The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Okogie is OK with playing point guard

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

The last person who might hold a “woe is us” response to Georgia Tech point guard Jose Alvarado’s season-ending elbow fracture and dislocatio­n is probably Alvarado’s teammate Josh Okogie. The sophomore is confident, capable of playing point guard and also someone quite familiar with having a key player miss time due to injury. Namely, himself.

“It’s always next man up,” he said. “When I went out with my injury (a dislocated finger), that was the thing. Next man up, everybody be ready to play. That’s the same thing now. It sucks for him, but I know he’s going to pull through. He’s a warrior and we’re going to have his back until he comes back.”

Okogie missed eight games at the start of the season due to his six-game NCAA suspension and also his finger dislocatio­n, which kept him out an additional two games.

Their season sliding away already — the Yellow Jackets have lost seven of eight — Tech will forge ahead without Alvarado, who was so indispensa­ble to its operations that he had played 197 consecutiv­e minutes when he suffered the injury in the first half of Sunday’s loss to Duke. Tech (11-14 overall, 4-8 ACC) plays at Wake Forest tonight (9 p.m., Fox Sports South). The Demon Deacons are themselves in a bit of a spiral, having lost 10 of their past 11.

Perhaps the most likely move is for coach Josh Pastner to move Okogie from

the shooting guard spot to the point, as he did against Duke. He declined to tip his hand on what he’ll do against Wake Forest (9-16, 2-11).

“Depending on the situation, we’ll just have to make it work,” Pastner said. “I thought (Okogie) was fine (Sunday). He came in, handled the ball, did some good things.”

Okogie scored 29 points with six rebounds and four assists against Duke. He sounded ready to move over to the point if called upon. He liked the idea of playing against a shorter opponent at the point.

“I can kind of look over him and kind of analyze the court and make a smart basketball play,” said the 6-foot-4 Okogie.

But that’s only part of the tangle that Pastner has to solve. Less than three weeks ago, Tech had a seven-man rotation, but it was reduced to six when guard Curtis Haywood was shelved with a stress reaction in his shin and then down to five with Alvarado’s injury.

Called upon Sunday, freshman forwards Evan Cole and Moses Wright played admirably, combining for 19 points and 12 rebounds and playing with abandon. It was a pleasant surprise for Tech, as they had combined for six points and three rebounds in ACC play prior to Sunday.

However, Cole and Wright are now likely the first two options off the bench, a different setting than getting sent into a blowout. (Pastner said Tuesday that he had not yet made up his mind about elevating Tadric Jackson into the starting lineup.)

“There was no pressure on them (Sunday),” Pastner said. “Can they play that well with the pressure on them? And they’re obviously going to have opportunit­ies to do that.”

 ?? TIMOTHY D. EASLEY / AP ?? Georgia Tech’s Josh Okogie could play shooting guard or move to point guard with Jose Alvarado (elbow fracture) out for the season. “It’s always next man up,” the 6-foot-4 Okogie said. Tech plays Wake Forest tonight.
TIMOTHY D. EASLEY / AP Georgia Tech’s Josh Okogie could play shooting guard or move to point guard with Jose Alvarado (elbow fracture) out for the season. “It’s always next man up,” the 6-foot-4 Okogie said. Tech plays Wake Forest tonight.

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