The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cunningham

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were going to blow out Northern Illinois. Man, was I wrong.

Three days later, Collins, the good salesman, didn’t seem interested in making his pitch directly to Tech’s supporters. The question: What would Collins say to fans unhappy about Saturday’s home loss to Northern Illinois and the general direction of the program? Collins paused for about 12 seconds, fixing his glare on the questioner, before answering:

“I’ve addressed how much confidence I have in this team, these coaches. I’m excited for Saturday (vs. Kennesaw State). Lessons learned from the game, so we can apply (them), and just taking the next step every single week in the program to get better.”

Ultimately, it doesn’t matter much what Collins says publicly. It’s results, not talk, that will convince outsiders that Collins has the Jackets on the right path. There are good reasons to be pessimisti­c about their fortunes.

The season-opening loss deflated the optimism accumulate­d during the summer. The Jackets may not be favored in another game after Saturday. But the reason I can’t write off the season, or Collins’ ability as Tech coach, is that his Jackets have won regularly when they are expected to lose.

According to the Odds Shark

database, Tech has won nine times as the betting underdog since 2016. Collins owns five of those victories. He did it with a roster still making the painful transition from triple-option offense and afterthoug­ht defense. Now Tech has better players, and the option is further behind.

Collins’ Jackets have punched above their weight plenty of times. Why can’t they surprise us again, in a good way? They’ll get plenty of chances to do it.

The Jackets are at Clemson on Sept. 18, followed by North Carolina at Mercedes-benz Stadium. They close the season at Notre Dame and vs. Georgia. And Tech isn’t built to beat those teams. Upsets likely will

have to come against the rest of the schedule.

Pitt, Virginia Tech and Boston College are set to come to Bobby Dodd Stadium. Tech is at Duke, Virginia and Miami. Let’s assume the Jackets beat Kennesaw State and don’t shock any heavyweigh­t opponents. Then they’d need to win half of the other six games to improve on their win total from 2019 and ’20.

I’m not going to overreact to the loss to Northern Illinois, even as I concede that it’s not the first time the Jackets fell on their face with Collins as coach. The problem for his Jackets is losing when they are expected to win big.

Tech was favored by 19 points over Northern Illinois.

The Jackets were favored by

at least that many points in 30 games since 1998. They lost three times. Collins owns two of them. Take your pick of which defeat was worse.

The Jackets lost to The Citadel, which plays at the FCS level (betting lines for FBS vs. FCS games are rarely offered, so they don’t reflect a consensus, but obviously Tech should have been heavily favored). Northern Illinois was 0-6 in the Mid-american last season, though that doesn’t necessaril­y mean the Huskies will be bad this season. They made some good plays against Tech.

Tech has been favored in only four games under Collins. It won the first, vs. South Florida, before losing the last three. Maybe the new-era Jackets still are learning how to win when it’s expected.

Said Collins: “There are so many things that you’ve got to address, and you’ve got to build, and you’ve got to experience together. And the last part is finding a way to win.”

That’s the hardest part for Collins. The thing about being a good salesman is that people catch on if claims about the product don’t hold up. There’s a long list of things that Collins and his staff said would be better this season. Most of them looked the same against Northern Illinois.

It was an ugly loss, but, again I go back to Tech’s upset victories with Collins. The best among them: winning as 18-point underdogs at Miami in 2019 and as 13-point ’dogs in Tallahasse­e to begin last season. The Jackets rarely win at either place. Collins scored stirring road victories while outmanned and still moving on from the option.

I noted Tech’s three losses as a huge favorite since 1998. The other defeat, at home to Middle Tennessee State in 2012, is on Paul Johnson’s ledger. By that point Johnson already had a Coastal Division title and had a victory at Georgia and two against Clemson. He’d demonstrat­ed he could win at Tech, so the bad loss could be viewed as a blip.

Collins doesn’t have the same currency here. He has a good track record and a vision to sell.

“Everywhere I have been, everywhere this staff has been, we have built things and found ways to get it done,” Collins said Tuesday. “And that’s what is going to happen (here). However long it takes, it’s going to be different at every place.”

All reasonable observers understood it would take time. Now it’s Year 3. It’s not unreasonab­le for Tech backers to expect the team to handle Northern Illinois at home. Failing to do so means that, to improve their season results, the Jackets will have to beat some teams they aren’t supposed to beat.

Tech has done that plenty with Collins as coach. That’s why I’m still buying his ability to lead Tech, while hoping I don’t later have remorse.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? This wasn’t the “Welcome back to the stands” Yellow Jackets fans imagined as they react to Northern Illinois’ game-winning twopoint conversion Saturday night to beat Georgia Tech at Bobby Dodd Stadium in Atlanta.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM This wasn’t the “Welcome back to the stands” Yellow Jackets fans imagined as they react to Northern Illinois’ game-winning twopoint conversion Saturday night to beat Georgia Tech at Bobby Dodd Stadium in Atlanta.

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