
The visiting Yellow Jackets rebounded from a third-quarter deficit for a 56-31 victory over Vanderbilt in front of 30,262 that came out for Halloween.
One year after winning in the Music City Bowl, the Commodores (2-7) were eliminated from bowl contention before playing their 10th game.
There was a bit of everything for Vanderbilt, including a quarterback change that saw Mackenzi Adams fill in when starter Larry Smith went down with a hamstring injury in the first half.
Freshman Warren Norman had an 80-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, his third in four weeks, to rewrite the Vanderbilt history books.
But the last word went to Georgia Tech, which showed exactly how an effective option offense can wear down a defense over four quarters.
It was the most points the Commodores have given up in Coach Bobby Johnson’s eight-year tenure. Kentucky scored 56 points and Florida 71 on Vanderbilt in 2001, the season before Johnson arrived.
Vanderbilt led 31-28 following Ryan Fowler’s 23-yard field goal with 10:35 left in the third quarter. But after that the Commodores mustered just 39 yards on 16 plays as the tide turned for good.
Georgia Tech’s Jonathan Dwyer scored on a 3-yard run to make it 35-31 with 54 seconds left in the third quarter. That came immediately after a Vanderbilt offsides penalty on fourth-and-1 at the 6.
On the Commodores’ next play, wide receiver Jamie Graham ran the ball and fumbled at the Vanderbilt 19. Two plays later, Dwyer was back in the end zone.
It got worse in the fourth quarter. Embry Peeples got behind cornerback Casey Hayward for an 87-yard touchdown catch to make it 49-31. Then Norman, who had played so well, fumbled away a kickoff return and the Yellow Jackets cashed in again on Roddy Jones’ 15-yard run.
Georgia Tech ran for 404 yards on 69 carries and outgained the Commodores 597-397. The Yellow Jackets, the country’s best at time of possession, dominated that category 39:45 to 20:15.
The first half resembled a ping-pong match on a 100-yard table. Vanderbilt’s no-huddle offense had been stagnant virtually the entire season, but showed its willingness to counterpunch early with Georgia Tech.
After the Yellow Jackets covered 60 yards on six plays with their opening possession for a 7-0 lead, Vanderbilt answered with an eight-play, 71-yard touchdown drive. Zac Stacy circled out of the backfield and caught an 11-yard pass from Smith on third-and-6 to give the Commodores an emotional lift.
Smith looked to keep the momentum going when Vanderbilt got the ball back on a punt. His 35-yard scramble got the offense out of a hole and up to the Vanderbilt 41, but Smith began grabbing for his left hamstring before the play was finished.
Adams exchanged his baseball hat for a helmet when he saw Smith go down and readied for his first relevant action of the year. On his first snap, he hit Stacy in the right flat for a 47-yard screen pass. Stacy capped the 88-yard drive with a 3-yard run for a 14-7 Vanderbilt lead.
Georgia Tech scored the next three touchdowns with drives of 69, 89 and 22 yards that had the Commodores’ defense on its heels. An Adams’ fumble led to Georgia Tech’s 28-14 lead when he had the ball stripped on a draw play at the Vanderbilt 22.
But the Commodores showed an offensive resiliency that hasn’t always been present this season and tied the score at 28 by halftime. Norman’s kickoff return closed the gap to 28-21 with 5:45 left in the half. Then after the defense forced a punt, Stacy burst through a hole on the right side for a 62-yard touchdown.
It was Vanderbilt’s first game against an ACC school since beating Boston College 16-14 last year in the Music City Bowl. That was also the last time Vanderbilt defeated a ranked opponent. The Commodores are 0-4 against ranked teams this year.
They won’t have to wait long for another shot. Vanderbilt plays No. 1 Florida next week in Gainesville.
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