The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

History shows how Tech can buck odds

Rivalry’s archives reveal upsets that wiped UGA from title contention.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

Be aware of this much as Clean, Old-fashioned Hate week begins: Georgia Tech has a history of knocking off Georgia teams with a shot at the national championsh­ip.

The trouble for Yellow Jackets fans hoping for a most unlikely upset is that they’d have to go back to 1927 to find it.

The Tech-UGA series dates to 1893 and is 113 games old (Georgia’s accounting is 111 games, as it doesn’t count the1943-44 games due to a dispute about players enrolled at Tech as part of training for World War II). For all of its rich, bitter history, though, there isn’t much in the way of stunning upsets by the Jackets.

Were Tech to somehow topple No. 4 UGA on Saturday to conclude coach Geoff Collins’ first season, it could be reasonably described as the Jackets’ biggest upset in the history of the rivalry. And it’s difficult to pick which game it would displace, as none would seem to approach it.

Fo one thing, rarely has

there been such a disparity between the two teams.

At 10-1, Georgia has seven more wins than Tech, which is 3-8. In the series, only twice have the Bulldogs owned a greater margin in wins going into the game. That was in 1980 and 1981, when UGA was at its peak with Herschel Walker and the Jackets were in coach Bill Curry’s first two seasons. The Bulldogs won both, going on to win the national championsh­ip in 1980 at 12-0 and finishing sixth nationally in 1981 at 10-2.

Also, it has invariably required an accomplish­ed Tech team to beat Georgia, which controls the series at 67-41-5.

Tech has only twice beaten Georgia when it had a losing record going into the game: 1935 and 1969, when the Jackets were 4-5 and 3-6, respective­ly, before facing UGA. They beat Bulldogs teams that finished 6-4 and 5-5-1, respective­ly. The 1969 team, coach Bud Carson’s third, was probably the poorest team to beat the Bulldogs. Those Jackets had lost six of their previous seven before upending the Bulldogs 6-0.

This will be the 38th time since the advent of the weekly Associated Press poll in 1936 that Georgia will enter the game ranked. In the previous 37, Tech is 6-31. In each of the six wins, the Jackets were also ranked — 1998-2000, 2008, 2014. That is to say, Tech has never defeated Georgia when Tech was not ranked and the Bulldogs were, as is the case this year.

Oddsmakers set Tech as a 29-point underdog, which may be a high for the series. Tech was a 23-point underdog in 1981, when the Jackets were 1-9 going into the game and the Bulldogs were 9-1 and No. 2 in the country. The gambling website covers. com has a database of point spreads dating to 1985, and Tech’s biggest upset from a point-spread perspectiv­e in that span was in 2014, when the No. 17 Jackets beat the No. 9 Bulldogs in the “Kick and the Pick” overtime win at Sanford Stadium as 10.5point underdogs. Given that team was probably coach Paul Johnson’s finest and went on to win the Orange Bowl, the game was hardly an upset at all.

Probably the most historic upset for Tech was its 12-0 win over the Bulldogs in 1927 at Grant Field, which dashed the perfect-season hopes of Georgia’s “Dream and Wonder” team.

With four games remaining, coach William Alexander set aside his first string to practice against a scout team running Georgia’s plays while backups won the next three games. When the two met on a rain-soaked field, the Golden Tornado, as the team was known then, took down a team that had won six games by shutout and had beaten mighty Yale on the road. The loss dropped the Bulldogs to 9-1 and deprived them of the chance to play in the Rose Bowl and be declared national champions.

“Dress Her in White and Gold,” a history of the institute published in 1969, said “(Alexander) spent an entire season preparing for one afternoon and neither the mud nor a great Georgia football team could deprive him of the game he wanted above all others in his career.” That victorious Tech team, though, was no slouch — it finished 8-1-1 and won the Southern Conference championsh­ip. It won the national championsh­ip the next season, and both Alexander and center Peter Pund are College Football Hall of Fame inductees.

Placing a potential upset into historical context doesn’t address Saturday’s mismatch on paper.

The Jackets will rely on, among other things, walkons at center and defensive tackle, a beaten-up defense that has allowed 400-plus yards in its past three games and an offense that has yet to crack 30 points. They’ll face a team bidding for a spot in the College Football Playoff that is ranked fifth nationally in total defense, second in scoring defense and will endeavor to punish Tech with the largest offensive line in school history.

ESPN’s metrics give the Jackets a 2.1% chance of winning Saturday. Undoubtedl­y, though, the Jackets will be unbowed. And, the most hopeful of Tech fans will trust, there’s a first time for everything.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? The Jackets were 10.5-point underdogs in 2014 when Paul Johnson’s team beat UGA 30-24 in OT.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM The Jackets were 10.5-point underdogs in 2014 when Paul Johnson’s team beat UGA 30-24 in OT.

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