Georgia is used to being well-represented on All-American teams.

And that was the case once again, as ESPN’s Chris Low took an early guess at projecting which players will be All-Americans at the end of the 2025 season.

Low placed three Bulldogs on his ‘Way-Too-Early’ All-American team. Just one made the first team, with punter Brett Thorson taking home those honors.

“Thorson is recovering from December knee surgery on his non-kicking leg after getting injured in the SEC championship game,” Low wrote. “He’s a big part of setting the table for Georgia’s defense, as 22 of his 42 punts last season were downed inside the 20-yard line and 14 more were fair-caught. A Ray Guy Award finalist last season as the top punter in the nation, the Aussie returns for his fourth season as the Bulldogs' punter.”

After Thorson went down with the aforementioned knee injury in the SEC Championship game, Drew Miller took up punting duties for the Bulldogs. He had four punts in the loss to Notre Dame, averaging 39.75 yards per attempt.

Thorson will be a senior next season for the Bulldogs. Georgia also sees kicker Peyton Woodring and snapper Beau Gardner return for the 2025 season as well.

Georgia did place two players on Low’s Second Team. At inside linebacker, junior CJ Allen was listed as the choice behind first-team options Anthony Hill Jr. of Texas, Kyle Louis of Pitt and Suntarine Perkins of Ole Miss.

Allen finished second on the team in tackles last season with 76. He also had an interception to go along with 3.0 tackles for loss and 4 pass breakups.

With Smael Mondon and Jalon Walker both moving on to the NFL, Allen has a chance to carve out a much larger role as both a player and a leader for the Bulldogs in 2025.

It’s worth noting that Walker, Nakobe Dean and Roquan Smith all won the Butkus Award as junior linebackers for the Bulldogs. Allen has the talent and experience to reach that same lofty standard in 2025.

“When you’re a winner, you hate losing more than you like winning,” Allen said after the loss to Notre Dame. “So just taking that into consideration with the offseason program and just knowing what we have to do and the feeling that we have now, not want to fight that again. So just working hard in the summer and spring and so on.”

On the offensive side of the ball, tight end Oscar Delp was given the second team slot at tight end. Ohio State tight end Max Klare, who transferred in from Purdue, earned first-team honors.

Delp did not have the most productive 2024 season, catching just 21 passes for 248 yards and four touchdowns. But those touchdowns all came in Georgia’s final three regular season games, with Delp becoming a larger part of the Georgia offense as the season developed.

Georgia also returns tight end Lawson Luckie, who actually posted better numbers than Delp last season in terms of yards and receptions. They figure to be quality targets for whoever ends up being Georgia’s starting quarterback.

The Bulldogs had five different players land on at least on of the All-American teams this past season. Thorson is the only one of those five 2024 selections that will be returning to Georgia for the upcoming season.

That does create an opportunity for the likes of new names such as running back Nate Frazier and safety KJ Bolden to show what they can do with more playing time in 2025.

Georgia opens the 2025 season against Marshall on Aug. 30, with spring practice set to start sometime in March.