Championship programs don’t guess. They identify what translates on Saturdays and continue to invest in it year after year.
That’s exactly why the Georgia Bulldogs have been long-time users of FlipSled — and why they’ve continued to add more strength and conditioning equipment as their program has grown.
Georgia currently owns six FlipSleds, reinforcing their commitment to developing real, game-ready power and physicality.
Georgia football is built on physicality. It shows up in how they come off the ball, how they finish blocks, and how they wear teams down over four quarters.
That physicality isn’t accidental — it’s developed.
FlipSled has been part of Georgia’s strength and conditioning environment because it forces athletes to apply power with intent. Every rep requires drive, leverage, and finish. There’s resistance. There’s effort. And there’s no coasting.
This type of strength and conditioning equipment trains athletes to be comfortable with contact, strain, and repeated force — all of which directly translate to physical football.
Georgia’s approach isn’t about chasing numbers in isolation. It’s about building athletes who can express strength through movement and contact.
FlipSled bridges that gap.
As a piece of strength and conditioning equipment, it helps develop:
That combination builds physicality — the ability to deliver force again and again, not just once.
Elite programs constantly evaluate their strength and conditioning equipment. If it doesn’t translate to the field, it doesn’t stay.
Georgia didn’t just keep FlipSled — they invested further.
Six units signals trust. Trust that this equipment supports how they want to train, how they want to play, and how they want to develop physically dominant athletes in the SEC.
Programs chasing wins experiment.
Programs winning championships reinforce proven tools.
Georgia’s recent SEC championships weren’t won on paper. They were earned through controlling the line of scrimmage, finishing games late, and maintaining physical dominance when opponents start to fade.
That level of physicality is built in training.
FlipSled supports that process by developing applied power — strength that shows up in real football situations when fatigue sets in.
“DAWG work” isn’t a phrase — it’s a mindset.
FlipSled fits that mindset because it demands physical buy-in. Every rep exposes effort. Every rep requires intent. There’s no hiding from the work.
That’s why it’s earned a long-term place inside Georgia’s strength and conditioning program.
Georgia’s continued investment in FlipSled reflects a program committed to developing physical, powerful athletes year after year.
Six FlipSleds.
Long-term trust.
Championship-level physicality.
Multiple SEC titles over the last few seasons.
That’s not coincidence.
That’s strength and conditioning equipment doing its job.
Learn more about FlipSled strength and conditioning equipment at
www.theflipsled.com