With their commanding defeat of the TCU Horned Frogs in the College Football championship game Monday night, the Georgia Bulldogs put a cap on their perfect 15-0 season of dominance. While many had high hopes that the TCU Cinderella story may have played spoiler to UGA’s championship repeat, the story did not play out in the way most had wanted, with UGA putting up a BCS/College Football Playoff record 65 points against TCU’s measly 7. Although Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett has announced he is declaring for the NFL draft this year, UGA expects a return of most of their top talent, and with the addition of their top-of-the-nation recruiting class, very few stand in their way of a three-peat championship next year.
NPR: Georgia Bulldogs repeat as college football’s national champion, thrashing TCU
Russel Lewis; January 9, 2022
The University of Georgia Bulldogs showed why they’re the best team in college football — again. With an unrelenting and dominant performance in the national championship game, Georgia swamped Texas Christian University 65-7to finishundefeatedand repeat as national champions.
The 65 pointsscored by Georgia are the most in a (BCS/College Football Playoff) championship game.
TCU came in as a huge underdog and the team had no answer for Georgia. After the kickoff, Georgia stopped TCU’s opening drive, and then scored first with a 21-yard rushing touchdown by senior quarterback Stetson Bennett. The Bulldogs marched down the field in less than three minutes slicing through TCU’s defense.
It was a sign of things to come.
UGA forced a fumble on the Horned Frogs next offensive effort and the turnover led to another Georgia score — a 24-yard field goal to go up 10-0 midway through the 1st quarter.
But third-ranked TCU answered on its next drive. Quarterback Max Duggan marched the Horned Frogs 75-yards for a score. Like the Georgia QB, Duggan, the Heisman runner-up, rushed for a touchdown to cut the Bulldog lead to 10-7. It would be TCU’s only points of the game.
Georgia responded right away with a 37-yard Bennett touchdown pass to extend the lead to 17-7. The Bulldog defense stopped TCU on its next series and then marched 92-yards for another Stetson Bennett rushing touchdown for a 24-7 Georgia lead in the second quarter.
A Duggan interception led to one more Bulldog touchdown before halftime.
Georgia simply dominated to lead 38-7 at the break, scoring on all six of its possessions (the first team to do that in the playoffs). The Bulldogs racked up 354 yards of offense in the half and averaged 9 yards per play.
TCU started the second half on a positive note — forcing a Georgia punt. But the Horned Frog offense was stymied yet again and the Bulldogs picked up where they left off — with another touchdown pass by Bennett to extend the lead to 45-7.
With 11-minutes left in the third quarter, the game was essentially over.
Bulldog quarterback Stetson Bennett would account for six touchdowns (two rushing and four passing) and was taken out of the game 95-seconds into the fourth quarter.
Georgia came into the contest undefeated (14-0) and the defending national champions. Led by Bennett (a former walk-on QB), Georgia overwhelmed the Southeastern Conference — the best conference in college football. Georgia was ranked number one for most of the season.
Texas Christian is a private university in Fort Worth, Texas, with an enrollment of about 12,000. It came in to the title game with a 13-1 record and the Big 12 Conference champions. Before the season began, TCU was picked to finish seventh in the conference and was a 200-to-1 longshot to win the national championship. But the Horned Frogs surprised legions of football fans all season long with their ability to win. They couldn’t find a way past Georgia though in the most important game of the year.
The Southeastern Conference has dominated the Division I FBS college football playoffs. Since 2014 when the CFP began, an SEC team has won the title six times. Before Georgia, no team had repeated as national champion in the CFP era.
One notable Bulldog didn’t get to witness the victory. Georgia’s famous mascot, Uga X, did not make the trip to southern California for the championship game. The bulldog is a common fixture at Georgia games wearing a UGA uniform and hanging out in an air-conditioned doghouse on the sidelines. His owners told WTOC television the cross-country flight would have been too difficult for the 9-year-old bulldog.
It’s safe to say Uga X will enjoy the upcoming victory parade in Athens, Ga.
Photo: Ronald Martinez/Getty Images