Daily Press

New Kent deals Poquoson defeat

Georgia Tech takes ACC crown, earns berth to NCAA tournament

- — Staff reports

New Kent (2-1) outlasted homestandi­ng Poquoson 41-31 Saturday in a Bay Rivers District game, spoiling the Islanders’ season opener. The Trojans led 21-13 at halftime and held on in the second half of a game that was arranged Thursday because both teams’ original opponents were unable to compete.

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Jose Alvarado couldn’t contain his emotions as the horn sounded, collapsing in disbelief as his Georgia Tech teammates mobbed each other near midcourt.

He quickly ran to the celebratio­n that included coach Josh Pastner — still sporting that can’t-miss-it clear face shield.

“Coach, you’re a champion, man!” Alvarado yelled as he joined him for a postgame TV interview amid fallen-from-the-rafters balloons and confetti.

The Yellow Jackets have their first Atlantic Coast Conference tournament title in nearly three decades after beating No. 15 Florida State 80-75 in Saturday night’s championsh­ip game. They secured an automatic NCAA tournament berth to end an 11-year drought.

“A lot of emotions: joy, happiness, everything,” said Michael Devoe, the tournament MVP. “I mean, this goes down in history for us.”

Devoe scored 20 points for the fourth-seeded Yellow Jackets (17-8), who shot 52% after halftime and repeatedly capitalize­d on mistakes by the Seminoles to win their first ACC tournament crown since 1993 and fourth overall.

ACC Player of the Year Moses Wright and Jordan Usher each had 11 of their 15 points after halftime for Georgia Tech, which started 0-2 with home losses to Georgia State and Mercer. The Yellow Jackets stood 9-8 after a loss at Clemson on a last-second shot Feb. 12 to find themselves facing bubble uncertaint­y.

But they haven’t lost since. And there’s no doubt about the NCAA tourney now after a strong finish against the second-seeded Seminoles (16-6).

“Our guys have just scrapped, fought, kicked, clawed — whatever they had to do to find a way to get wins this year,” Pastner said. “And I’m just so darn proud of these young men.”

Scottie Barnes had 21 points on 8-for-10 shooting for FSU, which shot 56% but committed 25 turnovers that led to 31 points for the Yellow Jackets.

They came in all kinds of ways, from the Seminoles bobbling catches and having passes deflected to just throwing balls straight out of bounds. The 25 turnovers fell one shy of tying a tournament title-game record since the league began tracking the number in 1961, while Georgia Tech’s 15 steals — five by Alvarado — were a title-game record since the league began charting it in 1976.

“We did turn the ball over a couple of times ourselves, what we call self-inflicted turnovers,” FSU coach Leonard Hamilton said. “But for the most part, I think that they forced us into turnovers . ... I want to give them credit because they did an unbelievab­le job of just stripping us from the ball, and their defense created a mindset with us where we were unsure as to what we were supposed to do.”

The Yellow Jackets avoided such trouble with just seven turnovers. But they were particular­ly steady down the stretch, making six of eight shots over the final eight minutes and 11 of 12 free throws in the final 90 seconds.

That included Alvarado knocking down a pair with nine seconds left after shaking off a hard fall.

It was an unusual final pairing in a tournament altered by the coronaviru­s pandemic. No. 16 Virginia and Duke withdrew after positive COVID-19 tests within their programs. The title matchup marked the second finale without a North Carolina-based team, the other being Georgia Tech’s win against Virginia in 1990.

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