The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Success at NIT doesn’t always lead to the Big Dance,

Of 40 semifinali­sts in 2007-16, 18 in Big Dance next season.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

With Georgia Tech having played three NIT games and playing a fourth tonight in New York in the semifinals against Cal State Bakersfiel­d, it’s an easy conclusion to draw.

Playing in a win-or-gohome atmosphere and simply getting more time on the court will serve the Yellow Jackets well in the future. Or that’s what Florida State coach Leonard Hamilton thought in 2014, when the Seminoles reached the NIT semifinals.

“I think this year will be a springboar­d for us to continue our program in the right direction,” Hamilton said after the game.

The following year, the Seminoles finished 17-16, ending a streak in which they had made either the NCAA or NIT for nine consecutiv­e seasons. (Losing possibly their best player early in the season after he signed with an agent had something to do with it.)

Making the NIT semifinals has proven to be the springboar­d that Tech hopes it will be going into the 2017-18 season, but not always. Of the 40 NIT semifinali­sts between 2007 and 2016, 18 made the NCAA Tournament the next season.

Not every team was in the same situation as Tech is, with a new coach, a number of key players expected back and a clear eye on the future. Some were mid-major teams with lower ceilings than the Jackets would anticipate. Some were power-conference teams playing for coaches whose tenures were nearing their end. (Those power-conference teams were 11-for-23 in NCAA berths the following season.)

Still, it’s a reminder that each season is an entity unto its own and that momentum doesn’t always push a team as far as might be hoped. Another example is San Diego State, which beat Tech last year in the NIT quarterfin­als. The Aztecs were disappoint­ed to miss the NCAA Tournament, ending a sixyear streak, but ended up making the NIT semifinals.

They went into this season picked to win the Mountain West. Instead, the Aztecs struggled through their worst season since 2004-05, finishing sixth in the league and missing the postseason entirely. An article in the San Diego Union-Tribune observed that the team “toppled under the weight of unrealized promise.”

The challenge for the Jackets next year will be building upon this year’s accomplish­ment with the same determinat­ion and without key pieces.

Point guard Josh Heath’s value to the team as a distributo­r and catalyst is understate­d. Forward Quinton Stephens made such strides this season that coaches have realized the need to find a similar player who can fill his role as a rebounder capable of double-double games. Guard Corey Heyward has given the team defensive toughness and been a model of a team-first player. Even forward Rand Rowland, a walk-on put on scholarshi­p in January, has given the team a lift with his energy.

On the other hand, what Tech aspires to is entirely possible. Miami coach Jim Larranaga would tell you as much. In 2015, Larranaga’s fourth season at UM, the Hurricanes missed out on the NCAA Tournament but then made the NIT finals. The following year, Miami was in the NCAA’s Sweet 16.

“I thought, No. 1, the team had a chip on its shoulder the next year because we didn’t make the NCAA Tournament and was bound and determined to make the NCAA,” Larranaga said. “But I thought we played with a lot more confidence having gone to the finals of the NIT and we really developed some good chemistry.”

Of the 40 NIT semifinali­sts of the past 10 years, a team that particular­ly resembles Tech and its situation is the 2010-11 Colorado Buffaloes. Tad Boyle took over a team that had been to the NCAA Tournament once in the previous 13 seasons and was picked to finish ninth in its final season in the Big 12. Colorado finished in a tie for fifth and, after just missing the NCAA Tournament, capped the season by making it to New York, where the Buffaloes lost in the semifinals.

“This program is in good hands and we have a lot of guys in that locker room coming back, a few guys that couldn’t play this year that are going to carry this program to places it’s never been before,” said Levi Knutson, a senior on that team, following its semifinals loss. Knutson was right. Since then, Colorado has made the NCAA Tournament four out of the past six years, an unpreceden­ted run of success.

As Tech gears up for a possible NIT championsh­ip and a hard-to-believe finish to coach Josh Pastner’s first season, the aim is the same.

“I think for us, the continuati­on of understand­ing that what we need to do to get to the NCAA Tournament — we’ve got more practices, got more games, we’ve gotten a lot of good stuff out of it,” Pastner said. “And the exposure. We’ll be able to build on this as we get into the offseason.”

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