Georgia
Stetson Bennett can cap Georgia career with second title — this one with brother
ATLANTA — Luke Bennett had narrowed his choices to a few selections: Florida State, Georgia and New Hampshire.
The primary two potentialities got here as a most well-liked walk-on and the third was on scholarship. Solely a kind of faculties, nonetheless, might provide the 5-foot-11 vast receiver one season he would really always remember.
An opportunity to play along with his older brother, Stetson.
“One 12 months taking part in with ‘Stet,’ I couldn’t give that up for something,” Luke advised The Put up on Thursday from the Faculty Soccer Corridor of Fame at Peach Bowl media day. “I used to be given the chance, and I ran with it.”
On account of their six-year age hole — Stetson is 25 and Luke is nineteen — the Bennett brothers had by no means performed on the identical group, making this season much more memorable. After serving to Georgia win its first nationwide championship since 1980 final January, Stetson has added to his hard-to-believe underdog story this 12 months. The one-time walk-on, Georgia’s model of “Rudy,” has set career-highs in completion share (68.1) and yards (3,425) whereas producing 27 whole touchdowns (20 via the air) and ending fourth within the Heisman Trophy voting. And Luke has been alongside for the experience.
Earlier than each follow, the brothers from Blackshear, a city of three,500 in southern Georgia, give one another a high-five as they go each other on the 50-yard-line earlier than becoming a member of their respective place teams. Once in a while, Luke will catch a go from Stetson. Most necessary, they’re experiencing this undefeated season collectively, Stetson’s last 12 months at Georgia and Luke’s first.
“It’s superior,” Luke mentioned. “We performed loads of ball within the yard collectively, however by no means an actual sport and even practiced collectively. It simply reminds you of outdated occasions.”
Added Stetson: “I wouldn’t say a miracle, but it surely nearly is. It’s super-lucky.”
Some would describe Stetson’s journey, to inside two wins of turning into the uncommon two-time nationwide championship-winning quarterback, in comparable style. He began his Georgia profession as a walk-on, went to junior faculty and returned to the SEC college after almost signing with Louisiana-Lafayette. He was the backup final 12 months to J.T. Daniels on the outset, however after Daniels suffered an indirect damage that stored him out just a few weeks, Stetson Wally Pipp’d him, taking on for good.
Stetson, nicknamed “The Mailman’’ as a result of he as soon as wore a U.S. Postal Service hat to a showcase camp whereas in highschool, took time to replicate on it this week. If he needed to expertise it unexpectedly, he in all probability wouldn’t be sane, Stetson joked. He admitted to disliking a few of his coaches at occasions, believing they had been deliberately holding him again, an opinion Kirby Good didn’t essentially disagree with.
“He overcame a lot,” Good, the Georgia coach, mentioned. “He overcame us. We didn’t put the man on the market. He got here and met with me, and he needed extra reps. We tried to provide him extra reps. Each spring sport he went with the 3s, he had success. It’s like what extra can the man do?”
Even with out a second title, Stetson will go down in Georgia lore because the quarterback who was in a position to get the Bulldogs over the hump after 41 years. Who defied the chances as an under-recruited and undersized prospect no person gave a lot of an opportunity. It’s a task Luke now finds himself in, making an attempt to work his manner up the ladder in a sea of elite recruits. He doesn’t consider there may be any added stress following in his brother’s footsteps at Georgia. There’s inspiration, although.
“He’s an amazing individual to look as much as,” Luke mentioned. “It’s motivating, it’s humbling. You be taught loads from him.”
Georgia
Georgia QB Carson Beck reportedly expected to miss College Football Playoff quarterfinal
Whomever Georgia football faces in the College Football Playoff quarterfinal, it will have to win without Carson Beck.
Due to a UCL injury in his throwing elbow, the Bulldogs starting quarterback is expected to miss next month’s game against the winner of the first-round matchup between No. 7 Notre Dame and No. 10 Indiana, according to On3’s Pete Nakos.
Beck has reportedly not been with the Georgia team since it returned to practice and workouts last week. In his absence, Gunner Stockton is expected to get his first career start Jan. 1 at the Sugar Bowl.
The injury occurred on the final play of the first half in Georgia’s win over Texas in the SEC championship. Beck’s arm was hit hard by a Longhorns defender as he reared back to throw, knocking the ball loose and leaving the passer writhing on the ground.
Stockton took over in the second half and helped rejuvenate a Georgia offense that scored only three points in the entire first half, before having to leave the game himself following a hard hit.
The Georgia coaches opted to bring a clearly limited Beck back in to hand the ball off to Trevor Etienne for a game-winning touchdown in overtime. It is now within the realm of possibility that will be the final play of his college career.
Should Beck be done for the season, his 2024 will be mostly remembered as a disappointing follow-up to his standout 2023. For the most part, his numbers took a step back across the board while Georgia didn’t look like the dominant force of the last three years.
It’s also unclear if this injury will affect Beck in the pre-draft process. Beck isn’t seen as one of the top quarterback prospects for the 2025 NFL Draft, but could theoretically rise in a class that is mostly seen as weak. Being able to throw would be helpful for that.
Georgia
Georgia Power customers facing higher bills next year
ATLANTA – Georgia Power customers should brace for higher utility bills in the new year.
The Georgia Public Service Commission approved another rate increase on Tuesday, marking the sixth hike in three years. Starting in January, the average customer’s bill will rise by $5.85.
According to Georgia Power, the increase is part of a long-term plan approved in 2022. The additional revenue will be used to fund ongoing infrastructure projects, address higher fuel costs, and support nuclear power developments.
Earlier this year, Georgia Power customers were hit with a 5% increase when the Plant Vogtle’s fourth nuclear unit came online.
This latest hike continues a trend of rising costs for electricity across the state.
Georgia
Bookman: Wealthy school voucher supporters send disapproving taxpayers the bill • Georgia Recorder
School vouchers are unpopular.
They are unpopular with liberal voters. They are unpopular with conservative voters.
In modern American politics, it is rare to find such agreement, with voters of all stripes recognizing that they pose an existential threat to public education.
Yet somehow, in Georgia and other states, voucher programs continue to be implemented against what appears to be strong bipartisan opposition.
How is that happening?
It’s happening because a relative handful of very wealthy people have made school vouchers their pet vanity project, using multi-million-dollar campaign chests to try to refashion state legislatures all across the country to do their will.
Jeffrey Yass of Pennsylvania, Betsy DeVos of Michigan, Richard Uihlein of Illinois, Charles Koch of Kansas and other billionaires are all funding crusades in states where they don’t live, threatening the health of public schools that their kids will never attend, because they believe they know better than residents of those states how their children should be educated.
In Texas, for example, Yass and others donated tens of millions of dollars to remove conservative legislators who had dared to vote against a universal voucher program. In legislative races, $10,000 can do a lot of damage, and in November they succeeded in removing 15 conservative anti-voucher legislators, replacing them with candidates willing to do their bidding.
In states such as Georgia, where public opposition has continued to frustrate straightforward attempts to implement universal vouchers, proponents have resorted to political intimidation, deception and bait-and-switch legislation to accomplish their goals.
Let’s start with the assertion that vouchers are highly unpopular.
In every single state, liberal or conservative, in which voters have had a chance to directly voice their opinion, pro-voucher referendums have been defeated, and usually by overwhelmingly margins.
It happened most recently last month in Nebraska, a conservative state that Donald Trump carried by 20 points. If vouchers are truly a grassroots conservative cause, with broad popular support, surely you would expect them to be popular in the Nebraska heartland.
Yet Nebraskans voted overwhelmingly, 57% to 43%, to repeal a voucher program that their state legislators had tried to impose on them. It was the third time that Nebraskans have directly voted against using taxpayer money to fund private schools.
In Kentucky, the story was much the same. State legislators, goaded by out-of-state donors, needed to change the state constitution to allow vouchers, but doing so required that they get voter approval. It didn’t happen. In a deep-red state that Trump carried by 30 points, the proposed voucher amendment was rejected by 30 points. It failed in every one of the state’s 120 counties, rural and urban.
It’s also important to note that the distorting effect of huge sums of campaign money from billionaire voucher proponents is not felt solely in legislative races. Republican megadonors have also made it clear to politicians with ambitions for higher office that if they want the type of large donations needed in national races, they better toe the line on vouchers.
So here in Georgia last year, Gov. Brian Kemp helped to strong-arm the state Legislature into narrowly passing what was sold to legislators and the public as a very limited voucher bill, estimated to provide $6,500 in taxpayer money to pay private-school tuition to students in the lowest-performing 25% of Georgia schools. As part of that bill, legislators authorized spending for vouchers for as many as 22,000 students who are supposedly “stuck” in those poor-performing schools.
Except ….
Suddenly, state education officials have reread that new law and now claim that it makes as many as 400,000 Georgia students eligible for vouchers, including hundreds of thousands who do not attend a low-performing school. That is a number that was never heard or seen during debate on the legislation.
State Rep. Chris Erwin, chair of the House Education Committee, told the Associated Press that wasn’t how the law was intended to work and he wants it rewritten.
House Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones joined him, saying she also felt misled.
“That wasn’t my understanding,” she said of the expanded program.
This is hardly the first time that voucher proponents in Georgia have told the public one thing during debate on a bill, only to turn around and disavow those promises later. It’s the kind of bait-and-switch technique you turn to only when you know that your proposal is too unpopular to be adopted through honest means.
It’s also important to point out that the public’s distrust of vouchers is well-grounded in fact and reality. Study after study has found that vouchers do not improve education outcomes, and instead can cause significant harm. And just as opponents have warned for decades, most of the taxpayer money spent on vouchers is going to subsidize students in prosperous families who were already attending private school or being home-schooled. Relatively little is used to help public-school students “escape” into better schools, the supposed rationale for vouchers.
And because voucher advocates insist upon little or no regulation of such programs, abuses have become legendary.
In Florida, homeschooling parents are using tax money to fund family trips to Disney World. In Arizona, families are using vouchers to buy themselves big-screen TVs. In Arkansas, a state that ranks 45th in the country in teacher pay, a voucher program created in 2023 is paying for horseback riding lessons for home-schooled children.
Think about that. At a time when public schools often lack the funding for even basic supplies, voucher advocates are using taxpayer money for equestrian training.
You can cite any number of circumstances in which unregulated campaign money is distorting the political process in this country, but perhaps none is as egregious, blatant and potentially destructive as the debate over vouchers. Rural communities in particular are wary of proposals that would drain resources from their public schools, and if Democrats are looking for a way to restore common ground with those voters, the fight against vouchers offers a great opportunity to do so.
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