Fifteen fateful seconds: The Bulldogs look back in anguish

The heat of the moment: Aaron Murray tells Chris Conley he should have dropped the ball. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

Aaron Murray and Chris Conley after the completion that wasn't supposed to be. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

Fifteen seconds left, eight yards from victory. We know how the epic SEC championship game played out – for late tuners-in, Alabama beat Georgia 32-28 on Dec. 1 – but what exactly went into those 15 overstuffed seconds? Why did what happened happen?

We begin at the end, or very near it. (All the voices heard below spoke at a Georgia media session this week in Athens.) An apparent clinching interception by Dee Milliner with 45 seconds remaining was overturned by video review, handing the Bulldogs a glimmer of life that would become a starburst. Quarterback Aaron Murray found tight end Arthur Lynch for 15 yards, then wide receiver Tavarres King for 23, then Lynch again for 26.

In 30 seconds the Bulldogs traveled 64 yards against the nation’s top-ranked defense. A game that had seen five lead changes was eight yards from a sixth.

Murray: “We’d gotten a little break (on the non-interception), and we’ve been a good one-minute team all year. And we about did it again.”

Lynch: “They had to be thinking, ‘It’s over, it’s over,’ (on the apparent interception) and then we hit them with two big plays – Tavarres’ catch where he took a shot and my play. They were on their heels. It was like in a boxing match: You hit them as much as you can.”

King: “It was like a movie … We marched right down the field. We thought we were going to win.”

The Georgia Dome was louder than it has been in its 20 years of operation. Murray could have spiked the ball to stop the clock after the restart and allow his team, which had no timeouts remaining, to collect itself. He looked toward the sideline and, asking for permission, made a spiking gesture. Coach Mark Richt signaled for Murray to run a play instead.

Murray: “I thought we were going to call the spike, but I don’t think it was a bad call at all by them. It was there.  It was open. We liked our matchup … We just wanted to get a quick play into the end zone. It was either going to be a touchdown or an incompletion.”

Lynch: “We’re not in the right situation to spike the ball. With a team like Alabama and a coach like Nick Saban, you don’t want to give him any (extra) chance to prepare.”

Richt: “Part of going no-huddle is when you have the defense on the run you snap the ball again. You don’t need to stop play. Play was stopped because we had a first down. With 15 seconds, strategically if you are able to call a play and it’s incomplete you have time for two more plays. You can run three plays. You want to give yourself as many opportunities as you can. If you clock the ball you probably only get two shots.”

As the Bulldogs were rushing to the line, offensive coordinator Mike Bobo, seated upstairs in the coaches’ booth, ordered a play called “Stout.” Bobo would later tell ESPN’s Mark Schlabach that if Georgia had it to do again, it would have spiked the ball. Richt insisted this week that not spiking the ball was the correct call, and as justification he referenced his teaching.

Near the end of the 2001 season, Richt’s first at Georgia, the Bulldogs faced first-and-goal from the 1 trailing Auburn 24-17 with 16 seconds remaining. Richt, then his own offensive coordinator, called a Jasper Sanks run, which was stuffed. Time expired before Georgia could manage another snap. Richt’s first words at his postgame briefing: “That was a bad one, wasn’t it?”

That offseason, Richt sought out Homer Smith, a renowned offensive coordinator who was seen as a master of clock management. Smith, who died in 2011, wasn’t an advocate of spiking.

Richt: “If we spike it, strategically you give them time to gather up and get their senses and get their calls in … We had that Auburn game years ago where we didn’t manage the clock well, and that offseason we go see Homer Smith … He says clocking the ball is for people who don’t have a plan. If you’re prepared and you’ve moved the chains and the clock is stopped and you’ve got the play that you like, then call it. Because if you call it you have a greater chance of getting three plays compared to clocking it and probably only get two plays … As we’re hustling down to the ball, the play was called. It’s exactly what we would have called if we had spiked it. It was the same call.”

It took Georgia five seconds to snap the ball, surely a couple of beats longer than Homer Smith would have liked. Before the snap, receiver Chris Conley stepped toward Murray, as if seeking clarification. And it was clear a moment after the snap that Georgia hadn’t wrong-footed the Tide. It was also clear that the Bulldogs knew their assignments. Every receiver went where assigned, and each was shadowed. In sum, nobody messed up. In the most frenzied moment of a frenzied game, the nation’s No. 2 and 3 ranked teams showed their class.

“Stout” is a simple play. The Bulldogs dispatched four receivers, with the two wideouts– Malcolm Mitchell on the right and King on the left – running “fade” routes into the end zone. The slot men – Conley on the right, Lynch on the left – ran “speed outs,” which are underneath routes toward the sideline.

Richt: “When a guy runs a ‘fade’ and (another) guy runs a ’speed out,’ if it’s zone coverage cornerbacks are taught not to go to the back of the end zone. They are only going to go so far. If you put a guy in front of him and a guy behind him you put a stretch on him, so you’re trying to throw the ball to what looks like might be the shorter guy, and he freezes and the ball goes over the top. That’s if it’s zone.”

Milliner, an All-American cornerback, took Mitchell man-to-man and appeared to have him blanketed near the front corner of the end zone. Appearances, however, can deceive.

Richt: “To us offensively, there (are) no shutdown corners. There’s no coverage that if the ball is placed properly, the (defender) can win. If the guy does a good job on the jam and doesn’t get beat deep, than he’s more vulnerable to the back-shoulder throw. If he’s lagging for that or trying to be a hero, than he can get run by. The quarterback has to recognize the coverage and throw the ball according to what he sees.”

The best pass Murray throws is the back-shoulder ball, which can seem like an underthrow but isn’t. He used back-shoulder balls to spectacular effect in the comeback victory over Florida in 2011, and it was a back-shoulder ball he loosed on the final play of another furious rally.

Murray: “We throw that all the time. It’s one-on-one. It’s a back-shoulder fade, which we’re great at … It’s definitely one of my favorite throws. Guys have a great understanding of the route.”

Richt: “You throw the ball according to what you see. Murray did right. It was more of a tight coverage. We throw the heck out of that back-shoulder throw … Watch the last two seasons. He’s as good at doing that as anybody.”

The back-shoulder throw calls for a lower trajectory. (The over-the-top fade traces a higher arc.) Murray, who insists he’s 6-foot-1, isn’t the tallest of quarterbacks. This became an issue when linebacker C.J. Mosley, another All-American, blitzed off the right side of Georgia’s line.

There was never a chance he would reach Murray – running back Todd Gurley barred the blitzer’s path – but Mosley did as pass rushers are taught: If you can’t sack the quarterback, get your hands up. Even as he was trying to skirt Gurley, Mosley leaped and swung his left arm.

Murray: “He pretty much stopped his rush. He jumped in the air and got a finger on it. He nicked it.”

Enter Conley, a designated decoy. When Murray delivered, Conley was running toward the sideline.

Conley: “I didn’t see him throw it. I didn’t see it tipped. I just saw it coming down.”

Richt: “You throw it where hopefully we catch it for a touchdown or if it’s incomplete you’ve got two more plays. You don’t want to complete it to anybody in play, but that play is not designed to go to that guy. That guy (Conley) is basically a decoy in zone coverage to try to get the corner to bite the cheese. In man coverage, he’s not in play at all because the ball is going either over the top (on a fade) or a back-shoulder throw.”

Conley: “Initially I couldn’t even see the ball. I saw the quarterback and the offensive linemen looking up, and I reacted.”

Watch the CBS replay, and you’ll see that Murray throws with eight seconds remaining and Conley catches the ball at 0:07. The sophomore receiver, who’s an honor roll student, had less than a second to react to the biggest moment of the biggest Georgia game in 30 years, and it wasn’t a moment anyone could have foreseen.

Conley: “When I saw the ball flipping end over end … you catch it and think about it later.”

Lynch: “Your main objective as a receiver is to catch the ball. For you to process it all – people can say, ‘awareness this’ and ‘awareness that,’ but that had nothing to do with (awareness). He was just trying to make a play.”

King: “Everyone would have caught it. (He pointed to various media members.) You would have caught it, and you would have caught it, and you would have caught it – especially if you’re a receiver.”

Richt: “For every receiver, his reaction would obviously be to catch the ball. A wide receiver catches the ball. That’s his nature.”

At the 5, Conley turned to track the deflected pass. His back was to the end zone, meaning he had no way of knowing what was behind him. As it happened, two defenders were within a yard of him, though cornerback Geno Smith had fallen after bumping Conley on his route.

King: “If (Conley) bats it down and there’s nobody around him, he looks like an idiot. I would have caught it.”

The trouble with catching it was that Conley had to score or time would expire. He actually made a nice grab of the fluttering ball, but he couldn’t turn and try to fight his way to the goal line. He fell without being touched.

The way it ended. (AJC photo by Brant Sanderlin)

Chris Conley catches and falls. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

Conley: “I caught it and lost my footing. You can always blame somebody, but in that moment, in that second … I guess it’s a learning experience.”

Really, though, what’s to learn? That you should ignore every fiber of instinct and every bit of training and NOT catch a ball that falls to you? That any human being should process data faster than an iPhone Siri? Two seconds after he fell to the turf, Conley knew his team would have been better served had he dropped the ball on purpose, but he didn’t have two seconds.

Murray: “With how fast we were going and how everything was happening at once, it’s hard not to catch it.”

The clock hit zero with Georgia five yards short of an SEC championship and a berth against Notre Dame in the BCS title game. The Bulldogs had gone 80 yards in 68 seconds without a timeout against mighty Alabama. They’d needed 85.

Richt: “I think everybody (among Georgia fans) felt like we were there in the game that meant everything. Not many people were in a game like that. There were three teams left (with a chance at the BCS title) and we were one of them. We played a great football team and played a great game. I’d say the same thing I said after the game. I was extremely disappointed in the outcome of the game, but not disappointed one bit in our players and coaches and how we battled.”

Murray: “I can’t sleep at night. I literally replay the entire game every night before I go to bed … It’s a game that will probably haunt me the rest of my life.”

Conley: “The whole Bulldog Nation has been messaging me or finding a way to get in touch with me. I can’t tell you how many people have been congratulating me on the season or telling me it’s not over for me … Some people have sent me Bible verses. I remember the one, ‘Cast your cares upon the Lord.’ (Psalm 55:22.) It helped me realize there was more to life than football, that this was not the biggest thing in life.”

Murray: “Certain songs remind me of the game. It’s like a playlist.”

King: “I’m not fully over it. I’ve still got a bitter taste in my mouth.”

Murray: “I don’t even want to think about how the state of Georgia would have been if we’d have pulled it out. It probably would have been one of the best, if not THE best, wins in Georgia history.”

It would have been, but it wasn’t. And from the moment the classic game ended, we’ve all asked: What happens if Mosley doesn’t tip the pass?

Murray: “Oh, it’s a touchdown. It’s a 50-50 ball, and (Milliner is) facing Malcolm and Malcolm is supposed to go up and catch the ball. It’s not like the guy is facing me where he could have made a play on it. He’d have had to strip it out of Malcolm’s hands. It would have been up to Malcolm to make a play.”

Richt: “It was the play we wanted to call. The problem was that the ball got tipped … You’re talking about one or two digits of a finger. That’s how close a game is sometimes.”

By Mark Bradley

459 comments Add your comment

JB

December 14th, 2012
9:59 am

GT Insider………………Because Bradley can’t come up with anything about Tech football to write on.
We’ve all seen and read 12 stories on Vad Lee vs Washington……Yawn.

gt4ever

December 14th, 2012
10:00 am

Probably more like 7 points JB…. But hey, you have the best offense in the country. One of the best offensive coaches in the country… The offense has played lights out for most of the year.. You guys will not turn the corner until you get a DC who doesn’t have that deer in headlights look when he plays against good competition. Let’s face it, with all the NFL talent on your defense, and you get blown off the field by anybody’s ground game, it’s the coach…

TC

December 14th, 2012
10:00 am

This is just becoming sad…..

How far is it from Orlando to Miami? To a Georgia fan, 5 yards……

Honey Boo Boo

December 14th, 2012
10:00 am

Commit To The “G”, and you two will forever be overrated.

Buckeye

December 14th, 2012
10:00 am

Unbelievable.

The dogs are still cryin’.

The loss is still in their heads.

Get over it, dogs. You lost, you’re #6, out the BCS and played a cupcake schedule (again).

Nebraska will capitalize.

Buckeye

December 14th, 2012
10:03 am

Ah, the memories:

350 IYFMF rush yards. Go Grantham.

JB

December 14th, 2012
10:04 am

gt4 ever………..You know, I can’t argue that point. Dawgs didn’t lose that game on the last play. They lost it in 59 minutes of Bama rushing for 350 yards and wearing out our no depth defense slap out. How about that for honesty.

monty

December 14th, 2012
10:04 am

King was literally all alone to the left side with a corner. No help from any safety or linebacker over or under. Look at the replay on youtube. Bama was totally commited to their left side. Skinny post, quick slant in to king and game over.

Tide Rising

December 14th, 2012
10:05 am

“Living for the day Saban gone….A Shula type takes back over…… And the Alabama saw mills can go back to two shifts.”

JB,

That’s a sad statement to be living for the day Saban is gone. But if he ever does leave or retire Kirby Smart has been with him for years and is well groomed to take the mantel. And if not Smart we’ll go out and get the best coach available. Shula was just a caretaker during the dark days of probation when we knew we were going to suck with 21 fewer scholarship players than everyone else. Those were great days for Richt. Too bad Shula’s not around to beat up on anymore. And too bad there won’t be a Shula like replacement when Saban eventually does leave or retire.

GT Insider

December 14th, 2012
10:05 am

JB, I hear ya on that and trust me I don’t want him to write anything on Tech. I just want something else or nothing at all.

dawgfan

December 14th, 2012
10:05 am

Our program can either whine, cry and feel sorry for itself or it can learn from it and move on. The more we talk about this the more concerned I am that we are going with the former. Just get the hell over it. This isn’t the last season of college football. There will be more opportunities. This wasn’t some once in a lifetime opportunity. We should be in the thick of it damn near every year. If we are the legit power program that we like to think we are we should be right back in the same situation in no time. That is not an unreasonable expectation at all. Just quit your whining. Watch us go out and get our azzes beat by Nebraska because everybody is still butthurt over the SECCG. That would go over real well.

By the way, love all the tough talk out of Tech fans telling us how we need to get over this, like they have any experience whatsoever with a game like this. Like they didn’t just get a waiver from the NCAA to make it to the freaking Sun Bowl. Like their program isn’t the biggest pile of effing donkey dung in the state of Georgia. Then they have the nerve to claim that WE are the arrogant ones. Getting your azz beat like a drum year after year and still running your mouth is about as arrogant as it gets Tech fans. You need to speak when spoken to. We’ll let you know if we we need any tips on bouncing back from a loss to Middle Tennessee State.

Georgia Tech=JOKE.

Ace

December 14th, 2012
10:07 am

Everyone else has forgotton about how lucky UGA was to get the block kick TD, it was over til then, then BAMA just runs it down your throat. It really wasn’t close.

UGA deserves the Peach bowl, they are lucky again.

Justin

December 14th, 2012
10:08 am

Looks like Murray is sayin… “Why in the FOCK did you catch that tipped ball??!!!!”

Situational awareness… Git you some!!

Roll Damn Tide!!

GT Insider

December 14th, 2012
10:09 am

Glad you got that off your chest there dawgfan.

And GT and the rest of college football will start taking your venting a little more seriously when UGA can actually win the games they need to.

Until then, UGA is just a team that does good in the “regular season” but craps the bed in the big “playoffs”.

I don’t think UGA could teach GT much about winning a bowl game either seeing as UGA can’t seem to win one of recent. Michigan State and UCF say “hello”.

GTBob

December 14th, 2012
10:09 am

Flat Tire, if all of the coaches in the land vote and decide that UGA is the best team then yes, you can claim the coaches poll just like GT did in 1990.

Dawgs 73

December 14th, 2012
10:09 am

Mark, please stop reliving this moment. A loss, no matter how close or tough it may have been, is still a loss. There’s no consolation prize for the loser, just the pain of “what if” and “maybe”.

Honey Boo Boo

December 14th, 2012
10:09 am

Your not contenders, your pretenders. Your chicken caca schedule got you that far.

JFF

December 14th, 2012
10:09 am

We beat Bama!

The Dutch

December 14th, 2012
10:12 am

I’m curious if BIG MOUTH Baccarri Rambo loses sleep like Aaron does? Does Baccarri lose sleep over the fact that he missed four games and totally let his team down? Does big-mouth Baccarri care that after trash talking to Bama he HUMILIATED dawg fans by getting run over and ho-slapped by Eddie Lacy like he was a 9 year old girl?

Somebody please tell me that Baccarri takes some ownership in this? I mean, Georgia was more talented at EVERY position, right Baccarri?

Seriously, Baccarri, when you graduate…. don’t ever come back to Athens. You’re never welcome back at Georgia again. You’re a disgrace to the G. Stay in whatever NFL city you land in and continue to live up to your stereotype.

JB

December 14th, 2012
10:12 am

Ace………..That may be the dumbest post ever. Lucky to block the kick. Was it LUCK Bama caught the long TD pass. It happened. Bama’s specials teams had a break down. Just like they did on the fourth down pass for a first down Dawgs completed.. Bama was fooled. You must be a Democrat. It’s luck for us and always greatness for Bama…. Geez.

Road Scholar

December 14th, 2012
10:13 am

Ah! UGA’s Reggie Ball moment!

Coward of Bulldawg County

December 14th, 2012
10:14 am

Just think…the AJC could make this an annual story…”December 1st, 2012. The day we embraced our inner loser”…or “12/1/12 – We tried”..or, “2012 SECCG – The day losing became cool”…

RGB

December 14th, 2012
10:16 am

If I were the Cornhuskers and saw that Georgia was looking backward at the Bama loss, I’d be pretty happy. UCF redux.

Dallas Cowboys

December 14th, 2012
10:16 am

No College team in the hunt here dawgfan and your mostly right about Ga.Tech not being very good but,out of the last three years of the draft,Give me Johnson,Thomas,and Burnett from GT over anyone UGAs sent up..just saying..although I bet all three of those guys wish now they had played somewhere else…..

GTBob

December 14th, 2012
10:16 am

Then they have the nerve to claim that WE are the arrogant ones.

I wouldn’t say arrogant, I would say delusional. You guys weren’t that great this year. You played a really weak schedule, lost to most of the good teams you played and you almost took advantage of a bad game played by an overrated team in the SEC championship. For all of that you want to crown yourselves kings of the world. Mark Bradley probably has 10-15 more blogs about how great UGA is even though they can’t win anything important.

dawgfan

December 14th, 2012
10:17 am

“And GT and the rest of college football will start taking your venting a little more seriously when UGA can actually win the games they need to.”

And I will stop laughing hysterically in the face of blowhard Techies like yourself when you stop living vicariously through others that can beat Georgia, grow some freaking stones, and start demanding as much out of your own pile of horse crap program as you demand out of UGA. If you Techies put half the effort in to supporting your own program as you do hating UGA you probably wouldn’t be 20-18 over the past 3 years and the current laughing stock of college football for getting a charity Sun Bowl berth.

Georgia Tech=JOKE

mcdaviddawg

December 14th, 2012
10:17 am

The last 15 minutes is called coaching and preparation and it was obvious that this situation is just another in the long list of things Richt doesn’t do.

DawginLex

December 14th, 2012
10:18 am

If you are not a fan of either team, it is probably one of the best college football games I have ever seen.

As a Dawg, it sucks.

There is no right or wrong answer regarding the spike. If you spike it and throw the same pass or throw a pick, folks complain that we should have just run a play.

One of my best friends in the world is a grad of Bama. He called me up right after. Not to brag but to tell me how we should both be proud of our teams

That’s how its supposed to be done

Lord Saban

December 14th, 2012
10:19 am

I own everyone of you leghumpers.

Really Bark Madly?

December 14th, 2012
10:21 am

Let it Go……….

You’d think with the Giants coming town vs our Birds and the Hawks tearing up the hardcourt, you might, just might have some other material to write about….

Geeze – move on.

Flat Tire On Hwy 441 in Athens

December 14th, 2012
10:21 am

Dutch

now now; you cant just blame Rambo when these players have been allowed for years to dance in the middle of ballgames; told to dance in the endzone; be allowed to trash talk during games and commit stupid personal foul penalties in almost every game

DawginLex

December 14th, 2012
10:21 am

GT Insider

You really are an idiot to be trashing a team that flat out OWNS YOUR TEAM

THE TIME IS 10:24 BUT ON THE FLATS IT IS

9:18

:) :) :)

dawgfan

December 14th, 2012
10:22 am

GTBob’s team is 6-7 but he spends almost all of his time lecturing everyone on what is wrong with UGA football. Its like a morbidly obese person giving dieting tips to a supermodel. But WE are the delusional ones?

Is there a bigger joke on the face of the freaking earth than Georgia Tech football fans?

captaindave

December 14th, 2012
10:23 am

And the Mark Bradley obsessive love affair with all things UGA continues…..

DawgLuver

December 14th, 2012
10:24 am

Hey Mark Bradley, please move on!!! I’d prefer to see your next article deal with the 2013 Dawgs and what will undoubtedly be upgraded competition from the SEC West. No more cupcake schedules for CMR. I actually have less interest in the Capital One bowl and am more intrigued how CMR with deal with the heavy graduation losses.

Unfortunately, I think we may be entering another up & down cycle in Athens. We’ll see if the AD made the right decision with regard to the contract extension for the HBC. In the past 6 years, Richt has never won a game that counted for much, with maybe the exception being the game this year with the Gators.

Surely Mr. Bradley, if I were you (and I’m not) I’d skip the UGA vs.NEB game in Orlando and start your prognosticating for the next edition of the Dawgs. Such articles, written after consulting your crystal ball, will be far more appreciated by your loyal followers!

JB

December 14th, 2012
10:25 am

It’s very lonely on Tech blogs……Maybe a good math question from an India student from time to time. Little else.

GTBob

December 14th, 2012
10:25 am

GTBob’s team is 6-7 but he spends almost all of his time lecturing everyone on what is wrong with UGA football.

There is plenty that is wrong with GT. If Mark wants to write a blog about it we can discuss it. For now he insists on writing blog after blog about how sad he is that UGA blew it once again so obviously we are going to discuss UGA and their inability to win tough games.

Tide Rising

December 14th, 2012
10:26 am

JB,

The blocked kick does count. But if you notice the ball it just hit him in the backhand. If not luck we’ll just call it good fortune that happens on a very rare basis. I’ve seen plenty of straight on blocked kicks. Just never seen one get blocked by someone’s backhand.

swampjacket

December 14th, 2012
10:27 am

The only reason to spike is to remind players not catch the ball if not in the endzone….

Flat Tire On Hwy 441 in Athens

December 14th, 2012
10:28 am

DawginLex

How’s the coaching search over at Southern Miss going? Is Bobo a finalist?

Ole Techs

December 14th, 2012
10:28 am

I wish we had had your season. Somebody had to lose. Whose to say what would have happened if you had spiked the ball.

Shug

December 14th, 2012
10:29 am

I get the sense that UGA is on the verge of entering the dark ages — won’t be heard from again on the national stage for another decade or so.

GTBob

December 14th, 2012
10:30 am

One of my best friends in the world is a grad of Bama. He called me up right after. Not to brag but to tell me how we should both be proud of our teams

Your friend called you because he had sympathy for you. He doesn’t really care about the supposed valiant effort of UGA. If his team had lost I doubt he would have called you.

JB

December 14th, 2012
10:30 am

This is all Tech folks needs to know. Georgia and Tech were in the Conference title games of their respected conferences. Dawgs/Bama tickets $300 to 5,000. Tech/FSU, $4. gave away 20,000 to boy scouts and Boys clubs to fill the place…..nuff said.

JustMe

December 14th, 2012
10:30 am

They can spin it all they want. Simple no brainer call to Spike the Ball. Get 2 plays and likely win the game and play/win the National Championship.

If Richt said NO, it was the biggest gaffe maybe in NCAA history.

trueblueeagle

December 14th, 2012
10:31 am

If UGA does not put this behind them then it will effect them for the bowl game and next year! You can’t live in past so its time to move on.

JB

December 14th, 2012
10:31 am

GTBob missed his calling. Like most Tech folks think, he knows it all….and especially how folks feel.

Tide Rising

December 14th, 2012
10:32 am

http://www.rollbamaroll.com/2012/12/3/3724086/if-quinton-dial-gets-suspended-then-sheldon-dawson-should-be-too

And of course lets not forget those personal fouls that the refs missed. Like the disgusting Sheldon Dawson eye gouge for example. I wonder if the dawg fans will be as upset about this as they were with Brandon Spikes? Just thought I’ld mention that since someone is bound to bring up the Quinton Dial hit if they haven’t already.

Dawglasville

December 14th, 2012
10:32 am

Tech Trolls – let’s talk about relevance. You love to point out that Richt is not relevant because he has not won a national championship.

Please, please tell me in what area is Georgia Tech relevant? Name the sport Tech is relevant in. Is Tech a top 5 engineering school? Is there an area of engineering that Tech is ranked top 5 nationally?

I’m trying to understand where this feeling of superiority comes from?

auburn grad

December 14th, 2012
10:33 am

Quit talking about what could’ve happened and focus on Nebraska, otherwise you’re going to get embarrassed.