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Georgia Bulldogs v. Michigan State Spartans: Too Much Information on the Outback Bowl

You may not be aware of this, but the Georgia Bulldogs are scheduled to take on the Michigan St. Spartans in the Outback Bowl on Monday afternoon in a battle of 10-3 conference runners-up who held halftime leads in their respective conference championship games. For purposes of previewing the matchup, I feel it incumbent upon me to bring you not just a dollop of data or an increment of insight, but, instead, to provide you with . . . Too Much Information:

Odds and Ends

As of the start of bowl season, Michigan State ranked fifth nationally in total defense, which means the Spartans sport the best defense fielded by a team from outside the Southeastern Conference: Alabama, LSU, Georgia, and South Carolina rank first through fourth, respectively. Yeah, that’s right; the ‘Dawgs boast the best defense of any squad not invited to the BCS National Championship Game.

Star-divide

Through December 28, the Bulldogs were better against the pass (seventh nationally, as opposed to the Spartans’ twelfth) and against the run (eleventh nationally, once again as opposed to MSU’s twelfth), but the Green and White were superior in scoring defense (ninth in the country, as opposed to the Athenians’ 16th). However, the gap between the two Outback Bowl combatants in the latter category narrows considerably when we look solely at neutral site and road games: Georgia allows 23.9 points per game when playing outside of Athens, whereas Michigan State surrenders 23.7 points per game when playing outside of East Lansing.

Georgia is better at bowling than Michigan State. Think about that for a moment.

This autumn, for just the second time since 1982, the Bulldogs beat the Florida Gators, the Auburn Tigers, and the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in the same season. In their whole history, the Classic City Canines have posted a 7-6 bowl record in campaigns that included victories over all three major rivals, but that middling postseason mark includes ledgers of 3-1 when the Athenians went 3-0 through “Hate Season” yet did not capture the Southeastern Conference crown and 2-1 in Sunshine State bowl games.

Georgia has not lost a bowl game in Florida after defeating the Plainsmen, the Saurians, and the Engineers since January 1, 1949, and the ‘Dawgs, who are 10-3-2 overall in Sunshine State postseason tilts, have not lost a bowl game in Florida, regardless of other circumstances, in 25 years.

For a while there, I thought we had this one in the bag, but then I wasn’t so sure.

Isaiah Crowell enters the Outback Bowl with 847 rushing yards to his credit as a true freshman tailback. Crowell is 28 yards shy of matching Thomas Brown’s 875 rushing yards as a freshman in 2004, and he is 43 yards shy of tying Rodney Hampton’s 890 rushing yards as a freshman in 1987. The Bulldogs won their bowl games in Brown’s and Hampton’s freshman seasons, just as they did in the two seasons featuring freshman running backs with more rushing yards than Hampton: 2007 (Knowshon Moreno with 1,334) and 1980 (Herschel Walker with 1,616).

The Feel Bad Stat of the Week

In seasons in which the Bulldogs have lost to the LSU Tigers, the Red and Black have posted a combined 4-1 record in bowl games. Wait . . . 4-1? That’s an .800 winning percentage! How is that the feel bad stat of the week?

It’s the feel bad stat of the week because Georgia’s lone bowl loss in those several seasons came in the 1986 Hall of Fame Bowl . . . in Tampa, Fla.

The Feel Good Stat of the Week

Michigan State isn’t Ohio State, but the Spartans have had only marginally more success against the SEC in postseason play than the Buckeyes have experienced. In a half-dozen bowls against the Southeastern Conference (1938 Orange, 1989 Gator, 1995 Independence, 2000 Citrus, 2009 Capital One, and 2011 Capital One), Michigan State has gone 1-5, with their lone win being a three-point victory over a Florida squad that ended the autumn on a three-game skid.

Georgia, which was responsible for two of the Spartans’ five bowl losses to the SEC, has gone 8-0 against Big Ten teams since the Bulldogs’ last loss to an opponent from the Midwestern BCS conference in 1957.

The Bottom Line

Georgia and Michigan State are evenly matched teams whose showdown should go down to the wire. The first time the Bulldogs met the Spartans, in the 1989 Gator Bowl, the Athenians won by seven, carding a 34-27 triumph. The last time the Red and Black faced a Big Ten team in Florida in January after suffering a lopsided loss to a national championship game-bound Louisiana State club in the SEC Championship Game that dropped the ‘Dawgs to 10-3, in the 2004 Capital One Bowl, Georgia won by seven, notching a 34-27 victory. Say, that sounds like a trend, and that’s good enough for me.

My Prediction: Georgia 34, Michigan State 27.

Go ‘Dawgs!

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Comments

Thanks Kyle.

However, I think if the Spartans score 27, I am not sure we win. Until Bobo shows me he can get ahead and then drop the hammer against a quality opponent, I will have my doubts. If we win, I can’t help but to think it will be the same maddening formula of good D, and never putting it away on O – where the stat sheet blows away he scoreboard.

Fully expect (you heard it hear first) another quarter of scripted plays to jump out ahead. I just hope we can do better on the fly after that script ends.

I agree with tankertoad.

Our defense has to hold Sparty to less than 24 points. Or, well, let me restate that more correctly: We have to somehow allow Michigan State to score less than 24 points. I can’t imagine it will be solely the defense’s fault if they score more than that.

Sadly, I’m just not confident in our ability to defeat the 4th-best team we will have played so far this year, since we didn’t fare so well against the top 3 teams on our schedule.

My prediction: Sparty, 17-9

Oh ye of little, tiny, minuscule faith
Using your math above

34-27+34-27=68-0….while that is a long shot. I still like the DAWGS to cover and win in a fashion that will welcome our 2012 class into Athens with a dump-truck (and I am talking about a CAT 875C) full of expectations.

YES THIS BIG

THEY ARE SPARTA

styled sandals

Those Shoes Are In This Year

Here on the Grand Strand. My 8th grade daughter had to have a pair.

Kyle, That's Some Impressive Stat Mining

Good work.

I'm sure Mark and Lou already know the winner !!!

With any luck they will miss commenting on our game….

Dawgs’ 24 MSU 13

My final NCAA 12 game for the Dawgs.

Michigan State 14, Georgia 35

Passing:
-Aaron Murray= 13-22, 2 TD, 1 INT, 154 yards, 138.7 rating
-Kirk Cousins= 6-14, 95 yards, 0 TD, 2 INT, 71.2 rating

Rushing:
Michigan State= 25 rushes, 222 yards, 2 TD
Georgia= 41 rushes, 238 yards, 2 TD
-Ken Malcome= 20 attempts, 121 yards, 6.0 avg.
-Richard Samuel=15 attempts, 72 yards, 4.7 avg, 1 TD
-Isaiah Crowell= 3 attempts, 37 yards, 12.3 avg, 1 TD

Receiving:
-Tavarres King= 4 rec, 59 yards
-Orson Charles= 4 rec, 36 yards, 1 TD
-Malcom Mitchell= 2 rec, 35 yards
-Aron White= 1 rec, 9 yards, 1 TD
-Michael Bennett= 1 rec, 12 yards

Defensive:
-Alec Ogletree= 7 total tackles, 3 tackles for losses, 1 sack
-Abry Jones= 5 total tackles, 2 sacks
-Sanders Commings= 2 total tackles, 1 INT returned for TD
-Brandon Boykin= 2 total tackles, 1 TFL, 1 INT

Kicking:
-Blair Walsh= 5-5 PAT, no field goal attempts
-Drew Butler= 2 punts, 90 yards, 45.0 avg, 31.5 net avg.

3rd down conversions:
-Michigan State= 1-8
-Georgia= 8-11

Penalties:
-Michigan State= 1 penalty, 4 yards
-Georgia= 1 penalty, 15 yards

Total Offense:
-Michigan State= 328
-Georgia= 392

Total Yards:
-Michigan State=385
-Georgia=480

Special teams may be the difference

With the exception of a defense touchdown or special team touchdown, I do believe that 34 points scored by the Bulldogs may be a little bit too optimistic given the way the GA offense tends to sputter against good defenses this season and in the past. If you had to compare offenses, Michigan State has about 395 yds a game and about 30.8 points a game. For us, we have about 418 yds a game and a little above 32 points a game including beatdowns against Coastal Carolina and New Mexico State. The 32 points per game average would be higher if it weren’t for several missed field goals. I hate to say it, but this game might come down to a special teams play or plays or on a field goal by Walsh. If it has to come down to 3 points, I hope Walsh goes out a winner at his last football game as a UGA uniformed football player by making all of his field goals and extra points.

I guess its down to the nut cutting now.

Is it going to be a good one or a blow out? I hope the D show up. If we can get 30 we should win. Its about 6 hours until kickoff. If I left now I could still get there in time. Reckon what tickets are going for on the street?

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