ATLANTA — All Georgia coach Kirby Smart needed to do was look between the blue-and-yellow confetti streamers to appreciate what this meant to the program.

Nick Chubb clutched a ready-made newspaper that declared Georgia the "SEC champs!" and waved to the red-and-black-clad crowd still hollering inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium. SEC commissioner Greg Sankey bumped into Smart at midfield for a quick handshake. But it's what the second-year coach saw on the podium that reinforced what No. 6 Georgia's 28-7 victory against No. 2 Auburn on Saturday really meant.

"To see Nick Jeffs, Sony Michel, Roquan Smith, hugging on the stage in tears because they care about each other so much," Smart said. "That's why I do this. It's because of these guys. It's great to bring it back to Georgia, and the Bulldog Nation is certainly starved, but these young men deserve a ton of credit."

It's a victory that puts the Bulldogs in the College Football Playoff for the first time. It ends the SEC East conference championship drought that extended back to 2008. It ends Georgia's SEC championship drought, which stretched back to 2005. It gives the Bulldogs a legitimate shot at two more games and a claim to the program's first national championship since 1980. It happened in the first SEC championship game at the stadium that towers over the concrete rubble of the old Georgia Dome.

That meant something in front of the 76,354 in attendance. Georgia (12-1) saved the biggest statement for conference championship weekend in a rematch with the Tigers, who routed the Bulldogs 40-17 on Nov. 11.

"This is why the guys came back," Chubb said. "I remember just talking to the senior class, I mean, back at camp, we'd be in the room with a little private meeting, and we just talked about what we want to do, and it all paid off. This moment right here, this is what we worked for."
Nobody talked about Georgia all week. Auburn (10-3) was the hottest team in the country. Alabama (11-1) was the one-loss team that could crack the field. Ole Miss, Florida, Tennessee and Texas A&M drove the SEC through coaching carousel crazy town.

The Tigers took an early 7-0 lead on the game's first drive and threatened to score again, but that's when the momentum of this game changed on a third-and-6 at the 14-yard line. Davin Bellamy chased Auburn quarterback Jarrett Stidham from behind for the strip, and Smith emerged from the pile with the fumble with 13:04 remaining in the first half.

Whenever it needed a play, Georgia's defense made it. Smith finished with 13 tackles, two fumble recoveries and a key sack. where he shot up the middle and drilled Stidham shortly before halftime. Auburn finished with 114 rushing yards and missed on two trips to the red zone. One trip resulted in that strip-sack fumble. The other was a blocked field goal by DaQuan Hawkins-Muckle, which Dominick Sanders scooped up near the Georgia sideline with 8:13 remaining in the third quarter.

Hawkins-Muckle posed. Sanders danced in a swarm of Bulldogs. The Tigers never found the red zone again. Smart preached physicality all week — and one more thing Smith heard more than once.

"Always keep your composure," Smith said. "We knew they would make plays. They're in the SEC. We knew they would make plays, and this did on the first drive. But we kept our composure."

Freshman quarterback Jake Fromm kept his composure, too. The Bulldogs scored on all their red zone trips and didn't turn the ball over. Fromm finished 16 of 22 passing for 183 yards and two touchdowns. If that continues in the College Football Playoff, then Georgia will be in good shape.

Georgia receiver Terry Godwin caught a back-shoulder fade for a touchdown that gave the Bulldogs a 21-7 lead with 13:06 remaining and served as the party-starter. He turned back for a word with Auburn's Jamel Dean.
In other words, look who's talking now.

Georgia did that by doing what it does best. The Bulldogs rushed 41 times for 238 yards. Chubb (13 carries, 77 yards) and Michel (seven carries, 45) worked the perimeter, and D'Andre Swift put the finishing touch with a 64-yard touchdown run with 10:34 remaining. That made Chubb smile.
"We kind of give him a little trouble," Chubb said. "We tell him he needs to break away, and he was picking his knees up, man. He was moving on that. We're proud of him."

Auburn fans trickled out, leaving a red sea in the Mercedes-Benz that chanted "Goodbye" with 5:04 remaining. It was that kind of statement, and the ever-stoic Smart laughed more than once on the podium while Chubb and Smith described the emotions of the program's biggest victory since 2005.
It's one Smart said the Bulldogs will enjoy, until shortly after the playoff pairings are announced Sunday. Then all those expectations come rushing back. Georgia will either play in the Sugar Bowl or Rose Bowl Game, and they'll have a chance to get back to this spot. That one will be for the national championship. There's a chance to get back for that, and for many future SEC championships to come.

Yet for Smart, this one will always take on a special meaning. Those memories will come be there forever, and for the Bulldogs to pull this off in Atlanta, well, you know the SEC slogan by now.

"(Falcons coach) Dan Quinn called me and said he already painted all the seats red and black," Smart joked. "He it had it loosened up. Yeah, I think the first one here, and you certainly hope to get back to place and make it a home for us