Georgia vs. Alabama (let's get this sucker going and over with): So much to ponder, and yet it's actually pretty simple.

Adding to the information overload of the Georgia-Alabama game, here's a breakdown, plus some reading material.
Â
Â
There was a gap between the NFL games on Sunday, and the phone rang.
It was Kirby Smart.
(It didnât ring, and he doesnât know my number).
âSup?â Kirby asked.
Not much. Just got back from a food run, letting the dogs out, getting set to watch New Orleans-Carolina.
âWhaddaya got?â he asked.
Donât call me âLoran,â dammit, Iâll hang up.
(Didnât hang up, call didnât exist, conversation was in my head and on this screen).
Georgia and Alabama are even. We know that. Media coverage goes back and forth amid its hyperbole and redundancy, but the reality is that while history may be different, these teams are evenly matched.
Different strengths, different consistencies and inconsistencies, that all balance things out.
Georgia has better running backs, but people are in too much of a comfort zone about the offensive line. It wasnât ready for Auburnâs pressure in the first game, got better in the second and Auburn wasnât as good.
Alabama will come harder, and smarter.
Jalen Hurts is an experienced sophomore, Jake Fromm an experienced freshman. Their numbers this year are pretty similar.
Â
Reading Material
Yes, Georgia has been here before, and not that long ago
Who will the player of the game be? (OK, same column)
Fromm should be no surprise anymore, but he is
Â
Â
Alabama is better because itâs been here, and confidence makes a difference. Confidence from experience, not confidence from mere âweâre here, weâre good, get over itâ confidence.
The Tide are proven on this stage, the Bulldogs are not. Tis a fact.
I want this game to be over for a variety of reasons â Lord have mercy, yes â and high on the list of reasons is that Iâm exhausted hearing about the teacher and student, the unbeaten teacher against his students.
Stop it, TVcomtwits and media. Itâs a note, not a story.
Nick Saban beats whoever. Alabama players beat whoever. Who coached any of them or older players in the past doesnât freakinâ matter.
If Alabama wins, itâs because Jalen Hurts played his best game of the season and Georgia made a mistake somewhere or the bad Georgia showed up and had too many dumb penalties.
Itâs about players, and Alabamaâs are more used to this stage. Saban is unbeaten against his old assistants because he had the better team every time.
And neither has shown enough personality to make this an entertaining story. They havenât said anything memorable about the fact, and they wonât.
Move on.
Higher on that list of reasons for joy at triple zeroes regards Fromm.
Moreso, the surprise of âanalystsâ and Fromm and Georgia âbringing him alongâ and âbeing a game managerâ and âtheyâre not giving him more than he can handleâ and all that other garbage.
Wake up, people. Fromm is smarter than those analyzing him. Good grief. I guess somebodyâs gotta have those TV jobs. And proving that having played a game doesnât really make you smarter about a game.
Fromm, if his head coach will let him, is going to be the key to the game.
He has to have better protection than heâs gotten, but he simply has to look downfield some, and he simply has to run some.
Fromm is more than what âanalystsâ say. He can make more throws than the âanalystsâ seem to believe. And he can move.
Frommâs legs will have a bigger impact in this game than people think, even if Jalen Hurtsâ legs move faster and get him to a destination quicker.
Georgiaâs defense will fluster Hurts more than Alabamaâs will fluster Fromm.
And hereâs a thought: at least one backup quarterback will make an appearance in this game, because those defenses will be coming at the QBs. One offensive line is without a starter, the other offensive line needs improvement in pass blocking.
Â
Â
Need more Reading Material?
Three coaches break down Alabama and Georgia, and who do they like?
Vegas bookies happy with CFP finale numbers
Best RB duo in college football history
Saban Way produces dandy D for Alabama ... and Georgia
Georgia facing a sporty run defense, not of the Big 12 variety
Lorenzo Carter has a unique off-the-field talent
UGASports.com staff makes its picks
Five keys
Kirby's road back to Athens
Â
Georgiaâs offensive game plan has been clenched, and the potential for some unclenching tonight to be the difference is huge.
Pump fake short, throw long.
Use the tight ends as, ya know, receiving targets, and move them up in progressions.
Second half, run Fromm more, especially if the run game is decent, because thatâs when a defense gets more focused to stop one thing and allows something else to open up.
If you try a gimmick play, throw short or take off. Weâve seen some flea-flickers and RB/WR passes get stuffed recently because of waiting too long to throw or run.
And, Kirbs, I hope you put in your playbook the play Oklahoma scored with late in the first half, in short yardage and long yardage. Use it moderately early, if you did.
People forgot what they saw in the Rose Bowl in a haze of joy.
Georgia got lucky with some bad Oklahoma defense on about four plays. Otherwise, the Soonersâ run D was fairly respectable, considering what people expected. The breaks â and holes - Georgia got in that game will be nonexistent in this game.
UGAâs run game will be slowed, and the Bulldogs will have to adjust rather than force it. Expect DâAndre Swift to be of impact this time, as opposed to the Oklahoma game.
You almost wonder if Georgia might have worked on some funky stuff in December to prepare for playing Alabama. Wouldnât be a bit surprised.
All the norms are in place, starting with up front. Georgia has to be disciplined against Jalen Hurts, and Iâm thinking Roquan Smith will have a four-quarter game rather than a second-half game.
And Georgiaâs secondary is high on the âwhat will win/lose this game?â for somebody.
Letâs go back to the last meeting, and what ended up winning the game.
Georgia started the slide with Mark Richtâs fairly typical âand unfortunate â time management and use of timeouts.
Alabama started on its 45 with 5:24 left. On third and 5, with everybody lined up properly and the Tide in no hurry, Georgia blew a defensive timeout, with 4:01 left.
Ohhhh, coaches. You can get five yards back, you canât get a timeout back. Take a penalty or go into a prevent, and save that timeout.
Just when folks thought Alabama was going to run, run, run, it happened.
A Georgia cornerback flinched, for no reason, and Amari Cooper got wide open for a 45-yard touchdown pass, and a 32-28 lead with 3:15 left.
Alabamaâs cornerbacks donât flinch.
Georgia rushed itself, and went three and out in less than a minute. Shortly thereafter, the Bulldogs were out of timeouts.
They took over on their 15 with 1:08 left, and moved gloriously downfield, using tight end Arthur Lynch a lot.
We know what happened when Georgia got real close, to the 8.
Dear Jake Fromm, should the same situation arise, spike the gawdblessed ball. They wonât take away your scholarship, they wonât put Jacob Eason in, and you will win a national championship on a better playcall than what Aaron Murray was given on that day in 2012.
And there it is. If Georgia lets him, Jake Fromm will be the reason the Bulldogs celebrate in Atlanta.
Yes, heâs that good. Some of us having been telling people that for months. Now, they can shut up for awhile.
Georgia 31, Alabama 24.
Â