The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bulldogs can't stay with No. 11 Auburn

- By Mike Griffith DawgNation

AUBURN, ALA. — Auburn set the tempo early, and Georgia simply couldn’t keep up.

The No. 11 Tigers (12-3, 1-1 SEC) ran away from the Bulldogs (9-6, 1-2) 93-78 in front of a sellout at Auburn Arena on Saturday.

The Tigers’ celebrated backcourt of Peach State products Jared Harper (Mablet o n) and Bryce Brown (Stone Mountain) lived up to their billing.

Harper led Auburn with 22 points and seven assists and Harper added 15 points as the Tigers improved to 24-1 at home since the start of the 2017-18 season.

Georgia forward Nicolas Claxton scored 15 points, blocked six shots and pulled down three rebounds. William Jackson had a season-high 16 points to pace the UGA scorers.

Georgia struggled to stay within 10 points throughout the second half as the Tigers kept the Bulldogs at arm’s length with their 3-point shooting and drives to the basket, leading by as many as 18.

“I never felt being down 10 like we were out of it, especially with the open looks we were getting,” Georgia coach Tom Crean said. “A game like this, it comes down to the hustle points. They scored six more points off turnovers, they scored seven more points off second-chance, and when you are playing against a team that, you can’t do that.”

Auburn’s win knots up the all-time series at 94, but the Tigers have won the past three.

Crean traveled to Auburn for Saturday’s game separately, having gone to Mich- igan to spend time with his ailing mother Friday.

The Bulldogs were hoping to build momentum after an 82-63 home win over Vanderbilt on Wednesday.

The Tigers had plenty of reason for motivation after suffering an 82-67 setback at unranked Ole Miss on Wednesday.

Auburn got right to it, holding a 48-38 lead after a fast-and-furious first half.

Georgia handled the Tigers’ opening flurry — unlike in its SEC-opening 96-50 loss at Tennessee on Jan. 5 — but was unable to keep pace with Bruce Pearl’s up-tempo Tigers.

“I thought our team resp o nded very well,” Pearl said. “We needed a better offensive execution. We needed to get to the right spots and take better shots.”

Auburn jumped out to leads of 6-0, 13-4 and was up 20-14 when the Bulldogs showed their first sign of SEC road resilience.

Jackson hit a 3-pointer that started an 8-0 run capped by a Jordan Harris trey to put Georgia up 22-20.

The Bulldogs were still leading 28-24 at the 9:39 mark before former Tucker standout Brown scored back-to-back buckets for Auburn.

Brown, who leads the Tigers in scoring (15.9 points per game) revved up the arena and his teammates with his instant offense, spurring an 11-2 run.

Georgia’s guards were seemingly a step behind on both ends of the court, and the Bulldogs quickly got out of sync, going 3 of 12 from the floor as Auburn built the 10-point halftime margin.

Georgia hosts the Tigers on Feb. 27, but next up for the Bulldogs is a 7 p.m. game Tuesday at Stegeman Coliseum against No. 18 Kentucky. The Bulldogs are 7-1 in home games this season, and the battle with coach John Calipari’s Wild- cats will mark the first of six consecutiv­e home sellouts.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JULIE BENNETT / AP ?? Georgia guard William Jackson II defends a shot by Auburn center Austin Wiley during the second half Saturday.
PHOTOS BY JULIE BENNETT / AP Georgia guard William Jackson II defends a shot by Auburn center Austin Wiley during the second half Saturday.
 ??  ?? Georgia forward Nicolas Claxton, who had 15 points and six blocks, looks to shoot over Auburn’s Anfernee McLemore and J’Von McCormick.
Georgia forward Nicolas Claxton, who had 15 points and six blocks, looks to shoot over Auburn’s Anfernee McLemore and J’Von McCormick.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States