Georgia football games will sound different on the radio starting in the 2025 season.

There will be a new color analyst in the booth next to Scott Howard for the first time since he took over as permanent play-by-play voice early in the 2008 season after the retirement of Larry Munson.

Former Georgia quarterback Eric Zeier is stepping aside as color analyst after 17 seasons to spend more time with family, according to the school.

Former Bulldog offensive lineman Josh Brock is replacing him with the Georgia Bulldog Radio Network.

Georgia noted the change in its new football media guide put out before SEC Media Days this week in Atlanta.

Brock was a guard on the Bulldogs from 2002-05, starting in 2003 and part of SEC championship teams in 2002 and 2005.

The Milledgeville native moved to Cartersville when he was young. He started three games in 2002 and 12 games in 2003 while battling a shoulder injury and took a medical disqualification in late September of 2005 after sustaining a third concussion.

Brock is a managing partner of Brock Fields Financial Advisors of Raymond James in Cartersville.

Zeier was not on the radio broadcast this year at the Georgia spring game and has missed an occasional game during seasons, but the perspective by a player who ended his college career in 1994 holding 67 school passing records had become familiar. That included during national championship seasons in 2001 and 2002.

Zeier began as color analyst in the 2007 season for road games when Howard stepped in for Munson who called only home games that season due to declining health.

Brock has been an analyst on the Bulldogs Live call-in show that follow Kirby Smart’s weekly show’s first hour. He also contributed to the Dawg Talk postgame radio show.

He will join former Georgia teammate DJ Shockley who will begin his fifth season as sideline reporter.

Howard has been in Georgia’s radio booth for football since 1993 and served as the voice of Bulldogs basketball since 1996.

Brock hosted Countdown to Kickoff on WBHF AM 1450 and FM 100.3, where he served as a sideline color commentator for the Cartersville football team for 15 seasons.

Brock, 41, lives in Cartersville with wife, Tamara, daughters Carder and Mary Collins and yellow Lab Marshall, according to his work bio.Â