The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Slumping Dogs hoping to snap back

Georgia travels to Florida in hopes of starting late surge in SEC.

- By Chris Starrs For the AJC

Defining what has ailed Georgia in

ATHENS — the past two weeks is relatively easy. Finding the fix quickly is considerab­ly harder.

While the Bulldogs (13-11, 4-8 SEC) have made no claim on having a scintillat­ing offense (they’re ranked last among 14 SEC teams in points per game), the team’s defense and rebounding prowess enabled them to keep their heads above water for much of the season.

But in Georgia’s past three games — all losses — its strengths morphed into weaknesses, and the Bulldogs are looking for answers as the season enters its final weeks, starting with a 9 p.m. game today at Florida (17-8, 8-4).

“Defense is all heart and a little bit of smarts. We’ve got to find our heart,” said Juwan Parker after Georgia’s 78-61 loss to No. 8 Auburn on Saturday.

“We’re all positive. We have spirit. We just have to get back to those two things. That’s what we built our foundation on earlier in the season, and that’s what we’ve got to get back to (in order) to get back to winning.”

In losses to Mississipp­i State, Vanderbilt and Auburn, the opposition shot 52.2 percent from the field and 38 percent from beyond the 3-point arc. And the Bulldogs — one of the league’s better teams on the glass — were outrebound­ed 97-75.

Is there any way to reverse the trend at this late date, especially in light of the fact that Georgia has probably played itself out of considerat­ion for the NCAA Tournament? “We’ve got to get back in the lab and get our defense and rebounding back,” Parker said. “Ever since I’ve been here that’s what we’ve been built on — defending and finishing with a rebound. We didn’t do that (against Auburn), so we’ve got to get it back.”

The Gators represent the last light Georgia enjoyed before its three-game slump. On Jan. 30 in Athens, the Bulldogs posted a 72-60 victory over then-No. 23 Florida, limiting the Gators to their lowest point total and their second-lowest shooting percentage in league play.

Since losing to Georgia, Florida lost to Alabama but then posted victories over LSU and South Carolina and shares second place behind Auburn in the SEC standings with No. 18 Tennessee (Georgia’s opponent Saturday).

If anyone thinks the Bulldogs have an edge over Florida based on the teams’ previous meeting, it’s not Georgia coach Mark Fox.

“The fact that we beat Florida the first time isn’t going to be any help (tonight),” Fox said. “We’ve got to get back to defending like we did against Florida, but we haven’t seen that in a couple of games. We’ll have to regroup and see if we can find an effective way to slow them down.”

Considerin­g that the Gators outrebound­ed South Carolina 46-24 and shot nearly 52 percent against LSU, slowing Florida figures to be a tall order.

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