COLUMN: Are We Sure Wes Johnson is the Right Fit at UGA?

ATHENS, Ga. — When the Wes Johnson era began at Georgia Bulldogs baseball, the excitement in Athens was immediate.

Johnson arrived with a strong reputation, big-league pitching experience and the type of energy that suggested the Bulldogs might finally reassert themselves as a consistent force in the Southeastern Conference.

To his credit, the early returns looked promising. Georgia hosted regionals, made a run to a super regional and stacked up several headline victories against ranked opponents. For a program trying to climb back into national relevance, that was progress.

But the question lingering around Athens now is simple:

How good is Georgia, really?

The Bulldogs’ résumé continues to be a puzzle. On one hand, they’ve piled up impressive wins and shown the ability to compete with top teams in the country. On the other, they’ve suffered several baffling losses and continue to build their non-conference schedule around opponents that rarely move the national needle.

Critics point out that Georgia notably avoided a matchup with the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, a series that would have offered a meaningful early-season measuring stick. Instead, the Bulldogs padded the schedule with lighter competition — something that raises eyebrows when the postseason committee begins comparing résumés.

The result is a team that’s difficult to evaluate.

Are the Bulldogs a legitimate contender capable of making a deep run in June?

Or are they simply another talented but inconsistent SEC club that will peak early and fade when the games matter most?

Even within the fan base, opinions vary. Some supporters believe Johnson has already elevated the program and deserves patience as Georgia continues building toward Omaha.

Others are less convinced.

Prominent Bulldog fan and insider Wes Jackson has openly said that if Georgia fails to make another meaningful postseason push this year, it may be time for the program to consider a different direction.

For now, the verdict remains incomplete.

Georgia has the talent. Georgia has the resources. And Johnson has already shown flashes of success.

But in Athens, flashes are not enough.

Sooner or later, the Bulldogs will need something more definitive — a season that removes all doubt and proves the program is truly back among college baseball’s elite. Until then, the question remains hovering over Foley Field:

Is this the breakthrough era for Georgia baseball?

Or is the jury still out on Wes Johnson?

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Jackson Fryburger