Current:Home > MyBrock Bowers has ankle surgery. What it means for Georgia to lose its standout tight end -AssetBase
Brock Bowers has ankle surgery. What it means for Georgia to lose its standout tight end
View
Date:2025-04-17 18:53:14
No. 1 Georgia’s quest for college football history has taken an enormous hit.
All-America tight end Brock Bowers will miss a huge chunk of the remainder of the season after undergoing ankle surgery, the school announced Monday.
The procedure, known as “tightrope” surgery, inserts sutures into the ankle and is designed to accelerate the recovery process, which is typically four to six weeks. Former Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa underwent the procedure during the 2018 season and missed just under a month.
Bowers’ injury occurred during the first half of Georgia’s 37-20 win against Vanderbilt. Before leaving the game, he'd touched the ball six times in the Bulldogs' 27 offensive snaps, with four receptions for 22 yards and another 21 rushing yards on two carries.
Winners of back-to-back national championships and owners of the nation’s longest active winning streak at 24 games, Georgia’s ability to capture the first threepeat in the Bowl Subdivision’s modern era will become dramatically more difficult without perhaps the best player in the country regardless of position.
CALM DOWN: The five biggest overreactions from games in Week 7
RE-RANK:Washington surges, Southern California falls in latest NCAA 1-133
An irreplaceable piece of the puzzle for the Bulldogs’ offense, Bowers leads the team in receptions (41), yards (567) and touchdowns (four) while serving as the ultimate security blanket for first-year starting quarterback Carson Beck. Only one other Georgia receiver, Dominic Lovett, has more than 18 catches and just one, Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint, has more than 282 receiving yards.
And while Bowers has been the go-to skill player for the Bulldogs since stepping on campus, he’s taken his game to another level as a junior, delivering on a weekly basis to become the rare tight end to earn heavy Heisman Trophy consideration.
“It does hurt to not have him out there,” Beck admitted after Saturday's win.
He had four catches in the second half of Georgia’s comeback win against South Carolina on Sept. 16, helping to turn a 14-3 deficit into a 24-14 win. He had 9 catches for 121 yards and two touchdowns a week later in a blowout win against Alabama-Birmingham. Bowers then had a career-high 157 receiving yards against Auburn on Sept. 30, another comeback win, and then 132 yards on 7 grabs in a 51-13 win against Kentucky.
The stretch of three 100-yard receiving games in a row was just the second by an FBS tight end since 2000, following Louisiana-Lafayette’s Ladarius Green in 2010.
His replacement, Oscar Delp (13 receptions for 160 yards), is probably good enough to start for over 100 teams in the FBS. But let’s be clear: Delp isn’t Bowers, because no one is. Georgia will also lean on freshman Lawson Luckie, a top prospect who had tightrope surgery in August after being injured during a preseason scrimmage and has played in two games.
Even with a healthy Bowers, the Bulldogs have struggled to match last season’s consistent offensive production with a new quarterback, a new offensive coordinator in Mike Bobo and a dramatically different cast of supporting players.
That Georgia isn’t entering an off week is one positive. From there, though, the Bulldogs embark on their toughest stretch of the regular season, beginning with rival Florida in Jacksonville on Oct. 28. Then comes three games in a row against ranked competition in No. 20 Missouri, No. 12 Mississippi and No. 15 Tennessee, with the Volunteers on the road. Georgia closes with Georgia Tech.
If the recovery lasts just four weeks, Bowers will return in time for Tennessee. If six weeks, he’ll be back for the SEC championship game, should the Bulldogs win the SEC East. If longer, he wouldn’t return until postseason play. Will Georgia survive his absence and get Bowers back in time for the College Football Playoff?
“Guys, it’s going to be physical and tough," Georgia coach Kirby Smart said Saturday. "We may or may not be playing with a full deck.”
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Horoscopes Today, August 13, 2023
- Jason Cantrell, husband of New Orleans mayor, dead at 55, city announces
- Go Hands-Free With a $250 Kate Spade Belt Bag That’s on Sale for Just $99
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Look Back on Halle Berry's Best Looks Ever
- Watch this: Bangkok couple tries to rescue cat from canal with DIY rope and a bucket
- NFL teams on high alert for brawls as joint practices gear up
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Travis Barker's New Tattoo Proves Time Flies With Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian
Ranking
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Maui officials and scientists warn that after the flames flicker out, toxic particles will remain
- Pilot survives crash in waters off Florida Keys, poses for selfie with rescuer
- Coast Guard rescues 4 divers who went missing off the Carolinas
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Run-DMC's Darryl McDaniels reflects on his Hollis, Queens, roots
- A's pitcher Luis Medina can't get batter out at first base after stunning gaffe
- Off Alaska coast, research crew peers down, down, down to map deep and remote ocean
Recommendation
Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
Billy Porter reignites criticism of Harry Styles' Vogue cover: 'It doesn't feel good to me'
3 found dead in car in Indianapolis school parking lot
EXPLAINER: Why is a police raid on a newspaper in Kansas so unusual?
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
Police apologize after Black teen handcuffed in an unfortunate case of 'wrong place, wrong time'
How dangerous climate conditions fueled Maui's devastating wildfires
Where does salt come from? Digging into the process of salt making.