The 76th annual Orange Bowl is set for January 5th, as the 10th-
ranked Iowa Hawkeyes and the ninth-ranked Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets square
off at Land Shark Stadium in Miami Gardens.
The Yellow Jackets posted an 11-win campaign and captured their first outright
ACC title since 1990, topping Clemson in the ACC Championship Game, 39-34.
Paul Johnson's squad opened the season with a pair of victories before
suffering its only league loss at Miami on September 17th (33-17). Tech
rebounded nicely though, with eight straight victories to capture the ACC's
Coastal Division crown and spot in the conference championship game. The team
suffered its only other defeat at the hands of rival Georgia (30-24) in the
regular season finale, but was able to earn the BCS bowl bid with a thrilling
win over Clemson for the conference crown. The season earned Johnson his
second straight ACC Coach of the Year award.
Georgia Tech is playing in its 13th consecutive bowl game and is 22-15 in the
postseason all-time, including a 3-2 mark in the Orange Bowl. The Yellow
Jackets have not had much success in the postseason of late, losing their last
four bowl games, including a 38-3 rout at the hands of LSU in last year's
Chick-fil-A Bowl.
Kirk Ferentz's Hawkeyes were not as fortunate in their bid for a conference
championship this year, as back-to-back losses to Northwestern (17-10) and
Ohio State (27-24 OT) in November prevented the Big Ten title and Rose Bowl
bid from landing in Iowa City. Still, the team reeled off a 10-win campaign,
winning nine straight to open the year and ended the regular season on a high,
with a 12-0 shutout of Minnesota to place second in the Big Ten and earn the
Orange Bowl bid.
Iowa is making its 24th bowl appearance and is 12-10-1 in its previous
postseason play. The Hawkeyes have played in the Orange Bowl just one time
before, that being a 38-17 loss to USC in 2003.
Iowa is 0-7 all-time against the ACC, while Georgia Tech is 6-6 in 12 matchups
against the Big Ten. However, this is the first-ever meeting between these two
teams on the gridiron.
Unlike a lot of teams in the Big Ten, Iowa utilized more of a balanced attack
this season, instead of relying heavily on the run. The Hawkeyes had their
moments when the ground game took center stage, but on the year, the team
averaged a rather pedestrian 109.4 yards per game rushing, on 3.2 yards per
carry. In addition, Iowa scored just 12 rushing touchdowns, all by tailbacks
Adam Robinson (775 yards, five TDs) and Brandon Wegher (528 yards, seven TDs).
The passing attack was much more effective (221.3 ypg) as QB Ricky Stanzi
completed 56 percent of his passes, for 2,186 yards and 15 TDs and came up
huge late in big games when needed. The receiving corps lacked any real go-to-
guy, but there were several reliable outlets on the season, in Derrell
Johnson-Koulianos (41 receptions, for 687 yards, two TDs) and Marvin McNutt
(30 receptions, for 653 yards, seven TDs).
A strong defense was really the key to Iowa's season, as the team limited the
opposition to a mere 15.5 ppg. The team was stingy against both the run at
122.4 ypg, and the pass, where foes managed just 164.7 ypg, ranking eighth
nationally in that category. The Hawkeyes thrived on big plays, racking up 29
takeaways this year, including 20 interceptions.
Several All-Big Ten First-Team members highlight the play on defense for Iowa.
Linebacker Pat Angerer is one of them, after leading the team in tackles
(135), with one sack, one INT and two forced fumbles. The secondary is
highlighted by ball-hawking strong safety Tyler Sash (84 tackles, six INTs),
while the defensive front's relentless pressure was spearheaded by defensive
end Adrian Clayborn (61 tackles, 18.0 TFLs, 9.5 sacks). Other defenders of
note include LB A.J. Edds (73 tackles, four INTs) and DE Broderick Binns (58
tackles, 9.0 TFLs, 6.0 sacks).
Iowa defensive coordinator Norm Parker knows the task at hand, considering
Georgia Tech's electric offense.
"It's like coaching 20 years ago," he said, before adding, "but what these
guys have done with this offense, they are, without question, they are the
gurus of doing it. You've got to look at it and say these guys are really
good. I mean, not only are they good at what they do, but they've got good
players. They've done a great job."
The Yellow Jackets use a totally different approach to move the football, as
they represent one of the most productive rushing teams in the nation thanks
to a devastating spread offence. Georgia Tech finished the year second in the
nation in rushing, churning out a ridiculous 307.2 yards per game on the
ground, on a hefty 5.3 yards per carry.
It certainly helps to have one of the nation's premier tailbacks in Jonathan
Dwyer (1,346 yards, 14 TDs) and an ultra-productive QB in Josh Nesbitt (991
yards rushing, 18 TDs). Throw a talented Anthony Allen (597 yards, five TDs)
into the backfield, and this is a ground game that can strike at any time.
Nesbitt is critical to what Tech can accomplish on offense according to Coach
Johnson.
"The key in any offense is to have a quarterback. Josh has certainly played
well this year and he has done a good job running the offense and hopefully he
will have a big game next Tuesday. He is a good athlete. Josh is a strong guy
and he is very competitive. He is an athletic guy so he is a good runner as
well as being able to throw the ball."
Despite the fact that Georgia Tech rarely goes to the air, Nesbitt has thrown
for 1,689 yards and 10 TDs this season, thanks in large part to star wideout
Demaryius Thomas. The 6-3, 230-pounder creates matchup problems down the field
and comes into this game with 46 receptions, for 1,154 yards and eight TDs.
According to Thomas, it is "pick-you-poison" with his ability downfield.
"If you try and play a safety and a corner over the top of me then you don't
have enough people in the box to stop the run. When we're running the ball
well you have to have eight people in the box. That leaves me one-on-one and
our offense is a vertical passing game so we can go deep on them and most of
my catches can be for so many yards."
Keeping the defense fresh has been a key to Georgia Tech's success this year
and a potent ground game has done just that, with Tech controlling the ball
for just over 34 minutes per game. That has allowed the defense to make big
plays, including 24 takeaways and 23 sacks.
The unit is highlighted by ACC Defensive Player of the Year and All-American
rush end Derrick Morgan. The 6-4, 275-pounder put up a huge campaign,
finishing the year with 52 tackles, 18.0 TFLs, 12.5 sacks, two forced fumbles
and two fumble recoveries. The linebacking corps is highlighted by standouts
Brad Jefferson (team-high 90 tackles, 8.0 TFLs, two forced fumbles) and Sedric
Griffin (72 tackles). All-ACC Second-Teamer Morgan Burnett (77 tackles, 3.0
TFLs, four INTs) spearheads the play in the secondary.
Coach Johnson thinks that Iowa will present a unique challenge.
"Defensively, they're probably similar to North Carolina or Clemson in that
they're big up front. They're just a good defensive team. Offensively, they
kind of have a style of their own. They have some big offensive linemen and
they try to run the ball at you and throw some play action. I don't think
we've played anyone that resembles what they do offensively."
This game will come down to ball control and if Tech can get its ground game
going, look for the Yellow Jackets to end their current bowl skein and finish
the season on a strong note.