Tim Hardy, Greater Atlanta Christian head coach

Today’s interviewee is Greater Atlanta Christian coach Tim Hardy, whose Class 3A-A Private team is in the semifinals for the first time since 2020. The Spartans also earned their first playoff win since 2020 with a 48-16 domination of Landmark Christian. Hardy’s team followed that with another statement win, a 49-14 road victory over Athens Academy. GAC can shock the state again tonight with an upset at top-ranked, defending state champion Hebron Christian in a battle between Gwinnett County private schools. This is Hardy’s 14th season as GAC’s coach.

1. How was your team able to dominate Athens Academy like that? “It was a really good team performance. I thought we defended well at all three levels. We played well up front, and then our secondary was outstanding. [Athens Academy] has a really good passing attack, and our guys just defended thrown balls really well that night. Then when you’re defending well, we were really efficient offensively. We just took advantage of opportunities, secured the ball, and some guys made some plays. Our special teams have been very strong all year, both in terms of some of our specialists, but also just our coverage teams. Combine some of those things together, and we pinned them deep on the coverage and played good defense. Things sort of worked together to play good, complimentary football.” [The margin of victory was more surprising than the outcome, as Athens Academy was a five-point favorite by the Maxwell Ratings. GAC surpassed 40 points in a game for the fifth consecutive time, the longest run of its kind for the program since 2017. Sophomore quarterback Michael Miller passed for two touchdowns and rushed for three. He produced 283 total yards.]

2. GAC didn’t win a playoff game for four years after a really strong run in the 2010s. What does this playoff run show about where your program is headed? “Even coming off of last year, which was a little bit of a disappointing year, we just had a little bit of a culture reset within our program in terms of attention to detail and quality of practice and work in the offseason. One thing that’s great about football is it takes so many people to be successful, so that’s not the result of one coach or one player. It’s really all the players buying into something bigger than themselves and the coaches setting that standard and holding that standard. So, it’s been a good year all the way across. One of the things that’s true about our team is we’re still a young team, so we’re better now than we were a month ago. We just continue to improve as we play the game, and so I think we’ve seen real growth from one season to the next, but also we’ve come a long way in the context of the season.” [GAC’s leading passer, rusher and receiver and eight of the 10 leading tacklers are juniors or sophomores.]

3. How specifically have you seen your young team grow up in the last month? “Some individuals have continued to improve at their specific positions, being honest with that. I think guys getting experience, right? ‘Oh, we played a close game and won. Okay, we came from behind. We’ve got a little confidence in that.’ People haven’t experienced things, and there’s no substitute for experience. So all of a sudden, you may start the year as a sophomore, but when you’re playing in November and December, you’re not a sophomore anymore, right? You’ve played an entire year, and you’re more like a junior. For us, legitimately, our guys have bought into holding to a standard in terms of our focus and our practice, so they do a great job of trying to show up to that standard and in a healthy way, encouraging and challenging their teammates to make sure they’re practicing at that level or focusing at that level.”

4. What have you seen from Hebron Christian, and what will it take to beat them on Friday night? “In high school football, the things that win are the things that win, right? Doing a great job taking care of the ball, being able to possess it in the way you want to possess it in terms of efficiency in offense and limiting the other team’s explosive plays. There’s just those things that happen in games, a big moment here, a big moment there, so who can make the plays and allow the plays. We’re excited about the opportunity. It’s fun to be one of the final four, it’s fun to be playing in December, and we look forward to 7:30 on Friday night.” [A victory would put GAC in a state championship game for the first time since 2016, when the Spartans’ quarterback was current Houston Texas quarterback Davis Mills.]

 
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Shelton Felton, Valdosta head coach