The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Specialist­s throwing deep balls? Ex-Yellow Jacket Scott Blair approves

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com AJC

Saturday afternoon, former Georgia Tech kicker Scott Blair was at his Roswell home with his wife Christy and daughters Ellie and Remi, watching his alma mater play Miami. Towards the end of the first quarter, he saw something most familiar — a specialist throwing a long touchdown pass off a fake special-teams play.

When punter Pressley Harvin connected with Nathan Cottrell for a 41-yard touchdown pass on a fake punt that helped the Yellow Jack- ets defeat the Hurricanes, he became Tech’s first non-quar- terback to throw a touchdown pass since Blair did it against Clemson on September 10, 2009. Blair launched a 34-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas on a fake field-goal try that helped the Jackets defeat Clemson 30-27.

“I was a little in shock that we actually had a fake punt, and I think it threw Miami off, too,” Blair told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on on Monday. “But the pass was incredible. My first reaction was, how can a punter throw a ball that well? It’s not even fair.”

Blair joined a legion of admirers. Harvin’s play was a social media sensation and Monday he earned recognitio­n as the ACC co-special- ist of the week. Harvin also had six convention­al punt plays, averaging 45.5 yards per punt, including a season-long blast of 57 yards.

Harvin himself was quite pleased after the game Saturday. “Literally by far the best play I’ve ever had in my life,” he said.

Tech coach Geoff Collins put in the play last week, Harvin said. It worked out perfectly. Cottrell, lined up wide as a gunner, ran unim- peded downfield. After taking Cade Long’s snap, Harvin stood at the Tech 49 and threw a tight spiral to Cottrell on the sideline just inside the Miami 10.

“I already knew the corner that was on Nate Cottrell was going to go ahead and just press him and just leave him out, so I took a look and I just threw it up and he just came down with the ball,” Harvin said. “It was a good play.” As Blair observed, “It didn’t even slow down (Cot- trell’s) run.”

Blair had no qualms acknowledg­ing that Harvin threw a better ball. Thomas had to stop his route to wait on Blair’s heave. But Blair deserves credit for a deft post-snap adjustment, as the play didn’t unfold by its design. The way Tech prac- ticed the gadget play, the ruse was for the offense to be on the field for the fourthdown play, only for the fieldgoal unit to run on as the play clock wound down, as though coach Paul Johnson had changed his mind. Then, in the confusion, Thomas was to remain on the field close to the sideline, hope- fully unnoticed by Clemson.

“I remember being on the sideline thinking we would never call that play and coach Johnson called it and I think I was not experienci­ng it so much,” Blair said. “It almost felt like a dream, like it was kind of an out-of-body expe- rience, which is probably a good thing.”

Thomas went unnoticed as planned, but he took off down the sideline at the snap rather than wait for Blair to throw it to him. Blair didn’t panic but just tossed it deep, where Thomas waited for it to come down, then ran it from about the 15.

Blair ended up kicking three field goals in the game, including the game-winner from 36 yards with 57 sec- onds remaining. His career rates among Tech’s top kick- ers. He made 73.2% of his field-goal tries (41-for-56), the Tech career record, and aver- aged 39 yards on 50 career punts.

However, to many Tech f ans, he may most ly be remembered for one slightly wobbly, if highly successful, throw. “I’d rather that be my legacy than something else,” said Blair, who now co-owns a remodeling business in Roswell.

Time will tell how Harvin’s career will be recalled. But what he’s done with his right leg over three years has made a greater impression on Blair than what Harvin did with his right arm Saturday. This season, Harvin is averaging 43.8 yards per punt, which would be a top-10 season all-time for Tech. His career average (43.2 yards) is second all-time behind Durant Brooks. Harvin was named All-ACC in his first two seasons at Tech. “You can take him for granted pretty easy,” Blair said.

Blair still has this much on Harvin: With one pass attempt, he finished his career with a passer rating of 715.6, almost certainly the highest rate in school history. Harvin’s career rating, sullied by an incompleti­on as a freshman against Duke, is 387.2.

 ??  ?? Former Georgia Tech kicker Scott Blair threw a 34-yard touchdown pass on a fake field-goal on Sept. 10, 2009.
Former Georgia Tech kicker Scott Blair threw a 34-yard touchdown pass on a fake field-goal on Sept. 10, 2009.

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