Some important information for Georgia football’s spring games that fans may have missed.
There are just a few weeks left until Georgia plays its annual spring game. The date has been set for April 18 and the game will be played at Sanford Stadium at 1 pm ET. Tickets are available for fans to purchase for $10 each. However, some other important information has also emerged that fans may have missed.
GeorgiaDogs.com has all the information fans need to know for those who want to attend the event. Last year, Georgia’s spring game, along with many other college spring games, were not televised for fans at home to watch. This probably has to do with coaches not wanting other teams to be able to see additional film on their players and potentially recruit them during the spring transfer window.
The good news is that there is no longer a spring transfer window and there are few who will bring spring games back to television, and it looks like Georgia has chosen to do so.
Georgia football spring game to be televised this year

Georgia’s spring game will be available for streaming on ESPN+ this year, according to spring game information provided by the university. Fans can also listen to radio broadcasts on the Georgia Bulldogs Sports Network.
Spring games are always an interesting event for fans to watch both inside the stadium and from their homes. This is the first look at any newcomer to the roster and they get to see how players have developed throughout spring practice since the end of last season.
It’s a great time for fans to get their preparations underway before the real part of the college football offseason begins and the long wait for next season begins as the summer begins.
Georgia is looking to improve on what it accomplished a season ago. Kirby Smart and his team were successful in winning their second consecutive conference title, but lost in the quarterfinal round in the Sugar Bowl for the second consecutive year.
The Bulldogs focused on retaining players who were already on their roster during the winter portal window, as well as making some additions from the portal. This philosophy doesn’t exactly match what a lot of college football programs are doing in today’s era of college football, so only time will tell if it will pay off for the Bulldogs in 2026.
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