The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech to open 2024 season in Ireland vs. Florida State

Jackets returning to Emerald Isle after successful 2016 visit.

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

Georgia Tech is going back to Ireland. After a successful trip to the European nation in 2016, the Yellow Jackets will open their 2024 season against Florida State at Dublin’s Aviva Stadium.

Tech announced the game Wednesday morning, two days ahead of St. Patrick’s Day.

The game will take place Aug. 24, a week before the traditiona­l Labor Day weekend start of the college football season. Tech will become the fourth team to play more than one game in Ireland, following Notre Dame, Navy and Boston College.

While the fact that the Jackets have a player from Ireland on scholarshi­p — punter David Shanahan — distinguis­hes the team, the more than 12,000 Tech fans who traveled to Dublin in support of the team in 2016 likely were more of a factor in the invitation.

Georgia Tech held a news conference in the afternoon that included representa­tion from the Irish government; the Irish consulate in Atlanta; the Atlantic Coast Conference; the presenting sponsor, Irish airline Aer Lingus; as well as Tech president Ángel Cabrera, athletic director J Batt and coach Brent Key.

Batt and other school officials had been working with the ACC, game organizers and Florida State since the fall to pull it together. While Tech will have to give up a home game against a traditiona­l rival, Batt was enthusiast­ic about the opportunit­y to provide players with an unusual cultural experience.

“Pretty awesome opportunit­y for our kids, primarily, but also our fans and alums,” Batt said.

Aer Lingus has put on an annual game in Dublin. This year, Notre Dame will play Navy on Aug. 26.

“The players are really fired up,” Key said. “Announcing it (Wednesday), they were excited. The opportunit­y to go do something different, do something special, and for those guys, to be able to experience something they’ve never done (is important).”

In Tech’s 2016 game, the Jackets rallied in the final minute to beat Boston College 17-14 on a rain-soaked afternoon. It was the first game that Tech had played off American soil. Irish minister for housing, local government and heritage Darragh O’brien, who has been in Georgia this week, said that Tech fans left “a lasting impression” in Dublin.

“I think some of them haven’t come back yet,” he said.

Without Florida State, Tech has six home games in 2024. The Jackets are to play Georgia State (Aug. 31, the week after the game in Ireland), VMI (Sept. 14), Notre Dame (Oct. 19 at Mercedes-benz Stadium), Clemson, Wake Forest and Pitt at home. Playing in “Week Zero” gives the Jackets an unusual benefit for that season. As there will be 14 Saturdays remaining in the regular season in 2024, Tech will have three open dates during the season. Playing ahead of the traditiona­l start of the regular season also likely will give the Jackets (and Seminoles) a larger-than-usual viewing audience.

“I feel really good about our team, and the opportunit­y to play on national TV in front of everybody in Week Zero is huge,” Batt said.

For Shanahan and his family and friends, it surely will be an unforgetta­ble experience. Shanahan grew up playing Gaelic football, rugby and basketball in County Kerry, but became intrigued by college football at the age of 16. Seeking a path to the game, he taught himself to punt and then earned an invitation to an Australian punting academy, which led to his scholarshi­p offer from Tech. The first football game he ever attended also was the first game he ever played in, Tech’s 2021 season opener against Northern Illinois. Shanahan has been Tech’s starting punter for the past two seasons and was the grand marshal of the St. Patrick’s Day parade in Atlanta on Saturday.

When the team was told about the trip Wednesday morning, “We instantly looked at David for his reaction, and he was really speechless because you don’t really get the opportunit­y to go back home a lot and perform on a big stage,” Tech safety Clayton Powell-lee said.

 ?? DANNY KARNIK/GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS ?? Georgia Tech punter David Shanahan, a native of Ireland, will get a chance to play in front of family and friends in the 2024 season opener against Florida State. Shanahan grew up playing Gaelic football, rugby and basketball in County Kerry.
DANNY KARNIK/GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS Georgia Tech punter David Shanahan, a native of Ireland, will get a chance to play in front of family and friends in the 2024 season opener against Florida State. Shanahan grew up playing Gaelic football, rugby and basketball in County Kerry.

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