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Georgia's Ingram-Dawkins cited for speeding, arrested on warrant - ESPN

Georgia defensive lineman Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins was cited for speeding earlier this week as at least a dozen Bulldogs players now have been charged with moving violations since the team won the national championship in January.

Major Chris Looney of the Franklin County Sheriff's Office told the Athens Banner-Herald that Ingram-Dawkins was clocked going 90 miles per hour in a 70 mph zone Monday.

The redshirt sophomore was then brought in on a warrant for previously failing to appear in court over a citation of parking in a handicapped zone. He was booked in Clarke County Jail before being released on bond, according to the Banner-Herald.

Ingram-Dawkins was a reserve defensive lineman in 2022, playing in 14 games and making 10 total stops.

Only a week earlier, Georgia coach Kirby Smart addressed his team's speeding issues at SEC media days in Nashville, Tennessee, saying he was «disappointed» by the number of traffic tickets among his players.

Smart said they had brought in police to speak to the team and had started a system of «checks and balances» for self-reporting speeding tickets. So-called «super speeders» are disciplined, according to the coach, by losing achievement-based monetary awards.

«I'm not going to eradicate speeding,» Smart told ESPN, «but what's going to happen to my program is every time somebody gets a speeding ticket, it's going to be the front-page story. If they went and combed every SEC player and researched 'em for speeding tickets, they'd find a lot more of them.

»But when I say we're under a microscope, it's a good microscope. 'Cause you know what it's making us do? It's making us try to prevent it. We're doing more to prevent speeding than anybody in the country."

Asked by ESPN whether he was

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