Rome wasn't built in a day

Remember the last 4 seasons when we were literally UNWATCHABLE.

At least we have an exciting new offense that actually friggin’ works.

I’ll take it with the understanding that something must be done on defense.

Very surprised Thacker was retained last year. That’s okay…we can remedy that no problemo.
 
Five things learned from Georgia Tech’s loss at No. 17 Ole Miss
Georgia Tech quarterback Haynes King throws a pass against Mississippi during the second half an NCAA college football game in Oxford, Miss., Saturday, Sept. 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Thomas Graning)

Caption
Credit: AP
GEORGIA TECH
By Chad Bishop
4 hours ago

OXFORD, Miss. – Georgia Tech fell to 1-2 on the season after a 48-23 loss at No. 17 Ole Miss on Saturday, a loss in which the Yellow Jackets gave up 34 points in the second half.
Tech trailed 24-17 with 10:31 to play before getting outscored 24-6 the remainder of the way. The Rebels (3-0) totaled 550 yards of offense, rushed for 299 yards and averaged nearly 10 yards per play.

The Jackets now turn their attention to a trip to Wake Forest (3-0) next week. But before then, here are five things we learned from Tech’s tough night inside Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

There are still second half issues
For the second time this season, Tech let opportunity slip by the wayside while its defense faltered in the second half.

Ole Miss scored on 6 of 7 possessions over the final 30 minutes and five of those drives went for touchdowns. The Rebels had 341 yards of offense and gained 13.6 yards per play over 25 offensive snaps in the second half.

“They had a good game plan against what we had going on,” Tech safety LaMiles Brooks said. “They made plays when plays were needed. We’ll get back to the lab and try to prevent that next week.”
On Sept. 1, Tech opened the season with a 39-34 defeat to Louisville. The Cardinals outscored Tech 26-6 in the second half of that game.

Coach Brent Key’s team has now been outscored 64-26 in the second half and 24-7 in the third quarter in its two losses.
“Obviously it’s a disappointing game. Disappointing any time you don’t come out with the outcome that don’t you want, that you worked for,” Key said. “I thought we had a good plan. We had the opportunity to make some plays. When I say make plays, it’s everyone. Whether it’s make a block, make a tackle, make a catch, make a call, everyone’s involved when it comes to that.
“Everyone is involved when you win games, everyone is involved when you lose games. It’s plain and simple the way it is. We got to be able to sustain and continue to play four quarters regardless of what the scoreboard says.”

Singleton singled out
Tech came into the season featuring a deep group of veteran wide receivers. The likelihood of a freshmen rising toward the top of that group was, well, unlikely.
But Eric Singleton Jr. may be beginning to do that after three games. The Alexander High graduate now has 10 receptions for 200 yards and has hauled in three touchdowns for the Jackets. He had a 51-yard catch Saturday at Ole Miss and a 15-yard TD grab in the fourth quarter.
Nate McCollum and E.J Jenkins tied for Tech’s team lead in receiving touchdowns for the entire 2022 season. Each had three, a total Singleton has matched in the first three games of his young career.

King continues to get it done
Tech quarterback Haynes King continued to play at a very high level Saturday.
The sophomore threw for 310 yards and two touchdowns to go along with 42 yards rushing and a score on the ground. King now has 913 passing yards and nine passing touchdowns this season while completing 66.6 percent of his throws.
A late touchdown pass to tight end Avery Boyd on Saturday was King’s sixth different connection for a touchdown throw already this season.
“We got an identity and you’ve got to keep moving forward,” King said about his play and the Jackets’ offense. “We’re explosive, we’re gonna keep calling our stuff, we’re gonna hit some tempo, we’re gonna change it up.
“Gotta run the football, gotta pass the football and move on to the next play. You gotta keep rockin’ and rollin’, you can’t flinch. Just don’t flinch, keep moving and react to what’s going on.”

There are no flags on the field
Key has harped all season on playing disciplined football, which to him means more than a lack of penalties. But Tech played extremely clean in the penalty department Saturday with a flag-free game at Ole Miss.
Tech hadn’t had a penalty-free game since Sept. 3, 2015, against Alcorn State and has now only had eight such games in program history. For the season, the Jackets have only committed five infractions for an average of 1.6 per game.
The team committed 5.8 penalties per game in 2022.

Third down success
Tech hasn’t been great on third downs in 2023, but it hasn’t been terrible, either. And Saturday the Jackets did something they hadn’t done in six years.
The team’s 11 third-down conversions were its most since going 13-for-18 against Tennessee to start the 2017 season. Tech has only had a game with at least 10 third-down conversions twice since that 2017 game.
For the year, the Jackets are 23-for-43 on third down for a conversation rate of 53.4 percent. That’s up nearly 23 percent from a season ago.
 
“If you can’t see the progress then you aren’t watching” … or something to that effect
 
Five things learned from Georgia Tech’s loss at No. 17 Ole Miss
Georgia Tech quarterback Haynes King throws a pass against Mississippi during the second half an NCAA college football game in Oxford, Miss., Saturday, Sept. 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Thomas Graning)

Caption
Credit: AP
GEORGIA TECH
By Chad Bishop
4 hours ago

OXFORD, Miss. – Georgia Tech fell to 1-2 on the season after a 48-23 loss at No. 17 Ole Miss on Saturday, a loss in which the Yellow Jackets gave up 34 points in the second half.
Tech trailed 24-17 with 10:31 to play before getting outscored 24-6 the remainder of the way. The Rebels (3-0) totaled 550 yards of offense, rushed for 299 yards and averaged nearly 10 yards per play.

The Jackets now turn their attention to a trip to Wake Forest (3-0) next week. But before then, here are five things we learned from Tech’s tough night inside Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

There are still second half issues
For the second time this season, Tech let opportunity slip by the wayside while its defense faltered in the second half.

Ole Miss scored on 6 of 7 possessions over the final 30 minutes and five of those drives went for touchdowns. The Rebels had 341 yards of offense and gained 13.6 yards per play over 25 offensive snaps in the second half.

“They had a good game plan against what we had going on,” Tech safety LaMiles Brooks said. “They made plays when plays were needed. We’ll get back to the lab and try to prevent that next week.”
On Sept. 1, Tech opened the season with a 39-34 defeat to Louisville. The Cardinals outscored Tech 26-6 in the second half of that game.

Coach Brent Key’s team has now been outscored 64-26 in the second half and 24-7 in the third quarter in its two losses.
“Obviously it’s a disappointing game. Disappointing any time you don’t come out with the outcome that don’t you want, that you worked for,” Key said. “I thought we had a good plan. We had the opportunity to make some plays. When I say make plays, it’s everyone. Whether it’s make a block, make a tackle, make a catch, make a call, everyone’s involved when it comes to that.
“Everyone is involved when you win games, everyone is involved when you lose games. It’s plain and simple the way it is. We got to be able to sustain and continue to play four quarters regardless of what the scoreboard says.”

Singleton singled out
Tech came into the season featuring a deep group of veteran wide receivers. The likelihood of a freshmen rising toward the top of that group was, well, unlikely.
But Eric Singleton Jr. may be beginning to do that after three games. The Alexander High graduate now has 10 receptions for 200 yards and has hauled in three touchdowns for the Jackets. He had a 51-yard catch Saturday at Ole Miss and a 15-yard TD grab in the fourth quarter.
Nate McCollum and E.J Jenkins tied for Tech’s team lead in receiving touchdowns for the entire 2022 season. Each had three, a total Singleton has matched in the first three games of his young career.

King continues to get it done
Tech quarterback Haynes King continued to play at a very high level Saturday.
The sophomore threw for 310 yards and two touchdowns to go along with 42 yards rushing and a score on the ground. King now has 913 passing yards and nine passing touchdowns this season while completing 66.6 percent of his throws.
A late touchdown pass to tight end Avery Boyd on Saturday was King’s sixth different connection for a touchdown throw already this season.
“We got an identity and you’ve got to keep moving forward,” King said about his play and the Jackets’ offense. “We’re explosive, we’re gonna keep calling our stuff, we’re gonna hit some tempo, we’re gonna change it up.
“Gotta run the football, gotta pass the football and move on to the next play. You gotta keep rockin’ and rollin’, you can’t flinch. Just don’t flinch, keep moving and react to what’s going on.”

There are no flags on the field
Key has harped all season on playing disciplined football, which to him means more than a lack of penalties. But Tech played extremely clean in the penalty department Saturday with a flag-free game at Ole Miss.
Tech hadn’t had a penalty-free game since Sept. 3, 2015, against Alcorn State and has now only had eight such games in program history. For the season, the Jackets have only committed five infractions for an average of 1.6 per game.
The team committed 5.8 penalties per game in 2022.

Third down success
Tech hasn’t been great on third downs in 2023, but it hasn’t been terrible, either. And Saturday the Jackets did something they hadn’t done in six years.
The team’s 11 third-down conversions were its most since going 13-for-18 against Tennessee to start the 2017 season. Tech has only had a game with at least 10 third-down conversions twice since that 2017 game.
For the year, the Jackets are 23-for-43 on third down for a conversation rate of 53.4 percent. That’s up nearly 23 percent from a season ago.
I could have saved him a lot of time.
offense = better
Special teams = same
Defense = worse
 
More excuses but ok.

You gave an example that's a complete anomaly in college football and are framing it as if it's a normal expectation. Surely on some level you have to realize how absurd that is.
 
We were the 85th-ranked D last year. We do not have the coaching to have a good defense. Rebuilding implies a multi-year process, which is a loser mentality excuse in this era. The Clown's go-to excuse in order to normalize losing to fans like you.
We had the 85th best defense and lost our 6 best players to draft or transfer. We were always going to suck. Upgrade it all.
 

This. I wonder how well our GT lobbyists could have done in the UGag legislature. Lol
Well it didn't matter. Read the article. The chancellor of the university changed it. And they were going to do it anyway.....it didn't matter what coach they hired.
 
It would be nice to have a big bruiser of an RB to run up the middle or off tackle, which Buster seems determined to do in spite of the fact that we can't do it.

Yes, it would always be good to have a Laskey or Dwyer. But I wasn’t too bothered by a handful of stuffed runs up the gut. I was very impressed by Hayes’ ability to cut and find a crease. Cooley wasn’t as impressive as he was against Louisville. But we seemed to get at least a couple of positive yards more often than not. I wasn’t dissatisfied with the running game.

JRjr
 
The toss plays to our running backs were awful

The first one was bad because King hesitated. The second one was ok, but either we had s missed block or Ole Miss read it correctly. I think that one was a 1 yard gain.
 
Yes, it would always be good to have a Laskey or Dwyer. But I wasn’t too bothered by a handful of stuffed runs up the gut. I was very impressed by Hayes’ ability to cut and find a crease. Cooley wasn’t as impressive as he was against Louisville. But we seemed to get at least a couple of positive yards more often than not. I wasn’t dissatisfied with the running game.

JRjr
Averaged less than 4.0 ypc in total and nobody averaged better than 3.9 ypc individually.
Run game had its moments but numbers like those aren't very reassuring.
The better number is giving up only two sacks in 41 pass attempts (that doesn't include dropbacks that turned into scrambles). They did have seven QB hurries.
 
Well it didn't matter. Read the article. The chancellor of the university changed it. And they were going to do it anyway.....it didn't matter what coach they hired.

"It's just based upon the degrees we offer," he said in a press conference back in October. "We do not have physical education here, and we do not have general education, and to be honest, that's not going to change."

CU’s chancellor did an about face on transfer rules. He effectively created new degree programs. There’s zero chance he did that without talking to the people who allocate funds to to the state’s universities.

 
Chase Lane and Singleton appear to be our best WRs. Haynes King is a decent QB and a huge improvement over what we had in past years. Our OL and DL both need improvement.
 
"It's just based upon the degrees we offer," he said in a press conference back in October. "We do not have physical education here, and we do not have general education, and to be honest, that's not going to change."

CU’s chancellor did an about face on transfer rules. He effectively created new degree programs. There’s zero chance he did that without talking to the people who allocate funds to to the state’s universities.


So what you are saying is the legislature didn't pass any new laws.......as has been the talking point here
 
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