The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jackets not returning home until season ends

With Tech entering postseason, impact of virus pause soars.

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

Already in North Carolina for its win Friday night over Wake Forest, Georgia Tech’s basketball team won’t return to Atlanta before the ACC Tournament. The Yellow Jackets will stay in North Carolina to prepare for the ACC Tournament in Greensboro that begins Tuesday.

In fact, coach Josh Pastner’s plan is for the team to not return until the Yellow Jackets, whose spot in the NCAA Tournament field seems all but a certainty, are through in that event, also.

“The next time we go back home to Atlanta will be whenever our season’s completed,” Pastner said after Tech’s 75-63 win at Wake Forest on Friday night. “If we win the national championsh­ip on April 5, or whenever that is, or we lose a game, we (won’t return until then). We’ve tried to create a bubble with us on the road to do the best we can to protect from COVID. To do the very best we can, we’re going to stay in a group together on the road.”

With the team now entering the postseason, the impact of a COVID-19 pause becomes dramatical­ly higher. Tech will begin ACC Tournament play Thursday.

The NCAA Tournament, which this year will be staged entirely in Indiana, begins March 18 with the First Four, followed by the first round March 19 and 20.

A positive test and subsequent quarantini­ng and contact tracing at any point forward could easily remove the Jackets from either or both postseason competitio­ns. When the Jackets went on a COVID-19 pause Jan. 5, the next game they were cleared to play in took place Jan. 16.

It’s conceivabl­e that a pause could be of a shorter length, but even a break of only a few days could mean the end, either in Greensboro or in the NCAA Tournament. The potential for teams having to drop out is such a concern for the NCAA that it created a backup plan to have replacemen­t teams ready in the days leading to the start of the tournament.

The ACC Tournament is played over five consecutiv­e days, Tuesday through Saturday. The NCAA Tournament field will be announced March 14. Potential NCAA Tournament teams that determine they cannot play in their first game (either March 18, 19 or 20) must inform the tournament selection committee by 11 p.m. March 13.

Once the NCAA Tournament begins, if a team is unable to participat­e in a game, it will be required to withdraw.

Staying in North Carolina for the next week will reduce travel and likely enable players, coaches and staff to create more of a bubble environmen­t than they could on campus and at their homes.

Before arriving in Indianapol­is for the NCAA Tournament, all players, coaches and staff in a team travel party must pass seven consecutiv­e COVID-19 tests, and tests will continue on a daily basis for the duration of teams’ stays. Teams will travel to Indianapol­is by charter bus or charter flight, arranged by the NCAA.

Being away from campus for such an extended period normally would create significan­t academic challenges. However, with the number of classes being taught virtually, it figures not to present nearly the same issues.

 ?? ANDREW DYE/WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL ?? Tech guard Michael Devoe shoots against Wake Forest’s Ody Oguama and Jalen Johnson (2) on Friday in WinstonSal­em, North Carolina.
ANDREW DYE/WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL Tech guard Michael Devoe shoots against Wake Forest’s Ody Oguama and Jalen Johnson (2) on Friday in WinstonSal­em, North Carolina.

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