The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Grateful’ assistant Wilkins says goodbye on social media

Post indicates he has not been retained on staff by Stoudamire.

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

Former men’s basketball coach Josh Pastner’s top assistant has not been retained by new coach Damon Stoudamire. Anthony Wilkins, Pastner’s associate head coach, posted a message on social media Wednesday afternoon indicating that he is no longer on the staff.

“I’m forever grateful for this opportunit­y — I wore these colors with pride and taught our young men our history and our way and our fight,” Wilkins wrote. “I’m a product of the truest Atlanta and will always bleed Gold. Thank you to everyone who gave a hand in our efforts. I have loved and will miss our good times here.”

Wilkins, who is from Atlanta and attended Therrell High for two years before moving to Ohio, served on the Yellow Jackets staff for the final five years of Pastner’s seven-year tenure, earning a promotion from assistant coach to associate head coach last June.

He was widely credited for his central role in developing Jackets stars Jose Alvarado, Moses Wright, Michael Devoe and Jordan Usher, among others. He led what he called “finishing school” — the instructio­n of skills to become better at scoring around the basket — that was instrument­al in the Jackets winning the 2021 ACC title.

With Wilkins’ help, Alvarado’s two-point field-goal percentage in ACC games improved from 46% as a freshman — the season before Wilkins was hired — to 61% as a senior when he was named second-team ALLACC and scored 15.2 points per game. Devoe improved from 41% on two-point fieldgoal attempts as a freshman to 54% as a senior.

“Before I met (Wilkins), I was a little wild going into the rim,” Alvarado said in 2021. “I was just jumping into you.”

“(Wilkins) helped me a lot off the pick and roll, just being sound using my feet,” Devoe said in 2019 as a sophomore. “Absorbing contact, using guys, just making great reads. He’s definitely helped me a lot.”

The personal interest and care that he took in players was also clear. Guard Kyle Sturdivant, for instance, said Wilkins had helped him the most of anyone on the staff in coping with the unexpected death of his father.

“I think just realizing I can’t really control what happened to my dad but I can control what I do for the rest of my life, how I honor him,” Sturdivant said.

In an interview in the beginning of March, Wilkins said that the roles of a coach blend into many different arenas.

“My aspiration in all of this is helping young men just grow and nurturing that growth,” he said. “A lot of times in your attempt in doing that, I grow so much more from it and our relationsh­ips are so strong.”

Stoudamire, hired March 13, has not made any changes official.

“I’ve got a great pool to search and see,” Stoudamire said on the day of his introducto­ry news conference. “I have a motto. I have a motto because in this business, I’m more about getting it right than being fast. I usually do fast noes and slow yeses.”

 ?? DANNY KARNIK/GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS FILE PHOTO ?? Former Georgia Tech assistant coach Anthony Wilkins (left) is credited with helping the developmen­t of key players, including Moses Wright, during his time with the Yellow Jackets.
DANNY KARNIK/GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS FILE PHOTO Former Georgia Tech assistant coach Anthony Wilkins (left) is credited with helping the developmen­t of key players, including Moses Wright, during his time with the Yellow Jackets.

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