The last time they met, Georgia ran the Ole Miss offense ragged by the fourth quarter, and afte tearing down those UGA tapes, QB Trinidad Chambliss knows why.
It is the lesson from Kirby Smart that Chambliss strongly intends on carrying to the Sugar Bowl this New Year's.
"They're (Georgia) probably the best coaches in the nation right now when it comes to adjusting and kind of switching up when we saw them to begin with previously," Chambliss said Dec. 28, explaining how Smart's squad knowing just when to adjust to the Rebels' offense gave them the ultimate edge.
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The QB now wants his unit to stew in the bitterness of that 43-35 collapse, using the sting of defeat as the only high-octane fuel they need to get their revenge in the Sugar Bowl.
"But I feel like they're going to do what they've normally done throughout the whole season. They're going to do what's flowing right now and what they're doing right now that's the best. We'll just have to adjust throughout the game."
Frankly, the only adjustment they need to make from their regular-season game plan is the fourth quarter. While the first three quarters were decent competition, the Rebels' offense all but hit the wall in the fourth quarter, and Georgia exploited every bit of it by going 17-0.
Ole Miss, on the other hand, went just as far as three-and-out in the first two drives of the fourth quarter and managed only 13 yards of offense.
Chambliss was 1-for-10 with 1 passing yard, which would easily be his most embarrassing stat this season ever since he took over the starting QB reins.
If Golding can somehow manage to continue the same tempo from the previous game consistently throughout the four quarters, and keep the ball moving, they look like the heavy underdogs who could still hold off Smart's squad and pull the craziest upset so far in the College Football Playoff.
