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Home > ajcsportstalk > Archives > 2006 > December > 02 > Entry

Tech’s ‘D’ stands offended

Jacksonville — The breakthrough season wound up broken. It came apart in the bleakest of games in the bleakest of settings, came apart so completely that the better part of Georgia Tech’s team didn’t disguise its disgust for the other half.

“I don’t forget anything,” said defensive tackle Joe Anoai. “Someday I’ll look back on this, and … it’s a lack of offensive production. The defense can’t do everything.”

With the ACC championship there for the taking, Tech didn’t score a touchdown. It saw a team of lesser gifts pull even and then ahead in the final 8-1/2 minutes. It saw the best season of Chan Gailey’s stewardship disintegrate over consecutive Saturdays — two massive games, two dispiriting losses.

Anoai again: “It’s pretty difficult to come down here and do what we did today.”

As happened against Georgia, Tech took a fourth-quarter lead and spat it back. As happened in Athens, Tech spent the first three quarters looking like the stronger team but never quite proving it.

The stout-hearted defense that yielded one scoring drive in Athens was touched for two field goals in the final period here, and those six measly points carried a gray and drizzly day that should have belonged to the Jackets.

Tech whiffed on three fourth-down tries inside the Wake Forest 33, Reggie Ball delivering an interception on the first and throwing to the wrong receiver on the third. On the other he was stuffed on a quarterback sneak. These failures kept the Deacons in the game at a time when Tech had established a physical superiority. Then again, the physical part isn’t what derailed this team.

The mental part did. Put simply, Jim Grobe outcoached Gailey. Grobe took the lesser side and won a championship with it. Gailey and coordinator Patrick Nix took an offense with the ACC’s best player (Calvin Johnson) and its leading rusher (Tashard Choice) and managed two crummy field goals. And then, with just over two minutes remaining and Tech facing fourth-and-13 after Ball scrambled out of bounds, Gailey chose to punt. The Jackets never touched the ball again.

“We didn’t get ready to play,” Gailey said, “and that’s my responsibility.”

Ball was better than he’d been against Georgia — he couldn’t have been worse — but completed only 9 of 29 passes and threw two more interceptions. The second changed the game. Leading 6-3 with 12:15 remaining and with Wake having bled out one second-half first down without benefit of penalty, the Jackets took possession at their 17. Run Choice and burn the clock, right? Uh, no.

Ball threw long for Johnson on first down. (It marked the seventh time on 11 second-half first-and-10s the Jackets had deigned to throw.) Johnson could have caught the ball but deflected it to Wake’s Riley Swanson instead. Wake took the turnover and drove to the tying field goal and soon to another.

Two Deacon catches — a third-down reception by backup tight end John Tereshinski, whose brother Joe caught a touchdown pass for Georgia on this field last season, and a deep ball to Willie Idlette between defenders Djay Jones and Jahi Word-Daniels — energized the drives. The Deacons, however, should never have been in position to win. Tech should have run Choice 31 times, not 21, and killed the game off. Tech should have played to its strength (Choice pounding), not its weakness (Ball flinging).

“It’s hard to go out there and give everything you have,” said linebacker KaMichael Hall, “and the last second runs off the clock and then you lose.”

Tech was talented enough to have beaten Georgia, to have beaten Wake, to be nuzzling up to the Top 10 as opposed to falling from the Top 25. As much as these Jackets did, they left too much undone. And they knew it.

“I don’t think it’s a breakthrough season,” said Hall, an icepack on his damaged ribs. “It’s not a breakthrough season if you can’t finish. We didn’t win a rivalry game and we didn’t win the ACC championship. It got away from us.”

Permalink | Comments (3) | Categories: Georgia Tech

Comments

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By the flats

December 2, 2006 08:54 PM | Link to this

Good article as usual, MB. Also, why were we doing a reverse on 3rd and 1? If we do pass, why not stick with what worked (slants, quick throw to CJ)? Why were we heaving it on our last possession with low percentage bombs down the sideline instead of trying ot put together a drive? As a fan, it is so very frustrating to watch the offense. The offense needs to apologize to the defense. And Nix and Gailey need to study tape from the last 4 games and see why we are struggling. Personally, I am hopeful Tulane hires Nix. I will stick with Tech, but it is really hard to watch this offense.

By The Winds of Change

December 3, 2006 12:36 PM | Link to this

Defense? Offended?

Who can blame them. In fact who could blame the entire offense except Reggie. Next year we won’t have Reggie around and hopefully he’ll take Chan and Nix with him.

The Gator Bowl will be the third time that we get embarrassed on national television thanks to those three. Its really doing us a world of hurt in our recruiting…those kids haven’t signed yet.

By GT

December 3, 2006 10:28 PM | Link to this

Winds of Change - Reggie may not be the best QB but the coaches are the ones that keep him in there. Reggie may not have had be best two games of his life and may not be the best QB…but I’m pretty sure he went out there and did all he could. No player goes out there looking to throw incomplete passes or interceptions. BUT the coaches kept him in the game. How many blocks did we miss and how many “should have been” catches did our WR’s drop…Reggie had a part in this, but this ALL falls on the coaches. Reggie was just trying to do what he was told.

 

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