Yes, UM and Georgia have a similar basis defensive scheme. Not the same, but similar in many respects. I have been following Georgia football closely for over 25 years and attended many games. My son follows them more closely and attends more games. Our friends have 12 season tickets. Georgia also uses what is essentially a 3-2-6 and moves its star (no. 9) all over the place. 2 backers 3 cb's 1 star, 2 safeties. They often have a standup lb on the line of scrimmage, just like the Griz. My Georgia buddies are good friends with Kirby.
You don't understand football and certainly not defensive schemes. You never played the game. You are one of those guys who Googles a bit and then tries to regurgitate what you read. One of my good friends is the famous Happy Dicks. He follows Georgia closely, attends games, and is involved with the program. Much of what I know about Georgia's defense I learned from Happy. We sometimes stay at his house when we go to Athens.
The Georgia D is rooted in the 3-4 that Saban ran and Kirby learned when he was at Alabama. They frequently use
3-4 alignments against heavier personnel (e.g., 12 or 21 sets) and also shift to nickel/dime with 3-3-5 or 4-2-5 looks against spread attacks. The scheme relies heavily on the DL winning one-on-one battles, with hybrid edge rushers (Jack/Sam outside linebackers). Just like the Griz. My son fed me some of this.
This is how Grok describes the D:
"Key Alignment Details (Tite/Mint Front)
- Defensive Line:
- Nose Tackle (NT): Head-up on the center (0-technique).
- Defensive Ends (DEs): Aligned in tight 4i techniques (inside shoulder of the offensive tackles). This closes the B-gaps and forces runs inside or creates penetration.
- Linebackers/Hybrids:
- Two inside linebackers (Mike and another ILB) stacked behind the DL.
- Hybrid edge players (often called "Jack" or outside linebackers) on the edges.
- Secondary in Nickel (Mint):
- Replaces one traditional linebacker (often the Sam) with a nickelback (called the "Star" at Georgia—a hybrid safety/corner who can play in the box, cover slots, or blitz).
- Results in 5 defensive backs on the field, making it lighter and faster for pass coverage while maintaining run strength.
This contrasts with traditional 3-4 fronts (wider 5-technique ends, creating open B-gap "bubbles" that spread offenses exploit with inside zone or RPOs)."