Tuesday, February 22
College Station, Texas
7:00 p.m.

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at

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22MBB Notes - Texas A&M

MBB Game Notes: Bulldogs Set For Rematch With Texas A&M

February 21, 2022 | Men's Basketball

Georgia Basketball Game Notes
  • Georgia (6-21, 1-13 SEC) vs. Texas A&M (16-11, 5-9 SEC)
  • STuesday, February 22, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Reed Arena (12,989) in Bryan-College Station, Texas
  • Radio: Georgia Bulldog Sports Network (Flagship: WSB AM 750); (Scott Howard, play-by-play; Chuck Dowdle, analyst; Adam Gillespie, producer) | Affiliates
  • TV: ESPNU (Kevin Fitzgerald, pbp; Joe Kleine, analyst)
  • Video Stream: ESPN+
  • Audio Stream: georgiadogs.com
  • Satellite: XM: 384; SXM App: 974
  • History: TAM 5-6 (Full History)
  • Last Meeting: L 79-81 (1/4/2022)
Watch Live Listen Live Live Stats
Georgia Bulldogs
Coach: Tom Crean
47-70 in 4th season at UGA
403-301 in 22nd season overall
No. Name PPG RPG
3 Kario Oquendo 14.4 4.3
(6-4; 215; Soph., Titusville, Fla.)
10 Aaron Cook 10.3 2.5
(6-2; 185; Grad.; St. Louis, Mo.)
11 Jaxon Etter 5.1 3.0
(6-4; 205; Jr.; Woodstock, Ga.)
20 Noah Baumann 8.7 3.9
(6-6; 210; Sr.; Phoenix, Ariz.)
23 Braelen Bridges 12.6 5.6
(6-11; 240; Sr.; Atlanta, Ga.)
Texas A&M Logo
Texas A&M Aggies
Coach: Buzz Williams
38-35 in 3rd season at TAMU
291-190 in 15th season overal
No. Name PPG RPG
1 Marcus Williams 7.9 2.2
(6-2; 197; Soph.; Dickinson, Texas)
15 Henry Coleman III 10.2 6.1
(6-8; 243; Soph.; Richmond, Va.)
20 Andre Gordon 7.0 2.5
(6-2; 186; Jr.; Sidney, Ohio)
23 Tyrece Radford 9.7 5.6
(6-2; 200; Jr.; Baton Rouge, La.)
31 Javonte Brown 1.6 2.0
(7-0; 253; Fr.; Toronto, Ontario)
TEAM COMPARISON
 
2021-22 STATISTICS GEORGIA TEXAS A&M
Points Per Game 70.3 72.0
Opp. Point Per Game 77.7 66.3
Scoring Margin -7.4 +0.5
Field Goal Pct. .441 .433
Opp. Field Goal Pct. .470 .415
3-Point Pct. .315 .322
3-Pointers Per Game 6.3 6.9
Opp. 3-Point Pct. .342 .322
Free Throw Pct. .749 .678
Free Throws Per Game 16.0 13.7
Rebounds Per Game 33.6 35.9
Opp. Rebound Per Game 34.8 35.3
Rebound Margin -1.1 +0.6
Assists Per Game 14.0 13.9
Turnovers Per Game 14.7 13.5
Assist-to-Turnover Ratio 0.95 1.03
Turnover Margin -3.6 +4.2
Steals Per Game 5.3 10.4
Blocks Per Game 2.3 3.9
 
The Starting 5...
  • Aaron Cook's 145 assists is No. 11 among UGA's all-time season leaders...and three from joining the top 10.
  • Braelen Bridges' current field goal percentage of .633 is No. 3 among UGA's all-time season leaders.
  • Kario Oquendo has upped his scoring average in SEC games by 5.8 ppg over what his production in non-conference play.
  • Jaxon Etter has drawn 27 charges in 26 games played this season...and 35 in his last 37 dating back to last season.
  • UGA leads the SEC in free throw percentage and nationally ranks No. 10 in FT makes (433) and No. 14 in FT takes (578).
 
The Opening Tip

Georgia and Texas A&M will meet on Tuesday in a rematch of the SEC opener between the Bulldogs and the Aggies back on Jan. 4.

A Marcus Williams 3-pointer with 1.2 seconds remaining propelled A&M to an 81-79 victory over the Bulldogs.

That bucket thwarted a valiant rally by the Bulldogs, who trailed by 18 points in the first half but took the lead with on a three-point play by Kario Oquendo with just 5.5 seconds remaining on the clock.
Keeping An Eye On... Entering Todays's Game:

Aaron Cook is...
• 4 steals from 200 for his career
Among UGA's single-season assist leaders:
• 3 assists from co-No. 9s G.G. Smith (1998) and G.G. Smith (1997)
• 4 assists from No. 8 Rashad Wright (2003)
• 5 assists from No. 7 Willie Anderson (1987)
• 6 assists from No. 6 J.J. Frazier (2016)
• 7 assists from No. 5 Donald Hartry (1986)
• 8 assists from No. 4 Rashad Wright (2002)
• 9 assists from No. 3 Sundiata Gaines (2007)
• 26 assists from No. 2 Pertha Robinson (1995)
Series History With A&M

Texas A&M's January victory at Stegeman Coliseum gave the Aggies a 6-5 edge in the all-time series between UGA and TAMU. A&M also owns a one-game lead, 3-2, in contests played in Bryan-College Station.

The Bulldogs and Aggies did not meet during the 2020-21 season. They were slated to play on Feb. 10 in College Station; however, that contest was postponed – and later canceled – due to COVID issues within the Texas A&M program.

Last month in Athens, A&M opened up a 46-28 lead late in the first half before the Bulldogs closed the period and opened the second stanza with an 8-0 surge.

Georgia later used a 13-0 run to pull within 55-51 with 14:42 remaining.

The Bulldogs made it a one-possession game three times before a Noah Baumann 3-pointer tied the score at 76-76 with 36 seconds on the clock.

Following a pair of A&M free throws, Kario Oquendo gave Georgia its first lead of the night on a three-point play with 5.5 seconds left. Marcus Williams canned a 3-pointer with 1.2 remaining to secure the victory for the Aggies.

Two seasons ago, UGA and A&M split a home-and-home series, with the home team winning each matchup.

In Georgia's last trip to Texas on Feb. 15, 2020 at Reed Arena, Texas A&M rallied in the closing minutes to secure a 74-69 win over Georgia. The victory avenged a 15-point win by the Bulldogs two weeks earlier in Athens.

Georgia led for 28:34 of the contest and never trailed in the second half until a pair of free throws by Emanuel Miller made it 61-59 with 3:48 remaining. Down 64-63 at the 2:12 mark, Georgia gained possession with a chance to regain the lead; however, a steal and bucket on the other end opened a 10-6 A&M surge to end the contest.
Scouting The Aggies

Texas A&M enters the week at 16-11 overall and 5-9 in the SEC. After beginning league play 4-0, the Aggies have lost nine of their last 10 games.

A&M's leading scorer is Quenton Jackson, who comes off the bench to average 13.4 ppg. Henry Coleman III provides the Aggies with another double-digit average at 10.2 ppg and is A&M's top rebounder at 6.1 rpg. Tyrece Radford, the only Aggie to start all 27 games, contributes 9.7 ppg.
Last Time Out

Braelen Bridges 17-point performance led Georgia in an 85-68 setback to Ole Miss on Saturday. Kario Oquendo added 14 points and Jabri Abdur-Rahim scored 11.

The Rebels led by 42-38 after a buzzer-beating 3-pointer entering the intermission and gradually expanded that distance throughout the second stanza.
Oquendo's Production Leaps

After averaging 11.5 ppg during the non-conference campaign, Kario Oquendo's scoring has increased to 17.3 ppg in SEC outings.

Oquendo opened SEC play with three straight 20-point performances – 21 vs. Texas A&M, 22 vs. No. 13/16 Kentucky and 28 at Mississippi State. He became the first Bulldog to do so since 2020 when Anthony Edwards put up 23 points at Missouri on Jan. 28, 29 against Texas A&M on Feb. 1 and 32 at Florida on Feb. 5.

Oquendo enters the week ranked No. 5 among SEC scoring leaders in league action. Each member of the SEC's top scoring quintet has increased their production in league play over their non-conference efforts; however, Oquendo's is the most significant.
 
Scoring Increases In SEC Play
Rk. Player SEC Non Conf Diff
1. Kario Oquendo, UGA 11.5 17.3 +5.8
2. Iverson Molinar, MSU 16.5 20.2 +3.7
3. Scotty Pippen Jr. VU 18.1 20.7 +2.6
4. JD Notae, ARK 17.8 19.3 +1.5
5. Tari Eason, LSU 16.3 17.5 +1.2
Crean, Williams Have History

Tom Crean and Buzz Williams served as Marquette's head coach over an 15-season span from 1999-2014.

Crean was in Milwaukee from 1999-2009 and in those nine seasons led Marquette to five NCAA Tournament appearances. That was one more than the previous four head coaches at Marquette did in their combined 16 seasons prior to Crean's arrival. The centerpiece of his tenure was a trip to the 2003 NCAA Final Four with Dwyane Wade.

Williams was an assistant coach for Crean's final season at Marquette and then was promoted to head coach. He sustained the momentum created by Crean by leading the Eagles to five NCAA bids over the next six seasons. Marquette's best "March Madness" performance under Williams was a trip to the 2013 "Elite Eight."
Bulldogs Battle Through

Georgia had only nine players dressed out for its Feb. 12 game versus South Carolina, the most depleted the Bulldogs' roster has been this season.

Georgia's ledger of available players was cut by from 15 to 14 with a preseason injury to P.J. Horne, one of two Bulldogs who started every game last season.

The Bulldogs have had their "full complement" of the 14 players for six outings and have played seven games – including six SEC contests – with only 10 players dressed out.

Since the season began, Jailyn Ingram suffered a season-ending injury against Jacksonville on Dec. 7, Jonathan Ned has been out with an ankle injury beginning with a Dec. 18 matchup with George Mason and Tyrone Baker broke his right hand on Jan. 18, the day before a road game at Auburn.

We won't count Horne since his injury was before the season, but the 14 other Bulldogs have compiled 58 DNPs. In addition to the injuries outlined above, Bulldogs scratched from the scorebook include:

• T. Baker vs. Virginia and Northwestern (illness);
• N. Baumann vs. Northwestern (illness);
• A. Cook vs. Memphis (illness);
• J. Etter vs. Gardner-Webb (injury);
• C. McDowell vs. Texas A&M and Kentucky (illness);
• T. McMillan vs. Florida, S. Carolina and LSU (injury);
• J. Ned vs. Virginia and Northwestern (illness);
• K. Oquendo vs. Auburn (injury);
• D. Ridgnal vs. Texas A&M and Kentucky (illness).
• J. Taylor vs. S. Carolina (illness);

Georgia has used eight starting fives, with Braelen Bridges being the only player to do so for every contest. Jabri Abdur-Rahim, Bridges and Christian Wright are the only Bulldogs who have played in every game.
B.B. Is Consistent, Efficient

Braelen Bridges is the Bulldogs' most consistent point producer and among the nation's most efficient.

Bridges has posted double-digit outputs in a team-best 20 games...and has notched nine points in four of the other seven outings.

The Atlanta native is shooting a sizzling 63.3 percent from the field, connecting on 131 of his 207 shots.

Bridges' effort almost puts him in elite company nationally. To be ranked among statistical leaders in field goal percentage, a player has to make a minimum of 5.0 shots per game.

With 131 field goals made, Bridges is four buckets shy of that standard...or he would No. 6 nationally entering this week in field goal percentage.
Dogs Capitalizing At The Line

Georgia is among the nation's top teams at getting to the line...and then converting.

The Bulldogs enter this week ranked No. 10 nationally in free throw makes (433) and No. 14 in free throw takes (578). Overall, Georgia leads the SEC and is ranked No. 62 nationally in free throw percentage at .749.

The Bulldogs also lead the SEC and are even more efficient in league play. Against conference foes, Georgia is shooting 78.9 percent (240-of-304) at the line and three Bulldogs – Kario Oquendo, Jabri Abdur-Rahim and Braelen Bridges – are ranked among the SEC's top-10 in free throw percentage.
Cook Joins UGA Assist Top 20

With nine assists against Auburn on Feb. 5, "Super senior" Aaron Cook ascended into Georgia's top-20 single-season leaders for passes to points.

Cook is now No. 11 on that ledger and enters the Texas A&M contest just 30¢ – as in three dimes – away from the top 10.
 
UGA Season Assist Leaders
Rk. No. Player Season GP
1. 193 Sahvir Wheeler 2021 26
2. 169 Pertha Robinson 1995 27
3. 154 Sundiata Gaines 2007 32
4. 153 Rashad Wright 2002 32
5. 152 Donald Hartry 1986 30
6. 151 J.J. Frazier 2016 34
7. 150 Willie Anderson 1987 30
8. 149 Rashad Wright 2003 27
9. 148 G.G. Smith 1998 35
148 G.G. Smith 1997 33
11. 145 Aaron Cook 2022 26
145 Pertha Robinson 1996 30
 
More Dish Marks Are Coming

Cook also is on pace to produce one of the best assist averages ever by a Bulldog.

Cook's assist average off 5.6 apg is significantly higher than the current No. 3 standard of 4.8 apg by Sundiata Gaines in 2006-07.
Etter Accepting Charges

Defensively, Jaxon Etter is like Visa...as in "everywhere you want (him) to be."

The junior walk-on took three charges at LSU, the third game this season he's done so...the other outings being versus Ga. Tech and Western Carolina.

Etter now has a team-high 27 charges in 26 games played this season.

That trend actually began toward the end of last season when Etter drew eight in the final 11 games, giving him 35 in his last 37 outings.
History In The Making

Three Bulldogs are in the midst of producing the most efficient shooting percentages overall, from 3-point range and at the line in Georgia history as outlined in the next column.

Braelen Bridges' now has the third-best season field goal percentage ever by a Bulldog at .633. The minimum to be included is 100 made field goals, which Bridges met during 7-of-8 effort at Vanderbilt on Jan. 29.

Christian Wright is currently ranked No. 9 among Georgia's season free throw percentage leaders ledger at .846. He inched past the 50 free throws made minimum to be featured on the leaders' ledger on Feb. 2 against Arkansas.

Noah Baumann connected on his 50th 3-pointer of the year against South Carolina to qualify for Georgia's record book. His current 40.6 percent shooting percentage ranks No. 11 among Georgia's single-season leaders.
 
UGA Season FG Pct. Leaders
Rk. No. Player Season FG-FGA
1. .643 Lavon Mercer 1979 146-227
2. .632 Bob Lienhard 1970 215-340
3. .633 Braelen Bridges 2022 131-207
4. .611 Lavon Mercer 1980 121-198
5. .591 Jim Youngblood 1967 140-237
.591 Derek Ogbeide 2018 101-171
UGA Season FT Pct. Leaders
Rk. No. Player Season FT-FTA
1. .910 Channing Toney 2005 61-67
5. .859 Juwan Parker 2018 73-85
6. .858 Jerry Epling 1969 91-106
7. .856 Juwan Parker 2017 77-90
8. .854 John Fraley 1972 105-123
9. .846 Christian Wright 2022 55-65
10. .844 Jordan Harris 2019 54-64
UGA Season 3FG Pct. Leaders
Rk. No. Player Season 3FG-3FGA
1. .449 Bernard Davis 1994 80-178
2. .442 Jody Patton 1991 69-156
3. .436 G.G. Smith 1998 81-186
4. .435 Dustin Ware 2011 57-131
5. .434 Litterial Green 1992 62-143
6. .429 Levi Stukes 2007 85-198
7. .425 Jarvis Hayes 2003 54-127
11. .406 Noah Baumann 2022 54-133
Noah Continues Scoring Trend

In five seasons of college basketball, Noah Baumann has established a trend of scoring most of his points from behind the 3-point arc...and doing so efficiently.

This season, 75.0 percent (54 of 72) of Baumann's made FGs have been 3s, and he is shooting 40.5 percent on 3-pointers.

Career-wise, 72.2 percent (200 of 277) of Baumann's made FGs are 3-pointers, and he is converting on a considerably better clip from outside the arc (.426) than inside (.379).
Etter's production is Better

Walk-on Jaxon Etter's contributions this season have skyrocketed over those during his first two seasons in Athens.

The junior from Woodstock, Ga., began the 2021-22 campaign with averages of 1.6 points, 0.8 rebounds and 6.1 minutes during his freshman and sophomore years.

This season, Etter has more than tripled his scoring to 5.1 ppg, nearly quadrupled his rebounding to 3.0 rpg and upped his PT four fold to 25.6 mpg.
Baumann Hits The Boards

With injuries to P.J. Horne and Jailyn Ingram, Noah Baumann shifted to playing the traditional '4' spot for Georgia 10 games into the season.

In his second outing doing so, Baumann grabbed 11 rebounds against Western Carolina. That was more than double his previous career-most of five boards in seven outings, including this year's season opener versus FIU.

Joked Tom Crean: "I don't know if he's done that since grade school. Somewhere out West, he might have had 11 boards in a CYO game in the eighth grade."

The joke has since continued. After averaging 1.6 rpg in the first nine games, Baumann is contributing 4.9 rpg since.
Experience Has Traveled

The phrase "defense travels" is a well-known in the sports world.

The slogan "experience has traveled" is more appropriate for Georgia Basketball and it's 2021-22 campaign.

When the campaign began, Georgia's lineup was anchored by five D-I transfers – sixth-year "super seniors" Aaron Cook and Jailyn Ingram, graduate transfer seniors Noah Baumann and Braelen Bridges and sophomore Jabri Abdur-Rahim.

Even though Ingram has not contributed to its totals since suffering a season-ending injury against Jacksonville on Dec. 7, that quintet the majority of the Bulldogs' production in virtually every statistic
 
D-I transfer contributions
Stat Team D-I Ts Pct.
Minutes 5400 2944 54.5
Scoring 1897 1129 59.5
Rebounds 816 452 55.4
Assists 379 248 65.4
Blocks 62 37 59.7
Steals 142 67 47.2
Kario Likes The Bright Lights

Kario Oquendo's 25-point outing against No. 1 Auburn continued his trend of producing big games against the best opposition.

Last season at Florida SouthWestern College, Oquendo averaged 13.5 points while shooting 55.4 percent from the field.

In Buccaneers' four contests against ranked opponents, those stats jumped to 22.0 points and 63.6 percent.

This season, Oquendo is averaging 13.8 points and connecting on 46.1 percent of his shots from the floor.

In outings against No. 19 Memphis, No. 13/16 Kentucky and No. 1 Auburn, Oquendo averaged in 23.7 ppg and shot 55.6 percent (25-of-45).

In seven outings versus ranked foes as a collegiate basketball player, Oquendo is averaging 22.7 points and converting on 60.0 (60-of-100) of his field goals. FYI, Oquendo did not play at No. 2 Auburn on Jan. 19 due to a lower body injury.
Cook Joins Elite List

At tipoff at Auburn, Aaron Cook became just the 18th player in NCAA Division-I men's basketball history to participate in 150 career games.

Cook played in 103 games in four seasons at Southern Illinois from 2016-20, including a redshirt campaign with six contests in 2019-20. He saw action in 30 games last season at Gonzaga during the Bulldogs' NCAA runner-up finish. Georgia's Jan. 19 game at Auburn was his 17th game with the Bulldogs.

Cook is now up to 159 games played and entered this week No. 4 nationally active players. While his milestone is significant, it is obviously aided by his "super senior" status as a sixth-year player.

Entering this season, Ohio State's David Lighty held the NCAA record with 157 games played and only 13 players had logged PT in 150 contests.

On Jan. 13, Iowa's Jordan Bohannon inched past Lighty's mark. On Jan. 19, Cook became the fifth player in 2021-22 alone to reach the century-and-a-half mark.

Those numbers have only continued to grow. Entering this week, Bohannon was at 168 GP and 36 players – nearly three times as many as prior to 2021-22 – had reached 150 games played this season.
Wright Scores Savvily

Christian Wright recorded his second and third double-figure scoring outputs at UGA in back-to-back road outings at No. 2 Auburn and South Carolina.

The freshman from The Skill Factory scored 16 points at Auburn and followed that 10 at South Carolina. His first double-digit performance was a 17-point outing against No. 18 Memphis on Dec. 1.

There has been a common theme in all three contests, Wright's ability to get to the free throw line.

Wright converted on 24-of-28 (.857) trips to the charity stripe against the Tigers, Tigers and Gamecocks. That's 55.8 percent of his 43 total points.

All told, Wright drew 22 fouls in that trio of games, while committing only four fouls himself.
Dogs Look To Regroup...Again

Georgia lost Jailyn Ingram to a knee injury during the Jacksonville game on Dec. 7. Ingram went down in a non-contact situation while trying to save a ball along the baseline with 14:21 left in the contest.

The "super senior" from Madison, Ga., and Morgan County High School was the Bulldogs' leading rebounder (6.0 rpg) and third-leading scorer (10.7 ppg).

Following an MRI on Dec. 8, Tom Crean confirmed the prognosis on Dec. 9 with a Tweet stating: "Unfortunately, Jailyn Ingram will have to have surgery to repair his ACL in his right knee. It's heartbreaking because Jailyn has been emerging in so many areas and has been a model of consistency day in and day out. He's an incredible young man... Jailyn has brought a spirit and seriousness to us. He is a guy that is in the gym most mornings before we would lift weights at 8:45 and was stabilizing for a young team. We plan to appeal for the waiver to get another year since he's under the 30% games played. Pray for him."

Ingram's injury was UGA's second season-ending setback. On Oct. 20, Crean announced an injury to P.J. Horne, one of just two Bulldogs to start every game last season.

Tweeted Crean: "It's with genuine sadness that I let you know that P.J. Horne will miss this season after undergoing surgery on his right knee this past weekend. In practice, he bumped knees in a scrimmage, lost footing and went down awkwardly. This is such a major blow to us because P.J. was playing so well and showing great leadership as our leading returning player, but more so because he is such a great person and one of the finest people I've ever coached."
Jabri's Contributions Soar

It's probably glossed over too much that this fall is the first time Jabri Abdur-Rahim has played extended minutes in nearly two years. He suffered a foot injury during his senior season at Blair Academy and only played in two games and only appeared in eight games last season at Virginia.

Jabri, who was ranked as one of the nation's top-40 prospects in the Class of 2020, showed signs of returning to form in three early-December outings.

Abdur-Rahim exploded for a career-high 20 points against Wofford and followed that with a 15 and 10-point showings versus No. 18 Memphis and Jacksonville, respectively. Equally impressive as the totals was the efficiency in which he scored.

In those three games, Abdur-Rahim scored more points, connected on more shots and upped his shooting percentages by massive amounts over his 14 previous career outings.
 
Abdur-Rahim's Increases
Total Points 32 45 +13
Scoring Average 2.3 15.0 12.7
FGs Made 9 13 +4
FG Percentage .214 .650 +.436
3FGs Made 3 9 +6
3FG Percentage .125 .600 +.475
Crean Captures Win No. 400

Tom Crean secured his 400th career victory with Georgia's upset of No. 18 Memphis on December 1.

Prior to arriving in Athens, Crean compiled 366 W's in his first 18 campaigns as a collegiate head coach. He earned the first 190 in nine seasons at Marquette from 1998-2008 and added 166 more at Indiana between 2008-17 before arriving in Athens and securing the final 44 of his 400.

Tom Crean's Milestone Wins
No. 1 – Nov. 20, 1999 – Marquette defeats Chicago State, 62-43, in Tom Crean's first game as a collegiate head coach.
No. 100 – March 6, 2004 – A three-point play with .8 of a second left lifts Marquette over No. 25 Louisville, 81-80.
No. 200 – Dec. 8, 2009 – Indiana knocks off Pittsburgh, 74-64, in the Big Ten/ACC Challenge.
No. 250 – Nov. 20, 2012 – A day after beating Georgia, 66-53, in the first round, IU tops Georgetown, 82-72, to win the Progressive Legends Classic.
No. 300 – Dec. 20, 2014 – Indiana tops No. 23 Butler, 82-73, as Yogi Ferrell became IU's 48th 1,000-point scorer.
No. 400 – Dec. 1, 2021 – Kario Oquendo's 24-point outburst paces UGA in an 82-79 upset of No. 18 Memphis.
Wright Stellar In Upset

Freshman Christian Wright started at point guard against No. 18 Memphis for Aaron Cook, who was out of action due to an illness. That task was taller considering the Tigers entered the game forcing an average of 18.0 turnovers per game.

While Wright's career-high totals of 17 points, six boards and 38 minutes tallies drew significant attention, his turnover tally – a meager one TO – was the most significant digit in his linescore. And he did so logging the most PT of any Bulldog in any game this season to date.

Also of note, Wright drew seven fouls, including two on the offensive end, and converted on 6-of-7 free throw attempts.
The SportsCenter "Top-Quen"

Kario Oquendo has emphatically made his way in the top-10 plays on ESPN's SportsCenter twice this season.

On Nov. 16, Oquendo came in at No. 3 on SportsCenter's top-10 plays after his third highlight reel effort against S.C. State. He stole the ball at midcourt and windmilled home an uncontested dunk.

A posterized effort on Nov. 23 was tabbed No. 6. Oquendo, who's 6-4, gathered a steal in Northwestern's lane and drove the length of the floor before a thunderous dunk over a 6-9 Wildcat.

If you want to rate Oquendo's SportsCenter dunks, you can find the S.C. State slam at gado.gs/kariosctop1116 and the Northwestern effort at gado.gs/kariosc1123.
Cook Tops Millennium Mark

Aaron Cook blew past the 1,000-point career scoring mark on Nov. 16 against South Carolina State.

The "super senior" was eight points shy of entering the game and inched past the milestone with 2:21 left in the first half. He finished with 22 points, three off his career high versus Indiana State on Jan. 24, 2018.

Cook scored 845 points at Southern Illinois from 2016-20 and added 127 points during Gonzaga's en route to their NCAA runner-up finish last season.

Cook was presented the game ball from the S.C. State game in a ceremony prior to the George Mason game that featured his mother, Regina, and brother, Anthony.
Dalen, Kario Draw Attention

Kario Oquendo and Dalen Ridgnal are among the top JUCO transfers expected to make the biggest marks this season.

On August 25, bustingbrackets.com ranked the top-25 junior college players moving to the "high-major" level. Ridgnal was tabbed No. 2 on that ledger, while Oquendo was ranked No. 23.

On Nov. 1, college basketball guru Jon Rothstein tabbed his top-10 "JUCOs to watch," an unranked list that also included Ridgnal.
Welcoming A Slew Of Scoring

Of the 10 newcomers on the Bulldogs' roster seven are transfers – five D-I players (Jabri Abdur-Rahim, Noah Baumann, Braelen Bridges, Aaron Cook and Jailyn Ingram) and a pair from the junior college ranks (Kario Oquendo and Dalen Ridgnal).

Those players arrived in Athens having already scored 4,782 points at their previous schools, the largest addition of scoring by any D-I program this season as outlined below.

In their previous stops, the D-I quintet of the group also logged 8813 minutes in 404 games played, while grabbing 1283 rebounds, dishing 643 assists, swatting 116 blocks and collecting 304 steals.
 
Top Scoring Influx's In D-I hoops
Rk. School Players Points
1. Georgia 7 4782
2. Duquesne 5 4695
3. Florida 5 4144
4. Arkansas 6 4125
5. Penn State 7 5183
6. Washington St. 4 3785
7. SMU 4 3733
8. Kentucky 4 3538
9. Utah 6 3175
10. Arizona St. 3 3132
On The Flip Side...

While Georgia welcomed a huge influx of college scoring from its newcomers, the Bulldogs returned a minuscule portion of their scoring from last season.

Minus P.J. Horne, the four returning Bulldogs accounted for only 1110 of Georgia's 2014 points a year ago, or 5.5 percent. Walk-on Jaxon Etter is the top returning point producer with 47 points.
"B" Is For Basketball Player

You may notice on Georgia's roster that the Bulldogs have gone away from listing traditional positions – guard, forward and center. All 15 players are now simply listed as "B" for "Basketball Player."

Tom Crean is a proponent for "position-less basketball."

"That's what they are," Crean said. "It's not valid to call them centers and power forwards and things like that as much with the way that we're trying to play. They're being trained as basketball players, every day... in the sense of how we train with the ball handling, the driving, the shooting – all those type of things. That's big to me."

Players Mentioned

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