Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men’s basketball

The Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets Men’s Basketball team Signifies the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in NCAA Division I basketball.

The team plays its home games in McCamish Pavilion on the Atlanta campus of the school and is currently coached by Josh Pastner. Georgia Tech established itself as a national force. Cremins led his team to the first ACC tournament victory in school history in 1985 and in 1990 he took Georgia Tech into the school’s first Final Four appearance ever. Cremins retired with the best winning percentage as a head coach of the school. The Yellow Jackets returned to the Final Four in 2004 under Paul Hewitt and lost in the national title game, losing to UConn. Overall, the team has won 1,352 matches and lost 1,226 games, a .524 win percentage.
Georgia Tech’s first official participation in basketball was in 1906, when a little club organized under Coach Chapman. They won just two of the three matches that they played with that season. Next time Tech had a basketball team, it was under the famous coach John Heisman, also Tech’s baseball and football coach. Heisman needed a winning percentage of .142 that season and improved the group’s percentage to .500 in 1912 and 1913.
Since that time, Georgia Tech has forged a solid basketball program around the strength of coaches like John Hyder and Bobby Cremins, and such players as Roger Kaiser, Rich Yunkus, Mark Price, Craig”Noodles” Neal, John Salley, Tom Hammonds, and Matt Harpring. Georgia Tech became a charter member of the Southeastern Conference in 1932 (the first year was in 1933) and won the conference title in 1938. Coach Hyder, whose teams won 292 matches in twenty five seasons, put the program on the national map when his 1955 team defeated Adolph Rupp’s Kentucky team, ending the Wildcats’ 129-game winning streak in the home.

Read more: walker-sports.net