The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pastner humbly moves among titans

His goals for Ga. Tech bearing big results, the coach earns lofty kudos.

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

On a night when his team’s NCAA Tournament chances took a body shot, Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski offered a string of pearls for his opponent and its coach.

Krzyzewski praised Georgia Tech forward Moses Wright as “outstandin­g” and hailed the Yellow Jackets as “a veteran team” after their 81-77 overtime win Tuesday night at Mccamish Pavilion. He even followed Notre Dame coach Mike Brey in sharing his appreciati­on for the home-court advantage the Jackets have enjoyed this season.

“Josh (Pastner) has done a great job with his team,” Krzyzewski said. “They’ve created a great environmen­t. I think they’re 8-1 at home (in ACC play). So they have a band, they have cheerleade­rs,

they have a certain amount of fans, and that helps. It helps you. There’s no question about it. But, congratula­tions to them. They took another step forward to an NCAA berth, which, that would be great for their program and very well-deserved with the job that he’s done.”

For Pastner, it was a thrilling extension of a season that increasing­ly looks like it will achieve its mission: Tech’s first NCAA Tournament berth since 2010. Among the many achievemen­ts that were checked off with Tech’s 10th ACC win of the season: first back-to-back seasons with double-digit ACC wins and the first five-game winning streak against ACC competitio­n since 1995-96.

It also marked a personal accomplish­ment for Pastner. After five consecutiv­e losses to Duke since his hiring at Tech, he notched his first win over the man he calls (at every opportunit­y) perhaps the greatest coach of all time, regardless of sport.

Virginia remains the lone ACC team Pastner’s teams have yet to defeat. However, Pastner can boast of a most impressive set of pelts accumulate­d this season — Kentucky’s John Calipari, North Carolina’s Roy Williams, Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim and, now, Krzyzewski. While each coach’s team is unquestion­ably enduring a down season — Calipari and Krzyzewski historical­ly so — they’re all in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. Add Florida State’s Leonard Hamilton and Notre Dame’s Brey, whose Hall of Fame candidacie­s Pastner eagerly endorses.

Pastner, who unfailingl­y touts opposing coaches’ credential­s in what seems sincere admiration and respect, declined to take a personal victory lap Tuesday night.

“There’s nothing about Josh Pastner and Coach K because it’s like, the last two games, it was Coach K and Jim Boeheim,” he said. “And then there’s me. Like, where’s Waldo? Like I like to say, literally, like, where’s Waldo? I mean, who am I, this guy, with these two teams, these two coaches?”

For Pastner, the deference is accentuate­d not only because, at 43 years old, he is the youngest coach in the ACC. He has known the likes of Boeheim, Krzyzewski and Williams since he was in high school and all three already were icons in the game. The story has been repeated, but when Pastner was in high school, he was the coach of his father Hal’s Houston-based AAU team. In that role, he came to know those three coaches and many others who remain in the profession.

“I don’t take it for granted,” Pastner said of his job in the ACC. “You look around the room, there’s multiple Hall of Famers in the room. You pinch yourself, but you’re going to be a competitor and you want to win. But you also recognize the fragile-ness of the job. When I say fragile-ness, the preciousne­ss of how precious these jobs are. You don’t take these things for granted.”

Pastner’s father has a photo of his son with Krzyzewski when the two were at a Nike All-american camp in Indianapol­is, Krzyzewski there to recruit and Pastner to coach. It’s from around 1995, when Pastner would have been a few months shy of his 18th birthday and the legendary coach would have been going into his 16th season at Duke, 48 years old, with two of his five national titles and seven of 12 Final Four trips under his belt.

As a competitor, more than the satisfacti­on of stopping Duke’s 14-game winning streak in the series Tuesday, Pastner’s joy was grounded in the present. Beating Duke meant a significan­t win and another step toward the NCAA Tournament. The win gave the Jackets another Quad 2 win, improving Tech’s record in games against Quad 1 and Quad 2 competitio­n (categories of games grouped by the opponent’s NET ranking and game site — home, road, neutral) to 8-6.

Only 23 teams have played at least 10 Quad 1 and Quad 2 games and performed better. Heading into the regular-season finale at Wake Forest on Friday, Tech is in fairly exclusive company. In his projection early Wednesday, ESPN bracket analyst Joe Lunardi placed the Jackets as a No. 11 seed in the field of 68.

Virginia Tech’s Mike Young would seem the favorite to be ACC coach of the year, but the Jackets’ strong finish will merit Pastner some considerat­ion. He already won it in 2017, his first season. At the least, it has become a little easier to find Waldo.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Georgia Tech’s Michael Devoe grabs one of his seven rebounds Tuesday night over Duke’s Wendell Moore Jr. in Atlanta. Tech won the game 81-77 in OT.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Georgia Tech’s Michael Devoe grabs one of his seven rebounds Tuesday night over Duke’s Wendell Moore Jr. in Atlanta. Tech won the game 81-77 in OT.
 ?? COURTESY OF JOSH PASTNER ?? When Josh Pastner (right) took this photo with Mike Krzyzewski at the Nike All-american camp in the mid1990s, Pastner was a high school student coaching his father’s AAU team.
COURTESY OF JOSH PASTNER When Josh Pastner (right) took this photo with Mike Krzyzewski at the Nike All-american camp in the mid1990s, Pastner was a high school student coaching his father’s AAU team.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States