Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

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Re: Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

Tech's Grant proves versatility against Troy

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/18/06 They're very good at math at Georgia Tech, but when fans look at a stat line reading two rushes, two catches, and one modest kickoff return, they might doubt it adds up to a game-changer.
With Rashaun Grant, however, what you see is not what you get.
<!--endtext--><!--endclickprintinclude--><table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="175"><tbody><tr><td>
JOHNNY CRAWFORD / AJC
</td></tr><tr><td nd="3" class="caption">Rashaun Grant's being able to move around on offense flusters opposing defenses.
</td></tr></tbody></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> He's listed as a running back, yet Grant lined up everywhere in Saturday's 35-20 win over Troy. That helped change the way Troy defended all the Yellow Jackets, which didn't hurt, as Tech rushed for 320 yards.
Remember all those quarterback draws up the middle, helping Reggie Ball rush for 138 yards on 16 carries?
Grant assisted a bunch, often by not even being there. When lined up as a wide receiver or on the wing, a Troy linebacker sometimes moved out of the middle, and left behind more running room. Or, perhaps a safety would vacate the middle of the field to boost Tech's passing and running games.
"If they go with a nickel, and put a defensive back in the game, we might put him in the backfield [with starter Tashard Choice] and now we've got a guy who's a [defensive back] trying to stop the run," offensive coordinator Patrick Nix said. "If they keep a linebacker in, they've got a match-up problem because Rashaun is a great athlete.
"Choice won't leave the backfield as much [because he's not the receiver Grant is], and we can have both in the backfield at once. We've got stuff where we do that although we didn't really do it much [Saturday]."
Grant can run a little, too. In 2004, he rushed 94 times for 425 yards, a 4.5-yard average that helped him earn Freshman All-ACC honors. Injuries racked his junior season, but he was back in form on two reverses against Troy, one going left for 26 yards and a score, the other going right for 25 yards.
He caught only two passes Saturday, but there's more where that came from. "We didn't use him as much as a wide receiver," Nix said. "That will come because Rashaun's a great wide receiver also."
The Tampa native is all for it. "Moving around just allows me to show all the different things I can bring to the table, and it creates a mismatch," he said. "I feel like I'm good enough to beat a linebacker one-on-one."
The same goes for many safeties. Or, if a defense marks him with a cornerback, that weakens the run defense, as there's one fewer linebacker in the game, and Nix can call on Ball, Choice or Grant to carry the ball.
It all adds up to good news for Tech. No wonder coach Chan Gailey said last week that although Choice is No. 1 in the backfield, he doesn't really consider Grant No. 2, more like one-and-a-half.
"He can do some things with the ball in his hands, and he's doing some things he could not do last year or two years ago," Gailey said. "He makes our package more varied."
 

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GEORGIA TECH 35, TROY 20
Calvin's quiet, but Jackets aren't

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/17/06 Georgia Tech's All-American went underground Saturday afternoon, so the Yellow Jackets turned to their global attack to overthrow ? and outrun ? Troy.
It worked. Of Tech's 500 yards of total offense, acclaimed wide receiver Calvin Johnson accounted for 9. Star of the game: The Others.
<!--endtext--><!--endclickprintinclude--><table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="175"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td class="body">RELATED COVERAGE:
? Photos: Tech vs. Troy
? Bisher: Troy played hard, didn't quit
? Complete Georgia Tech game coverage
</td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> "We were able to do some different things instead of saying, 'Let's just throw it to Calvin.' That's big for the guys' psyche," said offensive coordinator Patrick Nix, whose unit completed passes to eight different receivers.
"I think they proved to themselves today when he went out ... they all were sort of able to step up and say, 'Hey, we can do this' and stepped up and did it instead of having him as their crutch."
Winning's nice. Beating a good team (Troy led in the fourth quarter at Florida State a week earlier, and was tied starting the fourth Saturday) is great. Doing it virtually without your star: priceless.
On the play after Johnson was hit at the sideline, and stayed there with a hobble in the second quarter, quarterback Reggie Ball went deep to Johnson anyway. James Johnson, that is. And he caught the arcing throw down the sideline, a 55-yard scoring pass giving Tech a 14-0 lead.
Coaches dream about being unpredictable. Sometimes it actually happens.
"I wasn't surprised by the call in the huddle," James Johnson said. "We've been working it in practice."
Tech went multiple, nobody branching out and flowering more than running back Rashaun Grant.
All over the place Grant was, in the backfield, on the wings, as a wideout. "He can do some things with the ball in his hands and he's helping us now as a blocker, doing some things he could not do last year," coach Chan Gailey said.
Grant did not run once from the backfield, but from the flank ran two reverses, one for a 26-yard touchdown, the other for 25 yards. Nice average.
He also caught two passes, threw a few blocks, missed one when Calvin Johnson got hurt, and was called for holding to negate a first down. But hey, "I love it," he said. "It was the most fun I've had."
Get used to it. Grant and starter Tashard Choice will be on the field at the same time.
"He's one of the top three or four playmakers on our offense. That's the simple explanation," Nix said.
Not to be left out, junior fullback Mike Cox, who'd caught a pass in just one game prior to this season, caught two.
None of his seven college receptions have been bigger than the one he made on fourth-and-goal from the 1 early in the fourth quarter. Game tied 14-14, upset nightmares percolating, Ball rolls left and throws a meteor out front of Cox, who's running parallel to the quarterback close enough to smell his breath.
No option but to lay out, so Cox does, straining his right hand way out in front, pulling it in with one hand. Touchdown. Tech never trailed again.
No sweat, all glove.
"We call him Bull because of his blocking, but he's a finesse player," Grant said. "He has great feet and maybe the best hands on the team besides Calvin. We'll probably come up with another nickname. He's always doing it in practice, and Coach [Curtis] Modkins keeps saying, 'Catch the ball with two hands.'
"After the touchdown he said, 'I told you it was going to come in handy.' "
 

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Tech's new threads far out and groovy
Jackets to wear 1970 retro uniforms for Virginia game

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/20/06 Fans don't have to wear hot pants, platform shoes or bell bottoms to watch Georgia Tech's ACC opener against Virginia on Thursday night.
The Yellow Jackets' on-the-field attire, though, will be 36 years out of date.
<!--endtext--><!--endclickprintinclude--><table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="175"><tbody><tr><td>
Georgia Tech Athletic Association
</td></tr><tr><td nd="3" class="caption">Calvin Johnson models the throwback jersey and helmet he and his Georgia Tech football teammates will wear Thursday against Virginia
</td></tr><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr class="railscreen01"><td>Your Turn</td></tr></tbody></table><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td colspan="2">
</td> </tr> </tbody></table> <script language="javascript"> function clickVote() { document.pollForm.buttonClicked.value = "yes"; document.pollForm.PageId.value = "poll_vote_submit"; document.pollForm.submit(); } function alert1(){ document.pollForm.buttonClicked.value = ""; } </script> <form method="post" action="/poll/poll/poll/take_poll/PollRefresh.jsp" name="pollForm"> <input name="PageId" value="poll_vote_submit" type="hidden"> <input name="pollID" value="10745" type="hidden"> <input name="page" value="take" type="hidden"> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td width="100%"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] Do you like the 1970 retro uniforms the Yellow Jackets will wear for the Virginia game? [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> <td align="right" height="15" width="46">
</td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38037" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] Absolutely. Nothing like harkening back on tradition once in a while. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38034" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] Gosh, no. I don't like the look of 'em at all. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38038" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] They can wear pink hot pants for all I care, as long as they win. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2">
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[FONT=arial,helvetica][SIZE=-2]Voter Limit: Once per Hour
View Poll Results [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> </tbody></table> </form> </td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td class="body">RELATED LINKS:
? More Georgia Tech coverage
</td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> Tech will sport gold jerseys, white pants and black shoes, plus white helmets that look a whole lot like Al Hutko's lamp.
Welcome to Throwback Thursday, when Bobby Dodd Stadium takes a trip back to 1970, to the days when Rock Perdoni was the All-America lineman, Eddie McAshan was the quarterback and Hutko was the junior right guard with the exceptionally large head.
When his teammates turned in their helmets for the last time, Hutko got to keep his because the equipment manager said it would be too big for anyone else. Hutko, an engineer, turned the helmet into a lamp he still uses in his home office in Augusta.
Now you, too, can own a white helmet with gold and blue stripes down the middle and the familiar GT logo in blue and gold on the sides. Throwback mini-helmets will be on sale Thursday night for $25 apiece.
If you want a full-size helmet worn by one of Tech's players, bring a cellphone with Web browser capability and visit www.stingmobile.com. Tech will auction off two helmets before the game and two in each quarter, with the winners notified where to pick them up after the game. Minimum opening bid: $300. Bidding on the rest of Tech's helmets begins Monday at ramblinwreck.com.
"Our goal is to break even with it," Tech marketing director Scott McLaren said. "The biggest thing is to have a lot of fun and excitement and get 50,000 people in the stadium."
That's how many tickets had been sold through Tuesday morning.
Fans will be able to buy popcorn at 1970 prices ? $1 for a 46-ounce tub ? from concessionaires in 1970s outfits. Tech's band will sport tie-dyed shirts. Listen for some period music over the loudspeakers and look for some surprises on the messageboard, McLaren said.
The players might be too busy to notice anything but their uniforms, but that's OK with them.
"I'm going to love it," fullback Mike Cox said. "We've been wearing the helmets on Thursdays to get used to them. Everybody practices a little better when they have the helmets on. It's something new and exciting."
Tech went 9-3 in 1970, though Hutko said those Jackets were "small and slow" compared with this year's. He began his Tech career as a 6-foot-3, 220-pound tackle and finished it as a 248-pound guard.
"I hope they don't reproduce our results from my senior year," said Dr. Gene Spiotta, who wore a similar uniform as a 170-pound running back and captain on Tech's 4-6 team of 1969. Yellow Jackets players wouldn't want to reproduce the campus environment, either.
"Georgia Tech from 1968-70 was still an extremely conservative school," Spiotta said, adding that all but about 50 of the students were male and "girls had curfews at 11 o'clock on weekdays."
Tech didn't play Virginia in those years. The series didn't become an annual event until Tech joined the ACC in the early 1980s. Even that is ancient history for a 21-year-old like linebacker KaMichael Hall, who looks at Throwback Thursday as a 2006 football game, not a one-night trip into the past.
"I don't think it's too much about the uniforms. It's about the people that are in them," Hall said. "It's just clothes to me. I'll just put them on like any other uniform."
He'll still be No. 35, like always, but you'll need to remember that number if you want to identify him on the field. Those gold jerseys in 1970 didn't have names on the backs, and neither will the jerseys Tech wears Thursday night.
Russell Athletic donated the jerseys, which the current Yellow Jackets players will be allowed to keep. Putting together the rest of the uniform took countless hours of work by equipment manager Tom Conner and assistants Punt Windham and Brady Parish. Conner studied photos, then worked with suppliers to match that 1970 look. He began ordering equipment in late February, and the last few pairs of black shoes were scheduled to arrive Tuesday or Wednesday.
Some Tech offensive linemen prefer shoe models that have been discontinued, so Conner had to scrounge up size 13-1/2 and 14 high-tops from colleagues at other universities.
Just putting the stripes and decals on the helmets took 18 man-hours.
"It's a great look, and it's a great uniform," Conner said. "Everybody who's seen it has been thrilled with it. But would I want to do this every year just to have that thrill for everybody? No, because it's not that big a thrill for me."
 

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GEORGIA TECH REPORT
Ball gets room to run offense

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/20/06 Fans can see how accurately or inaccurately he passes, how well he runs and how successful or unsuccessful he is at spotting an open receiver and delivering the ball on time.
What they can't see about quarterback Reggie Ball are the decisions he makes.
<!--endtext--><!--endclickprintinclude--><table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="175"></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> Ball originally was supposed to run a draw on the second-quarter play against Troy that turned into a 55-yard touchdown pass to James Johnson, Johnson said. Offensive coordinator Patrick Nix has given Ball the authority to change out of plays at certain times based on the defense.
"If they blitz him, he can throw the pass," Nix said. "If there's a certain coverage, he can throw the pass. And there are certain times we know we're going to run it because we've got the numbers."
That's not the kind of freedom a coach would give a freshman, but Ball is a fourth-year starter.
"He understands the game. He's not going to get rattled on the field," coach Chan Gailey said. "He's going to make good decisions to get your team in a position to have a successful play. Then, we tried to not make it so complicated that it becomes burdensome. If you get him thinking too much, then you paralyze him to a certain extent."
Ball is 467 yards from Joe Hamilton's record of 1,758 yards rushing by a Tech quarterback. Hamilton and Shawn Jones are the only Tech players who have thrown more touchdown passes. Ball's passing efficiency rating of 113.1 this season is a career high.Break out the XXL jerseys
Tech's players will wear uniforms from 36 years ago Thursday night, but the uniform sizes will be a lot bigger.
"We didn't even have a weight room [or a strength coach]," said Dr. Gene Spiotta, captain of the 1969 team. "We had a small closeted area with some free weights in it."
Jackets get deeper on defensive line
Michael Johnson gave Tech a big boost Saturday when he was able to play against Troy after missing the Notre Dame and Samford games while hurt. Johnson backs up Adamm Oliver and Darrell Robertson at defensive end and made five tackles, including a sack, forced a fumble and broke up two passes.
"He is a good player and had a great game last week, and it's really nice to work him in the rotation," Oliver said. "We want to keep fresh and go all out on every play. Michael Johnson is going to come in and give it everything he's got; he is just that type of guy."
Expectations of players change
Not only has Tech added to its offense with each game, but it has adjusted the players it uses and the ways it uses them.
"I will continue to figure out who can do what and what plays are the best and how we need to use this guy or use that guy," Nix said. "There are some guys that going in we thought, 'He's going to be a great one for us,' but they haven't panned out, and there are some guys we thought maybe they're not going to be and all of the sudden they're being a big-time player for us."
 

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Tech Opens Conference Play Against Virginia on Thursday Yellow Jackets continue homestand in front of national audience <!-- remove this block --> <script languange="javascript1.2"> procad("http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/CSTV.GEOT/SPORTS.MFOOTBL.SPECREL;pos=promo66;sz=120x60;dcopt=ist;",0); </script><!--begin adver tag--> <script src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/CSTV.GEOT/SPORTS.MFOOTBL.SPECREL;pos=promo66;sz=120x60;tile=4;dcopt=ist;ord=9876154510426242?" type="text/javascript" language="JavaScript1.1"></script> <script src="http://graphics.fansonly.com/graphics/pontiac/p2-text.js"></script><table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="185"><tbody><tr><td valign="top" width="17"> </td><td class="pontiactext" valign="top" width="168">
Vote for this week's Pontiac Game Changing Performance - almost two hundred thousand dollars is on the line.
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ATLANTA - Georgia Tech hosts Virginia in the Atlantic Coast Conference opener for both teams Thursday night as ESPN returns to Bobby Dodd Stadium at Historic Grant Field. Thursday's kickoff is at 7:45 p.m. for the nationally televised contest.
Reggie Ball ran for 130 yards, setting a school record for a quarterback, and Georgia Tech (2-1) scored three fourth-quarter touchdowns to beat Troy 35-20 Saturday. The Yellow Jackets wore down the smaller Troy defense by rushing for 320 yards.
Virginia (1-2) returns to the field after being upset by Western Michigan 17-10 on Saturday in Charlottesville, Va. Coach Al Groh used three quarterbacks in the contest including third-string freshman quarterback Jameel Sewell for the entire second half. The Cavaliers outgained the Broncos 258-179 but could not overcome the upstart Mid-American Conference team.
"They (Virginia) are a real big team," said defensive end Adamm Oliver. "Big offensive line, the biggest we go up against. They like to run power football, more than the teams we have faced this year. Two tight ends, one back, and run that powerhouse offense right at you. It's a little bit of a change from Troy, Samford and even Notre Dame, this team is different."
Without an off week in between, both teams will return to the field on a quick turnaround after Saturday's game.
"We're having to practice on Monday, which we normally never do," said coach Chan Gailey. "Monday is a big lab day at Tech, which is why we don't practice. We`ll miss quite a few players in practice today, and then we can't do a lot of the things like film study because of late labs. We put together sack lunches for the players so they can go straight from practice to late labs. It's a little bit of a stress to practice on Mondays." <!-- STORY AD BEGINS HERE -->
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<!-- STORY AD ENDS HERE --> This week's game has been dubbed "Throwback Thursday" as the Yellow Jackets will wear special "Throwback" uniforms. Tech will don uniforms reminiscent of the early 1970s, including gold jerseys, white pants and white helmets. Tech wore various gold jerseys with white or gold helmets from 1968-1971.
"This is big time. I told the players last night ... national TV, everybody's watching," added Gailey. "You get a chance to go prove what kind of team we are. It still is the college version of Monday Night Football, I still believe that. The ACC has about six or seven games on, and that's great for the conference."
The Tech offense, led by quarterback Reggie Ball, compiled a total of 500 yards against Troy. Ball has completed 35 of 69 passes for 387 yards and five touchdowns with three interceptions in 2006. After his 130-yard outing against Troy, he is also the team's leading rusher with 194 yards and a 6.9-yard average. Tailback Tashard Choice has 176 yards and two touchdowns.
"He's (Ball) a senior in his fourth year, he understands the game," said Gailey. "He doesn't get rattled on the field. He's going to make good decisions to get our team in a position to have a successful play. Then, we tried to not make it so complicated that it becomes burdensome. If you get him thinking too much, then you paralyze him to a certain extent."
The Jacket offense will line-up across from a Virginia defense that features a 3-4 scheme led by sophomore linebackers Jon Copper and Clint Sintim. Copper leads the team with 24 tackles including three for a loss and a sack. Sintim is third on the team with 18 tackles and first with five tackles for a loss and two sacks.
"We had to spend extra time in meetings," said fullback Mike Cox. "The 3-4 defense is different than what most collegiate teams run. With only a short week to prepare for them makes it difficult as well, but we actually spent three practices in the preseason preparing for Virginia."
Linebacker Philip Wheeler leads the Yellow Jackets outstanding defense with 21 tackles and an ACC-leading five tackles for loss, while safety Jamal Lewis leads the league in interceptions with two.
 

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Jackets out to make a move

Georgia Tech

<sw_photos> </sw_photos> By Adam Van Brimmer | adam.vanbrimmer@morris.com | Story updated at 12:54 AM on Wednesday, September 20, 2006
<mcc story=""></mcc>ATLANTA - ACC experts talk fervently about the talent in a league they consider perennially underrated.
April's NFL draft validated their claims. Twelve of the 32 first-round picks played for ACC teams - the most from one league in NFL history.
Those departures created a vacuum, however. Three weeks into this season, the sucking sound is drowning out all the pundits talk.
North Carolina State lost to Akron and Southern Mississippi.
Virginia got hammered by Pittsburgh, struggled against Wyoming and lost to Western Michigan.
North Carolina lost to Rutgers at home.
Boston College squeaked past Central Michigan and needed overtime to defeat Brigham Young.
Maryland gave up 28 points in the first quarter of a humbling loss to West Virginia.
Florida State rallied late to beat Troy and is averaging just 49 rushing yards per game.
Those struggles lead to the inevitable questions.
Slow start?
Or down year?
And how good is the league's weakness for Georgia Tech?
"We definitely believe with the talent we have on our team we have a chance," fullback Mike Cox said. "With no one dominant team in the conference, we feel like this is our year."
The Yellow Jackets have been one of the few impressive ACC teams. The Jackets are 2-1 heading into Thursday's game against Virginia.
The difference between Georgia Tech and most of its ACC brethren is experience. The Yellow Jackets have veterans at every offensive position, as well as on the defensive line and at linebacker.
Their peers, meanwhile, are breaking in new players at key positions. Virginia and North Carolina have new quarterbacks. Maryland has a veteran trigger man in Sam Hollenbach but only youngsters at receiver.
The NFL draft gutted the defenses at Virginia, N.C. State and Florida State.
The losses have led to losses, or at least struggles, and have frustrated some coaches to the point of excuse making.
N.C. State coach Chuck Amato alluded to the Mid-American Conference allowing its schools to recruit non-qualifiers following the Wolfpack's loss to Akron, a MAC team. Non-qualifiers are student-athletes who don't meet the NCAA's initial eligibility requirements.
They can attend college as freshman but cannot practice or compete in football nor can they receive an athletic scholarship. The ACC prohibits its schools from accepting these players.
Virginia coach Al Groh has talked about parity. He pointed out the three wins by Division I-AA schools over major college programs this year: Montana State defeated Colorado, New Hampshire beat Northwestern and Richmond shut out Duke.
North Carolina faced Division I-AA Furman on Saturday, and had to hold on for a 45-42 victory.
Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey insists his team realizes that. But he said there's nothing wrong with his players seeing opportunity in the rest of the league's struggles.
It's bad "only if you let it affect your play," Gailey said. "There is nothing wrong with being confident and excited, as long as you don't get lackadaisical in your preparation or believe this isn't a hard week."

Published in the Athens Banner-Herald on 092006
 

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VIRGINIA (1-2, 0-0 ACC) AT GEORGIA TECH (2-1, 0-0 ACC) ? 7:45 P.M. THURSDAY ? ESPN ? 790 AM
Another prime-time drama for Tech
Yellow Jackets, reeling Cavaliers meet in Thursday night ACC opener

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/21/06 No school in the country has played more Thursday night ESPN games than Georgia Tech, which plays its 19th Thursday. No school has had more Thursday night heartache the last two seasons, either.
Two years ago, Georgia Tech led No. 22 Virginia Tech by eight points with less than six minutes to play, then collapsed. The Hokies completed an 80-yard touchdown pass and a 51-yard touchdown pass and returned an interception 64 yards for a touchdown. A 20-12 lead became a 34-20 loss.
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JOHNNY CRAWFORD / AJC
</td></tr><tr><td nd="4" class="caption">Calvin Johnson and the Jackets are seeking to erase bad memories of their last Thursday night game.
</td></tr><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td class="body">MORE TECH NEWS
</td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> Last year, Georgia Tech rallied from a 10-0 halftime deficit to take a 14-10 lead against N.C. State. Then, one play after Travis Bell missed a 24-yard field goal that would have stretched the lead to seven, N.C. State completed an 80-yard touchdown pass to go back on top. Tech got first-and-goal at the 2 with 32 seconds left, but Calvin Johnson couldn't hold on to a potential game-winning touchdown pass, and N.C. State's Garland Heath intercepted.
But if you think those results leave this year's team dreading another Thursday night game, you don't know the Jackets. Their friends back home and at other schools will be watching. There's only one other college football game being played Thursday ? Eastern Kentucky at Tennessee Tech ? and it's on ESPNU. For the first time since the season opener against Notre Dame, the nation's college football audience will focus on Georgia Tech.
"Both teams, no matter if you are home or away, are going to be ready to play because it is the national game that night," fullback Mike Cox said. "Everybody in the nation will be watching."
Tech coach Chan Gailey compares ESPN's Thursday night college telecasts to "Monday Night Football" in the NFL, an opportunity to strut your stuff on a day when other teams can watch.
"I told the players Sunday night," Gailey said. "National TV, everybody's watching, you get a chance to go prove what kind of team we are."
????????????????
JACKETS ARE HUGE FAVORITES
Who would have thought Georgia Tech would be favored by as many points over Virginia as it was over Troy?
Tech, which would have covered the 17-point spread last week if not for a touchdown allowed by the second-team defense, would surely be happy with another 15-point victory tonight.
In fact, a one-point victory would probably be considered plenty over a school none of the current Yellow Jackets has beaten. (Michael Matthews, George Cooper and Xavier McGuire were redshirting in 2002 when Tech beat Virginia 23-15.)
None of the Jackets is likely to get too overconfident, despite the Cavaliers' failure to score more than 13 points in any game this season.
"If it's somebody you don't know, thatcan be a tendency," Tech coach Chan Gailey said of overconfidence, "but when it's a conference game and a division game and somebody you haven't beaten in a while, I don't think our guys take anybody lightly that falls into that category."
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BIG OPPORTUNITY FOR WINNER
Thursday is the ACC opener for both teams, but the winner will have a leg up in the race for the Coastal Division championship. The winner joins Virginia Tech (2-0 ACC) as the only teams in the division without at least one ACC loss.
This could be a wide-open year in the league, a chance for someone other than the usual suspects to contend for the title. Coastal Division power Miami has lost four of its last six games overall dating back to last season; Atlantic Division power Florida State has lost five of its last eight.
At least half the teams on Georgia Tech's ACC schedule appear to be having down seasons.
Tech coach Chan Gailey said he doesn't mind his players looking at scores from around the ACC and aiming for a trip to the championship game in Jacksonville.
"There's nothing wrong with being confident and excited and looking at something that's got a chance to happen, as long as you don't get lackadaisical," Gailey said. "I always think we're going to compete for the title. I thought so last year. I think so today."
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A DIFFERENT 'D' FOR CAVS
Most college teams play four linemen and three linebackers most of the time. Virginia plays three linemen and four linebackers.
"It has the opportunity to confuse the offensive line more," said Nate McManus, one of four current Georgia Tech offensive linemen who started against Virginia last season. "Now that this group has been together and we've seen it, three years for some of us, I think we know what to expect. If we were ever to know what to expect, this would be the year."
The 3-4 can confuse a quarterback, too, because the linebackers can drop into coverage. Tech coach Chan Gailey said he expects Reggie Ball to be able to handle it.
"The great thing is, Reggie's been looking at it for three years and has a much better understanding of it," Gailey said.
Virginia has been much better against the pass than the run this season, and opponents have stayed with the run knowing they didn't need many points to outscore the Cavaliers. Something to remember in short-yardage situations tonight: Virginia opponents are 3-for-3 when running on fourth-and-1 or fourth-and-2.
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SHORT WEEK FOR TECH
Maybe it will show up in the fourth quarter, when fatigue hits a little harder than usual. Maybe you'll see it in the first quarter, when Georgia Tech or Virginia looks less than sharp countering the other team's scheme. Maybe it'll be visible as early as pregame warmups, when a player or two shows he hasn't recovered from an injury in last week's game.
All of those could be symptoms of the short week these teams had to prepare for tonight's game. Two days of recovery and preparation time were sacrificed at the altar of cable television money and exposure for the ACC.
That lack of recovery time could hurt Tech, as All-America receiver Calvin Johnson tries to come back from a leg bruise suffered against Troy.
Coaches prefer not to play the Saturday before a Thursday night game, and Tech hasn't had to before its six most recent Thursday night appearances.
"The ACC wants to play these Thursday night games, and ESPN wants us, so you have to work within the system," Tech coach Chan Gailey said. "Nobody gets exactly what they want, so you just look to make sure it's even."
Gailey went easy on his players this week in practice to give them a chance to recover from the Troy game.
If anybody gets an advantage, it's Tech. Both teams played home games on Saturday; Virginia had to travel to Atlanta.
"The biggest challenge has been on the coaching staff knowing we'd be on the road all day Wednesday instead of at our desks," Virginia coach Al Groh said earlier this week. "We wouldn't do much more with our players [if it was a home game]. In fact, they'll probably get more rest because they'll sleep on the plane."
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VIRGINIA'S REELING
Al Groh's first recruiting class ranked among the nation's 10 best. Two years later, his young Virginia players appeared to be way ahead of schedule. They won their first five games to reach No. 6 in the nation, and they were back in the top 10 two weeks into November.
The Cavaliers are 9-10 since.
Nowadays, Virginia is a lot closer to being 10th in the ACC than 10th in the nation. Among ACC teams, Virginia ranks:
? Last in total offense.
? Second-to-last in rushing.
? Second-to-last in scoring.
? Last in first downs.
? Second-to-last in third-down conversions.
The Cavaliers left the field Saturday to boos from the homecoming fans following a 17-10 loss to Western Michigan. Virginia comes to Bobby Dodd Stadium in crisis mode, with a redshirt freshman likely to get his first start Thursday after being the third of three quarterbacks to play last week.
"We expect that he will progress along. We are willing to handle whatever goes with that," Groh said of Jameel Sewell, who played the entire second half against Western Michigan but didn't lead his team to a single point.
Sewell is more mobile than senior Christian Olsen or junior Kevin McCabe.
"He can hurt you with his legs as easily as he can hurt you with his arm," Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey said.
Still, a first-time starter at quarterback, behind an offensive line with two sophomores and a freshman . . . that sounds like a formula for disaster against Tech's high-pressure defense.
"We've dealt with it pretty well in the past, but we did it with veteran players and they could relate it to other things that they've seen," Groh told reporters. "We've taken that background and information that we've had that's served us well in the past against this particular team and tried to rely on that and pass that on to these players. We'll just see what their capability is of utilizing that come Thursday night."
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FLASHBACK
? Last game: Nov. 12, 2005, in Charlottesville
? Score: Virginia 27, Georgia Tech 17
? Star of the game: Deyon Williams caught a career-high 10 passes for a career-high 107 yards.
? Stat that matters: Virginia's Marques Hagans completed 21 of 29 passes for 205 yards and a touchdown.
? It's history: Tech's Travis Bell kicked what remains a career-long 48-yard field goal.
? Coachspeak: "I told them, 'Here's the opportunity for you now, fellas. You've got to be like a shark smelling blood.' And they did. They took the ball, and they finished it off." ? Virginia's Al Groh, on his offense's game-clinching touchdown drive
? They said it: "I'm thinking we're going to win the game. We were really stroking at that time, offense and defense. We just couldn't make a play after that." ? Tech strong safety Chris Reis, on what he thought after the Yellow Jackets rallied from a 17-0 deficit to tie it.
 

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A few Cavalier notions

By Enemy Watchwoman | Wednesday, September 20, 2006, 03:33 PM
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
So it?s quite obvious that the ACC reeks of overripe limburger this year, and just from looking at some of the results and near-misses.
But delving a bit into the numbers, and examining the lack of progress of some of its supposedly on-the-move programs, reveals that the stench goes deep into the old pigskin olfactories.
Prime example being the Virginia Cavaliers, the Loyal Opposition for ESPN?s unslakable Thursday night ACC football thirst against Your Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets at Bobby Dodd.
Back in the days when The Enemy Watchwoman made regular sojourns up down the league ? when its northerly point was College Park ? she used to hear that George Welsh couldn?t recruit, and the Wahoos would never be a big-time college football power as a result. Then they went out and slayed Florida State in its first ACC loss. UVa made a regular habit of participating in fairly decent New Years Dayish bowl games, including the Atlanta Bowl Formerly Known as the Peach. Welsh produced a good number of players now competing in the NFL, such as Tiki and Ronde Barber.
Indeed, the heavenly autumnal visits to Mr. Jefferson?s University in Charlottesville were occasions to watch good football as well as the magical changing of the colors in the Blue Ridge. When Coach Welsh was ushered off into retirement, Al Groh was brought in from the NFL to take the Cavs into FSU-Miami-Virginia Tech company.
But on Thursday, he?ll start redshirt freshman Jameel Sewell, one of three quarterbacks he tried in last Saturday?s homecoming loss to ? Western Michigan?
Groh?s not happy with any of them. Yes, these would be QBs he recruited. Well, Al, even the student press isn?t happy with you.
There is a top QB prospect on the UVa roster, cornerback Vic Hall, signed as the top prep passer in Virginia high school history, more prolific than Michael Vick, even.
But Groh, who pouted that good Cavaliers fans shouldn?t boo after a loss ? even to a I-AA team ? says Hall isn?t an option under center.
While UVa?s decline as a program may be turning heads, the current offensive woes are being trumped as not much of a surprise.
Yes, Virginia, there are a few teams worse than you in Division I-A in offensive statistics across the board. But not many.
As Tech fan Dr. Football sez, the Jackets have no excuses not to put on a command performance. Keep this in mind, however: Tech?s lost 4 of its last 5 Thursday night affairs, including that unfortunate heartbreaker to N.C. State last season.
Yes, Jackets fans, that was the same Wolfpack team led by the soon-to-be former N.C. State Chuck Amato, who?s part of the lineup of what?s being referred to as the Atrocious Coaching Conference.
This take doesn?t hold out much chance for the Cavs to have a decent season, with apologies to ?Mr. and Mrs. Wahoo? out there.
There is a glimmer of hope, however:
?There are still games to be won. The ACC, if you haven?t noticed, isn?t overflowing with talent.?
As they always say at Duke, and at an increasing number of other campuses now stringing from Coral Gables to Chestnut Hill, October 15 is only 26 days away.
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Golden opportunity for Jackets

By Terence Moore | Wednesday, September 27, 2006, 07:00 PM
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Terence Moore

If those associated with the Georgia Tech football program wish folks to take them seriously again, they must win Saturday in Blacksburg, Va.
Period.
End of story.
Actually, if the Yellow Jackets do slay Virginia Tech, they could add several more chapters to their book entitled ?How to leave mediocrity for the first time during the Chan Gailey regime.? Later, they could survive a trip to Death Valley. Then they could whip their daring choice for a homecoming guest (Miami). Then they could evolve into the kings of Tobacco Road after visiting Raleigh and Chapel Hill. Then they could end all of that barking Between the Hedges. Then they could reach the ACC championship game before securing a berth in a BCS game.
It?s possible. Well, much of it is, because the Jackets have an offense with Calvin Johnson, their all-everything wide receiver, and they have a defense ranked among the nation?s elite in virtually everything. There also is something else about the Jackets, according to linebacker KaMichael Hall, their second-leading tackler. ?We?ve always had talent, but I just think this is the most together Georgia Tech team that I?ve played for,? Hall said. ?It?s just the way that we get along, and the way that we work well together, and the way that we put all three phases of the game together.?
The Jackets showed as much during their season opener at Bobby Dodd Stadium against Notre Dame. In fact, they were better than Notre Dame. They lost after Tech coaches punted away common sense by refusing after the first half to keep unleashing Johnson against a clearly overmatched secondary.
That said, the Jackets did what they had to do against inferior Samford and Troy. They crushed them. They also did what they occasionally haven?t done when facing the meek of the ACC by smashing Virginia last Thursday during a nationally televised home game. Tech coaches even threw early, often and late to Johnson against the Cavaliers. It made you wonder if they finally discovered what the rest of us already knew, and that is you keep going to Johnson no matter what. He?s among the nice collection of players with the ability to take the Jackets away from their blah existence toward whatever bliss they?ll reach with a victory against historically potent but slightly vulnerable Virginia Tech.
Although the Jackets were a second half filled with Johnson (you know, their Notre Dame fiasco) shy of becoming pretty great at 4-0, they still are pretty good at 3-1. They just slid into the Top 25 at No. 24. If nothing else, they are on course to do as well as Gailey?s other Tech teams that concluded each of the past four seasons with seven victories. It?s just that another such finish for the Jackets is unacceptable.
Unless mediocrity is acceptable for these Jackets. Which it isn?t, according to Hall, who has joined teammates and coaches in stressing the need to seek and reach The Next Level. ?That?s our ultimate goal ? to be able to get over the hump and to be able to win nine, 10, 11 games,? said Hall, whose Jackets were sprinting that way last season after a 4-0 start produced a No. 15 national ranking. Their next game was in Blacksburg, where they managed seven points to the Hokies? 51. Worse, Hall admitted before this season that more than a few Tech players actually quit during the game.
So, with Blacksburg back on the horizon for the Jackets, and with No. 11 Virginia Tech missing a couple of starters after struggling last week against pitiful Cincinnati, these Jackets have a chance to show the guts that those other Jackets lacked. ?We just came out last year, and one thing after another happened, and it kind of escalated after that,? Hall said. ?You think about that, and it?s motivational, but at the same time you don?t want to think too much about it. If you think too much about something like that you won?t focus on the goal that is at hand.?
For the Jackets, that goal involves going to the Virginia foothills and doing nothing less than the last two words of their Ramblin? Wreck song: Fight, win.
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Re: Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

GEORGIA TECH REPORT
Tech kicker can block and tackle, too

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/28/06
Troy Garside expected to play on Georgia Tech's special teams. He's a kicker, after all.
But Garside wasn't kicking when he took the field against Troy and Virginia. He was trying to block punts and block for punt and kickoff returners. He's also a backup on the kickoff coverage team.
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So much for that old notion that kickers aren't real football players.
Garside, a 5-foot-11, 195-pound sophomore, played outside linebacker and fullback at Episcopal High School in Jacksonville, where he also punted and kicked off. His athletic ability caught the eyes of Tech's coaches over the summer, in conditioning workouts and in the weight room.
"I put up good numbers, working my butt off," Garside said.
Special-teams coordinator Charles Kelly noticed and used some outside-the-box thinking to get the most out of the talent on the Yellow Jackets' roster.
"Keep kicking. Keep practicing," Kelly told Garside. "That's your priority. But I think you're a better athlete than just kicking, and we want to try you out on other things."
Travis Bell is Tech's No. 1 kicker, Mohamed Yahiaoui the kickoff specialist and Bell's top backup. So Garside would be sitting at home this weekend if not for his non-kicking duties. Thanks to his new roles, he made the travel squad for the first time for No. 24 Tech's game against No. 11 Virginia Tech.
Garside was planning to play soccer at Wake Forest until coach Chan Gailey
offered him a chance to walk on to Georgia Tech's football team. Garside, a civil-engineering major, accepted the offer, just as would-be Clemson soccer player Bell had done. Now they're both contributing, though Garside is doing it in a way he never expected.
"I love any time a kicker can get out there," Bell said. "We joke with him about it. We say it's OK to block somebody else's punt, just don't do it to our own punters in practice."
"He's considered one of us in the specialists group, so he's got a good little cheering section."
Graduation rates rise for athletes
Georgia Tech showed improvement in the graduation success rates the NCAA released Wednesday.
The football figure was up two points to 55 percent, men's basketball was up 11 points to 42 percent, women's basketball was up two points to 64 percent and baseball as up a whopping 22 points to 65 percent.
"It's important that we show progress, and that's something we try to do in all aspects of our business," athletics director Dan Radakovich said. "Showing that improvement is very important."
Ideally, Radakovich said, schools would be able to compare the graduation success rates of athletes to those for the student body as a whole. But campus-wide graduation rates are available only under the federal formula, which treats players who transfer as non-graduates.
Running game leads conference
Georgia Tech leads the ACC with 5.0 yards per carry. That kind of number makes an offensive lineman smile.
"I think we've been doing very well," right tackle Mansfield Wrotto said. "Everybody's grading out average plus or better in every game. We've been handling the runs. We've been making very few mental errors."
Wrotto was a defensive lineman before this season.
"I've just gotten better every single game," Wrotto said. "I think I've made maybe two or three mental errors in the last four games, which is very good considering I've never played offensive tackle before."
 

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GEORGIA TECH FOOTBALL
Kickoffs team jump-started
Reserve end Johnson puts spark in unit

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/27/06
Breathing was tougher, the tension obvious, and kickoff still was days away.
That's how bad kickoff coverage has been for Georgia Tech, explaining the meetingroom mood when coaches and players talk about it.
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"The air's thicker in there because everybody knows the eyes are on the kickoff team," said senior wide receiver Chris Dunlap, who's on that unit. "Pretty much everybody was fed up. ... After kickoffs. All the time, we turn to each other and say, 'Step it up! If you don't want to get it done, we'll find somebody else.' "
First-year special teams coach Charles Kelly has tried that. Still, last year's problem got no better as the Jackets allowed kickoff return averages of 39.5 and 34.2 against Notre Dame and Samford.
Enter Michael Johnson, sophomore reserve defensive end and attitude infuser.
"Michael has done great since he's been back [from a groin pull that kept him out of the first two games]," Kelly said. "Probably the two that stand out are Michael Johnson and Tony Clark. I think Michael brought leadership to that group. He played on that unit as a freshman and brought experience."
Johnson hasn't made every play on kickoffs, where the Jackets have allowed more palatable averages of 18.7 and 21 yards the past two games. But he's made several and helped mates do the right thing more.
Clark, who leads Georgia Tech's points chart on special teams, just knew his roommate would make a difference.
"We were putting the defense in a predicament, letting opponents past the 35-, even the 50-yard line," Clark said. "I was telling Mike, 'If it takes just you and me to get the job done, we'll do it.' We knew we looked terrible. He was amped. He brought something extra, a little swagger."
Just don't go to Johnson for a recount. He's as low-key off the field as revved on it. Asked if Kelly has been agitated in kickoff meetings, he said only, "He has a saying; let's just say it's, 'Get after their butts.'?"
The Jackets need to Saturday at Virginia Tech, the ACC's special teams capital.
Special teams turned last year's game at Blacksburg, Va., on Georgia Tech's head.
The Jackets lined up for a field goal to pull within 7-3 late in the first quarter, only to trail 14-0 moments later, the Hokies blocking the kick and returning it for one of 37 special teams touchdowns since Frank Beamer became coach in 1987. The Hokies have blocked 112 kicks in 231 games under Beamer.
Offering hope: Georgia Tech's special teams weak spot has been no strength for Virginia Tech. The Jackets are last in the ACC in kickoffs, netting 35.1 yards, the Hokies next to last in returns (16.9 yards per).
Even after changes, like inserting senior defensive end Adamm Oliver last week, coaches try not to overcorrect. The risk of increasing anxiety looms.
"When you're not doing something well, and you go out there and something bad happens, the first thing is, 'Oh, no. Here we go again!'?" Kelly said. "There's a point where you try too hard, so hard to get down there that you overpursue.
"That air is going to be a little thicker in that meeting every week. You've got to create some pride in it."
For some, that's not a problem.
"We need players out there who are going to risk everything they have," Clark said. "We don't need anybody out there taking a play short. That's what [the Hokies] are known for, special teams. 'Beamerball.' ... They got their own name for it. This is going to be huge."
 

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GEORGIA TECH REPORT
Hokies lose 2 players, may get 2 back

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/26/06
No. 11 Virginia Tech suspended two starters for Saturday's game against No. 24 Georgia Tech, but the Hokies might get two other key players back.
Receiver Josh Morgan and defensive end Chris Ellis will sit out the game for unspecified violations of team rules, coach Frank Beamer said Monday. However, ESPN reported Monday that the two were arrested early Sunday morning following an altercation outside of a nightclub in Blacksburg, Va., on misdemeanor charges of obstructing an officer.
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The good news for the Hokies is that leading receiver David Clowney and cornerback Roland Minor might return from medical problems.
Clowney, with 13 catches for 182 yards, had an appendectomy on Thursday.
"Hey, if Big Ben [Roethlisberger, the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback] can play in four days after the same thing, I can play in nine," Clowney told the Richmond Times-Dispatch. "I wanted to play [last week], but that would have been too soon."
Minor, who intercepted two passes in a 2004 game against Georgia Tech, has yet to play this season because of a broken wrist. The cast is off, and Minor said he'll be able to play Saturday. Even before Minor got hurt, sophomore Victor Harris was leading him for the starting job at field cornerback. Harris intercepted two passes against Cincinnati and returned one 72 yards for a touchdown.
Morgan ranks second for Virginia Tech in receptions, with 10 for 161 yards and two touchdowns. Ellis has made 12 tackles, three behind the line of scrimmage, and has four quarterback hurries.
Tech's defense stays stingy
Georgia Tech has allowed 47 points through four games. The last time the Yellow Jackets could say that? The 1990 national championship season, when Tech allowed 31 points while starting 4-0.
Ball's brother out with knee injury
Georgia Tech quarterback Reggie Ball won't get the chance to play against his younger brother, Florida State's Marcus, even if both teams reach the ACC championship game. Marcus Ball is out for the season after tearing his anterior cruciate ligament Saturday against Rice.
Johnson earns ACC honors
Tech wide receiver Calvin Johnson was named the ACC's offensive back of the week for his six-catch, 165-yard, two-touchdown receiving effort in Thursday's 24-7 win against Virginia. ... Tech's Oct. 7 home game against Maryland will kick off at 3:30 p.m. and be televised by ESPNU. ... Clemson's Oct. 21 home game against Tech is a sellout.
 

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Jackets focused on ACC Coastal race

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/25/06
Georgia Tech climbed into the Associated Press Top 25 on Sunday for the first time this season.
The trick now is staying there.
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No. 24 Tech (3-1, 1-0 ACC) plays No. 11 Virginia Tech (4-0, 2-0) on Saturday at Blacksburg, Va. The Yellow Jackets were a season-high No. 15 and the Hokies No. 4 heading into last season's 51-7 Hokies victory.
Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey said Sunday the No. 24 ranking won't have any effect on his team, which is focused on what the Virginia Tech game means in the ACC race. Georgia Tech and Virginia Tech are the only two Coastal Division teams without an ACC loss.
"I think they understand what's at stake with this ballgame and will prepare accordingly," Gailey said.
 

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Adventure waits along the road

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/25/06
After four straight home games, Georgia Tech is going road-tripping, and there's more to worry about than what might happen on the field Saturday in Blacksburg, Va., where the Yellow Jackets lost 51-7 last year.
It would be difficult to over-prepare freshmen, who would be well-advised to pack extra underwear. Sometimes, the greatest consternation awaits not in what's at the other end of a trip, but in the journey itself.
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"The worst memory I have ? among many ? of a bad trip was to Knoxville in 1983," former Yellow Jackets coach Bill Curry said. "We were still struggling to get things going and UT was really good. The fire alarm went off in the Holiday Inn at about 5 a.m. and we had to evacuate.
"Standing in the frigid weather with my team in their skivvies ? me too ? everyone shivering, trying to mount a head count to see if we had everyone ... that was the worst. We got hammered in the game, too. It was all because of the false alarm, of course."
It was the real thing in 2000 when Georgia Tech's game at Virginia Tech was canceled by a monstrous storm that swamped Lane Stadium. Just ask ESPN announcer Lee Corso.
"When we got inside, a gentleman said, 'Man, did you see that lightning bolt?!' And I said, 'Yeah, it was right by us!' Corso wrote for ESPN.com. " 'It hit a car,' he said. 'Really, what color?' 'Red.' 'Naw ... where?' 'Over by the fence.' My wheels began turning. My rental car is red and I parked over by the fence. Nah, it couldn't be.
"So I get out to the car, start her up and it smells like it's burning. It's like Christmas with all the lights. Every single light was on. Check oil! Check engine! Battery dead! Fasten seatbelts! I begin driving and ... everyone is staring because my car is full of smoke.
"I only get a few yards before I'm stopped dead in the middle of traffic. Now, my car is fried, and I'm trying to flag someone down as Virginia Tech fans are weaving past me, only no one will stop because I didn't pick the Hokies."
In 1978, Georgia Tech running back Eddie Lee Ivery rushed for a school-record 356 yards at Air Force. There was a price to pay. The Jackets got stuck in Colorado. "It was one of the coldest days I've ever spent in my life," former quarterback Gary Lanier recalled. "It seemed like we were there forever."
Plenty of long road trips got longer when Yellow Jackets coach Chan Gailey was in charge at Troy State in the early '80s.
"You get on two buses, and you're 50 miles out of town, and one breaks down. What do you do? We didn't have cellphones back then," he said. "You stop a motorist, have him get you to a phone. A hour-and-a-half later, your kids are sitting there, the replacement bus gets there, you reload everything.
"You had to send the equipment truck, which normally goes in the convoy, ahead to tell the restaurant you planned to stop at three hours later you'll be an hour and a half late. At a small school, you have a million stories."
Georgia Tech associate athletics director Wayne Hogan has tales from schools big and small.
Like one of his favorites from his days working at the University of Montana.
"We used to go to the I-AA playoffs every year, and one year we had to go to Western Illinois. This place is in the middle of nowhere," he said. "We lost, not a good day, bus back to the charter and the plane carrying us back to Montana was the same plane that was going from there to L.A. to pick up Notre Dame, who had played USC that day.
"We get back to the greater Missoula, Montana area (Hogan chuckles here) and begin to descend and suddenly I get paged to the cockpit. I was athletics director. They said, 'Look, we got this call and there's a little bit of weather in Missoula, a little fog and light snow and we just don't feel comfortable landing there. We've never flown into there, and there's mountains and all. We found Spokane, Washington.'
"Well, Spokane was about a three-hour drive from Missoula. They wanted to make sure they get Notre Dame. I said, 'Are you sure you can't make it into Missoula?' They said, 'If we see an opening, we'll land.'
"We descend, descend, and all the sudden the afterburners come on and he begins to go back up. I'll be damned if I don't look out the window, and you can clearly see the lights of the city, everything. It was a 3 a.m. deal getting home for us, a nightmare. But if a guy flying an airplane tells me he doesn't want to land, I'm not arguing."
 

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GEORGIA TECH FOOTBALL
Q and A with Chan Gailey
'I think we're seeing more diverse things [with Nix]' '

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/24/06
With one-third of the regular season behind him and eight days before his 3-1 team's next game, Saturday at Virginia Tech, Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey took stock of his team with staff writer Matt Winkeljohn.
Q: What do you know now that you didn't know before?
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JOHNNY CRAWFORD / AJC
</TD></TR><TR><TD class=caption>Chan Gailey's been pleased with the start to the season, but the Jackets face their first road contest Saturday against Virginia Tech.
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A: First of all, we've had some guys in the secondary that have stepped up. That is one thing I've learned. I was not sure how inexperienced guys would respond, and they've responded very well. [Former defensive lineman] Mansfield Wrotto has played better at right tackle each week. He's got a ways to go, but he gets better each week.
I think the diversity in the offense [with Patrick Nix now calling plays] has been a positive because the guys have really taken to it. Everybody's got different roles and new roles, and they're doing well.
Q: Has Patrick's willingness to call quarterback Reggie Ball's number so much as a runner (he's already rushed 50 times for 251 yards) slowed opposing blitzers?
A: I think we have slowed down the pass rush somewhat, but the other factor . . . linebackers, when they drop, they're not getting out as fast. They're hanging to see if he's going to run and then they go to drop and the guy that's trying to get deep middle zone or in a deep curl, they're half a step or a step slower.
I think we are seeing some benefit from [rushers] having to stay in their lanes. Now they can't free-lance on pass rush and the linebackers aren't getting out. I think it has helped us, I really do.
Q: You said last summer that you were handing play-calling duties to Patrick in large part because you no longer had the offseason time to research the latest trends in college football, and the offense was therefore falling out of date. Is he bringing it up to date?
A: I think so. I think we're seeing more diverse things, things that you're seeing from teams that have personnel like we have. I think there's some more evolving to do, but it's starting to create benefits for us. It's new, so we're having to see how it works, kind of [expand] it somewhat slowly rather than get to it right now because you have to see how other teams are playing it.
Q: Is this your fastest team at Tech?
A: Great question. It could be, let's leave it at that.
Q: Who's the funniest coach on staff?
A: [Quarterbacks coach] Buddy Geis.
Q: Wow. No hesitation.
A: I've been around him for a long time and he's got a unique sense of humor. He's got a great laugh and just says some off-the-wall things.
Q: Conversely, is defensive coordinator Jon Tenuta as wired as he appears when coaching?
A: Yes.
Q: Again, no hesitation. How important is it to have some ? but not all ? live wires on the coaching staff?
A: I am more of an even-keel guy, and football is a game of emotion and passion, so knowing my temperament, I've got to have some guys that are more extreme than I am on the staff.
I think Jon in particular, and Patrick and his group, bring a few more extremes in there. I think [special teams coach] Charles Kelly does, too. You've got to have those kinds of guys.
Q: Speaking of bringing energy, are you ever concerned that Reggie gets too involved in conversations with officials, or opponents, after plays?
A: No. We talked early in his career about being smart with how you handle officials. But if you try to calm a guy down too much, then you take away his personality. I don't want to take away his personality on the field. And until it becomes an issue, I'm not going to. Now, if it becomes an issue, you may have to address it. We had to address it early and he's handled it, in my opinion, extremely well since.
 

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Jackets-Hokies fight for Coastal division lead

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/30/06
The calendar still says September, but the implications might be felt in December.
Dec. 2, to be exact.
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No. 24 Georgia Tech plays No. 11 Virginia Tech Saturday in Blacksburg, Va., for the ACC Coastal division lead and the inside track to a berth in the ACC championship game nine weeks from now.
Saturday's winner will be the last team in the division without an ACC loss and will hold the head-to-head tiebreaker over today's loser. So, although it's a long time before kickoff in Jacksonville, the Yellow Jackets view Saturday's game as must-win.
"They won our division last year, and if we want to get to Jacksonville and if we want to prove anything in this conference, it goes through Virginia Tech," defensive tackle Darryl Richard said.
"Everyone's expecting them to be in the ACC championship," receiver Calvin Johnson said. "It would be good for us to go up there and knock them off, and then we'd be in the driver's seat."
It's the first big ACC test for Georgia Tech and the first test of any kind for Virginia Tech. While the Yellow Jackets were losing to Notre Dame and beating Samford, Troy and Virginia, the Hokies were beating Northeastern, North Carolina, Duke and Cincinnati, teams that are a combined 0-9 against Division I-A competition.
So Georgia Tech (3-1, 1-0 ACC) isn't exactly in awe of a Virginia Tech defense that has allowed two touchdowns all season.
"They've played some, I would say, softer offenses so far," right tackle Mansfield Wrotto said. "We're the first really big challenge for them."
The Yellow Jackets weren't much of a challenge in a similar situation last season. They went into Blacksburg with a Top 25 ranking and without an ACC loss and came out on the short end of a 51-7 rout.
Nine players from that Virginia Tech team were picked in this year's NFL draft. But this season's Hokies (4-0, 2-0) still have plenty of talent.
"It is an unbelievable group of athletes," Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey said. "When you look at the size and the speed and the athleticism of their football team, they've got a bunch of good-looking football players."
The biggest change is at quarterback, where Sean Glennon replaced the departed Marcus Vick. Glennon is not only less likely to stomp on an opponent ? as Vick did in the Gator Bowl ? but also less likely to use his legs to run. There's nothing inferior about Glennon's arm, though. He leads the ACC in passing efficiency and has thrown for six touchdowns while completing 61.4 percent of his passes.
Georgia Tech brings most of the same players it had last season but a considerably different offensive scheme. The Yellow Jackets hope for different results, too; they didn't score in last season's game until the third quarter, when they were trailing 31-0.
The new system seems to suit senior quarterback Reggie Ball, who shares the ACC lead with seven touchdown passes and is on pace to throw a career-high 21. Calvin Johnson has caught five of the seven and is coming off a career-best 165-yard game.
"They have a quarterback that's hot and probably the best receiver in the country and a lot of other good players to go along with them," Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer said.
The two Techs are the only ranked teams in their division and two of the few strong-looking teams in what appears to be a down season for the ACC. That's why the second game in an eight-game ACC schedule looks so important to the Yellow Jackets.
"Whoever wins this game's leading the division," Gailey said. "That's big. I'd much rather be in the lead."
 

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NO. 24 GEORGIA TECH (3-1, 1-0 ACC) AT NO. 11 VIRGINIA TECH (4-0, 2-0 ACC) ? 3:30 P.M. ? ABC ? 790 AM
Hokies have plenty of big plays

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/30/06
Some things to remember as you watch Saturday's game:
? Six Virginia Tech receivers have caught passes of 40 yards or more. So a big play can come from anyone.
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? Three current Hokies players ? Roland Minor, Xavier Adibi and Chris Ellis ? have returned interceptions for touchdowns against Reggie Ball. So there's nowhere safe to make a mistake.
? Virginia Tech leads the nation with 127 interceptions since the start of the 2000 season, 14 more than Southern Cal and Oklahoma and 18 more than Miami. And only Western Michigan, with nine, has more than the eight interceptions the Hokies have grabbed this season. So Ball needs to be especially accurate today.
? Only Texas and N.C. State have blocked more kicks than Virginia Tech's 36 since the start of the 2000 season. One of those 36 came last season against Georgia Tech. The Hokies have averaged one blocked punt or field goal per game this season. So the Yellow Jackets, who haven't had a punt or a kick blocked since their last trip to Blacksburg, had best be on their guard.
? Calvin Johnson's fifth-best receiving yardage game came last season at Virginia Tech, where he caught five passes for 123 yards. So the Hokies, like most teams, haven't solved him.
? Georgia Tech has knocked off at least one ranked team each of the past 11 seasons, and the Yellow Jackets' past three victories over ranked teams came on the road. So Georgia Tech isn't likely to be intimidated.
? Virginia Tech is playing without suspended starters Josh Morgan, the team's second-leading receiver, and defensive end Chris Ellis, who shares the team lead with three tackles for loss. Morgan is expected to be replaced by junior Justin Harper, who has caught seven passes, and Ellis is expected to be replaced by sophomore Orion Martin, who has as many tackles (12) and sacks (one). "I'm not feeling sorry for them because they are missing a couple of guys," said Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey, who pointed out the Hokies have excellent depth and have been using it. Morgan's absence might be most important on special teams; he has half the team's four blocked kicks.
? Virginia Tech receiving leader David Clowney is likely to play today, only nine days after undergoing an appendectomy.


Defenses feast on turnovers



If you like defense, you've come to the right game.
Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech might have the best two defenses in the ACC. Both rank among the nation's top 20 in yards allowed and points allowed. Both rank among the nation's top 10 in passing efficiency defense. Both rank among the ACC's top three in takeaways, with Virginia Tech grabbing a conference-best 11 (eight interceptions, three fumbles) and Georgia Tech grabbing eight (six interceptions, two fumbles).
Georgia Tech's defense wasn't expected to be this strong, with three new starters in the backfield and one at linebacker.
"I see progression. I see us getting better week in and week out," defensive tackle Joe Anoai said. "As long as we keep that upward climb, just keep going up the stairs of production, there's no telling how good we can be. We're not really worried about the numbers and the statistics. We know we're the best defense in the nation."
Virginia Tech has allowed 5.8 points per game, second only to LSU's 5.0. Like the Yellow Jackets, the Hokies challenge opponents, but the challenge is different. Georgia Tech applies pressure by rushing the passer from all angles, using the safeties, the linebackers, the nickel back. Virginia Tech applies pressure by bringing eight defenders to the line of scrimmage.
Half of the Yellow Jackets' seven sacks were made by linebackers and safeties. All but 3 1/2 of the Hokies' 13 sacks were made by their front four.
"They've got a really good D-line," Georgia Tech right tackle Mansfield Wrotto said.
Both defenses share this philosophy: Stop the run first.
"They also don't allow you to pick them apart underneath," Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey said.
"They are going to force you to throw the ball high and deep, and they have enough skill back there that they feel like they can run with you, jump with you and play with you."



Penalties are a problem
An untimely penalty could make a big difference in today's game.
Virginia Tech is the most penalized team in the ACC at 62 yards per game. That's true despite coach Frank Beamer implementing fines this season for personal fouls. The fines come out of players' bowl per diems.
Georgia Tech, the ACC's fourth-most penalized team, has committed costly penalties, too.
Philip Wheeler's personal foul for helmet-to-helmet contact against Notre Dame's Brady Quinn gave the Irish a first down that led to a go-ahead touchdown instead of a game-tying field goal. Michael Johnson's personal foul for helmet-to-helmet contact helped a Troy touchdown drive. A 15-yard face-mask penalty on Darrell Robertson helped Virginia out of a second-and-14 jam on its lone touchdown drive against the Yellow Jackets.

Crowd noise tough on visiting teams


Georgia Tech will play in bigger stadiums this season, at Clemson and at Georgia. The Yellow Jackets won games in bigger stadiums last season, at Auburn and at Miami.
But there's something about 66,233-seat Lane Stadium that makes it particularly inhospitable to visiting teams.
It's loud, so loud that even Darryl Richard, who has never played there, has heard all about it.
"From [Reggie] Ball to Calvin [Johnson] to Joe [Anoai], they all say, 'Crowd noise,'" Richard said. "Crowd noise is the 12th man that Virginia Tech has."
It's more than just intimidating. It can take away one of the advantages offensive players have ? knowing when the ball will be snapped. If you can't hear the quarterback, you've got to watch the ball, just like the defense.
The Yellow Jackets practiced this week with crowd noise via loudspeakers. The noise is a hindrance, but it's not insurmountable.
"That's a loud, tough place to play," Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey said, "but our guys have played in places like that before. I have a hard time differentiating between Clemson and Auburn and Florida State and Virginia Tech. They're really loud when we have the ball on third down."
"We should not be shellshocked," Richard said.
Visiting teams can win at Lane Stadium. Miami romped 27-7 there last season. N.C. State won 17-16 in 2004. In fact, despite the noise, the Hokies have lost as many regular-season games at home the past two seasons as they've lost anywhere else.
They trailed through three quarters last week. The lesson for Georgia Tech: The key to keeping the crowd from being a factor is to play well early.
"It seemed like as Cincinnati played with them, the crowd got a little bit lower and lower in sound," Richard said. "Basically, what we've got to do is go out and execute early and stop the big play. We have to stop the crowd from getting in the game."


Flashback: Black and blue in Blacksburg

? Last game: Sept. 24, 2005, at Blacksburg, Va.
? Score: No. 4 Virginia Tech 51, No. 15 Georgia Tech 7
? Star of the game: Tight end Jeff King caught a pass for Virginia Tech's first touchdown and blocked a field goal that D.J. Parker returned for Virginia Tech's second touchdown.
? Stat that matters: Nineteen of Georgia Tech's 31 first-half plays went for 1 yard or less.
? It's history: Georgia Tech matched its worst loss under Chan Gailey.
? Coachspeak: "In my heart of hearts, I do not think that's who we are out there. We played that way, so that's who we are tonight, but I don't believe that's who we are." ? Gailey
? They said it: "Yeah, I feel we made a statement. Before the game, the Georgia Tech guys were saying that we were overrated and that we hadn't played a ranked team. "
? Virginia Tech quarterback Marcus Vick




Falcons players on opposite sides this week


Falcons linebacker Keith Brooking, a Georgia Tech product, routinely finds himself outnumbered by teammates who played at Virginia Tech. But he doesn't buy into the strength in numbers thing when it comes to woofing every year about the Tech-Tech matchup.
He uses cunning. Brooking got Falcons rookie defensive back Jimmy Williams to give up 10 points in an undisclosed wager.
With DeAngelo Hall, it was pure bravado ? and that's hard because Hall is pretty much the king of kings in the category.
"I don't do predictions," Brooking told Hall. "I'm going to let the Jackets speak for themselves."
Countered Hall: "VT 28, Georgia Tech 14."
"What did you say?" Brooking shot back.
Boasted Hall: "We're winning by two touchdowns."
"OK, 24-21, Georgia Tech," Brooking said, taking the bait.
As for the wager?
That stays in the locker room but it was more than dinner at The Varsity.
? Steve Wyche
 

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GEORGIA TECH FOOTBALL
Hall wears inspiration on his wrist

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/04/06
Georgia Tech's leading solo tackler carries his goals and his motivations on the tape wrapped around his wrists.
KaMichael Hall glances down at them on the long drives, late in the game, whenever fatigue threatens to steal one iota of the speed and aggressiveness that make him one of the nation's elite players.
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Curtis Compton/Staff
</TD></TR><TR><TD class=caption>CURTIS COMPTON / Staff KaMichael Hall (with fans before the Sept. 2 opener vs. Notre Dame) was like an older brother to his younger teammate and friend McCollins Umeh (below).<FEFF>
</TD></TR><TR><TD>
JOHNNY CRAWFORD / AJC
</TD></TR><TR><TD class=caption>Jackets linebacker KaMichael Hall (top) bears a tribute to a childhood pal on his left wristband.
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Hall's right wrist reminds him of his goals: ACC championship, national championship and Butkus, the award given to college football's top linebacker.
Hall's left wrist reminds him who he's playing for: his mother, his little brother, his hometown of Houston and, most prominently, MC, his former high school teammate who died before getting to play college football.
Hall plays for MC more than anyone else. He talks to him in the locker room before games. He knows MC is listening and watching. And when Hall points skyward after batting down a pass, forcing a fumble or sacking a quarterback, he honors not only God but also the ex-teammate who became much more than a friend.
"I always keep him with me wherever I go," Hall said. "Whatever I do, I keep him in mind."
MC's name was McCollins Umeh, but only strangers called him anything but MC. He was a year behind Hall at Klein Forest High School but lived in the same apartment complex. When MC missed the bus in the morning after getting his brothers and sisters off to school, he would knock on Hall's door to ask for a ride from Hall's mom. Nessia Hall, already back from dropping off KaMichael, would never turn MC down. MC became part of the family, with KaMichael in the role of older brother.
Like every little brother, MC wanted to fit in, especially in football.
"He was always talking about how good he was, and 'I'm this. I'm that.' We were all like, 'Whatever,' " Hall said. "Then he gets on the field and he shows it to you. He backed up what he was talking about."
Their football lockers were side by side. MC would toss his helmet, pads and pants on the floor; Hall would pick up after him. If MC got on the wrong side of a coach, Hall would calm him down.
"He was just a big kid. Everybody loved him," Hall said.
"He had a big heart, a big, big heart," former Klein Forest linebackers coach Micah Davis said of MC. "If he was an orphan, you would adopt him."
Hall becomes mentor
MC began taking his cues from Hall, how to act, how to practice, how to play and, eventually, how to take care of his business in the classroom.
With Hall starring at linebacker and MC at defensive end, Klein Forest won a school-record 12 games Hall's senior season. Hall blocked a punt in the biggest victory, a playoff upset of a Waco team ranked second in the state and 18th in the nation. He was Klein Forest's star, a finalist for Houston player of the year, but he didn't make all the tackles. Often, MC got there first.
Hall got to college first, and MC was full of questions. He wanted to know everything about life on campus and football at the next level. And he wanted to tell Hall everything about Klein Forest's season, especially after he got to play middle linebacker one game and made 15 tackles.
"K, I beat your record," MC told him.
Meanwhile, at Georgia Tech, Hall was playing mostly special teams, not understanding Jon Tenuta's defense, hating practice and feeling homesick. He told one of his high school assistants he was considering transferring. If not for his mother he might have quit.
"I just reminded him it's not OK with me," she said. "It was important to me that he finish it because it was tied into school. I knew it was just a phase he was going through. He knew I was missing him, too."
Nessia Hall was hospitalized for more than a week with hyperthyroidism, and although she tried to keep the seriousness of it from her son, he knew something was wrong. Two days after she got out of the hospital, her father went in. By the time Hall could get home to see his grandfather one last time, his grandfather was too ill to recognize him.
The only good news from home was the progress of MC, who became the most highly touted prospect in Arizona's signing class and surprised a lot of people by meeting NCAA academic standards. Hall last saw MC at MC's graduation. MC grinned as he stepped into a car to drive off to what should have been a future as big as his smile.
Tragedy devastates
Days later, MC passed out during Arizona's first voluntary summer workout. He never regained consciousness. He died June 8, 2004, from an enlarged heart.
Hall returned to Houston for the service.
"It was very hard on him, very, very hard," Nessia Hall said. "He couldn't even speak at the funeral."
Friends aren't supposed to die at age 18, especially not when they're 6-foot-3, 245-pound physical specimens gifted with strength and speed.
"Still to this day sometimes I just don't believe he's gone," KaMichael Hall said. "He never had any problems healthwise. He was always happy."
There were memorial T-shirts with a picture of MC on the front and his No. 88 on the back. Hall wore his twice and now has it on the wall of his room.
Nessia Hall saw an immediate change in her son.
"He had a different outlook on the game," she said. "It became really important to him to make the NFL. He just told me, 'Mama, I have to do this for MC.'?"
Hall became a starter that fall and finished second on the team in sacks. Tenuta's defense finally made sense to him, so much that coach Chan Gailey now describes Hall as like a basketball point guard who always knows where the nine other players are on the court.
Last season, Hall led the team with 14 tackles for loss. This season, he leads the team with 25 solo tackles. He made a team-high 11 tackles in Saturday's 38-27 upset of then-No. 11 Virginia Tech. He's preseason All-ACC and on the watch list for the Butkus Award. And he's still driven to live up to his friend's memory.
Every week, Hall writes "MC 88 RIP" on his wrist tape. He says a private prayer in the locker room before kickoff, then speaks to MC.
"I'm down here, and I'm trying to make you proud," Hall tells him. "I'll give it all I have. I'm trying to have you live through me."
He knows MC hears him, knows he'll be watching.
And if Hall even thinks about slowing down on the field late in the game, a glance at his wrist lets him hear MC's voice.
"Suck it up. It's only for a little bit. You're not tired."
"That's something that keeps me going," Hall said, "his drive and his passion."
 

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GEORGIA TECH REPORT
Gailey points to big picture

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/04/06
Chan Gailey preaches weekly to players that the most important game is the next one. Yet this week the Georgia Tech coach is talking about all of the Yellow Jackets' games in trying to convey the gravity of Saturday's contest against Maryland.
"I think you have to be able to see the big picture," he said. "So often we talk to these guys about, 'Don't worry about tomorrow. Learn from yesterday, but forget yesterday, really, and let's talk about today.'
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"This is one of those cases where you say early in the week, 'Look at the big picture. Now, what do we want to invest in preparation?' "
Translation: it was great to win at Virginia Tech and move into first place in the ACC's Coastal Division, but a loss to Maryland (3-1, 0-0 ACC) could muck up the works for Tech (4-1, 1-0).
"If you keep winning, you don't throw it back to tiebreakers," Gailey said. "You don't want to get in the dressing room before Duke [Tech's final ACC game], and say, 'I wish I
had ...' "


Johnson, Choice, Walker sit out practice
Wide receiver Calvin Johnson (left thigh bruise), running back Tashard Choice and reserve defensive tackle Vance Walker (injuries undisclosed) didn't practice Tuesday. All may be game-time decisions, as Johnson was before the past two (in which he caught 12 passes for 280 yards and four scores).
Ball's on-field words earn talk with coach
Gailey said a couple weeks ago he wasn't going to caution Reggie Ball about speaking to opponents or officials on the field unless something made it necessary because he didn't want to change his quarterback's personality.
Then, Ball drew an unsportsmanlike-conduct penalty late in Saturday's win at Virginia Tech for "something that the young man said," the coach explained.
Was that enough to have a chat with Ball? "Yes, it was," Gailey said.
Terps tied for ACC lead ? in turnovers
Tech has lost one fumble and six turnovers overall, both ACC bests. Maryland has lost a league-worst 11 turnovers (tied with N.C. State and North Carolina) despite playing one less game.
"It kind of makes you lick your chops," linebacker Gary Guyton said.
Tech tidbits
Starting safety Jamal Lewis, last year's nickel back, replaced Pat Clark in that spot often in the Virginia Tech game, with Avery Roberson moving to safety. Asked if that was permanent, Gailey said, "Let's see where this goes." ... About Virginia Tech being ranked ahead of Georgia Tech in two of three major polls, Gailey said, "The only comment I could make would get me in trouble." ... Just 10 of Durant Brooks' 30 punts have been returned, and Tech leads the ACC in net punting (39.4 yards). Seventeen of Brooks' punts have been downed inside the 20-yard line.
 

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Jackets' NFL dads differ in approach

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/03/06
Dinner with dad can be many things, but what must it be like for an aspiring footballer when a former NFL player sits at the table, too?
Georgia Tech's Jake Blackwood, Andrew Smith and Byron Ingram know. Their fathers, Glenn, Barry and Brian, made it to the big time.
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"I started playing in fourth grade, and he was my coach all but one year," Jake Blackwood said of his father, who played for the Dolphins from 1979-87. "In ninth grade, he took over as head coach at my high school. You'd get home and want to gripe about the coach climbing all over you, but he's there. It was like the elephant in the room sometimes."
Barry Smith was more like a church mouse.
"He never really pressured me," Andrew Smith said of his father, who played from 1973-76 with the Packers and Bucs. "He always told me, school first and everything else second because you'll always have a backup with academics."
It all worked, same with Ingram, whose father played from 1982-86 with the Chargers and Patriots. Ingram, a freshman quarterback, is redshirting, Blackwood is a freshman reserve safety, and Smith is a sophomore reserve wide receiver who returns punts.
The message here is about different strokes.
"There are a lot of different ways to get where you're going," said Barry Smith, once a wide receiver at Florida State. "Our kids were raised to be independent thinkers. We're going to give you a lot of rope, and you can have fun with it or hang yourself, but don't blame me or your mother."
Jake Blackwood said his father didn't pressure him to play, either. Yet once his son took the field, dad took a keen interest.
"I probably took it more seriously than I should have," said Glenn Blackwood, a former safety who still works with defensive backs and wide receivers at his son's school, King's Academy in West Palm Beach.
"You get some kids in little league who are more developed, but even when they lose, they don't cry. They say, 'Who brought the cupcakes?' "
In Tampa, Smith's father took a different approach.
"When I got traded to Miami in 1977, I contracted polio," Barry Smith said. "I was 26, fifth year in the league, a chance to play for Dolphins and [coach] Don Shula, and that opened my eyes that you better not put all your eggs in one basket.
"I was raised by wonderful parents, but academics weren't stressed. I wouldn't let him play until high school. He was a good, little athlete [5 feet 1, 103 pounds as a freshman], not a star, but he's got a lot of 'Rudy' in him. He will not quit."
Once his son flashed some skill, Barry Smith, whose NFL career ended before he played for Miami, got involved ? from a distance. "We'd go out to the track, and Dad would put me through his old routines, explosion drills and endurance stuff," Andrew said.
Glenn Blackwood was more hands-on when Jake took up football again after quitting following fifth grade.
"I'm also on the board at school. As I evaluated the program, it was horrible," Glenn Blackwood said. "I thought if he wants to play football, then I want him to be part of a program that's decent."
So he became head coach, and dinner grew somber.
"The hardest thing was I felt like since he was my son he had to meet a higher standard because I didn't ever want it to be perceived that I was playing favorites," Glenn said. "I'd even have some players come up and say, 'Coach, you're being harder on Jake than us; you need to back off.' "
Meanwhile, Andrew Smith grew, improved and was wooed by colleges more known for classrooms.
"The summer before his senior year, we drove up to Chan Gailey's camp [at Tech]," Barry said. "We couldn't find a hotel. We ended up south of Macon, it was very late, and I said, 'Son, forget it; it's not meant to be.' In the back of my mind, I'm thinking he's going to Penn.' "
They skipped the camp, and weeks later Smith's scholarship chances and senior season ended on its first play with a knee injury.
A father said to his son, "Go to college, have fun, play intramurals." Andrew said, "Dad, I want to play football!"
"God bless Chan Gailey, who said, 'I'd love to have Andrew as a priority walk-on,' " Barry Smith said. "All I wanted for my son was to have a chance to see if he could play. God bless them all because they've given my son a chance to realize his dreams.
"Deep down, I wanted him to play football, but because it's what he wants to do, not because it's what I wanted him to do."
Smith is now returning punts for the Jackets, averaging 9.7 yards a pop.
Blackwood has played, too, participating in three of Tech's five games.
"I get more nervous than when I [played]," said a father who's tied tightly with his son now.
"That was really a tough time in our relationship, but as time went on, he focused on me less, we got to the end of it all and really miss it to this day," Jake Blackwood said. "It was a great time.
"There's no doubt in my mind that if I go no further, or if I hadn't gotten this far, he'd be just as proud. I don't think he needed me to be a good player. I think being his son is enough."
Love's a two-way player.
"It's something I'll never forget," Glenn Blackwood said. "I remember how painful it was for me walking off the field the last game he played because I knew I'd never coach him again.
"He's a great kid in character beyond what he is on the field. I was extremely proud to have had the opportunity to coach him."
 

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Jackets see room to improve

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/03/06
Georgia Tech players didn't sound like they thought they'd arrived. They sounded like they thought they were on their way.
Saturday's 38-27 victory at then-No. 11 Virginia Tech left the Yellow Jackets on top of the ACC Coastal Division and
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No. 18 in the nation but still seeing room for improvement.
Linebacker KaMichael Hall was concerned about Virginia Tech's two fourth-quarter touchdowns. "The game was almost back in reach," Hall said. "That happened to us two years ago [when Virginia Tech rallied from an eight-point deficit by scoring 22 points in the final 5 1/2 minutes], and that can't happen again. We've got to learn how to finish games and close them out and put them away."
Defensive tackle Joe Anoai called Saturday's victory "one of my most memorable" games but said he'd feel a lot more satisfied if the defense had shut out the Hokies in the second half.
And coach Chan Gailey said his team needs to get better in all phases, including cutting down turnovers on offense and keeping from giving up big plays on pass defense.
Virginia Tech completed passes of 49, 40, 30 and 24 yards.
Virginia Tech's Justin Harper wrestled the 49-yarder away from Jahi Word-Daniels, who nearly intercepted the pass. After Harper beat Word-Daniels for the 40-yarder, Pat Clark briefly took Word-Daniels' place at cornerback.
But Clark, who opened the season as the starter at that position, played sparingly. When Georgia Tech played nickel defense, Jamal Lewis moved up from strong safety to nickel back, and Avery Roberson played strong safety. Clark stayed on the sideline.
Gailey said Clark hasn't fallen out of favor. "We were just trying to field the right combination for that ball game because of certain coverages we were playing and certain blitzes we were trying to run," Gailey said.
Calvin Johnson has a conference-best five catches per game for a conference-best 85.2 yards per game. Philip Wheeler has a conference-best 1.8 tackles for loss per game.
Wheeler's tackles for loss rank him eighth in the nation. Durant Brooks ranks 19th nationally in punting at 43.3 yards per attempt. His teammates do a good job covering his punts, too: Tech ranks 17th nationally in net punting at 39.4 yards per punt, best in the ACC.
The Yellow Jackets rank fifth in the nation in pass efficiency defense and 10th in rushing defense, at 68.6 yards per game.
Tech reaps rewards
for its stellar play
Knock off a high-ranked opponent by a double-figure margin and the awards roll in:
? Georgia Tech was named the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl national team of the week, selected by a panel of Football Writers Association of America members. The Yellow Jackets won the honor last season, too, after winning at No. 3 Miami.
? Johnson was named ACC offensive back of the week for the second consecutive week and the third time this season after making six catches for 115 yards and two touchdowns.
? For the second consecutive week, Cingular's panel of four ESPN analysts nominated Johnson for its All-America Player of the Week award. To vote, text message "VOTE" to "87654" on a wireless phone. Other nominees this week are Navy quarterback Brian Hampton, Purdue wide receiver Selwyn Lymon and Northern Illinois running back Garrett Wolfe.
? Johnson also became one of four nominees for the Pontiac Game Changing Performance. Voting is at www.pontiac.com/ncaa.
? Wheeler, a middle linebacker, was named ACC defensive lineman of the week after forcing a fumble and making eight tackles, 2 1/2 for loss, including two sacks for minus-22 yards.
Choice turns in 100-yard effort
Tashard Choice got his first 100-yard game of the season, officially, with 18 carries for 105 yards against Virginia Tech.
"He'd have had 100 yards against Virginia if we don't get that clipping call," Gailey said. "To me, he's had two 100-yard games back-to-back."
Gailey praised his tailback for something else, something that doesn't show up in his stats but does help the team's. Choice has made some big blocks downfield on quarterback Reggie Ball's runs.
 

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Upset suggests even bigger things ahead

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/02/06
This time, a big Georgia Tech victory might mean the continuation of something, not an end in itself.
This time, the Yellow Jackets didn't eke out a lead and hold on for dear life.
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This time, the story wasn't just whom Tech could beat but where it might go from here.
"When we win the ACC championship, that's when I'll be ecstatic. That's when I will have achieved my goal," defensive tackle Joe Anoai said after Saturday's
38-27 triumph over then-No. 11 Virginia Tech. "This is a great win for this ball club, but it's just another hurdle in our race."
Georgia Tech moved up six spots to No. 18 in the Associated Press poll Sunday and broke into both the USA Today coaches' poll and the Harris Interactive poll at No. 20.
The coaches and the Harris poll voters somehow continued to rank the Yellow Jackets behind the Hokies despite Saturday's result, identical overall records and Georgia Tech's stronger schedule. That oversight might not matter to the Yellow Jackets, who if they continue to play the way they did Saturday will surely have the opportunity to climb considerably higher.
"It doesn't matter now. It matters at the end of the year," Tech coach Chan Gailey said Sunday.
At 4-1 overall, 2-0 in the ACC, Gailey's team not only leads the Coastal Division but has beaten the only two division rivals who beat it last season. Saturday's game continued what the Jackets started a week earlier with a 24-7 victory over Virginia.
Georgia Tech will have its first five-game winning streak since 2000 if it beats Maryland this week. That context makes the Virginia Tech game special.
Last season's upset at No. 3 Miami still led to the Emerald Bowl; Saturday's victory, if combined with several others, could lead to a Bowl Championship Series game.
"This is definitely a lot different," Anoai said. "That [upset of Miami] was just more of a moral victory. This was, I would say, a lot more important win and I would say a tougher win."
The 2003 upset of No. 17 Auburn and last season's upset of Miami were all about defense. The second half of last season's upset of No. 16 Auburn was all about getting a lead and then holding on by forcing five turnovers in the Tigers' final five possessions.
Saturday, Georgia Tech dominated in every phase. The offense threw for two touchdowns and ran for two touchdowns, while producing a 100-yard receiver in Calvin Johnson and a 100-yard running back in Tashard Choice. The defense held Virginia Tech to 13 points through three quarters and scored a touchdown of its own on Gary Guyton's fumble return. The special teams blocked a punt to set up a touchdown and twice pinned the Hokies inside the 5.
Georgia Tech scored more points than any other visiting team at Lane Stadium since 1994, and it took Virginia Tech out of its game so successfully the Hokies rushed for only 42 yards and Sean Glennon threw a school-record-tying 53 passes.
"That was real big for us to be able to come up here and do what we did," Johnson said.
And, this time, it suggested bigger things ahead.
 

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Mature Ball has new cool attitude
QB has learned not to force issue

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/05/06 Reggie Ball says he doesn't recall scraping bottom. Why should he while playing his best ball?
He leads the ACC with nine touchdown passes and ranks third in passing efficiency at 132.9. He's in a far different situation than he was two years ago, the last time the Yellow Jackets were preparing to play Maryland.
<!--endtext--><!--endclickprintinclude--><table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="175"><tbody><tr><td>
Mikki K. Harris
</td></tr><tr><td class="caption"> Coaches and teammates say the biggest difference in Reggie Ball this season is his confidence level. 'He's been there and done that,' offensive coordinator Patrick Nix says.
</td></tr><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr class="railscreen01"><td>Your Turn</td></tr></tbody></table><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td colspan="2">
</td> </tr> </tbody></table> <script language="javascript"> function clickVote() { document.pollForm.buttonClicked.value = "yes"; document.pollForm.PageId.value = "poll_vote_submit"; document.pollForm.submit(); } function alert1(){ document.pollForm.buttonClicked.value = ""; } </script> <form method="post" action="/poll/poll/poll/take_poll/PollRefresh.jsp" name="pollForm"> <input name="PageId" value="poll_vote_submit" type="hidden"> <input name="pollID" value="10920" type="hidden"> <input name="page" value="take" type="hidden"> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td width="100%"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] How much credit does Reggie Ball deserve for Tech's season thus far? [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> <td align="right" height="15" width="46">
</td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38978" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] A lot. He's making fewer mistakes and his numbers look really good. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38979" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] Not much. He's got a great line, Calvin Johnson and Nix calling plays. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38980" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] He deserves some, but the whole team is playing really well. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2">
</td></tr> <tr> <td align="center" width="100%"> <input value="Vote" name="vote" type="submit">
[FONT=arial,helvetica][SIZE=-2]Voter Limit: Once per Hour
View Poll Results [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> </tbody></table> </form> </td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td class="body">RELATED STORIES ? More Tech coverage
</td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> "I don't really remember," the senior said. "That was so long ago."
Who wouldn't want to forget?
After back-to-back losses in which Ball hit 37 percent of his passes for one touchdown and six interceptions, Tech coach Chan Gailey threatened to bench Ball if things didn't get better against Maryland. Gailey said he would turn to Taylor Bennett, who was four games into a redshirt season.
Ball even heard criticism from his mother, who reamed her son for not playing with his usual self-confidence.
He responded with a turnover-free game, Tech won 20-7 and he has remained the starter ever since.
Nowadays, Ball plays so well Bennett replaces him because the Yellow Jackets have a comfortable lead. Things still go wrong occasionally, but they don't stay wrong.
Bad play? Forget it; No. 1 has grown up and moves on, as when he threw a 35-yard third-down pass to Calvin Johnson after back-to-back picks at Virginia Tech.
"He's been there and done that," offensive coordinator Patrick Nix said. "I think a lot of it's maturity. One thing he realizes that he didn't early in his career is ... don't force it.
Gailey said, "Maturity helps. It calms you down a little where you don't over-react and try to make such amends that you mess up further. He's really focusing in; I've seen a difference in him on Fridays as opposed to two years ago."
In the eyes of wide receiver James Johnson, "[Ball] knows he's going to make mistakes, but he has more to help him. The coaches believe in him a lot more. We believe in him. He believes more in himself. He shows it every day, coming in the locker room laughing."
The changes in Tech's offense have helped, and so has improved pass protection. Ball has more open receivers and more time to throw.
"I think the biggest thing helping Reggie is the 10 guys around him are doing really good," Nix said.
Ball lines up in the shotgun much more than he used to, and he looks comfortable there, as a passer and as a runner. He has 52 carries for 231 yards, so defenders struggle to peg a play as run or pass, slowing their reactions.
"It makes it pretty tough on a defense," Nix said. "[They're thinking] how do we out-number them in the run game when we've got to double-team Calvin? And, oh yeah, there's some guy named James Johnson who's caught three or four big plays. Reggie being able to run efficiently is a big part of what we're doing."
Ball's ability to make good reads is a big part of it, too. Much of the time Tech walks to the line of scrimmage with more than one option, based on what the defense does. Ball makes the choice.
He also makes choices during the week so that by Saturday both he and Nix have confidence in every play Tech will use.
"A play can definitely be taken out of the game plan because he doesn't feel comfortable with it," Nix said. "I might see something I like, and I have to convince him why, or, if he really doesn't like it, I put it on the shelf. I know his favorite plays, and he knows mine."
The result is a quarterback who not only understands the offense but believes in it. He also has learned to believe in his teammates so much that even when things go wrong he knows they're about to go right.
"We could be at our worst, and he's smiling, saying, 'It's going to be OK; look at everybody we've got,'" James Johnson said. "A lot of times, he used to get so frustrated when he'd make a bad play."
After throwing 37 touchdown passes and 41 interceptions his first three seasons, Ball has thrown nine touchdown passes and five interceptions this season.
"We're just relaxing and playing, doing the little things right," Ball said. "Along with the wins, you have fun."
 

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TECH REPORT
Patience handy for Tech tight ends

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/05/06 Fourteen players have caught passes for Georgia Tech this season ? eight wide receivers, four running backs, a fullback and even quarterback Reggie Ball.
Absent from that list: Michael Matthews, George Cooper and Wayne Riles, the tight ends. Combined, they averaged a catch a game last season in Chan Gailey's offense; they're still waiting for a catch in Patrick Nix's system.
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</td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> That might be a technicality. Mike Cox, the fullback, often lines up as an H-back, as the tight ends do, and he has three catches, one for a touchdown. Taylor Bennett threw incomplete for Cooper on back-to-back plays against Samford, and Ball threw incomplete for Matthews against Troy.
But there have been no completions. In an offense that's rolling up points and spreading the ball all over the field, the tight ends await their turn.
"We continue to run our routes," Matthews said. "If [Ball] sees us, he sees us. If we're the read, we're the read. Sometimes he has a better option, we're the 5-yard route and the 10-yard route is wide open. He has to go with what he sees.
"You're not the go-to guy on every play. You've got to run your route as hard as you can go. That might be the time you get it."
Matthews, Cooper and Riles have made their biggest contributions as blockers, on offense and on the punt team. They're the trio that protects Durant Brooks from a rush up the middle. At an average of
6 feet 4, 260 pounds, they form an imposing but mobile wall.
"We communicate, obviously, very well back there," Matthews said. "We're used to talking to each other, so it's easy for us to communicate as far as who we have to pick up and see what guys are in which gap. We take pride in everything we do as a tight end unit."
Virginia Tech, famous for its kick blocking, brought pressure but couldn't penetrate the tight end wall in last week's game. No opponent has blocked a Georgia Tech punt in the last 25 games.
That's a source of satisfaction for the tight ends. So are a 4-1 record, 2-0 in the ACC, and 29 points a game.
"Getting the ball to the tight ends is a plus," Matthews said. "Getting the ball downfield and scoring is even better. As long as we're scoring, I'm happy. I have no complaints."
Does head-to-head count for anything?
Georgia Tech fans aren't the only ones who think USA Today coaches' poll voters and the Harris Interactive poll got it wrong when they ranked 4-1 Virginia Tech ahead of 4-1 Georgia Tech after the Yellow Jackets' 38-27 victory last week. Georgia Tech was 20th in those polls; the coaches ranked Virginia Tech 18th, and Harris ranked Virginia Tech 19th.
"I'd put them ahead of us," Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer said on Wednesday.
Guyton makes most of rare opportunity
Gary Guyton got the chance every defensive player craves thanks to Philip Wheeler's hit that knocked the ball loose from Virginia Tech quarterback Sean Glennon.
"When I saw the ball, I thought of it as a present. I just picked it up, and the first thing that was on my mind was run, run, run," said Guyton, who didn't stop until he reached the end zone 38 yards later. "It was too good to be true."
Johnson practices, listed as probable
Calvin Johnson (left thigh) was able to do some things in practice Wednesday and is probable for Saturday's Maryland game, Gailey said.
 

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Heisman voters talk about Johnson

Published on: 10/05/06 With 12 catches for 280 yards and four touchdowns the past two weeks, Calvin Johnson has caught the eye of Heisman Trophy voters from coast to coast. Staff writer Tony Barnhart asked three voters what they think of the Yellow Jackets star receiver's chances of walking off with college football's top individual honor.
<!--endtext--><!--endclickprintinclude--><table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="175"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td class="body">RELATED STORIES ? More Tech coverage
</td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> "If Calvin comes up big at Clemson and homecoming vs. Miami ? and Georgia Tech wins both games ? people will start to buzz about him in the Heisman hunt. His problem will be ? unlike Tim Brown and Desmond Howard in their years ? he's not a kickoff or punt returner."
? Brad Nessler, ABC/ESPN
"I currently have Calvin in the six hole [on my ballot]. But he's definitely on my radar."
? Spencer Tillman, CBS
"Calvin figures more in my receiver of the year category than the Heisman. I guess I'm quarterback- and running back-biased when it comes to the Heisman."
? Brent Musburger, ABC/ESPN
 

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No. 18 Georgia Tech Up For Another ACC Showdown The Yellow Jackets return home to face Maryland and defend their perfect conference record<!-- remove this block --><script languange="javascript1.2"> procad("http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/CSTV.GEOT/SPORTS.MFOOTBL.SPECREL;pos=promo66;sz=120x60;dcopt=ist;",0); </script><!--begin adver tag--> <script src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/CSTV.GEOT/SPORTS.MFOOTBL.SPECREL;pos=promo66;sz=120x60;tile=4;dcopt=ist;ord=7011040675027465?" type="text/javascript" language="JavaScript1.1"></script> <script src="http://graphics.fansonly.com/graphics/pontiac/p1-text.js"></script><table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="185"><tbody><tr><td valign="top" width="17"> </td><td class="pontiactext" valign="top">
Enter for your chance to win a five-thousand dollar scholarship to help pay for school for you or your family from Pontiac.
</td></tr></tbody></table> <noscript><img src=http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/CSTV.GEOT/SPORTS.MFOOTBL.SPECREL;pos=promo66;sz=120x60;tile=4;dcopt=ist;ord=7011040675027465?"> </noscript> <!--end ad tag--> <!-- end block --> Oct. 3, 2006
ATLANTA - Eighteenth-ranked Georgia Tech returns home to host Maryland in an Atlantic Coast Conference match-up Saturday at 3:30 p.m. at Bobby Dodd Stadium at Historic Grant Field. The game will be nationally televised in ESPNU.
Press Conference Quotes
The Yellow Jackets (4-0, 2-0 ACC) are coming off an important 38-27 victory over perennial powerhouse No. 11 Virginia Tech in Blacksburg last Saturday. Senior quarterback Reggie Ball came out throwing, connecting with All-America wide receiver Calvin Johnson twice in the first quarter and the Jackets never looked back. The victory vaulted Tech into first place in the ACC's Coastal Division.
Johnson, a game-time decision in the last two games with a leg injury, leads the ACC with 426 receiving yards on 25 catches and has caught seven touchdowns. He was named ACC Offensive Back of the Week for the second straight week and third time in the first five weeks.
"Probably will be a game-time decision again this week," said Tech coach Chan Gailey of Johnson. "First of all, if he was a freshman or sophomore that probably wouldn't happen. The guy has been a two-year starter, and this is his third year, and that allows you to do that. Plus he is very talented and has a very good tolerance of pain, which is amazing. Thoroughbreds sometimes don't have that tolerance for pain."
Maryland (3-1, 0-0 ACC), coming off its lone bye week, will open its ACC schedule on Saturday. The Terrapins, coached by former Georgia Tech assistant coach Ralph Friedgen, beat Florida International in its last outing 14-10 in College Park, Md.

"You look at their skill level on tape," said Gailey. "They have not put together a whole game yet, you can see where there is potential, it just hasn't happened. You're nervous that it's going to happen this week. They had a week off, they can fix some things that they were not doing well, and you hope it doesn't all come together this week. They're potentially a very good football team. When you can win against anybody not playing your best game that means you are a pretty good football team."
After such an emotionally charged win against Virginia Tech, the Jackets will need to come home and take care of business to preserve their four-game winning streak and their seat atop the Coastal Division.
"You keep up your emotional level by always looking forward to the next game, focusing on the big prize right now," said linebacker Gary Guyton. "The big prize is going to a game like the ACC Championship and the National Championship. If we stay working hard and stay humble, that's how we keep our heads down and are able to work hard each and every week." Linebackers Philip Wheeler and KaMichael Hall anchor Tech's defense that is currently ranked fifth in the nation in pass efficiency defense (93.37) and 10th in rushing defense (68.6). Wheeler, the ACC Defensive Lineman of the Week, leads the team with 35 tackles. He tops the ACC and ranks eighth in the nation with 8.5 tackles for loss. Wheeler is also tied for the ACC lead with four sacks. Hall has 31 tackles and three tackles for a loss including two sacks this season. He also has a forced fumble and three pass breakups.
Quarterback Sam Hollenbach, who has thrown for 661 yards and four touchdowns, leads the Maryland offense. The tandem of Lance Ball and Keon Latimore has combined for 557 yards on the ground. Ball has gained 290 yards rushing and has scored five touchdowns. Latimore has attempted 49 rushes for 267 yards and a touchdown.
"The two guys (Ball and Lattimore) can run the football and are both strong backs," said Gailey. "I call them strong backs because they break tackles. They may not be the biggest guys, but they are strong and break tackles. Maryland will play them at any time."
Tech's offense has averaged 29 points a game this season. Reggie Ball has completed 54 of 104 passes for 768 yards and nine touchdowns with five interceptions. He is also the team's second-leading rusher with 231 yards and a 4.4-yard average. Tailback Tashard Choice leads Tech and stands third in the ACC with 364 yards rushing on 75 attempts and four touchdowns. Wide out James Johnson has proved to be a compliment to Tech's other Johnson, catching 12 passes for 197 yards and a touchdown.
"We have some of the best players in the country and best players in the conference on our team," said center Kevin Tuminello. "We have a very explosive offense with the type of players we have. Watching them do what they do is incredible. We just give them an opportunity to do what they can do and give them time to get it done."
The Jackets special teams have continued to get stronger as the season has progressed. Backup placekicker Troy Garside, a member of the teams punt block unit, snaked through the line and blocked a punt in the first quarter of the Virginia Tech game. Punter Durant Brooks, a transfer from Georgia Military College, is averaging 43.3 yards a punt to sit second in the ACC in average yards and has placed 17 punts within the 20-yard line.
"I knew that he (Brooks) was going to be able to turnover the field like he did against Virginia kicking it from the four-yard line to the 44-yard line and things like that," said Gailey. "What he has been able to do, getting the ball inside the 20, has really been special. A phenomenal number that we have downed inside the 20, and you have to give credit to our gunners as well. Think about the fact that he is second in the conference in punting average, yet he has been trying to pooch it down there and get them inside the 20, that tells you how good the other punts have been when he has been backed up. You don't get as many yards when you are trying to get the ball inside the 20."
 

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Re: Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

Tuesday Press Conference Quotes Head coach Chan Gailey, WR James Johnson, LB Philip Wheeler, LB Gary Guyton, C Kevin Tuminello<!-- remove this block --><script languange="javascript1.2"> procad("http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/CSTV.GEOT/SPORTS.MFOOTBL.SPECREL;pos=promo66;sz=120x60;dcopt=ist;",0); </script><!--begin adver tag--> <script src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/CSTV.GEOT/SPORTS.MFOOTBL.SPECREL;pos=promo66;sz=120x60;tile=4;dcopt=ist;ord=2322983547197083?" type="text/javascript" language="JavaScript1.1"></script> <script src="http://graphics.fansonly.com/graphics/pontiac/p1-text.js"></script><table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="185"><tbody><tr><td valign="top" width="17"> </td><td class="pontiactext" valign="top">
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<b><blank> - </blank></b> HEAD COACH Chan Gailey
On Maryland -- "You look at their skill level on tape. They have not put together a whole game yet, you can see where there is potential, it just hasn't happened. You're nervous that it's going to happen this week. They had a week off, they can fix some things that they were not doing well, and you hope it doesn't all come together this week. They're potentially a very good football team. When you can win against anybody not playing your best game that means you are a pretty good football team."
On skipping an ACC team one year and then playing them again and the difficulty that brings -- "Sometimes it is. If there is continuity in the staff, sometimes it helps. This year Ralph [Friedgen] is calling the plays, which is different, and they have a new defensive coordinator [Chris Cosh], so there a few little changes in there. They're playing the same schemes, but there are some changes on both sides of the ball, offensively and defensively. It's requires a little bit more film study, instead of just being able to stack up years."
On having a team's number after beating Maryland the last two times -- "Doubt it because you guys thought that Virginia had our number. That's what everybody wrote, we lost three in a row, and they got our number. No, I don't think there is anything to that. You have to play each year and each situation."
On Maryland struggling with turnovers on offense and playing into Tech's defense -- "Only if they turn it over. We try and create turnovers, we bring a lot of pressure and try to give you a lot of different looks to try and force teams to turn it over. Some teams do and some teams don't. It's only an issue if they keep turning it over, and if they do, then yes. That would be great and it would play into our hands. If they do a good job of protecting the ball, then it doesn't do a whole lot of good. We have to go and make it happen."

On Maryland playing three different running backs -- "He [Josh Allen] was real good until he got his knee hurt. The other two guys [Lance Ball and Keon Lattimore] can run the football and are both strong backs. I call them strong backs because they break tackles. They may not be the biggest guys, but they are strong and break tackles. They will play them at any time. I don't think it creates problems unless they start to get into some kind of pattern. If they start doing certain things when one back is in there, than that's where you start to draw conclusions about when a certain guy is in there, think this. That's what we are tying to do, try and see if they have any kind of pattern to what they are doing."
On Reggie Ball doing a better job after making a mistake -- "You probably need to ask him that question. That would be a good question for him. I really don't see that being an issue. I think he is such a competitor that he wants to go back out there and make a good play to make up for a bad play. That has been his MO since he has been here and that has not changed. Maturity helps and calms you down where you don't overreact and go out there and try to make such an amends that you mess up even further. Maturity helps you in that regard, but it still makes him mad and he wants to go back out on the field and do something about it."
On the offense scoring 30 points a game makes it easier -- "That probably helps. Yes, that makes good sense."
On Reggie being the biggest competitor and ever more focused this year compared to last -- "He starts focusing in on things earlier. I have seen a difference in him on Fridays this year as compared to two years ago. He is starting to do that more ahead of time. It started at the beginning of this year, more so than I have ever seen it."
On managing the competitive nature -- "Probably knows how to manage it. I don't think you can real it in, but I think he knows how to manage it better."
On Durant Brooks -- "I knew that he was going to be able to turnover the field like he did against Virginia kicking it from the four-yard line to the 44-yard line and things like that. What he has been able to do, getting the ball inside the 20, has really been special. That stat doesn't show up on the conference stats, and he has 17 of them. A phenomenal number that we have downed inside the 20, and you have to give credit to our gunners as well. Think about the fact that he is second in the conference in punting average, yet he has been trying to pooch it down there and get them inside the 20, that tells you how good the other punts have been when he has been backed up. You don't get as many yards when you are trying to get the ball inside the 20."
"It's a mental process as much as it is a physical process, and there is some luck in there too. The ball has to hit, bounce and go out of bounds, instead of going into the end zone."
On TV dictating days and times when teams play -- "I'm not sure anybody has the answer. You have this giant over here that needs to eat and this other giant over here that has all the food. Both of them need each other. I don't know the answer to the question. I'd like to have one Thursday night game. I think Thursday night in college is like Monday night in the NFL. It's great for the game and great for the fans. All the other nights I am not a big fan."
"The game would not be where it is nationally, if there was not great exposure. If there wasn't great demand, there wouldn't be great exposure. It's a vicious cycle we go through. Until you get big enough to dictate stuff, you get stuff dictated to you."
On the game being on ESPNU and not nationally -- "You don't worry about that. We have contracts that we have to make good on with ESPN, and the TV people. It's good for those who can get it and it's better than not being on."
On keeping his players from getting a big head -- "I talked to them after the game, Sunday night and again today about staying focused. I think you have to be able to see the big picture. So often we tell these guys to not worry about tomorrow, learn from yesterday, but forget yesterday really, and focus on today and how we are going to get better. This is one of those cases here early in this week where you say, look at the big picture and what do we want to invest in our preparation because of the big picture of where this game is compared to the big picture. I will add a couple of other things, some coaches' clich?s that everybody uses the rest of the week."
On the big picture -- "If you keep winning, you don't throw it back to tiebreakers at any point. You don't want to get in that dressing room against Duke and say, I wish we hadn't."
On Calvin Johnson producing, despite being a game-time decision -- "Probably will be a game-time decision again this week. First of all, if he was a freshman or sophomore that probably wouldn't happen. The guy has been a two-year starter, and this is his third year, and that allows you to do that. Plus he is very talented and has a very good tolerance of pain, which is amazing. Thoroughbreds sometimes don't have that tolerance for pain."
On the offense improving Reggie's play -- "You can't pinpoint one thing about football. There are so many moving parts, you can't say its one thing. That's the easy thing, if you can say well if this one thing doesn't work, than fix that and everything is good. In some other sports, you can do that. If a pitcher dominates, then this is going to happen, you can't do that with football."
On Reggie making better reads -- "The one thing that I think has happened is that the shotgun is making him more comfortable. He has gotten much better at feeling the game from that position, rather than going back and forth a whole lot. He is much more in the gun now and that has become a comfort level for him. Patrick Nix and the staff deserve a lot of credit because they have put people in position to make plays. They have spread things out and brought some new things to the offense that have been wonderful."
WIDE RECEIVER James Johnson
On Playing Opposite Calvin Johnson -- "It's pretty fun actually; it takes all the attention off me. I can just concentrate on making plays and doing my job."
On the team's mentality after beating Virginia Tech -- "This year, we are just taking one game at a time. We want to go to the ACC Championship, and that requires playing every game as if it were the last game. That game happened to be our biggest game that we've played, and now we have to look forward to our next game and put that win behind us."
How you look at the season after win over Virginia Tech -- "We look at the standings now and realize that we have to the chance to actually do whatever we want as long as we go into every game playing hard and expecting to win."
On difference in playing at Virginia Tech this season and last -- "It seems this year we were ready to play this time and maybe we weren't as ready to come out and play last year. Everybody was just much more ready to play."
On being Maryland's first conference opponent -- "It is an advantage, but it's also a disadvantage because they had a week off, so they've been resting a little bit and we've been playing games on the road. We just have to keep thinking one game at a time and make it to our final destination at the ACC championship."
LINEBACKER Philip Wheeler
On mentality after win over Virginia Tech -- "We just got to stay focused on every thing we do and practice hard and try to make everything as perfect as possible. Virginia Tech was making plays at times, and we just kept them out of the game as best we could by making plays also. We have to do the same thing every game. We just try to be perfect and stay focused."
On teammates' reaction to both Calvin Johnson and Wheeler receiving ACC honors this week -- "They expected us to do that because we work hard. We come into practice and always work hard and try to perfect everything. If we don't do something right in practice, we have to do it again. So we expect things like that. I expect for some of my teammates to do it too, and win ACC defensive player of the week."
On feeling of being ranked -- "Of course it's different now because we're ranked right now. I liked it like that because we had to come up the hard way, the old-fashioned way not starting out ranked. We played our butts off to get ranked. It's the old fashioned way."
On maintaining intensity after win over Virginia Tech -- "I'm never satisfied, because there's always something better I can do. In the win against Virginia Tech, I missed a couple tackles, and we blew a couple assignments. While we're grateful for the win, we still need to work on being perfect."
LINEBACKER Gary Guyton
On realizing the strength of Georgia Tech's defense -- "I realized it when I first got here, when I saw all the guys we had in spring ball and summer camp. We have a lot of guys on this team who can make plays and do some things this year."
On maintaining intensity after big win over Virginia Tech -- "You keep up your emotional level by always looking forward to the next game, focusing on the big prize right now. The big prize is going to a game like ACC Championship, national championship. If we stay working hard and stay humble, that's how we keep our heads down and are able to work hard each and every week."
On being ranked below Virginia Tech in coaches' poll -- "I don't know how you explain that, but I guess that's just the Coach's pole. I guess at the end every thing will pan our. We'll just wait till the end of the year and see how everything goes."
On playing in front of home crowd -- "I think we always have good energy at home games. We had great energy when we played Notre Dame. If we give good energy and go out there and play the best we can, then the crowd will give good energy. We have a real good crowd here."
"I think when you have a week off its always good. You can take that time to rehab and prepare and everything. They had an extra week to prepare so they should be better, well not better but they should be good."
On preparing for Maryland's complex offense -- "You study film, and you study players. That's how you prepare. Preparation is key for this game."
CENTER Kevin Tuminello
On being ranked lower than Virginia Tech in coaches' poll -- "Virginia Tech is a great team, and you can't take anything away from them. They have a great program and a storied tradition. We just need to continue to play how we've been playing, and everything will work itself out. It's not for us to decide. It really doesn't matter where we are right now. It only matters where you are at the end of the season, and that stuff will work itself out."
On returning to Blacksburg a second year in a row -- "We had some animosity going back there to Virginia Tech and proving we can play with them. Last week a lot of circumstance affected that game. Every week you have to continue to practice and prepare like every game is the critical game that could make or break your season. You just need to continue to improve and get better as a whole."
On Georgia Tech's complex offense -- "We have some of the best players in the country and best players in the conference on our team. We have a very explosive offense with the type of players we have. Watching them do what they do is incredible. We just give them an opportunity to do what they can do and give them time to get it done."
On the offensive line -- "The offensive line can bring a lot of schemes and scenarios and the only time the offensive line gets recognition is when something bad happens. We just have different schemes and just prepare."
"On our offense we do so many different things, they have to defend everything with our backfield and receivers. We have threats from all over, not just one or two players. Our offense tries to do different things to keep them guessing."
 

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Re: Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr><td>James Johnson is 'other Johnson' in Jackets' offense
by The Associated Press

ATLANTA - James Johnson insists he is in no hurry to make his name known in Georgia Tech's offense.

Maybe so, but he sure looked impatient to gain attention last week.

On Georgia Tech's first play from scrimmage in its 38-27 win over Virginia Tech, Johnson was open as he caught a 59-yard pass from Reggie Ball. The big play set the pace as the Yellow Jackets took an early 21-0 lead, shocking the favored Hokies and their home fans.

Johnson said the play was designed for either receiver, and it was no surprise Calvin Johnson drew more defensive attention.<<table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="130"><tbody><tr><td colspan="2"> </td><td rowspan="4" bgcolor="#999999"> </td><td rowspan="4"> </td></tr><tr><td>``He's already caught three or four big plays because they've forgotten about him,''</td><td> </td></tr><tr><td align="right">Patrick Nix</td><td> </td></tr><tr><td colspan="2"> </td></tr></tbody></table>br>
``It was from watching film and seeing what they do early,'' said James Johnson. ``So we were able to call the play that could go to me or Calvin. It turned out it was me in the coverage they had.

``After a couple yards of coming off the ball and seeing where the safety was, I just knew Reggie would have the ball where it needed to be ... it was quite a lot of distance.''

He's still known as the ``other Johnson'' by other Atlantic Coast Conference teams who know far more about Calvin Johnson, but James Johnson's big plays eventually will earn him recognition.

While Calvin Johnson is on an All-America path with 25 catches, including seven for touchdowns, James Johnson is proving to be an effective complement at wide receiver. The ``other Johnson'' has 12 catches for 197 yards and a touchdown, and his average of 16.4 yards per catch is just below Calvin's mark.

``I really wouldn't care if my name was out there or not because we're one unit,'' said James Johnson. ``It's going to take more than me or Calvin to have this offense to roll. I could care less if people know about me or don't know about me.''

The 18th-ranked Yellow Jackets, who play host to Maryland Saturday, are best known for their defense and for Calvin Johnson, who is in his third year as a starter.

James Johnson, a sophomore from Oakland, Fla., is easy to miss on the field as defenses first check to match up with Calvin Johnson, Ball and tailback Tashard Choice.

``There's some guy over there named James Johnson, and he's already caught three or four big plays because they've forgotten about him,'' said Georgia Tech offensive coordinator Patrick Nix.

James Johnson (6-0, 190) has good size and strength, though he doesn't come close to matching the unusual gifts of the 6-foot-5 Calvin Johnson.

Calvin Johnson gets the top cornerback. James Johnson gets whoever is left.

``Now that I'm a starter, I guess people will just look up and say ``There's a guy named Johnson on the other side. He's not as tall as Calvin so he probably won't be as effective,''' said James Johnson. ``That will motivate me to get in their hair a little bit.''

But Johnson says he doesn't mind being overshadowed by Tech's most famous player.

``It's pretty fun actually; it takes all the attention off me,'' he said. ``I can just concentrate on making plays and doing my job.''

Johnson had two receptions for 62 yards last week and only one catch for 16 yards against Virginia. His best game was against Troy three catches for 74 yards, including a 55-yard catch for a touchdown.

Tech (4-1 overall, 2-0 ACC) will be the first conference opponent for Maryland (3-1). Maryland was off last week following a 14-10 win over Florida International on Sept. 23.

``It is an advantage, but it's also a disadvantage because they had a week off, so they've been resting a little bit and we've been playing games on the road,'' Johnson said.

``We just have to keep thinking one game at a time and make it to our final destination at the ACC championship.''

(Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
</td> <!--END STORY//--> </tr> <tr> </tr><tr><td align="left">
?Copyright 2006 AccessNorthGa.com / WDUN News/Talk 550.</td></tr></tbody></table>
 

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Brooks giving Georgia Tech big edge in field position

ATLANTA - Durant Brooks played receiver and defensive back at Tattnall Square Academy in Macon, but his most notable claim to athletic fame may have come in basketball, where he set the school record for career 3-pointers.

Somewhere down the list of Brooks' football positions was punter.

``It was just kind of a side job,'' Brooks said Tuesday. ``I really didn't work on my punting until late in my senior year.''

Now that side job in high school is Brooks' top priority in college. He is enjoying big success in his first season as the starting punter for No. 18 Georgia Tech, which plays host to Maryland Saturday.

Brooks, who punted two years at Georgia Military College before transferring to Georgia Tech, leads the Atlantic Coast Conference with his net average of 39.37 yards per punt. His gross average of 43.3 is second in the league.

Those averages amaze Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey, because 17 of Brooks' 30 punts have been downed inside the 20-yard line.

``That's a phenomenal number,'' Gailey said.

In the Yellow Jackets' 38-27 win at Virginia Tech last week, Brooks netted 41.8 yards on five punts. Tech's coverage team downed his punts at the Hokies' 3 and 4, giving Georgia Tech a huge advantage in field position.

``What he has been able to do getting the ball inside the 20 is really special,'' Gailey said.

``He is second in the conference in punting average and first in net, yet he's been trying to pooch it down in there and get the other team inside the 20. That tells you how good his other punts have been when he's been backed up, because you don't get many yards sometimes when you are downing them inside the 20.''

Brooks, a junior, says he didn't know he could be so effective downing punts so close to the goal line.

``I had no clue,'' he said.

``I punted from seventh grade, but it was just kind of a side job. I never knew it could go this far or I could make it to the next level.''

Brooks gives credit to special teams coach Charles Kelly and Tech's punt coverage team for being in position to down his punts.

But Brooks also deserves credit for developing the touch for the pooch kicks while other punters might go ahead and boom punts into the end zone. Brooks has only four touchbacks.

``You've got to want to help your defense,'' Brooks said. ``Yeah, you want to have the individual stats to make your average go up, but I love it when the ball is downed on the 5 or 10 or 15 and our defense has a chance to make a stop. It's big for the other team to have to start inside the 20.''

Tech's defense appreciates the special teams help.

``That's great for a defense,'' said Tech linebacker Gary Guyton. ``We have their offense in trouble on something like their 2-yard line. That's great. You have a chance for a safety and for a team driving 80 or 90 yards on you, that's really difficult for an offense. So anytime you have a punt inside the 10, it's great for a defense.''

Brooks, whose longest punt sailed 61 yards, also is a confidence-boosting weapon for Tech's offense.

``We have a lot of confidence right now in our punting team,'' said offensive coordinator Patrick Nix. ``If we're on our own 20-yard line, we can take some shots, take some chances, and if it doesn't work, (Brooks) is going to boom it out of there, we're going to get good punt coverage, and we're going to flip the field anyway.''

Brooks played a key role in overall strong special teams play by the Yellow Jackets against Virginia Tech, which is known for its strong kicking game.

Tech's Troy Garside, a kicker, blocked a punt, giving Tech the ball at the Hokies' 25 to set up a touchdown for a 21-0 lead in the first quarter. ``And our kickoff coverage was great,'' Brooks said, adding the overall days for special teams ``was awesome.''

Brooks averaged 48.1 yards on seven punts, with a 41.0 net mark, in Tech's season-opening 14-10 loss to Notre Dame, but he says he would rate Virginia Tech as his best game ``considering where we were playing and who we were playing against.''

``It was very difficult,'' he said of his first road game. ``I'm glad it was our fifth game. Our fans are usually quiet when it's punting time, but their fans were all loud. I worked hard on getting it off quick.''

?Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
 

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Re: Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr><td align="left" valign="top"> Updated Thursday, October 5 at 11:52 PM

</td> </tr> <tr> <td> Nix has Jackets' offense on a roll

ATLANTA - These are some of the questions Georgia Tech offensive coordinator Patrick Nix would like Maryland's defensive players and coaches to think about Saturday:

Will Tech's Reggie Ball, who set a school record for a quarterback by rushing for 130 yards last month against Troy, take off on another run?

Will Ball instead pass to Calvin Johnson, who already has been named the Atlantic Coast Conference's top offensive back of the week three times this season and has matched his career high with seven touchdown catches?

Or will Ball fake a quarterba<table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="130"><tbody><tr><td colspan="2"> </td><td rowspan="4" bgcolor="#999999"> </td><td rowspan="4"> </td></tr><tr><td>``They can't outnumber you because you have an extra back in the backfield,''</td><td> </td></tr><tr><td align="right">Patrick Nix</td><td> </td></tr><tr><td colspan="2"> </td></tr></tbody></table>ck keeper or fake the pass to Johnson and instead hand off to tailback Tashard Choice, who ran for 105 yards in the Yellow Jackets' impressive 38-27 win over Virginia Tech last week?

There are other options, including receiver James Johnson and backup tailback Rashaun Grant, in Tech's spread option attack. Each week Nix seems to add another element to keep opposing defenses off guard.

Tech (4-1 overall, 2-0 ACC) has scored 35 or more points in three of the last four games, and, led by Ball, the No. 18 Yellow Jackets still seem to be gaining momentum.

``We're still taking steps,'' Nix said.

``That's the evolution of the offense, step by step. There are things we keep putting in each week. The more (Ball) can handle, the more our guys can handle, the more we'll do. You just hope he doesn't hit that point where they break. You have to be very careful of that.''

Ball seems to be a perfect fit for the increased emphasis on the option scheme with Nix calling plays for the first time this season.

Ball, a senior, has passed for nine touchdowns and added 231 yards rushing with another score. He has five interceptions but has rarely resembled the quarterback of the past who might become rattled and was prone to forcing bad passes.

Nix says the run-pass-handoff option flexibility with Ball ``is a play-caller's great friend.''

``They can't outnumber you because you have an extra back in the backfield,'' Nix said, referring to Ball becoming a running back when he takes off on a keeper.

``If he's running, Choice is a blocker and all of a sudden we've got numbers. That can be tough on a defense.''

Coach Chan Gailey turned the offense over to Nix before spring practice. There were misfires in a season-opening 14-10 loss to Notre Dame, but since then the offense appears to have consistently gained momentum as Nix has added plays each week.

``I've got to give Patrick Nix and this staff a great deal of credit because they've done a super job of putting people in position to make plays and spreading things out with new ideas and the new things they've brought to the offense,'' Gailey said.

``This offense they've brought in has been wonderful.''

Ball had similar talent around him last year, with 2005 senior P.J. Daniels starting at tailback, but despite the presence of Calvin Johnson the Tech offense was seen by some as too conservative and predictable.

Now, with Ball directing the attack from the shotgun formation, defenses soon discover it can be difficult to match up with the Tech offense, especially when two defenders are on Johnson.

``You put Reggie and Calvin and add them together and what they're doing right now, it makes it very, very tough,'' Nix said.

``Then you factor in what Choice is doing and how well he's running the ball, and it's pretty tough to know how do we outnumber them in the running game when we have to cover Calvin and oh yeah, there's some guy over there named James Johnson who has already caught three or four big plays because they forgot about him over there. All of a sudden they have to be thinking about a lot of things.''

Still, James Johnson says there is more to come.

``It has continued to evolve,'' said James Johnson of the offense.

``Sometimes I feel like we didn't even use everything. I'm like man, imagine if we had used this. In big games and we're close and we don't even have to use everything that we have. I can't wait until we start using everybody. Y'all are going to be excited.''

James Johnson said the players are following the example set by Ball's new confidence.

``He's been through it all,'' he said. ``He's been through his best games and he's been through his worst games.

``He has a little more help around him this year. The coaches, they believe in him now a lot more. We believe in him. He believes in himself. When we're not scoring, he just smiles and says 'We're going to be OK. Look at everybody we've got. We're going to do this, no matter what. We were taught for it.'''
</td> <!--END STORY//--> </tr> <tr> </tr><tr><td align="left">
?Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved.</td></tr></tbody></table>
 

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Coaching talent constant at Tech
School is a breeding ground for football coaches

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/06/06 Take two national championship coaches, one of whom became an NFL head coach, too. Add three more NFL head coaches, two more ACC champions, another SEC champion and an Ivy League champion.
What have you got? A coaching dream team with one thing in common: They all used to be assistants at Georgia Tech.
<!--endtext--><!--endclickprintinclude--><table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="175"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td class="body">RELATED STORIES ? More Tech coverage
</td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table><!--startclickprintinclude--><!--begintext--> Frank Broyles and Steve Spurrier won it all on the college level, though Spurrier wasn't a hit with the Washington Redskins. Romeo Crennel and the late Bud Carson earned Super Bowl rings as coordinators and ran NFL teams of their own. (Crennel still does.)
Bill Curry, Ralph Friedgen and George O'Leary became national coaches of the year. Maxie Baughan was an NFL defensive coordinator before leading Cornell to a share of the Ivy League title. And Jerry Glanville, the NFL's man in black, led the Houston Oilers and the Atlanta Falcons to the playoffs.
All used to work on the Flats.
"Isn't that something?" current Tech coach Chan Gailey said. "Obviously, with the success they've all had, there's some super minds there."
If you had a time machine and could bring them back together as Tech assistants, you'd have one heck of a nine-man staff, guaranteed to help any head coach make an annual trip to the Bowl Championship Series. Or would you?
"There probably wouldn't be enough room for all those ideas," Gailey said.
"You'd still need the players," said Friedgen, who brings his Maryland team to Bobby Dodd Stadium to face Tech on Saturday.
"I would want to have guys like that," current Tech offensive coordinator Patrick Nix said, "but some of those guys might not have been able to work together. That's just as important as anything. Individually, they're all very good coaches, but who knows how some of them would have been together?"
Would they run Spurrier's Fun 'N' Gun, or would Friedgen call the plays? Would they run Carson's Steel Curtain defense or let Crennel design the blitzes?
Who knows? It's a dream team. You decide.
Maxie Baughan
? Assistant at Tech: Defensive coordinator 1972; linebackers coach 1973
? Before: Captain and 1959 SEC lineman of the year at Tech; College Football Hall of Famer; nine Pro Bowls in 14 seasons as NFL linebacker
? After: Assistant for Washington Redskins 1974; defensive coordinator Baltimore Colts 1975-79 and Detroit Lions 1980-82; coached Cornell 1983-88 and won share of 1988 Ivy League title
Frank Broyles
? Assistant at Tech: Backfield and offensive line 1951-56
? Before: SEC player of the year in 1944 as quarterback of a Tech SEC champion
? After: Athletics director at Arkansas since 1973; coached Arkansas 1958-76; won 1964 Football Writers Association of America national championship; coached Missouri 1957; Frank Broyles Award goes to the nation's top assistant coach; shared American Football Coaches Association national coach of the year title in 1964
Bud Carson
? Assistant at Tech: Defensive coordinator 1966
? Before: Defensive back at North Carolina; U.S. Marines
? After: Coached Tech 1967-71; architect of Steel Curtain defense as Pittsburgh Steelers defensive coordinator 1972-77; several other assistant jobs; coached Cleveland Browns 1989-90; died in 2005
Romeo Crennel
? Assistant at Tech: Defensive line 1980
? Before: Assistant for Western Kentucky, Texas Tech and Ole Miss
? After: Coach of Cleveland Browns 2005-present; defensive coordinator on three New England Patriots Super Bowl champions 2001-04; NFL assistant coach of the year 2003; several other NFL assistant jobs
Bill Curry
? Assistant at Tech: Offensive line 1976
? Before: Played 1962-64 at Tech and 10 seasons at center in the NFL
? After: Coached Tech 1980-86; ACC coach of the year in 1985; coached Alabama 1987-89 and shared 1989 SEC title; won 1989 Bobby Dodd national coach of the year; coached Kentucky 1990-96
Ralph Friedgen
? Assistant at Tech: Offensive coordinator 1987-91 and 1997-2000; won 1999 Broyles Award
? Before: Assistant at The Citadel, William & Mary, Murray State and Maryland
? Between: San Diego Chargers assistant
? After: Coach at Maryland since 2001; won 2001 ACC title and national coach of the year
Jerry Glanville
? Assistant at Tech: Freshmen 1968; defensive ends/outside linebackers 1969-74
? Before: Western Kentucky defensive coordinator 1967
? After: Hawaii defensive coordinator 2005-present; coached Falcons 1990-93 and Houston Oilers 1986-89; various assistant jobs
George O'Leary
? Assistant at Tech: Defensive coordinator 1987-91, 1994
? Before: Assistant at Syracuse
? Between: Assistant at San Diego Chargers
? After: Coached Tech 1995-2001 and shared 1998 ACC title; ACC coach of the year in 1998 and 2000; 2000 Bobby Dodd national coach of the year; coach of Central Florida 2004-present
Steve Spurrier
? Assistant at Tech: Quarterbacks coach 1979
? Before: Won 1966 Heisman Trophy at Florida; 10-year NFL career; Florida assistant 1978
? After: Coached Duke 1987-89, won 1989 ACC championship; 1988 and 1989 ACC coach of the year; coached Florida 1990-2001, won 1996 national championship, seven SEC titles; SEC coach of the year 1990, 1991, 1994, 1995, 1996; coached Washington Redskins 2002-03; coach of South Carolina 2005-present, SEC coach of the year 2005.
 

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Re: Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

GEORGIA TECH REPORT
Jackets' depth takes another hit with injuries

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/06/06 Reserve offensive guard Jacob Lonowski severely re-injured his surgically repaired shoulder in Thursday's practice and might miss the rest of the season, Georgia Tech coach Chan Gailey said.
Reserve wide receiver Greg Smith, whose injury has not been disclosed, will be a "game-time decision" Saturday against Maryland, Gailey said.
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Maryland will be looking for more offense than it got the last time it played Tech, when it had 82 total yards and lost 20-7 in 2004. That might be difficult.
"Georgia Tech runs an extremely complicated defense, moreso than a lot of programs," said Glenn Blackwood, father of Tech reserve safety Jake Blackwood and a Miami Dolphins safety from 1979-87. "They get guys who can not only make plays but think out on the field.
"It's interesting for me to learn all the schemes. Bill Arnsparger was our [defensive coordinator] in Miami, and extremely innovative. We zone-blitzed as far back as 1981, but nothing to the extent of what they're doing."
Recruits to get early start
Quarterback Steven Threet of Adrian, Mich., and wide receiver Tyler Melton of Houston plan to enroll at Tech in January. That will not affect the number of scholarships Tech can award.
Threet is looking forward to getting a jump in the race with Taylor Bennett, Jonathan Garner, Kyle Manley and Byron Ingram plus fellow incoming freshman Josh Nesbitt to replace departing starter Reggie Ball.
"To me it's just a great opportunity to get in the offense a semester early and get some experience in practices and learn not just in the classroom," Threet said. "Academically, as well, I'll be ahead."
Early recruit list grows?
Tech is zeroed in on another potential early signee, Coatesville, Pa., defensive end Derrick Morgan, the No. 1-ranked player at any position in Pennsylvania (according to Rivals.com) and No. 90 in the nation. He will graduate in December.
Saturday, Tech will host Ponte
Vedra (Fla.) Nease High offensive lineman Clyde Yandell on a recruiting visit.
Tech has 14 commitments and probably will sign 18 players. Among prospects Tech is chasing: Yandell, Morgan, Baton Rouge defensive lineman Jason Peters, Detroit cornerback Cedric Everson, Orlando safety Lorenzo Edwards and North Clayton safety Morgan Burnett.
 

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Re: Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

Mature Ball has new cool attitude
QB has learned not to force issue

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/05/06 Reggie Ball says he doesn't recall scraping bottom. Why should he while playing his best ball?
He leads the ACC with nine touchdown passes and ranks third in passing efficiency at 132.9. He's in a far different situation than he was two years ago, the last time the Yellow Jackets were preparing to play Maryland.
<table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="175"><tbody><tr><td>
Mikki K. Harris
</td></tr><tr><td class="caption"> Coaches and teammates say the biggest difference in Reggie Ball this season is his confidence level. 'He's been there and done that,' offensive coordinator Patrick Nix says.
</td></tr><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr class="railscreen01"><td>Your Turn</td></tr></tbody></table><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td colspan="2">
</td> </tr> </tbody></table> <script language="javascript"> function clickVote() { document.pollForm.buttonClicked.value = "yes"; document.pollForm.PageId.value = "poll_vote_submit"; document.pollForm.submit(); } function alert1(){ document.pollForm.buttonClicked.value = ""; } </script> <input name="PageId" value="poll_vote_submit" type="hidden"> <input name="pollID" value="10920" type="hidden"> <input name="page" value="take" type="hidden"> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td width="100%"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] How much credit does Reggie Ball deserve for Tech's season thus far? [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> <td align="right" height="15" width="46">
</td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38978" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] A lot. He's making fewer mistakes and his numbers look really good. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38979" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] Not much. He's got a great line, Calvin Johnson and Nix calling plays. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" valign="top"> <input name="choice" value="38980" type="radio"> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-1] He deserves some, but the whole team is playing really well. [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2">
</td></tr> <tr> <td align="center" width="100%"> <input value="Vote" name="vote" type="submit">
[FONT=arial,helvetica][SIZE=-2]Voter Limit: Once per Hour
View Poll Results [/SIZE][/FONT] </td> </tr> </tbody></table> </td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr><tr><td><table bgcolor="#cccccc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="170"><tbody><tr><td><table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="9" cellspacing="0" width="168"><tbody><tr><td class="body">RELATED STORIES? More Tech coverage
</td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table> "I don't really remember," the senior said. "That was so long ago."
Who wouldn't want to forget?
After back-to-back losses in which Ball hit 37 percent of his passes for one touchdown and six interceptions, Tech coach Chan Gailey threatened to bench Ball if things didn't get better against Maryland. Gailey said he would turn to Taylor Bennett, who was four games into a redshirt season.
Ball even heard criticism from his mother, who reamed her son for not playing with his usual self-confidence.
He responded with a turnover-free game, Tech won 20-7 and he has remained the starter ever since.
Nowadays, Ball plays so well Bennett replaces him because the Yellow Jackets have a comfortable lead. Things still go wrong occasionally, but they don't stay wrong.
Bad play? Forget it; No. 1 has grown up and moves on, as when he threw a 35-yard third-down pass to Calvin Johnson after back-to-back picks at Virginia Tech.
"He's been there and done that," offensive coordinator Patrick Nix said. "I think a lot of it's maturity. One thing he realizes that he didn't early in his career is ... don't force it.
Gailey said, "Maturity helps. It calms you down a little where you don't over-react and try to make such amends that you mess up further. He's really focusing in; I've seen a difference in him on Fridays as opposed to two years ago."
In the eyes of wide receiver James Johnson, "[Ball] knows he's going to make mistakes, but he has more to help him. The coaches believe in him a lot more. We believe in him. He believes more in himself. He shows it every day, coming in the locker room laughing."
The changes in Tech's offense have helped, and so has improved pass protection. Ball has more open receivers and more time to throw.
"I think the biggest thing helping Reggie is the 10 guys around him are doing really good," Nix said.
Ball lines up in the shotgun much more than he used to, and he looks comfortable there, as a passer and as a runner. He has 52 carries for 231 yards, so defenders struggle to peg a play as run or pass, slowing their reactions.
"It makes it pretty tough on a defense," Nix said. "[They're thinking] how do we out-number them in the run game when we've got to double-team Calvin? And, oh yeah, there's some guy named James Johnson who's caught three or four big plays. Reggie being able to run efficiently is a big part of what we're doing."
Ball's ability to make good reads is a big part of it, too. Much of the time Tech walks to the line of scrimmage with more than one option, based on what the defense does. Ball makes the choice.
He also makes choices during the week so that by Saturday both he and Nix have confidence in every play Tech will use.
"A play can definitely be taken out of the game plan because he doesn't feel comfortable with it," Nix said. "I might see something I like, and I have to convince him why, or, if he really doesn't like it, I put it on the shelf. I know his favorite plays, and he knows mine."
The result is a quarterback who not only understands the offense but believes in it. He also has learned to believe in his teammates so much that even when things go wrong he knows they're about to go right.
"We could be at our worst, and he's smiling, saying, 'It's going to be OK; look at everybody we've got,'" James Johnson said. "A lot of times, he used to get so frustrated when he'd make a bad play."
After throwing 37 touchdown passes and 41 interceptions his first three seasons, Ball has thrown nine touchdown passes and five interceptions this season.
"We're just relaxing and playing, doing the little things right," Ball said. "Along with the wins, you have fun."
 

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Re: Georgia Tech Football Information Thread for the Upcoming NCAA Football Season

GEORGIA TECH REPORT
Receiver Johnson better in so many ways

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/19/06
Calvin Johnson averaged 4.5 catches for 74 yards and half a touchdown per game last season. He averages 5.8 catches for 93 yards and 1.25 touchdowns this season. What has caused the difference for Georgia Tech's All-America receiver? There are multiple explanations.
"I'm doing a lot better in my route running," Johnson said, "getting myself wide open, maneuvering the DB without touching him, where I want him to be."
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"I think he understands coverages better," offensive coordinator Patrick Nix said. "He understands how to attack a defensive back better."
Said coach Chan Gailey: "He's done a good job of running with the football after the catch. That's something he's always been able to do, but he's had more opportunities and made more big plays that way this year."
Part of that, is quarterback Reggie Ball throwing the ball accurately enough so Johnson can stay on his feet while making the catch. And part of it is the new offense with Johnson as the focal point.
"Patrick Nix has done a great job of coming up with some new and better ideas to get him involved in the offense," Gailey said.
Next 2 weeks may decide Coastal
Victories the next two weekends over Clemson and Miami would all but clinch the ACC Coastal Division title for Georgia Tech. Losses in both games would put the Jackets in a deep hole in the division race. But the one-two punch of Clemson and Miami isn't too much for Tech to handle, defensive tackle Joe Anoai said.
"It's not hard mentally at all. When you play a team like Clemson, and if you get the job done, then you know what to expect going into another big game against Miami," Anoai said. "The downfall is physically. We know that there is going to be a lot of hitting going on, and it's going to be a very physical game. They have huge guys that can run, and we know that we are going to be pretty sore after this game. Hopefully, we can go in there, achieve our goal, and get out of there healthy."
Depth solid except in secondary
Tech (5-1, 3-0 ACC) is off to its best start in years because it's the most experienced the Yellow Jackets have been in years. That's Gailey's take on a team that returned starters or experienced backups everywhere but in the secondary.
"We're more talented because our football players are a year older," Gailey said. "Everybody goes through these cycles. It's just happening to us now."
But Gailey warned that the Yellow Jackets' success could be fragile.
"If you get an injury at the wrong time," he said, "you can be in trouble."
Johnson's sacks built confidence
Michael Johnson's back-to-back sacks to end Maryland's final possession not only clinched a victory for the Jackets but also should pay off in future games played by the sophomore defensive end.
"Tremendous confidence builder," Gailey said. "He always plays hard. It's not going to up his level of play. But it's going to allow him to play with more confidence. He's a great player that we can now put in the ball game in certain situations and expect him to be able to handle his side of the field."
 

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GEORGIA TECH REPORT
Tech-Clemson a high-ranking matchup

By MIKE KNOBLER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/18/06
Here's one measure of how big Saturday's game at Clemson is for Georgia Tech: It's the first time since 1999 and the second time in 25 years Tech has been involved in a game between two of the top 13 teams in the Associated Press poll.
No. 13 Tech (5-1, 3-0 ACC) leads the Coastal Division. No. 12 Clemson (6-1, 3-1) leads the Atlantic Division. It's Tech's biggest game, poll-wise, since No. 10 Tech lost to No. 1 Florida State 41-35 at Tallahassee in 1999. ESPN College GameDay will broadcast from Clemson.
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The Jackets say the big-game atmosphere won't affect them. GameDay came to the season opener against Notre Dame, too. And these Jackets players have a history of winning on the road against ranked teams, from Clemson and Maryland two seasons ago to Auburn and Miami last season to Virginia Tech this season.
"We just always figure to be the underdog," receiver Calvin Johnson said Tuesday, "but we know that we are just as good as the next team. That's just the way I see it. We have all the talent in the world on this team."
"I think they go out and play their game," coach Chan Gailey said of his players. "They don't get intimidated by anything. They have a great deal of respect, but I don't think they're intimidated whatsoever."
Time off a mixed blessing
Tech ought to be ready to play Clemson on Saturday night. The Yellow Jackets have had no shortage of practice.
Not only did Tech have an open date last weekend, but the institute was on fall break Monday and Tuesday. With classes not in session, Tech wasn't limited by an NCAA rule restricting teams to no more than four hours of practice and meetings in one day.
How will that show up on the field Saturday? You might be surprised by how much you don't see.
"Sometimes it can be worse than it is good," offensive coordinator Patrick Nix said of the extra preparation time. "For us, it was more of a time to let the guys catch their breath than for us to try to add things and do that sort of deal. I wouldn't say we added a ton. If you spread yourself too thin, you don't do well at anything. You want to do what you do well and make defenses stop you."
Personnel mostly healthy
Tech is mostly healthy for the game. Wide receiver Greg Smith has an undisclosed injury Gailey said might make whether to play Smith a game-time decision. Backup offensive lineman Jacob Lonowski (shoulder) is a long way from getting back on the field, Gailey said.
Choice checks on Sooners
Running back Tashard Choice took advantage of Tech's open date to catch up with his old team, Oklahoma, which played Iowa State on television. What he saw was painful, though. Running back Adrian Peterson broke his collarbone and might miss the rest of the season. "It really hurt. That's one of my old teammates, and he really worked hard," Choice said. "For a freak accident to happen like that was tough. I haven't talked to him since, but I know how he feels right now."
BCS ranking? No problem
Tech, ranked 13th in all three human polls ? Associated Press, USA Today and Harris Interactive ? averages 22nd in the computer polls used in the Bowl Championship Series standings. That's why the Jackets are 19th in the BCS. At least one person on the Flats doesn't seem to care.
"I think I'll sleep OK," Gailey said. "If that was my biggest problem, I wouldn't have any problems."
 

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Gailey fields fans' questions

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/17/06
Chan Gailey was the guest speaker Monday at The Touchdown Club of Atlanta. The Georgia Tech coach sounded off on a number of topics:
On the BCS: "I love to answer this question. I am probably one of the few in the country that is not a playoff advocate. If we say we are amateur athletics, and we say we are student-athletes, then let's treat them that way. In a playoff system, how many teams get to feel good at the end of the year? One. But in a bowl system, if you've got 25 bowls, you've got 25 teams that get to feel good about themselves at the end of the season. ...
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"Now, if we want to be big-business, big-money totally, and that's all we're about, that's fine. Then, let's pay the players, make sure that when they get their degree they get some money out of it and they share the spoils. But until then, let's be who we say we are. Let's not talk out of both sides of our mouth, NCAA."
On why quarterback Reggie Ball (below) is playing so much more consistently: "There's a lot of reasons. First of all, he's a senior, he's more knowledgeable, he has more experience, he understands, and I think the offense that [offensive coordinator] Patrick Nix has put together really fits Reggie very well.
"Something else that I think is sometimes overlooked: This is the first year that we've had experienced offensive linemen, tight ends, wide receivers, running backs, fullback, all coming together at one time."
On the brawl in Saturday's Miami-Florida International game: "I think that the trash-talking that goes on is not good for the game. All it does it lead to something else. Do we have a couple of guys that like to talk during a game? I'll be the first to admit we do. But it's not derogatory, it's not negative; they're just talking. They're not picking on any players or demeaning anybody. They're just patting each other on the back very loudly."
On why Tech's recruiting has gone well: "We're dealing with some really smart kids this year. [Laughter from the crowd.) I really do believe that we've got some changes in our system that have been very good. I think we've done a good job of identifying the players that fit our system and fit our university. I think we did that earlier than ever before, and once you identify them, you can begin the process."
 

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Gailey rides wave of popularity

By MATT WINKELJOHN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 10/17/06
These are not the times that try the soul of a football coach, at least not the cool inner core of Chan Gailey. But he sure could use more space.
Hope you had luck finding a seat Monday at the Fox Sports Grill at Atlantic Station on Monday, when the hottest college football coach for hundreds of miles was in the house. The Touchdown Club of Atlanta needed a fan-horn to fit the Georgia Tech coach and guest speaker.
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Win at Virginia Tech, Yellow Jackets fans like you. Come from behind, build a wall near your goal line against Maryland to avoid the kind of letdown previously considered your scarlet letter, and you're in clover.
Pass dreaded Georgia in the polls, and suddenly you're the king of campus.
"When you're winning, everything, even going home at night, is easier," Gailey said afterward. "It's the nature of the game. It's where we are in life."
Tech is in a good spot, ranked No. 13 in the Associated Press poll, listed at No. 19 in the BCS standings and leading the ACC's Coastal Division while preparing for Saturday's game at No. 12 Clemson.
It may be the most pivotal game the program has played since a trip to No. 1 Virginia in 1990 on Tech's way from unranked to a share of the national championship. No wonder Gailey was ? gasp ? funny at times Monday.
After suggesting he'd break from form and instead review the five questions he's most often asked before taking more queries, he rolled like a pro.
"The first one, and I'm about tired of it, to be honest with you, is 'How is it not calling plays?' " said the coach, who turned over play-calling duties to offensive coordinator Patrick Nix this season. "Since we've been playing so good, it's been wonderful. There are times I feel I'm standing on the sidelines doing nothing."
Just a year ago, before Gailey received a then-controversial new contract and then won at No. 3 Miami, you could find, "Can Chan" threads on the Internet.
Now, Chan's the man, as a notoriously fickle fan base seems nearly in lockstep.
Check out the public message board on "The Hive" at gojackets.com. On page 4 is the thread "The Decision to hire Chan Gailey is looking better and better and better by the week."
That statement by a fan using the handle "UpperEast," is followed by this one: "One of the best ways [in my mind] to judge a coach is to ask yourself, 'Is this someone I'd like to play for?' For me, the answer is a definite YES. I worked for a lot of people in my life and I think Coach Gailey would be someone I would work my butt off for."
On campus, it wasn't easy to gauge the winds Monday as Tech students are on fall break, but freshman Steve Leopold of Woodstock is picking up a vibe. "I think the team's really close this year, like they're actually playing as a team," he said. "The way we react to that is whenever we're scoring, or winning, we get louder."
Gailey said after Monday's lunch gathering that he doesn't read any more or less fan mail if a season's going well.
"You try to understand it's part of the process and you deal with it, put it in a category and keep going because the objective is not whether or not I feel good, it's where the team is and where we want them to be, and what do I have to do to get the team headed in the right direction?" he said.
"Everybody's human, and if you read it too much, then you start to believe it. The negative's not completely true, and the positive is not completely true."
 
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