Saturday, February 23
Oxford, Miss.
3:30

University of Georgia

at

Ole Miss

Georgia Treks to Oxford to Face Ole Miss

February 22, 2019 | Men's Basketball

  • Georgia Basketball Game Notes
  • Georgia (10-16, 1-12 SEC) vs. Ole Miss (18-8, 8-5 in SEC)
  • Saturday, February 23 at 3:30 p.m. ET
  • The Pavilion at Ole Miss (9,500) in Oxford, Miss.
  • Radio: Georgia Bulldog Sports Network Flagship: WSB AM 750 Atlanta; XM: 386; Internet: 977. (Scott Howard, play-by-play; Chuck Dowdle, analyst; Tony Schiavone, producer)
  • TV: SEC Network (Kevin Fitzgerald, play-by-play; Dane Bradshaw, analyst)
  • Video: SECN+
Watch Live Listen Live Live Stats
Georgia Bulldogs
Coach: Tom Crean
10-16 in 1st season at UGA
366-247 in 19th season overall
Pos No. Name PPG RPG
G 0 Turtle Jackson 5.7 1.5
6-4; 185; Sr.; Athens, Ga.
G 2 Jordan Harris 6.3 3.6
6-4; 190; Jr.; Iron City, Ga.
G 11 Christian Harrison 0.8 0.9
6-4; 200; R-Sr.; Atlanta, Ga.
F 20 Rayshaun Hammonds 12.4 6.4
6-8; 235; So.; Norcross, Ga.
F 33 Nicolas Claxton 12.7 9.0
6-11; 220; So.; Greenville, S.C.
University of Mississippi Logo
Ole Miss Rebels
Coach: Kermit Davis
18-8 in 1st season at OM
487-271 in 24th season overall
Pos No. Name PPG RPG
G 3 Terence Davis 15.7 6.1
6-4; 205; Sr.; Southaven, Miss.
G 4 Breein Tyree 18.4 3.1
6-2; 195; Jr.; Somerset, N.J.
G 2 Devontae Shuler 9.6 4.2
6-2; 192; Soph.; Irmo, S.C.
F 0 Blake Hinson 8.6 2.8
6-7; 229; Fr.; Deltona, Fla.
C 13 Dominik Olejniczak 5.7 3.2
7-0; 260; Jr.; Torun, Poland
TEAM COMPARISON
STATISTIC GEORGIA OLE MISS
Points Per Game 73.9 76.6
Opp. Point Per Game 75.3 70.2
Scoring Margin -1.4 +6.4
Field Goal Pct. .446 .465
Opp. Field Goal Pct. .428 .428
3-Point Pct. .332 .362
3-Pointers Per Game 7.0 8.1
Opp. 3-Point Pct. .333 .372
Free Throw Pct. .716 .769
Free Throws Per Game 16.2 15.0
Rebounds Per Game 39.6 35.2
Opp. Rebound Per Game 34.8 32.8
Rebound Margin +4.8 +2.4
Assists Per Game 13.9 14.7
Turnovers Per Game 15.9 13.0
Assist-to-Turnover Ratio 0.87 1.13
Turnover Margin -5.0 +2.1
Steals Per Game 5.7 7.8
Blocks Per Game 5.0 3.7
The Starting 5...
  • Georgia is averaging 8,912 fans over its 15 home dates, the highest tally since averaging a school-record 9,857 fans during 2002-03 season.
  • Nicolas Claxton is one of two Division I MBB players to lead his team in scoring, rebounding, assists, blocks and steals.
  • With an average 9,611 fans, Stegeman has been 91.3 percent full for UGA's SEC seven home dates. That's 4th-best in the league.
  • Derek Ogbeide is No. 9 among UGA's career rebounding leaders...and is currently four boards from the No. 8 spot.
  • UGA's coaching staff sports a combined 80 seasons of D-I experience (Crean-28, Scott-27, Dollar-23, Abdur-Rahim-12) with 38 postseason bids
 
The Opening Tip

Georgia treks to Oxford, Miss., on Saturday to face Ole Miss for the second time in as many weeks. The Bulldogs and Rebels also met at a sold-out Stegeman Coliseum on Feb. 9.

Saturday's game is Georgia's first weekend road date in over a month, 42 days to be exact. The Bulldogs opened SEC play with back-to-back Saturday trips to the league's defending co-champions, Tennessee and Auburn. Since then, Georgia has had five-consecutive home contests on weekends, four with SEC foes and Texas as part of the SEC/Big 12 Challenge.
 
Series History With The Rebels

Georgia currently leads the all-time series with Ole Miss 73-43, but the Rebels possess a 27-25 advantage in games played in Oxford.
 
Up Next: Dogs To Host Tigers

Georgia will return to action on Wednesday when the Bulldogs host Auburn at Stegeman Coliseum. The contest will tip at 9:00 p.m. and will be televised on ESPNU.
 
Attendance Mark Set To Be Broken

Georgia Basketball is all but certain to break its all-time attendance record at the Bulldogs' next home game against Auburn.

To date, Georgia has drawn 133,683 to Stegeman Coliseum for 15 home games this season. That's 5,888 shy of the school record with a pair of outings remaining against the Tigers and Missouri.

The most members of the Bulldog Nation to attend hoops contests ever is 139,570 for 19 games during the 2015-16 campaign.

The current tally ranks third all-time behind, 4,219 from the No. 2 effort established during the 2003-04 campaign as outlined below.
 
UGA Basketball Total Attendance
Rk. Season Games Total
1. 2015-16 19 139,570
2. 2003-04 16 137,902
3. 2018-19 15 133,683
4. 2006-07 18 132,048
5. 2010-11 16 131,998
 
The Dogs Are Drawing

Georgia has been drawing fans at a record pace throughout the 2018-19 campaign, including seven sellouts.

The Bulldogs are averaging 8,912 fans over 15 home games this season, their highest average since a school-record mark of 9,857 during the 2002-03 campaign. If the current average holds, it would be the third-highest average in school history.

Tom Crean's inaugural season with the Bulldogs' has carried historic ramifications for Georgia Basketball from an attendance standpoint from the preseason to today, including:
  • Georgia announced sellouts of the Florida and Kentucky games on Oct. 24, the earliest date for a game to sell out in program history.
  • The Texas game became a third sellout two days later. Before this season, the Bulldogs never had more than one sellout prior to the season opener.
  • In December, all available tickets for the LSU, South Carolina and Ole Miss games were sold. The six sellouts before the calendar rolled over represented the most in program history.
  • Georgia drew 9,018 fans for the season opener against Savannah State, UGA's biggest crowd for a home opener in 37 seasons...since Dominique Wilkins' sophomore year in Athens in 1981-82.
  • The UMass game on Dec. 30 also sold out, giving Georgia seven sellouts. That represents the most sellouts since having a school-record nine in 2002-03.


It should be noted that 2,000 free seats for UGA students must be filled for those "sellouts" to have capacity crowds of 10,523.
 
Stegeman Nearly Full Regularly

The confines of Stegeman Coliseum have been increasingly crowded this season.

Georgia's overall attendance average of 9,038 fans in the 10,523-seat venue equates to it being 84.7 percent full over 15 home contests, which ranks No. 5 in the SEC.

The Bulldogs have drawn an average of 9,611 fans for their SEC games, meaning Stegeman has been 91.3 percent full for those six games. That ranks No. 4 in the league behind only Florida (97.5 percent), Kentucky (97.4) and Tennesse (93.8).
 
Dogs, Rebels Meet Again

Georgia will face Ole Miss on Saturday afternoon in Oxford, Miss., the second matchup between the Bulldogs and the Rebels in two weeks. On Feb. 9, Ole Miss defeated Georgia, 80-64, before a sell-out crowd at Stegeman Coliseum.

Georgia is now 10-16 overall and 1-12 in the league. The Bulldogs are looking to continue to build on the positive momentum from their last two outings.

Georgia pushed No. 19/21 LSU to the brink last Saturday before falling, 83-79. The Bulldogs led by as many as five points midway through the second half before the Tigers rallied to improve to 11-1 in the SEC.

On Wednesday night, Georgia rallied from a 17-point, second-half deficit to tie Mississippi State before a heart-breaking ending. Tyree Crump's 3-pointer with 9.3 seconds remaining knotted the score at 67-67 before Quinndary Weatherspoon's free throw with .5 of a second left provided State with the victory.

Multi-dimensional Nicolas Claxton has been a "do-it-all" contributor for the Bulldogs. He is one of only two Division I players leading his team in all five major statistical categories – scoring, rebounding, assists, blocks and steals. Claxton not only tops Georgia, he also paces the SEC in both rebounding (9.0 rpg) and blocks (2.5 bpg).

Rayshaun Hammonds, Tyree Crump and Derek Ogbeide also are scoring at a double-digit pace for the Bulldogs. Hammonds, who has a team-high 19 double-figure performances, is averaging 12.4 ppg, while Crump and Ogbeide both are chipping in 10.0 ppg.

Ole Miss enters the game with records of 18-8 overall and 8-5 in the SEC.

Guards Breein Tyree and Terence Davis provide the Rebels with one of the SEC's best 1-2 scoring duos, averaging 18.4 ppg and 15.7 ppg, respectively.
 
Series History With The Rebels

Georgia leads the all-time series with Ole Miss 73-43; however, the Rebels own a 27-25 advantage in games played in Oxford. The Bulldogs are 1-1 at The Pavilion.

In the last meeting in Oxford on Jan. 11, 2017, Georgia out-battled Ole Miss, 69-47, limiting the Rebels to what was their lowest scoring output since 2008.

J.J. Frazier poured in 17 points for Georgia, while Yante Maten recorded a double-double with 15 points and 11 rebounds.

The Bulldogs held the Rebels scoreless for a four-and-a-half-minute stretch and a separate span of over three minutes without a point in the first half. The stifling "D" helped Georgia gain a 30-18 halftime advantage.

The Rebels cut the lead to single digits several times in the second half but did not get closer than seven points at any point. Georgia went on an 8-0 run at the 5:13 mark of the second half to extend the lead to 17 points at 61-44. After an Ole Miss basket, the Bulldogs rattled off another eight uncontested points to further enhance their advantage to 23 points.

The Bulldogs and Rebels met just two weeks ago in Athens, with Ole Miss securing an 80-64 victory before a sellout crowd at Stegeman Coliseum.

Jordan Harris notched his first career double-double to lead Georgia. He scored 10 points and grabbed a career-high 11 boards.

Georgia raced to an early 18-8 lead just 4:33 into the game. The Bulldogs connected on 6-of-8 shots from the floor, including all four attempts from 3-point range, during the spurt.

Ole Miss answered with a 14-2 run that put the Rebels up 22-20 less than five minutes later. After two ties and two more lead changes, Ole Miss gained control with an 18-5 run to close out the opening period.

The Bulldogs did cut the gap to single digits twice following the intermission but could never get closer.
 
Last Time Out...

Georgia rallied from a 17-point, second-half deficit to tie Mississippi State at 67-67 with less than 10 seconds remaining before dropping a 68-67 decision on Wednesday night.

Georgia led 24-20 with 3:20 remaining in the first half before State closed the period on a 16-1 run and opened the second stanza with a 6-0 surge.

Georgia trimmed the deficit to 56-46 at the 11:48 mark and cut that margin in half to make it 56-51 with 9:05 remaining.

The Bulldogs made is a one-possession game twice in the final four minutes before knotting the score on a Tyree Crump 3-pointer with 9.3 seconds remaining.

Quinndary Weatherspoon was fouled with .5 of a second left. After missing his first free throw, Georgia was assessed a technical for a fan threw an object onto the floor. Weatherspoon made his next attempt and intentionally missed the third.
 
Claxton In Rare Air Statistically

Nicolas Claxton enters this weekend as one of only two Division-I players who is leading his team in all five major stats – points, rebounds, assists, blocks and steals.

As of Friday, Claxton and Sandy Cohen III of Green Bay were the only D-I players pacing their team in that statistical quintet.

Claxton has led the Bulldogs in four of the aforementioned categories – everything but scoring – for virtually the entire season. Rayshaun Hammonds has been Georgia's leading scorer for the most part; however, Claxton inched by him with his 18-point performance at Texas A&M last Tuesday.
 
Harrison Earns First Career start

Redshirt senior Christian Harrison secured the first start of his collegiate career against LSU and remained in the lineup against MSU.

Harrison, an Atlanta native who played at Woodward Academy, was a scholarship player for two seasons at Troy before transferring to Georgia as a walk-on.

After sitting out the 2016-17 campaign, Harrison saw action in two games last season. He began this season on the Bulldogs' scout team before earning meaningful minutes in the Oakland game on Dec. 18. Harrison was then was a key defensive contributor in the second half at Georgia Tech on Dec. 22.

Harrison is now a relative regular in the Bulldogs' rotation, seeing time in 14 of the last 17 contests. He even started the second halves at both Tennessee and Texas A&M.

Against LSU, Harrison logged a career-high 19 minutes, six more than his previous high as a freshman at Troy. His solid linescore included two points on a nifty reverse layup, two rebounds, two steals, an assist and a blocked shot. Harrison spent a good portion of the second half guarding Tremont Waters.

Nicolas Claxton sang Harrison's praises following the LSU game.

"I just want to tip my hat off to Christian," Claxton said, unprompted by the media. "He came here and last year didn't play at all. This year, his minutes have been kind of up and down. But, throughout all of that, he has just stayed persistent. He just kept grinding. He comes in every day, and he doesn't complain. He just comes in and works hard, and you see the results today."
 
Ogbeide Steps Up In SEC Play

Derek Ogbeide is averaging 10.8 points and shooting a team-best 61.0 percent from the field in SEC games. That's a significant jump from his efforts of 9.2 ppg and 49.0 percent in non-conference action.

Ogbeide would rank second in the SEC in field goal percentage among statistical leaders for league game only; however, he is four FGs made shy of the minimum to qualify.
 
Turtle, Tyree And the "3"

Although the above headline sounds like the title to a children's book, it's actually in reference to the standing of Turtle Jackson and Tyree Crump among Georgia's career leaders in 3-point field goals.

Jackson and Crump both joined the Bulldogs' top-20 all-time for successful shots from behind this arc.

As a matter of fact, they entered the Ole Miss and Texas A&M games tied at No. 18. Crump inched ahead of Jackson at A&M, but Jackson knotted their numbers again during against LSU .

On Wednesday, Turtle moved just past Crump by one trifecta. Jackson is now No. 17, while Crump is No. 18 at outlined below.

 
UGA Career 3-Point FG Leaders
Rk. No. Player Season GP
1. 261 Levi Stukes 2004-07 683
10. 172 Jody Patton 1988-91 387
14. 132 Terrance Woodbury 2006-09 386
15. 122 Rashad Wright 2001-04 358
16. 121 Sundiata Gaines 2005-08 400
17. 120 Turtle Jackson 2016-19 361
18. 119 Tyree Crump 2017-19 339
19. 116 Michael Chadwick 1996-99 340
20. 106 Nemanja Djurisic 2012-15 292
 
Harris' Production Is Up

Over his last eight games played, Jordan Harris has more than doubled his production in every major stat from his first 15 outings.

Entering the Florida contest on Jan. 19, Harris was averaging 4.1 points, 2.5 rebounds, 1.0 assists, 0.6 steals and 0.3 blocks.

Since then, the junior from Iron City has posted seven double-figure outings and is contributing 10.3 points, 5.5 boards, 2.0 assists, 1.6 steals and 0.8 blocks.

That stretch actually covers 10 of Georgia's games. Harris had a two-game hiatus due to concussion-like symptoms following a collision with Nicolas Claxton late in the LSU game on Jan. 23.

Harris showed little rust in his return to action against South Carolina and finished with 11 points, six boards, four steals and two assists. His quartet of steals is the most by any Bulldog in a single game this season.
 
An 80 Percent Lefty Lineup

On the previous page, you had the opportunity to read how Georgia's roster (more than likely) features the most left-handed players in Division I hoops this season.

In fact, the Bulldogs started four southpaws – Nicolas Claxton, Rayshaun Hammonds, Jordan Harris and Derek Ogbeide – in consecutive outings against Alabama, Ole Miss and Texas A&M.

All told, Georgia has used eight different starting quintets in the first 25 games of the season, with Claxton and Hammonds being the only Bulldogs to begin every outing.
 
Bulldogs Are Blocking Shots

Georgia ranks among the nation's top shot-blocking teams.

Through SEC midweek action, the Bulldogs ranked No. 14 nationally, averaging 5.0 bpg.

Individually, Nicolas Claxton led the SEC and also ranked No. 13 in the nation by swatting 2.5 bpg.
 
Dogs' Depth Paying Dividends

Georgia's bench has outscored its counterparts 19 times...consistently doing so by a significant amount.

The Bulldogs' reserves have been +10 or more in 13 outings, helping Georgia to a +203 scoring margin on bench points.
 
Claxton Doing It All For Dogs

Nicolas Claxton is the only player in the SEC this season to – in the same game – lead his team in points, rebounds, assists, blocks and steals...and he's done so twice.

Claxton did so Nov. 27 against Kennesaw State with 16 points, 15 boards, four assists, two blocks and two steals. The sophomore from Greenville, S.C., repeated the feat Dec. 18 versus Oakland with 17 points, 13 boards, three assists, three blocks and a steal.

The last SEC player to lead his team in all five stats in multiple games was LSU's Ben Simmons, who did so three times in 2015-16.
 
Feel Free To Call Him "Ty-3" Crump

More than two-thirds of Tyree Crump's successful FGs for Georgia have been from at least 20-feet, 9-inches away from the basket.

All told, 69.2 percent (119-of-172) of Crump's made shots from the floor have been from behind the arc.

In fact, 3-pointers directly account for 63.6 percent (357 of 561) of Crump's career points with the Bulldogs.
 
Claxton Joins Top-10 Ledger For Single-Season Swatters

Claxton Joins Top-10 Ledger For Single-Season Swatters Nicolas Claxton moved into the Bulldogs' the top-10 list of single-season blocked shots efforts near the midway point of the season.

Claxton passed a familiar name at No. 9 during the South Carolina game, his father Charles. Nicolas is currently No. 7 on that ledger as outlined below and still chasing his dad, who also owns Georgia's single-season blocked shots record of 94 in 1995.

 
UGA Season Blocks Leaders
Rk. No. Player Seasons GP
1. 94 Charles Claxton 1995 28
2. 91 Richard Corhen 1984 30
3. 88 Lavon Mercer 1977 27
4. 83 Terrell Bell 1996 31
5. 82 Lavon Mercer 1977 27
6. 76 Lavon Mercer 1980 27
7. 65 Nicolas Claxton 2019 26
8. 61 Yante Maten 2016 34
60 Antonio Harvey 1991 29
10. 58 Charles Claxton 1994 30
 
Ogbeide Among Best Boarders

Derek Ogbeide began the season ranked No. 17 among UGA's career rebounding leaders with 614 boards.

Ogbeide has since ascended eight spots on the list. He joined the Bulldogs' top-10 boarders all-time during the Vanderbilt victory and is now No. 9, just four rebounds from No. 8 as outlined below.

 
UGA Career Rebounds Leaders
Rk. No. Player Seasons GP
1. 1116 Bob Lienhard 1968-70 75
2. 923 Terry Fair 1980-83 123
3. 893 Alec Kessler 1987-90 123
4. 889 Yante Maten 2015-18 128
5. 867 Jerry Waller 1964-66 75
6. 840 Charles Claxton 1992-95 116
7. 838 Lavon Mercer 1977-80 106
8. 763 Chris Daniels 2000-04 119
9. 759 Derek Ogbeide 2016-19 120
10. 739 Carlos Strong 1993-96 118
 
The Deflection Objective

The deflection is an extremely key statistic for Georgia. Head coach Tom Crean regularly discusses the deflection and its significance.

"I was told a long time ago – and I don't think you can say it any better – deflections are barometer of active defense. It's any type of activity on the ball. It's a finger tip, a hand, blocked shots, chargers, a steal. That's what we're aiming for. I want our team at a deflection-to-turnover ratio of 3.5-to-1. To me, that is an optimal number."

"You will hear me talk a lot about it," Crean said in his press session following the Sam Houston State game. "Some of you will get tired of it, and some of you will buy into it."

The quote above gives a definition of the stat. The Bulldogs' season totals to date are below. Nicolas Claxton leads the team, including 18 deflections against Sam Houston State.

"I have only coached four other guys, and all four of them played in the NBA, that ever had more than 18 in a game," Crean said.

 
UGA Deflections
Player Number
Nicolas Claxton 227
Rayshaun Hammonds 99
Jordan Harris 86
Turtle Jackson 68
Teshaun Hightower 67
E'Torrion Wilridge 65
Derek Ogbeide 59
Tyree Crump 52
Tye Fagan 40
Amanze Ngumezi 16
Ignas Sargiunas 15
Christian Harrison 15
JoJo Toppin 9
Connor O'Neill 2
Mike Edwards 2
 
A Really Big Family Reunion

Nearly 100 Georgia Basketball letterwinners returned to Stegeman Coliseum for the Feb. 9 Ole Miss game to take part in the Bulldogs' Lettermen's Day. That represented the largest turnout in the event's history.

Hugh Durham, the winningest coach in school history who guided the Bulldogs from 1979-95, headlined the list. Durham's teams produced a series of notable firsts in school history – the first postseason appearance with the 1981 NIT; the first SEC Tournament title, first NCAA Tournament bid and first Final Four all in 1983; and the first SEC regular-season Championship in 1990.

Player-wise, Bulldogs spanning the last 74 seasons were represented – from Charlie Burch, UGA's oldest living letterwinner from the 1944-45 team, to 2017 seniors J.J. Frazier, Kenny Paul Geno and Brandon Young.
 
Welcome To The League, Coach

Tom Crean's initiation into the Southeastern Conference would probably be considered hazing by some.

Georgia began league play with back-to-back Saturday trips to the defending league co-champs and six straight outings against teams ranked in the top-50 of the new NCAA Evaluation Tool (NET) rankings.

In the Jan. 5 edition of the NET, the Bulldogs' first half-dozen SEC foes, in succession, were ranked as No. 7 Tennessee, No. 45 Vanderbilt, No. 18 Auburn, No. 10 Kentucky, No. 33 Florida and No. 27 LSU.

On Jan. 27 (when all 14 league teams had played six SEC games), the NET listed UGA's first six opponents as No. 6 Tennessee, No. 93 Vanderbilt, No. 27 Auburn, No. 7 Kentucky, No. 37 Florida and No. 16 LSU.

The Bulldogs' opponents over their first six SEC contests averaged a NET ranking of 31.0, far and away the most difficult in the league. The next closest was 42.0 for Alabama.
 
Dogs Shooting Blistering Percentages Against Longhorns

As outlined below, Georgia's overall and 3-point field goal percentages against Texas both rank among the top-5 in school history.

For good measure, the Bulldogs connected on 78.6 percent of their trips to the free throw line versus the Longhorns.

"I'm not sure I've ever coached a team in my 19 years that's ever shot that well from all three spots on the floor," Tom Crean said.

 
UGA Single-Game FG Percentages
Rk. Pct. Site-Opponent FG-FGA Date
1. .762 H-Chattanooga 32-42 12/19/80
2. .702 H-Miss. State 40-57 2/28/01
3. .692 H-Vanderbilt 45-65 2/12/86
4. .667 H-Texas 32-48 1/26/19
.667 H-Winthrop 40-60 12/21/93
.667 H-Tennessee 32-48 3/12/83
 
UGA Single-Game 3FG Percentages
Rk. Pct. Site-Opponent 3FG-3FGA Date
1. .727 H-Alabama 8-11 2/6/88
.727 A-Vanderbilt 8-11 2/14/90
3. .706 H-Texas 12-17 1/26/19
4. .700 A-Miss. State. 7-10 1/19/89
.700 H-S. Carolina 7-10 1/22/00
 
Claxton Named SEC POTW

Nicolas Claxton was tabbed the SEC Player of the Week on Dec. 31, a day after his game-high tallies of 20 points, 11 rebounds and three blocks against UMass.

Claxton recorded his sixth double-double of the season while connecting on 8-of-13 shots from the field and converting on 3-of-3 trips to the line versus the Minutemen. He grabbed 10 defensive rebounds, one less than the UMass entire roster grabbed as a whole on that end of the floor.
 
Maten Earns G League Honor

Yante Maten, the 2018 AP SEC Player of the Year for Georgia, enjoyed a very productive month of December.

Maten, a two-way player with the Miami Heat and the Sioux Falls Skyforce, was named NBA G League Player of the Month. In nine games, he averaged 29.2 points, 11.4 rebounds, 2.2 assists and 1.4 blocks per game while shooting 59.0 percent from the field, 47.4 percent from 3-point range and 80.3 percent from the line. Maten's month was highlighted by a 42-point, 14-rebound performance against Stockton, one of his seven December double-doubles.

"I'm definitely enjoying my time in Sioux Falls," Maten said. "I'm being used a lot. I'm trying to make the best out of every opportunity and every game. I'm just exited to come out and prove a point every night."
 
Perfect Against "The Enemy"

With its 70-59 win over Georgia Tech on Dec. 22 at McCamish Pavilion, Georgia's Class of 2019 secured a unique spot in the Bulldogs' history.

In the first 113 seasons of Georgia Basketball, only four, four-year Bulldogs finished their careers undefeated against the Yellow Jackets – the tandems of James Banks and Vern Fleming (1980-84) and Richard Corhen and Gerald Crosby (1981-85).

That number more than doubled with this year's victory as Mike Edwards, Turtle Jackson, Connor O'Neill, Derek Ogbeide and E'Torrion Wilridge joined that quartet. Christian Harrison also went undefeated against Tech, but only played two seasons in Athens after transferring from Troy. Those Bulldogs not only won each game, the did so by double figures. The last time Georgia posted four-consecutive double-digit wins over the Jackets was a stretch covering the 1908-09 through 1913-14 seasons

To adhere to "truth in advertising" principles...it should be noted that UGA and GT played at least twice each season from the beginning of the series through 1981-82.
 
Hammonds Puts Up Rare Stat Line

Rayshaun Hammonds poured in a career-high 31 points while not turning the ball over once versus Illinois State.

Hammonds is the only SEC player this season to put up 30 points with no turnovers. Only two SEC players did so last season – Vanderbilt's Jeff Roberson and Terence Davis from Ole Miss.

Hammonds, Yante Maten and Jumaine Jones are the only Bulldogs to do so in the last 20 seasons as outlined below.

 
30 Points, 0 Turnovers
Player Points Opponent (Date)
R. Hammonds 31 Illinois State (11/19/18)
Y. Maten 30 Charleston Southern (12/17/16)
Y. Maten 30 Kansas (11/22/16)
J. Jones 34 Kentucky (1/26/99)
 
Career-High Outings Against ISU

Rayshaun Hammonds and Nicolas Claxton exploded for career-high outputs of 31 and 22 points, respectively, against Illinois State.

Hammonds scored 31 points in 31 minutes. He scored 18 first-half points, almost topped his previous best effort of 21 points before intermission. Claxton did much of his damage after the break with 14 second-half points.
 
Excitement Surrounds Bulldogs

Tom Crean was hired as the Bulldogs' head coach on March 15 and created an off-season buzz surrounding Georgia Basketball that it hasn't been seen since Dominique Wilkins' days in Athens during the early-80s.

Before this season, Georgia had never sold out more than one game before its opener.

This fall, the Bulldogs had three sellouts – Florida, Kentucky and Texas – in October.

In addition, the number of contributors and the amount donated to UGA's Basketball Enhancement Fund (BEF) set records by considerable margins. The BEF tally topped $1 million for the first time ever and as of Nov. 7 had bettered the previous watermark by just shy of 25 percent.
 
UGA Loaded With Peach Products

Nearly three-fourths of Georgia's roster played high school hoops in the Peach State. Eleven of 15 Bulldogs – that's 73.3 percent to be exact – did so.

The list includes: seniors Christian Harrison (Woodward Academy), William "Turtle" Jackson (Athens Christian School), Connor O'Neill (Blessed Trinity Catholic High) and Derek Ogbeide (Pebblebrook High); juniors Tyree Crump (Bainbridge High) and Jordan Harris (Seminole County High); sophomores Rayshaun Hammonds (Norcross High) and Teshaun Hightower (Collins Hills High); and freshmen Tye Fagan (Upson-Lee High); Amanze Ngumezi (Johnson High) and JoJo Toppin (Norcross High).
 
Fagan Owns Unique Record

The first recruit to commit to Tom Crean at Georgia certainly brought a winning résumé.

Spring signee Tye Fagan helped Upson-Lee High School to back-to-back state titles and 63 consecutive victories as a junior and senior. The Knights' effort represents the third-longest winning streak in Georgia boys' high school hoops history.

"Any time you add a championship-winning player and person to your program, it's great," Crean said. "But I can't recall ever signing anyone that was 63-0. That's unique."

Georgia's loss at Temple on Nov. 13 represented Fagan's first setback representing his school since an Upson-Lee setback to New Hampstead on Feb. 17, 2016 in the first round of the 2016 state tournament...providing a span of exactly 1000 days between those losses.
 
Inaugural StegMania A Success

Tom Crean arrived in Athens with a distinct vision. One thing he wanted to create was an preseason event to display the new energy and enthusiasm around Georgia Basketball.

On Friday, Oct. 5, the first-ever StegMania drew a crowd of more than 5,000. It was, by all measures, a significant success.

UGA students lined up around the Coliseum to receive commemorative "StegMania" t-shirts. A lengthy autograph session with a distinct family feel wrapped up the festivities.

StegMania itself was packed with pyrotechnic player intros, a high-flying dunk contest, a dance battle with the Georgia Lady Bulldogs, an impromptu performance of the hit song "Rolex" by hip-hop artists Ayo & Teo and a scrimmage with Crean "mic'd up."

"When you're brand new coming into something like this, you really don't have an expectation," said Crean after the event. "But if I would've had one, it would have exceeded it. When I saw people in line to get into the Coliseum, I got a lump in my throat. It was awesome because you never take it for granted. Hopefully, everyone walks out of here knowing that they matter."
 
The Leftiest Lads In The Land

The Bulldogs' roster features six – count 'em on two hands – left-handed players. Georgia's southpaws include Nicolas Claxton, Tye Fagan, Rayshaun Hammonds, Jordan Harris, Derek Ogbeide and JoJo Toppin.

We're relatively confident that tally is the most any NCAA Division I basketball team will suit up during 2018-19.

During the summer months, J.D. Hamilton of the NCAA sends out a laundry list of questions to the nation's Division I men's basketball SIDs. The inquiries can range from statistical – what school has the most 2,000-point scorers – to staff – who has the nation's most experienced coaching staff – to roster related – who has the most newcomers.

Round 1 of the email on September 5 including the following offering from Athens: "Georgia has six left-handed players. Does any other team in the country have as many or more players who are left-handed?"

Not that SIDs are bound to answer every request, but that question received no replies. So, the ask was modified for a second email correspondence sent out by Hamilton on September 26 to read: "Georgia has six left-handed players. Does any other team in the country have as four or more players who are left-handed?"

That led to Tennessee (D.J. Burns, John Fulkerson, Jalen Johnson and Yves Pons), Washington (David Crisp, Elijah Hardy, Bryan Penn-Johnson and Nate Roberts) and Winthrop (Adam Pickett, Jermaine Ukaegbu, Kyle Zunic and Raivis Scerbinskis) supplying lists of four.

While nothing is official, Georgia will claim the unofficial title of the leftiest team in America until proven otherwise.

And for full effect, the above headline should be read in a voice imitating Dan Magill, the greatest Bulldog of all time. If you're not familiar with Coach Magill, ask.


 

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Georgia Men's Basketball Media Availability - Marcus "Smurf" Millender
Monday, September 22
Georgia Men's Basketball Media Availability - Jeremiah Wilkinson
Monday, September 22
Georgia Basketball - Coach Mike White - Media Availability
Monday, September 15
Georgia Basketball - Dylan James - Media Availability
Monday, September 15