ATHENS — Two on me, somebody else free.

That’s the Georgia defense motto up front, where all the action starts and where opposing ball carriers and scrambling quarterbacks are designed to end.

Mykel Williams, Chaz Chambliss and Jalon Walker will enter their CFP Sugar Bowl matchup with Notre Dame vying for the team lead in sacks.

But the only numbers that matter to those players — and their teammates — will be the ones on the scoreboard, as that will determine whether they’ll take the field again.

“If we win it’s not my last game,” Chambliss said, asked if he’s thought about the 8:45 p.m. game with Notre Dame possibly being his last at Georgia.

“We want the last one to be in the championship, obviously, so I’m doing everything to make sure all my other her seniors and upperclassmen go out on a good note.”

The Bulldogs defensive front will need to be at their best against a veteran Irish front known for being assignment-sound.

“Their offense barely messes up,” noted Chambliss, who has 6.5 sacks and 9.5 tackles for loss. “They never let anyone in gaps they aren’t supposed to be.

“It all comes down to who is better man on man.”

Or two men on one man, as is often the case for Williams, who looks to work his way into the Top 10 picks of the upcoming NFL draft with a strong postseason run.

“Two on me, somebody else free,” said Williams, who has 5 sacks and 8.5 tackles for loss. “As long as we make the play on defense, I’m happy with that.”

Walker said he’s happy to have Williams to work with, the pair often lining up on the same side of the line of scrimmage, the better to stress offensive lines and disrupt protection packages.

“He makes my job a lot easier with the attention he’s getting, we just compliment each other,” said Walker, the team leader with 35 QB pressures and 10.5 tackles for loss along with his 6.5 sacks.

“I feel like it runs deeper than just football, I’ve been with Mykel the past three years, he’s been one of my brothers,” said Walker, the 2024 Butkus Award winner.

“We have a relationship and a mindset, we work together, it creates opportunities not just for him, but for me, and we feed off each other’s energy.”

Indeed, Texas coach Steve Sarkisian noted how the Walker-Williams tandem disrupted the Longhorns, with Chambliss holding down contain at the other end.

“(Williams) is obviously an elite pass rusher that can put stress on your tackles and put stress on your quarterback,” Sarkisian said after Georgia’s 30-15 win in Austin.

“I thought they had a really good plan of allowing him to rush and flush the quarterback, and then using Walker as a spy to go chase down the quarterback — he’s got elite closing speed, as well.”

Williams isn’t much for words, but when he speaks, teammates listen, and his message carries weight.

“(Walker) is my brother, we work together every day,” Williams said. “We constantly chill together, we watched a game (Thursday) night. We work on things together.”

Georgia co-defensive coordinator Glenn Schumann is counting on it.

“We talk about being at our best when our best is needed,” Schumann said, “and in this setting, your best is needed.”