The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech perplexed without Alvarado

Injured team leader, unique contributo­r will sit until Dec. 31; Jackets must decide how to fill void.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

Amid a treacherou­s week, one of Georgia Tech’s obstacles in its pursuit of an NCAA tournament berth has been enlarged. Point guard Jose Alvarado, who was expected back from an ankle injury in time for the Yellow Jackets’ Dec. 14 game at No. 8 Kentucky, will be out for an additional two weeks. He is expected to return for the Dec. 31 game at Florida State.

Alvarado, who suffered a high ankle sprain in practice before the Nov. 11 game against Elon, came back to play 18 ineffectiv­e minutes against Georgia, then sat out the following two games. Starting with the Georgia game, his absence has been a factor as the Jackets lost to Georgia and Arkansas, then had difficulty defeating Bethune-Cookman on Sunday.

Tech plays Nebraska tonight at home as part of the Big Ten/ACC Challenge.

“He’s a good player, he’s a great leader, he does things that don’t show up in the box score, so we’ll have to figure it out without him,” coach Josh Pastner said Tuesday.

Last season, with Alvarado on the floor 83% of the time, Tech’s

assist/turnover ratio was 433/459. Its assist-per-field-goal rate was 57%. (Assist/field-goal rate is an

important statistic to Pastner, who finds it a good indicator of ball movement and aims for 60%.)

Starting with the Elon game and including the Georgia game Nov. 20, Tech has had a 45/69 assist/turnover ratio in its past four games and has assisted on

46% of its baskets.

Where his anticipate­d absence was four games, if Alvarado returns for the FSU game, the player Pastner has said was the team’s best in the offseason will have missed 10 games, nearly a third of the 31-game regular season.

Pastner said the extended absence puts him and his staff in a position of determinin­g if the team needs to tweak anything to

help guards Michael Devoe and Bubba Parham fill Alvarado’s shoes at the point, roles they’re not accustomed to filling.

Alvarado can play, but is not close to 100%. When he tried to come back to play against Georgia, Pastner said it was “five on four,” with Alvarado unable to defend effectivel­y. Alvarado’s rehab program is conservati­ve, but Pastner believes that hav

ing Alvarado at full health for the final 18 games of ACC play, even if it means sacrificin­g him for nonconfere­nce games, is the best course for Tech to reach the

NCAA tournament for the first time since 2010.

Pastner also is banking heavily on transfer guard Jordan Usher, who will be eligible starting with the Jackets’ Dec. 18 game against Ball State, to give the Jackets a significan­t jolt in energy and offense. “Yes, nonconfere­nce matters,

and you don’t want to lose any games, but you’re really going to be judged by how you fall in line with the ACC,” Pastner said. “That’s the point of decision with Jose — how do we get him healthy for the 18 remaining games for ACC play? That’s kind of where we’re at.”

The game against Nebraska, which is 4-3 in coach Fred Hoiberg’s first season, is the middle leg of a stretch of three games in seven days, the last of which is Tech’s Saturday home game against Syracuse (originally scheduled for Sunday) in an early league game. Moreover, Tech begins its final-exam period Thursday.

Meantime, sophomore forward Kristian Sjolund will redshirt this season, or at least has intentions to do so, Pastner said Tuesday.

Pastner kept him off the court as Sjolund considered the option, which would give him an extra year to develop and train. Pastner and Sjolund had also contemplat­ed the option last season, before Sjolund decided to play.

“As of (Tuesday), the plan is to redshirt him,” Pastner said. “I don’t see anything changing on that.”

As a redshirt, Sjolund can devote more time to getting stronger in the weight room and working on individual skill training. Sjolund is listed at 6-foot-8 and 213 pounds.

Last season, Sjolund played 198 minutes in 21 games, with 63 points, 22 rebounds, four assists and 14 turnovers. He shot 36% from the field and 33% from 3-point range.

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