University of Tennessee Athletics

Georgia Outlasts Vols, 26-24
October 06, 2001 | Football
Oct 6, 2001
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By ELIZABETH A. DAVIS
AP Sports Writer
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - With new coach Mark Richt calling the shots, Georgia found a way to win in Neyland Stadium.
The Bulldogs' 26-24 victory over sixth-ranked Tennessee on Saturday was their first here in six tries and first since 1980 when Herschel Walker was a freshman.
"In a coaching transition, it's tough on them and they're upset, usually rightfully so," Richt said. "I told them this is for you, no matter what. It's a defining moment for our seniors and the whole team. I'm thankful, we could pull it off."
Verron Haynes caught a 6-yard touchdown pass with 5 seconds left after redshirt freshman David Greene, starting for the first time on the road, drove the Bulldogs 59 yards toward the win.
The Volunteers (3-1, 2-1 Southeastern Conference) had come back to take the lead in dramatic fashion as Travis Stephens caught a screen pass and ran 62 yards for a touchdown with 44 seconds left for a 24-20 lead.
But the Bulldogs (3-1, 2-1), who have won two straight over the Vols, still had plenty of time for the upset.
David Greene drove Georgia to the Tennessee 6 with a 14-yard pass to Randy McMichael. Then he found Haynes open in the end zone.
"I kind of prepared myself for the moment. I kept telling myself to stay focused," Greene said. "We started moving the ball and started clicking. It was kind of a trick play. We faked to the fullback (Haynes) and he slides out like he is going to block the middle linebacker."
Georgia, which had lost five straight in Knoxville, did not risk and extra-point try, and Tennessee didn't have time for a comeback.
"This is tough," Tennessee coach Phillip Fulmer said. "There are a lot of hurt feelings in that dressing room. We're heartbroken right now."
Greene finished 21-of-34 for 303 yards, scorching the Vols' vaunted defense that was third in the country in allowing just 222.3 yards a game. Musa Smith had 49 yards on 17 carries, getting the best of the nation's best rush defense.
McMichael had six catches for 108 yards.
The Bulldogs had taken a 20-17 lead on Billy Bennett's 31-yard field goal with 5:44 remaining.
Then the Vols got the ball back, and it appeared all hope was lost when Jermaine Phillips intercepted Casey Clausen's pass in Georgia territory.
But Georgia had to punt, and Tennessee got the ball back with 1:21 to go. On second-and-10, Stephens swung out to catch a screen pass and ran down the sideline 62 yards for the score.
"It's very frustrating to have a game won at the end and turn out losing," Stephens said. "It's a long season and we've got time to do good things by the end of the year."
Stephens rushed for 176 yards on 30 carries, but special teams was Tennessee's biggest downfall.
"Our punt coverage and kick coverage was atrocious. That was complicated by the fact they were returning the way they were," Fulmer said.
Alex Walls missed a 34-yarder with 20 seconds left in the first half that would have put the Vols ahead. Punter Dustin Colquitt averaged just 33.4 yards a kick.
On consecutive punts in the second half, Tim Wansley downed Jonathan Kilgo's kicks at the Tennessee 1.
The Vols couldn't move past their own 29, but with ensuing possessions in Tennessee territory Georgia couldn't go anywhere either until the decisive drive.
Tennessee jumped out to a 14-3 lead after Clausen threw touchdown passes to Kelley Washington and Leonard Scott in the first quarter.
Georgia scored two straight touchdowns to overcome the deficit.
Damien Gary, who had good returns on his other tries, burst through Tennessee's defense on the Vols' first punt of the second quarter and returned it 72 yards for a touchdown to cut the lead to 14-10.
It was Georgia's first punt returned for a touchdown since Chris McCrainie against Texas Tech in 1993 and first allowed by Tennessee since Nebraska's Bobby Newcombe in the 2000 Fiesta Bowl.
Fred Gibson gave the Bulldogs a 17-14 lead with 9:18 to go before halftime with a 15-yard TD catch, the first in his career.
Walls tied it at 17 with a 25-yard field goal with 6:41 left in the second quarter.
Then Georgia went ahead on a 31-yard field goal by Bennett on fourth down with 5:44 remaining.
Clausen finished 24-for-40 for 295 yards, while Washington had nine catches for 108 yards.










