Arch, Gunner center stage in Texas-Georgia SEC showdown in Athens

The last time Arch Manning was in Athens alongside Georgia coach Kirby Smart, the Bulldogs were walking the recruiting tightrope knowing prominent SEC ties were still in play.

On Saturday Manning strolls back into Georgia (8-1) with a chance to steer Texas (7-2) closer to a return appearance in the College Football Playoff. Georgia is No. 5, five spots ahead of the two-loss Longhorns.

In Texas’ last two wins over Mississippi State and Vanderbilt, Manning has thrown for 346 and 325 yards – the two highest passing totals of his career. After struggling to begin his first season as starter in a road game at No. 1 Ohio State, Manning has come into his own ahead of the massive matchup in Athens.

“Any time you are moving the ball on offense, the game starts to slow down,” Manning said. “We’ve just got to continue moving forward. Georgia has a really good defense.”

Georgia (8-1, 6-1 SEC) has won five straight games ahead of one of Sanford Stadium’s most anticipated matchups in its 96-year history.

The SEC Championship Game rematch — Georgia beat Texas 22-19 in overtime last December — marks the first time the Longhorns will play at Sanford Stadium.

“We’ve got a big matchup,” Smart said. “I’ve got a lot of respect for (Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian). He’s become a good friend of mine. He does a tremendous job. He’s at one of the premier programs in the country. He’s been successful everywhere he’s been. I enjoy his friendship and look forward to another great matchup on Saturday night.”

When Manning chose to head to Austin, Georgia didn’t drop the ball. And Texas was there for the Bulldogs’ most recent QB handoff.

Their current quarterback needs no introduction to the Longhorns.

Gunner Stockton broke onto the scene for the Bulldogs in the emergency appearance in the conference championship game. Carson Beck was knocked out of the game with a torn UCL. Stockton completed 12 of 16 passes for 71 yards in the second half to help lead Georgia to a conference title.

In his first full season under center, Stockton has thrown for 15 touchdowns and just two interceptions, adding seven scores on the ground.

“He’s brought toughness, he’s brought wisdom, he’s brought consistency,” Smart said of Stockton. “He’s avoided catastrophic things like turnovers. He’s made plays with his legs, and he’s made plays with his arm. It’s going to make us very hard to defend when he plays well.”

After a loss to hapless Florida on October 4, Texas was all but written off in the playoff chase. The Longhorns have since rattled off four consecutive victories and can prove they’re a playoff-worthy team with a road win on Saturday.

“Since we lost to Florida, the first bullet point I talked to the team about was what it takes to get to the SEC Championship game,” Sarkisian said. “If we want to play in an SEC Championship game, you’ve got to win Saturday night. It just is what it is.”

Manning admitted that before choosing Texas in June 2022, the nation’s top player was almost a Bulldog.

“They’re a good team. I was considering them until the end,” Manning said on Monday. “But we’re just focused on today, getting better today.”

Things worked out for the two-time national champion Georgia head coach, but there were reasons Smart recruited Manning so heavily.

“It wasn’t about the celebrity nature or the last name. It was about the tape,” Smart said. “They’ve got a wonderful family, but it had nothing to do with his recruitment. His recruitment was because he’s athletic, he’s fast, he’s tall, he’s intelligent, I mean, he can do it all. He can run the ball, he can throw the ball. In this day and age, you’ve got to have a quarterback that can do both. He can, and I think he’s got great composure.”

Saturday’s winner would receive a boost in the rankings but the season isn’t close to over, and no SEC team has anything wrapped up.

Texas hosts Arkansas and No. 3 Texas A&M (Nov. 28), meaning a top four spot in the playoff isn’t out of the question if the Longhorns win their final three regular-season games.

Georgia has home dates with Texas and Charlotte (Nov. 22) before going to Atlanta (Mercedes-Benz Stadium) to take on No. 16 Georgia Tech (Nov. 28). Georgia erased a 17-point deficit and went to eight overtimes for a 44-42 win against the Yellow Jackets last season.

–Field Level Media

Arch Manning, Texas embrace shot to show Georgia what it’s missing

Georgia coach Kirby Smart recognizes the version of Arch Manning performing at a high level since critics gathered with doubts that the first-time starter was destined to carry on the All-Pro family lineage.

“He has made lots of wow throws,” Smart said of Texas’ redshirt sophomore quarterback, a player Georgia went after hard on the recruiting trail more than three years ago as pundits drew parallels to uncles Peyton Manning and Eli Manning.

“It really wasn’t about the celebrity nature or the last name. It was about the tape,” Smart said. “Have a good relationship with his family.

“His recruitment was based on he’s athletic, he’s fast, he’s tall, he’s intelligent. He’s got composure. He can do it all. Even the way he’s managed the hype and expectations … it doesn’t seem to have affected him. He knows he has to grow and get better.”

Texas coach Steve Sarkisian turned the offense over to Manning this year following two seasons as a backup to Quinn Ewers.

Sarkisian will be out to break a poor record against teams ranked in the top 10 when the Longhorns follow Manning to Athens on Saturday. Sarkisian is 2-11 at Texas against opponents in the top 10 of the AP poll including two losses to Georgia in 2024.

“Since we lost to Florida, the first bullet point when I talk to the team about what it takes is, this is an SEC Championship game. That (mindset) went back now for the last month,” Sarkisian said. “This week’s not different.”

Manning has wins over No. 9 Vanderbilt (34-31 on Nov. 1) and No. 6 Oklahoma (23-6 on Oct. 11) this season. He has seven touchdowns and one interception since completing 21-of-27 passes against the Sooners and has averaged 337 passing yards the past two games.

On the other side, Georgia junior Gunner Stockton has 15 touchdowns, two interceptions and wins over No. 5 Ole Miss and No. 15 Tennessee with one loss in September against Alabama.

In a retrospective glance back on Monday at recruiting Texas’ current quarterback, Smart said there was no “sales pitch” from Georgia, which leaned on a relationship with members of the Manning family and built a strong rapport.

“He came over here a lot,” Smart said. “He was very honest. Had his thoughts about both programs. He liked both programs. He had to pick one.”

Smart is happy to have Stockton under center.

“He’s brought consistency. He’s made good decisions with the ball in terms of keeping us out of bad situations,” Smart said. “He’s avoided quite a bit of sacks. He’s avoided catastrophic turnovers. He’s improved throughout the season. He continues to do that. He’s going to make us very hard to defend when he plays well.”

The winner of Saturday’s game stays on solid footing for the College Football Playoff even with nine SEC teams packed in the Top 25.

–Field Level Media

Sep 20, 2025; Bloomington, Indiana, USA; Indiana Hoosiers wide receiver Elijah Sarratt (13) and IIndiana Hoosiers quarterback Fernando Mendoza (15) celebrate after a touchdown during the second half against the Illinois Fighting Illini at Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Goddin-Imagn Images

John Mateer’s injury props up new Heisman favorite

Fernando Mendoza, step on up, you are the newest Heisman Trophy favorite in a season that has seen five candidates rise to the top before the calendar hits October.

Following the news that Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer will undergo hand surgery that is expected to sideline him for a month, Mendoza suddenly is the Heisman favorite at most sportsbooks.

Barely on the Heisman radar when the season began a month ago, the Indiana quarterback vaulted into the conversation with a five-touchdown performance in last week’s 63-10 rout of Illinois. He was +900 on Monday, just behind Mateer at +700. With Mateer now sidelined, Mendoza is the +650 favorite at BetMGM.

Mateer had just separated himself from the pack with Oklahoma’s come-from-behind win at home against Auburn. He had been jockeying for the top spot with Miami’s Carson Beck, and they had followed preseason favorite Arch Manning from Texas along with LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier.

Mateer’s odds plummeted to +2000 with the injury news. Meanwhile, Oregon’s Dante Moore shifted to the No. 2 spot at +1000, followed by Beck at +1200. It also provided a boost to Jeremiah Smith, who has the shortest odds among non-quarterbacks. Ohio State’s wide receiver is now +1400, even with Georgia quarterback Gunner Stockton.

The book currently stands to do very well in the Heisman market, with the three biggest liabilities being Manning, Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love and South Carolina quarterback LaNorris Sellers. Manning leads all players with 13.2 percent of the money wagered backing him to win the award.

Mateer had garnered a lot of interest over the past few weeks and had become the book’s fourth biggest liability, just ahead of Nussmeier. None are currently among the top five favorites, with Nussmeier the only one among the top 10 at +!500.

DraftKings also is offering Mendoza as the new favorite at +700. He closely is followed by Moore (+850) ahead of Beck (+1200), Stockton (+1300) and Aguilar and Smith at +1400.

HEISMAN TROPHY ODDS*
PLAYER, POS, TEAM, PRE-MATEER INJURY, CURRENT
Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana (+900), (+650)
Dante Moore, QB, Oregon (+1200), (+1000)
Carson Beck, QB, Miami (+1200), (+1200)
Jeremiah Smith, WR, Ohio State (+1600), (+1400)
Gunner Stockton, QB, Georgia (+1400), (+1400)
Marcel Reed, QB, Texas A&M (+1500), (+1500)
Josh Hoover, QB, TCU, (+1500), (+1500)
Joey Aguilar, QB, Tennessee (+1500), (+1500)
Garrett Nussmeier, QB, LSU (+1500), (+1500)
Jayden Maiava, QB, Southern Cal (+2000), (+1600)
Julian Sayin, QB, Ohio State (+1700), (+1700)
Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama (+2000), (+2000)
Thomas Castellanos, QB, Florida State (+2000)
Arch Manning, QB, Texas (+2500), (+2500)
John Mateer, QB, Oklahoma (+700), (+2200)
Haynes King, QB, Georgia Tech (+2500), (+2500)
Drew Allar, QB, Penn State (+3000), (+3000)
Beau Pribula, QB, Missouri, (+3500), (+3500)
Jackson Arnold, QB Auburn (+4000), (+4000)
Devon Dampier, QB, Utah (+4000), (+4000)
Sam Leavitt, QB, Arizona State (+4000), (+4000)
Diego Pavia, QB, Vanderbilt, (+5000), (+5000)
Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame (+5000), (+5000)
LaNorris Sellers, QB, South Carolina (+8000)
Cade Klubnik, QB, Clemson (+10000)
DJ Lagway, QB, Florida (+30000)
*BetMGM

–Field Level Media

July 15, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; Georgia head coach Kirby Smart speaks in the Main Media Room during SEC Media Days at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta.

SS Georgia: QB Stockton, Smart lead Bulldogs through unfamiliar youth movement

Georgia coach Kirby Smart transitions from one of his most experienced rosters to a full-blown youth movement as he begins Year 10 with the Bulldogs.

“Our team is going to be comprised of 54 percent first- and second-year players. Very big change for us,” Smart said at SEC Media Days in Atlanta on Tuesday.

From Smart’s vantage point, he has new names and faces, but the same standard and belief he brought to the Bulldogs from Alabama a decade ago. He said the program mantra in recruiting and the “strained” landscape of college football has been prioritizing relationships “over transactions.”

That could mean finding an all-in freshman who fits the program over replacing a first-round pick with a high-dollar transfer.

It also gives Smart an unfamiliar baseline, going from “one of the most veteran teams I’ve been a part of” to the 2025 version where follow the leader might be a bit more literal than previous seasons.

“What do you get with that? You get youthful exuberance. We’ve had practices that have been spirited,” Smart said. “We had a great spring practice that we talked about the words fire, passion and energy. I think the biggest thing that separates college football teams today is complacency among players versus fire, passion and energy among players. So we’ve tried to highlight those traits as much as possible with our players.

“Our players need to bring juice and energy each and every day. If they don’t, they’ll be confronted by the players that do. And if the players continue to do that, we’ll have a successful season and a successful football team.”

Smart is starting the season with a new QB1, albeit a familiar one, in Gunner Stockton. The quarterback jumped into the fray in the SEC Championship when Carson Beck was injured and then started the Sugar Bowl, a 23-10 loss to Notre Dame.

Already this offseason Smart has defended Stockton’s potential with talk show host Paul Finebaum while taking multiple opportunities to remind his QB where he needs to be by the final Saturday in August.

Smart said he learned all he needed to know about Stockton being ready by watching him prepare. The line coaches commonly share about preparing like the starter is Stockton’s modus operandi since he arrived in Athens.

“Gunner is a kid that leads from the front. Gunner is a winner,” Smart said. “He comes from an athletic family background, his dad played at Georgia Southern, and he’s the kind of kid you want at the front of the line, and he leads from the front. So I appreciate what Gunner does. He’s going to be a big part of our program this year in leadership and doing that with the offensive players. He’s already begun to do that in his leadership groups that he runs right now.”

His sophomore quarterback is the embodiment of what Smart said the Bulldogs are trying to build around and a message to players and opponents of the complacency Georgia hopes to avoid.

“You can say what you want, but there’s people more in college football today, especially in the SEC, that are comfortable with where they are,” Smart said, listing examples from his coaching past from Julio Jones and Mark Ingram at Alabama to Georgia pupils such as linebackers Roquan Smith and Nolan Smith.

“(Thinking) ‘This is a pretty good life. I’m earning 200K a year. I’m very comfortable.’

“You don’t reach your goals being comfortable. You don’t attain great success — none of those people I mentioned before were ever comfortable. They were aiming at something. They had a goal. They wanted to go achieve it.

–Field Level Media

Georgia quarterback Carson Beck (15) throws the ball during the first half of a NCAA college football game against Georgia Tech in Athens, Ga., on Friday, Nov. 29, 2024.

Report: Georgia QB Carson Beck out for CFP quarterfinals

Georgia quarterback Carson Beck (elbow) is expected to miss the team’s College Football Playoff quarterfinal game at the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1, On3 reported Thursday.

That means backup Gunner Stockton is in line to start the knockout round game, when the Bulldogs face either No. 7 seed Notre Dame or No. 10 seed Indiana.

Beck, the Bulldogs’ starter all year, missed most of the second half of the Southeastern Conference title game with an injury to the UCL in his right (throwing) elbow. Stockton helped guide the Bulldogs to a 22-19 overtime win over Texas and clinch a first-round bye in the first 12-team playoff.

On3 reported that Beck has not practiced or been with the team since it returned to workouts late last week.

It is unknown whether Beck would be ready to return for the semifinal round if the Bulldogs make it that far.

Beck has thrown for 3,485 yards, 28 touchdowns and 12 interceptions this season, his second as Georgia’s starting quarterback.

–Field Level Media