ATHENS — Kirby Smart and the Georgia Bulldogs are eager to get back on the playing field. While the off week was much needed, the Bulldogs are looking forward to the upcoming game against the Florida Gators.
Smart provided an update on how a number of Bulldogs are doing, as well as his thoughts on the latest sign-stealing controversy involving Michigan.
Below is a full transcript of what Smart said during his Tuesday press conference.
On practice this week…”It’s been good. A little slow with the warm and fuzzies, we call them, yesterday. They were gone for three days I guess, Friday Saturday Sunday, without the pads popping. It was a little slow to get going yesterday, but I thought they were better today. They’ve had good energy, good spirits. I think they really respect this rivalry. We’ve got quite a few kids from the state of Florida that take a lot of pride in going back down to Jacksonville and play. They seem excited. They have good energy.”
On how he’s seen the Florida program develop under Billy Napier…”Yeah, I think they’ve recruited well. We recruit against them, they’ve recruited well, recruit hard. They have good schemes, good coaches. They have great facilities and a great organization. When you have that recipe, it’s just a matter of time. You build it through hard work and discipline. You can see that in his players. You can see those guys playing with toughness and discipline. Their brand of football is very respectable. They have a lot of the same, similar schemes, defensively and offensively, to what we do, things you believe in. I’ve got a lot of respect for Billy and the job he’s done. I have no doubt that Billy’s going to do a great job.”
On Julian Humphrey’s confidence…”Yeah, he’s gotten a lot of work, like I said. In the last three to four weeks of practices, he’s gotten a tremendous amount, probably 60 to 70 percent of his reps have come with the ones. He gets a lot of work in there with those guys. He gets better. He gets to go against better competition doing that. I think that’s great for his development. He’s a talented football player. He’s got really good speed, good football instincts, and plays the ball well in the air.”
On his relationship with Florida staffers Austin Armstrong and Russ Calloway…”I worked with a lot of guys on their staff. I think they’re really good coaches. They have a great pedigree and they work really hard at what they do. I have a lot of respect for Russ and his family. Coach Calloway was here when I first got hired. Russ is a tremendous coach. He knows football inside and out, great husband and father as well. Austin was here with us. He was a really good idea guy, always looked for a better way to do things. He didn’t feel limited by his role. He wasn’t afraid to speak up and have good ideas, which I think makes a good young coach when you think that way.”
On Amarius Mims and Xavier Truss
“Yeah, both guys have been able to take some reps and work. Xavier is probably ahead of Mims, which is what we expected, but I was really pleased with Mims. He pushed really hard today and got out there, got some work in. And Truss has been out there both days.”
On facing Florida’s pistol offense and setting the strength to that...
“Well, it depends on a lot of things: the call, number one, the rest of the formation because the pistol part of it doesn’t necessarily set the strength. The formation does a lot of times. And they change the strength. They motion a lot, they shift a lot. They have a lot of window dressing on plays and set plays up with that. We don’t worry about the setting of the strength based on the back as much as we do other things.”
On Kamari Lassiter being a veteran presence among the cornerbacks...
“Leadership. He’s a kid that’s been committed to excellence his whole life. He comes from a great family background. A really tough, hard-working family. He kind of came up through the mud, man. He didn’t get anything given to him. He was not a super highly-recruited guy. He’s made himself into a really good player through work ethic. Like, he just won’t be outworked. He won’t be outcompeted, and you love that about a football player.”
On what he has seen from Marvin Jones Jr. and Damon Wilson...
“Well, I think they’re in two different spots, you know? Like, Marvin’s a year in to the system, he understands it really well. He can play SAM, JACK, can probably play off-the-ball ‘backer too if he had to. He’s got very good instincts and has gotten physically stronger and tougher. He’s had two weird deals where he missed games due to injuries, but other than that he’s been really consistent.
Damon’s younger and has shown great promise. I mean, he’s a player that has ascended in the last 2-3 weeks in our eyes because he’s worked so hard. I mean, he’s down there on the scout team, and they’re coming in every day being like, ‘Dude, Damon is playing so hard down there.’ He’s giving so much effort, and he’s given us a great look. We rewarded him and played him more against Vandy because of the work that he did. He continued that into the off week and this week, so he’s doing a good job.”
On where Kirby stands on stealing signals and if it’s acceptable...
“Are you referencing going to people’s games, or are you talking about within our games?”
The reporter indicates both...
“Yeah, I never heard of anybody going to the games to watch and film and do all that — all the stuff that’s going on that everybody’s talking about. I don’t know anybody that’s ever done that. I’ve never been asked to do that as a young coach or known anybody to do that. I’ve never heard of that.
In high school football, you know, I grew up with my dad. We would go watch other teams play. That’s part of what you did. You went and watched the other team play with four other coaches and draw up their plays while they were during it. That was pre cell phone and probably pre-signals. They were sending people in, the coach would send them in. That was a long time ago. As far as in game, I think people try to do that. It tries to go on. As a signal caller, when I had to call defenses, it confused me if I had to sit there and try to tell me what they thought they got. I’m trying to think about what the best call for the situation is. You’re relying on misinformation or something that’s not very reliable so I don’t know. There have been times where people have said they’ve had our signals in-game and this or that. You talk to the team that you played last and when you’re not going to play them again, sometimes they share what they might have had on you and things like that. So I’ve heard of it in game. A lot of the times you can still have the signal and not do it right. It’s kind of the joke we have you know what play is coming and you mess it up. I’ve laughed with coaches about that before.
If he was aware of anything unusual with Michigan...
“No, I didn’t notice anything or know anything. Nobody we talked to warned us or anything like that. I think everybody we play, they say ‘we steal your signals.’ We play somebody, they’re great at stealing your signals. But what they’re referencing is different than stealing them. They’re coming in and you’re talking about someone coming in and filming them, that’s completely different. We’ve tried to hide the signals, hold the calls, put signs up, do all that. But there’s nothing I remember about the Michigan game that makes me think that.”
On the development of Arian Smith...
“Yeah, you know Arian probably had more opportunities earlier in the year when we were down on wide outs for a couple of games. Had a guy out, guy out, guy injured. Ladd has been in and out. He’s played a lot of the same spots as Ladd. For whatever reason, he hasn’t had as many opportunities lately and he’s had some opportunities that he didn’t capitalize on He’d be the first to you that. But I’m really proud of him and the role he’s played on our team in terms of leadership. He’s taken on ownership on some special teams units. He’s been elite at gunner and you know he’s part of the reason we haven’t given up many return yards. He’s been a major factor in that. He works really hard after practice at developing as a wide out.
On Darris Smith...
“Same as we talked about before, he’s just not with us right now.”
On if he’d want to go to a challenge system for reviews...
“What would be the advantage of a challenge system. Now it’s on me and you’re going to criticize me. I’ve got to make the call. You can’t criticize me now because they review every play. Yes, 100% it slows down the game. That argument is correct, but the flip side of that for the coaches is you wanting me to decide when to do it and burn one of my timeouts when I don’t have the same information you have. They have the information up there. They have the ability to review every play. Should they review every play? A one yard spot in the first quarter for five minutes? They give us the numbers, it’s 53 seconds average review time. Is it worth that for that one yard? Probably not. But if you’re telling me I have to throw the flag or not like the NFL, I don’t know. It would definitely speed the game up to not review, but you would have a lot of controversy after the game. Theirs get reviewed for critical plays: inside 2:00, scoring plays, all those things. Once you add all that in - every turnover - it’s kind of like, they’re reviewing the ones anyway. It gets off a challenge flag, but it would keep us from having to review, I don’t want to say things that aren’t relevant but things that might not affect the outcome of the game.”
On Florida’s offense...
“They run the ball really well, they have great backs, they have a quarterback that’s extremely hot and accurate. He knows exactly what to do in the system. They’ve got tight ends involved the last couple of weeks. They block physically on the perimeter, they take shots down the field set up through their play action, they spread you out. They do a really nice job. They’re a complete offense. It’s not like, ‘Ooo, if we take this away they’re one dimensional.’ They have good wide outs, a really big, physical offensive line, a quarterback that understands, ‘If this is not there, I’m doing this,’ and he can run. They’re a very complete offense, and they’re very methodical. It’s not like they’re out there 100 mph. They know what their plan is, and they execute.”
On knowing when the bye is...
“I don’t see how it provides an advantage to know when your bye is. Everybody kind of knows when their bye is. The years I was at Alabama, it was before LSU. It’s not an advantage. You might argue it’s an advantage if you have a bye and somebody you’re playing doesn’t. I’ve had that strategy before, but I’d also say you lose rhythm. You worry about your guys getting out of shape because they’re going to take a break over that weekend. You get your legs back, but you also may have six guys come back in overweight. That can be a detriment to your team. I don’t put a lot of thought into where the bye falls. I don’t have a lot of control over it.”