Three Things Brent Key Must Prove About Georgia Tech In 2026

Amidst significant roster changes and strategic overhauls, Georgia Tech Football is set to lean on its robust running game and enhanced defensive lineup as it enters a transformative 2026 season.

Georgia Tech’s 2026 season may look different in a lot of places, but under Brent Key, the backbone of the program still looks the same.

The roster has turned over. Haynes King is gone after one of the most productive careers in program history.

Two new coordinators are in place. And a group of seniors who helped carry the rebuild - Malik Rutherford, Clayton Powell-Lee, and Ahmari Harvey - have moved on.

Even with all that change, this is not shaping up to be a team that suddenly reinvents itself from the ground up.

The clearest constant is on the ground. Key’s Georgia Tech has been built on running the ball and playing with force up front, and that formula is not going anywhere. In fact, the Yellow Jackets might be even more dangerous there despite losing Jamal Haynes.

That starts with the talent they brought in. Michigan transfer Justice Haynes arrived through the portal and has a real shot to be a first-team All-American this season.

He joins Malachi Hosley, who is back after both he and Haynes averaged more than seven yards per carry last season. With a new starting quarterback and a receiver room that has been reshuffled, Georgia Tech is set up to lean hard on its ground game.

The tight end group could also become a bigger part of the offense now that George Godsey is calling the plays. Georgia Tech used tight ends in different ways under Buster Faulkner, but this year’s group has a chance to be featured more heavily in the passing game.

That position has had plenty of variety over the last few seasons. Jackson Hawes was arguably the best blocking tight end in the country a couple of years ago, and Brett Seither, J.T.

Byrne, Josh Beetham, and Luke Harpring all brought different skill sets to the offense. None of them are back, which means the job now falls to Gavin Harris, Chris Corbo, Spencer Mermans, and Kevin Roche Jr.

Harris has real receiving potential. Mermans was one of the best blocking tight ends at the FCS level.

Corbo was an FCS All-American. Roche Jr was one of the standouts of spring.

A first-round tight end may not be waiting in that room, but with Georgia Tech’s receiver inexperience and Godsey’s background, the position could matter more than it has in recent years.

On defense, Georgia Tech spent the offseason trying to get bigger up front, and that could end up being the most important personnel shift of all. It does not guarantee improvement, but it could give the Yellow Jackets their best defensive line under Key.

The portal additions include Noah Carter, Jordan Walker, Taje McCoy, Tim Griffin, Tawfiq Thomas, and Vincent Carroll-Jackson, while Christian Garrett, Amontrae Bradford, and other young players remain on the roster. Since arriving, Key has made stopping the run a priority, and outside of a solid run defense in 2024 under Tyler Santuccci, that area has been a problem for Georgia Tech.

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