#Coach Kirby Smart
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codedsoul · 23 days ago
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How Bout Dem Dawgs 🐶🐾🐾
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mydaddywiki · 2 months ago
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Kirby Smart
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Physique: Husky Build Height: 5'10" (1.78 m)
Kirby Paul Smart (born December 23, 1975) is an American football coach and former player. He is the current head football coach at the University of Georgia, his alma mater. As head coach, he led the Bulldogs to back-to-back national championships in 2021 and 2022.
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Handsome, solid body, nice dick sucking lips (dsls) and if you look closely you will note that he has a ferociously furry arms. So he's possibly hair. I must of had blinders on before because I never realize how hot Kirby is. I don’t know why I haven’t notice him til now. Oh I know, I haven’t seen a Georgia game in who knows how long. Now I’m going to change that.
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Born in Montgomery, AL, and grew up in Bainbridge, GA. Smart began his playing career at Bainbridge High School and went on to play college football at the University of Georgia. Smart graduated from the Terry College of Business in 1998 with a bachelor's degree in finance. He went undrafted in the 1999 NFL draft and signed a free-agent contract with the Indianapolis Colts. He spent the 1999 preseason with the team but was cut before the start of the regular season. In 2003, Kirby attended Florida State University for graduate school.
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Smart began his coaching career with the University of Georgia in 1999, Valdosta State in 2001, and at Florida State while pursuing a master's degree from 2002 to 2003. Smart then spent one season under head coach Nick Saban in 2004 before following to Miami Dolphins in 2006 then to the University of Alabama in 2007. On December 1, 2015, it was "reported" that Smart had been hired as the next coach for Georgia.
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Again married… aren't all the hot ones? He pretty much seems to have lived and breathed football his entire life, when he wasn't marrying his college sweetheart, Mary "Beth" Elizabeth Lycett (awww) and having three kids. There isn't much else I can say about him. He's good looking and I'd love to fuck him until his head caved in. Well, he would probably disagree.
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Head Coaching Record Overall: 100–17 Bowls: 9–2 Tournaments: 5–1 (CFP) National 2 SEC (2017, 2022) 6 SEC East Division (2017–2019, 2021–2023)
Accomplishments and Honors Awards: George Munger Award (2017) 3× SEC Coach of the Year (2017, 2021, 2022) Broyles Award (2009) AFCA Assistant Coach of the Year (2012) First-team All-SEC (1998) Second-team All-SEC (1997)
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maturemenoftvandfilms · 1 year ago
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My Top 10 College Coaches (2023-2024)
With the 2023-2024 NCAA college football season about to start, here are top 10 teams/coaches I'll be watching.
10. Dabo Swinney at Clemson University
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9. Brian Kelly at Louisiana State University (LSU)
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8. Mark Stoops at the University of Kentucky
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7. Kevin Wilson at the University of Tulsa
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6. Sam Pittman at the University of Arkansas
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5. Mack Brown at the University of North Carolina
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4. Kirby Smart at the University of Georgia
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3. Chip Kelly at UCLA
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2. Terry Bowden at the University of Louisiana at Monroe
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1. Sonny Dykes at Texas Christian University (TCU)
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HONORABLE MENTIONS: Gary Patterson Nick Saban at the University of Alabama Bret Bielema at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Jimbo Fisher at Texas A&M
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luvmelikelluvu · 3 months ago
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Behind the Bench
Chapter four - Playing it cool
Ophelia stood outside the small café they’d agreed on, her hands shoved deep into her pockets to keep warm against the crisp autumn air. She’d never been more aware of the steady thrum of her heart as she waited for Kirby to show up. The nerves from earlier hadn’t disappeared, but she was determined to play it cool, even if her mind was racing.
The bell over the door jingled as Kirby walked in, his usual smile slightly muted but still present. His eyes found hers instantly, and for a moment, Ophelia wasn’t sure what to expect—a confrontation, awkwardness, or something in between. But the minute he crossed the room and smiled at her, she exhaled a breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding.
“Hey,” he said, sliding into the booth across from her. “Sorry if I kept you waiting.”
Ophelia shook her head, offering a small smile in return. “You’re fine. I just got here.”
For a beat, they just sat there, neither knowing exactly where to start. Kirby’s knee bounced under the table, a small sign that he was just as nervous as she was.
Finally, Ophelia decided to rip the bandage off. “So… this is kind of a mess, huh?”
Kirby chuckled softly, leaning back in his seat. “Yeah, not exactly what I expected either.”
Ophelia twisted her fingers together, trying to keep her voice steady. “I didn’t know. About… you being on the team. I mean, my dad—”
“I know,” Kirby interrupted gently. “And I didn’t know you were Coach Bennett’s daughter. If I’d known, I—well, I don’t know. Maybe I would’ve been upfront sooner.”
They sat in silence for a moment, both absorbing the weight of the situation. Ophelia felt her pulse quicken. “I get it if this is too weird for you,” she admitted quietly. “I mean, my dad’s your coach, and he’s… well, you know how he is.”
Kirby’s smile returned, soft and reassuring. “Look, it’s a bit awkward, yeah. But it doesn’t have to be. I like talking to you, Ophelia. I don’t want this to get weird just because of hockey.”
Ophelia relaxed slightly, feeling some of her anxiety fade away. “Yeah? So, you’re not… running for the hills?”
Kirby laughed. “Nah, I’m sticking around. But maybe we don’t tell your dad just yet.”
Ophelia’s lips curved into a grin. “Probably a good call. I’d rather not have him banning you from his team.”
They both laughed, the tension between them starting to ease. But even as the mood lightened, Ophelia knew there was still a lot left unsaid.
“Look,” Kirby began, leaning forward again, his expression more serious now. “I know this is kind of a big deal. I don’t want to rush anything or make things complicated for either of us. I just… I like where we are right now. We don’t have to put a label on it or make it official or anything like that. Let’s just keep things low-key for now, see where it goes.”
Ophelia nodded, relief flooding through her. “Yeah, I think that’s smart. I mean, we barely know each other in person, and… everything with my dad, and your career, it’s just a lot. But I like talking to you too.”
Kirby’s smile grew, and for a moment, the weight of the situation seemed to melt away. “So, we’re playing it cool?” he asked, his eyes twinkling with that same goofy charm she’d come to love.
Ophelia grinned, her heart feeling lighter than it had all day. “Yeah, we’re playing it cool.”
They stayed at the café for another hour, talking about everything but the elephant in the room—hockey and her dad. It was easier this way, just the two of them, sharing stories about their lives, laughing at dumb jokes, and making each other feel at ease.
As they walked out of the café together, the crisp evening air biting at their skin, Kirby glanced down at her. “We’ll figure this out, you know,” he said softly. “Whatever this is.”
Ophelia smiled, nodding.
Over the next couple of weeks, things between Ophelia and Kirby settled into an unexpected rhythm. Their conversation had set the tone,ow pressure, no labels but they couldn’t deny the connection growing between them.
They went on a few more dates. Sometimes it was a quiet dinner in a small, tucked-away restaurant, other times it was a late-night walk through the cobblestone streets of Old Montreal, where the city’s lights shimmered on the river, and they felt like they were the only two people in the world.
It was during one of these walks, under the cool autumn sky, that Kirby stopped suddenly, his hand still loosely intertwined with hers. “You know,” he said softly, his breath fogging in the crisp night air, “I really like you, Ophelia.”
Her heart fluttered in her chest. She smiled, squeezing his hand, unsure of what to say.
Kirby paused, searching her eyes before continuing, “I don’t want to keep denying things. I know we weren't putting labels, but… I think we both know this is more than just casual.”
Ophelia bit her lip, her stomach doing somersaults. “Yeah, it’s… definitely more,” she admitted her voice barely above a whisper.
Kirby chuckled softly, a little awkward but sincere. “I guess what I’m trying to say is… will you be my girlfriend?”
Ophelia’s heart skipped a beat. The simplicity of the question, paired with the weight of everything else—the sneaking around, the secrecy, the tension with her dad—made it feel like both the easiest and hardest decision she’d ever made. But in that moment, standing there with Kirby under the twinkling city lights, she knew the answer was easy.
“Yeah,” she said, smiling up at him. “I’ll be your girlfriend.”
Kirby grinned wide, his whole face lighting up. He pulled her close, wrapping her in his arms. For a moment, the world outside didn’t exist—no hockey, no overprotective dad, no sneaking around. Just the two of them, standing there in the quiet of the night.
Dating in secret, though, was an entirely different story. As the weeks went by, they became experts in covert operations, sneaking around the city. Late-night adventures became their thing hidden meet-ups after practice, walks in parks, and sometimes just hanging out in Kirby’s car, talking and stealing kisses for hours in empty parking lots, or or their apartments where no one could find them.
Though they made the most of it, there was always the looming fear of Ophelia’s dad finding out. And while Kirby was more relaxed about that, it was Ophelia who was more vocal about her worries.
“I just don’t know how long we can keep this up,” she muttered one night, as they sat in Kirby’s car parked near the old port, the river visible in the distance. “My dad’s not stupid. He’ll figure it out sooner or later.”
Kirby drummed his fingers on the steering wheel, glancing over at her. “I know. I’m worried about it too. But what’s the alternative? We tell him now, and he benches me for the rest of the season?”
Ophelia groaned, sinking back into the seat. “He wouldn’t do that… would he?”
Kirby gave her a knowing look. “You know your dad better than I do.”
She sighed. “Yeah, I guess so.”
Ophelia didn’t want to admit it, but the thought of her dad finding out terrified her. Not just because he might overreact, but because of what it could do to Kirby’s career. The last thing she wanted was to be the reason things went south between him and the team.
And then there was the other part of her—the part that was secretly enjoying this, the thrill of sneaking around, the late-night texts, the stolen moments in hidden corners of the city. It felt like something out of a movie, and as much as it stressed her out, there was something exhilarating about it too.
Still, the pressure was always there, just beneath the surface. Every time she met up with Kirby, a small part of her was waiting for the other shoe to drop, for the moment when everything would come crashing down.
As they continued dating in secret, the rest of the world kept spinning. Kirby’s performance on the ice remained strong, and her dad’s team was looking better with each practice. Coach Bennett had no idea what was happening behind the scenes, still happily oblivious to the fact that his daughter was dating one of his players.
But the longer they kept it up, the more Ophelia started to wonder how long they could live in this double life. Could they really keep sneaking around indefinitely? Or would they eventually have to face the reality they were both so desperately trying to avoid?
As much as she was falling for Kirby, the question of her dad—and what it would mean for all of them—hovered over everything like a storm cloud, waiting to burst.
But for now, they were playing it cool. And as long as they could, that’s exactly what they were going to keep doing.
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seemoresports · 4 months ago
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Coach Kirby smart & actor Omari Hardwick back in their Georgia Bulldog days
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bongaboi · 2 years ago
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Georgia: 2022 NCAA Division I FBS National Champions
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INGLEWOOD, Calif. -- For so long, Georgia was the flagship program of the really good but not quite great. It produced a few decades of pretty nice seasons ending in pretty nice bowl games played by a lot of really good players dressed in red, white and black. But the Dawgs were always a few steps behind the sport's elite.
They were always one play shy of beating Alabama. Always a few five-star recruits behind Florida. Always a few inches short when measured against the true ruling class of college football, even as the head of that class rolled through different eras and teams, from Miami and Nebraska to Southern California and seemingly every team in the SEC except for the one in Athens, Georgia.
But on a damp Monday night outside Los Angeles, the Georgia Bulldogs didn't simply engrave their names onto the measuring stick by which all other college football programs are measured, they pulled that stick off the desk and beat the TCU Horned Frogs with it. Now, the conversation about Georgia football isn't about what it hasn't been able to do. It's about what it might be able to do that few have ever done before: move past building championship seasons and move into building a championship era.
"I don't know about that word, era; I'm not even sure what an era is," Kirby Smart confessed as he headed from the confetti-covered SoFi Stadium field to the cigar-smoke-filled locker room after winning the College Football Playoff National Championship. "But I know what a great program looks like, a program that is built to last. I was part of four national championships as an assistant coach at Alabama. I know how hard it is to get to the peak of the sport, and I know it is even harder to stay there. I know what the foundation of that looks like. I think we are building that foundation. I hope we are."
Consider it built. Concrete poured, cured and seemingly built to last.
UGA won its second national title in a row, only the fourth team to do so since 1990 and the first in the nine-year College Football Playoff era. It did it via a beatdown the likes of which hasn't been seen in a college football title game of any format in 152 years of college football. Not the 1971 Orange Bowl (Nebraska 38, Alabama 6). Not the 1972 Rose Bowl (USC 42, Ohio State 17). Oklahoma 1985 (25-10 over Penn State). Nebraska 1995 (62-24 over Florida). USC in 2004 (55-19 over Oklahoma). Florida in 2006 (41-14 over Ohio State). Not even the previous standard-bearer for title game dominance: Alabama over Notre Dame 42-14 in the 2013 BCS championship. Miami in 2001, LSU in 2019, whatever comes up while thumbing through the record books … not a single one of those juggernaut teams or lopsided evenings on the gridiron comes close to approaching the 65-7 Bulldogs bulldozing that took place Monday night at SoFi Stadium.
It demoralized the upstart Horned Frogs and sent shivers into the souls of any team hoping to stand in TCU's cleats anytime soon. It was the most lopsided postseason victory since bowl games made their debut in Pasadena, California, in 1902, capping a 17-game winning streak, the longest for Georgia since 1947. The Bulldogs' 29 wins ties the mark for any major college team over a two-season span and is the most ever for an SEC school. Monday's victory rewrote page after page of the college football history book.
"Georgia, obviously you've seen them in the past couple of seasons now, really, they've taken hold of college football." That declaration was made by former Georgia All-American linebacker turned TV analyst David Pollack during ESPN's halftime coverage of the game, when the score was 38-7.
He said it while sitting beside the network's guest analyst for the evening, Alabama coach Nick Saban.
If it's possible to say it, the game was even worse than the score. It was such a throttling that Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett, shortly after tying LSU signal-caller Joe Burrow's CFP title game for points responsible for (36), was pulled from the game … with 13:25 remaining in the fourth quarter.
This is a team that lost 15 -- yes, 15! -- players to the 2022 NFL draft, five more than any other team, and simply reloaded. A defense that was supposed to take a step backward after a 2021 unit that was statistically speaking among the greatest of all time instead limited TCU -- which came into the game averaging 474 yards and 41 points per game -- to 188 yards and one solitary TD. A team that looked emotionally and physically exhausted after a New Year's Eve thriller comeback win over Ohio State in the CFP semifinals responded by embarking on a week of practice that Bennett described in the days leading up to the title game as "a damn reconstruction project."
"You attack every aspect of this as a challenge," Bennett, 25, recalled of the week, quick to praise the UGA scout team that played the role of tough-as-railroad-spikes TCU quarterback Max Duggan. "Now I am done, but I think that those who are still here, and maybe those of us who are gone, have a responsibility to make sure this keeps rolling. Make sure you feel the pressure of keeping up what has been built."
The comment showed shades of those all-time teams that Georgia once chased. The legendary Miami Hurricanes calling out from NFL locker rooms to those youngsters now in their beloved orange and green to ask what happened after a loss to a rival or one that ended a streak. Saban's Alabama veterans showing up to spring practice to talk to their heirs about maintaining the principals of the process.
"That's what we all have to guard against, complacency, and I am talking about coaches, players, even fans, never taking a night like this one for granted," said Smart, who played defensive back on a lot of those good but never great Bulldogs teams of the 1990s. "You have to expect to be in these games and expect to win these games, but you can't assume that it will happen. And I think that's why trying to win a third straight championship will be an even steeper challenge than this one was. We lost so many guys last year and have so many more guys coming back next year. That's more chances for complacency."
It's also more chances to benefit from experience, to lean on been there, done that. More than half of this season's starters were redshirt sophomores or younger. They'll be paired with what will be Georgia's seventh consecutive top-three recruiting class.
Smart is only 47 years old. His former mentor, the guy sitting awkwardly next to Pollack, is 71. The GOAT was fully focused on what was in front of him. Saban always is. "I have hard time watching football because it's always work," Saban confessed the morning of the game. "How would we scheme against this? How are they accomplishing that? And in the case of what Kirby has done at Georgia, that is especially true. That's the greatest compliment I can give any program, that everyone in our business has to watch everything you do."
Yes, there are plenty of cautionary tales when it comes to college football dominion collapses. The transfer portal; name, image and likeness (NIL); an expanded playoff -- the list of what has derailed the mighty and could do the same to Dawgs in the future is ever changing. All of those teams listed earlier, from Miami to Nebraska to USC, have fallen from "they can't be beaten!" to "whatever happened to those guys?" It was just four winters ago when Clemson was playing in its fourth CFP title game in five years, and it has since slowly started sliding from the national conversation.
But even the players and coaches from those ruling-class programs, hailing from every spot along the timeline of college football history, likely spent their Monday night like the rest of us, watching the Georgia Bulldogs and wondering if what we witnessed against TCU might be a lot closer to the beginning of something big than it is to any conceivable end.
"I want to enjoy tonight, and I will," said Georgia's Brock Bowers, the All-American tight end who hauled in seven catches for 152 yards and a TD. He also is one of those sophomores. "But we go back to work as soon as we get home. There is always work to be done."
That's how it goes when you're building an empire.
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2-timesaweek · 19 days ago
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Texas coach Steve Sarkisian's classy message to Kirby Smart after Georgia defeat | Irish Star - Irish Star
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yayatees7store · 22 days ago
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Georgia Bulldogs Southeastern Conference Champions Skyline 2024 Shirt
Click here to buy it: https://yayatees7.com/product/georgia-bulldogs-southeastern-conference-champions-skyline-2024-shirt/Visit Home page: https://yayatees7.com The Georgia Bulldogs, led by the legendary coach Kirby Smart, have established themselves as a dominant force in college football, capturing two national championships in three years. As the 2024 season approaches, the Bulldogs are…
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cavenewstimes · 1 month ago
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The College Football Playoff Race Is Pure Chaos
Sports The Weirdest Stuff That Could Still Happen in College Football’s Wacky Playoff Race The final week of the regular season is pure chaos. Georgia Bulldogs head coach Kirby Smart and his players prior to the game against the UMass Minutemen last Saturday, at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Georgia. Jeffrey Vest/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images At the onset of fall, it was clear that the growth…
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gurutrends · 3 months ago
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Georgia made Kirby Smart college football's highest-paid coach. But at what cost?
Earl Ehrhart says he only encountered Kirby Smart once, in March 2016, before Smart had coached a football game at Georgia. Perhaps then it should have been obvious the signs were already there that this Georgia football coach would play defense better than any Bulldogs coach before him. At the time, Ehrhart was the longest-tenured Republican in the Georgia House of Representatives. Smart had…
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f4superbugfan89 · 3 months ago
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maturemenoftvandfilms · 1 year ago
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Watching Brian Kelly on the sidelines for LSU bowl game. Makes me think about the great victory sex that these coaches have when they win the big game! Just picture Brian Kelly, Kirby Smart or Nick Saban power fucking their wife (or favorite female) after big wins. What I would give to have a video of Brian Kelly going at it in the sack!
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norainahmadme-blog · 3 months ago
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Nick Saban reveals what he told Kirby Smart after Alabama beat Georgia
Sep 11, 2021; Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide head coach Nick Saban at Bryant-Denny Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Marvin Gentry-USA TODAY Sports Nick Saban may not have been pulling for the Georgia Bulldogs to beat Alabama last Saturday, but he still had a message for Kirby Smart once the game was over. On Saturday’s edition of “College GameDay,” Saban revealed he sent a text message…
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marklakshmanan · 3 months ago
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Is college football becoming pro football?
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jkdanu · 7 months ago
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University of Georgia Football Coach Kirby Smart Offers Up Athens Home for $4.2M
http://dlvr.it/T7Nr0X
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2-timesaweek · 6 months ago
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Bad News for Georgia | The Clemson Insider
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