The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

PASTNER UNVEILS RETOOLED OFFENSE TODAY

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

With experience to be gained and questions to be answered, Georgia Tech can obtain value from its sole exhibition game tonight at McCamish Pavilion. The Yellow Jackets’ preseason contest against Florida Tech can be far more than an opportunit­y to run around in their new uniforms and for fans to see the new paint job on Cremins Court (and run through the new clearbag policy).

“I’m excited for us to get going,” coach Josh Pastner said this week in advance of his third season at Tech.

With the losses of guards Josh Okogie and Tadric Jackson and center Ben Lammers — players who accounted for 56 percent of the scoring and 48 percent of the rebounding for last season’s team, which finished 13-19 — Pastner has done considerab­le retooling of the offense and has new pieces to insert.

Among the chief difference­s will be the offensive scheme, which Pastner has described as “positionle­ss.” While his offense has relied heavily on ball movement and cutting to the basket and will continue to do so, driving and distributi­ng responsibi­lities will be distribute­d more widely across the five players on the floor.

“So if I get on the top (of the key) or the point guard gets on top and we run point, it gives us opportunit­ies to get cuts and layups,” forward Evan Cole said. “It really depends on who’s hot that night.”

That said, a lot of responsibi­lity will still fall upon point guard Jose Alvarado. In the team’s private scrimmage against Auburn last weekend, “when Jose was in, we were good. Without Jose, we were stagnant, we struggled,” Pastner said. “We struggled in a lot of areas.”

The Jackets also intend to play at a faster pace. Running through the offense through Lammers, Tech often needed to slow the pace to give him time to get up the floor (in part because he played so many minutes). Last season, the Jackets ranked 308th in tempo at 66.5 possession­s per game (per KenPom). At Memphis, Pastner’s teams ranked as high as 18th (73.6 possession­s per game).

Lammers’ replacemen­t, Abdoulaye Gueye, should help.

“The one thing for sure he does better than Ben is the way he runs, so that will help us in that area,” Pastner said.

Pastner also wants to see much improved shooting from 3-point range. Last year, the Jackets shot 31.8 percent beyond the arc, 325th nationally. Pastner will also give time to at least two of his freshmen, forwards Kristian Sjolund and Khalid Moore. Guard Michael Devoe, the highest-rated of the three, is recovering from a toe injury and only returned to practice this week after six weeks on the sidelines.

Tech opens its regular-season schedule Friday against Lamar at McCamish.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Tech coach Josh Pastner describes his retooled offensive scheme as “positionle­ss.” The Jackets also intend to play at a faster pace.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Tech coach Josh Pastner describes his retooled offensive scheme as “positionle­ss.” The Jackets also intend to play at a faster pace.

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