Jovesa Damuni STOLE victory from the No. 24 Yellow Jackets in a finish so BRUTAL it has fans and pundits questioning the very HEART of Georgia Tech’s program. In a game that EXPOSED catastrophic coaching failures, BYU’s last-gasp 25-21 win wasn’t just an upset—it was a SYSTEMIC COLLAPSE broadcast to the nation.
With the game on the line, Georgia Tech’s senior leader, Haynes King, did the UNTHINKABLE. After a miraculous 66-yard completion on fourth down, King stared down the end zone with 35 seconds left—only to THROW THE SEASON AWAY with a crushing interception. This wasn’t just a loss; it was a CHOKE of historic proportions, snatching defeat from the jaws of victory and cementing a legacy of failure.
The Yellow Jackets’ epic meltdown was a masterclass in incompetence. A MUFFED KICKOFF, a BLOCKED field goal, and a final, unforgivable red zone turnover revealed a team CRACKING under pressure. While King set career records, his final act was to IMBED the dagger into his own team’s heart. Coach Brent Key’s “breakthrough season” has ended in AGONIZING, self-inflicted ruin, losing three straight and BLEEDING out in a bowl game sponsored by a pastry.
Meanwhile, BYU’s controversial, faith-based program celebrates its 12th win, a milestone not seen since 2001, fueled by a freshman quarterback and a victory handed to them by an opponent’s sheer inability to win. The haunting question now echoes through college football: did Georgia Tech simply lose a game, or did they REVEAL a deep-seated culture of CLUTCH FAILURE that no record book can ever erase?




