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Kirby Smart channels Elaine Benes of 'Seinfeld' as to Georgia's Carson Beck | Toppmeyer
Blake ToppmeyerUSA TODAY NETWORKIn the sixth season of “Seinfeld,” Elaine Benes tells a woman interviewing her for a job that she possesses “a little grace.”The boss balks and tells Elaine grace isn’t on a spectrum. It’s black and white. You either have grace, or you don’t.Georgia football coach Kirby Smart shares Elaine’s mentality. Intangible qualities like Elaine’s grace or whether a quarterback is clutch aren’t a yes-or-no proposition. It’s not as if there’s a literal “clutch gene,” that some quarterbacks are born with and others aren’t. There are degrees of being clutch, and that can...…Blake ToppmeyerUSA TODAY NETWORKIn the sixth season of “Seinfeld,” Elaine Benes tells a woman interviewing her for a job that she possesses “a little grace.”The boss balks and tells Elaine grace isn’t on a spectrum. It’s black and white. You either have grace, or you don’t.Georgia football coach Kirby Smart shares Elaine’s mentality. Intangible qualities like Elaine’s grace or whether a quarterback is clutch aren’t a yes-or-no proposition. It’s not as if there’s a literal “clutch gene,” that some quarterbacks are born with and others aren’t. There are degrees of being clutch, and that can...WW…
You're admitted: Georgia to urge high school seniors to apply in streamlined process
Jeff AmyAssociated PressATLANTA — Georgia's public colleges and universities want high school seniors to know there's a place for them in higher education and soon will be mailing a letter to the state's 120,000 seniors, urging them to claim their spot.Gov. Brian Kemp and others unveiled the new program Thursday, encouraging more young people to attend college. They say college will help students earn more over the long run and give the state a better-qualified workforce."We're going to make sure that they know there's an opportunity for affordable, quality education out there for them in...…Jeff AmyAssociated PressATLANTA — Georgia's public colleges and universities want high school seniors to know there's a place for them in higher education and soon will be mailing a letter to the state's 120,000 seniors, urging them to claim their spot.Gov. Brian Kemp and others unveiled the new program Thursday, encouraging more young people to attend college. They say college will help students earn more over the long run and give the state a better-qualified workforce."We're going to make sure that they know there's an opportunity for affordable, quality education out there for them in...WW…
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