Georgia
Tech Drops Road Game at Georgia, 76-62
Athens, Ga. – Miles Kelly and Kowacie Reeves, Jr., each scored 12 points to lead Georgia Tech, but the Yellow Jackets had trouble finding the basket and shot a season-low 32 percent, falling to Georgia by a score of 76-62 Tuesday night at Stegeman Coliseum.
The loss ended a two-game winning streak for the upstart Jackets (4-3), who had defeated top-25 foes Mississippi State and Duke last week. The Bulldogs won their fourth straight game and improved to 6-3, and snapped a two-game skid in the series with Tech in the teams’ 199th all-time meeting.
Reeves scored Tech’s first two baskets on a layup and a three-pointer, while Kelly drained a three and freshman Baye Ndongo scored on a layup as the teams went back and fourth over the first eight minutes with Georgia holding a 12-10 edge.
But the Jackets went cold at that point, missing their next 10 shots from the floor while the Bulldogs scored nine straight points to take a 21-10 lead with 6:01 left in the first half. Tech trimmed the margin to nine on each of its next two possessions, but when Georgia freshman Blue Cain drained the second of his four three-pointers in the game to get the Bulldogs back up 26-14, Tech never got closer than 10 points the rest of the game. The ‘Dogs led by as many as 23 points in the second half.
Tech connected on just 26.5 percent of its shots from the floor in the first half, improved to 36.2 percent in the second half, but suffered from a large number of missed shots from close range, including 15 layups.
Georgia didn’t fare much better, hitting 40 percent from the floor, but hit two more threes and eight more free throws. Noah Thomasson led four Bulldogs in double digits with 16 points.
The Yellow Jackets return to action Saturday at 4 p.m. against Alabama A&M at McCamish Pavilion. The game will be televised nationally on the ACC Network.

Georgia
Georgia football future SEC opponents, schedule announced

The SEC has announced the future Georgia football conference opponents for the 2026 through 2029 seasons.
Georgia will face Florida, South Carolina and Auburn every season. The SEC announced on Friday that the annual opponents will be revisited every four seasons.
Georgia football future SEC opponents, schedule
- 2026: Florida (Atlanta), at South Carolina, Auburn, at Alabama, at Ole Miss, at Arkansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Vanderbilt
- 2027: Florida (Tampa), South Carolina, at Auburn, at Kentucky, at Texas, at Texas A&M, LSU, Mississippi State, Tennessee
- 2028: Florida (Jacksonville), at South Carolina, Auburn, Alabama, Ole Miss, Arkansas, at Oklahoma, at Missouri, at Vanderbilt
- 2029: Florida (Jacksonville), South Carolina, at Auburn, Kentucky, Texas, Texas A&M, at LSU, at Mississippi State, at Tennessee
“it’s hard. I mean, it’s brutal. And everybody’s the same,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said on Tuesday night. “I mean, we all gotta play each other. It’s really tough, highly ranked teams, physical teams. It’s just going to continue to be a grind. I mean, looking forward with the nines coming, it’s going to be scary because you just don’t have enough. Nobody has enough depth.”
Dates for the 2026 schedule will be announced in December, according to the conference. The schedules will be flipped in 2028 and 2029 from the home-road splits in 2026 and 2027.
In its scheduling outline, the SEC made it clear it wants competitively balanced schedules, which will be determined using the entire schedule and not just the annual opponents. Tennessee reportedly will face Alabama, Vanderbilt and Kentucky in each of the next four years. The latter two are not exactly football powerhouses.
According to the SEC, the highest opponent average winning percentage for any school in the 2026-29 schedules is 55.67% while the lowest is 46.65%, a difference of only 9.02%. From 2020 through 2023 — when the league still used the divisional format — the highest winning percentage was 61.32% and the lowest was 39.76%.
In addition to nine conference games, the SEC stipulates that schools face one Power Four in its nonconference scheduling.
Georgia’s game against Georgia Tech satisfies that requirement. Georgia has future nonconference games against Louisville, Florida State, Clemson and Ohio State on its schedule for the time being.
As it stands, Georgia has 13 games scheduled for the 2025 season. The Bulldogs have nonconfernce games against Tennessee State, Western Kentucky, Louisville and Georgia Tech.
“We’re working through that right now, and a lot of that’s going to be determined as we learn when and where our schedule is going to be in the next few weeks,” Georgia athletic director Josh Brooks said. “But that’s something we’re attacking right now to see what our options are going to be in 2026. So we’re going to take it one year at a time right now. The first focus is going to be on 2026 and then 2027 and moving on. So still a lot of work to be done, and I work closely with Coach Smart and Mark Robinson and the league to kind of figure out what is that going to mean for our schedule moving forward.”
Georgia takes on Alabama this week, with the game scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ET on ABC.
Georgia
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Georgia
Clemson vs. Georgia Tech: College football live scores, games, highlights and more
We’re back for another week of college football action and the slate is loaded, including three games between ranked opponents.
Here’s how to watch in Week 3. Scroll down for live scores, highlights and more.
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Here are the best games this Saturday:
Clemson at Georgia Tech (+3), Noon ET, ESPN: The Tigers are just 3-point favorites ahead of their first road game. It’s a sign that expectations for Clemson have been way off. With Haynes King back, the Yellow Jackets will want to keep it on the ground.
Georgia at Tennessee (+4), 3:30 p.m., ABC: Has Georgia’s offense been good enough ahead of this pivotal SEC game? Saturday is the day to air it out as Tennessee will be without its top two corners again.
South Florida at Miami (-17.5), 4:30 p.m., The CW: The Bulls are the surprise team so far this season. Can they pull off a third straight upset, or will the ‘Canes handle business?
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Florida at LSU (-7), 7:30 p.m., ABC: This game was going to be the day’s marquee matchup before Florida’s loss to USF. A Florida victory would certainly quiet the idea that Billy Napier is on the hot seat.
Texas A&M at Notre Dame (-6.5), 7:30 p.m., NBC: Aggies QB Marcel Reed has thrown for seven TDs so far and A&M’s offense has racked up 953 total yards. The Irish will surely try to get the ball to their star running backs after a subpar opener.
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