Fumble-prone Yellow Jackets fall to Duke

Duke running back Deon Jackson stiff-arms Georgia Tech defensive back Jaytlin Askew (33) on his way to the end zone during Saturday's ACC matchup in Atlanta.
Duke running back Deon Jackson stiff-arms Georgia Tech defensive back Jaytlin Askew (33) on his way to the end zone during Saturday's ACC matchup in Atlanta.
photo Duke running back Deon Jackson stiff-arms Georgia Tech defensive back Jaytlin Askew (33) on his way to the end zone during Saturday's ACC matchup in Atlanta.

ATLANTA - Duke's Daniel Jones seized the advantage when Georgia Tech suffered a sudden flurry of three lost fumbles in the final three minutes of the third quarter.

Jones threw three touchdown passes, all in the decisive span late in the third quarter, and Duke contained the nation's top running attack to beat the Yellow Jackets 28-14 Saturday.

"We wanted to force some turnovers, and really that changed the game," Blue Devils safety Dylan Singleton said.

The game was tied before the flurry of fumbles converted to touchdowns gave Duke (5-1, 1-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) a 28-7 lead.

"It was the game," Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson said. "You can't turn the ball over on three straight plays and expect to beat anybody. You're not going to come back from that."

Georgia Tech (3-4, 1-3) couldn't maintain its offensive momentum after scoring more than 60 points in back-to-back wins over Bowling Green and Louisville. The Yellow Jackets were held to 229 yards rushing, 144 below their nation-leading average.

Deon Jackson ran for 98 yards, including a 12-yard touchdown run to cap Duke's opening drive.

Jones' 48-yard scoring pass to T.J. Rahming followed the first of Tech's rapid-fire lost fumbles, this one by running back Jerry Howard. Officials ruled Howard down before the fumble, but the call was overturned in a video review. The fumble was forced by Axel Nyembwe and recovered by Chris Rumph II.

Only three seconds after Rahming's touchdown catch, Tech quarterback TaQuon Marshall's fumble was recovered by Duke's Twazanga Mugala. The turnover set up Jones' 1-yard scoring pass to Davis Koppenhaver.

On the following kickoff, Juanyeh Thomas lost the ball when hit by Mataeo Durant. Brandon Hill recovered at the Tech 6. Jones' scoring pass to Jonathan Lloyd gave Duke a 28-7 lead.

"It's how we play our best - to blend defense, the kicking game and offense," Duke coach David Cutcliffe said. "That was a storm, it wasn't a blend."

Tech lost three of its six fumbles in the game.

"I'm not sure what happened, but that's unacceptable and we're going to fix it as a team," Howard said.

Tech's only first-half touchdown, a 32-yard pass from Marshall to Malachi Carter, was set up by Lamont Simmons' interception. Jones was pressured and appeared to be trying to just throw the ball away.

Howard's 2-yard scoring run midway through the fourth quarter cut Duke's lead to 28-14. He led Tech with 62 yards on the ground.

Marshall had 16 carries for only 41 yards before leaving the game in the fourth quarter with an apparent shoulder injury.

"It was sore, and we didn't want to put him back in," Johnson said.

The Blue Devils had an impressive answer to their first loss of the season to Virginia Tech on Sept. 29. Duke, third in the ACC in scoring defense and fifth in total defense, contained Tech's triple-option-heavy flexbone offense. Aside from his poor first-half pass that was intercepted, Jones avoided mistakes and capitalized when the Jackets suffered their sudden spree of turnovers.

The two-game offensive surge against Bowling Green and Louisville now looks like a blip on the Jackets' schedule. The offense was held to no more than 21 points in ACC losses to Pittsburgh and Clemson and again was underwhelming against Duke. The Jackets will to try to save their season again with back-to-back road games against Virginia Tech and North Carolina.

Duke has four wins in its past five games against the Jackets, including two straight. Cutcliffe said his preparation for the Jackets' offense begins in the spring.

"We do a good job of making it familiar for our players year-round," Cutcliffe said. "It's a playbook. It literally is a system, and we teach the system to our kids in the spring. Then I think we do a good job of simulating their offense in practice."

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