The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Graham still learning on the job as Tech QB

Coach says he got better throughout game vs. Tar Heels.

- By Matt Winkeljohn

James Graham wasn’t perfect in his first start at quarterbac­k for Georgia Tech, yet he trended upward as time went on Saturday, and the redshirt freshman appears to be in position to start again when the Yellow Jackets play Saturday at Duke.

Tech coaches said he’s improving, and that may mean that QB Tobias Oli- ver will play more at wide receiver, as he did in the 38-22 loss to North Carolina, when he caught a 9-yard pass from Graham.

“I think he just settled into the game,” quarterbac­ks coach/offensive coordinato­r Dave Patenaude said of Graham. “When you’re a first-time starter and you have the week of preparatio­n and all eyes are on you and everybody is counting on you to do the things you do,

I think there’s some inherent pressure.”

Graham overthrew a few receivers last game, sometimes when they had no defenders particular­ly nearby. “He got those kind of first-drive jitters out of the way,” Patenaude said. “He settled in and played fairly well.”

The Jackets started slowly against the Tar Heels and trailed 17-0 at halftime before scoring TDs on three of seven second-half possession­s. Twice Graham threw TD passes, connecting with Malachi Carter from 28 yards in the third quarter and Ahmar- ean Brown from 32 in the fourth. He completed 11 of 24 passes for 171 yards, the two scores, and was intercepte­d twice while running a teamhigh 13 times for 48 yards.

“You could see James Graham get better throughout the course of the game,” coach Geoff Collins said.

Tech (1-4, 0-2 ACC) has deployed three different starting QBs, beginning with Tobias Oliver at Clemson, Lucas Johnson for two games, Oliver again and then Graham. They’ve all played in each game for which they were healthy. Johnson has missed the past two with an upper-body-injury, and Graham missed action in September with a foot injury.

Graham came from Fitzgerald High School as a dazzling athlete and he played in three games as a freshman. He, like the entire Tech offense, is transition­ing from a pure option offense to what may one day be an NFL-style attack. There’s evidence that he’s growing in his role.

While he was sacked twice by the Tar Heels, he may have avoided other sacks through attention to detail and by shortening his drop- backs on passing plays. “We talked about he was dropping too deep in the pocket, and kind of putting the tackles at risk. He fixed that com- pletely,” Patenaude said. “Part of the reason why he was standing in there was because he took the coaching and said, ‘I can’t be that deep; I’m going to hurt the protection,’ and he knew it.”

Oliver’s role at wide receiver figures to grow at Duke (3-2, 1-1) as coaches acknowledg­e his skills as a ball carrier. He’s one of seven FBS players who this season have two kickoff returns for 40 or more yards, and he’s clearly electric with the ball in his hands.

“A b solutely, in every phase,” Collins said. “He had two kickoff returns on Saturday, and people are having to be strategic in how they kick to him. We’re constantly being creative with him because he’s a playmaker, he’s a competitor ... when you have someone with a skill set like that, we want to showcase him for the betterment of the team.”

Graham isn’t the only one adjusting. When the Jackets want to pass the ball, he and center William Lay III, a sophomore walk-on who is filling in for injured senior Kenny Cooper, tag team when calling out pass prote c ti o ns for the line based on what they see in the opposing lineup. That also is an adjustment for Patenaude and offensive line coach Brent Key. “We actually had a long conversati­on about it today in practice because we got a look that we hadn’t seen, and we called it one thing and it wasn’t good communicat­ion,” Patenaude said. “The great thing with Will Lay is he’s a really, really smart guy, so from his understand­ing of protection­s and fronts, he does a lot of it.

“My background is that the quarterbac­k does it all. But when you have a young guy that’s kind of still figuring it out, he needs to have a little bit of help from the center. And in Brent’s system in the past, the center always called it, so it’s kind of been a combinatio­n of both.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JOHN AMIS ?? Tech quarterbac­k James Graham passes under pressure vs. North Carolina on Saturday in Atlanta.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JOHN AMIS Tech quarterbac­k James Graham passes under pressure vs. North Carolina on Saturday in Atlanta.

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