The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GEORGIA TECH NATHAN COTTRELL THE RIGHT MAN FOR KEY PLAY

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

Nathan Cottrell hoped he would be given the opportunit­y to come through for his team. Late in the first quarter of Georgia Tech’s game at Miami on Saturday, the moment arrived — a fake punt in which Cottrell, lined up at gunner, was to run down the sideline and catch a pass from punter Pressley Harvin.

“(Coach Geoff Collins) trusted me to go out there and complete it, so I didn’t want to let my team or let any of the coaches down,” Cottrell told The Atlanta Jour- nal-Constituti­on on Wednesday. “Just did all I could, and when I got out there, it was just another play that we got to make happen.”

Tech fans know what happened. Cottrell caught Harvin’s on-target pass for a 41-yard touchdown reception that tied the score at 14-14, a momentous play in the Yellow Jackets’ 28-21 win over Miami that ended the team’s four-game losing streak.

Cottrell represents a number of facets of this team as it transition­s to Collins’ leader- ship. The running back (called an A-back in former coach Paul Johnson’s offense) is one of only 11 seniors on the roster. Cottrell bought heavily into Collins and his empha- sis on energy and effort. Having graduated in May, Cottrell had the opportunit­y to leave Tech as a grad transfer for another school where he might have had more oppor- tunity to play, but he wanted to experience and contribute to the transition at Tech. (He is earning a master’s in building constructi­on.)

He also has become a staple of Tech’s special-teams units, another Collins priority, playing on the punt and kickoff teams and both return teams. In that way, Cottrell has exemplifie­d the position flexibilit­y that Collins has tried to develop, to make the best use of the roster. Cottrell’s contributi­ons have been recognized in his being chosen to wear the No. 90 jersey honoring the late Brandon Adams for the game against The Citadel and also being selected as a team captain for the North Carolina game.

“I think it comes out when he plays, just his effort, how he approaches every single day,” cornerback­s coach and defensive special-teams coor- dinator Jeff Popovich said. “He’s out here and he goes 100 miles an hour every sin- gle rep to be great.”

It was fitting, then, that in a game the Jackets were widely expected to lose, Cottrell was the one called on to make a daring special-teams play that proved pivotal.

“It meant the world,” said Cottrell, from Knoxville, Tenn. “It was just a special play for me, personally. Just having been through these changes and tough times and just seeing hard work pay off for the whole team was huge for us. I loved being able to be a part of that.”

Tech had worked on the play in the week leading to the Miami game, noting that the Hurricanes’ “punt safe” scheme would allow Cottrell the opportunit­y to run downfield and get open. Cottrell said he was anxious about the play but hopeful that the Jackets would get a chance to run it. Down 14-7 late in the first quarter with a drive stalled on the Miami 41, Collins made the call.

“Pressley threw an absolutely perfect ball — right placement, right on the sideline – and made my job easy,” Cottrell said.

Tech’s record (2-5) might not be what Cottrell envisioned for his senior season, but “the amount of fun and just the energy we have every day, it’s contagious,” he said. “I could be coming in having a rough day, but as soon as I get around my brothers on this team, it’s an instant change.”

That resolve has helped spur developmen­t and improvemen­t. As a gunner on the punt team, Cottrell has used his effort and speed to get free to run downfield and chase down returners, but acknowledg­ed that he has to get better at making plays once there. It’s a skill he’ll need to master to get a chance at the NFL. Earlier in the season, Collins called him “an NFL special-teams player.”

“It’s kind of a foreign thing for me still, making the actual tackle, so (I’m) really just trying to work on that,” Cottrell said.

With the Jackets in the midst of an open week, they have the opportunit­y to recover and gird themselves for the final five games. An emotional overtime win over an ACC rival to end a four-game losing streak could scarcely have been timed better.

“It doesn’t matter what our record ends up being — I know our team’s not going to falter,” Cottrell said.

 ??  ?? Nathan Cottrell caught a game-tying touchdown pass vs. Miami.
Nathan Cottrell caught a game-tying touchdown pass vs. Miami.

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