Georgia Tech Delivers Miami’s First Home Loss

Posted by KCarpenter on March 7th, 2013

Before Wednesday night, Miami had yet to lose a single game at home. Granted, they hadn’t lost many games period, but the BankUnited Center has witnessed nothing but triumphs during this breakthrough season for Jim Larranaga’s squad. In Coral Gables, Michigan State, Duke, Virginia, and North Carolina had all fallen to the Hurricanes. So, naturally, Georgia Tech, a team trying to avoid the worst record in the conference, was the team that finally bested the Hurricanes at home. It doesn’t make much sense on the face of things, but there does seem to be something about these Yellow Jackets.

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After last night, Georgia Tech had three conference victories on the road. That might not seem like much, but it’s only one fewer win than Duke and North Carolina, the same as NC State, and one more than Virginia. For as poorly as Georgia Tech has played (and given that they only have three conference victories at home, let me stress that they have played poorly), the Yellow Jackets have honestly been one of the better teams in the conference on the road. Sure, three wins isn’t much to hang your hat on, but these victories do stand as true accomplishments in an otherwise disappointing season.  Defeating Miami at home is a singular achievement that no one else in the conference or out of it can match, unless a slumping Clemson team surprises us all over the weekend. Sure, defeating Virginia Tech at home isn’t all that special, but beating Wake Forest at Joel Coliseum has been challenging this year. Miami, Virginia, and NC State couldn’t do it, and Duke came within five points of falling short as well. Why has such an otherwise disappointing team been so (relatively) effective on the road?

The correct answer is probably statistical variance and chance, but that’s not a particularly edifying explanation. I’d like to credit Tech’s success to last year, when the Yellow Jackets were a team without a home while McCamish Pavilion was still under construction. Playing variously in the Atlanta suburbs and in the NBA arena that hosts the Hawks, the Yellow Jackets spent the whole last season effectively on the road. It was a rough season, much like this one, and probably not a lot of fun, but it is conceivable that all that experience playing outside of the comforting confines of a home gym has made the Yellow Jackets less reliant on home-court advantage. They may not be a great team, but they are perhaps just as good at home as they are on the road. Again, this is pure speculation, but it’s interesting to me.

If the Yellow Jackets don’t need home court to be effective, does that mean this team has a better chance at making a surprising run in Greensboro? It’s worth thinking about.

KCarpenter (269 Posts)


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