The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech AD Batt’s vow: More wins, more revenue

- By Chad Bishop chad.bishop@ajc.com

From his office in the Wardlaw Center inside Bobby Dodd Stadium, J Batt is surrounded by newness already realized and newness still to be imagined and actualized.

Batt recently sat down with The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on inside that office on the same day a Hyundai Ioniq 5 was lifted by crane into the corner of Bobby Dodd Stadium and on the same day that a new Hyundai sign was put in place: Bobby Dodd Stadium now officially is Bobby Dodd Stadium at Hyundai Field. Both of those happenings are significan­t to the breezes of change wafting over the Flats.

About one month out from his one-year anniversar­y of being hired as Georgia Tech’s athletic director, Batt has fit a handful of headline-making moves into his first 11 months. Life as a busy AD hasn’t even left him any time to adorn his office walls with framed pictures and notable achievemen­ts from his relatively young career in college athletics.

While the Tech football team practices below on Grant Field in preparatio­n for its home opener, Batt sips a cup of coffee and speaks with great passion about the state, and the future, of his athletics program. It’s a program undoubtedl­y at a crossroads.

“We’re gonna win. That is the expectatio­n,” Batt said. “We’re going to have incredible students who do incredible work in the classroom. We have one of the most unbelievab­le legacies of student preparedne­ss from our Total Person Program that (former Tech AD) Homer Rice started. We’re going to continue to do that well. But we’re gonna win ballgames. Comprehens­ively.

“I think setting that standard again — in some ways we’re a little bit of where Homer Rice was when he got here. He came in the late (1970s), he had to garner alignment, he had to raise dollars, and the outcome of that successful effort was an unpreceden­ted period of winning, to see Georgia Tech win a national championsh­ip in football, go to Final Fours. I don’t think that’s unattainab­le.”

Batt, known as Jason Batt as a youth in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, before going by Jay Batt as a goalkeeper for North Carolina at the turn of the century, has not sat in his new office idly since his October hiring. He hired two coaches for two of Tech’s most visible sports, fostered a corporate partnershi­p with Hyundai that included a naming-rights deal for Bobby Dodd Stadium, reimagined football game days with a plan to close North Avenue before kickoff, and is guiding Tech into a new age of ACC competitio­n that will send the Yellow Jackets as far as California for regular-season conference games.

The 41-year-old, previously the executive deputy athletics director at Alabama, came to Atlanta because of a word and theme he uses often: alignment. Batt said there is alignment among Tech’s athletic department, Tech President Angel Cabrera, the University System of Georgia,

influentia­l alumni and donors on where Tech currently sits and what needs to be done to return its major sports to an elite level.

That’s a level that seems like a distant memory.

“At the end of the day, if winning is key, which it absolutely is here, our recent success hasn’t measured up,” Batt said. “National prominence for Georgia Tech athletics is not foreign, nor unachievab­le. Our goal is to regain that.”

The financial piece of the puzzle clearly has been an emphasis from Day One. Batt said revenue generation is a daily focus and that Tech will explore any opportunit­ies available.

He also expects Tech’s school record $128 million athletics budget for the 202324 fiscal year to grow even larger in the coming years, and he’s confident there is a clear understand­ing across the board that for the Jackets to compete for success, there must be a championsh­ip level of commitment to funding resources.

Batt discusses these topics while sitting 100 yards from the Edge Center, a building whose days are numbered.

Destructio­n will begin, at the earliest, later this year of the building that currently houses offices for Tech coaches, staff and administra­tors. In its place will rise the Student Athlete Performanc­e Center, a 96,000-square-foot facility that Batt said will provide future Jackets with spaces for strength and conditioni­ng, sports medicine, recovery, mental health, nutrition, sports science and sports analytics. The building also will be a big lift to the football program. Its offices, meeting rooms, video department and team spaces will be housed there.

Batt hinted the SAPC isn’t the only facilities project on the immediate horizon.

“We’ve begun the planning process for some comprehens­ive renovation­s,” he said. “This facility that we’re sitting in, Bobby Dodd, will certainly be at the top of the list. We want to provide an enhanced game-day experience, enhanced premium-seating options, and do so in a thoughtful manner. We’ll want to do it as part of a comprehens­ive approach to our facilities across the board.

“I’ll tell you that planning process has begun. Long way to go to get to all those different needs, but we’ve begun to approach that. It’s important.”

In November, Batt hired Brent Key to take over the football program, giving the former Tech offensive lineman a five-year, $15 million contract.

In March, Batt let go Josh Pastner and brought in Damon Stoudamire to try to revamp the men’s basketball program. Stoudamire was given a five-year contract and will receive $2.1 million for his first season in charge.

Batt’s tenure ultimately will be judged on how Stoudamire’s and Key’s programs fare. The football team has been to only two bowl games, and only won one, since 2015, and the basketball team hasn’t made it past the second round of the NCAA Tournament since its championsh­ip-game appearance in 2004.

“My expectatio­n is that we build their programs back to the place that our fan base expects, which is to be about the right things, to build it the right way, to continuall­y improve,” Batt said. “Georgia Tech and Georgia Tech athletics have been built on hard work and discipline and toughness for so long, restoring a lot of that, I have expectatio­ns (Key and Stoudamire will) do that, and I have supreme confidence that they’re going to be able to get those programs back to the spot that they deserve.”

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ/AJC 2022 ?? Tech AD J Batt exudes great passion about the state, and future, of his athletics program. “My expectatio­n is ... to continuall­y improve,” he said.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ/AJC 2022 Tech AD J Batt exudes great passion about the state, and future, of his athletics program. “My expectatio­n is ... to continuall­y improve,” he said.

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