
MBB Game Notes: It's Dogs vs. Hogs In Fayetteville On Saturday
January 08, 2021 | Men's Basketball
- Georgia Basketball Game Notes
- Georgia (7-2, 0-2 SEC) vs. Arkansas (9-2, 1-2 SEC)
- Saturday, January 9, at 3:30 p.m. ET
- Bud Walton Arena (19,368) in Fayetteville, Ark.
- Radio: Georgia Bulldog Sports Network Flagship: WSB AM 750 Atlanta. (Scott Howard, play-by-play; Chuck Dowdle, analyst; Adam Gillespie, producer) | Affiliates
- TV: SEC Network (Mike Morgan, play-by-play; Debbie Antonelli, analyst)
- Video Stream: SEC Network (Kevin Fitzgerald, play-by-play; Dane Bradshaw, analyst)
- Audio Stream: georgiadogs.com
- Satellite: XM: 382; Internet: 972
- History: UA leads, 23-16 (Full History)
- Last Meeting: UGA, 99-89, on Feb. 29, 2020
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Georgia Bulldogs | ||||
Coach: Tom Crean | ||||
34-38 in 3rd season at UGA | ||||
390-269 in 21st season overall | ||||
No. | Name | PPG | RPG | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | Sahvir Wheeler | 13.7 | 3.8 | |
5-10; 180; Soph.; Houston, Texas | ||||
5 | Justin Kier | 12.6 | 4.8 | |
6-6; 215; Soph.; Hopkins, S.C. | ||||
10 | Toumani Camara | 14.3 | 8.9 | |
6-8; 220; Soph.; Brussels, Belgium | ||||
14 | Tye Fagan | 10.6 | 5.9 | |
6-3; 195; Jr.; Logtown, Ga. | ||||
24 | P.J. Horne | 10.6 | 4.2 | |
6-6; 230; Gr.; Tifton, Ga. |
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Arkansas Razorbacks | ||||
Coach: Eric Musselman | ||||
28-14 in 2nd season at UA | ||||
138-47 in 6th season overall | ||||
No. | Name | PPG | RPG | |
---|---|---|---|---|
3 | Desi Sills | 12.1 | 3.9 | |
6-2; 200; Jr.; Jonesboro, Ark. | ||||
5 | Moses Moody | 15.9 | 5.7 | |
6-6; 206; Fr.; Little Rock, Ark. | ||||
10 | Jaylin Williams | 3.4 | 3.6 | |
6-10; 245; Fr.; Fort Smith, Ark. | ||||
11 | Jalen Tate | 10.4 | 4.2 | |
6-6; 175; Sr.; Pickerington, Ohio | ||||
23 | Connor Vanover | 9.3 | 7.3 | |
7-3; 247; R-Soph.; Little Rock, Ark. |
TEAM COMPARISON
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2020-21 STATISTICS | GEORGIA | ARKANSAS |
Points Per Game | 81.4 | 87.2 |
Opp. Point Per Game | 70.0 | 67.1 |
Scoring Margin | +11.4 | +20.1 |
Field Goal Pct. | .469 | .456 |
Opp. Field Goal Pct. | .412 | .391 |
3-Point Pct. | .309 | .341 |
3-Pointers Per Game | 6.6 | 9.5 |
Opp. 3-Point Pct. | .304 | .302 |
Free Throw Pct. | .699 | .730 |
Free Throws Per Game | 14.4 | 16.5 |
Rebounds Per Game | 43.4 | 43.6 |
Opp. Rebound Per Game | 34.1 | 34.5 |
Rebound Margin | +9.4 | +9.1 |
Assists Per Game | 16.3 | 15.3 |
Turnovers Per Game | 17.8 | 12.1 |
Assist-to-Turnover Ratio | 0.92 | 1.26 |
Turnover Margin | +0.4 | +2.2 |
Steals Per Game | 9.1 | 8.4 |
Blocks Per Game | 2.8 | 5.6 |
The Starting 5...
- Georgia is one of three D-I MBB teams – of 345 that have played this season – with six players currently averaging double figures in the scoring column.
- The combined rosters of UGA & UA feature 20 players in their first seasons competing as Dogs and Hogs; however, neither team has a fourth-year senior.
- Toumani Carama is tied for the league lead and is tied at No. 16 nationally with four double-doubles. All of those have come in the Bulldogs' last six games.
- Sahvir Wheeler's three double-digit assist outings in the first three games of the season were as many as any SEC player posted in all of 2019-20.
- UGA's roster features eight newcomers with representative in every class – two freshmen, a sophomore, two juniors and a trio of graduate transfers.
The Opening Tip
Georgia treks to the Western half of the SEC for the second time four days on Saturday when the Bulldogs visit Arkansas in Fayetteville for a Saturday matinee matchup with the Razorbacks. On Wednesday, Georgia dropped a gut-wrenching, 94-92 overtime decision at LSU.
The Bulldogs are now 7-2 on the season. Georgia began the 2020-21 campaign with a 7-0 start that was the program's best beginning in 38 years...since Georgia's 1982-83 Final Four season.
The Bulldogs are one of the nation's most balanced offensive basketball teams. Through Thursday's games, Georgia was one of only three NCAA Division I men's basketball programs with six players averaging double figures in the scoring column along with UCLA and Merrimack. FYI, as of Friday morning there were 345 teams that had played games this season.
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Keeping An Eye On . . . Entering Tonight's Game:
Justin Kier is...
• 7 assists from 250 for his career
• 14 rebounds from 600 for his career
Andrew Garcia is...
• 125 points from 1,000 for his career
• 48 rebounds for 500 for his career
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Series History With Arkansas
Arkansas owns a 23-16 lead in the all-time series with the Bulldogs, including an 11-3 edge in games contested in Fayetteville.
Last season on Feb. 29 in Athens, Georgia raced to a 14-0 lead to open the game and then withstood numerous Arkansas attempts to rally as the Bulldogs secured a 99-89 victory before a sold-out Stegeman Coliseum.
The Bulldogs earned their largest lead of the evening at 36-18 with 8:24 left in the first half before the Razorbacks trimmed the gap to 47-39 at the intermission.
Arkansas pulled within a single point three times in the second period, but the Bulldogs answered on each occasion – with a Rayshaun Hammonds three-point play, an acrobatic layup from Tyree Crump and a layup by Hammonds.
Anthony Edwards took over late, scoring 10 of his game-high 26 points in the final 4:30 as Georgia pushed a three-point lead to a 10-point margin of victory.
In the Bulldogs' most recent trip to Fayetteville on Jan. 29, 2019, Arkansas pulled away late en route to a 70-60 win over Georgia in a back-and-forth contest that featured seven ties and seven lead changes.
With the score tied 52-52, an Isaiah Joe 3-pointer initiated an 18-8 surge the rest of the way.
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Scouting The Hogs
Arkansas is 9-2 overall and 1-2 in the SEC entering Saturday's game.
The Razorbacks were one of the league's last undefeated teams, racing to a 9-0 start to the 2020-21 season before dropping back-to-back decisions to ranked SEC foes. Arkansas' initial setback came to No. 12 Missouri last Saturday before the Razorbacks lost to No. 9 Tennessee in Knoxville on Wednesday.
Like Georgia, Arkansas features an extremely balanced offensive attack.
Five Razorbacks are contributing double-figure scoring averages – Moses Moody 15.9 ppg, JD Notae 15.7 ppg, Desi Sills 12.1 ppg, Justin Smith 11.6 ppg and Jalen Tate 10.4 ppg – while Connor Vanover is eight points shy of also scoring at a double-digit clip (102 points in 11 games for a 9.3 ppg average). Of note, Smith is currently out of action after suffering an ankle injury in Arkansas' SEC opener at Auburn on Dec. 30.
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Last Time out
LSU outscored Georgia 14-12 in overtime en route to a 94-92 win over the Bulldogs at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center on Wednesday night.
Justin Kier and Sahvir Wheeler led the Bulldogs with 25 and 21 points, respectively, while Toumani Camara added his fourth double-double in the last five games with 14 points and 10 rebounds.
The back-and-forth affair featured no less than 20 lead changes and nine ties – including at halftime (42-42) and obviously at the end of regulation (80-80).
The Bulldogs earned the game's biggest advantage at 68-58 on a breakaway dunk by Kier with 9:07 remaining. Following an LSU timeout, the Tigers recorded back-to-back old-fashioned three-point plays to trim the gap to four points just 67 seconds later.
Georgia led 80-74 following a Wheeler 3-pointer with 1:57 left, but Javonte Smart's back-to-back 3-pointers tied the scored and forced the extra session.
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The Unofficial SEC Tourney Title
Georgia and Arkansas were the two Wednesday night winners at the 2020 SEC Tournament in Nashville last March.
On March 11, the Bulldogs bested Ole Miss, 81-63, in the evening's first outing before the Razorbacks downed Vanderbilt, 86-73. The following morning, the remainder of the tourney was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Certain jokesters declared Georgia and Arkansas as the tourney's co-champions, making Saturday's matchup what those folks would consider a 2020 SEC Tourney title tilt.
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America's Most Balanced Offenses
Georgia, UCLA and Merrimack entered this weekend as the only Division I basketball teams in the nation with six players averaging double figures.
Through Thursday, 345 D-I teams had begun their 2020-21 seasons. Bulldogs Toumani Camara, Sahvir Wheeler, Tye Fagan, Justin Kier, P.J. Horne and Andrew Garcia represented one of only three sextets of teammates contributing 10 or more points to their team's offensive production.
All told, seven different Bulldogs – add Christian Brown to the ledger above – have combined to notch 37 double-digit scoring outputs during Georgia's first nine games.
Of note: 1) the double-figure Bruins are Jaime Jaquez Jr., Chris Smith, Jonny Juzang, Tyger Campbell, Cody Riley and Jules Bernard; and 2) Merrimack has only played one game this season.
Following the Bulldogs, Bruins and Warriors, there were 20 teams with five double-digit scorers as of Friday morning, including Arkansas.
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Dogs, Hogs Tops In Points & Boards
Georgia and Arkansas both are near the top SEC statistics for scoring and rebounding.
The Razorbacks are the league's most potent offensive, averaging 87.2 ppg, while the Bulldogs' 81.4 ppg is No. 3. Nationally, they ranked No. 10 and No. 38 as of Friday.
Georgia is currently No. 2 in the SEC in rebounding margin at +9.3 rpg, slightly better than Arkansas, which is No. 3 at +9.1. Those efforts were No. 23 and No. 24 in rankings for all D-I teams entering this weekend.
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Bulldogs Supplying The Digits
Georgia is averaging 81.4 points per game this season, continuing the Bulldogs' trend of big-time point production under Tom Crean.
Georgia scored 92 points against LSU on Wednesday – the 13th time UGA reached the 90-point plateau in Crean's 73 games at UGA. By comparison, Georgia scored 90 or more points just 13 times in the 403 games before Crean's arrival, a span of 10-plus seasons dating back to 2008.
Last year, the Bulldogs averaged 75.9 ppg, their highest effort in more than 15 years. The last time Georgia produced a higher points per game clip than that mark was in 2002-03 when the Bulldogs averaged 79.2.
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Kier, Wheeler Leading SEC
Georgia's Justin Kier and Sahvir Wheeler entered this weekend leading the SEC in steals and assists, respectively.
Kier's average of 2.3 spg paced league leaders and ranked No. 51 nationally on Friday.
Wheeler's production of 7.7 passes-to-points not only placed him atop SEC stats but also put him at No. 6 nationally. The sophomore from Houston's average was 2.7 assists per game better than any other league player.
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It Ain't Just Wheeler Dishing
Georgia leads the SEC and ranks No. 52 nationally in assists per game.
All told, 147 of the Bulldogs' 272 made field goals this season have been assisted buckets, 54.0 percent of every Georgia make.
Following Sahvir Wheeler's league-leading average of 7.7 apg, Justin Kier is ranked No. 8 in SEC stats at 4.0 apg.
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Camara's Production Increases
Toumani Camara's efforts in the scoring and rebounding columns have increased dramatically from last season.
Camara's scoring average is up 116 percent from a year ago – from 6.6 to 14.3 ppg – while his rebounding count is up 107 percent – from 4.3 to 8.9 rpg.
In turn, Camara has produced an SEC-high four double-doubles this season, all of those coming in the last six games.
Camara's increased offensive production can be traced to the second half of last season. After scoring in double figures once in the Bulldogs' first 16 games, he did so seven times in the final 16 outings. With seven more double-digit tallies this season, Camara has now scored 10 or more points in 15 of his last 25 outings at Georgia.
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New Faces In New Places
There are no less than 20 first-year players in Saturday's game. Georgia has eight newcomers, while there are 12 new Razorbacks. Of note, neither roster includes a true senior.
Georgia's octet newcomers features a representative of every class – freshmen K.D. Johnson and Josh Taylor, sophomore Tyron McMillan, juniors Jonathan Ned and Mikal Starks; and graduate transfer seniors Andrew Garcia, P.J. Horne and Justin Kier.
The dozen first-year Razorbacks include five freshmen, one sophomore transfer, two junior transfers and four graduate transfers.
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"Camara" Throughout SEC Stats
Toumani Camara's name is littered throughout league leader stats.
The sophomore from Brussels, is ranked among the best in the SEC in no less than seven categories – No. 12 in scoring, No. 3 in rebounding, No. 4 in field goal percentage, No. 7 in steals, No. 12 in blocked shots, No. 3 in offensive rebounding and No. 4 in defensive rebounding.
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Dogs' Double-Double Tandem
Georgia's Toumani Camara and Sahvir Wheeler are the only Southeastern Conference teammates with three double-doubles each this season.
Wheeler opened the campaign with a trio of point-assist efforts against Florida A&M, North Georgia and Jacksonville. He is believed to be the first SEC player with three straight point-assist double-doubles Mississippi State's Chuck Evans in 1993.
Camara's efforts are of the more traditional point-rebound variety and came versus Montana, Cincinnati, Mississippi State and LSU.
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Latest Road Opener In 77 Seasons
Georgia's trip to Baton Rouge to face LSU on Jan. 6 represented the Bulldogs' latest initial road game calendar wise since 1945.
The Bulldogs opened the "1944-45" campaign by hosting Clemson on Jan. 8 and then traveled to take on Jacksonville NAS (that's Naval Air Station) on Jan. 12.
The last time Georgia played December games and its first road game this late was the 1940. The Bulldogs played five home dates between Dec. 20, 1939-Jan. 5, 1040 before trekking to Clemson on Jan. 6, 1940.
The trip to Baton Rouge was the latest date for the Bulldogs' first true road game since the 2008-09 season when Georgia played three neutral site games before facing Georgia Tech on Jan. 6 in Atlanta.
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Bulldogs Collect SEC Honors
Tye Fagan and Toumani Camara earned SEC Player of the Week accolades in the first and fourth weeks of the season.
Fagan won the honor on Nov. 30, a day after posting career-high tallies of 21 points and 10 rebounds en route to his first career double-double in the season opener versus Florida A&M.
Fagan connected on 9-of-10 shots from the field against the Rattlers and played a major role in creating distance on the scoreboard. Fagan scored eight points in a span of 76 seconds as Georgia expanded a two-point lead (49-47) to 10 (59-49).
Camara was tabbed on Dec. 21 after his 19-point, 10-rebound performance against Cincinnati two days earlier. He equaled his career-best scoring output (19 points) for the third time this season en route to his second double-double.
The sophomore from Brussels, Belgium, had 14 points and eight rebounds in the first half and keyed a 15-0 run that broke the game wide open and extended an eight-point lead to a 23-point cushion. Camara scored eight points and collected four boards in that surge.
Fagan and Camara are the 28th and 29th different Bulldogs who have combined to win SEC Player of the Week recognition 39 times since the award's inception in 1985.
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UGA Among Last Unbeatens
With a men's/women's doubleheader sweep on Dec. 22, Georgia became one of only two D-I schools with both hoops programs undefeated on Christmas.
The Lady Bulldogs dispatched Appalachian State, 107-44, in the afternoon, their highest scoring output since Dec. 28, 2000.
Later that evening, the Bulldogs defeated Northeastern, 76-58.
Michigan, with a 7-0 men's team and a 5-0 women's record, was the only other school with unblemished records when Santa Claus circled the globe.
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Wheeler Produces Historic Start
Sahvir Wheeler opened the season with a streak three consecutive point-assist double-doubles.
Wheeler has 12 points and 12 assists against Florida A&M, equaling the fourth-best single-game assist tally in 116 seasons of Georgia Basketball. It also was the most assists by a Bulldog in more than two decades...since G.G. Smith also had a dozen against Vanderbilt on Jan. 3, 1999.
The sophomore from Houston followed the FAMU contests with 17 points and 10 assists versus North Georgia and 21 points and 10 assists against Jacksonville.
Wheeler became the first SEC player to record three-straight point-assist double-doubles since at least the 2000-01 season. In fact, only two league players – Florida's Chris Chiozza and Kentucky's Tyler Ulis – recorded back-to-back point-assist double-doubles in the last five seasons. The last instance of three-consecutive point-assist double-doubles found was a stretch by Mississippi State's Chuck Evans during the 1992-93 season.
Wheeler also is believed to be the first Georgia player with back-to-back double-figure assist tallies ever. Box scores dating back through 1969-70 did not find anyone who had done so. There were a couple of close calls, most notably Gino Gianfrancesco – who owns three of the top-four single-game assist efforts in school history – in a three-game span covering the 1971-72 and 1972-73 seasons.
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Crean Familiar With Bearcats
Tom Crean improved to 7-7 all-time against Cincinnati with a Dec. 19 win over the Bearcats. All of the previous matchups coming during his tenure at Marquette from 1999-08.
"This game brings back tremendous intensity for me," Crean said prior to the game. "When I was growing up as a coach, every day it started with 'What's going on at Cincinnati?' and 'What's going on at Louisville?' My coaching career began with those two programs as a measuring stick. Every day was about how do we compete with Cincinnati."
Marquette and Cincinnati were conference rivals throughout Crean's time in Milwaukee, competing in Conference USA from 1999-05 before both moved to the Big East. They also were relatively regular NCAA participants, combining for 11 bids to "March Madness."
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Of Big Plays and "+/-" numbers
Georgia's Dec. 12 win over Samford wasn't decided until the game's final seconds.
The Bulldogs took their first lead of the evening when Jaxon Etter scored with 1:17 remaining. Georgia was up 76-73 with 13 ticks on the clock when P.J. Horne's putback of a missed free throw pushed the margin to five points and two possessions.
While those plays drew attention, examining the box score revealed that Etter and Horne also were two of Georgia's most efficient players on the evening.
Etter played just shy of four minutes but the Bulldogs were "+8" with him on the floor. The sophomore from Woodstock helped Georgia thwart Samford's first-half momentum. In just 2:30 of action, Etter recorded a +/- of "+6", the best effort of any Bulldog in the period.
Horne's 34 minutes of PT – his most of the season to date – provided the Bulldogs with a "+13" margin with him in the court.
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A Busy Bunch Of Bulldogs
Georgia opened the 2020-21 season by playing five games in 14 days.
That came following a 263-day gap between March 11 – when Georgia played its final game of the 2019-20 season at the SEC Tournament – and Nov. 29 – when the Bulldogs opened this season versus Florida A&M.
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Dunks On Dolphins Eyed By ESPN
Toumani Camara and Christian Brown delivered two ESPN attention-getting dunks against Jacksonville on Dec. 4.
During the first half, Justin Kier dove for a deflected ball near midcourt and pitched it ahead to Camara who, with space, put down a windmill effort that immediately drew the attention of the network. @SportsCenter tweeted "We score that a 10 for Toumani Camara!" followed by a "head blown" emoji.
In the second half, Brown prevented a deflected ball from going out of bounds and passed to Tyron McMillan, who quickly moved the ball to Sahvir Wheeler. Wheeler drove toward the basket before floating a pass that Brown handled with his left hand and slammed through the basket. @ESPN tweeted "The save ... and the finish!" and added a "hammer" emoji for good measure.
Camara's effort ended up at No. 4 on SportsCenter's top-10 plays for Friday.
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The Nomination Wasn't Automatic
The decision to push Tye Fagan for SEC Player of the Week required some thought.
Andrew Garcia also had an outstanding – and efficient – game against the Rattlers. The Bergenfield, N.J., native scored a game-high 22 points in just 23 minutes of playing time. Garcia connected on 6-of-8 shots from the field and converted on 10-of-11 trips to the free-throw line in his debut as a Bulldog.
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Hoops Scheduling 2020 Style
It took four opponents for Georgia to play its first two games of the season.
As of Monday, Nov. 23, UGA was scheduled to play Gardner-Webb on Nov. 29. The decision was made to cancel that contest that day after consultation with UGA Athletic Association medical personnel due to COVID-19 issues within the GWU roster.
About 24 hours later, Georgia announced it would play Florida A&M on the 29th. On Tuesday, Tom Crean said: "Well in a nut shell, this came up yesterday morning and we already had some ideas of potential replacements for the first couple of weeks so we really started with that. That becomes the most important thing...some were available, most weren't available to be honest with you, but Florida A&M was the one that had the most opportunity to say yes and the best opportunity to say yes, in the shortest amount of time, and the shortest distance involved."
Less than 24 hours after that, Crean's comments seemed prophetic when Wednesday's season opener against Columbus State was canceled just hours before tip off. That outing was scrapped when COVID-19 tests returned positive within the Cougars' traveling party.
On Nov. 30 – about 54-and-a-half hours before tipoff – the Columbus State game was replaced by the Dec. 2 North Georgia contest. The addition of that contest lined up games against Nighthawks, Dolphins and Grizzlies in a span of just less than a week.
"It's not optimal, but for this year, it's very probable," Tom Crean said following the North Georgia contest. "I told the guys, we may get to a situation where we don't have three games in three weeks, let alone three games in one week. Who knows what way this season is going to go. Anything you do is getting you ready for what's coming. It just so happens that this is the way it's going to be."
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Latest Opener In A While
Last season, the Bulldogs christened their season on Nov. 5, the earliest opening contest ever in Georgia's 115 seasons. The previous date for an initial outing was when UGA began the 2013-14 campaign on Nov. 8.
With the 2020-21 campaign delayed due to COVID-19, the Bulldogs' Nov. 29 date against Florida A&M was their latest opener in nearly three decades.
Georgia began the 1992-93 season on Dec. 1, with a 76-65 loss to No. 3 Kansas at Allen Fieldhouse. That contest was the first of a "home-and-home." The quote marks are to emphasize that Kansas' return was not to Athens. The Bulldogs ventured to Lawrence, but the Jayhawks return game in Atlanta for the first-ever basketball event at Georgia Dome, the 1993 Kuppenheimer Classic.
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Top-Ranked JUCOs Join Dogs
Each of Georgia's junior college recruits was ranked among the top-15 prospects nationally by 247Sports.com. Mikal Starks was listed at No. 9, Tyron McMillan was No. 11 and Jonathan Ned was No. 15.
Ned and Starks come from dramatically different hometowns but the same junior college – Eastern Florida State. Ned is from Northern California, while Starks hails from South Florida. They helped EFSC's Titans win 55 games over two seasons and reach the "Elite Eight" round of the 2019 NJCAA Tournament.
McMillan, who played AAU basketball with Sahvir Wheeler, earned All-Region honors in his one season at Kilgore College in Texas.
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Edwards Drafted No. 1 Overall
Anthony Edwards was chosen by the Minnesota Timberwolves with the No. 1 overall pick of the 2020 NBA Draft on Nov. 18. Edwards became the Bulldogs' highest draft pick ever, topping Dominique Wilkins, who was selected No. 3 overall in 1982.
"This is an incredibly special night for an incredibly special young man," Tom Crean said. "I know the time and the effort he's put into getting to this point. He's earned it. He works extremely hard. He's dedicated to getting better."
Edwards is the Bulldogs' 39th NBA Draft pick and the eighth first-rounder. He was the first lottery pick since Kentavious Caldwell-Pope (No. 8 overall) in 2013.
"This is a big-time moment for this program," Crean said. "When you're trying to build on what others have done here before, you've got to have moments that help establish what you want your program to be. I think this is something that everyone who has ever been a part of Georgia Basketball can be proud of. It also shows that you can come to Georgia, and in Anthony's case come to Georgia and stay close to home, and you can achieve all of your dreams. That's really, really important for us."
Edwards was the nation's top-scoring freshman last season, averaging 19.1 ppg. He scored 610 points, the 10th-most ever by an SEC freshman in a single season.
Edwards was named SEC Freshman of the Year by both league coaches and the Associated Press and was tabbed SEC Freshman of the Week a school-record four times.
Edwards became the SEC's sixth all-time overall No. 1 pick in the NBA Draft – and the fifth since 2010. The league's other top picks include Shaquille O'Neal to Orlando in 1992, John Wall to Washington in 2010, Anthony Davis to New Orleans in 2012, Karl Anthony-Towns to Minnesota in 2015 and Ben Simmons to Philadelphia in 2016.
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A Good Year for Drafted Dogs
Anthony Edwards' selection in the NBA Draft continued a strong year for Georgia Bulldogs in professional drafts.
Offensive tackle Andrew Thomas was the No. 4 overall pick in the NFL Draft by the New York Giants. Pitcher Emerson Hancock was the No. 6 selection in the first round of the MLB Draft by the Seattle Mariners.
With that, Georgia became just the fifth school ever to have top-10 picks in the three major sports drafts in the same year.
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And While We're Talking Pros...
The 2020 year hasn't had very many highlights overall, but three former Georgia Bulldogs certainly have.
Mecole Hardman capped a Pro Bowl rookie season by helping the Kansas City Chiefs win Super Bowl LIV (that's 54 for the commoners).
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope had an outstanding run to help Los Angeles capture the NBA Championship. KCP started all 21 games of the Lakers' run through the Playoffs. He averaged 10.7 points per game in the postseason, largely due to connecting on 45 3-pointers. That tally is the second-most ever by a Laker during the Playoffs, trailing only Kobe Bryant's 49 in 2009-10.
Pitcher Alex Wood pitched two perfect innings with three strikeouts for the Dodgers in their decisive win over Tampa Bay in game 6 of the World Series. With that, Georgia became the only school in the nation with former players who won NFL, NBA and MLB championship rings during 2020.
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A Summer Unlike Any Other
COVID-19 forced the Bulldogs' season to end prematurely on March 12 and began a period where Tom Crean was away from on-court coaching for more than four months.
Georgia returned to workouts on July 20 with and eight newcomers.
"The only guy will a full year of college basketball with us in the program is Tye Fagan," Crean said. "That's really tough because the sophomores didn't get the full spring. And when the three grad transfers and Tyron McMillan got to campus, that was the first time we'd personally met them and talked to them not on phone, FaceTime or zoom. There was nothing normal about this summer. There was nothing even remotely close to normal as to how you would build your team."
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Crean Impressed With Teamwork
Tom Crean was impressed his current roster's ability to form a bond. Eight Bulldogs are newcomers – two freshmen, three junior college transfers and three graduate transfers.
"I like their camaraderie," Crean said this summer. "I like their spirit. We've worked very hard. There's guys who are in the gym at different times, whether it's later at night or early in the morning. There are guys who are very, very hungry.
"In addition to all that, they've done a good job in the weight room. They've done a good job when we worked out outside. They've pushed each other. They've competed. There is a spirit about them, and they're improving."
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Bulldogs Speak Out On Issues
In addition to the pandemic, social issues dominated the landscape for much of the summer. Several Georgia basketball players, led by Tye Fagan and Sahvir Wheeler, chose to utilize their platform and voice to speak toward needed changes to create a better and more respectful society in general.
Fagan took part in a march in Thomaston, Ga., where he led Upson-Lee High School to back-to-back state titles in 2017 and 2018.
"It's bigger than basketball, it's bigger than me," Fagan said. "A lot of people have lost their lives, a lot of people are upset. A lot of my people are upset and they feel a lot of different ways. I can't blame them because I feel the same way, seeing guys suffer from police brutality or racism or bigotry or whatever you want to call it. Black people have been suffering a lot over the past few months. It's been going on forever but especially over the past few months."
In an interview with DawgNation.com Wheeler stated: "One of the most important things is this is a time when the country has to pivot, and it has put a magnifying glass on our actions, our deeds and our approach with others in relationships in general," Wheeler said. "It has come to question ourselves: What are we willing to tolerate? What is the catalyst of change? How are we looking upon other people from different walks of life, and how we can take a step forward in progression so everyone can be equal?"
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Ronnie Hogue Honored
Ronnie Hogue, the first Black men's basketball scholarship student-athlete at the University of Georgia, will be honored with a commemorative sticker on the Stegeman Coliseum basket supports during the 2020-21 season. Hogue passed away in Setpember at the age of 69.
A native of Washington, D.C., Hogue arrived in Athens in the fall of 1969 and became one of the best players of his time, or any other era of Bulldog basketball.
Two years before freshmen became eligible under NCAA rules, Hogue averaged 19.1 points per game on UGA's freshman squad. He burst upon the scene the following year when, playing largely out of position as a forward, he averaged 16.2 points per game and was named to the SEC's All-Sophomore team.
The following year, 1972, was a breakout season for Hogue as he upped his scoring average to 20.5 points per game. In the season's fifth game, on December 20, 1971, he exploded for a career-high 46 points against LSU, the most ever by a Bulldog in Stegeman Coliseum and second-highest single-game tally in school history. Perhaps more impressive than the scoring total was the fact that Hogue connected on 20-of-23 shots from the floor en route to that output. Hogue was named first-team All-SEC by league coaches that season while also garnering second-team honors from the AP and UPI. As a senior, Hogue averaged 16.5 points per game.
Hogue finished his Georgia career with 1,367 points in just three seasons. At the time, that ranked second among UGA's all-time scoring leaders.
Hogue was drafted by the Washington Bullets in the seventh round of the 1973 NBA Draft.
Players Mentioned
Georgia Men's Basketball Media Availability - Kanon Catchings
Monday, September 29
Georgia Men's Basketball Media Availability - Somtochukwu "Somto" Cyril
Monday, September 29
Georgia Men's Basketball Media Availability - Marcus "Smurf" Millender
Monday, September 22
Georgia Men's Basketball Media Availability - Jeremiah Wilkinson
Monday, September 22