Georgia
How to buy Georgia Bulldogs vs. Auburn Tigers tickets
SEC opponents face off when the No. 5 Georgia Bulldogs and the Auburn Tigers play on Saturday, October 5, 2024 at Sanford Stadium.
If you are looking for Bulldogs vs. Tigers tickets, information is available below.
Georgia vs. Auburn game info
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How to buy Georgia vs. Auburn tickets for college football Week 6
You can purchase tickets to see the Bulldogs play the Tigers from multiple sources.
Georgia vs. Auburn betting odds, lines, spreads
- Spread favorite: Bulldogs (-24)
- Moneyline favorite: Bulldogs (-2857)
- Total: 52.5 (O: -112, U: -108)
Odds courtesy of BetMGM
Georgia Bulldogs schedule
- Week 1: Aug. 31 at 12:00 p.m. ET vs. Clemson Tigers, 34-3 win
- Week 2: Sept. 7 at 2:00 p.m. ET vs. Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles, 48-3 win
- Week 3: Sept. 14 at 7:30 p.m. ET at Kentucky Wildcats, 13-12 win
- Week 5: Sept. 28 at 7:30 p.m. ET at Alabama Crimson Tide, 41-34 loss
- Week 6: Oct. 5 at 3:30 p.m. ET vs. Auburn Tigers
- Week 7: Oct. 12 at 4:15 p.m. ET vs. Mississippi State Bulldogs
- Week 8: Oct. 19 at Texas Longhorns
- Week 10: Nov. 2 at 3:30 p.m. ET vs. Florida Gators
- Week 11: Nov. 9 at Ole Miss Rebels
- Week 12: Nov. 16 vs. Tennessee Volunteers
- Week 13: Nov. 23 at 12:45 p.m. ET vs. UMass Minutemen
- Week 14: Nov. 29 at 7:30 p.m. ET vs. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
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Georgia Bulldogs stats
- Georgia owns the 44th-ranked offense this season (431.5 yards per game), and has been even better defensively, ranking 24th-best with just 288.3 yards allowed per game.
- On the defensive side of the ball, the Bulldogs have been a top-25 unit, ranking 18th-best by giving up just 14.8 points per game. They rank 52nd on offense (32.3 points per game).
- Georgia has been a tough opponent for opposing teams in the passing game, with a top-25 ranking in both passing offense (19th-best with 302.3 passing yards per game) and passing defense (25th-best with 162 passing yards allowed per game) this year.
- The Bulldogs rank 102nd in run offense (129.3 rushing yards per game) and 57th in run defense (126.3 rushing yards allowed per game) this season.
Auburn Tigers schedule
- Week 1: Aug. 31 at 7:30 p.m. ET vs. Alabama A&M Bulldogs, 73-3 win
- Week 2: Sept. 7 at 3:30 p.m. ET vs. California Golden Bears, 21-14 loss
- Week 3: Sept. 14 at 7:30 p.m. ET vs. New Mexico Lobos, 45-19 win
- Week 4: Sept. 21 at 3:30 p.m. ET vs. Arkansas Razorbacks, 24-14 loss
- Week 5: Sept. 28 at 3:30 p.m. ET vs. Oklahoma Sooners, 27-21 loss
- Week 6: Oct. 5 at 3:30 p.m. ET at Georgia Bulldogs
- Week 8: Oct. 19 at Missouri Tigers
- Week 9: Oct. 26 at Kentucky Wildcats
- Week 10: Nov. 2 vs. Vanderbilt Commodores
- Week 12: Nov. 16 at 12:45 p.m. ET vs. Louisiana-Monroe Warhawks
- Week 13: Nov. 23 vs. Texas A&M Aggies
- Week 14: Nov. 30 at Alabama Crimson Tide
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Auburn Tigers stats
- Auburn’s offense has been excelling, piling up 466 total yards per game (23rd-best) this season. On defense, it ranks 50th by surrendering 329 total yards per game.”s offense has been excelling, piling up 466 total yards per game (23rd-best) this season. On defense, it ranks 50th by surrendering 329 total yards per game.
- The Tigers rank 42nd in the FBS with 33.4 points per contest on offense, and they rank 37th with 18.8 points surrendered per game on defense.
- Auburn’s pass offense has been thriving, posting 294.8 passing yards per game (25th-best) this season. Defensively, it ranks 67th by surrendering 208 passing yards per game.
- The Tigers are putting up 171.2 rushing yards per contest on offense this season (62nd-ranked). Meanwhile, they are allowing 121 rushing yards per game (47th-ranked) on defense.
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Georgia
Why Southern Living is spotlighting serene coastal escape in Georgia
22 sea turtles released into the ocean at Jekyll Island
Mystic Aquarium, a Connecticut-based aquarium and animal rescue organization, released 22 sea turtles into the Ocean at Jekyll Island.
A quiet stretch of the Georgia coast is back in the national spotlight.
In a recent feature, Southern Living highlighted the Golden Isles as one of the South’s most serene escapes, praising the region’s undeveloped marshes, barrier islands and slower pace compared to other East Coast beach destinations.
Located roughly halfway between Savannah and Jacksonville, the Golden Isles include Brunswick, Sea Island, St. Simons Island, Jekyll Island and Little St. Simons Island.
Here’s what to know.
What makes Georgia’s Golden Isles different?
Unlike more densely developed beach towns in neighboring states, Georgia’s coastline is defined by tidal creeks, salt marshes and wide stretches of protected land.
“The coast of Georgia is quite different than the shores of North Carolina or South Carolina,” Southern Living wrote. “It’s wilder and quieter, and it’s much less populated with beach towns.”
While the islands offer modern resorts and vacation homes, much of the natural character remains intact.
One of the most photographed spots is Driftwood Beach on Jekyll Island, known for its haunting remains of a maritime forest scattered along the shoreline.
Where are visitors staying?
The publication pointed to several well-known properties across the islands:
- The Cloister at Sea Island
- Jekyll Island Club Resort
- St. Simons Island: The Grey Owl Inn and the St. Simons Lighthouse.
Little St. Simons Island, accessible only by boat, was highlighted for its all-inclusive lodge and thousands of acres of protected marshland and upland habitat.
What can you do in the Golden Isles?
Southern Living emphasized simple, immersive experiences:
- Biking under live oaks
- Kayaking through marsh creeks
- Horseback riding along the beach
- Watching sunsets over the water.
Public beaches like East Beach on St. Simons Island remain open to visitors, while golf courses on Jekyll Island and St. Simons offer year-round play.
The region’s history also plays a major role. Visitors can climb the St. Simons Lighthouse, explore historic districts in Brunswick or learn about Gullah Geechee heritage through local organizations.
For more information, visit southernliving.com/georgias-golden-isles-11906085.
Vanessa Countryman is the Trending Topics Reporter for the Deep South Connect Team Georgia. Email her at Vcountryman@gannett.com.
Georgia
Gov. Kemp signs amended FY 2026 budget, delivering $2B in Georgia tax relief
ATLANTA, Ga. — Georgia Governor Brian P. Kemp on Tuesday signed HB 973, the amended Fiscal Year 2026 budget.
The amended budget includes $2 billion in income and property tax relief, alongside investments in education, public safety, mental health, transportation and rural development.
Lt. Gov. Burt Jones praised Gov. Kemp, saying the budget…
“Makes critical investments in middle-class families, mental health services, healthcare workforce development, transportation and Georgia’s veterans community.”
Key allocations in the amended budget include:
- Education and Workforce Development: $325 million to endow the DREAMS Scholarship, a new needs-based scholarship program; $6 million for a Career Navigator tool; and funding for new and expanded programs at University System of Georgia and Technical College System of Georgia institutions.
- Public Safety: $150 million for Department of Corrections bed space, $9.7 million for additional corrections officers, $15 million for a new K-9 training facility, and $50 million to help communities address homelessness, including among veterans.
- Mental Health: $409 million to design and construct a new Georgia Regional Hospital to expand mental health bed capacity.
- Transportation: More than $1.6 billion to extend and expand I-75 express lanes in Henry County; $185 million for SR 316 interchange conversions; $100 million for rural bridge rehabilitation and replacement; and $250 million for local maintenance and improvement grants.
- Rural Georgia: $15 million for rural site development grants; $35 million for a new natural gas infrastructure program; and $8.9 million for the Georgia Forestry Innovation Initiative.
Governor Kemp says the state’s conservative budgeting approach has allowed Georgia to provide tax relief while making “generational investments.”
Georgia
Middle Georgia DSA condemns U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran, calls escalation ‘illegal’
MACON, Ga. (WGXA) — Middle Georgia Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) has issued a statement regarding the U.S. and Israel’s joint strikes on Iran over the weekend.
According to other WGXA articles, based on reports as of early March 2026, the United States and Israel have launched major, coordinated military operations against Iran, labeled in reports as “Operation Epic Fury” and “Operation Midnight Hammer”. This follows months of failed nuclear negotiations and escalating regional tensions.
RELATED | Hegseth insists US-Israel strikes on Iran are ‘not Iraq, not endless’
WGXA asked Middle Georgia DSA, the largest activist organization in Middle Georgia, for their opinions on the strikes, and they responded with this:
The strikes on Iran, carried out by the United States and Israel, mark a catastrophic escalation in an illegal act of aggression. The Iranian people do not deserve to live in fear of American bombs and of the instability of regime change. Americans do not want our tax dollars and the lives of our people to be wasted on opening up a new war in the Middle East, or on bombing girls’ elementary schools. We want relief from the affordability crisis. We want peace. Middle Georgia DSA unequivocally condemns these attacks and any politicians who cannot do the same. We do not want this, we do not deserve this.
DSA added that they are not currently planning any protests at this time, and that they “remain focused on improving the conditions of people who live within our communities directly, and do not feel a protest is the best strategy to deliver on that.”
Middle Georgia DSA condemns U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran, calls escalation ‘illegal’, March 2, 2026 (Image is meant to say 2026 instead of 2025, Courtesy of GCSU Mutual Aid)
However, GCSU Mutual Aid, a grassroots, community-led initiative focused on collective care and resource sharing within the Milledgeville and broader Middle Georgia area. While not an official department of Georgia College & State University (GCSU), it frequently operates in coordination with student-led groups and local residents to address gaps in traditional social safety nets.
RELATED | GCSU encourages peaceful expression ahead of national ICE walkout
GCSU Mutual Aid is planning a protest for Wednesday, where they will be “Marching for Democracy” in retaliation to recent events in the U.S.
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