Changes are coming to the Georgia football program, according to DawgNation.

DawgNation did not disclose what those reported changes are, or when they will come. It did not say if head coach Mark Richt was going to stay, or if any assistant coaches will be replaced. But it did claim there was “general dysfunction and dissension not only within the team but also within the football staff,” and said that Richt has been told to fix it.

DawgNation also reported that Richt’s support has shrunk a good amount among “individuals who are intimately connected to the program through financial support and/or past or current service.”

Defensive coordinator Jeremy Pruitt has reportedly been one of the main sources of dysfunction within the football program. Pruitt (who is in his second season with the team) has denied having any run-ins with other coaches.

At his weekly press conference on Tuesday, Richt was asked about the reported problems between coaches, and said there were no major issues between members of his staff.

“Not really,” Richt said. “You know … there’s always things that happen in the heat of the battle and all that in every game. I think if you put a microphone on everybody, if you’ve got a play-caller upstairs and you’re calling a game and every word was recorded, you know, there would be like people get hot about this, that or the other. But it’s just typical game-day type stuff. But we’ve had no issue there.”

How well the Bulldogs play over their last four games (against Kentucky, Auburn, Georgia Southern and Georgia Tech) reportedly could determine the futures of some of the assistant coaches, and possibly Richt.

After starting the season 4-0, Georgia has lost three of its last four games. The Bulldogs have not scored a touchdown since Oct. 10 against Tennessee, a game they lost despite holding a 21-point lead at one point. They have scored just 12 points in their last two games, all on field goals. The last time Georgia was kept out of the end zone in back-to-back games was 1969.

Richt, who is in his 15th season as the Bulldogs’ head coach, understands that the expectations are high at Georgia.

“Some jobs you might have a bad day at the office and maybe three people know,” he said. “We have a bad day at the office in our line of work and millions of people know and millions of people have an opinion. And a lot of people know football. A lot of people think they know football, you know, so there’s a little bit of everything.

“There’s actually some pretty good constructive criticism out there. But it’s kind of obvious. I mean, we know it, too.”

But although there have been plenty of fans calling for Richt to be replaced, the Bulldogs’ coach has said he doesn’t pay attention to that. Instead, he’s focused on coaching his football team, and trying to finish the season strong.

“That’s how you’ve got to handle adversity, focus on our job in a season and that’s how you have to handle adversity in life, in my opinion,” Richt said. “The biggest thing is what are we gonna do now? What we’re going to do is we’re going to focus on our job, we’re going to fight like mad and we’re going to do it together.”