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Johnson and Richt talk GT-Miami

Richt and Johnson pose before a Georgia-Georgia Tech game. (CSTV)

Old foes square off again in Bobby Dodd Stadium on Saturday as the Yellow Jackets host undefeated #14 Miami. Both head football coaches spoke on Wednesday about the challenges of opening up Coastal play with a game like this.

Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson

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PAUL JOHNSON: Well, good morning. We're coming off a difficult game on Thursday night against what I think is a really good Clemson team. They played extremely well, and they're very talented. We didn't play as well as we would have liked, but we have a chance this week to play another ranked team at our place, and hopefully we'll play a little better than we did on Thursday night. We certainly need to.

Q. Looking at Miami, they've changed a little bit with Mark Richt there, running the ball a little bit more effectively than they have in the past. Can you talk about how they've changed with the new coaching staff?

PAUL JOHNSON: Well, I think with anything, there's some tweaks and that kind of thing, and they've changed up somewhat. The quarterback is very talented, and they've got a couple of good running backs. You know, I think it'll unfold the more they play, too. As they start to play in the conference, you'll have a better idea of what it is they want to do. They've pretty much run roughshod over everybody they've played so far.

Q. I want to ask about your game. I was just wondering, you guys obviously struggled to run the ball; was that your inability to execute your offense, or was that just the strength of the Clemson defense?

PAUL JOHNSON: I think it was some of both. I mean, we played as poorly offensively as any team I've ever coached. I mean, we had 15 missed assignments on the first 22 plays, and when you're doing that against a really good team, that's the result you're going to get. We played a little better in the third quarter, but overall we didn't play very well. But they're very talented on defense. I mean, they've got some great players, and they do a good job. They play hard.

Q. To follow up on that, are there one or two aspects of the offense you're really honing in on this week that improves the offense or gets it back to where you want it to be?

PAUL JOHNSON: Well, I think we'll play better. I think it would be hard to play as poorly as we did on Thursday. We've done that two years in a row against them, though, so you have to give them some credit. Yeah, we're back to basics, and we're going to do what we do. We feel like we know it works if we do it correctly and we execute. We haven't played as well offensively as we would have liked, but after Saturday, I think we will have played the No. 1, 2 and 6 ranked teams in total defense in the country, so we've played some pretty good folks.

Q. Paul, you don't hear maybe quite as much about Miami's quarterback, and he's really good, Brad Kaaya. And there's some other big-name quarterbacks in the league. But just what are your impressions of Kaaya and the kind of problems that he presents?

PAUL JOHNSON: Well, I think he's as good as any quarterback in the league. I mean, he's the prototypical drop back pro-style quarterback. He throws the deep ball really well, and he's got really good skill guys around him. He's been a good player for them for a while. He's certainly got my respect and our respect as a football team. I mean, we don't have any doubt that he can play the game.

Q. One of your guys, Lawrence Austin, came up with 12 tackles against Clemson. Just talk a little bit about Austin and the kind of player, the kind of things that he's doing well for you and how a defensive back winds up with that many tackles in a game.

PAUL JOHNSON: Well, I'm not sure that's a good thing when the defensive backs have 12 tackles. But Lawrence has played some, and he's experienced and he flew around on Thursday night and played hard. We really didn't play -- the first half we didn't play very good defensively, either, but we were kind of hanging in, and we had the kind of freak interception, fumble for a safety, and then let them score, which really was a killer, especially the way we were playing offensively.But you know, they threw a lot of perimeter stuff and a lot of screens, and he's out there, he was our nickelback, so he made a lot of tackles.

Q. Miami had last week off, and I'm just wondering, a lot of coaches think because your offense --

PAUL JOHNSON: I think that's a rule in our league. I think everybody takes a week off before they play us.

Q. I was going to ask you, there actually are three or four more down the road. How big a difference does it make in trying to defend you, that teams have that extra week?

PAUL JOHNSON: I think it makes a difference no matter who you play. You get a chance to get people back healthy, and you have extra time to prepare. But you know, that still doesn't keep us from playing the way we can play. You know, that would be something you'd have to ask Mark, I guess, but certainly I know when we have a week off before we play somebody, I think it helps.


Miami coach Mark Richt 

MARK RICHT: We had a nice practice this morning. We basically were in shorts and helmets at this time, the week after an open date, being kind of a day ahead of schedule, so we end up with two dress rehearsals, one today and one tomorrow, and I thought the focus was good, because it's a day where you can let your mind wander a little bit. You know it's not going to be quite as physical. But I thought the focus was good. I thought our scout teams did their part and did a good job for us.

Q. Everybody gets an off week, and you can obviously use that to heal up and everything, but is it especially convenient to get it the week before Georgia Tech to give you time to prepare for --

MARK RICHT: Yes. I mean, it helps I think to have time to prepare for anybody. If it was a one-game season, that would be great, but we've got another eight conference games to go in a row basically. We have a ninth game in there. But when you're preparing to play their offensive system, it does help, I think.

Q. You've seen them a lot when you were at Georgia, you played them every year and have worked against that offense. Can you talk about some of the problems it presents?

MARK RICHT: Well, we have a quarterback who can run, number one. That's problematic in anybody's system. When you also read people, in other words, you don't block somebody and you read them, you know, if they get off the field, you hand the ball off and maybe they crash down on the back, you pull the ball out, so you don't have to use a blocker for them, you use your eyes and your skills to negotiate the guy. So now all of a sudden, that still allows you to have one more blocker to block one of your defensive players.Most defenses would like to have one or two safeties deep to clean up anything that might spit through that line of scrimmage or spit through the initial group of defenders, and against them, it's very difficult to play some type of one high defense or two high defense. You'll get murdered.So everybody has got to be locked in. Everybody has got to play the right assignment, and everybody has got to defeat a block to make a tackle.You know, there is no unblocked guy that's going to get in the box and make a hit. Everybody is getting blocked or optioned, one of the two.

Q. At this point in the season, what do you have a pretty good handle on in terms of what's emerging, the strong suits of your team versus what you still are kind of unsure about and will learn more about in these coming weeks here?

MARK RICHT: Right. Well, so far I feel like if we continue doing what we've been doing, we'll at least play hard, we'll play physical, we'll play -- we will tackle well. We will block downfield. We'll do the little things that help a team become successful. You know, I will say this: Every game we've played, the second opponent was probably a little better than the first, and the third was probably a little better than the second, and now the fourth one is probably a little better than the third one, so we're kind of stepping up in the competition level in my opinion throughout this season so far, and it's just a new challenge for us to see if we're ready for the next level of competition.

Q. How was your bye week? What did you learn during the bye week to get you ready for this game?

MARK RICHT: Well, part of it is just to give these guys a little bit of break physically, mentally, and if there's a guy that's just got a nagging injury that maybe he would have played last week and not missed a practice and kind of fought through it, sometimes we'll monitor the amount of reps or just pull the guy out for a day and let him heal. You only get one shot a year to do it, and this was it. After this we've got eight in a row, nine in a row, and eight of them are conference games. So we're not going to have that luxury anymore.So you do that, and then you start to scheme them. But you scheme them at a pace that is not as fast and rapid as it has to be when you only have one week to do it. We were able to take a little bit more time, be a little bit more deliberate. Sometimes that's good and sometimes it's not good if you have too many good ideas that you just don't have enough time to practice them all.

Q. You played this team last year when you were with Georgia. Is it always good to play against somebody you know instead of playing against a team that you have no idea -- anybody on your schedule this year that you have never met before?

MARK RICHT: Well, I will say this: If I was a defensive coordinator type guy coming up, and if I knew everything about what you needed to know about that offense that we're about to face, I think it would be an advantage, but right now I don't have that expertise. I know in generalities but not in specifics. That's why I've got to really rely on Coach Diaz and his ability to -- with his staff put together a plan that will help us defend those guys.

Q. Is it weird at all going back up there?

MARK RICHT: Not to me. I've been there when I was at Florida State coaching, I've been there when I was at Georgia, and now I'm going there while I'm at Miami. It's not that weird. It's just -- I guess I'm used to it. If this was the first time there, it might be different. It's more -- I don't know if weird is the word, but going to Appalachian State was more new to me than going back to Atlanta. I've been there a lot of times.

Q. One of the big stories nationally, obviously Les Miles is out at LSU, you coached against him; Ron Turner out from down in your neck of the woods. The coaching turnover, does that say where the industry is and where college football is right now?

MARK RICHT: Well, it's a business. We all know that. People have to function from a financial point of view, and somebody is in charge of making those decisions. Those decisions aren't made easily. They're tough ones that have to be made.I think as a coach, I know that whoever my boss is, he has the right to decide whether to keep me or not, and for whatever reason, my contract will say it, for any reason if they want to let me go, they can let me go, and they can let any coach go. It's a tough part of the business, but we all know it can happen, and we all signed up for it, and we still do it because we love it.

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