- Associated Press - Tuesday, October 31, 2017

ATLANTA (AP) - After a second loss in the Atlantic Coast Conference, it seems like a good time for Georgia Tech to reset its goals.

Not so fast, said coach Paul Johnson.

He’s not giving up on the idea of the Yellow Jackets (4-3, 3-2) reaching the ACC championship game, though he could’ve used some visual aids Tuesday to explain all that needs to go right.

“What happens if Virginia Tech goes and beats Miami and we win at Virginia?” Johnson asked. “Then (Virginia Tech is) coming in here next week and Miami is one loss away from being tied with whoever wins that game. If we win that game,” presumably, he meant Virginia Tech, “we could all wind up with two losses.”

If that all sounds a bit convoluted, one thing is easy to understand.

The Jacket can’t afford another conference defeat.

Their part of the deal begins with Saturday’s road game against the Cavaliers (5-3, 2-2).

“That’s a lot of ’ifs,’ but it’s not dead,” Johnson said. “We don’t change our goals. We just keep playing. It will be all dead if we don’t win at Virginia.”

No. 13 Virginia Tech (7-1, 3-1) travels to No. 9 Miami (7-0, 5-0) Saturday night before visiting Atlanta on Nov. 11. The Yellow Jackets close out their ACC schedule with a Nov. 18 game at Duke (4-5, 1-5).

Essentially, everything has to fall in place for Georgia Tech - Virginia Tech beats Miami, the Yellow Jackets beat Virginia, Virginia Tech and Duke, and Miami loses one of its last two conference games against either Pitt or Virginia.

Under that rather farfetched scenario, Georgia Tech, Miami and Virginia Tech would all finish 6-2 in the conference. The first tiebreaker would be their record in division games, which would eliminate the Hurricanes. Then, Georgia Tech would get the nod over Virginia Tech based on their head-to-head matchup.

The Yellow Jackets are clinging to that faint hope.

“I’ll get the guys together and try to rally everyone to get some energy going at practice,” quarterback TaQuon Marshall said. “We still have some things ahead of us we’re still trying to accomplish. We can’t really get down. We’ve got to keep practicing hard and trusting in each other and just keep going.”

A year ago, Georgia Tech defeated the Cavaliers 31-17 in Atlanta.

But Charlottesville has always been a challenging venue for the Yellow Jackets, who have lost 10 of their last 12 appearances at Scott Field dating to 1992.

Marshall is eager to redeem himself for a poor showing in last week’s 24-10 loss at No. 6 Clemson. He rushed for just 23 yards on 15 carries and struggled to throw on a miserable day, completing 3 of 13 for 32 yards.

“He’s a competitive kid and tough as nail. He wants to be good,” Johnson said. “Like most competitive people when things don’t go well, they get frustrated and try to remedy it and play better. I’m sure he’ll be that way this week. When he has a big game, it’s no different. He comes to work every week and tries to get better, whether he’s had 200 yards rushing or 15.”

Notes: OT Andrew Marshall will return for a fifth season after missing his senior year with injuries. Marshall sustained a leg injury in the preseason, then hurt a foot while trying to work his way back. Now, he’s focused on getting healthy for 2018, which would be a huge boost for the offensive line. “We are excited,” Johnson said. “We talked last week and he decided that he wanted to come back and play. That’s good news for everybody. I’m excited for him and excited for us.” … Freshman Pressley Harvin III is on the watch list for the Ray Guy Award, which goes to the nation’s top punter. Harvin leads all true freshmen and ranks seventh nationally with a 46.0-yard average.

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Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963 . His work can be found at https://apnews.com/search/paul%20newberry

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For more AP college football coverage: www.collegefootball.ap.org and www.twitter.com/AP_Top25

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