Georgia
‘The guys trust him:’ What assistant Travaris Robinson will bring to Georgia football
WATCH: UGA football DC Glenn Schumann talks about defense at Orange Bowl
WATCH: Georgia football DC Glenn Schumann talks to reporters on Dec. 27, 2023 about Bulldog defense at Orange Bowl
A couple of guys that played with Jerraud Powers with the Indianapolis Colts chopped it up with the former Auburn cornerback after Travaris Robinson was hired for the Georgia football coaching staff.
Tim Jennings and George Foster, who played for the Bulldogs, keep in touch with Powers.
So when Robinson was named co-defensive coordinator and safeties coach under Kirby Smart, Powers, like many, saw it as a great get for Georgia. The well-known SEC assistant spent the past two seasons as Alabama’s cornerbacks coach under recently retired Nick Saban.
“I was just telling them, man, the rich get richer,” Powers said. “When you think about the talent that Georgia has and the system and the program that’s already in place, adding T-Boy is just the rich getting richer type of thing. He’s going to fit that environment and know the system already because it’s a similar system that he coaches and I think he’s going to thrive in recruiting.”
More: New era at Alabama is also a new chapter for SEC rival Georgia football under Kirby Smart
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Robinson, known widely as T-Rob, was a student assistant and then graduate assistant under then defensive coordinator and secondary coach Will Muschamp for Powers’ first two seasons at Auburn in 2006 and 2007. Robinson worked extensively with nickelbacks.
“He’s always been a bright mind, but he was an Auburn alum,” said Powers, who played eight seasons in the NFL with the Colts, Cardinals and Ravens. “When he came back to coach, we were all ears and trying to learn and gain knowledge from him as much as possible because we knew he had just been through what we’d been through and he was just coming from the NFL.”
Robinson played 48 games as a free safety and returned kicks for Auburn from 1999-2002, where the Miami native was All-SEC and a team captain his senior season and shared the team lead in interceptions with Carlos Rogers with 4. He then played for the Falcons for two seasons and Tampa Bay for one.
“He quickly learned Muschamp’s system as far as the teaching points and how to get guys ready for it,” Power said. “He was one of the main guys we used to rely on in understanding the system and understanding how Muschamp wanted us to play back then.”
Robinson and Muschamp worked together later for 10 straight seasons at Florida from 2011-14 when Muschamp was head coach, 2015 back at Auburn when Muschamp was defensive coordinator again and at South Carolina from 2016-2020 when Muschamp was Gamecocks’ head coach.
They will work together again at Georgia with Muschamp serving as a defensive analyst now and Robinson taking over the coaching role that Muschamp held.
SEC Network analyst Cole Cubelic praised the Robinson hire.
“He’s one of the best recruiters in the nation,” Cubelic said in a message to the Athens Banner-Herald. “Big program experience. Knows South Florida well. Coordinator experience & players love him. Also great with punt returners. Just adds a ton of value.”
Robinson is credited with recruiting five-star prospects Vernon Hargreaves and Teez Tabor at Florida, Jordan Burch at South Carolina and Caleb Downs and Jaylen Mbakwe at Alabama.
Downs, a safety, entered the transfer portal after Nick Saban retired but he ended up committing to Ohio State.
“There’s a lot of guys that love playing for him,” Powers said. “You don’t find too many guys that played for him or Muschamp that have anything negative to say. When it comes to recruiting and just getting guys to run through a brick wall for him, he does a good job in building those relationships to where the guys trust him and obviously the play on the field is the bottom line. More times than not, he’s been around a lot of great guys that have played in the secondary and on defense that are playing in the NFL to this day.”
Robinson, 42, considers himself a “very personable guy,” he told reporters in 2021 when he was Miami defensive backs coach. “One of the biggest things in college football is creating relationships. I think that’s more than the recruiting factor, it’s when you get a kid on campus, it’s having a relationship with that kid that it feels like he can come and talk to you about anything. And the kid will play more for you.”
Heritage High coach Ryan Andrews met Robinson when he was recruiting Chaz Elder out of Banneker High where Andrews coached. Elder went on to play for Robinson at South Carolina.
“In recruiting he is relentless and very authentic and honest,” Andrews said. “As a coach, very detailed oriented and does a good job of getting his players to play hard for him.”
Robinson was defensive coordinator at South Carolina, and Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin created a stir this season when he said he thought Robinson started calling Alabama’s defensive plays — not Kevin Steele — after the loss to Texas.
“Our guys watching the TV copy schematically in this last game, it certainly seems like T-Rob’s now calling the defense,” Kiffin said. “We played him before at South Carolina, so we’re preparing accordingly, you know, for him calling the defense. He’s done a good job, too. And they’ve got really good players.”
Robinson said of players he recruits that he will “coach him hard, I’m going to hold him accountable and responsible for everything that he does. But I’m gonna love him equally as hard and that’s why I think I’m successful as far as the recruiting part. … Not only can I recruit and get the No. 1 player or whatever the case may be, but I want to develop him so when he leaves here he’s going to have that same opportunity to be the No. 1 player when he’s getting ready for the draft.”
Georgia
Federal defunding of public media raises concerns for Georgia stations from viewers, educators
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) — More than $1 billion in federal funding is being pulled from public media nationwide, money that supports more than 1,500 television and radio stations across the country.
For nearly six decades, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) helped deliver children’s programming, public affairs reporting and emergency information to homes across the state. Shows like “Sesame Street” introduced generations of children to letters, numbers and social-emotional learning.
“I loved learning, and having educational programming right there made a big difference,” said Bailey Matthews.
In Georgia, the cuts are raising concerns about jobs, children’s educational programming, and access to news and emergency alerts, particularly in rural communities.
Educators and child development experts say programs featuring puppets as characters can be especially effective for young learners.
“Kids see a puppet as a living character, and that makes learning easier,” said Beth Schiavo, executive director for the Atlanta Center for Puppetry Arts.
Congress voted last year to defund CPB through the Rescissions Act of 2025, clawing back $1.1 billion that had already been approved. This week, CPB’s board voted to dissolve the organization entirely.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Corporation for Public Broadcasting votes itself out of existence
Some Georgia Republicans who supported the move say the decision comes down to federal spending priorities and concerns about political bias in public media.
“The news that these entities produced is either resented or increasingly tuned out and turned off by most of the hardworking Americans who are forced to pay for it,” said former U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.
The loss of federal funding has immediate financial implications for Georgia stations. Georgia Public Broadcasting says CPB funding made up about 10% of its budget, or roughly $4.2 million this year.
At Atlanta’s WABE, the city’s PBS affiliate and main NPR affiliate, they must replace $1.9 million — about 13% of their annual budget.
Both GPB and WABE say they are not shutting down but acknowledge the loss of federal support means relying more heavily on donations and community backing moving forward.
“Public radio, to continue to be funded, allows for us to meet the needs of people who live in news deserts,” said NPR President and CEO Katherine Maher.
Former Georgia Teacher of the Year Tracey Nance said the impact extends beyond broadcasting. The Georgia Budget and Policy Institute estimates more than 77,000 Georgia teachers have accessed GPB educational content more than four million times.
“It is absolutely providing essential services — not a luxury, but essential services that provide a foundation that all kids deserve,” said Nance.
Nance is calling on state lawmakers to use the state surplus to intervene.
Copyright 2026 WANF. All rights reserved.
Georgia
Georgia Deports Citizens of 6 Countries, Including Azerbaijan
Employees of the Migration Department of Georgia’s Ministry of Internal Affairs, as part of recent special operations, have deported 13 citizens from Turkmenistan, Iran, Cuba, Türkiye, Thailand, and Azerbaijan.
According to the information released by the ministry, the Migration Department carried out comprehensive immigration control measures in close coordination with the relevant departments, The Caspian Post reports, citing local media.
It is noted that, under current legislation, deported persons are prohibited from re-entering the country.
According to official statistics, the total number of foreign citizens deported from Georgia last year was 1,311.
Georgia
Georgia attains highest AP Top 25 ranking since 2003, with Florida on deck
No. 18 Bulldogs bring 13-1 record into Tuesday night game against defending national champion Gators in Gainesville.
Georgia coach Mike White (right) talks with guard Jeremiah Wilkinson during the Bulldogs’ win against Cincinnati in a Holiday Hoopsgiving game Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025, at State Farm Arena in Atlanta. Georgia won 84-65. (Jason Getz/AJC)
ATHENS — Georgia basketball is back on the map, ranked in the AP Top 25 for a third consecutive week for the first time in nearly 23 years.
The Bulldogs (13-1, 1-0 SEC) are ranked No. 18 in the AP Top 25, up five spots from last week’s ranking, on the strength of a 104-100 overtime win over Auburn on Saturday.
It’s the highest Georgia has been ranked in the AP Top 25 poll since Jim Harrick coached the program and came in at No. 17 on Feb. 3, 2003 — the most recent season UGA has been ranked in the poll three or more consecutive weeks.
Unbeaten teams Arizona (14-0), Michigan (13-0) and Iowa State (14-0) hold the top three spots in this week’s AP Top 25, with UConn (14-1) and Purdue (13-1) rounding out the top five.
Vanderbilt (14-0, 1-0) is the SEC’s highest-ranked AP Top 25 team, coming in at No. 11, while Alabama (11-3, 1-0) is at No. 13, Arkansas (11-3, 1-0) is No. 15 and then No. 18 Georgia is the league’s fourth-highest-ranked team entering into this week’s games.
“Our guys have been so eager, probably like most teams in our league and throughout other leagues, at the highest level of college basketball,” UGA fourth-year coach Mike White said about the start of SEC play.
“We were playing a bunch of midmajors through the holidays, and you can’t let the moment be too big.”
Georgia’s schedule strength jumped from 298th to 231st with the win over Auburn, and it figures to get another boost when the Bulldogs play at Florida (9-5, 0-1) at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
“Our confidence comes from within, we know what we have in our locker room,” said Georgia guard Jeremiah Wilkinson, a transfer from Cal who scored 31 in the win over Auburn and leads the Bulldogs with 18.3 points per game this season.
“We knew what we were capable of before coming into the (Auburn) game, and we told each other before the game: Let’s act like we’re supposed to win the game. Let’s act like we’re supposed to be here.”
Georgia leads the nation in scoring offense (99.4 points per game), fast-break points (27.0 per game) and blocked shots (8.0 per game).
The Gators, featuring preseason All-SEC players Alex Condon, Thomas Haugh and Boogie Fland, were the media’s preseason pick to win the league.
Georgia — which didn’t have a player picked on the first, second or third team — was picked to finish 14th in the SEC.
White, who coached Florida from 2015-2022, leading the Gators to four NCAA tournaments and an Elite Eight appearance in 2017, said Georgia is looking forward to the opportunity to play the defending national champion.
“We’ll fly around, we’ll play hard, we’ll be prepared,” White said. “This team has a pretty healthy level of intrinsic confidence, and you’ll need that to be competitive down there against a team that’s coming off a national championship.”
Georgia split with Florida last season, losing 89-59 in Gainesville, Florida, on Jan. 25 and then handing the Gators their last loss of the season, 88-83, on Feb. 25 in Athens.
“It’s nothing different than what we’ve just seen tonight (against Auburn),” said UGA guard Marcus “Smurf” Millender, who leads Georgia with 54 assists and a 40% 3-point shooting clip.
“They put their jerseys on like we put our jerseys on. We’re going to give them our best game and hope they bring it too.”
Florida fell out of the AP Top 25 poll this week after losing its SEC-opening game at Missouri 76-74 on Saturday and is among other teams still receiving votes.
Georgia has lost six consecutive games in Gainesville dating back to a 61-55 win on March 2, 2019, in Tom Crean’s first year leading the Bulldogs.
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