The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

To end slide, Pastner may simplify game

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

Georgia Tech’s losing streak has extended to seven games despite coach Josh Pastner’s efforts to try to find a solution, whether it’s been changing starting lineups, adjusting the offensive and defensive schemes or hunting for some other fix to stop his team’s slide.

“We’re trying different things, and whatever it may be, we’re not standing pat,” Pastner said Monday on the ACC coaches teleconfer­ence.

Effective solutions have yet to reveal themselves. Entering their game tonight at Louisville, the Yellow Jackets have been unable to assert themselves at either end of the floor and cratered in an 86-43 home loss to Duke on Saturday, one of the more lopsided defeats in team history. Tech (8-13, 1-10 ACC) owns its poorest league record after 11 games since the 2008-09 season and has lost nine league games by double digits. Before Tuesday’s games, the Jackets ranked 310th in Division I in field-goal percentage (41.6%).

“We’ve got to start scoring at some point, some way, somehow,” Pastner said.

Maybe the solution is doing less. While the usage of an assortment of defenses has been a core element of Pastner’s strategy, as well as its reliance on a Princeton offense, Pastner suggested that simplifyin­g the game for his players could help.

“Whether that’s the answer, I don’t know,” Pastner said. “But I’m trying to say, ‘OK, maybe us doing a lot of different things is just not paying off.’ Where in the past it has, and it’s been really effective for us and it’s won us a lot of games, that hasn’t been as effective this year for us in ACC play.”

It could be that Pastner’s roster might not be best suited or ready for a strategy that relies on complexity, or that, with confidence draining, a streamline­d approach could have a steadying effect.

The Jackets have allowed four consecutiv­e opponents to shoot better than 50% from the field in part because of breakdowns on defense. (Tech had six such games all last season.) Also, an inability to run the offense properly has frequently resulted in possession­s that drag into the final seconds of the shot clock, leaving players to toss up low-percentage shots to avoid shotclock violations. Over those same four games, the Jackets are shooting 21.6% from 3-point range, dragging down the season average to 31.2%.

In ACC play, Tech ranks 14th in offensive efficiency and 13th in defensive efficiency (Kenpom).

“We’re trying to figure things out, be solution-focused,” Pastner said. “There’s no give-up on our end. We’re just trying to find whatever we can do to turn the season around and have a great month of February, whatever that means, and hopefully get some wins along the way.”

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