Jan 9, 2023; Inglewood, CA, USA; Georgia Bulldogs offensive lineman Amarius Mims (65) against the TCU Horned Frogs during the CFP national championship game at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Georgia OT Amarius Mims, possible 1st-round pick, declares for draft

Georgia junior right tackle Amarius Mims, projected to be a first-round pick despite a limited college career, was one of three Bulldogs to declare for the NFL draft on Sunday.

Mims told ESPN his intentions, while junior cornerback Kamari Lassiter and junior safety Javon Bullard posted on their Instagram accounts.

No. 6 Georgia routed No. 5 Florida State 63-3 in the Orange Bowl on Saturday in the Bulldogs’ season finale.

Mims (6-foot-7, 340 pounds) was a key reserve for Georgia’s 2022 national championship season, starting in both playoff games. This season for the Bulldogs (13-1), he started six games but sustained a high-ankle sprain against South Carolina on Sept. 16 and had surgery before returning to action.

He allowed just one pressure and no sacks in more than 150 pass-blocking plays this season, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

“The first thing on my mind was, ‘Did I play enough?’” Mims told ESPN. “I felt like after I got back late in the year, I took a step forward with my play, as Tennessee and Georgia Tech were the two best games I played this year.”

Lassiter (6-foot, 180 pounds) started 29 games for the Bulldogs and had 86 tackles and one interception in three seasons. He was voted All-Southeastern Conference second team by the league’s coaches this season, when he had 37 tackles and eight passes defended.

Georgia coach Kirby Smart told Lassiter after the game that he should turn pro, the Athens Banner-Herald reported.

Bullard (5-foot-11, 195) made the Associated Press All-SEC second team this season after 56 tackles and two picks. He totaled 114 tackles and four interceptions in three seasons, and he made the move from nickel back to safety in the offseason.

–Field Level Media

Dec 2, 2023; Charlotte, NC, USA; Florida State Seminoles quarterback Brock Glenn (11) throws against the Louisville Cardinals during the second quarter at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-USA TODAY Sports

No. 5 FSU, No. 6 Georgia aim to get past anger in Orange Bowl

Florida State owns a 19-game winning streak that ranks second nationally, and Georgia has won 45 of its past 47 games.

However, neither program is part of the four-team College Football Playoff, leaving the No. 5 Seminoles and the No. 6 Bulldogs to face off in the Orange Bowl on Saturday at Miami Gardens, Fla.

Florida State (13-0) appeared in great position to land a playoff spot until star quarterback Jordan Travis, who finished fifth in Heisman Trophy balloting, sustained a broken leg on Nov. 18 against North Alabama.

The Seminoles won their next two games behind two different starting quarterbacks, but they wound up fifth in the final rankings, when chairman Boo Corrigan said the committee decided that “Florida State is a different team without Jordan Travis.”

At the time, Seminoles coach Mike Norvell described himself as “disgusted and infuriated with the committee’s decision.” Now he is focused on leading Florida State to its second-ever 14-0 season.

Georgia (12-1) fell from No. 1 to No. 6 in the final rankings but only had itself to blame. The Bulldogs lost 27-24 to then-No. 8 Alabama in the Southeastern Conference title game.

Georgia is making its 27th straight bowl appearance, the longest active streak in the nation.

The big question for the Bulldogs is whether All-America tight end Brock Bowers will play. Bowers injured an ankle against Vanderbilt on Oct. 14, underwent surgery two days later and returned Nov. 11 but wasn’t a big-time force the rest of the season.

“Brock’s been with us the whole time and he’s been doing all the things he’s got to do,” Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart said. “It’s more important, though, that he’s 100 percent. The guy probably played earlier than he should have, came out there and competed his butt off.”

Bowers has 56 catches for 714 yards and six touchdowns this season. He ranks second in school history in touchdown receptions (26), third in catches (175) and fifth in receiving yards (2,538).

Smart expects Ladd McConkey to be available after the wideout was limited to nine games due to injuries.

Bulldogs quarterback Carson Beck considered declaring for the NFL draft before announcing his return for 2024. Beck is completing 72.4 percent of his passes this season (which would be a school record) for 3,738 yards, 22 touchdowns and six interceptions.

“We’ve felt pretty good that Carson was coming back the entire time,” Smart said. “He certainly had options, but he communicated that he wanted to grow and continue to get better.”

Florida State has been hit heavily by departures since defeating then-No. 14 Louisville 16-6 in the Atlantic Coast Conference title game on Dec. 2.

Backup quarterback Tate Rodemaker, who guided the Seminoles past Florida on Nov. 25, announced earlier this week that he is entering the transfer portal and won’t play in the Orange Bowl. That leaves freshman Brock Glenn to make his second straight start. Glenn passed for just 55 yards in the Louisville game when Rodemaker sat out due to a concussion.

“Definitely excited to see (Glenn) take the step from his first start to his second start,” Norvell said. “A lot of confidence in what he’ll be able to do, what he’ll be able to accomplish. … I know Brock is going to be fired up and excited for the opportunity that he has.”

Other Seminoles sitting out include top running back Trey Benson (905 rushing yards, 15 total touchdowns), receivers Keon Coleman (50 catches, 11 for touchdowns), Johnny Wilson (41 receptions) and Jaheim Bell (39 catches), All-America defensive end Jared Verse (team-best nine sacks). Defensive tackle Fabien Lovett also is headed for the NFL, but it was unclear if he would compete against Georgia.

Florida State enter its 50th bowl game with a 30-17-2 bowl record, including a 5-5 mark in the Orange Bowl.

Georgia has won six consecutive bowl games and is 37-21-3. The Bulldogs are 3-1 in past Orange Bowl appearances.

Georgia is 6-4-1 all-time against Florida State. The Bulldogs won the most recent meeting 26-13 in the Sugar Bowl following the 2002 regular season.

–Field Level Media

Florida Gators running back Trevor Etienne (7) makes yards during first half action as Florida takes on Florida State at Steve Spurrier Field at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville, FL on Saturday, November 25, 2023. [Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun]

Report: Ex-Florida RB Trevor Etienne transferring to Georgia

Georgia replenished its running back room on Sunday, landing a commitment from transfer Trevor Etienne, On3 reported.

Etienne spent the past two seasons with Georgia’s rival in the Southeastern Conference — Florida — and has two years of eligibility remaining. In 2023, he led the Gators in rushing touchdowns (eight), yards per carry (5.7) and yards per game (68.4) with 753 total rushing yards in 11 games (one start).

Georgia will be losing seniors Kendall Milton and Daijun Edwards and will count on Etienne as a veteran presence.

He ran for 719 yards and six touchdowns as a freshman. He also returned 17 kicks for 421 yards.

His older brother, Jacksonville Jaguars tailback Travis Etienne, played at Clemson.

–Field Level Media

Nov 24, 2023; Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA; Miami Hurricanes wide receiver Colbie Young (4) reacts after making a reception against the Boston College Eagles during the first half at Alumni Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brian Fluharty-USA TODAY Sports

Former Miami WR Colbie Young transfers to Georgia

Georgia used the transfer portal to nab another wide receiver, reeling in Miami’s Colbie Young, according to a social media post by Young on Saturday.

“Thank you Miami coaches and teammates for everything,” Young wrote on his Instagram account. “Y’all made the experience amazing and I’m extremely grateful. Thank you to my agent, family, friends, etc. for supporting me through this decision. With that being said I have decided to transfer and am committing to (the) University of Georgia.”

A sizeable receiver at 6-foot-5 and 215 pounds, Young is a junior who will have one season of eligibility left.

At Miami this year, Young caught 47 passes for 563 yards and five touchdowns. In two seasons with the Hurricanes, Young notched 79 receptions for 930 yards and 10 touchdowns.

Young joins fellow wide receiver London Humphreys, who joined the Bulldogs via the transfer portal on Monday. Humphreys had 22 receptions for 439 yards in 2023 for Vanderbilt.

The Bulldogs also added former four-star recruit defensive lineman Xzavier McLeod out of South Carolina via the transfer portal, McLeod announced Friday.

–Field Level Media

Nov 4, 2023; Athens, Georgia, USA; Georgia Bulldogs linebacker Jamon Dumas-Johnson (10) on the field during the game against the Missouri Tigers during the first half at Sanford Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

Georgia LB Jamon Dumas-Johnson heading to Kentucky

Georgia linebacker Jamon Dumas-Johnson announced Wednesday he is transferring to Kentucky.

He was a 2022 Butkus Award finalist and a two-time national champion in three seasons with the Bulldogs.

“The chip is there on BOTH shoulders,” he posted on Instagram with a photo wearing a Wildcats uniform.

He registered 9.5 sacks, 17 tackles for loss and one interception in 38 games at Georgia from 2021-23.

Dumas-Johnson missed the last three games this season with an arm injury.

Georgia backup quarterback Brock Vandagriff previously announced he also was transferring to Kentucky.

The Bulldogs visit the Wildcats next season on Sept. 14.

–Field Level Media

Chandler quarterback Dylan Raiola throws during a scrimmage against Williams Field High in Gilbert.

Five-star QB Dylan Raiola flips from Georgia to Nebraska

Quarterback Dylan Raiola, one of the highest-rated prospects in the Class of 2024, flipped his commitment from Georgia to Nebraska on Monday.

The five-star recruit was the No. 6 overall prospect in the 247Sports composite rankings. He committed to Ohio State in 2022, decommitted before the end of the year and chose Georgia last May over Nebraska and Southern California.

Raiola will become the highest-rated recruit in Nebraska program history when he signs his national letter of intent.

Raiola is the son of Dominic Raiola, who played center at Nebraska and spent 14 years in the NFL with the Detroit Lions.

“I firmly believe that Nebraska is in my blood,” Dylan Raiola told ESPN. “It’s a great opportunity to be part of something bigger than myself. Nebraska is a special place.”

Georgia got better quarterback news Monday when Carson Beck announced he was returning to the program instead of entering the 2024 NFL Draft.

–Field Level Media

Georgia quarterback Carson Beck (15) throws a touchdown pass to Georgia wide receiver Rara Thomas (5) during the first half of a NCAA college football game against Kentucky in Athens, Ga., on Saturday, Oct. 7, 2023.

Georgia QB Carson Beck returning in 2024

Georgia quarterback Carson Beck announced Monday that he will be back for his senior season.

Replacing Stetson Bennett, who led the Bulldogs to national championships in 2021 and ‘22, Beck threw for 3,738 yards with 22 touchdowns and six interceptions in his first season as a starter. He completed 72.4 percent of his passes, which ranked sixth nationally, just ahead of Heisman Trophy winner Jayden Daniels of LSU.

Beck and the No. 6 Bulldogs (12-1) face No. 5 Florida State in the Orange Bowl Dec. 30.

“My friends and family have helped put me in a situation to have options for my future,” Beck said in a statement posted to Georgia football’s X account. “However, the NFL can wait one more year. I am returning to UGA for my senior season. We need everyone’s support in Miami to close this season out the right way!”

Also on Monday, five-star QB recruit Dylan Raiola of Buford (Ga.) High School — who had committed to the Bulldogs in May — flipped to Nebraska after an official visit this past weekend. Raiola was considered the No. 1 quarterback in the class by 247Sports and ranked No. 2 among signal-callers in the 247Sports composite.

However, Ryan Puglisi, a top-10 quarterback prospect, has already joined Georgia and will take part in bowl practices.

Earlier this month, former four-star recruit Brock Vandagriff, who served as Beck’s backup, announced he is transferring to Kentucky. Redshirt freshman QB Gunner Stockton saw limited action and is expected to return in 2024.

–Field Level Media

Georgia quarterback Brock Vandagriff (12) runs the ball during the second half of a NCAA college football game against UAB in Athens, Ga., on Saturday, Sept. 23, 2023.

Georgia QB Brock Vandagriff entering transfer portal

Former five-star quarterback Brock Vandagriff is leaving Georgia with a degree and entering the transfer portal.

Vandagriff said farewell to the Bulldogs on Monday and will have two years of eligibility remaining as a graduate transfer.

“Dawg Nation, thank you for the unwavering support over the past 3 years,” Vandagriff posted on X. “I was able to accomplish a huge goal of mine, which is graduating from the University of Georgia.”

Vandagriff arrived in Athens as the No. 17 overall recruit in the Class of 2021, per the 247Sports composite.

The 6-foot-3, 210-pound Georgia native completed 12 of 18 passes for 165 yards with two touchdowns and no interceptions while backing up Carson Beck in 2023.

–Field Level Media

Dec 2, 2023; Atlanta, GA, USA;  Georgia Bulldogs quarterback Carson Beck (15) throws a pass against the Alabama Crimson Tide in the third quarter of the SEC Championship at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports

Florida State-Georgia in Orange Bowl highlights non-CFP bowl games

Undefeated ACC champion Florida State and two-time national champion Georgia will face off in the Orange Bowl in the biggest showdown of the non-playoff New Year’s Six bowl matchups, announced Sunday.

The Orange Bowl will pit No. 5 Florida State against No. 6 Georgia on Dec. 30 in Miami Gardens, Fla. The 13-0 Seminoles, who feel they were snubbed from a top-four spot by the College Football Playoff selection committee, will settle for the traditional destination of the ACC champion.

Georgia dropped from No. 1 to No. 6 after a wild weekend saw the Bulldogs lose the SEC championship game 27-24 to Alabama. At 12-1, the Bulldogs fell behind not only the Crimson Tide but also No. 3 Texas and the Seminoles.

On Jan. 1, No. 1 Michigan will face No. 4 Alabama in the Rose Bowl in one CFP semifinal, and No. 2 Washington will play No. 3 Texas in the Sugar Bowl for the other.

In other New Year’s Six bowl game action:

–Ohio State will meet Missouri in the Cotton Bowl on Dec. 29. The Buckeyes’ only loss came in their regular-season finale against current No. 1 Michigan. That knocked Ohio State out of the running for the Big Ten championship game. Missouri went 10-2 in its first double-digit-win season since 2014.

–Penn State will face Ole Miss in the Peach Bowl on Dec. 30. The third Big Ten-SEC matchup of the New Year’s Six, this game pits two 10-2 teams that fell short of making their respective conference title games.

–Oregon will face Liberty in the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 1. The Ducks’ two losses both came by three points to Washington, the latter time in the Pac-12 title game. They’ll face undefeated Liberty, which is playing in its first New Year’s Six bowl game in program history. The 13-0 Flames earned the Group of Five conferences’ automatic New Year’s Six bid after Tulane lost to SMU in the American Athletic Conference title game.

The full schedule of bowl games is as follows:

Dec. 16
–Myrtle Beach Bowl: Georgia Southern vs. Ohio
–New Orleans Bowl: Louisiana vs. Jacksonville State
–Cure Bowl: Appalachian State vs. Miami (Ohio)
–New Mexico Bowl: New Mexico State vs. Fresno State
–LA Bowl: Boise State vs. UCLA
–Independence Bowl: Texas Tech vs. Cal

Dec. 18
–Famous Toastery Bowl: Western Kentucky vs. Old Dominion

Dec. 19
–Frisco Bowl: Marshall vs. UTSA

Dec. 21
–Boca Raton Bowl: South Florida vs. Syracuse

Dec. 22
–Gasparilla Bowl: UCF vs. Duke

Dec. 23
–Birmingham Bowl: Georgia Tech vs. Troy
–Camellia Bowl: Arkansas State vs. Northern Illinois
–Armed Forces Bowl: James Madison vs. Air Force
–Famous Idaho Potato Bowl: Utah State vs. Georgia State
–68 Ventures Bowl: South Alabama vs. Eastern Michigan
–Las Vegas Bowl: Northwestern vs. Utah
–Hawaii Bowl: San Jose State vs. Coastal Carolina

Dec. 26
–Quick Lane Bowl: Bowling Green vs. Minnesota
–First Responder Bowl: Texas State vs. Rice
–Guaranteed Rate Bowl: Kansas vs. UNLV

Dec. 27
–Military Bowl: Tulane vs. Virginia Tech
–Duke’s Mayo Bowl: North Carolina vs. West Virginia
–Holiday Bowl: Louisville vs. Southern California
–Texas Bowl: Oklahoma State vs. Texas A&M

Dec. 28
–Fenway Bowl: SMU vs. Boston College
–Pinstripe Bowl: Miami vs. Rutgers
–Pop-Tarts Bowl: NC State vs. Kansas State
–Alamo Bowl: Oklahoma vs. Arizona

Dec. 29
–Gator Bowl: Clemson vs. Kentucky
–Sun Bowl: Oregon State vs. Notre Dame
–Liberty Bowl: Iowa State vs. Memphis
–Cotton Bowl: Ohio State vs. Missouri

Dec. 30:
–Peach Bowl: Penn State vs. Ole Miss
–Music City Bowl: Auburn vs. Maryland
–Orange Bowl: Florida State vs. Georgia
–Arizona Bowl: Toledo vs. Wyoming

Jan. 1
–ReliaQuest Bowl: LSU vs. Wisconsin
–Citrus Bowl: Iowa vs. Tennessee
–Fiesta Bowl: Oregon vs. Liberty
–Rose Bowl: Michigan vs. Alabama (CFP semifinal)
–Sugar Bowl: Washington vs. Texas (CFP semifinal)

–Field Level Media

Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh celebrates after U-M's 26-0 win over Iowa in the Big Ten championship game on Saturday, Dec. 2, 2023, in Indianapolis.

Michigan tops CFP rankings; undefeated Florida State out

Texas and Alabama earned the final two spots into the College Football Playoff rankings on Sunday as the four-team field was set.

The 13-member selection committee bypassed unbeaten Florida State (13-0), marking the first time an undefeated power conference champion has missed the field in the CFP era. The Seminoles were No. 5, just behind Alabama. Texas was No. 3.

Michigan (13-0) earned the No. 1 seed, followed by No. 2 Washington (13-0) in the announcement from Grapevine, Texas.

Two-time defending national champion Georgia (12-1) was passed over after losing 27-24 to Alabama in the Southeastern Conference title game on Saturday. That result ended the Bulldogs’ 29-game winning streak and dropped them to No. 6 in the rankings.

Despite the win, Alabama coach Nick Saban said there was a lot of tossing and turning overnight.

“It was a tough night. I didn’t sleep a lot because there are a lot of good teams out there,” Saban said. “Florida State’s certainly a good team to go undefeated in their league and it’s unfortunate that some good teams had to get left out. But I really think our team earned the right to be here.”

The passing over of Florida State was the committee’s most controversial decision. The season-ending leg injury sustained by star quarterback Jordan Travis was a major consideration during the committee’s discussions.

“Florida State is a different team than they were the first 11 weeks,” CFP selection committee chairman Boo Corrigan said on ESPN. “Coach (Mike) Norvell, their players, their fans, had an incredible season. But when you look at who they are as a team right now, without Jordan Travis, without the offensive dynamic that he brings to it, they are a different team and the committee voted Alabama 4 and Florida State 5.”

Florida State knocked off Louisville 16-6 in the Atlantic Coast Conference championship game on Saturday without its top two quarterbacks (Travis and Tate Rodemaker) due to injuries. Brock Glenn quarterbacked the Seminoles against the Cardinals.

Florida State athletic director Michael Alford issued a statement Sunday slamming the committee’s decision to exclude the Seminoles from the playoff.

“Our players, coaches, and fans — as well as all those who love this sport — deserve better,” he said. “The committee failed college football today.”

Florida State coach Mike Norvell also had an angry response to his program’s snub.

“I am disgusted and infuriated with the committee’s decision today to have what was earned on the field taken away because a small group of people decided they knew better than the results of the games,” Norvell said in a statement. “What is the point of playing games? Do you tell players it is okay to quit if someone goes down? Do you not play a senior on Senior Day for fear of injury? Where is the motivation to schedule challenging nonconference games?”

Interestingly, Florida State will face another angry program in Georgia in the Orange Bowl on Dec. 30.

“I empathize with anybody that goes undefeated and doesn’t get in,” Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart said. “I empathize with our players because I personally feel like we deserve to be in. We’ve got a really good football team, we’re considered No. 1 in the country all year and then fell. We’ve got a whole hornet’s nest around here of some players that are disappointed too.”

The Wolverines will face No. 4 seed Alabama (12-1) in the semifinals at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. The Huskies will meet No. 3 Texas (12-1) in the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans. Both games are Jan. 1.

The national championship game is Jan. 8 at Houston.

Longhorns coach Steve Sarkisian will face the Washington program he used to lead for the second straight postseason.

“Kind of ironic,” Sarkisian said. “Washington still holds a special place to me. I got my first head-coaching opportunity there and I had five tremendous years and just tried to rebuild that program. What Coach (Kalen) DeBoer has been able to do the last couple of seasons has really been a tremendous run.

“Ironically we played them a year ago in the Alamo Bowl,” added Sarkisian, referring to his club’s 27-20 loss to the Huskies.

The Longhorns rolled to a 49-21 win over Oklahoma State in the Big 12 title game on Saturday.

Texas defeated Alabama 34-24 at Tuscaloosa in September and is playing in the CFP for the first time. It is the Longhorns’ first conference championship since 2009.

“This has been a heck of a journey for us,” Sarkisian said. “So to earn a seat at the table and be in this tournament, we’re humbled by it but excited for it as well.”

Michigan cruised to a 26-0 victory over Iowa in the Big Ten title game on Saturday. The Wolverines won six games this season while coach Jim Harbaugh was serving suspensions.

“It’s a galvanized team,” Harbaugh said. “Some may think it is galvanized by adversity, it’s not. It’s galvanized by choice.”

Washington defeated Oregon for the second time this season with a 34-31 triumph in Friday’s Pac-12 title game. The Ducks were in contention for a CFP bid prior to the loss.

The Huskies didn’t have any consternation while waiting to learn who they would face in the semifinals.

“We’re going to face a good football team in Texas and we need to be at our best in all areas,” DeBoer said.

–Field Level Media