The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ball security foremost among A-backs’ focus

Avoiding fumbles is the key to Yellow Jackets’ success on offense.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

At practice, Georgia Tech A-backs coach Lamar Owens trusts a couple of tools to help teach his players to clutch dearly to the ball.

One is the Fumble Pro, a football connected by a rope to a metal handle. As players carry the ball in the preferred “high and tight” style, Owens tugs on the handle to try to pull it out.

Another is a football covered by a synthetic sleeve that makes it more difficult to grip. Players carry the ball while the other A-backs take whacks at it to try to dislodge it. Even with an inexperien­ced group under his tutelage, Owens is counting on the lessons to pay dividends.

“To this offense, I would think it means everything for us to take care of the ball,” Owens said.

In the Yellow Jackets’ 2014 season, it undoubtedl­y did.

Tech Alcorn State at Georgia Tech, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, FSSO, 680, 93.7

Clemson looking to ‘take that next step,’

are they top-shelf.

They ascended to that exalted tier last year. On Thursday night against Alcorn State, they’ll take the first step in the attempt to stay there. The history cited above tells us it won’t be easy, and if you’re not one for numerical precedent, there’s the expert testimony of Dave Braine.

On Nov. 15, 2005, Braine — once a football coach and then the Jackets’ athletic director — said: “Georgia Tech can win nine or 10 games (in a season), but they will never do it consistent­ly.” Given that he spoke those words at a press conference announcing a contract extension for coach Chan Gailey, this struck many as a concession speech.

Harrumphed Taz Anderson, the Atlanta entreprene­ur who was a captain under Dodd: “I’m disappoint­ed Georgia Tech would expect mediocrity in anything. We certainly don’t teach it in architectu­re or chemistry or engineerin­g. It’s kind of hard to build half a bridge.”

Being oddly timed, however, didn’t render Braine’s words false. In its history, Tech has had nine 10-win seasons (two since Braine’s proclamati­on); Mark Richt has had nine in 14 seasons at Georgia. It was that inherent imbalance that Braine referenced when he called Tech the third-toughest job — after Army and Notre Dame — in the nation.

Over the final four games off the 2014 season, Tech played as well as it has at any time — here we include the 1990 national championsh­ip run under Bobby Ross — since Dodd. The Jackets flattened Clemson. They beat Georgia in Athens. They came within two points of then-undefeated Florida State on a neutral field. They trampled Mississipp­i State. Were you a Tech fan, you might well have thought, “This is as good as it gets.”

There’s a chance it was. Fueled by talent inherited from Gailey, Paul Johnson’s second Tech team went 11-3 and won the 2009 ACC title. With most of the stars gone to the NFL, his third Tech team went 6-7. Asked Monday if he felt these Jackets were more apt to sustain success, Johnson said: “I don’t know that there’s a whole lot of difference. Hopefully our quarterbac­k won’t break his arm in the sixth game, which happened in 2010.”

Actually, Joshua Nesbitt’s injury was suffered in the ninth game, by which time the Jackets had already lost to Kansas (yikes), North Carolina State and Clemson. But Johnson’s greater point holds: In 2010, Tech could go only as far as its quarterbac­k could lift them; in 2015, the same figures to be true.

Johnson: “You can’t control all those factors (meaning inju- ries) ... I don’t know that you ever get into — anywhere, really — where it’s just a reload, where you’ve got players falling out of the windows and as soon as one guy goes, there are five more All-Americans ready to step in.”

Maybe at Alabama it works that way. Maybe at Ohio State, at least with quarterbac­ks. Not at Georgia Tech. In February, Tech compiled its highest-rated signing class, as adjudged by Rivals, under Johnson. His best ranked 39th nationally, eighth among ACC teams. There’s a reason a former AD called this the third-toughest job in college coaching, and that reason has a name — calculus.

Georgia Tech got really good last season because of the galvanizin­g powers of quarterbac­k Justin Thomas. He’s back. Most every other player who touched the ball is gone. He’d better not break anything in the sixth game. Or the ninth game. Or any game.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? A-backs coach Lamar Owens said “it means everything for us to take care of the ball.” Tech, formerly fumble-prone, cut its total down to 20 last year.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM A-backs coach Lamar Owens said “it means everything for us to take care of the ball.” Tech, formerly fumble-prone, cut its total down to 20 last year.
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