Today, the first day of a new year, is a special date in Georgia football history, particularly, the January 1st of 1981. In their history, the Bulldogs have played on the first day of the year more than any other date (22 times); however, none of the other firsts of January that came before or since can quite compare to that of 1981.
The Georgia fans who remember the 17-10 win over Notre Dame in the 1981 Sugar Bowl are fortunate and understand how celebrated and distinctive that victory was for all Bulldog faithful. I was only five years old at the time and barely remember the game but I’ve done enough research, writing, and heard and read plenty of accounts regarding the game (and watched it countless times on ESPN Classic) to give, what I believe, an accurate narrative.
Although undefeated and number one-ranked Georgia was only a one-point underdog entering the game against Notre Dame, who had lost one, tied another, and was ranked seventh in the nation, few gave the Bulldogs a chance at victory.
Although undefeated and number one-ranked Georgia was only a one-point underdog entering the game against Notre Dame, who had lost one, tied another, and was ranked seventh in the nation, few gave the Bulldogs a chance at victory.
Famed football forecaster Jimmy “The Greek” Snyder said the Fighting Irish were “far superior” than Georgia. Notre Dame All-American linebacker Scott Zettek commented Notre Dame should have been favored by, not one, but 10 points, and said Georgia’s freshman phenom tailback, Herschel Walker, only ran the football well “because his offensive line blocks well. Anyone could run through those holes. They could pick somebody off the street.”
So, you can imagine how shocking it was to many when the Bulldogs emerged from New Orleans’ Superdome on the winning end, especially if you take a look at the stat sheet.
A win is inconceivable when there is a 328-127 disadvantage in yardage, 17-10 in first downs, and 34:41-25:19 in time of possession, but somehow, some way, Georgia pulled it off that day against the Fighting Irish.
The 17-10 decision is also likely the only high-profiled college football game in modern history where an individual player outgained his entire team. Walker, named the bowl’s MVP and played most the game with a separated shoulder, rushed for 150 yards on 36 carries and two touchdowns. The rest of the Bulldogs had minus-23 total offensive yards on 29 plays.
The Dawgs achieved victory by having “the luck of the [Georgia] Irish.” The breaks the Bulldogs caught the other night against Texas A&M in the Independence Bowl were nothing compared to that of the ’81 Sugar Bowl.
Georgia intercepted three passes and recovered a fumble while committing no turnovers. Notre Dame also misplayed two kickoffs, the second directly leading to the Bulldogs’ first touchdown, missed two field goals, and had another blocked.
Besides having no luck, Notre Dame was also “the ill-advised of the Irish.” I’m no football coach or expert analyst but, I truly feel, if the Fighting Irish’s game plan had been what got them to the Sugar Bowl in the first place, they likely would have won.
In 1980, Notre Dame had a spectacular running game, showcasing two halfbacks, Phil Carter and Jim Stone, who each nearly rushed for 1,000 yards during the regular season. Although stout, Georgia’s defense against the run had allowed several opponents, even a bad Vanderbilt team, some success running the football.
Notre Dame’s passing game had been dismal in ’80; starting quarterback and freshman Blair Kiel only attempted approximately 11 passes per game, completed less than 40 percent of his attempts, and did not throw a single touchdown the entire year. However, for whatever reason, Kiel and the Irish came out throwing in the Sugar Bowl.
Ignoring the run, for the most part, until the second half, Notre Dame threw on four of the game’s first seven plays and finished with 28 pass attempts, completing only half, and, as mentioned, was intercepted three times.
On the contrary, the Bulldogs’ offensive attack was to simply hand it to Herschel and hope they were never forced to pass.
Buck Belue, an All-SEC quarterback in 1980, lost 34 yards on 13 rushes, primarily due to being sacked multiple times, and missed on his first 11 pass attempts. Notwithstanding, Belue’s twelfth and final attempt made up for a horrendous passing day by clinching victory in the greatest day in Georgia football history.
With just over two minutes remaining in the game, leading by seven points, and possessing the ball at the 50-yard line, Georgia faced third down and seven to go. Belue rolled to his right and completed a short pass to Amp Arnold, barely picking up the first down.
If Belue’s pass had resulted like the previous 11, Georgia would have been forced to punt to Notre Dame, who had a timeout remaining, with 2:05 left. Instead, the Bulldogs kept their drive going, ran the ball five times, ran the clock out in the process, and then nearly got ran over by the throng of Dawg fans that stormed the field. (Photo--Copyright © Frank Fortune)
During the bedlam, a Superdome security guard screamed, “I’ve got the damn president of the United States in here (Jimmy Carter and approximately 200 of his presidential party were in attendance), and I can’t get him out!” At the same time, a police officer was overheard saying, “Thank God [the fans] ain’t armed.” The late great writer Lewis Grizzard would later give his own account:
All season long, Georgia had been criticized for facing a relatively easy schedule; just one of its 12 opponents, ninth-ranked Notre Dame, finished the year in the AP’s top 20. When the final rankings were released, although the Bulldogs were number one in both the AP and UPI polls, seven of the 101 combined voters placed a one-loss Pittsburgh squad atop the rankings despite Georgia’s perfect record.“We’ve had it tough in this state. First of all, that Yankee scoundrel Sherman came through here and tried to burn it down. Then we finally got a man elected President—nobody liked him. But on January 1st, 1981, I looked up at the scoreboard in the Superdome and it said “Georgia,” where I went to school, “17,” “Notre Dame 10.” We had won the national football championship. Children laughed and grown men cried. How ‘Bout Them Dogs!”
Starting right guard Tim Morrison might have put it best when asked after the Sugar Bowl if there was any doubt Georgia, despite its schedule, was not the best team in college football:
“Hell, no!” replied Morrison. “We’re the only 12-0 team in the country, and by God, we’re No. 1!”
No other season in Georgia football history before or since can quite compare to 1980—the Bulldogs lone undefeated, untied, and, as Coach Vince Dooley likes to say, only “undisputed” national championship.
If you didn’t understand before, perhaps now you realize why January 1st, specifically the one from 29 years ago is cherished by the Bulldog Nation.
3 comments:
Great job as always, Patrick. I remember the day and game very clearly. I was 20 years old, and was in Florida on vacation. That season was so magical.
GO DAWGS!
It will be great to watch Georgia Bulldogs, i have bought tickets from
http://ticketfront.com/event/Georgia_Bulldogs-tickets looking forward to it.
Thanks for keeping the memories alive. Especially of the 17-10 victory over Notre Dame. I was there in the Superdome to see it live, seated about 20 rows from the field behind the Georgia bench. I still clearly remember Herschel's shoulder drooping after that carry (just his 2nd of the game, I believe)--him trotting over to the sideline in front of us...& watching him only slightly flinch after Butch popped the shoulder back into a workable spot. Such a sweet Sugar Bowl for the Dawgs that day !!
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