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Head Coach Kirby Smart
KIRBY SMART
Head Football Coach
• SEVENTH SEASON AS GEORGIA COACH • 79-15 RECORD • 2021 NATIONAL CHAMPION • 2017 NATIONAL RUNNER-UP • 2017, 2022 SEC CHAMPIONS • 5-TIME SEC EASTERN DIVISION CHAMPS • 2017 GEORGE MUNGER AWARD (NAT’L. COACH OF THE YEAR) • TWO-TIME SEC COACH OF THE YEAR • TWO BUTKUS AWARD WINNERS • OUTLAND TROPHY WINNER • CHUCK BEDNARIK AWARD WINNER • THORPE AWARD WINNER • ONE LOU GROZA AWARD WINNER • MACKEY AWARD WINNER • THIRTEEN 1ST-TEAM ALL-AMERICANS • ELEVEN 1ST ROUND NFL DRAFT PICKS • FORTY-FIVE NFL DRAFT PICKS OVERALL
he 2021 College Football Playoff na-
Ttional championship, a 2018 CFP title game appearance, 2022 CFP semi-final game, Southeastern Conference Championships in 2017 and 2022, five SEC Eastern Division titles, 79 wins and six bowl victories are more than respectable rewards over a six-year period. That’s what Georgia got when it hired former Georgia player and Alabama defensive coordinator Kirby Smart to head the program in December of 2015.
His impact, along with a stellar coaching staff, players, and a passionate fan base has put Georgia on the national stage seven years running. The Bulldogs enter the College Football Playoff having won 31 of their last 32 games. 2022 - Georgia captured its second SEC championship of the Smart era in dominant fashion. The Bulldogs went 12-0 in the regular season and soundly defeated LSU in the SEC title game, earning a No. 1 seed in the final CFP rankings. 2021 - His 2021 team became UGA’s first national champion since 1980, the first since 1982 to go undefeated in the SEC regular season, a No. 1 national ranking by all the major polls and the first ever to win 14 games. It marked the fifth straight team to finish the regular season ranked in the top ten of the College Football Playoff rankings. The team set 21 school records, highlighted by the nation’s topranked defense. The third-ranked Bulldogs defeated #2 Michigan, 34-11, in the Capital One Orange Bowl in Miami and then No. 1 Alabama, 33-18, in the championship game in Indianapolis. The senior class also set the mark for most career wins by going 45-8. After the regular season, Smart was named SEC Coach of the Year for the second time in five years. Georgia’s championship season enjoyed a fitting exclamation mark at the 2022 NFL Draft. The Bulldogs set a Draft record with 15 players taken, including five defenders in the first round, led by the first overall selection, junior Travon Walker. 2020 - The 2020 Bulldogs became Smart’s fourth consecutive team to earn a New Year’s Six bowl game appearance. With a Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl victory over undefeated Cincinnati on Jan. 1, 2021, the Bulldog seniors tied the record for the most wins by one class in school history (44). 2019 - Smart’s 2019 Bulldogs became the first team in school history to win 11 or more games for a third straight season. Georgia defeated three teams in the final Top 15 CFP ranking — Notre Dame, Florida, and Auburn — and finished fourth in the final polls. The Bulldogs capped their season with a dominant victory over Baylor in the Allstate Sugar Bowl game. 2018 -- Georgia in 2018 posted an 11-1 regular season record, a second straight SEC Eastern Division title, and a ranking as high as number four in the CFP poll. Georgia landed in the Allstate Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1, 2019—the program’s tenth all-time appearance in the New Orleans classic. 2017 -- Smart’s second season in 2017 was a special one, with an 11-1 regular-season record, an SEC title, a win over Oklahoma in the Rose Bowl Game (CFP semifinal) and advancement into the CFPNational Championship Game. It was the first conference title since 2005 for the Red and Black.
Both Smart and his players reaped the bounty of their banner 2017 season. He was named George Munger National Coach of the Year by the Maxwell Football Club, SEC Coach of the Year by the Associated Press and SEC Coaches, and the Regional Coach of the Year by the AFCA. Roquan Smith earned first-team All-America honors and the Dick
Smart’s Year-by-Year Coaching Record
Overall Conf. Final Final Year School Position Record Record AP Rank CFP Rank Bowl Season Note
2000 Valdosta State Asst. Coach/DBs 10-2 9-0 --- --- --2001 Valdosta State Def. Coordinator 12-1 9-0 --- --- --2002 Florida State Grad. Assistant 9-5 7-1 --- --- Sugar 2003 Florida State Grad. Assistant 10-3 7-1 11th --- Orange 2004 LSU Asst. Coach/DBs 9-3 6-2 16th --- Capital One 2005 Georgia Asst. Coach/RBs 10-3 6-2 10th --- Sugar 2006 Miami (NFL) Asst. Coach/Safeties 6-10 --- --- --- --Reached 1st Rnd. Division II Playoffs Reached 2nd Rnd. Division II Playoffs Lost to UGA in Sugar Bowl ACC Champions Lost to Iowa in Capital One Bowl SEC Champions 4th in AFC Eastern Division
2007 Alabama Asst. HC/DBs 7-6 4-4 NR --- Independence 2008 Alabama Def. Coord./ILBs 12-2 8-0 6th --- Sugar Def. Colorado in Independence Bowl SEC West Champions
2009 Alabama Def. Coord./ILBs 14-0 8-0 1st --- BCS Champ. Game
National Champs, SEC Champs 2010 Alabama Def. Coord./ILBs 10-3 5-3 10th --- Capital One Def. Michigan State in Capital One Bowl 2011 Alabama Def. Coord./ILBs 12-1 7-1 1st --- BCS Champ. Game National Champs, Def. LSU in Champ. Game 2012 Alabama Def. Coord./ILBs 13-1 7-1 1st --- BCS Champ. Game National Champs, SEC Champs 2013 Alabama Def. Coord./ILBs 11-2 7-1 7th --- Sugar Lost to Oklahoma in Allstate Sugar Bowl 2014 Alabama Asst. HC/Safeties 12-2 7-1 4th 1st Sugar SEC Champions 2015 Alabama Def. Coord./ILBs 14-1 7-1 1st 2nd Cotton, CFP Champ. National Champs, SEC Champs 2016 Georgia Head Coach 8-5 4-4 NR --- Liberty Def. TCU in Autozone Liberty Bowl 2017 Georgia Head Coach 13-2 7-1 2nd 3rd Rose, CFP Champ. SEC Champs, Reached CFP Nat’l. Champ. Game 2018 Georgia Head Coach 11-3 7-1 t7th 5th Sugar SEC East Champions 2019 Georgia Head Coach 12-2 7-1 4th 5th Sugar SEC East Champs; Def. Baylor in Allstate Sugar Bowl 2020 Georgia Head Coach 8-2 7-2 7th 9th Peach Def. Cincinnati in CFA Peach Bowl 2021 Georgia Head Coach 14-1 8-0 1st 3rd Orange, CFP Champ. Def. Alabama in CFP National Championship Game 2022 Georgia Head Coach 13-0 8-0 1st CFA Peach SEC Champions
Smart File
Full Name.........................Kirby Paul Smart Birthdate.......................December 23, 1975 Birthplace................Montgomery, Alabama Family................................Wife, Mary Beth .....Children, twins Weston and Julia (Feb. 8, 2008), and Andrew (May 25, 2012) High School.................Bainbridge (Ga.) ‘94 College.............BBA (Finance), Georgia ‘98 ..............M.S. (Phys. Ed.), Florida State ‘03
Coaching History
2016-Present ...................................Georgia
Head Coach 2015 ................................................Alabama
Defensive Coordinator / Inside LBs 2014 ................................................Alabama
Defensive Coordinator / Secondary 2008-13...........................................Alabama
Defensive Coordinator / Inside LBs 2007 ................................................Alabama
Assistant Head Coach / Def. Backs 2006 ....................................Miami Dolphins
Asst. Coach / Safeties 2005 .................................................Georgia
Asst. Coach / Running Backs 2004 ...................................................... LSU
Asst. Coach / Defensive Backs 2002-03.................................... Florida State
Graduate Assistant 2001 .......................................Valdosta State
Defensive Coordinator 2000 .......................................Valdosta State
Asst. Coach / Defensive Backs 1999 .................................................Georgia
Administrative Assistant
Playing Career
1995-98....................................... Georgia
Four-year letterman as a defensive back. First-team All-SEC in ‘98. Thirteen career interceptions. Four-time member of SEC Academic Honor Roll. 1991-93...................Bainbridge (Ga.) HS
Three-year letterman in football, basketball and baseball. First-team Class AAAA All-State as a senior. Sixteen career interceptions. Coached in football by his father, Sonny Smart. Butkus Award as the nation’s top linebacker. 2016 -- In Smart’s first season leading the Bulldogs, Georgia made its 20th straight bowl appearance and posted four fourth-quarter comebacks, including wins over No. 8 Auburn and No. 22 UNC. He led the Bulldogs to an 8-5 final record, which included a victory over TCU in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl.
As an Assistant Coach
When Smart officially came home to Georgia on Dec. 6, 2015, he had unfinished business as defensive coordinator at Alabama, which was still chasing a national title. He juggled both jobs for a month until Jan. 11, 2016, when the Crimson Tide won its fourth national championship in a 7-year span. Twelve hours later, he was at work in Athens, where he remains one of ten head coaches at schools from Power 5 conferences that are coaching at their alma maters.
Smart had served on the Alabama staff the previous nine years, seven as defensive coordinator. During his tenure at Alabama, the Crimson Tide won three BCS National Championships, one CFP national title, three SEC crowns, six SEC Western Division titles, and was ranked in the nation’s final top 10 the last eight years in a row.
During Smart’s time at Alabama, he coached players at three different positions, in addition to his coordinating duties. He was recognized as the 2012 AFCA Assistant Coach of the Year and the 2009 Broyles Award winner as college football’s top assistant. He also was a finalist for the award in 2015.
Prior to joining the Alabama staff in 2007, Smart spent the 2006 season as safeties coach with the NFL’s Miami Dolphins. He served six years on the collegiate level as the running backs coach at Georgia (2005), defensive backs coach at LSU (2004), graduate assistant at Florida State (2002-03), defensive coordinator/linebackers coach (2001) and defensive backs coach (2000) at Valdosta State, and administrative assistant at Georgia (1999).
Smart was the running backs coach for Georgia’s 2005 SEC Championship team. He coached Thomas Brown, Danny Ware and Kregg Lumpkin — all future NFL players. In 2004 at LSU, he tutored two NFL draft picks: Corey Webster (2nd round, New York Giants) and Travis Daniels (4th round, Miami).
As a Player
Smart was a four-year letterman at defensive back for Georgia, where he was a First-Team All-SEC pick as a senior. He finished his career with 13 interceptions, a mark that still ranks sixth in UGA annals, and paced the Bulldogs with six interceptions in 1997 and five in 1998. He led the SEC in interceptions during his final season.
A four-time member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll, Smart received his bachelor’s degree in Finance from Georgia in 1998 and his master’s in Physical Education from Florida State in 2003.
Smart was a first-team All-SEC choice as a senior in 1998, when he led the league with five interceptions. Smart had six interceptions in his junior season of 1997.
The Smart Family
The Bainbridge, Ga., native is married to the former Mary Beth Lycett of McDonough, Ga., a 4-year letterwinner and 2-year starter on the Georgia women’s basketball team from 2000-03. The couple met long after their undergraduate days at Georgia, when Lycett — then working in the UGA Athletic Association Business Office — helped arrange Smart’s trip to interview for the Bulldogs’ running backs coaching job in 2005. They are the proud parents of twins Weston and Julia (born Feb. 8, 2008) and son Andrew (born May 25, 2012).
Kirby and Mary Beth Smart also oversee the Kirby Smart Family Foundation, which is focused on being champions in the community by supporting needy children and families facing adversity.