Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsSports

Out west, the Georgia rules are in force

Chris Dufresne ON COLLEGE FOOTBALL

September 21, 2008|Chris Dufresne

TEMPE, Ariz. -- Now we know why Georgia packed up its players and its bulldog mascot, Uga VII, who left an air-conditioned Dawg house back in Athens, to venture out on its longest regular-season trip since 1960.

It was a chance to play the Pacific 10 Conference.


Advertisement

If you were a college football team from the East, wouldn't you head west?

Looking every bit like the No. 3 team in the nation, and maybe like the No. 2 or the No. 1 team, Georgia delivered a decisive Saturday night blow to Arizona State, 27-10, at Sun Devil Stadium.

Knock one more game off Georgia's schedule and the Pac-10 down another peg.

Georgia (4-0) looked like a team capable of playing the season's last game Jan. 8 in the Bowl Championship Series at Dolphin Stadium in South Florida.

The Bulldogs looked capable of playing current No. 1 USC in the matchup everyone but the Rose Bowl, it seemed, wanted to see in last year's Rose Bowl.

Arizona State (2-2) looked out of sync and nothing near the No. 15 team it was billed to be back in August -- before anyone played a game.

"Considering the team we played, I'd have to say that was the most complete game for our team this year," Georgia Coach Mark Richt said.

What a nice, gentlemanly thing to say.

Saturday was likely a sneak preview of what Arizona State will see Oct. 11 when it plays USC at the Coliseum.

There were acrobatic plays, the kind that Reggie Bush used to make.

In the first quarter, punctuating Georgia's first score, tailback Knowshon Moreno ran around right end, sprang off his left foot from the four-yard line and did a Superman dive into the end zone.

"Half the guys on our team need a trampoline to make that play," quarterback Matthew Stafford said.

Moreno finished with 149 rushing yards in 23 tries.

Stafford, meanwhile, looked like the top-five NFL draft pick he's projected to be by throwing darts off both feet, and sometimes falling backward, on his way to a 16-for-28, 285-yard night.

Arizona State had no problem with freshman receiver A.J. Green, other than not being able to cover him. Green finished with eight catches for 159 yards and a touchdown.

"They're so explosive offensively," Sun Devils Coach Dennis Erickson said. " . . . Against a team like that, which is awfully athletic, I don't think you know the speed until you actually sit there and see it on the field."

Georgia looked like a pro team, Arizona State the amateurs.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|