I think we keep Buster at least one more year

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Georgia Tech

North Oconee state title puts Georgia Tech’s Buster Faulkner and son in unique club​

Yellow Jackets offensive coordinator and son make GHSA football history
North Oconee’s quarterback Harrison Faulkner (1) dives through Marist’s defense during the second half of a Class 4A championship game at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium Monday, Dec. 16, 2024. (Photo/Daniel Varnado)

North Oconee’s quarterback Harrison Faulkner (1) dives through Marist’s defense during the second half of a Class 4A championship game at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium Monday, Dec. 16, 2024. (Photo/Daniel Varnado)
By Chad Bishop
1 hour ago
On Dec. 16, from the stands inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Buster Faulkner watched history unfold standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the rest of the North Oconee High School community.
Faulkner, Georgia Tech’s offensive coordinator, has been involved in the game of football, both as a player and coach, nearly his entire life. Nothing, however, prepared him for what he was witnessing that day.
“I’ve been in a lot of big games, coached in a lot of big games,” he told The Atlanta Journal Constitution on Tuesday. “Been a part of state championships and national championships as a player, coached at several different levels. I was nervous and probably as nervous as I’ve ever been watching a football game.
“But, it’s crazy to say, I had no doubt that he could take them down the field and score. I just felt like if they tied it up, all he needed was about a minute and a half.”
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In a 7-7 game between Marist and North Oconee, Faulkner’s son, Harrison Faulkner, led North Oconee onto the field in the fourth quarter of the Class 4A state championship. The Titans went 76 yards in 12 plays while draining more than 5-1/2 minutes off the clock.
With the ball then resting at the Marist 2, Faulkner’s own number was called, and the junior quarterback dove into the end zone with 3:58 on the clock in what would turn out to be the game-winning score.

“I was worried the whole week,” Buster Faulkner said. “Marist is an unbelievable football team. I knew if he had a chance, just had the ball late in the game — as a little kid he’s always come through.”

Said Harrison: “Just a quarterback sneak. We haven’t run it all year. Just bring the tight ends up and pick up a few yards, and if I can get in, I get in.”
Harrison Faulkner completed 16 of 22 passes for 203 yards and one touchdown to go with the game-winning score, a touchdown which gave North Oconee its first state title in school history.
Nearly 30 years ago, Buster Faulkner was in the midst of state championship celebration of his own inside the Big Orange Jungle, the home of the Parkview football team in Lilburn. As a sophomore he had led Parkview to its first state title in school history by defeating Tift County 21-7.
In those days, the GHSA held its semifinals of the state playoffs at the Georgia Dome before returning to campus sites for the title games. Parkview had to come from behind a week earlier to defeat Colquitt County to earn a shot at the state championship.
Faulkner remembers a goal-line stand before halftime in the Tift County game, then a touchdown pass not quite as heroic as his son’s score, but no less impactful.
“I threw a touchdown to Dan Burnett (North Oconee’s current defensive coordinator) on a big post ball,” Faulkner recalled. “That week in practice, I’ll never forget coming off that fake and not throwing the post and throwing a drag across the field. Offensive coordinator Robert Hill stopped practice and said, ‘Listen. This is what’s gonna happen. You’re gonna come off this fake, you’re gonna turn around and throw it as far as you can and Dan Burnett’s gonna catch the touchdown and the place is gonna go crazy.’ And that’s exactly how it happened.”
Buster Faulkner and Harrison Faulkner are thought to be the first father-son duo in GHSA history to lead schools to state championships. Harrison Faulkner is a 6-foot, 180-pound junior who has a handful of scholarship offers to play at the FBS level.
His game-winning drive in the state championship wasn’t even his first of the season. In October, North Oconee beat Eastside thanks to an 80-yard drive in the final three minutes of the fourth quarter that ended with Faulkner’s 3-yard touchdown pass resulting in a 40-35 victory.
“It all starts with Harrison,” North Oconee coach Tyler Aurandt said. “He’s such a competitor and his ability to extend plays and make throws. He’s one of the best that I’ll ever coach.”
With Harrison having already brought home one trophy this month, the Faulkner family turns it attention to Friday’s Birmingham Bowl, where Buster will be looking to help the Yellow Jackets (7-5) beat Vanderbilt (6-6). Buster said the Faulkner family will be in attendance at Protective Stadium to cheer him on, but it was his ability to be present for Harrison’s crowning moment that meant more this month.
And that’s a big reason he has remained a part of the Tech staff the past two seasons, to be able to be with Harrison at Mercedes-Benz Stadium during the postgame celebration to tell his son how much he loved him and how proud he was to call him a champion.
“It’s definitely neat. Not many people can say they’ve been a part of that. I’m just happy for him. This is his moment, this is his time,” Faulkner said. “(When) I took this job, I was very fortunate I didn’t have to move my family. That’s something I told my son a while back, when he got into high school, regardless of the opportunities for me, we were gonna get him through school,” Buster said. “A lot of that is because of the community, because of the football program, because of the coaches. A lot of similarities and a lot of parallels to what I was able to experience in ‘97.”
 
Too bad Harrison or his HS coach knew that a QB sneak that close to the goal line would work, but Buster didn't go to that in the 7th OT against the mutts, which would have won the game.
 
Too bad Harrison or his HS coach knew that a QB sneak that close to the goal line would work, but Buster didn't go to that in the 7th OT against the mutts, which would have won the game.

Only if it worked. I have to believe the coaches aren't dumb and at least considered it -- maybe U[sic]GA's line was just getting too much push at that point in the game?

One and a half yards is a relatively long QB sneak to begin with
 
Only if it worked. I have to believe the coaches aren't dumb and at least considered it -- maybe U[sic]GA's line was just getting too much push at that point in the game?

One and a half yards is a relatively long QB sneak to begin with
All I can say is did the pass work? NOPE
Since Pyron had already been in the game, his portal status was apparently not a factor, so put him in under center, and I guarantee you he scores or hands off to a RB who would have. Why try to gain 1 yard by starting 5+ yards behind the line of scrimmage?
 
All I can say is did the pass work? NOPE
Since Pyron had already been in the game, his portal status was apparently not a factor, so put him in under center, and I guarantee you he scores or hands off to a RB who would have. Why try to gain 1 yard by starting 5+ yards behind the line of scrimmage?

We ran shotgun 99% of the game and the one play Pyron played he rushed for no gain.

I'm not saying it's a bad idea, but to guarantee that it would have worked is a huge reach.
 
I repeat....the pass didn't work.

I understand, but failing on the pass doesn't mean that going under center with a QB who previously failed to gain a single yard on his one rush is guaranteed to have worked.

It could just have easily have caused a false start running from a different formation with a different QB than the rest of the game.
 
many things still piss me off about that game, obviously. But, I just don’t understand how we can’t have any go to plays inside the 5 on 4th and gotta have it. I know we do and we got defended well, sure, but damn. Can’t get 3 yards in 7/8 tries or 1 yard in 1 try? Hard to accept still.
 
I understand, but failing on the pass doesn't mean that going under center with a QB who previously failed to gain a single yard on his one rush is guaranteed to have worked.

It could just have easily have caused a false start running from a different formation with a different QB than the rest of the game.
I only saidPyron, because the mutts wouldn't have been ready for him. King could have done the same. The key is under center, which they have only sparingly used, for unknown reasons, but makes much more sense in a situation like that.
 
Wish we would have run some RPO or designed runs instead of drop backs the whole 2 point shoot out. Or on that 7th OT (or whichever one had the PI) we hit Singleton with a pop pass on the jet sweep instead of trying to run up the gut where UGA had started pretty successfully getting penetration. Hindsight 20/20 and all though. I can’t really fault wanting to keep the ball in King’s hands at that moment in the game. Still hard to swallow outcome regardless.

If we brought Pyron in and it wasn’t a pass (that we’d been setting up all freaking season by having him run it) I would have liked it less.
 
We ran King one time in OT after he basically ran up and down the field on the Dwag defense for chunk play after chunk play. Somehow we decided we had seen enough of that and needed to become a passing team in OT. The one time we ran King the Dwag defense was all over it and stemmed across the DL and the LBs shifted when Singleton went in motion. They knew what was coming and ate it up. One of the few times all game King didn't get at least 3/4 yards on the QB power read.

Will never understand the change in philosophy there.
 
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