The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

With Friday game, practice gets early start

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

An unusual week began Friday for Georgia Tech and will conclude this coming Friday, when the Yellow Jackets play at Louisville.

Tech will play it first Friday regular-season game since 1994, when the Jackets played Georgia on the day after Thanksgivi­ng. (Tech fans probably don’t want to look that one up.) It will cause a disruption to the standard weekly schedule — not ideal preparatio­n as the Jackets prepare for a critical game that could even their record at 3-3 after a threegame losing streak dropped them to 1-3.

“Everybody knows what this game means,” quarterbac­k TaQuon Marshall said in the locker room following the Jackets’ 63-17 win over Bowling Green on Saturday. “I just told the guys, everybody’s always talking about a big prime-time game. You got one. Friday night — the only game that’ll probably be on. Seven o’clock, they’re wearing all black (Louisville is promoting the game as a black-out), so their stadium will be jumping. That’s what you play college football for. It’ll be rocking, so everybody’ll be ready to play.”

Tech was to begin its practice week Sunday, a day ahead of schedule ( Jackets players normally have Sunday off after games and begin practice on Monday). The team will also practice today, Tuesday and Wednesday and fly to Louisville on Thursday. It will be their first-ever meeting with the Cardinals.

It’s a week in which rest and hydration will perhaps be even more important than normal.

Last year’s Jacksonvil­le State game followed Tech’s

double-overtime loss to Tennessee on Labor Day night, when the offense ran 96 plays, the most in Johnson’s tenure. Players’ legs seemed to be affected in the 37-10 win over the Gamecocks. After the game, Johnson remarked that “it looked like we were playing in sand.”

In the lopsided win over Bowling Green on Saturday, starters were subbed out in the fourth quarter. The Tech defense was on the field for 87 snaps — the most the Jackets have played on defense since the Virginia game in 2016 — but most players were in a steady rotation. The offense took 56 snaps, well below its 2017 average of 68.3 snaps per game.

This is one of the weeks that raised Johnson’s concerns prior to the season about the class schedules of Marshall and others. Marshall started the semester with a 6 p.m. class on Monday evening, which required him to be excused early from practice in the first week of the semester.

In most weeks, it’s not a concern, as Monday practices aren’t as long as the Tuesday and Wednesday practices and not as critical to game preparatio­n. But with the schedule moved up this week, Monday’s practice will include plenty of game prep for Louisville. (Tech also will be under a similar schedule before its game against Virginia Tech on Oct. 25, a Thursday night game.)

It’s why Marshall, at Johnson’s request, changed out of the class and will take it in the spring semester instead.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson has a word with quarterbac­k TaQuon Marshall during the second half of Saturday’s 63-17 victory over Bowling Green at Bobby Dodd Stadium.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson has a word with quarterbac­k TaQuon Marshall during the second half of Saturday’s 63-17 victory over Bowling Green at Bobby Dodd Stadium.

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