Saban had lost only once to a former assistant — five of whom are now coaching in the SEC. None, though, have been closer to him or endured as many crushing defeats against Saban as Smart. He spent 11 seasons in three places — Louisiana State, the Miami Dolphins and Alabama — working under Saban. And those defeats included two in SEC championship games and another in the 2017 season’s national championship game, with Georgia blowing double-digit leads.
That title game was the most excruciating: Alabama freshman quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, who had come off the bench at halftime, hit a streaking DeVonta Smith down the sideline on second-and-26 for a walk-off, overtime touchdown.
The Bulldogs, who had not beaten Alabama since 2007, had spent the last 10 days answering questions about their record against the Crimson Tide. “It’s the truth,” senior left tackle Jamaree Salyer said. “You can’t really run from the truth.”
Georgia began the night as if it was spooked simply by the sight of the Tide.
Bennett was sacked on his first snap and dropped the ball while scrambling on the second (he recovered it). The Bulldogs failed to get the next snap off before the play clock expired — the first of seven penalties in the first half. The team that mowed down Michigan from the opening snap of the semifinal netted 1 yard on its first two drives, which seemed to be a good indication of why Smart deferred when he won the coin toss.