The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Loss convinces AD ‘future is bright’

Stansbury believes program is headed in right direction.

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

When Georgia Tech AD Todd Stansbury looks back at the 2020 football season, he focuses on one game in particular. If you’re guessing the 73-7 loss to Clemson, please consider a second guess.

But it wasn’t one of the Yellow Jackets’ three wins, either. Instead, it was Tech’s 23-13 loss at N.C. State on Dec. 5. That was a game in which the Jackets were without 10 “Above the Line” players, including running back Jahmyr Gibbs and three top defensive ends. Stansbury said it wasn’t certain the game would even be played until about noon that day, hours ahead of the 4 p.m. kickoff.

“I mean, it was just crazy,” Stansbury told the AJC in a recent interview.

Despite the obstacles, the Jackets outgained the Wolfpack 412-397. The two totals were above Tech’s total offense average for the season (389.9) and well below its average for total defense (459.3).

Tech was done in by 12 penalties (a persistent problem last season) and backto-back possession­s in the second quarter in which it was stopped on fourth down inside Wolfpack territory. Despite that, the Jackets were down seven points in the fourth quarter, with one possession in the quarter for a chance to tie, to a team that finished 8-4.

“Literally, we went toe to toe with them, late in the season,” Stansbury said.

The Jackets have plenty of areas to address, starting with a defense that gave up 36.8 points per game, the highest average in the team’s modern era. And someone who found a different game to be representa­tive of the season — the 48-27 loss at Boston College, for example — might reach a different conclusion.

However, the fight the Jackets put on display at Carter-finley Stadium and the relatively close outcome helped inform Stansbury’s optimism about the team’s direction with coach Geoff Collins, who will convene his third spring practice March 23.

“I think we’re a lot closer than many would have anticipate­d,” Stansbury said.

As Tech fans hope for (or wonder about) the rise of a team 6-16 in Collins’ first two seasons, Stansbury sees the team being on track, and not only for what happened in Raleigh, N.C., on Dec. 5. The Jackets return 19 players who started at least four games in 2020, for example.

“Seeing the young guys perform the way they did (was encouragin­g),” he said. “And, of course (quarterbac­k Jeff ) Sims and Jahmyr are kind of a window into the future. So I saw a lot of good things out there that I think we’re going to build on, and so I think the future is bright.”

Stansbury praised Collins for the culture and rapport he has created with players. Stansbury said it was “readily apparent” to him Collins has earned players’ trust, evident in their adherence to COVID-19 protocols and their effort throughout the season in a highly unusual year.

“Even when the postseason wasn’t really in the cards, they still just kept on playing,” Stansbury said. “That’s why I think that N.C. State game, really, I think said a lot about this team in general.”

One way Collins has created this buy-in, Stansbury said, has been by his staying in the present and not playing for the future.

“And he was focused on that from Day 1,” Stansbury said. “Even when you look at last year (2019), those seniors, he made sure they knew that they were the ones setting the tone, that they were leading the team.”

 ?? ETHAN HYMAN/THE NEWS & OBSERVER VIA AP ?? Tech QB Jeff Sims escapes the tackle attempt of N.C. State linebacker Payton Wilson during the Jackets’ 23-13 loss Dec. 5. Despite losing, Jackets AD Todd Stansbury came away convinced the program is headed for better days.
ETHAN HYMAN/THE NEWS & OBSERVER VIA AP Tech QB Jeff Sims escapes the tackle attempt of N.C. State linebacker Payton Wilson during the Jackets’ 23-13 loss Dec. 5. Despite losing, Jackets AD Todd Stansbury came away convinced the program is headed for better days.

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