The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech down to last 2 shots at ACC road win

Jackets are 0-8 in league away games heading into matchup at Syracuse.

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

After stopping its nine-game losing streak, Georgia Tech has assembled a modest list of accomplish­ments.

First, the Yellow Jackets have won three of their past five ACC games. Second, the offense has revived. Tech is shooting 45.1% from the field over the past five league games after shooting 39% in the first 13. The team’s assist/ turnover ratio has improved from 1.0 in the first 13 games to 1.6 in the most recent five games.

“They’re just more cohesive,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said Monday on the ACC coaches teleconfer­ence. “They’re better offensivel­y. I think their defense has gotten better.”

The Jackets will play at Syracuse today in what could be their final game against Boeheim, whose return for the 2023-24 season is not certain. Boeheim, in his 47th season coaching the Orange, told ESPN earlier in February that he was “probably” going to return.

For Tech (12-17, 4-14 ACC), today’s game holds more significan­ce than that. Going into the final week of the regular season, the Jackets have yet to win a road game in the ACC. Tech is 0-8 in league road games and has lost 11 in a row going back to last season, a streak that started with an overtime loss to the Orange in the building now called the JMA Wireless Dome. The Jackets did win one nonconfere­nce road game, at Georgia State in November. But the last time Tech failed to win a conference road game was the 2008-09 season.

“I just think it’s important for us to keep getting better,” coach Josh Pastner said in an interview with The atlanta Journal-constituti­on. “We’ve been close on these last few games on the road; we need to get over the hump.”

Tech’s three wins in its past five games have been earned at Mccamish Pavilion at the expense of Notre Dame, Virginia Tech and Louisville, teams that are with the Jackets among the bottom four teams in the ACC standings. Defeating Syracuse and/or Boston College (the Jackets’ opponent Saturday) would add additional meaning to the end-of-season turnaround and bolster the case for Pastner continuing as the Tech coach.

Beating Syracuse (16-13, 9-9) or Boston College (14-15, 8-10) would be more significan­t than beating Notre Dame, Virginia Tech or Louisville at home. The Jackets have come close to stealing road wins in their past three games but haven’t been able to finish.

Tech led N.C. State by three at the four-minute mark but surrendere­d an 11-3 run to end the game. Against Wake Forest, the Jackets led by five with two minutes left and three with one minute left but couldn’t hold the lead in a game in which a couple questionab­le late non-calls went against the Jackets. Against a Pitt team that is in first placein the ACC, the Jackets went toe-to-toe with the Panthers but faltered in the final two minutes.

The Jackets will likely have to face the Orange without guard Deivon Smith, whom Pastner said was doubtful to play because of an ankle injury. Guard Tristan Maxwell’s availabili­ty had also yet to be determined as he has been under the weather, Pastner said. It could be the third consecutiv­e game in which the Jackets rely on a six-man rotation.

By the standings through the weekend’s games, Tech was positioned to play its first game in next week’s ACC Tournament against Virginia Tech in a first-round game, a meeting of the Nos. 12 and 13 seeds. The winner of that game plays the No. 5 seed, which was Duke. Georgia Tech, which is in 13th place in the league going into today, can do no better than 12th.

 ?? MATT FREED/AP ?? Georgia Tech coach Josh Pastner calls out to his team during the first half of a game last week in Pittsburgh. The Panthers won 76-68. “I just think it’s important for us to keep getting better,” he says.
MATT FREED/AP Georgia Tech coach Josh Pastner calls out to his team during the first half of a game last week in Pittsburgh. The Panthers won 76-68. “I just think it’s important for us to keep getting better,” he says.

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