|                         History of Uga                        In the last 100 years of intercollegiate football, Georgia's Uga has                        established himself as the nation's most well-known mascot. The line of                        pure white English bulldogs, which epitomizes everything Georgia, has been                        owned by the Frank W. "Sonny" Seiler family of Savannah, Ga., since Uga I                        first graced the campus in 1956.                                                  Through the years, Uga has been defined by his spiked collar, a symbol of                        the position which he holds. He was given his name, an abbreviation for the                        university, by William Young of Columbus, a law school classmate of Seiler.                        Each of the Uga mascots is awarded a varsity letter in the form of a                        plaque, identical to those presented to all Bulldog athletes who letter in                        their respective sports.                                                  As determined and published by the Pittsburgh Press, the University of                        Georgia is the only major college that actually buries its mascots within                        the confines of the stadium. Ugas I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII and VIII are                        buried in marble vaults near the main gate in the embankment of the South                        stands. Epitaphs to the dogs are inscribed in bronze, and before each home                        game, flowers are placed on their graves. The memorial plot attracts                        hundreds of fans and visitors each year.                                                  For the past 20 years, Uga's jerseys have been custom-made at the                        beginning of each season from the same material used for the players'                        jerseys. Old jerseys are destroyed.                                                  Uga's on-field home is a permanent air conditioned doghouse located next                        to the cheerleaders' platform, providing comfort in the heat of August and                        September.                                             Uga X, 2015-present"Que" * Record: 10-3
                        The University of Georgia formally introduced Uga X, known as "Que," at                        Georgia's game against Georgia Southern on November 21, 2015. He succeeded                        Uga IX, affectionately known as "Russ," as the Bulldog mascot. Que served                        as the primary mascot for all the games of 2015 but was officially named                        Uga X in the game against Georgia Southern.                                                  Changing of Collar Ceremony: Video  | Photo Gallery                         Uga IX, 2012-2015"Russ" * Record: 44-19
                        "Russ," the half-brother of Uga VII who has served as interim mascot for                        the Georgia Bulldogs, has received a "battlefield promotion" and assumed                        the title of "Uga IX" prior to the Florida Atlantic game on September 15,                        2012.                                                  "Russ" served as the Bulldog Mascot a total of 25 games beginning with the                        Georgia Tech game in Atlanta in 2009 helping his squad to a 30-24 win. Russ                        worked a total of nine games during the 2009 and 2010 seasons. Following                        the unexpected death of Uga VII on Nov. 19, 2009, Russ served as interim                        mascot the final two games of the 2009 season and the first six games of                        2010. Uga VIII was introduced on Oct. 16, 2010 prior to the                        Georgia-Vanderbilt game. Russ was pressed back into duty prior to the 2010                        Liberty Bowl and stayed on following the untimely death of Uga VIII in                        February, 2011.                                                  He roamed the sidelines at all 14 games during the 2011 season. He then                        served for two wins at the beginning of the 2012 season before being                        promoted as Uga IX prior to the Florida Atlantic game on Sept. 15, 2012.                        His time as mascot has included the 2011 and 2012 SEC Eastern Division                        championship, two road wins at Georgia Tech, a victory over Texas A&M                        in the 2009 Independence Bowl in Shreveport, La. and a win at the Capital                        One Bowl in Orlando, Fl. on January 1, 2013 against Nebraska. Uga IX                        finished 2013 with an 8-5 record. He completed the 2014 season with a 10-3                        mark, capped by a victory over 20th-ranked Louisville in the Belk                        Bowl.                                                  He was the first substitute mascot since "Otto" in 1986.                                                  "Russ has endeared himself to the Georgia people over the last three                        years," said UGA Director of Athletics Greg McGarity. "His dedication to                        duty when called upon has been exemplary and it's fitting that he takes his                        place in the official line of Georgia mascots."                                             Uga VIII, 2010-2011"Big Bad Bruce" * Record: 4-2
                        The eighth in the Uga line of Georgia mascots was introduced to the Georgia                        fans on Saturday, October. 16, 2010, during pre-game ceremonies of the                        Bulldogs' Homecoming game against Vanderbilt.                                                  Born Sept. 12, 2009, he served the final six regular season games of 2010                        before missing the Bowl game after a diagnosis of lymphoma.                                                  "Big Bad Bruce" passed away Friday, February 4, 2011.                                             Uga VII, 2008-2009"Loran's Best" * Record: 16-7
                        The seventh in the Uga line of Georgia mascots was introduced to the                        Georgia fans on Saturday, Aug. 30, 2008, during pre-game ceremonies of the                        Bulldogs' season opener against Georgia Southern.                                                  "Loran's Best" officially became "Uga VII," when he was introduced. Uga                        VII was escorted onto the field by members of the Frank W. "Sonny" Seiler                        family of Savannah who have owned the continuous line of mascots since Uga                        I took up the mantle in 1956. The first year was a success for the laidback                        mascot. He was not bothered by flying in an airplane, taking photos with                        excited fans and was oblivious to the crowd noise during games.                                                  Uga VII, at 56 and one half pounds, completed the 2008 season with a 24-12                        win at the Capital One Bowl in Orlando and ended his first season with a                        record of 10-3.                                                  Uga VII passed away unexpectedly on Nov. 19, 2009 of heart-related causes.                        It was the Thursday before the final home game of the 2009 season and the                        Bulldogs did not have a live mascot at the game. Instead, a wreath was                        placed on Uga VII's doghouse, and the players wore a special Uga VII decal                        on their helmets to remember him.                                             Uga VI, 1999-2008"Uga V's Whatchagot Loran" * Record: 87-27
                        In 2007, Uga VI became the winningest mascot in school history with a                        record of 87-27. He reigned over more games than any other mascot at                        114.                                                  The pregame passing of the bone ceremony from Uga V to his heftier and                        friskier son, Whatchagot Loran, took place at the 1999 Georgia-South                        Carolina contest. Only a year old at his coronation, Uga VI stands as the                        biggest of all the Uga mascots weighing in at 65 pounds - 20 pounds heavier                        than his father.                                                  His first season climaxed in a magnificent come from behind victory over                        Purdue at the Outback Bowl in Tampa. The comeback from a 25-point deficit                        marked an unprecedented feat in Georgia annals and the largest comeback in                        collegiate bowl history.                                                  The 2000 season ended in Hawaii, but due to the distance and a quarantine                        rule, Uga VI missed the O'ahu Bowl, marking the first time the Georgia                        mascot had missed a postseason game since the 1969 Sun Bowl.                                                  Alongside first-year head coach Mark Richt, Uga VI saw his third                        consecutive 8-4 season.The 2002 Bulldogs won a record 13 games (to only one                        loss), and topped Arkansas to win the program's first league title since                        1982. And Uga VI roamed the sidelines as the Bulldogs defeated Florida                        State in the 2003 Nokia Sugar Bowl, 26-13.                                                  The wins kept piling up for Uga VI and the Bulldogs in 2003, as the team                        posted an 11-3 record, returned to the SEC Championship game before falling                        to eventual national champion LSU. Georgia held on for a 34-27 overtime                        victory against Purdue in the Capital One Bowl in Orlando.                                                  In the 2004 season, the Bulldogs posted a 10-2 record with a 24-21 win                        against Wisconsin in the Outback Bowl.                                                  Year 2005 ended with a record of 10-3 and a loss in the Nokia Sugar Bowl                        38-35 against West Virginia on January 2, 2006. The game was played in                        Atlanta, Ga. due to destruction in New Orleans from Hurricane Katrina.                        Georgia returned to Atlanta, Ga. to defeat Virginia Tech in the Chick-fil-A                        Bowl on December 30, 2006 to end the 2006 season with a 9-4 record.                                                  The Bulldogs defeated the Hawaii Warriors 41-10 in the Allstate Sugar Bowl                        on January 1, 2008 in the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, La. ending                        the 2007 season ranked second in the AP poll.                                                 Epitaph:  A Big Dog For A Big Job, And He Handled It Well                                             Uga V, 1990-99"UGA IV's Magillicuddy II" * Record: 65-39-1
                        In the first game of 1990, Uga V officially began his reign as the Georgia                        mascot taking over from his father Uga IV, who passed away at his home in                        Savannah on Feb. 26, 1990. Uga V was the last pup sired by Uga IV and was                        born on March 6, 1990.                                                  Named in honor of one of the greatest Bulldogs, Dan Magill, former                        Assistant Athletic Director for Public Relations and longtime tennis coach                        and sports information director. Surprisingly, the Seiler family became                        aware that Uga IV's mate was expecting only 10 days before the litter was                        due. This notice came a week after Uga IV had passed away at his home in                        Savannah from kidney failure. There were only three pups in the litter and                        the last one born on March 6 was the only solid white male.                                                  Uga V had been perhaps the most well known of all the Bulldog mascots                        highlighted by his appearance on the cover of the April 28, 1997, Sports                        Illustrated which declared him the nation's best college mascot. Rocketed                        to stardom, he also appeared in Clint Eastwood's "Midnight In The Garden Of                        Good And Evil" - filmed in his hometown of Savannah, Ga. Uga V also                        presided over Georgia's most successful collective sporting effort in                        department history as the Bulldogs claimed four NCAA team titles during the                        1998-99 season - women's swimming and diving, women's gymnastics, men's                        tennis and men's golf - and placed second in the Directors' Cup race. He                        died on Nov. 22, 1999, just over two months after his retirement.                                                 Epitaph:  Defender Of His Turf                                             Uga IV, 1981-89"Seiler's Uga Four" * Record: 77-27-4
                        Uga IV was perhaps the most active of all the Georgia mascots, standing as                        the only one to attend a bowl game every year of his service (1981-89). He                        took over for Uga III in the 1981 season opener and over the next nine                        seasons, led Georgia to a record of 77-27-4. The highlight of his career                        was his personal appearance at the Heisman Trophy Banquet with Herschel                        Walker in New York on December 9, 1982. Uga IV was escorted through the                        banquet hall by the president of the Downtown Athletic Club, and was                        earlier photographed with Walker by news photographers from across the                        country. The proud Bulldog donned his game jersey for the outing but added                        the formal touch of a collar and black tie. Uga IV was the first mascot                        invited to the Heisman Banquet.                                                  Declared "Dog of the Decade" by Vince Dooley in 1991, Uga IV was                        posthumously awarded the highest honor available to University of Georgia                        mascots - the Georgia varsity letter.                                                 Epitaph:  The Dog Of The Decade                                             Uga III, 1972-80"Seiler's Uga Three" * Record: 71-32-2
                        Born October 9, 1972 , Seiler's Uga III was present for Georgia football's                        finest moment as Herschel Walker took the Bulldogs to the 1980 national                        championship. He led Georgia to six bowl games in nine years and closed out                        his career in ultimate fashion winning the 1980 NCAA championship. Uga III                        retired on the 100th football game of his career, marking the season-opener                        of the 1981 season. He died just weeks later.                                                 Epitaph:  How 'Bout This Dawg                                             Uga II, 1966-72"Ole Dan's Uga" * Record: 42-16-3
                        Uga I was succeeded by his son, Ole Dan's Uga at an impressive pregame                        ceremony at Homecoming, 1966. With the Georgia Redcoat Band lining the                        field, Uga II was led to the center of the field by Charles Seiler, son of                        Sonny and Cecelia. The student body erupted in a cheer that was picked up                        by the entire stadium, ''Damn Good Dog!''                                                  Uga II had an impressive reign as he watched Georgia participate in five                        bowl games and win two SEC championships.                                                 Epitaph:  Not Bad For A Dog                                             Uga I, 1956-66"Hood's Ole Dan" * Record: 53-48-6
                        The current Uga line of solid white English bulldogs began with Uga I,                        Hood's Ole Dan, born Dec. 2, 1955, in Columbus. Uga I was given to Cecelia                        Seiler by a friend, Frank Heard of Columbus and appeared in his first game                        in the 1956 home opener. As recalled by Sonny Seiler, "...his original red                        jerseys were made by Cecelia. It was necessary to take up children's                        t-shirts to fit the dog in the right places. There is no telling how many                        of these jerseys he wore out. During the early games in Athens, especially                        the hot ones before he had a dog house, the large green hedges that                        surround Sanford Stadium afforded welcomed shade in the heat of battle.                        Unfortunately, the hedges constantly tore these jerseys and new ones had to                        be made."                                                 Epitaph:  Damn Good Dog                                             OTHER MASCOTS                                                          Trilby                                                                                        Mr. Angel                                                                                        Mike                              Statue                                                                                        Otto                                                                             Although the University of Georgia is now known as the home of Uga, the                        pure white English bulldog, several mascots led the Red and Black before                        Frank W. Seiler provided the current lineage.                                                                          The Goat, Feb. 22, 1892                         Georgia's mascot for its first football game against Auburn, February 22,                        1892 in Atlanta, Ga., was a goat. Old newspaper clippings indicate that the                        goat wore a black coat with red U.G. letters on each side. He also had on a                        hat with ribbons all down his high horns, and the Auburn fans yelled                        throughout the game "shoot the billy-goat."                                                                          Trilby, 1894                         In 1894, Georgia's mascot was a solid white female bull terrier owned by a                        student, Charles H. Black, Sr., of Atlanta. Trilby, named after a novel by                        George Du Maurier, served as the campus pet and mascot for the Chi Phi                        fraternity.                                                  Disputing stories speculate the origin of the Bulldog nickname, and the                        story of Trilby provides yet another opinion: "...every day Trilby took                        herself down to old Herty field with her master for football practice. She                        ran signals with the best of them and became an accustomed figure on the                        athletic field...One morning, Trilby failed to appear for her breakfast and                        after a frantic search she was finally discovered proudly washing the faces                        of her newborn family, 13 white puppies...Late one dusky fall afternoon,                        Trilby appeared for a grid workout and scampering after her came her 13                        children, darting through players' legs, barking and pace. 'Well,'                        suggested one of the players, 'Trilby has brought us a name,                        Bulldogs.'...Every time a game was played on Herty Field, the boys would                        floss Trilby and her 13 offerings up with red and black ribbons, and so                        attired they have gone down in history as perhaps the first 'sponsors' in                        southern football." -Ruth Stanton Cogill (Atlanta newspaper) "After the                        reign of Trilby and her family, chaos developed in the mascot department at                        the university. Many games had several, depending on which alumnus got his                        dog to the game first." -AJC, Nov. 18, 1962                                                                          Mr. Angel, 1944-46                         Mr. Angel, a brindle and white colored English Bulldog owned by Eastman,                        Ga., physician, Warren Coleman, filled a void during some of the war years.                        There was no mascot roaming the sidelines and Coleman took Mr. Angel to                        games and stood with him on the sidelines. His picture on the field and                        with the Georgia cheerleaders appears in the 1945 and '46 UGA annual, the                        Pandora.                                                                          Butch, 1947-50                         Butch was a brindled English bulldog owned by Mabry Smith of Warner                        Robins, Ga. He was spotted by students who were attending the 1946                        Georgia-Georgia Tech game in Athens, and the canine appeared to be suited                        for the mascot position. Smith agreed to loan Butch to the University                        during the football season along with a female puppy named Tuffy. The                        female died of a heart attack following the Georgia-Kentucky game in 1948,                        but Butch continued to serve. Spending the off-season at Smith's home in                        Warner Robins, Butch was tragically shot in the summer of 1951 by a                        policeman after the dog escaped from his pen and was found roaming the                        streets. Butch is buried behind Smith's business along Watson                        Boulevard.                                                  In 2004 plans for a marker honoring Butch in his hometown were put into                        motion by longtime Warner Robins resident Guy Fussell.                                                                          Mike, 1951-55                         Butch was succeeded by Mike, another brindled English bulldog, owned by C.                        L. Fain. Mike lived in the field house on campus and died of natural canine                        causes in 1955. As his master's thesis, Gene Owens of Fort Worth, Texas,                        cast the bronze statue of Mike, which is located at the entrance of                        Memorial Hall.                                                                          Otto, 1986Record: 3-1
                         Although Otto was not pure white like his father, he was called upon to                        fill in for his younger brother, Uga IV, who injured ligaments in his left                        hind knee when jumping off a hotel bed before the Vanderbilt contest. In                        four games during the 1986 season, Otto led the team to a 3-1 record and                        also co-mascotted (along with Uga IV), a victory over instate rival Georgia                        Tech. After winning his first two games, fans cheered, "2-and-0 with Otto!"                        Dooley, serving as head coach during Otto's brief tenure favored the                        substitute the most. "I have always had a great affection for those who                        came off the bench and performed, and he did that and had a great time,"                        Dooley said. Otto is buried in the Seilers' backyard.                     |