Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bennett thankful for second stint at UGA

- BY DAVID PASCHALL STAFF WRITER Contact David Paschall at dpaschall@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6524.

It’s the second go-around for Stetson Bennett IV as a Georgia quarterbac­k, and this time he’s on scholarshi­p.

Bennett was a walk-on with the Bulldogs a year ago but played this past fall for Jones County Junior College in Ellisville, Mississipp­i, where he threw for 1,840 yards and 16 touchdowns while leading his team to a 10-2 record. That served as a necessary proving ground for the 5-foot-11, 190-pounder, who missed being in Athens and is appreciati­ve to be back.

“Junior colleges are not as nice as this,” Bennett said Saturday afternoon in a news conference after Georgia’s seventh spring practice. “They’ve got great people, great coaches and great football, but it’s not the same. Being away made me realize how lucky I was.”

Bennett, a redshirt sophomore from Blackshear, Georgia, is vying with early enrollee D’Wan Mathis for the second-team spot behind junior Jake Fromm, who has guided the Bulldogs to 24 victories the past two seasons and a 12-0 record against Southeaste­rn Conference Eastern Division opposition.

“We know a lot about Stetson because he’s been in our program,” Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart said before spring workouts started. “He’s played in a spring game with 93,000 people in it. I’ve got great expectatio­ns for him.”

Bennett arrived at Georgia in 2017, just like Fromm but with a lot less fanfare. He had accumulate­d 3,700 passing yards, 500 rushing yards and 40 touchdowns during his career at Pierce County High School, but Jacob Eason and Fromm were the top two quarterbac­ks for the Bulldogs going into the 2017 season, with fifth-year senior Brice Ramsey the third-string option.

That left Bennett guiding the scout team, which earned him more and more respect each week, especially when he imitated Oklahoma’s Baker Mayfield leading up to Georgia’s 54-48 double-overtime victory in the Rose Bowl.

“That was my offense in high school, so that was a lot of fun,” Bennett said. “Our favorite thing that year was beating the No. 1 defense, because what else were we looking forward to? We weren’t going to play on Saturdays, so we looked forward to going out there and trying to beat the No. 1 defense.”

Despite the admiration he earned during his first Georgia season while redshirtin­g, Bennett believes he didn’t go about his business the way he should.

“I didn’t learn the playbook well enough,” he said. “After I left, I thought I was good enough to play here talent-wise, but I didn’t do enough myself to be as good as I could be.”

The Bulldogs had Fromm and Justin Fields as their top two quarterbac­ks last season, with walk-on Matthew Downing serving as the third-stringer and playing in four games. Fields and Downing have since transferre­d, Fields to Ohio State and Downing to TCU.

That resulted in a need for Bennett, who developed a need for Georgia as soon as he arrived at Jones County.

“When I pulled into campus and saw their dorms — they weren’t awful, but they weren’t great,” Bennett said.

Odds and ends

Sophomore Jamaree Salyer was working Saturday as the first-team right guard, ahead of junior Ben Cleveland. … The Bulldogs will resume practicing Tuesday.

 ?? GEORGIA PHOTO/ANDY HARRISON ?? Georgia quarterbac­k Stetson Bennett IV was a walk-on player this time last year but left Athens after the G-Day spring game and played last season at Jones County Community College in Mississipp­i. He has returned to the Bulldogs and is now on scholarshi­p.
GEORGIA PHOTO/ANDY HARRISON Georgia quarterbac­k Stetson Bennett IV was a walk-on player this time last year but left Athens after the G-Day spring game and played last season at Jones County Community College in Mississipp­i. He has returned to the Bulldogs and is now on scholarshi­p.

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