The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech’s hot streak continues, with UNC showdown up next

Jackets’ victory run will be tested against the No. 20 Tar Heels.

- By Chad Bishop chad.bishop@ajc.com

At the start of each week throughout the regular season, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on will take a closer look at the Georgia Tech baseball team. Here’s a breakdown of the Yellow Jackets going into the fifth week:

Record: 15-4, 3-0 ACC. Streak: Won 8. RPI: 77. Last Week (4-0): Tuesday, won at Mercer 9-5; Friday, beat North Carolina State 8-5; Saturday, beat NC State 8-7; Sunday, beat North Carolina State 15-5 (8).

This Week: Today at Georgia State, 4 p.m. Friday at North Carolina, 6 p.m. Saturday at North Carolina, 2 p.m. Sunday at North Carolina, noon.

Week in review; A sweep of North Carolina State has Tech’s win streak at eight. The unranked Jackets won a pair of nip-and-tuck games, including an 8-7, come-frombehind triumph in the middle game, before blowing out the Wolfpack on Sunday.

Tech hit .315 against NCSU and slugged 10 home runs, one coming off the bat of Bobby Zmarzlak in the bottom of the eighth during Saturday’s comeback. Drew Burress hit three more home runs and has 13 for the season, second nationally only to Grant Knipp of Campbell, who has 14.

On Tuesday, Tech sophomore righty Carson Ballard threw seven innings of scoreless ball before the Jackets’ bullpen had to hold on in a 9-5 win at Mercer.

Week ahead: Tech will begin its week by taking the 12-mile drive across town to face Georgia State in a rematch of a Feb. 27 contest that saw the Jackets win 10-0 at Russ Chandler Stadium. The Panthers have been 9-3 since that loss and are fresh off a conference-opening sweep at South Alabama.

On Thursday, Tech will leave the state for the first time this year when it travels to Chapel Hill for a threegame series at North Carolina beginning Friday. The Tar Heels (17-4, 4-2 ACC) are 15-0 at home and host North Carolina Wilmington on Tuesday. North Carolina, ranked 20th nationally, swept Pittsburgh to start ACC play and dropped 2 of 3 at Miami over the weekend.

Tech’s RPI has rocketed up to 77, putting the Jackets back in the discussion to make the postseason. North Carolina begins the week ranked 10th in RPI.

People in North Carolina may have a little more riding on this season’s NCAA men’s and women’s basketball tournament­s, as they will be able to legally bet on the games through their smartphone apps and computers for the first time.

For the sixth consecutiv­e year, the number of states allowing legal sports betting has expanded since the last rendition of March Madness. A total of 38 states and the District of Columbia now allow some form of sports betting, with 30 states and the nation’s capital allowing online wagering.

That’s up from one state, Nevada, where people could legally wager on games during the 2018 college basketball tournament­s, before the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for expansion.

The rules for sports betting vary by state. Some states prohibit bets on home-state college teams or the performanc­e of specific players. Others allow bets not only on the outcome of any college games but also on a variety of other things, such as the number of points, rebounds and assists that a particular player will tally.

Here are some things to know about sports betting as the tourneys open. The men’s games start tonight with two play-in games; the women’s competitio­n begins Wednesday with two play-in games.

Big money

Fans long have filled out NCAA tournament brackets while wagering in office pools or against friends and family. But those casual bets have increasing­ly been supplement­ed with more formal gambling.

The total amount bet on all sports through legal wagering sites exceeded $121 billion in 2023, up 30% from the previous year, says the American Gaming Associatio­n. After paying out winnings, sports betting operators reaped $11 billion in revenue, up from about $7.5 billion the previous year.

The American Gaming Associatio­n estimates $2.7 billion will be bet this year on the NCAA men’s and women’s basketball tournament­s through legal sports books.

“March Madness is the biggest kind of individual event of the year for sports betting,” said David Forman, the American Gaming Associatio­n vice president of research.

The Super Bowl also draws big bets, but it’s only one game. The men’s and women’s tournament­s feature 136 teams playing 134 games over three weeks. And the Final Fours in each tournament — with all the attendant media attention — will take place over four days; the women’s semifinals are April 5, the men’s semifinals April 6, the women’s final April 7 and the men’s final April 8.

Betting on ‘your’ team

Despite living where sports betting is legal, some fans still could be blocked from betting on their favorite teams and players.

Roughly a dozen states bar bets on college games involving home-state teams. Four additional states — Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts, Rhode Island and Vermont — generally prohibit bets involving their own college teams but make exceptions for tournament­s.

Some states only allow bets on the outcome of college games, not how particular players will perform. Maryland and Ohio, for example, banned so-called propositio­n bets on college players, effective this month.

The NCAA has raised concerns that player-specific bets can lead to problems, including the harassment of college athletes and strain on their mental health. The organizati­on also says such bets could entice players to wager on themselves or alter their play to affect stats-based bets.

New betting states

Since UConn won the men’s tournament last season, half a dozen states have launched or expanded sports betting.

Nebraska began taking sports bets at casinos in June, though it doesn’t allow mobile wagers. Kentucky launched sports betting in September to coincide with the start of the NFL season. Maine began doing so in November.

After a court victory, the Seminole Tribe of Florida in December began taking online sports bets in addition to wagers at its casinos. Wagering has continued while a challenge is pending before the Florida Supreme Court. Opponents also have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to take up the case.

In January, Vermont launched online sports betting.

North Carolina, which previously allowed sports betting only at three tribal casinos, began permitting online sports wagering statewide March 11, a day before the start of the ACC men’s basketball tournament but a day after the ACC women’s tourney ended.

Odds for other states

Several states have a chance to join the sports betting trend.

In Missouri, where legislativ­e attempts repeatedly have failed, the St. Louis Cardinals are leading a coalition of pro sports teams supporting an initiative petition that could place sports betting on the November ballot. Sports betting operators DraftKings and FanDuel have contribute­d a combined $3 million to the effort. Supporters say they are on track to exceed the required signatures by a May 5 deadline.

Lawmakers in Alabama and Georgia also are considerin­g constituti­onal amendments authorizin­g sports betting. Georgia senators passed a measure last month, but it still needs a two-thirds vote from the House to appear on this year’s ballot.

Alabama’s House included sports betting in a wide-ranging gambling measure, but the state Senate stripped it out earlier this month. The House now must decide whether to accept that change or negotiate a final version to go to voters.

Legislatio­n to legalize sports betting also is pending in Oklahoma and Minnesota. A Minnesota state Senate committee endorsed a revised version Thursday that would raise the proposed tax rate.

Mississipp­i, which legalized casino sports betting in 2018, is considerin­g an expansion to online betting. A bill passed the House last month and now is in the state Senate.

Crossing state lines

Although sports betting remains illegal in a dozen states, some residents place bets by crossing state lines. In Missouri’s two largest cities, St. Louis and Kansas City, some people drive to the nearest commuter lots or highway exit ramps just across the border in Illinois or Kansas, respective­ly, to place legal bets through mobile apps.

Many other would-be bettors get thwarted by technology.

During the weekend of the Super Bowl, where the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the San Francisco 49ers, technology company GeoComply Solutions said it processed more than 431,000 location checks from about 40,500 mobile devices in Missouri that attempted to access other states’ legal sports betting sites. The location checks allowed those bets to be blocked.

During that weekend, GeoComply said it processed an additional 256,000 location checks for sports betting sites coming from 30,000 devices in Alabama, Georgia, Minnesota and Mississipp­i.

 ?? JASON ALLEN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Outfielder Drew Burress signals to the Yellow Jackets dugout after stroking a double during Saturday’s 8-5 win over North Carolina State. Georgia Tech’s four victories last week ran its streak to eight.
JASON ALLEN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Outfielder Drew Burress signals to the Yellow Jackets dugout after stroking a double during Saturday’s 8-5 win over North Carolina State. Georgia Tech’s four victories last week ran its streak to eight.

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