The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jackets still hoping for postseason, need wins

NCAA tourney a long shot, but even NIT will take work.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

With three games to play in the regular season, the NCAA tournament appears to be the longest of long shots for Georgia Tech. Though the Yellow Jackets haven’t aban- doned it — they can get in by winning the ACC tournament and capturing the league’s automatic berth — the NIT is out there as a possibilit­y, though that would require some work, too.

“If it came to that, any chance to extend your season is going to be a bless- ing, especially for a senior,” senior center James Banks said. But “you know what every kid wants. You want that ‘One Shining Moment,’ and that doesn’t happen in the NIT. That happens in the NCAA. We’re grateful for whatever chance we get, of course, but we’re not striving for (the NIT) at all.”

Tech (14-14, 8-9 ACC) will try to continue its late-season run this evening with a home game against Miami (14-13, 6-11). A win over the Hurricanes would be the Jackets’ fourth in the past five games and keep alive the possibilit­y of finishing with a .500 or better record in league play.

Coach Josh Pastner’s goal has been to finish in the top nine in the conference standings — which would mean the Jackets would avoid playing in the first round of the tour- nament. Tech has played on the first day of the tourna- ment in each of Pastner’s first three seasons.

Tech has finished in the top nine only once in the past nine seasons, and that was in 2013, when the ACC was 12 teams, not 15. Past- ner sees it as part of his long- stated vision to get the Jack- ets into the NCAA tourna- ment by next season, his fifth at Tech.

“That’s a big step for us,” Pastner said.

Going into today’s games, Tech was in a three-way tie for seventh. The Jackets can also finish at .500 in league play with a 2-1 finish in the last three games against Miami, Pitt and at Clem- son. Tech’s last .500 season in ACC regular-season games was the 2006-07 season. It bears mentioning that the Jackets are mak- ing this charge in a season when the league is down from its usual standards and this Tech team is arguably Pastner’s strongest.

“There’s a lot to play for, and there’s a lot to play for with Miami,” Pastner said.

Pastner, like Banks, isn’t ready to entertain the thought of playing in the NIT. Tech played in the consolatio­n tournament in 2017, at the end of Pastner’s first season, and reached the finals.

“We’re playing for the NCAA tournament,” Pastner said. “I mean, that’s what we want to do. Obviously, playing in the postseason, the objective is to play in the NCAA tournament. If you’re not going to play in the NCAA tournament, you want to play in the NIT, obviously. But our first thought is to play in the NCAA tournament.”

Whether or not it’s on the radar, an NIT berth would still take some doing. The Jackets would almost certainly have to finish at .500 or better, and Tech, at least in the view of the NCAA tournament selection committee, is actually 13-14, not 14-14, as it only considers games against Division I teams. Tech beat Division II Morehouse in January.

Should the NIT take the same view, if the Jackets lost one of their remaining regular-season games to finish 15-15, they would have to win at least one ACC tournament game to stay at .500. But a 16-16 record would guarantee Tech nothing.

Last season, the NIT took nine teams from the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and

S EC. They h appen e d to be the nine power-conference teams with the highest NET rankings that weren’t selected to the NCAA tournament and had records of .500 or better. The range was 35-66.

After Thursday’s games, Tech’s NET (a replacemen­t for the NCAA’s longstandi­ng evaluation metric, RPI) was No. 78. The Jackets likely would be in good position for the NIT if they could win the next three games to get to 16-14 and win one tournament game to finish at 17-15, but even that would not seem a lock by any stretch.

In the NET ranking after Thursday’s games, there were no fewer than 14 power-conference teams ahead of Tech in NET with records of .500 or better.

The simple solution for Tech is to keep winning.

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