The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia State men, women set to open tournament play

- By Stan Awtrey

Georgia State basketball coach Jonas Hayes takes the optimistic approach regarding the Sun Belt Conference tournament. It’s a chance to wipe the slate clean and produce some good vibes as the program moves forward from a disappoint­ing regular season.

“That’s what this time is all about,” Hayes said. “You can’t remake yourself, but you can start anew.”

The Panthers (10-20, 3-15) are the No. 14 seed in the tournament and play No. 11 seed Texas State (13-18, 6-12) today at 8:30 p.m. at the Pensacola (Fla.) Bay Center.

“We’re not that far away,” Hayes said. “This represents the opportunit­y to see if we can get it right.”

The season has been a challenge. Hayes took over a program that lost four experience­d starters and six regulars on a team that won the Sun Belt title last year and reached the NCAA Tournament. The Panthers opened the season with a young group that had no experience playing together and limited minutes in competitio­n.

“I think we’ve found a little bit of offensive cohesion,” Hayes said. “The last couple of weeks we’ve found a bit of togetherne­ss off the court and that has brought us closer together.”

The Panthers do play hard, particular­ly on defense, but have offensive deficienci­es that have been difficult to overcome. There isn’t a go-to shooter on the roster and the perimeter game has been problemati­c, as has the lack of points in the post. GSU ranks 12th in the league in offense (64.5 points), 12th in field goal percentage (41.1%) and last in 3-point percentage (30.5%).

Four weeks ago, Hayes settled on a starting group of Dwon Odom, Brenden Tucker, Jamaine Mann, Ja’heim Hudson and Collin Moore. He also shortened the bench, using only Edward Nnomoko, Kalik Brooks and Kaleb Scott as reserves.

Moore missed the first 18 games with a thumb injury. Since his return, he is averaging 13.3 points, 4.3 rebounds and 2.3 steals. He scored a career-high 28 against Marshall.

The Bobcats also have trouble scoring (64.1 points, 13th in Sun Belt) and are last in the league in 3-pointers. Texas State is No. 5 in the league in defense (67.5 points), eight spots better than Georgia State (72.7).

“They hang their hat on defense, so it’s going to provide a challenge of similarity,” Hayes said. “We’ll see whose will is the strongest.”

The women’s tournament will run concurrent­ly with the men. No. 12 seed Georgia State opens play today at 12:30 p.m. against No. 13 seed Southern Alabama.

The Panthers (11-20, 5-13 Sun Belt) beat the Jaguars 66-57 on Jan. 3 at the GSU Convocatio­n Center in their only meeting this season.

The Panthers are led by sophomore Mikyla Tolivert (15.7 points, five rebounds, 3.1 assists) and junior Deasia Merrill (12.7 points, 6.6 rebounds).

 ?? JASON GETZ/JASON.GETZ@AJC.COM ?? Georgia State coach Jonas Hayes sees the Sun Belt Conference tournament as a chance to wipe the slate clean and produce good vibes as the program moves forward from a disappoint­ing regular season.
JASON GETZ/JASON.GETZ@AJC.COM Georgia State coach Jonas Hayes sees the Sun Belt Conference tournament as a chance to wipe the slate clean and produce good vibes as the program moves forward from a disappoint­ing regular season.

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