The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

In volleyball, No. 18 Tech drubs UGA

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

Mariana Brambilla may have joined Georgia Tech’s volleyball team from Brazil, but you don’t need to have grown up within state borders to pick up on the importance of the rivalry between Georgia Tech and Georgia.

“It obviously is something really big here, because we want to be the team that can win everything in our state,” Brambilla, Tech’s All-american outside hitter, said in comments recorded by the Tech athletic department. “And also, since freshman year, we learned ‘What is the good word?’”

For Tech students, alumni and fans, the only proper response is, of course, “To hell with Georgia.” The call and response was undoubtedl­y echoing off the walls Saturday night in noisy O’keefe Gymnasium, where the No. 18 Yellow Jackets completed a rigorous nonconfere­nce schedule with a 3-0 win over the Bulldogs before a sell- out crowd of 1,200. It was the first head-to-head contest of the school year in the “Clean Old-fashioned Hate” rivalry, a series The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on will chronicle beyond football, basketball and baseball.

“I think outside the locker room we talk about (how) it’s another match, we’ve got to go one point at a time,” Tech coach Michelle Collier told the AJC. “But definitely inside the locker room, there’s good talks about how much this means to our program, to our school, to everybody that’s connected with it. We know we say it’s just one game, but it’s the game.”

After eking out the first set 25-22, Tech (9-1) rolled through the next two sets 25-17, 25-12 for the win. Bram- billa, a senior, led both teams with 17 kills.

“I was really excited for this game, especially because it’s Georgia,” Brambilla said.

Tech won its fourth match of the past six against Georgia, and 18th of the past 22. Of the sports in which the Jackets and Bulldogs com- pete head to head, volleyball is the one that Tech holds with the firmest grip by far. Given that, Collier said she doesn’t feel added pressure to carry the banner for the athletic department, but she is always happy to contribute a win over the Bulldogs.

“We’re starting the year the right way,” Collier said. “Hopefully everybody else follows suit now.”

After losing to the Bulldogs in Athens in 2019, Tech players had to wait two years for redemption. The 2020 match was not played because both the ACC and SEC adopted conference-only schedules.

“It’s very, very important, and I was just glad we got that one (Saturday),” Collier said.

Georgia (4-7) has lost six of its past seven games as it goes into SEC play.

“I thought the first set was really good volleyball and then, Georgia Tech, it was pretty lopsided from that point,” Bulldogs coach Tom Black said in post-match comments recorded by the UGA athletic department.

For Tech, the win over Georgia is but one of six wins over power conference oppo- nents in non-conference play, most notably No. 20 Penn State. Collier’s team is trying to build off an NCAA Tourna- ment appearance last spring, the team’s first since 2009. ACC play begins this Friday at Wake Forest.

“I think that our team can get so much better; that’s what’s really exciting,” Collier said. “We have won some great matches, we really challenged with our schedule this preseason, but we have yet to see everything that we can do.”

Georgia starts league play Wednesday at South Car- olina.

“We’ve got the first match of conference coming up, and we need to compete better, and we have the poten- tial to do that,” Black said.

 ?? GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS ?? Georgia’s Kayla Rivera challenges Georgia Tech’s Julia Bergmann at the net in the Jackets’ win on Saturday at Tech’s O’keefe Gymnasium.
GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS Georgia’s Kayla Rivera challenges Georgia Tech’s Julia Bergmann at the net in the Jackets’ win on Saturday at Tech’s O’keefe Gymnasium.

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