The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Unselfish Jackets raising eyebrows

Pastner has Tech in position for a run at an NCAA berth.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

About 90 minutes had passed since Josh Okogie set McCamish Pavilion on its ear by racing to the basket to beat No. 14 Notre Dame with a winning layup just before time expired.

Former Georgia Tech players, in the arena for their annual alumni game, had moved the party up to the Callaway Club, the expanded suite-style space overlookin­g Cremins Court. The air was filled with the nostalgia of a reunion and the joy of a wedding reception, and for a moment Saturday, the man holding everyone’s attention was the man for whom the court is named.

“If you’re not proud to be a Yellow Jacket today, something’s wrong,” Tech coaching great Bobby Cremins told the assembly of former players and family.

Among those assembled, there was little doubting the pride in the team, which hammered No. 6 Florida State on Wednesday and then rallied to upend the Fighting Irish on Saturday. With the New Year’s Eve defeat of then-No. 9 North Carolina, coach Josh Pastner’s Jackets became the first since the 2009-10 team (the last to make an NCAA Tournament) to beat as many as three Top 25 teams.

A team expected to be among the weaker power-conference teams in the country, the Jackets (13-8) enter tonight’s matchup with Clemson at 5-4 in the ACC. A team pegged to finish 14th of 15 teams in the league has a clear shot at an NCAA Tournament berth.

“I’m starting to believe that Josh has the personalit­y,” Jackets legend Dennis Scott said. “I like how he’s tweaked his system to fit his players. That lets me know he knows what ... he’s doing. I think that’s half the battle.”

Cremins can hardly believe what he has seen.

“The transforma­tion’s unbelievab­le,” he said. “It’s incredible for a team to be picked last, next to last, and to do what they’re doing. To me, it’s one of the best stories in college basketball right now. Again, you’ve got to give Brian (Gregory) some credit, but Josh Pastner has taken this group together, and it’s amazing. And everybody feels it.”

Pastner stayed briefly at the reception, accepting well wishes before ribbing Cremins, who felt compelled to ask Pastner for permission to attend practice.

“I say, ‘Coach — your name is on the floor,’ ” Pastner said to laughs. “‘If you want to coach the team, I’ll move over. You’ve earned that right.’ ”

Among those who wanted to meet him was former player Jack Mansell, who was Cremins’ first recruit and a roommate of Jackets legend Mark Price.

“Hey, I want to tell you this is some of the best coaching I’ve ever seen,” Mansell told Pastner.

Mansell acknowledg­ed later that he was initially as doubtful of Pastner as many Tech fans. He said he even called his buddy Price, now in his second season at Charlotte, and said he should sit tight for a couple seasons and then scoop up the job after what he thought was Pastner’s inevitable failure.

“I’m just seeing disaster,” Mansell said.

But Mansell, a season-ticket holder who records games to review after he returns home, has been floored. He likes the unselfish ball movement, the Princeton-style backdoor cutting and the belief that Pastner has inspired.

“With as little (talent) as he has and with as little expectatio­ns, a lot of times (when such teams win), you go, it’s mostly coaching,” Mansell said. This season, “I mean, it’s almost all coaching. I can’t think of many other coaches that could get as much as he’s gotten out of it.”

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