No. 25 Georgia and No. 11 Tennessee are coming off very different games but have similar stakes in Saturday’s SEC East matchup in Athens.

After a dominant second half last week against Florida, the Vols suddenly look like the team to beat in the division once again. The Bulldogs, meanwhile, haven’t played a clean game since their season opener and looked bad in last week’s road loss to Ole Miss.

Here’s what the media has been saying this week leading up to the 3:30 p.m. ET kickoff in Athens.

1. Jacob Eason could be in for another rough outing: Against Ole Miss, quarterback Jacob Eason finally looked like a true freshman. The Rebels’ pass rush forced Eason into mistakes and clearly rattled him in the first half. That might not change this weekend, says ESPN’s Edward Aschoff, as Tennessee’s confidence on defense is at an all-time high after its victory against Florida. Defensive end Derek Barnett is a capable pass rusher, and Georgia allowed three sacks to Missouri’s Charles Harris the last time it faced someone of his caliber.

2. Tennessee was its biggest opponent against Florida: There’s no doubt that the Gators are a worthy adversary in the SEC East, but the Vols might not have needed a comeback if they hadn’t shot themselves in the foot in the first half. According to SB Nation, the game’s narrative might have overshadowed the objective play on the field. Five dropped passes in the first half prevented Tennessee from keeping drives alive and scoring points. If those plays had been made, the Vols’ offense might have been able to move up and down the field against one of the SEC’s top defenses, which is a scary proposition heading into Saturday.

3. Georgia needs hard work, not Kirby Smart ‘magic’: In this week’s SEC on CBS podcast, analyst Gary Danielson said that Bulldogs fans are learning that teams don’t magically get better with a new coach and a new quarterback. There’s no “magic defensive dust” that Smart can bring over from Alabama to make the team’s defense better overnight. Danielson said doing the small things right is what leads to improvement, and if the Bulldogs wilt on Saturday, they will get “run over in SEC league play.”

4. The Vols should be wary of another slow start: Tennessee has been a notoriously slow-starting team in 2016, which is something fans should hope not to see Saturday. While last weekend’s comeback proves the Vols are a mentally-tough team capable of righting the ship, Fansided points out that they still haven’t been able to do so in a true road game.

5. Sony Michel needs to have a big game: Although Nick Chubb is Georgia’s most talented back when healthy, he is dealing with an ankle injury that has kept him out of practice this week. There is still hope that Chubb will play, but if he can’t, or if he’s limited, Sony Michel will become a crucial player. Last year, Michel broke out against Tennessee after Chubb suffered his season-ending injury and Georgia would gladly take a repeat of his 173-yard performance.