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UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FOOTBALL MEDIA CONFERENCE


October 7, 2019


Kirby Smart


Athens, Georgia

KIRBY SMART: All right. It's on to South Carolina, who I've been very impressed with. I think they're playing a lot better. They've gotten better throughout the year, you can tell from Game 1 to Game 2. They're healthier, number one. They've got a lot of guys playing at a high level.

Got a lot of respect for the way Will runs the program. I think they're doing a really good job. Both coordinators really get after you. They put pressure on you in three phases -- offense, defense, and special teams. They do a great job up front. Defensively, they've got a lot of big guys and a lot more big bodies than they've had in the past, and they're healthy.

Offensively, they've got one of the best wide receivers that I've seen on tape in Bryan Edwards. He does a very good job. Hilinski is a very talented quarterback. We recruited him hard here. He's got extreme arm talent. He can make all the throws. And they're doing a lot of things that are tough to defend offensively, and they put pressure on you from a special teams standpoint.

So, an exciting game. I want to challenge our fans, who have always responded to challenges, to get in your seats early and get ready for an early kickoff. Our guys will need that support, and we'll need the crowd noise and the impact that we had in the Notre Dame game, we'll need that same thing going against a young quarterback. With that, I'll open it up.

Q. Kirby, after the game the other night, Jake talked about some teams just like to light up the scoreboard and all that, and there are some teams at the top of the country that do seem to have like pinball machine offenses. You're coming off a very efficient game as far as yards per play and time of possession and all that stuff, but are you happy with the offense, or is there a lack of big play potential compared to some other offenses out there?
KIRBY SMART: Am I happy with the offense? Yeah, I'm happy with what we've been able to do, sustain drives. Do we want to be more explosive? Yes, we want to be more explosive. I think we're always looking. We have a goal of 1 of every 8 plays to be explosive. In this game, we were 1.1 out of 8.3, so we missed our goal offensively of being explosive. That's our standard. That's not -- some teams may have they want 1 out of every 5, but we want 1 out of every 8 plays is our goal, and we were 1 out of 8.3. So we just missed it.

In some of that, they did a good job of. You take one or two blocks downfield and one more play is explosive, and you make that goal. But we're always looking to improve, and the same thing with defense. We're trying to not give up explosives.

Q. The last two games, defense played really well in the third quarter. What is it that's allowed the strong performance after halftime? And does it reflect more on the adjustments you guys make as coaches or players' ability to respond to those strategic changes?
KIRBY SMART: Settling down, I think. Playing and understanding what the team is trying to do to us. Maybe we've got to do a better job as coaches of preparing them early in the game. I think, when you're a good defense, I do think that you don't see the same things.

So what happens is, in the history of the really good defenses I've been with, you go into a game expecting one thing, and the other team has worked really hard to try to counteract that and get off tendencies to do different things. You see different stuff because they're trying to generate plays against you, and that's been the case for us, but we've got to do a better job starting off for sure.

Q. Coach, Will Muschamp was asked yesterday about his friendship with you. Could you just elaborate on Will's role when you were here and how you guys have been able to maintain a friendship throughout the changes in your coaching careers.
KIRBY SMART: Yeah, it was not like a close relationship when we were here because he was a fifth year senior captain and I was a redshirt freshman that we were really in two different places. I mean, he was good to me, but it wasn't like we had a friendship. We were at two different spots in our career.

Where we became closer was the opportunity he gave me to come to Valdosta State, and we worked together there, and then we worked together at LSU, and those two years we spent in the same staff, we probably bonded more than we did while we were here.

But he's always been a very intense coach, good football coach. I think he does a good job running the program, and that has allowed us to share information when possible, when it's not about scheme and it's more about philosophy, but he has been a good friend. I've got a lot of respect for him.

Q. Kirby, thinking back on the offensive explosive ability, the (indiscernible) of Jake's completion percentage to wonder about him throwing it downfield, but not seeing y'all's 22, are those shots not there a lot?
KIRBY SMART: When you said "not seeing y'all's 22" --

Q. 22, the team.
KIRBY SMART: I got you, the whole picture.

Q. What is the whole picture there? Is it the safeties just taking away the deep shots, or he's just very adept at hitting the balls that are there?
KIRBY SMART: No, he's taken some shots, and we've hit some. I mean, we take shots in practice. He has progressions that he reads, and he goes through his progressions, and he looks for the right throws. I don't know that it's all about -- being explosive is a lot of things. It's blocking downfield. It's winning one-on-ones. It's speed, vertical speed versus horizontal speed. There's a lot of things combined in that.

I mean, just look at us defensively in reverse and say, okay, what have we given up explosive? Well, two of our explosives are busts. One was against a team that came in. We gave up the play early in against -- was it Murray, I think it was? Or Arkansas - it was Murray. So we gave up a big play in that game off of a bust and then give up a really big explosive last week getting off of a bust.

So, some of that is mistakes where he's going to capitalize on those errors if he gets those opportunities, but we haven't had a lot of busts in coverage where they left a guy free or somebody just messed up. George had an explosive where he won one-on-one outside. Those are the ways you get an opportunity to get those explosives down the field, but it's not a matter of him not reading it correctly or us not calling it because a lot of times the progression is deep to short or short to deep or across the board, and he does a good job of finding the right guy with the ball.

Q. Kirby, what do you remember about coaching Thomas Brown as a player, and what was that season like for you to coach on the offensive side of the ball in 2005?
KIRBY SMART: Thomas was one of the hardest working players we had in that room. I had a really good room of running backs. There were four or five really good backs. Kregg Lumpkin, Danny Ware, Tyson Browning, Thomas Brown. There was good backs in that room, and he was probably the hardest working, quietest guy that came to work every day, extremely physical and explosive for his size. He's just a great leader, great person.

He continues to be that way as a coach. What was the second part?

Q. You've been obviously a defensive assistant. That year on offense, what did you learn?
KIRBY SMART: I think coaching the running backs was more than just effort. It was psychology. It was management. You got four guys in the room that all want the ball. Protection, protection of the ball, and protection of the quarterback was an ultimate goal, but it was a good experience for me to see how offenses think about things.

I think that was probably one of the most valuable years of my career because I looked at it through the eyes of an offensive staff -- Callaway, Bubba, Coach Rick -- of how they analyze a defense and how they see thing.

Q. Coach, do you have an update on Jordan Davis, how you guys might manage his practice workload? Also, after he left the game early Saturday, after watching the tape, what are the things you're able to see about the impact he has on the defensive line? Like what's the difference when he's not out there?
KIRBY SMART: To be honest, I didn't see a huge difference when he wasn't out there because the things he impacts are the run game, and we were able to control the run game pretty well. The play he was in there, we actually had a run came out. We would play a run right early when he was in there and fit it more right as the game went on.

We think Jordan is going to be fine. He's not going to be out there today early on. He's going to be rehabbing when you guys are out there, but he's going to be fine to go. We expect him to be able to play.

Q. After five plays, where do you see Brian Herrien from the off-season to where he is now?
KIRBY SMART: I think the confidence -- Brian -- I don't know that it's major improvement. The Brian that I'm seeing now is the Brian I've always seen. The difference is you guys are seeing him. You say, why didn't he play? The guys that are in the NFL is the reason he didn't play. Brian has been perfectly capable. And when he got that opportunity, he seizes his opportunity the times he got in the past. He's just getting more opportunity now.

I think his vision, his decision-making, he catches the ball well out of the backfield. He runs really hard. I mean, he runs physical and explosive. To be honest with you, he practices that way. So, when he goes out to practice, he doesn't treat practice different than a game. I think those practice habits have allowed him to be successful in games. It's just you guys are getting able to see it now.

Q. To follow up on that, can you talk about the continued emergence of depth at running back, particularly with Zamir White?
KIRBY SMART: I don't see it as an emergence. I see it as it's kind of been there. When you say what's the deepest position on our team, you would probably argue that running back is the deepest position. Those guys compete really hard in practice. They work for their reps. We thought Zamir had some really good work last week. His protections have just become where he's really physical in his protections. He's one of our best pass protectors. So he's earned that right and that trust to get out there, and we're pleased with his growth, and he's added more depth.

I mean, he started on punt return in this game. He did more things in this game than he's done in the past. With him, and Kenny is showing up more and more on special teams for us. He's figured out that that's an opportunity for him to gain trust, and he's done that. So those guys are working really hard.

Q. Kirby, you're going from one, facing one true freshman quarterback to another, and I know you had true freshmen in '16 and '17 here starting for you, and I think Alabama, 5 of their 8 games could be against true freshmen quarterbacks in the SEC. Are you surprised by that number? And is there -- it seems like you don't want quarterbacks to lose the game and that you need them to be game managers early on. When you get to the midpoint of the season -- and I know moo was just making his first start last week, but when freshmen quarterbacks get to the midpoint of the season, do you feel more comfortable putting more stuff on them?
KIRBY SMART: Yeah, I think it's a trend you're going to see because, number one, they're getting hit more. So there's a chance of injury. They're running more, so there's a greater chance of injury. So you're seeing backups who happen to be true freshmen because quarterbacks don't usually stay the long haul and they leave, so you're seeing more backups, but you're also seeing more talented freshmen arrive.

This young man is talented. This young man has a talented arm strength. He can make all the throws. To see him go in the games he went in -- I mean, just look at the Alabama tape. He went out and played against one of the elite defenses in the country and spun the ball as good as anybody. He's got a great release. He's got intuition on throws. Very instinctive. He's going to be a really good player in this league for a long time, in my opinion.

Q. Is there an update on Tyson Campbell, Solomon Kindley? Did everybody else come out of the game healthy?
KIRBY SMART: Tyson will be trying to go today. I don't know much, so I haven't seen him since the game or since we left for the game. He didn't go. We're hoping to get him back, but we don't know. I'll know more by the end of the week. Then Solomon should be good. He's cleared to go today. We thought, if he had to go in the game, he would have been able to go. So we have him practicing today.

I don't think there's anything else outside of Jordan that we talked about. I don't think there's anything else?

Q. Is Rochester okay?
KIRBY SMART: Yeah, Julian played well. He came in and has just been practicing. We've been grooming him to get him ready and get him in the rotation and felt like it was the time to do it. He'll get opportunities to continue doing that if he continues to do everything he's supposed to do and work hard in practice, if he continues to do that. The biggest thing is we've got to get some quickness and production out of those guys. That's what we're hoping he can help with.

Q. Going back to Brian Herrien, you've known him so long. He's a guy that's gone through a lot. In a time where people look for greener pastures out there when they're not playing a lot, is that a guy that you kind of pull for a little more when he has a successful game like he did the other day?
KIRBY SMART: I mean, I pull for all of our guys. The guys that practice hard and go out there and play, you want them to be successful just like you do anybody else. He works hard. You can say he's been patient, but he's been a contributor in every way. I mean, the guy has played almost every role on every special teams. He's first in line when we do stuff for special teams. I've seen him carry the ball plenty in practices and know that he's talented enough.

I don't think you look for greener pastures at Georgia. You continue to work and get better because the green pasture is what the O-line opens up. I mean, they open up green pastures for you to have the ability to run, and you're not looking to run away from here and run away from a good physical O-line where you get the opportunity to carry the ball.

Q. Looking at numbers those defenses made when they shut down opposing running backs, how would you assess the defensive line in stopping the run?
KIRBY SMART: You know, we haven't fit things real well all the time. We haven't tackled the way we're supposed to, especially in space, and some of that comes off the passing game, but we have to play better in space. We have to be a better tackling team. That comes from perimeter runs from running backs. So I'm not pleased with how we have played, as far as contact and contact toughness. We have to improve on that and get better because that's a hole when you watch football in general, tackling tends to go downhill as the season goes, and we can't let that happen. A lot of that starts with our defensive line, controlling it from getting out of there.

Q. When you go up against a coach that was formerly on your staff or a former coordinator, how difficult is it to game plan around what that coach knows going into the game?
KIRBY SMART: Are you talking about last week's?

Q. Yes.
KIRBY SMART: Talking about Tennessee's with Coach Chaney. Yeah, I'm worried about South Carolina right now. I've forgotten about that totally. They did a really good job. Got a lot of respect for those guys and how hard their kids played, but I'm worried about South Carolina right now.

Q. With Zamir White, it looks like you guys got him involved early throughout the game. How is he handling the ins and outs of the game both physically and mentally where there might be a week like against Notre Dame where he doesn't have a carry and then he gets pretty involved in Tennessee?
KIRBY SMART: How is he handling it mentally?

Q. Yeah, sort of the wear and tear of the season.
KIRBY SMART: Zamir's physically -- our kids lift, run, practice every day. There's probably more wear and tear on a Tuesday, Wednesday practice than there are sometimes in games. I think the psychological part of knowing and understanding what my role is in the game, and not every game's the same. I mean, you just don't know. So part of being a good football player is I'm ready to go when my number's called.

I tell the guys all the time, because you prepare well in practice doesn't guarantee you'll play, but if you don't prepare well in practice, it guarantees you won't. So that goes perfect for Zamir. He prepares properly and gets ready. It doesn't guarantee that he'll play. He deserves to, and I want him to, but it doesn't guarantee he'll play. But if he doesn't do those things, it will guarantee he won't. He's handled that well. He prepares and gets ready to play.

He prepared getting ready for Notre Dame just like he did getting ready for Tennessee. It wasn't different. It was just us making sure it happened and also him preparing to take advantage of the opportunity and practicing the right way so that we know he's ready.

Q. Coach, South Carolina is coming off an off week, and you've got several opponents that are coming off off weeks. What do you make of that, number one? I guess it's something you have no control of. What are the realities of it when teams have an extra week to prepare and you don't?
KIRBY SMART: Well, it's a reality that you deal with, kind of like the kickoff time. You don't have control over it. You take it, and you go, and you do the best job you can with it. In a two off-week year, I found, it seems like, obviously, there's more opportunities just statistically for that to happen. So when there's a two off-week season, which there is this year, there's more that have that chance of happening.

You worry about it as a coach, but it's something you can't control. So when you can't control t you just move on and say, hey, maybe we didn't start good defensively last week because we were off the week before. Sometimes there's some roughs there, and sometimes playing in a game is good for you. You get to grow and develop. I do think the healing part is helpful and getting fresher, recovery time. Those things are probably beneficial for the team that's off, but at the end of the day, you've got to go out there and play the game, and everybody's playing the same number of games.

Q. Coach, what are your thoughts about promoting a player, or in your case, players, for Heisman. When will that campaign Hot Rod for Heisman begin?
KIRBY SMART: I'm ready to start now. I mean, Hot Rod does a great job. He does everything he's asked. He's a great leader for our team, and he's very consistent. He has an approach to the game and an approach to his method of doing things that is unique to him. He believes in it.

We trust him a lot, and he's been a tremendous leader, you know, just in this room with our team because people see how hard Rod works. So it's an honor to have him on here, and he works really hard.

Q. So in terms of players on your roster, when you bring them here or when they're high school prospects, how much are you able to learn about their background, their motivations, their families? And then when they go out and have individual performances like some of these guys have week to week, do you ever look back on that and say -- maybe remind the player that this is maybe their why, I suppose, coming to Georgia?
KIRBY SMART: Yeah, I think you connect during recruiting, and you spend more time with the family during recruiting than you do with them just as a player a lot of times. The toughest part about, when they come here as a player, their families come for either team events in the spring, team events in fall camp, banquets and galas. A lot of times you get to see the family, you don't always get to see them around game time because we're so busy with media and with recruiting afterwards. So you don't get to spend as much time as you want with them.

But the connection you form with their family, you know what made their son and daughter who they are through everything they do, and you see a lot of that with these kids, and you know the trials and tribulations they may have had at home, and you're so happy for them when they have success on the field because they worked so hard for it.

But just as important to me is the development of the guy that's not having success right now, that's going through the hard time of growing pains, of I haven't quite been able to crack the lineup, but I'm getting close. Those are the ones that stick -- the Brian Herrien and the guys that stick it out and stay and work, they're rewarded by their patience are the great stories.

Q. Just a quick followup on Hilinski for South Carolina, Coach. How does he, I guess, how he prepares to Jake Bentley. Maybe what he does better than what Jake does.
KIRBY SMART: It's hard because you see Jake in the first game, and we played Jake a couple times. There are a little different quarterbacks. Hilinski has a quick release. He's got the ability to get it out. He's got great velocity on his ball. He's athletic and mobile enough to get around in the pocket and move around and do some things. He just does not play like a freshman.

Not that Bentley does because Bentley is certainly not a freshman, But Hilinski's done a great job of whipping the ball, throwing quick game stuff, vertical down the field. He's got a really good group of wideouts, and they do a great job of putting them in successful situations. So he's made that transition really smooth.

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