they'll handle that the right way.

Q. On the decision not to kick the field goal...
KIRBY SMART: Absolutely not. Has nothing to do with it. Has to do with normal football. No coach in his right mind with eight seconds thinks he can't get another play off. We do it every single Thursday, every single Friday. We script it. We've done it with seven seconds. We've actually done it with six ever since the Florida halftime deal where we had a chance to get another play in, Florida with it being a really short, condensed area, because that was like on the goal line. And, plus, we're going to trust our quarterback to make a good decision there and allow us to have a field goal to kick afterwards, so no doubts, no questions. Nothing there.

Q. On the challenges of facing Lynn Bowden...
KIRBY SMART: He's extremely athletic. I tell you what, the guy does a phenomenal job. I think their staff does a great job of using his skill set. And you think when he's back there he's not going to throw it, but it becomes harder to defend him because you let the pass creep out of your mind and then he hits two or three big passes. They've got a major matchup factor on the outside in a really big wideout. They've got tight ends that run pop passes when you play certain coverages. They just do a really good job. And he's hard to tackle. And they've been one of the best rushing teams in our league for a while because of Benny Snell, and now they're finding other ways to use it with Lynn. I mean, the management they had the other time with him back there, he creates a different type football game. It's very different when you look at third down with him having the option to run or throw. He creates a difficult defending mechanism.

Q. Kirby, what about strategy in general? Obviously you go back and review all the mistakes that players make during the game. What about yourself? I mean how do you feel like you've done in strategy as a coach? You're still a relatively new coach, and are there some decisions from the South Carolina game, and specifically besides the field goal maybe that you might have done a little different in retrospect?
KIRBY SMART: Nothing from the South Carolina game perspective. Looking back, we do self-analysis all the time. The biggest thing was the two two-minutes before the halves that we had an opportunity to score. We've been really productive in those. We've been really aggressive in those and done well. And we ended up with a long field goal opportunity before the half that ended up getting blocked that Rod might be able to make, might not. But we thought we managed those really well.

We have analytics group that sends us information every week, and it's the same thing with that. The only consideration that we have is sometimes when to burn timeouts strategy wise. And philosophically, we go meet with people. We met with NFL teams. We met with SEC officials before the season. When you get a first down, do you call a timeout or do you not, because sometimes they're going to burn four seconds on you regardless. So a couple times we've had first downs this year that we've had an abundance of timeouts, which means we're managing our timeouts right to even have them to use late in the half, late in the game and you gotta make a choice on whether you use it after a first down, because some people would say, well, I'll just clock it or I'll just run a quick play, which at Alabama we had a philosophy of run a quick play sometimes, but that burns more time than possibly calling a timeout where you'd go to the half with timeouts. And we've had some situations in the past where we did that. So felt very comfortable how we used those. We just gotta be more effective and efficient in two-minute, and that's really been one of our strengths, not one of our weaknesses.

Q. With the offensive line, how much has that group been hurt or hindered by the rotation of guys and injuries? And is there any update on Solomon Kindley and Justin Shaffer?
KIRBY SMART: Yeah. Shaffer will be out this week. I don't know. He'll be week to week following this week. Don't know when we'll get him back.

Solomon is dinged up. We think he's going to be able to go this week, think he'll be able to play. He's going to be struggling a little bit today. He'll probably be rehabbing some.

Ben Cleveland is a little beat up. There was some time the other day where he was unable to go and ended up being able to finish the game for us. We got a couple other guys that are beat and banged up, but everybody in the SEC does.

Q. Kirby, how is the moral of your coaching staff, since you really haven't met with the players since Saturday? And then what's the key to extending offensively and for those receivers to sort of kind of get some separation?
KIRBY SMART: Yeah, I think number one thing is getting some opportunities to do that. Our staff is great. Look, our coaching staff has been through this before. There's not a coach on there that hasn't lost a game. So you understand that that's part of the game. And you give the other team credit; you move on. You don't let it beat you twice. We are very technical in our process of these are the things that we can do better. But these are the things we did well.

Just like when we win, we go back and show them the things we didn't do well, and I think that's really important to your players and your team that your coaches are consistent. So each time we've come in this team meeting room and we've said, hey, guys, we won the game, but this is the things we didn't do well, just like we're going to say we didn't win the game and these are some things that we did do well. All right. And we gotta grow on those and we gotta get better at the things we didn't. And we'll be consistent with our message.

Q. On extending offensively...
KIRBY SMART: Yeah, extending offensively, we had pretty good protection. We had three sacks. Everybody's like, oh, protection broke down, did terrible. Go back and watch those three plays. There's five for five. We got five linemen blocking five guys. They block them for three-and-a-half, four seconds; that's more than your average. We gotta find some guys that can get open, that can win one-on-one, that can create separation and do a good job, and then Jake ultimately has gotta be the guy that controls it, whether he throws it away, eats it and runs with it, which he did the other day, and makes good decisions with the ball.

Q. On Jake throwing the ball in the middle of the field...
KIRBY SMART: No. That's not the case at all. Jake's had some really good throws over the middle. Some of his best throws have been over the middle. I don't know where that comes from or where it would come from. There were some throws on the perimeter that weren't great throws, ones he'd like to have back, but it's not like he's not throwing it over the middle on that. Teams play us different ways. Some people play two-man where they take away inside leverage. Some people just play man-to-man where they take outside leverage.

He knows that. He sees it every day from us, so a lot of the routes are predicated by how people are playing us, but he's not not throwing it to the inside or not throwing it to the outside based on the ability to be comfortable.

Q. On the illegal formation and Cager's availability to play with injury...
KIRBY SMART: Yeah, I don't know if Cager is going to be able to play. He's probably out this week. We don't know that for sure. We're going to see. He's dealing with more than a shoulder now. He's got another injury that happened Saturday, so he may not be able to play. We're not sure yet. We'll see.

As far as the play, it was one that we changed at the line, and the two guys moved late, and we snapped the ball probably a little bit early.

But, again, guys, we're going to Kentucky. We're focused on Kentucky. Out of respect for our team, understand we're focused on Kentucky for our players. And we'll grow and develop from the loss. Don't get me wrong. I'm not trying to bury that hatchet. We got things we gotta do better. We gotta protect the ball. But we're focused on Kentucky.

Q. Kirby, big picture, your assessment of James Coley to this point as an offensive coordinator. And also, in general, how much do you sort of immerse yourself in offense and how much of his play calling is influenced by basically what you want or something maybe you say to him in headphones?
KIRBY SMART: Yeah, we're definitely looking forward to Kentucky right now. That's the biggest concern we've got, and we're going to focus on that. I think the most important part of an offense is scoring points, and that's the most important thing. Now, how do I get to those points? Do I get to them through explosive plays? Do I get them through long, methodical drives, which has so far been our MO. That's been the identity we have, of long, methodical drives, and we've had some really good long, methodical drives.

At the end of the day we're all judged by, number one, how do I score points, how do I protect the ball and how explosive can I be, and that's what we're focused on.

Q. Before Dom Blaylock goes out there to catch a punt, do you tell him ahead of time fair catch this or return it or do you let him decide that while the ball is in the air?
KIRBY SMART: Good question. We don't do that, but unfortunately, there's times where we play in safe, where we play in a prevent mode of fake alert based on who they send in the game or based on the down and distance in the game that he is, he has to fair catch it, and we had several of them that we were in safe the other day where he's not protected, meaning we're not holding people up for him, and so he can't just abandon it and try to return it on his own.

So we weren't able to set up a lot of returns, which goes back to our third down. Defensively third down, we won third downs, statistically looks great. We had really good success on third down. We made our goal, 70 percent, but we didn't hold them to third-and-long long enough to where we got to return the ball on fourth down. There's a lot of times that they were in the 50-yardline range that they're are in fake mode and we want to be as safe as we can to get possession of the ball and not be able to return it. And that had a lot with Dom having to fair catch it. It's not a matter of him wanting to.

Q. About the offensive line...
KIRBY SMART: Well, I think you talk about it all the time. I think saying that, when you go back and watch the tape and you see the rush efficiency, meaning the efficiency with which we rush for, which means four more on first down, half of second down what you need, and third down you have to get it, we were rush efficient. And we've had some games this year where we haven't been rush efficient, and we were. So there's some positive there for the O Line.

Protection, I think the first thing you look at is the three sacks. But two of those three were pretty good protection, we got covered. So it's a team event, and I think that's what you go to mostly.

The biggest thing for our guys will be can they block Kentucky, can they move Kentucky, can they create movement to create some explosive runs. Can we block on the perimeter well enough that a 12-yard run is a 50-yard run because we've got pretty good backs to do that with. We've opened up a lot of 10- to 12-yard runs. We haven't had the explosives that we need greater than 12.

Q. What's the key to defensively going against an athletic quarterback? And then how is Tyson? Any news on his injury?
KIRBY SMART: Yeah. Tyson feels like he's almost back. He just has not been able to -- he can run, plant, point, drive, but the pressure, the torque it takes to hit someone and drive off of it where he's feeling somebody's pressure, that's what he's struggling with. And it's a long, slow injury, guys. I mean when you talk to everybody across the country, there's nothing you can do to speed that up. So I don't know, because I don't know if he'll be back. Last time I got to see him was during warmups, and he was getting closer. So I'll see.

As far as dealing with an athletic quarterback, it's very different because they add an extra hat to the box. So every single play where you say, man, you all got a good rush defense or, man, you stopped this guy, this guy can take off running at any time he wants on a drop-back pass and the six or seven guys in the box might not have a chance to tackle him, because he's extremely athletic. He's a receiver, a great athlete, a really good athlete playing quarterback which creates a new dynamic for us.

Q. On the wide receivers getting open...
KIRBY SMART: I think it's always a combination of both. You're looking for man-to-mans to stay on the run. Can you get off of press coverage? Can you separate? What kind of style defense are you going against? Is it more zone or more man? And each one of those is really important, and it's important for our wideouts to be able to create separation for Jake. It's important for Jake to see separation to feel confident and to be able to throw it.

Q. I think you said after the game about wanting to help your players, put them in better position offensively.
KIRBY SMART: Everywhere, defense and special teams. Everything.

Q. What kind of ideas come to mind with that? And regarding the receivers or even offensive line, I know you guys deal with injuries, but is there any benefit to shorting in the rotations at all to go with your most effective players?
KIRBY SMART: Rotations of what?

Q. Wideout, offensive linemen.
KIRBY SMART: Offensive line we were forced to. I don't know if you're aware of the injuries we've been dealing with, so there's not a lot of choice. If a guy can't go -- you can't play with four. So you have to put another guy in. So there's not really a rotation going on on the offensive line. The only rotation has been Ben and Cade for the most part. Everything else has been injury driven for us.

As far as wideouts, nobody plays three wideouts. Most people we play play six to seven, and right now we're playing six to seven, and we'd like to keep those guys fresh as possible. Especially in a game that you're going two-minute three times, you want to keep guys fresh and try to do that. Thanks.

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

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