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Jeffery Lamar Grier

Jeffery Lamar Grier, age 50, of Alto, passed away on Sunday, January 9, 2022.

Born on September 7, 1971, in Demorest, he was a son of the late William Wiley and Helen Malinda Oliver Grier of Alto. Mr. Grier was a loving father, son, and brother and of the Christian faith.

Survivors, in addition to his mother, include his daughters and sons-in-law, Lexi and Jacob Stinchcomb of Clarkesville and Hope and Austin Smith of Demorest; grandchildren: Dakoda Smith, Kamryn Smith, Finley Smith, and Doug Hunter Wiley Stinchcomb; brother, Tim Grier of Alto; sister, Carrie Grier of Alto; and several aunts, uncles, and cousins.

Funeral services are scheduled for 11:00 am on Thursday, January 13, 2022, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart with Rev. Anthony Shore and Rev. Tim Beasley officiating. Interment will follow in Mt. Zion United Methodist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 2-4 and 6-8 pm on Wednesday, January 12, 2022, at the funeral home.

Those in attendance are asked to please adhere to public health and social distancing guidelines regarding COVID-19.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com.

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.

Vernon R. Bryson

Vernon Ray Bryson, age 56, ended his pilgrimage here to join the Saints of all Ages, Sunday, January 9, 2022. He peacefully passed away of natural causes at his home in Clarkesville, Georgia.

Born on December 25, 1965, in Kokomo, Indiana, he was the son of Elder Paul Willis Bryson and Bernice Welborn Bryson of Homer. Vernon was a member of Union Hill Missionary Baptist Church in Homer, Georgia. Additionally, he was a licensed minister of the Gospel and preached at many churches in Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee, as well as carrying on missionary efforts via radio broadcast in Liberia, Africa. He was both a learned and spiritual preacher of the Gospel, preaching with power that was thrilling to hear. He possessed a loving and humorous spirit that endeared him to those who knew him. After graduating high school in 1984 from Warren Central High School in Bowling Green, Kentucky, Vernon enjoyed many occupations. The one that he truly loved was being a farmer.

In addition to his parents, Vernon is also survived by sons and daughters-in-law, Donald Bryson (Amy) of Raleigh, North Carolina, Walker Bryson (Maleah) of Clayton, Paul Bryson (Becca) of Chatsworth, and Zeb Bryson of Clayton; daughter, Kay Lee Bryson of Clayton; 9 grandchildren; brother and sister-in-law, Elder David Bryson (Amanda) of Homer; sisters and brothers-in-law, Carol Savage (Tim)of Cleveland and Cheryl Churchwell (Glenn) of Homer; several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews also survive.

Funeral services are 2 pm on Thursday, January 13, 2022, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart with Elder Roger Galloway and Rev. Donald Grizzle officiating. Interment will follow in Union Hill Baptist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 5-8 pm on Wednesday, at the funeral home.

Those in attendance are asked to please adhere to the public health and social distancing guidelines regarding COVID-19.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com.

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.

Cornelia burglary suspect identified

Do you know who this man is? If so, Cornelia Police want you to call them. The man is suspected in an early morning burglary at a convenience store on Dec. 17, 2021. (store surveillance image)

The Cornelia Police Department has identified a suspect in a local convenience store burglary. Officers received information that led them to identify Jose Luis Ortiz Torres, age 25, as the man seen on surveillance cameras burglarizing Murphy’s Express on the morning of December 17.

Officers took out an arrest warrant on Torres for one count of first-degree burglary. He has not been arrested; they are still looking for him.

“The City of Cornelia Police Department was able to locate many of the stolen items and return them back to the owner,” says CPD Lt. Wayne Green.

The investigation began on December 17 when police responded to a report of an alarm at the gas station on VFW Post Road. They found the front door smashed open with what appeared to be a rock, Lt. Green said.

Store surveillance cameras captured images of the suspect, since identified as Torres, inside the store and a white truck parked outside.

If you know where Torres is or have information that could help officers find him, please contact Cornelia Police at (706) 778-4314 or Habersham County E-911 non-emergency at 706-778-3911.

Christopher “Chris” Gene Poole

Christopher “Chris” Gene Poole, age 62 of Gainesville, entered heaven Sunday, January 9, 2022, at the Northeast Georgia Medical Center, Gainesville.

Chris was born April 18, 1959, in Gainesville to Earl & Betty Bryant Poole. He worked at Peerless-Winsmith, Inc. for a number of years. He was a member of Calvary Baptist Church. Chris was dearly loved by his family and will be missed by all who knew him.

Left to cherish his memory, parents, Earl & Betty Poole; wife, Patricia Thomas Poole; sister, Lynn Duke; niece, Lacey (Matt) Hood; nephew, Dylan Duke; great-nephew, Jentry Hood, & great-niece, Fenley Hood.

Funeral services honoring Chris will be held at 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2022, at Calvary Baptist Church with Rev. Raymond Latty & Rev. Terry Poole officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends from 5:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m. Tuesday evening at the funeral home.

Please share online condolences with the family at www.wardsfh.com. Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Christopher “Chris” Gene Poole.

Fire department buys battery powered extrication equipment

Habersham County purchased over $140,000 worth of battery-powered extrication equipment from Holmatro, but taxpayers only had to foot around $14,000 of the bill thanks to a fire safety grant awarded to the county. (photo by HCES)

Habersham County Emergency Services just received an order of new

hat was awarded to Habersham County.

With the addition of this state-of-the-art equipment, Habersham County is moving closer to its goal of updating all of its end-of-life equipment.

“The equipment in need of replacement is over 15 to 20 years old and is inadequate for our growing needs,” explains county public information officer Carolyn Gibson in a news release.

The county now has three sets of this “state-of-the-art” equipment. Officials say it will be strategically placed in stations on the south, central, and north ends of the county. (HCES)

“This is a great addition to the equipment for HCES and was very much needed to continue to serve the citizens with efficient and dependable equipment for when extrication is required,” says Habersham County Emergency Services Director Chad Black.

According to Gibson, the fire safety grant saved Habersham taxpayers approximately $126,000. The equipment cost $140,687 and the county paid approximately $14,000 of that. The grant covered the rest.

Habersham County now has three complete sets of battery-powered extrication equipment. Officials say it will be strategically placed at fire stations in the southern, central, and northern parts of the county. All other stations will have new combi-tools and a full set of struts they can use to stabilize wrecked vehicles and rescue those trapped inside them.

Lawmakers keep first day short ahead of National Championship football game

The Georgia General Assembly chambers (Taylor Reimann/Fresh Take Georgia)

The University of Georgia’s fight song blared through the Georgia House chamber in support of the school’s football team on the first day of the legislative session Monday morning.

Lawmakers expressed their enthusiasm by wearing red and black clothing, waving red streamers and clapping in anticipation of the night’s College Football Playoff game against Alabama.

House Speaker David Ralston, a Republican from Blue Ridge, convened the half-hour session early so he could make his flight to Indianapolis for the game. He kept it short, foregoing the usual time allotted for representatives to speak, but a few managed to express their support for UGA anyway.

White man in grey suit and red tie wearing UGA visor stands in front of microphone at podium
The chaplain of the day, Rep. Wes Cantrell, a Republican from Woodstock, put on his red “Kirby Smart visor” and said, “Go Dawgs!” before he began the devotion. (Taylor Reimann/Fresh Take Georgia)
Over in the Senate chambers, a former UGA football player, Adam Johnson, gave the devotion, and when it came time to close out the Senate session, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan asked, “Is it not true that the Dawgs are going to win tonight?”

Ralston and other legislators had tickets for the championship game so the House and the Senate agreed to skip Tuesday’s session altogether and cancel all committee meetings until Wednesday. They did assign bills to committees and establish a schedule for the first two weeks of the 2022 session.

The 40-day annual session is the second in the two-year terms for state lawmakers. Almost all of the 56 senators and 180 representatives will be jockeying for campaign fodder, including the six senators and six representatives who have already declared their candidacy for higher offices.

The Legislature is only required to pass the state budget, but it will also consider hundreds of other bills, including proposals to create Buckhead City, adjust election laws and expand gun rights.

Georgia legislative session kicks off with excitement for the Georgia Bulldogs

Sylvester state Rep. Bill Yearta wears a University of Georgia mask Jan. 10, the first day of the 2022 legislative session as lawmakers celebrate the upcoming national college football championship game. (Credit: Riley Bunch / GPB News)

Georgia legislators convened under the Gold Dome on Monday to kick off the 2022 legislative session.

The Georgia House of Representatives started early so that lawmakers would have ample time to travel to Indianapolis to watch the Georgia Bulldogs play in the National College Football Championship.

The state Senate quickly gaveled in and out as well.

The Capitol was brimming with excitement, as legislators donned UGA colors of red and black. The House played a hype video for Georgia football at the start and end of the General Assembly meeting.

Rep. Wes Cantrell (R-Woodstock), a Georgia Tech graduate, proclaimed that he said “Go Dawgs” for the first time in his life.

Gov. Brian Kemp declared Monday “Hunker Down Day” in Georgia in honor of the Bulldogs.

The legislature will not meet on Tuesday, but sessions resume on Wednesday. Gov. Brian Kemp will give his State of the State address on Thursday.

Sequel to battle over Georgia’s election laws in play in 2022 Legislature

Democrats and Republicans are expected to resume intense debate over voting legislation during the 2022 Georgia General Assembly. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

(GA Recorder) — As Georgia legislators prepare to resume the public’s business inside the Gold Dome today, the fireworks over absentee ballots and a host of other voting rules are expected to erupt again after 2021’s controversial GOP overhaul of the state’s election laws.

Following the heated debates last winter over Senate Bill 202, the lobbying arm representing Georgia’s 159 counties will take a wait-and-see approach after advocating for a handful of changes that were recommended by local election superintendents and other leaders.

Senate President Pro Tempore Butch Miller’s plan to ban absentee drop boxes in 2022 foreshadows more bitter partisan strains after drop boxes became popular during the pandemic during the 2020 election cycle. Additionally, Republicans are proposing legislation that would permit the Georgia Bureau of Investigation to investigate election-related complaints without a request from a local government while a separate measure would allow voters to use paper ballots instead of touchscreen devices.

Following the 2020 presidential election, Georgia became ground zero for restrictive voting rights legislation. Democrats and progressive groups charged Republicans of disenfranchising minority voters in particular, resulting in multiple lawsuits against Georgia’s new election law. In the 2022 session, the Association of County of Georgia is trying to remain neutral after its receiving some blowback over the extensive bill passed last year. County officials administer elections.

“Senate Bill 202 had dozens and dozens of provisions, five or six of which we asked for, the remainder we didn’t,” Deputy Legislative Director Todd Edwards said. “Because it becomes very political very quickly… it’s something we had to handle very delicately because of how politically charged it is.”

“So (in 2022) we’re just going to take it step by step on each issue and rely on our policy council to formulate our positions on those bills as we see them,” Edwards said.

Changes to election law in 2022 will likely come in more digestible bites, as opposed to last year’s 98-page bill, which added a new ID requirement to vote by mail, shortened the window to request absentee ballots and reduced the time that out-of-precinct provisional ballots can be cast.

In his campaign to fill an opening for lieutenant governor, Miller announced he wants to eliminate absentee drop boxes altogether in order to prevent election officials from disregarding security regulations, such as maintaining cameras monitoring the boxes.

This would mark the second major change for drop boxes since Miller and Republicans mandated in SB 202 that every county provide a dropbox for absentee ballot deposits, but also limited the maximum number of drop boxes that led to Fulton County reducing 38 of them in 2020 to eight last year.

According to the secretary of state’s office, counties stayed largely within the new dropbox compliance rules last year. Drop boxes are only permitted inside early voting locations while polls are open, while before they could be.

“Removing drop boxes will help rebuild the trust that has been lost,” Miller said. “Many see them as the weak link when it comes to securing our elections against fraud. For the small number of Georgians who need to vote absentee, that will remain as easy and accessible as it was before 2020.”

A Republican bill likely to be considered in the state Legislature would let voters choose paper ballots over the electronic touchscreen devices that were built into the Dominion Voting Systems package first used statewide in 2020.

The bill’s sponsor, Sen. Burt Jones, a Trump-endorsed GOP candidate for lieutenant governor, says paper ballots will offer a more secure way to vote than electronic devices alone. A series of unfounded conspiracy theories followed the 2020 presidential election about Dominion’s voting machines, although supporters of paper ballots have long advocated for better voting security.

Also, GOP Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger wants to gain legislators’ support for a constitutional amendment that would bar non-citizens from voting. State law already prohibits the practice, but the top election official says stronger language is needed.

State Democrats pledge they will not back down, not with high-stakes races for governor, secretary of state, U.S. Senate in 2022, and the threat that new election laws could further restrict access to the ballot box.

And the level of concern is high for the nonprofit voting advocacy organization, New Georgia Project, which says new rules have already resulted in a significantly higher rejection rate for absentee ballot applications, increased the consolidation of voting precincts, and led to more restructuring of local election boards.

“Despite recent statements by Gov. Kemp that further election changes are not considered a priority by his office, we definitely believe that they are going to put forward more restrictive voting measures,” New Georgia Project Action Fund said Stephanie Ali, policy director for NGP Action Fund. “And we say that based on precedent. This is what they always do. Especially now that they know that it might be the only way they can win.”

Atlanta Democrat Rep. Bee Nguyen, who is running for secretary of state, said Miller’s absentee plan is another restrictive policy that is not supported by evidence that drop-boxes are not secure.

“It’s just a continuation of the voter suppression bills that we’ve seen Republicans introduce and pass in Georgia,” she said. “Specifically as it pertains to somebody like Butch Miller, he’s running for statewide and so this is just an attempt to continue to peddle the big lie and sow those seeds of doubt when it pertains to security of our election system.”

Some top state GOP officials are pressing for some updates, but urge party members to focus on the upcoming elections instead of harping on 2020 where President Donald Trump and his allies, including some in the Georgia Legislature, pushed the false narrative of widespread fraud resulting in a stolen election.

House Speaker David Ralston wonders why the proposal to eliminate absentee ballot drop boxes was not pushed by Miller last year when lawmakers overhauled the state’s election law.

The Blue Ridge Republican told reporters Thursday that he does support pursuing changes now that would give the GBI the authority to investigate potential election law violations without an invitation from local officials, as is needed now.

“I think that would give us the professional, thorough, investigative body to go in from the get-go and look at these things,” Ralston said. “Here we are now, what, 14 months after an election and you still have some people who don’t accept the result. Part of that’s due to the fact that we didn’t have an independent, non-political investigation go in early. Had we had that, I don’t think we would be here.”

Lt. Geoff Duncan said last week that election law revisions shouldn’t be politically motivated because its campaign season and that it would be a “mistake to try to relitigate the 2020 elections” that were fair and accurate

Duncan announced last spring he is not seeking a second term in favor of focusing on his post-Trump movement he calls GOP 2.0.

The state of Georgia has become a hotbed for battles over voting rights, with SB 202 facing multiple federal lawsuits – including a U.S. Department of Justice complaint – claiming it violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by suppressing Black votes.

On Tuesday, Democratic President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are set to visit Georgia to advocate for the passage of significant federal voting rights legislation that could overturn new state-level laws after efforts stalled in the U.S. Senate.

Kristina (Kris) Dawnn Jones

Kristina (Kris) Dawnn Jones passed away on January 7, 2022, surrounded by close friends, after a 6-month battle with leiomyosarcoma. She is survived by her parents Robert & Virginia Jones of Lawrenceville, Georgia. Born in 1963, at Fort McClellan in Anniston, Alabama, Kris spent most of her formative years in Alabama and Georgia. She graduated with a dual engineering degree from Berry College and Georgia Tech. She was employed as an electrical engineer with Occidental Chemical Company in Lake City, Florida as well as Ethicon in Cornelia, Georgia, and Siemens Automotive in Gainesville, Georgia.

Following her servant’s heart, in 2000, Kris shifted from the corporate to non-profit world. She was currently employed by Georgia Legal Services, where she served as Office Manager for both the Gainesville and Athens offices. In addition, Kris held multiple positions in her community that demonstrated her innate empathy and kindness. She served on the Board of Circle of Hope, the local shelter for victims of domestic violence, and held leadership positions with task forces on family violence. In 2008, she was awarded Task Force Member of the Year by the Georgia Commission on Family Violence.

An avid traveler, Kris particularly enjoyed her European vacations. Paris was her favorite. She last visited the City of Lights before the pandemic and was always making plans to return. She also traveled to Italy, Austria, and Germany with close friends, and Kris held these memories dear. She traveled throughout the US but held a deep affinity for Savannah, Georgia which combined being by the water, walking, history, good jazz music, public art, and beautiful gardens, all of Kris’ favorite things.
You can’t think about Kris without remembering her love of the arts. Always up for live music, Kris supported local talent and large concerts every chance she could. She surrounded herself with works of fine and folk art that she acquired during her travels or weekend art shows. She also loved college football, historical books, and her precious cats. Most of all, Kris will be remembered for her huge heart, mischievous smile, and sweet spirit.

We’ll celebrate Kris’ life during an outdoor gathering this Spring.

In lieu of flowers, grab a cup of coffee and tip your barista well or make a generous donation to a charity of your choice in remembrance of Kris.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123

GHSA ratifies reclassification, approves 3 appeals, denies 4 others

The Georgia High School Association’s executive committee ratified reclassification Monday, officially ending the public-private split in Class A effective in 2022-23.

The GSHA also approved appeals by Drew Charter and Gordon Lee to move up one classification – Drew into Class 2A and Gordon Lee into 3A.

Gordon Lee, a Chickamauga city school, first petitioned to move down to remain in A, its current class. Failing that, the northwest Georgia school petitioned to play up to be with schools closer to it.

The GHSA denied appeals made by Thomas County Central, Thomasville, Jenkins and Model. Schley County was allowed to drop into Class A Division 2 from 1.

The vote to ratify reclassification ends one of the most controversial offseasons of reclass debate.

It heated up with an August proposal by the GHSA’s reclass committee chairman to siphon off private schools in all classifications instead of just Class A. It ended ironically nearly five months later with private schools mixed in with public schools in all classifications, including Class A, which has staged separate public and private championships since 2012.

The GHSA addressed the issue of the larger private schools and their sports domination by increasing the out-of-zone enrollment multiplier to 3.0 from 2.0. As a result, Woodward Academy, Blessed Trinity, Marist and St. Pius will compete in Class 6A in the next academic year. Buford, a city school, will be in the highest classification for the first time. Several other private and city schools were affected.

That seemed to settle it, but then the GHSA was forced to remake Class A entirely after more than a dozen smaller GHSA private schools announced they were leaving for the Georgia Independent School Association.

That left the GHSA with too few Class A private schools to continue with separate public and private classes for smaller schools. So the GHSA tore up original plans for Class A and applied the 3.0 multiplier to all schools, revoking the exemption that existed in Class A.

Now, Class A will have two divisions – Class A Division 1 and Class A Division 2 – based on school size. Smaller private schools such as Wesleyan, Prince Avenue Christian and St. Francis now will compete against public schools for state titles again.

Final class and region alignments and the minutes from Monday’s meeting can be found on the GHSA’s website.

Produced by Georgia High School Football Daily. To sign up for GHSF’s free email newsletter click here.

Varsity swim team dominates at ‘Shiver Me Timbers’ meet

Montgomery Dampier (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

In the Shiver Me Timbers Invitational hosted by TFS on Saturday, the varsity swim team dominated the competition. The Indians and Lady Indians both placed first out of 8 teams.

“This meet was a prelims/finals meet,” explains coach Rachel Nichols. “This means if a swimmer swam to a top-16 place in their event in the preliminary session, they earned a second swim in the finals session.”

Several swimmers took a top-3 finish in their individual event. These swimmers included William Xu, Emre Sungur, Henry Rickman, Karis Tatum, Nelson Wilkinson, Montgomery Dampier, and Emery Sims. Madison Dampier also swam to a pair of top-3 finishes in her events.

Many swimmers swam to new personal records in either the preliminary or the finals session on Saturday as well. These swimmers included Cole Borchers, William Xu, Morgan Mullins, Tamia Moss, Emre Sungur, Emery Sims, Jedd Thomas, Tillie Crumley, Mina Beratovic, Henry Rickman, Karis Tatum, Layne Kafsky, Jason Dong, Jedd Thomas, Grayson Penland, Tahj Charlton, Kate Trotter, Emma Jackson, and  Hannah Hickox.

Emre Sungur earned a new GHSA state championship qualifying time in the 100-yard breastroke.

“We are very proud of our swimmers’ efforts this past weekend,” adds Nichols.

The varsity team will compete again this upcoming weekend at the Clarke-Oconee Invitational in Athens at University of Georgia’s Gabrielsen Natatorium.

FULL RESULTS

With CFP title on line, Georgia gets another crack at ‘Bama

FILE - Georgia offensive lineman Warren Ericson (50) and Alabama wide receiver Slade Bolden (18) play during the second half of the Southeastern Conference championship NCAA college football game, Saturday, Dec. 4, 2021, in Atlanta. Those Georgia Bulldogs aren't the only ones having a devil of a time beating fellow Southeastern Conference powerhouse Alabama. They're just the only one that gets another shot in the biggest game of them all. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File)

Georgia coach Kirby Smart got an inside look at what it takes to build a college football juggernaut working for Nick Saban at Alabama for eight seasons.

Blueprint in hand, Smart took over at his alma mater in 2016, and the Bulldogs have been ascending ever since, going 57-10 in the last five seasons.

“I think the University of Georgia, Kirby’s program is probably one of the elite programs in the country,” Saban said Sunday.

But to truly be like ‘Bama you have to beat ‘Bama. Smart and the Bulldogs are 0-4 against the Tide.

No. 3 Georgia gets another shot to take down the king Monday night. The Bulldogs face the top-ranked and defending national champion Tide in the all-Southeastern Conference College Football Playoff title game played in the heart of Big Ten country.

Five weeks after Alabama once again asserted its dominance over Georgia in the SEC title game, the Bulldogs drag the weight of a seven-game losing streak against the Tide and a 41-year national title drought into a rematch at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Georgia head coach Kirby Smart speaks with Alabama head coach Nick Saban before the first half of the Southeastern Conference championship NCAA college football game, Saturday, Dec. 4, 2021, in Atlanta. Georgia plays Alabama in the College Football Playoff national championship game on Jan. 10, 2022.
Georgia head coach Kirby Smart speaks with Alabama head coach Nick Saban before the first half of the Southeastern Conference championship NCAA college football game, Saturday, Dec. 4, 2021, in Atlanta. Georgia plays Alabama in the College Football Playoff national championship game on Jan. 10, 2022. (Credit: AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File)
“I mean, it’s definitely motivation,” Georgia tackle Jamaree Salyer said of the losing streak to Alabama. “It’s the truth. You can’t really run away from the truth.”

The last meeting was especially painful for Georgia. The Bulldogs entered the SEC championship favored and undefeated, the unanimous No. 1 team in the country.

MORE: Where to catch the game on TV, radio

Georgia had stomped everything in its path behind a defense that was smothering opponents at an historically stingy pace before Bryce Young and the Tide picked the Bulldogs apart 41-24 in Atlanta.

“He is elite at what he does,” Smart said. “We’ve talked about him as Houdini because he can he can make people miss.”

Young adeptly avoided Georgia’s pass rush while throwing for 421 yards in a performance that essentially won him the Heisman Trophy.

“He’s slippery,” Georgia All-America nose tackle Jordan Davis said.

How much of an outlier was the Alabama game for Georgia? The Bulldogs have allowed only 15 touchdowns this season. Five came against Alabama.

“I think no game’s going to be the same,” said Tide All-America linebacker Will Anderson, who had two sacks in Alabama’s 27-6 semifinal victory against No. 4 Cincinnati. “What happened last game is what happened last game. We have to worry about what happens this game.”

Georgia reverted back to form in the CFP semifinals, beating No. 2 Michigan 34-11 in the Orange Bowl. Davis and All-America linebacker Nakobe Dean led the charge defensively and quarterback Stetson Bennett rebounded from a tough game against Alabama with three touchdown passes.

“If you want to have any success in this game, offensively, you have to be able to at least control those guys up front and their front seven to some degree,” Saban said. “They have a very good defense in total but it starts with that.”

Georgia linebacker Nakobe Dean (17) follows a play during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Florida, Oct. 30, 2021, in Jacksonville, Fla.
Georgia linebacker Nakobe Dean (17) follows a play during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Florida, Oct. 30, 2021, in Jacksonville, Fla. (Credit: AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)
While Georgia is trying to win its first national title since Herschel Walker led the Bulldogs to the championship as a freshman in 1980, Alabama is looking to add to an unprecedented run.

 

The Tide is trying to go back-to-back as national champs for the second time under Saban. It would be title No. 7 for Alabama in the last 13 seasons, and its 13th overall in college football’s poll era (1936-present), more than any other school.

To find more successful runs in college football, you have look beyond the top of the sport.

North Dakota State currently has an even tighter grip on the second-tier of Division I than Alabama has in the first. The Bison won their ninth FCS championship in the past 11 years on Saturday.

Mount Union 13 won Division III championships over a 25-year span from 1993-2017, including a string of six in seven seasons.

Georgia often has to go through Alabama just to win the SEC, though being in opposite divisions means regular-season meetings are rare.

The Tide’s winning streak in the series dates back to Mark Richt’s time as Bulldogs coach and includes three SEC championship games and the 2017 national title game.

That game in Atlanta was the first — and until now the only — CFP title game matching conference rivals.

The Bulldogs led 13-0 at the half before freshman quarterback Tua Tagovailoa came off the bench to rally the Tide and force overtime. Georgia took an OT lead and had Alabama facing second-and-26 when Tagovailoa threw a 41-yard touchdown to fellow freshman DeVonta Smith for the win.

Georgia has not been back in the playoff since.

Smart said he didn’t return to the school where he played in the mid-1990s with the goal of building Alabama East and derailing the dynasty.

He understood the ceiling was high in Athens, Georgia, and those who support the program yearned for championships.

Smart insists he and his team do not feel the burden of history heading into Monday night.

“What I feel is how do we stop Bryce Young and how do we control their front and how do we run the ball, how do we throw the ball with efficiency, how do we convert third downs and stop them in the red area,” Smart said. “That’s the furthest from my concern because I don’t at all control that.”

This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News