The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GSU coach endorses coordinato­r choice

Elliott offers high praise for Woody’s defensive schemes.

- By Ken Sugiura

From 2001-09, Georgia State coach Shawn Elliott was an offensive line coach at Appalachia­n State. At the same time, Nate Woody was defensive coordinato­r at Wofford. Their Southern Conference matchups gave Elliott enough of a dosage of Woody and his defensive schemes that he decided, should he ever become a head coach, he’d like to have him on his side instead of facing him.

“When I was thinking of getting into this head coaching business, Nate was probably one of the first defensive coordinato­rs I reached out to a long time ago, even before the Georgia State deal,” Elliott said.

Woody won’t be joining Elliott’s staff, but they’ll now be in the same city. Woody, who recently completed his fifth season as Appalachia­n State defensive coordinato­r, is expected to be named Georgia Tech’s new defensive coordinato­r, pending a background check. The official announceme­nt likely won’t be made until January, as the campus is closed this week.

“I don’t think there’s any question he’ll go in there and be successful,” Elliott said.

Elliott provided insight into how Woody has made the Mountainee­rs one of the more effective defenses in FBS, one that has finished in the top 25 nationally in scoring defense, total defense and intercepti­ons the past three seasons.

“He has a unique scheme, first of all,” Elliott said. “He’s a very intelligen­t football coach. He studies the game like a defensive coordinato­r should and really just has the knowledge of the Xs and Os part to be really successful, and I don’t feel like he’s ever going to come across anything he hasn’t covered from a situation standpoint or anything.”

Woody’s 3-4 defense is different from others in the types of players he uses, according to Elliott.

“What he does really well is, I think he can take players that a lot of coaches don’t see as interior defensive linemen and turn them into playmakers — fast, quick-twitch guys that can really put pressure in the run game and pressure the quarterbac­k,” Elliott said.

That would bode well for Tech, which typically can’t sign the mammoth defensive tackles who can hold up double teams and allow linebacker­s to run free to make plays. Woody’s philosophy for his three down linemen isn’t for them to read and react or hold the point, but to attack.

“If you look at his games from this past year and the year previous, they’re not supposed to just keep guys off linebacker­s,” Elliott said. “They’re a force to be reckoned with.”

When Appalachia­n State faced Georgia State in a Sun Belt Conference matchup this November, the Panthers were limited to 292 yards on 61 plays, a 4.8 yards-per-play average, in a 31-10 win for the Mountainee­rs at Georgia State Stadium.

It was the second fewest yards Georgia State gained in a game this season.

“I thought their front was probably the best we had seen, and that’s going back to the Penn State game,” Elliott said. “Oh, yeah. Without a doubt.

“They just had great football players and players that loved it. They weren’t the biggest guys. They knew how to play the game, and he put them in position to make plays.”

Elliott further called Woody a good communicat­or and “just a good overall person.”

He also praised Woody’s ability to pick up on tendencies and get inside the minds of the opposing offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­k.

“He just studies it so well,” Elliott said.

Elliott has also seen Woody develop his scheme. Previously, Elliott said, Woody preferred zone coverage in the passing game but has shifted more to man-to-man coverage in recent years. As a result, Appalachia­n State has intercepte­d 56 passes in past three seasons, the second most in FBS in that span, according to the school.

“It makes it even more difficult, adding more pressure packages,” Elliott said. “It’s certainly going to be based off personnel he has, whether he can match up. I would imagine over there at Georgia Tech, he’s going to have some athletes.”

 ?? MICHAEL CHANG / GETTY IMAGES ?? Appalachia­n State’s Nate Woody (right) is officially expected to be named Tech’s defensive coordinato­r when the campus reopens next month.
MICHAEL CHANG / GETTY IMAGES Appalachia­n State’s Nate Woody (right) is officially expected to be named Tech’s defensive coordinato­r when the campus reopens next month.

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