The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Seniors’ efforts put title in reach

Young players credit teammates for run.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

NEW YORK — Josh Okogie didn’t need to give it much thought at all.

“I can tell you what each of them has done,” the Georgia Tech freshman said helpfully.

Corey Heyward? Soon after Okogie arrived on campus last summer, Heyward was dragging him to the gym for late-night shooting sessions.

Kellen McCormick? The graduate transfer has dispensed college basketball wisdom to Okogie throughout his freshman season. The humor of Jodan Price, Tech’s other graduate

transfer, has kept him laughing. Quinton Stephens has mentored Okogie, the team captain imparting his expectatio­ns for the rising star for seasons to come.

Josh Heath has been a big brother, the first teammate Okogie will call when he runs into trouble. Rand Rowland? “That’s the biggest one,” Okogie said of the former walk-on, who was put on scholarshi­p in January. “Rand, he’s that guy that, whatever you need, he’ll do it. I’ll be like, ‘Rand, can you come to the gym with me and help me with some free throws?’ He’ll be like, ‘Sure.’”

Beloved by their teammates and appreciate­d and respected by their coaches, Tech’s six seniors have played the past four games in the NIT unsure if it would be their final time in a Yellow Jackets uniform. There will be no question tonight at Madison Square Garden. The end of the line has come. For most of the six, possibly all, it will be their last organized game.

At the end of a season no one saw coming, Tech will play TCU for the NIT championsh­ip, the final stage after defeating Cal State Bakersfiel­d 76-61 in a Tuesday semifinal. It’s not the NCAA Tournament berth the Jackets hoped for, and it’s for a title many might dismiss as second-rate or irrelevant, but one that still comes with a trophy, rings and a lifetime of memories.

For a team that, by ESPN’s accounting, was the least experience­d in Division I at season’s start, it would be a worthy accomplish­ment. And to end a career with a championsh­ip?

“It would be incredible,” Heath said.

For both those seniors and the teammates they’ve led, that prize provides all the motivation they’ll need against the Horned Frogs, who gained their spot in the final with a 68-53 semifinals knockout of Central Florida.

“They deserve it,” Okogie said. “Since the season started, they’ve set the tempo, they’ve listened to Coach ( Josh Pastner) since he got here. If they can listen, we can listen. We were able to follow their footsteps and they set a great example both on and off the court.”

In his final days as a Tech athlete, Stephens continued to exert his leadership. At a gathering for media Monday, Stephens noticed the

‘Since the season started, they’ve set the tempo, they’ve listened to Coach (Josh Pastner) since he got here, and if they can listen, we can listen. We were kind of able to follow their footsteps and they set a great example both on and off the court.’ Josh Okogie Georgia Tech freshman about senior class

championsh­ip trophy. He told Okogie to get a good look, a directive that had its intended effect.

“It’s one thing to look at it,” Okogie said. “It’s (another) thing to have it. It gave me motivation.”

Pastner has extolled the team’s seniors for the way they accepted and embraced change when Brian Gregory was dismissed at the end of last season and he was hired to be their coach for their final season. Their willingnes­s to accept the change and lead teammates through it has been a critical factor in the developmen­t of the chemistry and effort-filled play that has helped enable a team expected to be among the weaker power-conference teams in the country to run through four NIT opponents to reach the final.

It has been a two-week gallop in which the Jackets have played near their peak, executing in synchronic­ity, at times dominating their competitio­n.

At this point, the underdog patina has long worn away. Leaving New York without a trophy would cut deep, particular­ly for the freshmen, sophomores and juniors who want to send their elders out on top.

“It’s just a brotherly love thing,” guard Tadric Jackson said. “They’ve been here for four years, never really won anything like that or achieved anything like that in college. So it’ll be a great thing for the seniors to go out with a ring, an NIT championsh­ip. It would be fantastic. They can just go back 10 years, 20 years later and tell their kids, ‘I won a championsh­ip in college.’ It’s going to mean a lot.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Senior forward Quinton Stephens has been a mentor to freshman Josh Okogie as the Yellow Jackets marched to the NIT championsh­ip game.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Senior forward Quinton Stephens has been a mentor to freshman Josh Okogie as the Yellow Jackets marched to the NIT championsh­ip game.

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