The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

For jackets, it's all about the run game

In 49-28 beatdown of Hokies, Tech ran 78 times, tried only one pass.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

Maybe the run that best defined Georgia Tech’s night against Virginia Tech arrived midway through the third quarter.

It was second-and-6 at the Yellow Jackets’ 40-yard line. Ahead 35-21, the Jackets were trying to apply a knockout blow.

Quarterbac­k Tobias Oliver pulled the ball out of a mesh with B-back Jordan Mason, tucked the ball and followed A-back Nathan Cottrell through a hole on the right side of the line. Oliver squirted through traffic and, six yards downfield, spun out of a tackle attempt by defensive back Chamarri Conner, slipped through the grasp of lineman Emmanuel Belmar and, stum-

bling, was finally brought down with a walloping hit from defensive back Jovonn Quillen, for a 16-yard gain.

The play, which continued a drive that resulted in a touchdown for a 42-21 lead in an eventual 49-28 victory, had touches of the punishment that the Jackets brought to bear upon Virginia Tech in Lane Stadium. Powerful blocking at the line of scrimmage, eager attempts to clear a path by the Jackets’ running backs and the willful running of Oliver. It’s how Georgia Tech won a critical game, scoring more points on Virginia Tech in Lane Stadium than any Hokies opponent since 1974.

“I thought the offensive line fired off the ball really well,” said former Tech AllACC center Sean Bedford, now the Jackets’ radio analyst. “I thought they won the line of scrimmage, and anytime you do that and you can limit the other teams’ effectiven­ess on third down, you’re probably going to win the game. I thought Tobias, just navigating the offense and controllin­g it as well as he did, I thought that was incredibly impressive for somebody making his first start. It really speaks for itself.”

The remarkable stat out of the box score — that the Jackets attempted only one pass all night and gained all 465 yards on the ground — is staggering. As Tech goes forward this week into its matchup at North Carolina on Saturday, it is worth another look back at how dominant the Jackets were on the ground against Virginia Tech.

Of Tech’s 78 run plays, only four were either no-gain or negative-yardage plays. Of those four, one was caused by a bad pitch by Oliver, and another was a sack in which he ran out of bounds. The Jackets benefited from excellent blocking from the line.

“I was just blown away by how well Tech played (Thursday),” Bedford said.

In the first half, on 41 run plays, Tech runners encountere­d their first contact after the line of scrimmage 32 times. That included the fifth possession, when the Jackets drove 72 yards in nine plays on a diet of handoffs to the B-backs and quarterbac­k keepers.

There was little pretense about the Jackets’ intentions. Eight of the nine plays were run out of the “tight” formation in which the wide receivers lined up snug against the offensive tackles on the line of scrimmage. Still, on that drive, Tech ball carriers encountere­d their first contact after crossing the line of scrimmage all nine plays. On seven of the nine, it was at least four yards past the line.

“They had a wrinkle that we had never seen before,” Virginia Tech defensive tackle Ricky Walker said after the game. “Every year we play Tech, there’s a new play that we have never seen, and it seemed like we couldn’t stop it.”

Coach Paul Johnson estimated there were perhaps three or four called passes in the game, only one of which actually resulted in a pass.

“We just never really had to throw it,” Johnson said Sunday. “I think we could have thrown play action if we wanted to, but there was no reason. We didn’t want to take a chance in getting behind on down and distance because we were churning out a lot of 5-, 6-, 7-yard plays. When they did tackle you for two or three, you could come back and get it. There was no use to take a risk taking a sack or throwing an incompleti­on when you could run the ball as well as you could. Plus I was trying to run the clock and keep their offense off the field.”

Johnson’s offense is heavily run-oriented — typically 80/20 run/pass — but the run orientatio­n against the Hokies was heavy even for his standards with 78 runs and one pass attempt. Prior to this season, the fewest passes that the Jackets attempted in a game in Johnson’s tenure was four, against North Carolina in 2010 and Maryland in 2012, both wins.

Tech has now thrown five or fewer passes in three games this season: Alcorn State (five), Louisville (two) and Virginia Tech.

 ?? MICHAEL SHROYER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Georgia Tech quarterbac­k Tobias Oliver avoids a tackle from Virginia Tech lineman Emmanuel Belmar on Thursday during the Yellow JacketsHok­ies game.
MICHAEL SHROYER / GETTY IMAGES Georgia Tech quarterbac­k Tobias Oliver avoids a tackle from Virginia Tech lineman Emmanuel Belmar on Thursday during the Yellow JacketsHok­ies game.
 ?? MICHAEL SHROYER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Georgia Tech quarterbac­k Tobias Oliver thanks the visiting fans Thursday night after his team’s victory against host Virginia Tech at Lane Stadium in Blacksburg, Va.
MICHAEL SHROYER / GETTY IMAGES Georgia Tech quarterbac­k Tobias Oliver thanks the visiting fans Thursday night after his team’s victory against host Virginia Tech at Lane Stadium in Blacksburg, Va.

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