Georgia toasts SEC East title by blistering Ole Miss

AP photo by John Bazemore / Georgia tight end Brock Bowers runs with the ball after a catch as Ole Miss safety Nick Cull defends during Saturday night's game in Athens, Ga.
AP photo by John Bazemore / Georgia tight end Brock Bowers runs with the ball after a catch as Ole Miss safety Nick Cull defends during Saturday night's game in Athens, Ga.

ATHENS, Ga. — No. 1 Georgia had plenty of reasons to celebrate even before taking the field Saturday night.

The party never stopped at Sanford Stadium.

Carson Beck threw for 306 yards, Kendall Milton ran for 127 yards and Brock Bowers made a triumphant return for the Bulldogs, who punctuated their spot in the Southeastern Conference championship game with a 52-17 demolition of No. 10 Ole Miss on Saturday night.

Georgia (10-0, 7-0 SEC, No. 2 College Football Playoff ranking) turned in its most thorough performance of the season on a cool, rainy night, seemingly peaking at just the right time to make a run at its third straight national title.

"It's not one guy," coach Kirby Smart said. "There's guys everywhere."

Georgia scored touchdowns on its first four possessions, building a 28-14 halftime lead against Ole Miss (8-2, 5-2, No. 9 CFP) and cruising the rest of the way to its 27th consecutive victory.

Even before the game kicked off, the Bulldogs knew they had clinched another SEC East Division title and a Dec. 2 showdown in Atlanta against Alabama when No. 16 Missouri blew away No. 14 Tennessee, 36-7.

Then there was the return of Bowers, the star tight end who sustained a high ankle sprain in an Oct. 14 victory over Vanderbilt, an injury that led to him having surgery soon after. The Bulldogs beat Florida and Missouri without their most dynamic offensive weapon, but it was clear this team is even better when he's on the field.

A huge cheer went up from the crowd when Bowers was shown on the videoboard as one of the starters, just 26 days after his surgery. He didn't have a huge game — three catches for 34 yards — but an 8-yard touchdown reception in the opening minute of the fourth quarter was a reminder of what he means to the offense.

Bowers' mere presence requires defenses to lean his way, opening up the field for his teammates. Georgia averaged 10 yards per snap, piling up more than 300 yards in each half.

"I would assume that their attention would be shifted to him," Beck said. "If you're going to focus attention on him, OK, I'm going to spread the ball around."

Beck did just that while completing 18 of 25 passes, including a 29-yard touchdown to Ladd McConkey, who had a game-high 81 receiving yards on four catches.

Milton and Daijun Edwards ran for two touchdowns apiece as Georgia piled up 293 yards on the ground and 610 yards overall. Milton essentially finished off the Rebels with a 33-yard scoring burst right up the middle early in the third quarter.

Eliminated from contention in the SEC West by No. 8 Alabama's 49-21 victory over Kentucky earlier in the day, Ole Miss pulled out all the stops in hopes of becoming the first team since 2021 to beat Georgia. The Rebels went for it three times on fourth down, converting twice, and also pulled off a fake punt.

It wasn't nearly enough against a Georgia team that is chasing history, even with Quinshon Judkins running for a pair of touchdowns early on for the visitors.

"I think that offense is overlooked," Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin said of a Georgia unit coordinated by former Bulldogs quarterback Mike Bobo. "It's a defensive-made team, people think. But that's a really good offense."

In a further blow to the Rebels, quarterback Jaxson Dart was knocked out of the game late in the third quarter after being sandwiched between two Georgia defenders.

Dart was cleared to return, Kiffin said, "but I didn't see a need at that point to put him back in."

After a promising start offensively, the Rebels were held to a field goal over the final three quarters. It was an especially rough night for Dart, who threw for just 112 yards with a pick. Meanwhile, the defense looked downright helpless against the two-time reigning national champs.

The Bulldogs are another step closer to a three-peat, which has never been done in the poll era. This group appears to be just as motivated as the two previous seasons, and it's as close to full strength as it's been all year.

Good luck to anyone trying to knock off the Georgia juggernaut, though Milton issued a word of warning: "We haven't peaked. We're nowhere near the peak."

Bowers' return should help make that possible. Expected to be a first-round pick in the NFL draft, some pundits suggested the 6-foot-4, 240-pound junior would be better off skipping the rest of his final college season.

No chance. Smart said Bowers was "hell-bent" on getting back on the field as quickly as possible.

"There were people who called him and told him that" he should turn his attention to the NFL, Smart said. "Those people will not be representing him. They just pissed him off."

In keeping with the theme of the evening, Georgia recognized several of its sporting greats during breaks in the action.

Mark Richt was honored for his selection to the College Football Hall of Fame, an especially poignant moment for the former longtime coach of the Bulldogs, who revealed in 2021 that he has Parkinson's disease.

Stetson Bennett IV, the quarterback who guided the Bulldogs to their last two national titles, returned to Sanford Stadium to belatedly receive the Burlsworth Trophy as the top player who began his career as a walk-on. Bennett was drafted by the NFL's Los Angeles Rams, but he is apparently done for the season after leaving the team for reasons not related to football that have yet to be explained.

For good measure, British Open champion and former Georgia golfer Brian Harman was on hand with the claret jug.

Georgia closes its SEC regular-season schedule next Saturday at Tennessee (7-3, 3-3), a matchup that lost a bit of luster after the Volunteers face-planted at Missouri. The Bulldogs then face rival Georgia Tech from the Atlantic Coast Conference on Thanksgiving weekend before turning their attention to Alabama.

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