Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Run-heavy Jackets go to air in victory

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GEORGIA TECH 28, NO. 17 VIRGINIA TECH 22

ATLANTA — TaQuon Marshall made the most of his only two completion­s.

And, finally, Georgia Tech won a close game.

Marshall threw two long scoring passes, including an 80-yarder to Ricky Jeune with 6½ minutes remaining, and Ajani Kerr swatted away a fourth-down pass in the end zone to preserve Georgia Tech’s 28-22 upset of No. 17 Virginia Tech on Saturday.

This one felt especially good for the Yellow Jackets (5-4, 4-3), who had lost three games by a total of six points.

“Proud of our guys,” Georgia Tech Coach Paul Johnson said. “They showed a lot of grit and determinat­ion.”

It looked as though Georgia Tech was heading for another excruciati­ng defeat when Virginia Tech rallied from a 21-9 deficit in the second half.

The Hokies (7-3, 3-3 Atlantic Coast Conference) went ahead 22-21 when Greg Stroman returned an intercepti­on 24 yards for a touchdown off a terrible pass by Marshall with 7:27 left.

The Georgia Tech quarterbac­k made up for his mistake two snaps later, after the Yellow Jackets fumbled the kickoff but fortuitous­ly managed to recover after a wild scramble. Jeune got loose behind the secondary, hauled in the long throw and just managed to stick the ball inside the pylon before tumbling out of bounds.

It was the longest touchdown pass of the season for the Yellow Jackets, surpassing Marshall’s 60-yard scoring play to Brad Stewart early in the second half. Marshall finished 2-of-8 passing out of the triple-option.

“He made, what, two completion­s and they were both for touchdowns, and it ended up being 140 yards?” Johnson said. “We’ll live with that. That’s a pretty good average.”

Marshall also had two short touchdown runs.

On its final possession, Virginia Tech converted two fourth-down plays and faced third-and-1 at the Georgia Tech 32 with plenty of time to deal the home team another tough loss.

But on a day when he made a number of curious decisions, Virginia Tech Coach Justin Fuente called two passes rather than running for the first down. Both were incomplete, including a deep pass down the middle for Cam Phillips that Kerr knocked away.

“We got the best matchup we could possibly get,” Fuente said. “That was as good a look as we were going to get.”

The Yellow Jackets rushed for 261 yards, led by KirVonte Benson with 86 yards on 22 carries. Nathan Cottrell had a 69-yard run, setting up Georgia Tech’s first touchdown, a 3-yard run by Marshall. The quarterbac­k also had a 1-yard touchdown run.

Georgia Tech appeared to be driving for a clinching touchdown late in the third quarter. But a chop-block penalty against center Kenny Cooper knocked the Yellow Jackets back 15 yards, and Brenton King missed a 43yard field-goal attempt.

The Hokies took advantage — with a big helping hand from Georgia Tech.

On third-and-14, Josh Jackson threw a pass into heavy coverage. A.J. Gray and Lamont Simmons both had a shot at picking it off, but wound up tipping the ball to Eric Kumah for a 26-yard completion — eerily similar to a play that led to a 25-24 loss to Miami on Oct. 14.

Jalen Holston’s 8-yard touchdown run on the final play of the third quarter brought the Hokies within 21-16.

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