The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

In many ways, Hokies are familiar foe

- By Ken Sugiura | ksugiura@ajc.com

Georgia Tech renews its rivalry with Virginia Tech on Saturday at Bobby Dodd Stadium. The Yellow Jackets are trying to notch wins in their season-ending, three-game homestand, while the Hokies are in the thick of the ACC Coastal Division race. What to watch for in Saturday’s matchup:

Graham a focal point

After playing the best game of his young career Saturday, quarterbac­k James Graham will face an opponent he knows particular­ly well. Graham committed to Virginia Tech as a senior at Fitzgerald High in the fall of 2017 before changing to Georgia Tech late in the recruiting process, signing with the Jackets that December.

A major part of Georgia Tech’s appeal was that then-coach Paul Johnson was recruiting him as a quarterbac­k, while Virginia Tech wanted him as a wide receiver or defensive back.

“We had him in camp and loved him coming out of high school, so we know what he can do,” Virginia Tech coach Justin Fuente said. “He can run and is getting much better in the passing game.”

The Hokies’ pass defense has played effective games in the past two weeks. Notre Dame and Wake Forest completed 45 of 89 passes for 574 yards (6.4 yards per attempt) with four touchdowns and four intercepti­ons.

This Bud’s for you

Saturday will be the final visit to Bobby Dodd Stadium for a well-respected Georgia Tech rival, Hokies defensive coordinato­r Bud Foster, who will retire after 33 seasons at Virginia Tech. He has served as coordinato­r since 1996.

Georgia Tech coach Geoff Collins once paid Foster a visit during spring practice during Collins’ time as defensive coordinato­r (1999-2001) at Division III Albright College in Reading, Pennsylvan­ia, “just trying to gain some insight on how to be a future big-time ball coach one day,” Collins said this week.

Jackets offensive coordinato­r Dave Patenaude had his own recollecti­on as he was working his way up the ladder. With the success that Foster had with his 4-4 defense, Patenaude said, “everybody was running that defense, and I was cursing the defensive coordinato­r at Virginia Tech because we couldn’t figure out a way to beat it.”

The scheme has changed, but the tenets remain, Patenaude said. This season, the scheme features linebacker Rayshard Ashby, third in the ACC in tackles with 87. Patenaude described him as “a little fireplug.”

“We’re going to have to find him in the run game, put a body on him,” Patenaude said.

Hokies coming in hot

The Hokies have turned their season around since Duke obliterate­d them 45-10 on Sept. 27 at Lane Stadium. Virginia Tech was outgained in yardage 422-259. Fuente told reporters this week that he apologized to the team after the Duke game, saying that it was his fault players were not physically, mentally or emotionall­y tough, and that it would not continue.

Since then, the Hokies have won four of five games, their only loss coming by one point at No. 16 Notre Dame. At 6-3 overall and 3-2 in the ACC, the Hokies will win the Coastal Division if they win their remaining games against Georgia Tech, Pittsburgh and Virginia.

Their surge has coincided with quarterbac­k Hendon Hooker’s elevation into the starting job. The run game in particular has ticked up, with three 200-yard rushing games in the past four games.

Defensive coordinato­r Andrew Thacker said that Hooker may not have the upper-body strength of Virginia quarterbac­k Bryce Perkins, but he is efficient running the ball and “has the talent to make all the throws.”

Pass protection improving

Virginia Tech will bring the threat of an effective pass rush, and that is nothing new for Georgia Tech. All of the Jackets’ seven FBS opponents so far rank in the top 51 nationally in sacks — Pittsburgh (third), Miami (fourth), Virginia (sixth), Clemson (tie for eighth), Temple (tie for 14th), North Carolina (tie for 36th) and South Florida (tie for 44th). And Virginia Tech and the Jackets’ opponent next week, N.C. State, are tied with Temple at No. 14, meaning that Georgia Tech will play five teams in a row in the top 20.

The Jackets had their strongest pass-protection game against Virginia, preventing the Cavaliers from recording a single sack while passing 22 times. Not coincident­ally, Graham had his best passing day, completing 15 of 22 throws for a career-high 229 yards.

The gains in experience, the stability of the line (four of the five starting line spots have been the same for the past four games) and the tutelage of line coach Brent Key have all factored. Patenaude said that the offensive linemen are “sponges” in absorbing Key’s teaching and are improving both individual­ly and as a unit.

“I mean, we passed off a twist in the (Virginia) game that was three guys passing off a twist with linebacker­s running and defensive guys running out that we never would have picked up, even in camp,” Patenaude said.

A streak to protect

Johnson bequeathed to Collins a three-game winning streak against the Hokies, including last year’s 49-28 annihilati­on in Blacksburg, Virginia. Now in his fourth season, Fuente is 18-8 against the rest of the ACC and 0-3 against the Jackets.

Going for the 4-0 sweep doesn’t rate that highly with senior safety Christian Campbell.

“I haven’t put much thought into it,” Campbell said. “I try to go beat everybody we play every week. I couldn’t care less what it is.”

Fuente’s comments on Georgia Tech this week: “You turn on the game vs. Virginia last week and you know immediatel­y that they’re there to go win the game. (Collins) deserves a tremendous amount of credit for that. Those guys are continuing to battle and they’ll be ready to play on Saturday.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Like the Jackets’ other seven FBS foes this year, the Virginia Tech defense is no slouch with the pass rush. The Hokies are tied at No. 14 nationally in sacks.
GETTY IMAGES Like the Jackets’ other seven FBS foes this year, the Virginia Tech defense is no slouch with the pass rush. The Hokies are tied at No. 14 nationally in sacks.

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