Gunner Stockton Already Delivered For Georgia So Why Is He Overlooked

Gunner Stockton faces skepticism despite past accolades as he looks to lead Georgia to greater heights and prove his critics wrong this season.

Gunner Stockton isn’t drawing much preseason love, and that might suit him just fine.

As the quarterback rankings roll out ahead of the upcoming season, Stockton keeps showing up lower than expected - or not at all. Joel Klatt of Fox Sports left the Georgia quarterback out entirely.

Chris Low of On3 slotted him as the No. 3 quarterback in the SEC, behind Arch Manning of Texas and Trinidad Chambliss of Ole Miss. David Cobb of CBS Sports also kept Stockton out of the top tier of his rankings.

That’s a sharp contrast to what Stockton actually did last season. He finished seventh in Heisman Trophy voting, and he beat both Manning and Chambliss as Georgia went 12-2 and won the SEC.

The reason for the skepticism is easy enough to find: Stockton didn’t finish the year the way Manning and Chambliss did.

Over the final four games of the 2026 season, Manning and Chambliss were peaking. Manning put together 12 total touchdowns against one interception, and that lone pick came in a loss to Georgia. Chambliss was even cleaner, finishing with 10 total touchdowns and no interceptions while helping win two College Football Playoff games before Ole Miss finally came up short.

Stockton’s late-season stretch told a different story. In those same four games, he had 7 total touchdowns and 2 interceptions. His 6.31 yards per attempt in that span was well below Manning’s 7.65 and Chambliss’ 8.77, and it also dipped under Stockton’s own season average of 7.5.

That finish left Georgia with an unsatisfying ending to its 2026 season, and Stockton acknowledged it this spring.

“It definitely left a bad taste,” Stockton said this spring. “And just try not to let that happen and do our best to make it not happen.”

The numbers also reinforce a bigger truth about Stockton: he’s not built to win with volume. He topped 250 passing yards only three times in 14 games. If you’re judging him strictly by box scores, you’re probably missing what Georgia values most.

Low put it plainly when describing Stockton’s reputation around the sport.

“Few players in college football are more underrated than Gunner Stockton. Just don’t tell the coaches and players who’ve gone against him that he’s underrated,” Low wrote of Stockton. “They will tell you his toughness, penchant for making clutch plays and leadership are all right there at the top of the players they’ve faced.”

That’s the lane Stockton lives in. His value is tied to toughness, leadership and the ability to rise when the moment gets loud. He already has wins over Manning and Chambliss on his résumé, and both came with Stockton playing his best football in the second half.

Georgia, though, knows the quarterback can’t do it alone.

This season, Stockton won’t have Zachariah Branch and Colbie Young available. London Humphreys is the only returning Georgia pass catcher who had more than 15 receptions last season.

One major piece does remain in place: Drew Bobo. Georgia’s center earned Second Team All-SEC honors last season even after suffering a season-ending foot injury against Georgia Tech. He didn’t start or finish any of the four games in that late-season sample, and his absence was noticeable in the way Georgia’s offense, and Stockton in particular, functioned down the stretch.

Stockton may not care much about where he lands in quarterback rankings next to names like Chambliss, Manning, CJ Carr of Notre Dame or Darian Mensah of Miami. He’s not trying to win that argument.

He’s trying to win a national championship.

And if Georgia is going to do that in 2026, both Stockton and the Bulldogs know the finish has to look a lot different than it did last season. Kirby Smart said as much.

“With what you do now in the playoffs, in the games you have to win, I think the cream comes to the top,” Smart said. “The best team comes out and wins.

It’s who’s playing the best at the end. It might not be who’s playing the best in the beginning, but that’s who wins the championship.”

In Other News...

Georgia Faces A Growing SEC Debate It Cant Ignore

As more SEC schools keep leaning into entertainment districts as a way to reshape the fan experience and open new revenue streams, Georgia is still taking a more cautious path. Athletic director Josh Brooks said the university does not have an immediate plan for a district of its own, largely because of campus space limitations, but he also left the door open to land-use possibilities that could eventually change the conversation.

For now, the focus is on making better use of what already exists. Brooks pointed to Sanford Stadium, Stegeman Coliseum and Foley Field as venues that could help bring in more non-sports events, part of a broader effort to generate revenue without rushing into a major development project. The bigger question is whether Georgia can keep pace with the SECs latest trend while waiting for the right opportunity to emerge south of campus. [Read more 🡒]

Georgia Lands 5th In ESPNs Most Debated Preseason Ranking

ESPNs Football Power Index always draws attention when the preseason version drops, and Georgia is once again near the top of the conversation. The system leans on a mix of unit efficiency, opponent adjustments, prior-year results, recruiting, home-field and travel factors, then runs thousands of season simulations to sort out the order, which is part of why the Bulldogs keep showing up in the national picture before a snap is played.

Still, the bigger lesson from recent preseason FPI releases is that the numbers should be taken with a grain of salt. Recent SEC-heavy examples have shown how often these early rankings miss the mark, with plenty of teams that started high eventually finishing nowhere near it, so Georgias place in the mix is more a reminder of its reputation than a guarantee of how the season will unfold. [Read more 🡒]

Georgia Just Reopened A Frustrating Future Schedule Debate

Georgias 2028 football schedule just got a little more interesting after Florida A&M and the Bulldogs mutually canceled their planned Sept. 9 game at Sanford Stadium. The date is now open, and it lands on a slate that already looks packed with 11 Power 4 opponents, a nine-game SEC schedule and neutral-site matchups against Florida State and Florida.

So the real question is less about whether Georgia will fill the spot than what kind of game it wants there. The expectation is that the Bulldogs will add another home opponent that does not raise the degree of difficulty much, a familiar kind of scheduling move for a program that has long balanced a brutal conference grind with a softer nonleague date or two. Kirby Smart has also made clear before that he knows when a matchup is lopsided, which is part of why this latest opening has reopened a debate Georgia fans know well. [Read more 🡒]