The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jackets to keep fifififigh­ting even without star Wright

- By Ken Sugiura ken. sugiura@ ajc. com

On Dec. 15, Georgia Tech trailed by 16 points to Florida State in the second half before reducing the deficit to one point before falling 74- 61.

“We scrap,” coach Josh Pastner said. “We compete.”

On Feb. 6, the Jackets fell behind 33- 1 6 at home to Notre Dame and were down 50- 35 at halftime before fifinally winning 82- 80.

“( The fifirst- half lead) is a credit to Notre Dame,” Pastner said. “But we scrapped, kicked, clawed, fought, elbowed, punched, dove, whatever we had to do to fifind a way to scrap our way back into a chance to take the lead, then to win the game. That is a great win.”

March 5 was a high moment of the season. In what Pastner believed was a game that would secure Tech’s fifirst NCAA Tournament berth since 2010, the Jackets defeated Wake Forest 75- 63 t o complete a re gular season that began with disastrous home losses to Georgia State and Mercer and looked very ordinary at 9- 8 before a 6- 0 fifinish.

their leading scorer over three hairbreadt­h games and somehow won them all.

It was learned Tuesday night that the contempora­ry Jackets will be without Moses Wright for their NCAA opener against Loyola Chicago. Should they advance to Round 2, the opponent will surely be the No. 1 seed, Illinois. Wright will miss that game, too. The reason: COVID- 19. This would appear to be something approachin­g a worst- case- scenario. But, as someone who covered every minute of Tech’s six games in the 2004 tournament, not many among us expected that team to stick around long with Elder hobbled.

Elder made second- team all- ACC that season. Wright was the ACC player of the year. Yes, that’s a difference. Elder was a wing, and Tech could cover for his absence by deploying Jack and Bynum in tandem and sliding Marvin Lewis over. ( It also had Isma’il Muhammad, the dynamic off- thebench presence.) After Wright, Tech’s tallest starter is Jordan Usher, who’s 6- foot7. Wright’s backup is Rodney Howard, the Georgia transfer who averages 7.6 minutes and 1.6 points.

Tech uses multiple defenses. The guess is that trying to play Loyola man- to- man without Wright will be a no- go. The Ramblers’ center is Cameron Krutwig, who made third- team All- American. The good news: Tech tends to be better when it plays zone, their version being essentiall­y a morphing matchup. Loyola won’t score 100 points today; according to Ken Pomeroy’s rankings, it was 49th in offensive efficiency, the lowest such number of any team in KenPom’s overall top 20.

The problem will come when Tech has the ball. Loyola was No. 1 in defensive efficiency, and Tech is missing a man who averages 17.4 points. It’s possible to imagine the Jackets winning if Usher, who has averaged 15.4 over the past five games, has another big day. It’s not possible to imagine them winning if Michael Devoe isn’t hitting.

Loyola plays at a sedate pace. Tech will try to speed things up. ( A big man is less essential in an open- court game.) Jose Alvarado’s ball pressure will be mandatory. The Jackets might well deploy Usher as a nominal center and play three guards, Bubba Parham being the third, as opposed to stationing Howard down low.

In sum, there are ways to win this game without Wright. Granted, there’d be more ways with him, but you play with what you have. We might never know, even with the Jackets’ attention to protocols and their weeklong Greensboro bubble, how Wright came to test positive. We’re still in a pandemic. How does anybody test positive? He’s in isolation in Indianapol­is and is said to be asymptomat­ic. He might be able to return if the Jackets reach the Sweet 16.

They were already a slight underdog against Loyola, but this is an 8- versus- 9 game, which means there’s not really a favorite. We shouldn’t dismiss their chances out of hand. As for what might happen in Round 2 against Illinois minus Wright … well, let me get back to you on that.

In the meantime, the Jackets can buoy their spirits by recalling Tech’s perseveran­ce back in the day. If they require personal testimony, Elder shouldn’t be hard to find. He’s their associate director of player personnel.

 ?? GERRY BROOME/ AP ?? If Jordan Usher, who has averaged 15.4 points over the past five games, has another big day, it’s possible to imagine Tech winning without Moses Wright.
GERRY BROOME/ AP If Jordan Usher, who has averaged 15.4 points over the past five games, has another big day, it’s possible to imagine Tech winning without Moses Wright.

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