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Irish look to avoid slip-up ahead of Clemson

- By Paul Newberry

ATLANTA — With one of the biggest games of the year looming, it’s hard not to look ahead.

No. 4 Notre Dame can’t afford a slip-up.

The Fighting Irish (5-0, 4-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) must get by Georgia Tech — a 20-point underdog — on Saturday before turning their full attention to a Nov. 7 showdown against topranked Clemson.

“We know how good we can be on this team and we need to play that way regardless of who we are playing,” safety Isaiah Pryor said. “We shouldn’t play down to the level of our opponents.”

Coach Brian Kelly has preached to his players that they must use these sort of games to address their weaknesses before facing a team of Clemson’s caliber. They heeded the message last week, routing Pittsburgh 45-3.

“That was implicit in that conversati­on without having to say, ’Hey, guys, in a couple of weeks, we have to play Clemson — wink, wink, wink,’” Kelly said.

Clemson has won five straight ACC titles in a dominating run that also includes two national championsh­ips. Notre Dame would love nothing more than to upend that streak in what is expected to be its lone season as a full-fledged conference member.

Quarterbac­k Ian Book acknowledg­ed that Clemson “has been circled on the list for a while and is an extremely important game. The guys are excited for it. That’s

why you come to Notre Dame – to play in huge games like that.” But first up, it’s Georgia Tech. The Yellow Jackets (2-4, 2-3) are in the midst of a massive rebuilding job under second-year coach Geoff Collins and simply hoping to be competitiv­e as they face a top-five school for the second time in three weeks.

The first such game was humiliatio­n. Clemson routed the Yellow Jackets 73-7 — the most points

allowed by the team since 1894.

“There’s always things that motivate you one way or another,” Georgia Tech offensive lineman Ryan Johnson said. “But we’ve got to focus on this week. We’ve got to move on. You want to learn from the past, but focus on the present to prepare for the future.”

Collins insisted the future is bright for Georgia Tech, even though he’s won just five of his first 18 games since taking over from Paul Johnson.

“A lot of people just look at results,” he said. “They don’t want to look at the steps in the journey. Every single day, we’re building something that’s very, very special.”

Some other things to watch for when Georgia Tech hosts Notre Dame:

TIME IS ON THEIR SIDE

Notre Dame held the ball for 40:59 in its victory over Pittsburgh, the largest time of possession edge for an ACC team this season.

The Irish ran out the last 7:52 with a 14-play, 32-yard drive, mimicking a 14- play, 57- yard possession that finished off the remaining 7:55 of a 12-7 victory over Louisville the previous week.

Notre Dame is averaging 34:11 in time of possession, which leads the ACC and ranks seventh nationally. It could be more of the same against Georgia Tech, which last week surrendere­d 264 yards rushing to Boston College — a team that had not gained more than 90 yards in a game until it faced the Yellow Jackets.

HOLD ON TO THE BALL

Georgia Tech must avoid turnovers to have any chance against the Fighting Irish.

The Yellow Jackets already have 18 turnovers — just two less than their total in 2019. They had three in the 48- 27 loss to Boston College, all of which led to touchdowns that essentiall­y accounted for the final margin.

Freshman quarterbac­k Jeff Sims fumbled a snap and threw an intercepti­on deep in his own territory, while a fumble by running back Jordan Mason was returned for a TD.

 ?? Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP - Matt Freed ?? Notre Dame tight end Michael Mayer pulls in a touchdown pass against Pittsburgh’s Paris Ford during last week’s game.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP - Matt Freed Notre Dame tight end Michael Mayer pulls in a touchdown pass against Pittsburgh’s Paris Ford during last week’s game.

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