(12) Georgia Tech 34, Virginia 9

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#12GT (7-1)31071434
UVA (3-4)33039

Final

12:00 PM ET, October 24, 2009
Scott Stadium
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA

Georgia Tech holds off Virginia, takes charge of ACC Coastal Division

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Top 25 Overview
It was over when... Anthony Allen scored on a 20-yard run in the fourth quarter to put Tech up 27-9.
Gameball goes to... Josh Nesbitt. The Yellow Jackets' signal-caller threw for 85 yards, ran for 82 and scored two touchdowns.
Stat of the game... 447. The total number of yards Georgia Tech spit out. Compare that to Virginia's 199-yard flop.
Team Stat Comparison
 
1st Downs2011
Total Yards447198
Passing85168
Rushing36230
Penalties8-704-40
3rd Down Conversions8-172-11
4th Down Conversions1-20-1
Turnovers11
Possession42:4317:17
Air/Ground Leaders
Georgia Tech Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Nesbitt4/88500
Virginia Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Sewell18/3216800
Georgia Tech Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Dwyer25125032
Allen11103221
Virginia Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Sewell526025
Simpson6402
Georgia Tech Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Thomas376052
Melton1909
Virginia Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Hall551023
Simpson430021
Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTERGTUVA
FG08:14Scott Blair 24 Yd 30
FG02:12Robert Randolph 49 Yd 33
SECOND QUARTERGTUVA
FG14:51Robert Randolph 19 Yd 36
TD09:34Josh Nesbitt 1 Yd Run (Scott Blair Kick) 106
FG00:00Scott Blair 23 Yd 136
THIRD QUARTERGTUVA
TD04:13Anthony Allen 1 Yd Run (Scott Blair Kick) 206
FOURTH QUARTERGTUVA
FG14:51Robert Randolph 30 Yd 209
TD09:37Anthony Allen 20 Yd Run (Scott Blair Kick) 279
TD03:04Josh Nesbitt 2 Yd Run (Scott Blair Kick) 349
Associated Press

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- It was a drive that took forever, or at least it felt like it. Eighteen plays. Eighty-two yards. A game-sapping 10:47 off the clock, the longest in the 21 years that Georgia Tech has been regularly keeping such a stat.

There were 17 runs, only one pass, and it came on a rainy day at the start of the second half. It's a wonder Virginia had any energy left to keep playing.

Fast Facts

• Georgia Tech held the ball for more than 42 minutes and rushed for 362 yards to hand Virginia its first ACC loss of the season. It was Georgia Tech's first win in Charlottesville since 1990 (eight losses).

• Georgia Tech has its first 7-1 start since its national championship season of 1990 when it went 11-0-1.

• Louisville transfer Anthony Allen (11 rushes, 103 yards), who came into the game averaging an FBS-best 11.5 yards per carry, picked up his first two-rushing TD game for Georgia Tech (seventh of his collegiate career, six with Louisville).

• Virginia's loss ended a three-game winning streak.

-- ESPN Stats & Information

The Yellow Jackets (No. 12 BCS, No. 11 AP) ran through a downpour Saturday, piling up 362 yards rushing and holding the ball more than 42 minutes in a 34-9 victory over the Cavaliers, dispatching the last team with an unbeaten record in Atlantic Coast Conference play.

"When we had the 11-minute drive, we're coming in and looking at the guy lined up across from us and they're just dog tired," running back Anthony Allen said. "And we know we have them right then."

With an option attack already ranked second in the nation in rushing yards entering the game, Georgia Tech put on a ball control clinic on each of its four touchdown drives: a 10-play, 60-yard march in the second quarter; the 10:47 marathon in the third; an 11-play, 66-yard put-the-game away possession in the fourth; and a didn't-really-matter 10-play, 71-yard finisher near the very end. Quarterback Josh Nesbitt threw only two passes on those four drives.

Dinich: Ga. Tech In Control

In an intermittent driving rain, Georgia Tech controlled the clock better than it has in the past two decades, and broke a streak of eight straight losses in Scott Stadium, writes Heather Dinich. Blog
• ACC blog

"It's hard to play against them because they have all those different options," Virginia defensive lineman John-Kevin Dolce said. "One player, and the next, and the next."

Georgia Tech (7-1, 5-1) broke an eight-game Charlottesville losing streak, winning at Virginia for the first time since 1990, the year the Yellow Jackets claimed a share of the national title. Coach Paul Johnson's team has sole possession of the Coastal Division and is closing in on the school's first top 10 ranking since 2001.

"We had a lot of firsts this year," Allen said. "This had to be one of the biggest ones."

The Cavaliers (3-4, 2-1) had a three-game winning streak snapped, a run that followed an 0-3 start that had fans calling for coach Al Groh's job.

Jonathan Dwyer rushed for 125 yards, Allen had 103 and a pair of touchdowns, and Nesbitt ran for 82 yards and two scores. He threw only eight passes, but one was a biggie -- a 52-yard pass to Demaryius Thomas that set up the field goal that gave the Yellow Jackets a 13-6 halftime lead.

It took a little while for the option to get going on a wet day that made for messy football. Georgia Tech committed three penalties and had burned two timeouts before the game was seven minutes old. The Yellow Jackets also fumbled three times in the first quarter: a muffed punt they were lucky to recover, a dropped snap to the upback that doomed a fake punt attempt, and a no-one-touched-him bobble by Nesbitt that was recovered by the Cavaliers.

"We were a little bit discombobulated there in the first 10 minutes of the game, for sure," Johnson said. "I think you don't panic. You just keep playing."

Virginia couldn't capitalize, at least not with a touchdown. Back-to-back drives that began in Georgia Tech territory ended in first goals -- one killed by a holding penalty and another by two slow-developing run plays and a batted pass after the Cavaliers had first-and-goal at the 2.

"We had our chances," Groh said. "We got out-executed at the point of attack a couple of times and had a decent play on third down that was well-defended. ... We have to do a better job of converting."

The Cavaliers had only 30 yards rushing and converted 2 of 11 third downs. That left a lot of time for Georgia Tech's offense to do its thing -- and the Yellow Jackets used every second they could. Final time of possession: 42:43 to 17:17.

"We just needed to pick our tempo on those big drives," Virginia defensive lineman Zane Parr said. "When we were tired, we needed to step our game up, and we didn't do that."

College Football Scores

Other Scores:

Saturday, October 24th
1 Florida 29 Final
Mississippi State 19
Tennessee 10 Final
2 Alabama 12
3 Texas 41 Final
Missouri 7
4 Boise State 54 Final
Hawaii 9
Louisville 10 Final
5 Cincinnati 41
6 Iowa 15 Final
Michigan State 13
Oregon State 36 Final
7 USC 42
8 TCU 38 Final
16 Brigham Young 7
Auburn 10 Final
9 LSU 31
Clemson 40 Final
10 Miami (FL) 37 OT
11 Oregon 43 Final
Washington 19
12 Georgia Tech 34 Final
Virginia 9
13 Penn State 35 Final
Michigan 10
15 Oklahoma State 34 Final
Baylor 7
Southern Methodist 15 Final
17 Houston 38
Air Force 16 Final
18 Utah 23 OT
Minnesota 7 Final
19 Ohio State 38
South Florida 14 Final
20 Pittsburgh 41
UCLA 13 Final
22 Arizona 27
Connecticut 24 Final
23 West Virginia 28
Vanderbilt 10 Final
24 South Carolina 14
Oklahoma 35 Final
25 Kansas 13