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Georgia Football vs. Ole Miss: How to watch, listen, stream

Palmber-Thombsby:Palmer Thombs11/07/23

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Georgia Ole Miss
Sep 24, 2016; Oxford, MS, USA; Georgia Bulldogs running back Sony Michel (1) is hit by Mississippi Rebels linebacker Detric Bing-Dukes (43) during the first quarter of the game at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Bush-USA TODAY Sports

It’s not often that Georgia and Ole Miss get together on the football field, not having done so since 2016. That time, just Kirby Smart’s second SEC game as a head coach, went the way of the Rebels, but all time, the Bulldogs hold a 32-13-1 advantage.

Of the 46 meetings, Saturday’s has a chance to be the biggest one of them all. A top-10 matchup featuring a combined one loss this late in the season, Georgia and Ole Miss both have something to play for. Furthermore, it’s one of the weekend’s premiere games with ESPN’s College GameDay coming to town to feature the contest live from Athens.

“Moving to Ole Miss, they’ve got a really good football team. They’ve improved. You watch them on tape, and you watch the games throughout the year, they’ve improved with every game,” Georgia head coach Kirby Smart said of Ole Miss in his opening comments during his weekly Monday press conference. “They’ve played a tremendous schedule, some really tough teams they’ve played on their schedule. Lane does a great job with his program, with his team. They’ve got a great staff. They got really good players. He’s done an incredible job.”

“(Jaxson Dart) is playing at a high level; great backs. I think Pete (Golding) on defense has brought unbelievable energy, and you see it the way they play and the way they attack the ball. I mean they come after the ball. They lead the SEC in, I’m pretty sure, turnover margin, but I know they have like the fewest fumbles and the most fumbles gotten. They do a great job of that. They attack that, and they really play hard. So, we got a hell of a challenge,” he continued. “We got a great atmosphere. We need it to be as great an atmosphere in Sanford Stadium as it’s ever been to help take care of our home field advantage that we need to have. So looking forward to that. Looking forward to the preparation time, and that starts today.”

With a win, or a Tennessee loss to Missouri earlier in the day (3:30 p.m. ET, CBS), Georgia can clinch its spot in the SEC Championship Game for the sixth time in seven seasons. The Bulldogs are likely to play Alabama in Atlanta if the Crimson Tide can take care of business against Kentucky (12:00 p.m. ET, ESPN).

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DawgsHQ will have you covered all week long, including live from Sanford Stadium on Saturday with updates throughout the day. However, if you’re wanting to tune in for yourself, here’s how you can do so.

How to Watch, Listen and Stream

Kickoff Time: 7:00 p.m. ET

TV: ESPN (Chris Fowler – Play by Play, Kirk Herbstreit – Color Commentator, Holly Rowe – Sideline Reporter)

Streaming: Watch ESPN

Radio: Atlanta (750 AM/95.5 FM), Athens (960 AM/106.1 FM), Augusta (580 AM/95.1 FM), Brunswick (1440 AM, 107.7 FM), Columbus (1270 AM/102.5 FM), Macon (106.3 FM), Savannah (1400 AM/104.3 FM), Sirius XM (Channel 94/192-82 – ESPN Radio), Online at www.georgiadogs.com/watch/

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