WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Wake Forest kept winning and coming up with more reasons to celebrate: A school-record 10 wins, an improbable conference division title, Tobacco Road supremacy.<br>
<br>
But the 16th-ranked Demon Deacons don't have time to party yet. With their first league championship since 1970 and a spot in the Orange Bowl on the line in Saturday's Atlantic Coast Conference title game against No. 23 Georgia Tech, the stakes remain huge.<br>
<br>
``It's something that probably will happen once in a lifetime, so you definitely have to live up the moment,'' running back Kenneth Moore said Tuesday. ``But you definitely have to get ready for next week and not get on too high a pedestal.''<br>
<br>
Wake Forest (10-2, 6-2) allowed itself a few days to drink in the division championship it clinched with a 38-24 victory against Maryland. Some players whooped it up in the locker room, others watched a 3 a.m. replay of the game on television and still more spent Sunday reflecting on their surprising accomplishment.<br>
<br>
``It really didn't soak in until like Sunday ... Man, we just won the division,'' Moore said. ``One step away from doing what we said we were going to do in the beginning of the year.''<br>
<br>
Then, on Monday, it was back to work.<br>
<br>
``You can't just sit on that and be satisfied because Georgia Tech is a really good team,'' offensive tackle Steve Vallos said. ``And if we want to be where we were planning on being at the end of the season, you can't dwell on that win and (not) focus on our next opponent.''<br>
<br>
That Wake Forest has maintained focus throughout its run is remarkable. The Demon Deacons have performed at a consistently high level for most of the season, with their only blips coming in the fourth quarter of the Clemson loss and in their loss to Virginia Tech.<br>
<br>
Of course, Wake Forest won't play a bigger game than this one unless the Demon Deacons win and advance to the Orange Bowl.<br>
<br>
``You think one game is huge, and you want to sit down and soak it all in,'' quarterback Riley Skinner said. ``But you realize you've got an even bigger one next week, so there's no time to sit around and let it sink in.<br>
<br>
``You've got to keep going through every week, planning for the next game. After the season's over, it'll be time to let it all sink in.''<br>
<br>
One thing the Demon Deacons say isn't a concern is the just-happy-to-be-there mind-set. They insist they aren't content just to win the division.<br>
<br>
``We're happy to be in the position that we're at, but I don't think we're satisfied,'' Vallos said.