The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jackets move to 4-2 in ACC

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all and 4-3 in the ACC, reaching .500 for the first time since it was 2-2 and headed for its horrendous loss to Middle Tennessee State.

Improbably, in a season in which the team has played historical­ly ineffectiv­e defense and repeatedly demonstrat­ed a lack of focus and energy, Tech is still in play for a spot in the ACC championsh­ip game. With Miami’s loss to Virginia on Saturday, Tech will go to Charlotte, N.C., if the Jackets beat Duke on Saturday at Bobby Dodd Stadium and the Hurricanes lose to the same Blue Devils a week later.

Tech may yet go if Miami decides to self-impose a postseason ban in a proactive response to forthcomin­g NCAA penalties.

“We’re going in like our head’s on fire because we need this win,” Smith said. “Before the bye week, if someone told me we’d be in this position, I wouldn’t have believed it. This is a great feeling, and we’re going to attack it.”

The 50,000 celebratin­g homecoming at North Carolina may have witnessed the birth of a star celebratin­g a homecoming of his own. Lee, from nearby Durham, took over for starter Tevin Washington in the third series of the game and never gave Johnson a reason to return Washington to the game.

Lee escaped pressure in the pocket, legged out runs for clutch thirddown conversion­s and thwarted the Tar Heels in the air. He ran 23 times for 112 yards, including two touchdowns. He was 6-for-10 passing for 169 yards with one touchdown and an intercepti­on.

“The kid makes plays,” Johnson said.

His playmaking flair and animated style gave the Jackets a lift on a day when the Tar Heels’ offense, ranked No. 16 in the country in scoring and total yards, never seemed to relent.

“Everybody has confidence in Vad,” outside linebacker Brandon Watts said. “Everybody seems to go up to another level when he’s in there.”

Watts was an author of one of the big plays of the game, stopping Tar Heels punter Tommy Hibbard on an ill-advised fake punt attempt from the UNC 25-yard line. On the next play, A-back Robbie Godhigh took a toss from Lee and turned the corner down the left sideline for a 27-yard touchdown that gave Tech a 5136 lead with 6:21 remaining in the third quarter.

It was one of three touchdowns by Godhigh, all scored in the third quarter. He also came down with a 32-yard touchdown pass from Lee on a third-and-14 play in which he outleaped a UNC linebacker for the ball.

“Robbie’s the shortest guy in the nation, but he will jump and make a play,” Lee said. “He always makes plays for us.”

Tech turned another takeaway earlier in the third quarter, an intercepti­on of a screen pass by defensive end Izaan Cross, into a 35-yard field goal by Chris Tanner, a third-stringer and walkon who was attempting his first field goal since high school in 2007.

It was no defensive masterpiec­e. Tech allowed 497 yards of offense, and missed assignment­s and tackles. It was the fifth game this season in which its opponent scored 40 or more points.

“We talked about at halftime, if we could just get a couple of stops, we thought we could win the game,’ Johnson said.

But the Jackets forced seven stops on the Tar Heels’ high-powered offense, not counting the final one-play possession. Five took place in the second half, and Carolina had outscored the opposition 164-51 in the second half before Saturday.

Said Watts, “We just went in at halftime, made some adjustment­s, made minor tweaks. We didn’t do anything special. Everybody just did their assignment, did their job, got to the ball, wrapped up, made tackles, made some plays.”

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