There were a lot of big plays by both teams in Saturday’s Chick-fil-A Bowl.
Georgia had them on offense, defense, and special teams in the second half.
But the biggest play might have been a simple pass on a short drive that resulted
in no points.
Entering the third quarter, Georgia hadn’t managed a first down and only two
yards of offense since its first drive. They had no running game to speak of,
and passes were either intercepted, dropped, or off the mark. Through turnovers
and special teams Virginia Tech had scored three times with a short field. The
second half didn’t start much better. A short kickoff return gave the ball to
the Dawgs on their own 16 yard line. Two plays only moved the ball three yards.
Georgia faced third-and-seven from their own 19, and they hadn’t converted a
third down all evening.
Then Matthew Stafford hit Mario Raley for a 24-yard pass down the seam. The
pass itself was impressive enough. Any flatter and it would have been tipped
by a linebacker. Any more time in the air and a defensive back would have made
a play on the ball. It was Stafford’s best-thrown ball to that point, and it
would be the first in a series of beautiful second half passes. Then there was
the catch. Raley was hit and dropped as soon as he caught the ball. This was
the same Mario Raley who less than two months ago was knocked motionless and
carted off the field at Kentucky after catching another pass across the middle
of the field. To most watching it was just a nice completion, but those familiar
with the shot Raley took in Lexington know how truly impressive it was that
he made this play and hung on to the ball.
Raley’s reception didn’t result in a score; Georgia advanced the ball as far
as midfield before they had to punt. But the effect of the play was to flip
the field and force a Virginia Tech offense that had operated from midfield
or better for much of the first half to start their first third quarter drive
from their own 10. It started a series of events that changed the game. Georgia’s
defense held. Virginia Tech had to punt from their own 18. Mikey Henderson returned
the punt 20 yards. On the next play, Stafford hit Brannan Southerland down the
middle for 26 yards, and Georgia soon started an incredible string of 28 consecutive
points to beat their third consecutive ranked opponent.
We’ll all remember the onside kick or the many stellar defensive plays or the
long pass to Milner, but it all started with a pass to a nearly-forgotten senior
receiver who shook off one of the most devastating and scary moments a football
player can experience to go back across the middle and come up big in his last
game.
If you’ve got another underrated play that featured into the win, be sure to leave a comment.