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Great — that loss by Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (to NC State Wolfpack) helps Miami Hurricanes’s path to the ACC Championship Game significantly. Here’s how and why it improves their chances — and what still needs to happen.
What the Georgia Tech loss does
What Miami still needs to do
Updated scenario assuming Miami wins out
If Miami wins all remaining games, let’s assume:
Bottom line
Yes — the Georgia Tech loss helps Miami substantially in the ACC title race. It simplifies one of their hurdles by making Georgia Tech less of a “perfect record wall”. If Miami wins out, they now have a much clearer shot at qualifying for the ACC Championship Game — provided they handle their part, and no other team finishes with a better record.
- Georgia Tech had been undefeated in ACC play, which placed them ahead of Miami in the race for one of the top two conference records. The loss means they now carry one conference defeat, which reduces their winning percentage in the ACC. (The loss came in a conference game: NC State beat GT 48-36. )
- This drop opens the door for Miami: if Miami wins all remaining games (including all remaining ACC games), they could surpass or tie Georgia Tech — depending on the rest of Georgia Tech’s schedule and whether they take any more losses.
- In simple terms: one fewer opponent with an unblemished ACC record means fewer teams that Miami absolutely must overtake or hope for to lose.
- Miami must still win all remaining games (or at least lose none of the remaining ACC games) to maximize their chances. Until they do, the path isn’t assured.
- Miami must hope that Georgia Tech (and potentially other competitors like Virginia Cavaliers) drops at least one more game or finishes worse than Miami in conference winning percentage, and that Miami finishes with one of the top two ACC records.
- Even with the Georgia Tech loss, Miami must also manage their own remaining schedule: handle games vs Syracuse, NC State, Virginia Tech, Pitt (as earlier discussed).
- There is still the matter of tie-breakers: if Miami ties Georgia Tech (same ACC record) then head-to-head, common opponents, etc., will matter.
If Miami wins all remaining games, let’s assume:
- Miami finishes with a conference record of 6-2 ACC (for example)
- Georgia Tech already has at least one ACC loss; if they lose no further ACC games, they might also finish 6-2 or 7-1 depending on total ACC games. But the loss makes 7-1 less likely (unless they go perfect the rest).
- If Miami finishes 6-2, and Georgia Tech finishes 6-2 (or worse), Miami could be tied for or ahead of Georgia Tech — meaning Miami would essentially be in position to claim a top-two spot.
- Because Georgia Tech now has “one in the loss column”, Miami’s margin for error is improved: Miami’s perfect finish + Georgia Tech at least one loss = Miami might leapfrog them.
Yes — the Georgia Tech loss helps Miami substantially in the ACC title race. It simplifies one of their hurdles by making Georgia Tech less of a “perfect record wall”. If Miami wins out, they now have a much clearer shot at qualifying for the ACC Championship Game — provided they handle their part, and no other team finishes with a better record.