- Final0
1ARK
FLA20
2320
23 - Final122
2SCAR
ALA6
206
20 - Final220
3OKLA
TEX13
1613
16 - Final34
19VT
GT23
2823
28 - Final46
25USC
ND34
2734
27 - Final57OSU
PUR18
2618
26 - Final69MIA
UCF27
727
7 - Final711IOWA
WIS20
1020
10 - Final8
12CSU
TCU6
446
44 - Final9
14MINN
PSU0
200
20 - Final10
15TTU
NEB31
1031
10 - Final11
16MIZZ
OKST17
3317
33 - Final1217KU
COLO30
3430
34 - Final1318BYU
SDSU38
2838
28 - Final1423HOU
TULN44
1644
16 - Final1524UTAH
UNLV35
1535
15 - Final165BSU
TLSA28
2128
21 - Final178
21CIN
USF34
1734
17
Final

(4) Virginia Tech 23
(5-2, 3-1 ACC)

(19) Georgia Tech 28
(6-1, 4-1 ACC)
6:00 PM ET, October 17, 2009
Bobby Dodd Stadium, ATLANTA, GA
Top Performers
Passing: T. Taylor (VT) - 159 YDS, 1 TD, 2 INT
Rushing: J. Nesbitt (GT) - 23 CAR, 122 YDS, 3 TD
Receiving: D. Roberts (VT) - 3 REC, 66 YDS
ATLANTA -- The Georgia Tech players bounced up and down in the middle of the field, right in unison with the raucous crowd. Josh Nesbitt took the snap and kneeled down one more time.
Then, it was party time.
Fast Facts
• Josh Nesbitt rushed for 122 yards and three touchdowns, helping the Yellow Jackets upset the Hokies despite completing only one pass.
• Georgia Tech won its fourth straight game, improving to 6-1 this season.
• The win snapped Georgia Tech's 17-game winless streak at home against opponents ranked in the top five.
-- ESPN Stats & Information
Nesbitt rushed for 122 yards and three touchdowns -- the last of them a 39-yarder tiptoeing down the sideline with 3 minutes left -- as No. 19 Georgia Tech ran to a 28-23 win over the fourth-ranked Hokies on Saturday night for its biggest triumph in years.
The gold-clad fans stormed the field, engulfing a team that didn't mind a bit, and wound up tearing down the goal post in the north end of Bobby Dodd Stadium. No wonder -- this was Georgia Tech's first win at home over a top-five team since the Dodd-coached Yellow Jackets beat Bear Bryant's top-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide in 1962.
"This is the biggest thing that's happened since I've been here," said Nesbitt, a junior quarterback who plays more like a running back out of Georgia Tech's spread-option offense.
Virginia Tech (5-2, 3-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) endured another doomed trip to Atlanta. A season-opening 34-24 loss to Alabama at the nearby Georgia Dome was followed by a second defeat on the return trip south, this one hurting the Hokies' ACC hopes and probably ruining their shot at a national title.
Georgia Tech (6-1, 4-1) completed just one pass but ran for 309 yards -- all but 37 of those yards coming in the second half.
"Their offense," Beamer said, "was just hard to stop. Their quarterback was doing a great job, and we got into a little bit of a guessing game."
Nesbitt made up for a fumble that gave Virginia Tech life by finishing off the clinching drive with his best run of the night.
On third-and-7 from the Hokies 39, the quarterback ran to his left, saw two defenders peel away to shadow potential pitch targets, turned up through a huge hole and managed to stay in bounds along the sideline, even when Dorian Porch gave him one last shove around the 5.
"He's the heart of our team," said running back Jonathan Dwyer, last year's ACC offensive player of the year.
Nesbitt has run for six touchdowns over the last two weeks, also scoring three times in a 49-44 victory over Florida State. It was the fifth time this season the quarterback was rushed for more than 90 yards, and Georgia Tech has certainly proven in Paul Johnson's two seasons as coach that its run-oriented offense -- incorporating elements of old formations such as the wishbone and veer -- can win at the major-college level.
The Yellow Jackets ruined Virginia Tech's clear path to the ACC title game and made things real interesting in the Coastal Division, which also includes No. 9 Miami.
"We already have a loss and I don't think you can win our side with two," Johnson said. "One loss is going to win it. What we did tonight was stay alive and put everyone else back in it."
On the heels of two straight shootout wins over Mississippi State and Florida State, the Yellow Jackets slogged through much of the first half.
Georgia Tech managed only 37 yards on 21 carries before halftime, though Nesbitt's lone completion -- a 51-yarder to Demaryius Thomas -- set up a touchdown that gave the home team a 7-3 lead heading to the locker room. Nesbitt burrowed over from the 1 with 32 seconds left.
My, how things changed after the break. Virginia Tech stuck with the scheme that had been working, but Johnson's subtle adjustments started producing huge chunks of yardage on the ground, both inside and out. Nesbitt scampered for 31 yards before finishing off the drive with another 1-yard TD plunge.
Virginia Tech had a chance for a quick response, but Beamer passed on a field goal try on fourth-and-2 from the 18, and Ryan Williams was stuffed short.
Beamer's questionable decision turned out to be moot. Getting a little greedy, Nesbitt went deep again and was picked off by Porch. On the very next play, Williams went 66 yards up the middle for a touchdown that pulled the Hokies to 14-10.
Georgia Tech kept right on running. Dywer carried five times for 48 yards on a 12-play, 86-yard drive that burned nearly 6 1/2 minutes off the clock. Marcus Wright finished it off by taking a pitch from Nesbitt and scooting 13 yards to make it 21-10.
The Yellow Jackets were on the verge of clinching it when they drove deep into Virginia Tech territory before Nesbitt made an errant pitch that sailed behind Roddy Jones. Davon Morgan fell on the loose ball, giving the Hokies new life with just under 5 minutes remaining.
They quickly took advantage of the turnover, scooting 77 yards in six plays. Taylor scrambled the final 22 yards for a touchdown that closed the gap to 21-16, but the 2-point conversion failed.
After Nesbitt's third TD, Taylor flicked an 8-yard TD pass to Williams with 1:48 left. But Jerrard Tarrant corralled the onside kick for Georgia Tech.
Williams ran for 100 yards, while Taylor had 159 passing and 63 on the ground.
"Our big plays," Taylor said, "came a little too late."
SPONSORED HEADLINES
Top 25 Overview
It was over when... Jerrard Tarrant recovered an onside kick, ending Virginia Tech's bid for a comeback.
Gameball goes to... Josh Nesbitt, who only passed for 51 yards but rushed for 122 and three touchdowns.
Stat of the game... 1962. The last time GT beat a top 5 team at home was top-ranked Alabama in 1962.
Team Stat Comparison
| VT | GT | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Downs | 13 | 19 |
| Total Yards | 334 | 360 |
| Passing | 159 | 51 |
| Rushing | 175 | 309 |
| Penalties | 4-26 | 6-33 |
| 3rd Down Conversions | 2-8 | 8-15 |
| 4th Down Conversions | 0-1 | 1-1 |
| Turnovers | 2 | 2 |
| Possession | 21:38 | 38:22 |
Scoring Summary
| SECOND QUARTER | VT | GT | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | FG | 04:01 | Matt Waldron 34 Yd | 3 | 0 |
![]() | TD | 00:32 | Josh Nesbitt 1 Yd Run (Scott Blair Kick) | 3 | 7 |
| THIRD QUARTER | VT | GT | |||
![]() | TD | 12:00 | Josh Nesbitt 1 Yd Run (Scott Blair Kick) | 3 | 14 |
![]() | TD | 07:58 | Ryan Williams 66 Yd Run (Matt Waldron Kick) | 10 | 14 |
![]() | TD | 01:37 | Marcus Wright 13 Yd Run (Scott Blair Kick) | 10 | 21 |
| FOURTH QUARTER | VT | GT | |||
![]() | TD | 04:52 | Tyrod Taylor 22 Yd Run (Two-Point Pass Conversion Failed) | 16 | 21 |
![]() | TD | 03:00 | Josh Nesbitt 39 Yd Run (Scott Blair Kick) | 16 | 28 |
![]() | TD | 01:48 | Ryan Williams 7 Yd Pass From Tyrod Taylor (Matt Waldron Kick) | 23 | 28 |




