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The Bulldogs corridor of Georgia, Nate Frazier, could not help laughing when he remembered his first time at the university last season.
Compton’s true student student, California, did not expect him to listen to his name against Clemson’s number 14, but however, chief coach Kirby Smart wanted him in the field.
“There have been people at the University of Georgia for three years and they have not yet touched the field,” Digital’s Pak Gazette told Fox while arguing his association with the “It Take More” campaign by Powerade. “So, it is as if I really did not expect myself to play the field.
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The Bulldogs corridor of Georgia, Nate Frazier, poses for the new Powerade “take more” campaign before the 2025 university football season. (Powerade)
“My heart was beating from my chest and I couldn’t even feel my body. I was very nervous.”
Frazier said the first transfer led him to stumble “because I couldn’t feel my feet.” But Frazier knew that he had to face all the noise, expectations and nerves that leads to play football.
Because? His mother would not have it otherwise.
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Frazier described his mother, Yomeisha Moore, as his “biggest hero.”
She raised him as a single mother during the first years of her life, depending on her own mother and sisters to help raise her only child. And his son never forget what he has done to help him reach this point so far: be on the depth table of the bulldogs to run in the 2025 season.
“His determination and ethics of work made me feel that I had no choice, I can’t give up,” Frazier explained when asked about his mother’s influence. “It doesn’t matter what comes out in my way, there is no setback because I literally saw her do it. It doesn’t matter what occurred to her, she never retired. He never resigned, he never gave up. He always found his departure.
“My mother never, never in her life, told me: ‘Son, I can’t do this.’ My mother has always made a path to me no matter what.
That trip of Moore stayed with Frazier, who got up after that first transport against Clemson and ran for 83 yards with a Touchdown in 11 hauling in the 34-3 burst to open the 2024 season.
Frazier hastened for 671 yards in 133 attempts with eight touchdowns by land in his debut season for Bulldogs, consolidating himself as a piece for the future in the smart team.

Nate Frazier #3 of the Bulldogs of Georgia celebrates after scoring a touchdown during a game between the University of Tennessee and the University of Georgia at the Sanford Stadium on November 16, 2024, in Athens, Georgia. (Photos of Perry McIntyre/ISI/Getty Images)
The bets are higher for Frazier this year, even if it is not yet eligible to enter the NFL draft. That will have to wait next year, but he is not even thinking about his own future. His team focused on the team, saying that he only wants to do his best for the Bulldogs in 2025 to get beyond winning the SEC championship as they did last season.
But Frazier plays much more than the Bulldogs and their faithful fans in Athens every week. More than 2,000 miles away, his mother is watching in suspense, hoping that his son will continue without giving up despite the situation. And also young people who want to be cooler one day.
“Game for all children at home regardless of where they are,” Frazier began when asked who plays for each game day. “Not even in my hometown, but for children who do not believe they can do it and only think it is impossible and unheard of. Juice for all the children who grew up in the type of situations in which I grew Be it, can you do other options?
“Game for my family. Every time there are difficult times or difficult points [of the season]I only think of my family and all the struggles we go through and things like that. They never gave up and were always on my corner, always in my circle. They were positive for me no matter what. “
Frazier and the Bulldogs begin their 2025 football trip on Saturday, where they will receive Marshall at the Sanford Stadium.

The Bulldogs corridor of Georgia, Nate Frazier (3) celebrates after a victory over Tennessee volunteers at the Sanford Stadium on November 16, 2024. (Brett Davis/Imagn images)
Frazier knows that more is needed
Frazier’s emergence as a key gear for the Bulldogs football program means opening new NIL opportunities, which occurred when Powerade refreshed the “Takes More” campaign, which enters its third consecutive year before the university football season.
“I never thought I could really have opportunities like this to be in this position,” he told Fox Business. “Powerade is a drink used by athletes from around the world, not even by the country. Being able to be in this position is incredible, and does not feel real. I am really blessed to work with Powerade.”
As a true first -year student last season playing at the SEC, the toughest conference in university football, Frazier really understood the meaning of “more needed.”
“Additional cinema hours are needed. Extra hours are needed with their coach. Additional field work hours