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Georgia vs. Texas football history: Fran Tarkenton, Tom Landry and Bevo charging Uga

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Georgia vs. Texas football history: Fran Tarkenton, Tom Landry and Bevo charging Uga


Sixty-six years later, Fran Tarkenton remembers every detail about his college football debut. It came at Memorial Stadium, as Texas’ stadium was called then. And it happened when Tarkenton put himself in the game.

Tarkenton was the backup quarterback to start the 1958 season. Georgia’s offense was awful, and it was unable to get a first down. Tarkenton watched in growing disgust.

“I’d been harassing Wally Butts to, ‘Let me in, let me in, let me in.’ He never did,” Tarkenton said last week.

So he took the initiative. When Texas punted early in the fourth quarter, Tarkenton noticed Georgia’s starting quarterback sitting on the bench. Standing at the 50-yard line, right next to Butts, the sophomore didn’t wait.

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“I just ran on the field,” Tarkenton said. “My teammates were telling me: ‘What are you doing here?’”

Butts either didn’t have enough time to stop him or just didn’t bother. Asked what Butts said to him afterward, Tarkenton said: “Nothing! Nothing!” Either way, what ensued was what is still one of the longest drives in Georgia history: 21 plays, 95 yards, capped by Tarkenton hitting Jimmy Vickers for a 3-yard touchdown, then hitting Aaron Box for the first two-point conversion in program history. (It was a new rule that year.)

Texas answered with its own long drive — 72 yards on 17 plays — to win the game. But the legend of Tarkenton’s career had begun, and it would have seemed like a good time for two of the biggest programs in college football to launch a storied rivalry. But that proved to be the last time Georgia visited Austin.

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Until this Saturday, which will only be the sixth time the two powers have played each other.


Texas beat Georgia in the 2019 Sugar Bowl in the most recent meeting between the programs. (Sean Gardner / Getty Images)

The rivalry, such as it is, has created moments: Bevo going after Uga. Darrell Royal’s first game as Texas’ coach. Georgia moving a home game to Georgia Tech’s stadium for financial reasons. Tom Landry playing his final game with the Longhorns. Georgia ruining Texas’ national title hopes.

Some quick history:

1949: Orange Bowl, Texas won 41-28

This should have been a mismatch: Georgia was ranked No. 8 and on an eight-game winning streak. Texas was unranked with three losses and only got the Orange Bowl bid because SMU, which won the Southwest Conference, went to the Cotton Bowl.

The game began fortuitously enough for the Bulldogs, who got a 71-yard pick six from Al Bodine. But the Longhorns rallied and went ahead with a touchdown run by Landry, who finished with 117 yards. The future Dallas Cowboys coach turned pro after the game. Butts suffered the first of three losses to Texas.

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1957: Atlanta, season opener, Texas won 26-7

This goes down in Texas history as the debut for Royal, who finished 6-4-1 and ranked No. 11 in his first season.

The game goes down in Georgia history as an example of how different times were: Georgia moved the game to Georgia Tech’s home field because attendance would be better.

At the time, Georgia and Georgia Tech struggled to fill their stadiums if they were playing on the same day, “particularly Georgia, which is located in a sparsely populated area,” Dan Magill, wrote in Georgia’s official athletic department newsletter.

“No Georgia supporter could regret moving the Georgia-Texas game from beautiful Sanford Stadium to Grant Field any more than your Georgia Bulldog editor,” Magill added. “But we must admit that it was financially necessary to do so.”

Georgia was in the doldrums of the Butts era and finished 3-7, and the opener set the tone. As did the next year’s opener.

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1958: Austin, season opener, Texas won 13-8

After Tarkenton’s heroics, Texas quarterback Bobby Lackey answered with his long drive for the game winner. The Longhorns finished 7-3 in Royal’s second season, and he won two AP and three coaches poll national championships in his 20-year tenure.

As for Georgia, the Tarkenton era had begun, although not without another hiccup. Butts didn’t play Tarkenton the next week at Vanderbilt, leading Tarkenton and teammate Pat Dye to decide to transfer. They had cleaned out their dorm room but were talked out of it by an assistant coach. The next season, Tarkenton led Georgia to a 10-1 season and another trip to the Orange Bowl, where the Bulldogs beat Missouri. Another matchup with the Longhorns wouldn’t come for almost three decades.

1984: Cotton Bowl, Georgia won 10-9

Georgia essentially took away a national championship from Texas, which entered the game unbeaten and No. 2 in the AP and coaches polls and likely would have moved up after No. 1 Nebraska was upset that night in the Orange Bowl. But Georgia quarterback John Lastinger ran in a 17-yard touchdown with 3:22 left, and Kevin Butler kicked the game-winning extra point, capping the kind of low-scoring win that Vince Dooley liked.

Texas outgained Georgia 278-215 but committed four turnovers, including a muffed punt return that set up Georgia’s game-winning drive: Texas receiver Craig Curry, the short man on the punt return, thought Georgia was going to fake it, but instead the punt was short, and he tried to field it.

“I have no excuses. I don’t know what happened to me,” a tearful Curry said. “I had no idea it would be short. I just don’t know why I did it.”

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Georgia, which entered the game ranked No. 5, moved up a spot, finishing 10-1-1 in its first year without Herschel Walker, who was watching the game from the press box.

“We’re not as good a team without Herschel, but this is as fine a group as I’ve had in 20 years of coaching,” Dooley said.

2019: Sugar Bowl, Texas won 28-21

The most memorable thing happened before the game and didn’t even involve the players or coaches: Bevo went after Uga, turning what was supposed to be a happy photo op into a viral moment. (Read about it here.)

The incident portended the game as Georgia, dealing with several opt-outs and injuries, fell behind early and never recovered, losing 28-21.

2024: Saturday in Austin

Sixty-six years later, Georgia makes its return to Austin, this time with the teams in the same conference preparing for a much-hyped matchup with national championship ramifications.

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Tarkenton, who was in Napa Valley last week, said he’ll watch from his home in Atlanta if he’s home by then. Like everyone else, he’s glad it’s happening.

“Texas has a great team and a great coach. We have the same,” Tarkenton said. “It’s what it’s supposed to be. Great teams like Texas and Georgia are supposed to play each other.”

(Illustration: Meech Robinson / The Athletic; photos: Hargrett Library / UGA)



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Amid tariff and trade confusion, Georgia posted record exports in 2025

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Amid tariff and trade confusion, Georgia posted record exports in 2025


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The value of Georgia products sold overseas surpassed $60 billion last year, state officials said.

Georgia was ninth in the U.S. for exports in 2025, propped up by its logistics infrastructure of the world’s busiest airport, an extensive railroad network and the ports of Brunswick and Savannah (pictured). (Courtesy of Georgia Ports Authority 2024)

Despite a barrage of new tariffs imposed across the globe, Georgia saw another record year for international trade in 2025.

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Total trade last year reached nearly $211 billion, up almost 6% from 2024. Imports, subject to many tariffs enacted by the Trump administration, made up most of that activity, growing about 3% to more than $150 billion, according to a state report released Thursday.

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Georgia's top exported product in 2025 was civilian aircraft and ancillary parts, such as Gulfstream’s G500 and G600 aircraft seen on the assembly line in Savannah in December. (Hyosub Shin/AJC)

Georgia’s top exported product in 2025 was civilian aircraft and ancillary parts, such as Gulfstream’s G500 and G600 aircraft seen on the assembly line in Savannah in December. (Hyosub Shin/AJC)

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Amy Wenk

Amy Wenk is the consumer brands reporter for the AJC.



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Cal Men’s Basketball: Bears Stay Focused and Outlast a Beleaguered Georgia Tech 76-65

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Cal Men’s Basketball: Bears Stay Focused and Outlast a Beleaguered Georgia Tech 76-65


image courtesy of @CalMBBAll

Cal entered tonight’s matchup against a destitute Georgia Tech side dusting themselves off from an unexpected loss to a middle of the road Pitt team. The Golden Bears were looking to stay on the bubble of the NCAA tournament, while Tech, who finished last in ACC play, were simply trying to finish out their season with pride. This game marked the beginning of what will prove to be a long road trip for the boys from Berkeley.

Tech came out red hot from 3, thanks to forward Kowacie Reeves, who went 5-8 from behind the arc in the first half, while the entire Cal team was 0-12. His 19 points provided the difference in a first half with long stretches where neither team could put the ball in the basket.

Cal were frustrated early offensively, with Justin Pippen and Dai Dai Ames held scoreless in the first half. Lee Dort proved his offensive value, as the highest scorer for the Bears in the first half, particularly finding success in the paint, and they started the second half off feeding him early inside with some success.

The Bears opened the second half strong, finding ways to run their sets and get more players looks around the basket. Simultaneously, Camden began to find his shot from three, and things began to fall into place for a Cal side that was already having a decent night on the boards.

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Georgia Tech could not keep pace once Cal’s offense found a rythm, though they would have to do so without any scoring contributions from Justin Pippen, who went 0-7 from the field, but closed out the night with eight assists and two rebounds.

Ultimately, Tech’s 18 turnovers, and Cal’s persistence gave way to a Bears lead that wouldn’t be overcome. The Yellow Jackets did not have an answer for Lee Dort’s efforts in the paint, and when Dai Dai Ames found his footing on offense, eventually the game was all but finished. Despite a valiant effort, the Yellow Jackets could not maintain an offensive pace or defensive effort to keep up with Cal, who face Wake Forest this Saturday in another must win.



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Georgia Lt. Gov. candidate releases controversial ‘Sharia law’ video

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Georgia Lt. Gov. candidate releases controversial ‘Sharia law’ video


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In the days since the initial U.S. strikes in Iran, countless lawmakers stateside have weighed in on the Trump Administration’s decision to once again get involved in a conflict in the Middle East.

Prominent Georgia political figures like former representative Marjorie Taylor Greene and Senators Ossoff and Warnock have denounced the attacks, while candidates to replace MTG and others running in midterm elections have backed the president.

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Now, Georgia State Senator Greg Dolezal, who is running for Lieutenant Governor in November, has posted a controversial video to social media depicting a hypothetical scenario where an extreme version of what he calls “Sharia law” has taken over the United States.

“London has fallen. Europe is under siege. In America, the invaders who would rather pillage our generosity than assimilate are roaming Minnesota, New York and LA,” Dolezal said in the post. “As Lt. Governor, I will fight the enemy before they’re within the gates and keep Georgia safe and Sharia free.”

The video was marked with a content warning on X.

What does the video show?

The video, appearing to have been AI-generated, begins with two people walking toward a building and wearing head coverings, possibly hijabs, shaylas, Al-miras or khimars.

It then cuts to a man writing with frosting on a cake, possibly “Happy Easter,” but the letters are unclear. A figure dressed in all black runs into frame and slices the cake with a weapon like a Zulfiqar sword.

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It goes on to show military vehicles driving down the street, a woman being stopped from driving, a group of men in head coverings shooting weapons into the air and a suicide bomber vest, all while playing a song with the lyrics “No Sharia.”

(Warning: the video may be disturbing for some viewers.)

Video called ‘disgusting’ and ‘racist’

The video was met with significant criticism, including from Democratic gubernatorial candidate Geoff Duncan.

“This is disgusting. People wonder why I became a Democrat, it’s because of the inexcusable hatred spewed by so many Republicans like Greg Dolezal. Hate, including Islamophobia, has no place in Georgia,” Duncan wrote on X.

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Rev. James “Major” Woodall, Sr., of Atlanta, called the video “deeply racist.”

“As a Christian man who deeply loves Georgia, I pray you never become Lt. Governor,” Woodall wrote.

Emanuel Jones, of the state senate, called out his fellow representative and said “if you don’t know it yet, Georgia is better than this!!”

“We don’t need race baiting, fear mongering to get votes. Perhaps that (is) what the Republican Party has devolved into,” Jones said on X.

Dolezal got support, however, from MAGA personality Laura Loomer who commented “No Sharia!”

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The video has also been reposted more than 1,000 times as of 2 p.m. on March 4.

Who is Greg Dolezal?

The state senator represents District 27, and is based in Alpharetta. He was sworn in to the Georgia Senate in 2019.

He is a small business owner and attended North Park University.

Irene Wright is the Atlanta Connect reporter with USA Today’s Deep South Connect team. Find her on X @IreneEWright or email her at ismith@usatodayco.com.



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