Josh Heupel was not pleased that Georgia was up on Tennessee at halftime in an undefeated showdown in Sanford Stadium.

After the first half, Heupel talked with Jenny Dell of CBS Sports.

“We’ve got to do the little things right, obviously a bunch of self-inflicted wounds early in the football game,” Heupel said. “We’ve got to be more precise with what we’re doing, communication, got to clean some things up and get the ball moving. At the end of the day we’ve got to reset, play one play at a time, we’ve got to make some plays to get back in the football game, 30 more minutes of football, let’s go play.”

Georgia, which leads the all-time series 26-23-2 with wins in the last 5 meetings, largely bottled up Tennessee’s high-powered offense. The Vols were 1-for-7 on third down conversions, with 9 first downs.

Hendon Hooker in the first quarter alone had 39 passing yards and -2 rushing yards, and Tennessee overall managed just 64 yards.

Coming into the game, the key matchup was the Vols’ scoring offense (49.4 ppg) and total offense (553 ypg). They’ve scored at least 30 points in an SEC-best 11 straight games, a school record. Georgia ranks second in the nation in scoring defense (10.5 ppg). The Bulldogs are fourth in total defense (262.6 ypg) and fifth against the run (85.5 ypg).