NEWNow you can listen to Pak Gazette articles!
The Memphis Tigers football coach Ryan Silverfield, hit the Bulldogs of Georgia on the program of driving incidents of the program on Monday.
Silverfield spoke holding his players the day after his games during an appearance on the Memphis Tiger network. He said that, in his conversations with his players, he has a segment called “is not our standard.”
CLICK HERE for more sports coverage at Foxnews.com

The head coach of the Memphis Tigers, Ryan Silverfield, looks before the match against the Chattanogo Moc at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium on August 30, 2025. (Wesley Hale/Imagn images)
“We always start with a negative,” he said, through ON3 Sports. “And the ‘No our standard’ is ‘, the open Georgia receiver arrested for driving 900 miles per hour above the speed limit’. That is a weekly fact.
“So, that is one of those things we will show. You know, this guy in the USFL got a DUI, this guy in this university was shooting a Paintball gun.”
The last arrests within the Georgia football program occurred in March when the open receiver Nitro Tuggy was arrested for driving 107 mph, according to Georgia authorities. According to reports, the offensive line Marques Easley also participated in a vehicle accident.
Georgia met the tragedy in January 2023 when the offensive liner Devin Willock and the Chandler Lecroy recruitment staff were killed in an accident that occurred while Lecroy and the defensive Tackle Jalen Carter were running.

The chief coach of Georgia, Kirby Smart, looks at the field during the first half of a University Soccer match of the NCAA against Tennessee, on Saturday, September 13, 2025 in Knoxville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Brian Kelly apologizes for Florida-Lsu Postjame Tirade; Joel Klatt weighs
The former Bulldogs corridor, Trevor Etienne, lost the first game of the season in 2024 and corner Daniel Harris a game for driving arrests was delayed.
“We will continue to observe this case by case,” said Bulldgos chief coach Kirby Smart, in March, through the Banner-Hald in Athens. “There are things that surround each of these outside the immediate reaction is: ‘How can this happen again?’ And I understand it, but each one is a case by case.

The chief coach of Georgia, Kirby Smart, shouts his players during the first half of a University football match of the NCAA against Tennessee, on Saturday, September 13, 2025, in Knoxville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
“You have to see how these are your children. This is how I see it. I look (I look at) what I would do with my children and there are 18 to 19 to 20 years. They make mistakes. The consequences that come with them are based on a case -by -case case. That is really what these two are doing right now.”