Article Wed against ND is 'Level Up Night"

  • Highlight

Preview: Georgia Tech vs Notre Dame

It’s caught by Devonta Smith for an Alabaaaaama touchdown!! As Alabama’s confetti fell in Mercedes Benz Stadium last night, the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets basketball team was resting up for the always tough Notre Dame Fighting Irish that are coming to town. The Irish are 12-3 on the season with losses to Ball State and Indiana (both by 3) along with a 63-81 loss to Michigan State. Unfortunately for Notre Dame, that is not the biggest loss of the season. Instead that comes in the form of losing last year’s ACC Player of the Year, Bonzie Colston for 8 weeks with a foot fracture. Senior guard and fellow upperclassmen Matt Farrell is also expected to be unavailable for the game (ankle), but who knows, Notre Dame could pull a Coach Pastner and he suits up and plays. I don’t expect them to make that move with more important long-term postseason thoughts, but you never know.

In his 18th year as the lead man at Notre Dame is Coach Mike Brey. He is highly considered as one of the greatest coaches in college hoops right now and one of the inspirations of Coach Pastner’s “get old, stay old” philosophies….and boy does Brey do an excellent job of it.

Without Colson and Farrell on the court to provide that senior leadership, Coach Brey will turn to a fellow upperclassman who stands 6’6” out of Mater Dei High School #0, Rex Pflueger. Not only does his name sound like a cousin of a super-villain but it is also a pain to spell out. A “f” after a “p” seriously, come on guy. Even though his hair and name are annoying, he is a really really solid basketball player. Was the second “really” necessary? Yeah, probably not, but I don’t want you fooled. Pflueger rarely comes out of the game, and will be trusted to do a plethora of things for the Irish. He hits the open shot, grabs the tough rebound, makes the extra pass to his teammates, and will give up his body for a charge (a Notre Dame player taking a charge..you don’t say?). He will more than likely get his 14 points and 7 rebounds, while playing solid hard defense. Tech just can’t let him get fired up and start making crazy shots/plays. If you keep him in a supporting role, you can be successful.

Baller Alert: The 6’3” sophomore out of Scotch Plains, New Jersey is #10, T.J. Gibbs Jr. This young guard is amazing on the offensive end and can shoot it from anywhere. I honestly do not know why he isn’t getting more recognition nationally. To me, he reminds me of the NBA rookie who is taking the league by storm, Donovan Mitchell. I would be interested to see who you guys/gals would compare his game to. Gibbs is averaging 14.8 points per game this season but will be able to add onto that without Colson and Farrell taking shots. He can go off for 30 and easily take over the game, and I am a little nervous he does. For some reason I cannot get the image of him nailing that back side three over and over. <insert PA Announcer in soft voice> “Gibbs for three…again.”

For Notre Dame, the next couple of words are rarely linked together: the impact freshman standing 6’6″ out of Bowie, Maryland #3, DJ Harvey. He already has the body for the ACC and the mindset to go along with it. He has no problem shooting the ball, even if there is a better option or his shots aren’t falling. In my opinion this is the guy Tech should force to beat them. Put the pressure on the talented but unproven freshman on the road in the Thrillerdome (trademark pending, I feel like this will catch on).

With an even bigger role down on the block with Bonzie out is the 6’10” senior from Vilnius, Lithuania #23, Martinas Geben. Not only is this guy from the same country that is hosting Peac’s favorite family, he is also the fifth European player to play for Brey at Notre Dame. He is averaging 8 points and 7 rebounds on the year and he plays as you might imagine. Big and strong, he hits the boards hard and hits the defenders with screens even harder. They like to get him the ball at the high post and do pick/ball hand-offs to the scorers on the wing for an easy shot. This is a game where Ben Lammers will need his healthy legs to grab those boards, because you know that Geben will be making contact trying to box out.

The Fighting Irish will also turn to a duo of upperclassmen #12, Elijah Burns and #1, Austin Torres. Out of the two Burns is by far more of the scoring threat while Torres is a graduate transfer that is straight energy, and it doesn’t matter if it’s off the bench or starting as he goes all out. The final key piece for the Irish is the 6’9” sophomore big #33, John Mooney. He is still young but can stretch the floor and has the body to compete down low.

Prediction: This game is set up for Lammers to have a nice game if his mid-range shot is falling. AD will be posting up on the block or at the top of the key to get Geben to guard him, which means Lammers will have someone smaller guarding him. Therefore Ben can easily shoot over whoever with a normal jumper or a vintage Dirk’Lammers fadeaway. I feel like Alvarado can get some back-side poke away steals from Harvey in transition and Tech runs the floor for a basket. *paging a Tadric euro step finish*. I keep wanting to pick Notre Dame because of all the talent they have, but I also can’t get over how well we play in ACC games at home. So, it basically came down to one thing. Josh Okogie. We have him, they don’t. Pretty deep analysis there, huh? Gibbs Jr. step over, the real sophomore baller is comin’ through. Okogie drops 36 and Techs wins by 5.

 
Last edited:

SidewalkJacket

Helluva Engineer
Messages
1,666
ND may have only dressed 8, but once again, we only played 7. It's unreal how much we get out of our guys some nights. The HS team I coach is in a similar numbers situation most nights (though our records aren't similar, sadly), and it's crazy to see teams rolling guys in and out while every timeout we just look at ours and say "get a sip of water and get back out there and fight."
 

LibertyTurns

Banned
Messages
6,216
I'm on it.. As soon as my book releases it, I'll buy down a PK and dump it.

FWIW, it won't be easy, but I see us winning it by making free-throws down the stretch to seal 5-6 point victory.
Dude you’re money!
I am trying to remember if Cremins ever played more than 7-8 guys in close games. Some athletes like that kind of load.
If he ever played 8 there must have been 3 starters in foul trouble. ACCT game against UNC in Atlanta was one for sure. He might have even played 9 that game
 

bke1984

Helluva Engineer
Messages
3,613
Need to steal one Saturday at Pitt. The stretch after that is brutal. #3 UVA @ #20 UNC @ #23 FSU #19 Clemson, Syracuse, @ BC, Louisville, #7 Duke and @ Wake. We could lose every game with our lack of depth or an injury.
That stretch is brutal, but I’m not sure I’d say beating Pitt would be “stealing one” given that they are 8-9 (0-4)
 

YlJacket

Helluva Engineer
Messages
3,273
Cremins structured things to be 7 deep. I think CJP wants to go 8 maybe 9 deep but doesn't have the horses - yet.

I will be really interested to see how the substitution patterns look next year and beyond.
 

YJMD

Helluva Engineer
Messages
1,630
Tadric's bonehead plays were a little more in the direction of risky than ill-advised this game.

Glad CGB got some more minutes. Seemed a lot more lost on what to do (especially offensively). He can shoot the rock but needs to understand the offense a bit better to help himself and his teammates.

Not sure I understood why we were playing the starting 5 or subbing with a small package with CGB & Tadric in and Alston and Gueye out. The idea of the small lineup might be to have more scoring threat in the game and theoretically get more open looks, but I don't think it is working. We need to be able to feed the post more and get guys in position down there so we can rotate the ball and free up the perimeter guys. The lineup I have wanted is the starting 5 replacing Alston with CGB. Really, CGB, Okogie, and Alvarado are each great at shooting the 3 when they get the ball in scoring position. None of them are aggressive at trying to put themselves in that position and get teammates to get them the ball. CGB doesn't do much else, and he shoots it when he's free, but even though he's got the shot, he doesn't drive defenders nuts trying to keep him from getting open. A lot of that is on the rest of the offense to feed the post and rotate the ball more aggressively. With Okogie, Alvarado, and Tadric, we've got the slashers. Each is a good enough finisher that they mostly try to score even without the numbers. Alvarado is better at passing off a drive, of course, but he's shuffling the ball out on the perimeter too much. He needs to probe the lane more to open things up. Like Steve Nash. Not necessarily attack the basket. Don't have to be in a hurry, but if no one is making you pick up the ball, move around and look for opportunities. Like a QB who looks off safeties.

How about Gueye's man-to-man defense on a wing? Wow, didn't know he had that in him. I know he extends to the perimeter in the zone a lot. Theoretically his length is of good value in closeouts, but he is much weaker having to closeout on the perimeter than he showed (in very limited time) gluing himself to the defender. I know we are a zone-predominant team, and it's what made us who we are last year, but I think I like our defensive performance better when we're in man from what little I've seen.
 

Peacone36

Helluva Engineer
Messages
10,531
Location
Maine
I only caught the last 6 minutes or so but that Okogie tip in, and that Okogie Drive, and those Okogie free throws were huge. Lammers was all over everything on the other end. I thought Curtis was visibly hobbled when he was on the court, on one sequence when he inbounds the ball and was jogging up the court I thought it looked as if he was limping pretty badly, maybe it was just me.

Good win. It was a game we should have one and once again we protect our home court. I’ll take it
 

RamblinRed

Helluva Engineer
Featured Member
Messages
5,902
Great student crowd. They were really into the game. Though I would have destroyed either of the kids who played mariocart at halftime.

Great to see CGB slowly ramping up. I think it is less hobbling and more just trying to shake rust off. Great to see him hit the first three. A couple of plays later he made a great fake on a three and drove the lane, but had the basket waived off (correctly) for an offensive charge. Just took one too many steps. But he'll get better as he gets more time.

You can pretty much count on Tad to fall asleep on defense on one of the first possessions he comes into the game.

Brey killed us out of timeouts. This was mentioned on the Syracuse board last weekend as well. I think ND scored every time on offense coming out of a TO. They got alot of baskets off of pick and rolls or screen and rolls.

Pflueger reportedly had the flu or something like it, but JO was pretty determined not to let him get going at all. Students were all over him all game. They kept chanting - "we want 0'. Would cheer whenever he re-entered the game and then taunt him.

AD is coming along. If he would just make a quick move after receiving a pass rather than gathering himself and thinking about what he wants to do he had 2-3 layup opportunities. But he also had one of the biggest baskets of the game - running down the loose ball and making a 15 ft baseline shot as the clock expired.

GT did much better against ND's 2-3 zone once it put Josh in the middle of it.

GT did a really good job on Gibbs in the first half - holding him to 2 pts.

Seems like GT has its likely 7 man rotation with CGB back.

Pastner mentioned after the game that he went small with CGB late in the game because he was getting deflections and when ND went 5 shooters he felt CGB was more comfortable on perimeter than AD. Given Pitt's lack of size and high percentage of threes taken (almost 50% of their shots in ACC games) I expect to see alot of small ball this weekend.

Once CGB is 100% back and shaken the rust off I wouldn't be surprised to see him start and have Alston come off the bench. Alston had 2 really nice buckets early in the second half to keep ND from making an early charge in that half.

I thought ND was the more aggressive team the first ten minutes of the game, outrebounding GT 15-10, getting the 50/50 balls but GT seemed to match the intensity after that. GT is the first team to outrebound ND in conference play.

Even taking the loss I was pretty impressed with ND. Without their top 2 players they really are hanging together as a team and everyone is elevating their game to try to help. But it gets harder the longer you go without those big guys. They play quite smart and don't do much to beat themselves.
 

Deleted member 2897

Guest
Look like another year when we can make a run at winning the NIT?

We still have a long way to go, just to make the NIT.

We're 9-7 with 15 games left. + 1 ACC Tournament game.

We have to go 7-8 in the remaining 15 and lose the ACC Tournament first round as a worst case scenario to still qualify for the NIT at 16-16.

7 of our remaining 15 games are against ranked opponents.

Unranked on the road is Boston College, Pittsburgh, and Louisville - road games for us have been tough.

Bottom line, starting 2-1 has given us a chance now. But its still going to be extremely difficult. I think the NCAA is only possible if we go 9-6 from here on out to finish at 11-7 in the ACC. Because that would put us at 20-14. And I think we would get a benefit of the doubt for the first 15 games of the season with injuries and what not if we did that. But 9-6 from here with our schedule is holy cow rough.
 
Top