
Let's say at the conclusion of UGA's spring practice, instead of having G-Day be an intra-squad scrimmage, there's a scrimmage against another in-state school?
Would something like Kennesaw State or Georgia Southern interest you?
That's what Auburn head coach Hugh Freeze is proposing - let's eliminate the whole spring game, bring in a smaller school from within whatever state you're in, charge for tickets, and donate the proceeds to a state charity.
In today's edition of the Tailgate on the Steakhouse, Drew Butler and Steak discussed Hugh's comments, and what would it take to make something like that to happen.
"Guys are going to be more amped up to play, and it's not like their going to be breaking headlines on the score", Drew told Steak this morning. "You'd be able to donate the gate revenue to charity. If Georgia football played Kennesaw State next week, would you buy a 15 dollar ticket and go?"
The real question, though, is if there's an actual problem with how spring games are currently done? "He (Hugh Freeze) used the word solution, and I'm not sure there's a problem", Steak feels when discussing the current model of spring games. "I'm not sure there's a problem. They won't have 93k for a game vs Kennesaw State."