Albuquerque Journal

Georgia’s Taylor keeps coaching, running through pregnancy

39-year-old is due to give birth next month

- BY CHARLES ODUM ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATHENS, Ga. — Joni Taylor gets intense on the sideline coaching the Georgia Lady Bulldogs.

Her actions recently have been making her players nervous. It’s understand­able. Taylor is coaching for two and she is due to give birth next month.

Taylor can laugh at the concerns because she said her doctor has not put any restraints on her.

“Not at all,” Taylor told The Associated Press on Monday when asked if doctors have any medical reservatio­ns. “The fans do. I get emails every day. People tell me to stop running, stop jumping, stop stomping.” There’s little chance of that. Taylor, 39, runs at least three times a week and clocked an 8-minute mile last week. When she’s not pregnant, she runs half-marathons. She’s not about to sit still now.

At the end of the Lady Bulldogs’ tight win over then-No. 13 Tennessee on Sunday, Taylor was fulling engaged. Her players seem to have one eye on the clipboard and the other on their coach.

“Oh man. She was stomping and everything,” guard Taja Cole Cole said. “She’s going to go into labor on the sideline soon!”

Taylor and her husband, WNBA Atlanta Dream assistant coach Darius Taylor, had their first baby girl, Jaci, about a week before the 2016-17 season. Joni said she is enjoying another smooth pregnancy.

“God has shown me tremendous favor,” Taylor said. “My pregnancie­s both have been very smooth. I had a very easy pregnancy with Jaci and a very easy delivery. I’ve had a very smooth pregnancy so far, the second time around. That has enabled me to have good energy, to be available for this program, our young ladies, our recruits.”

Taylor said she is “still waking up at 4 and 5 o’clock” for workouts and has had no morning sickness.

“That has allowed me to operate in a pretty normal way,” she said.

Taylor’s other baby is the Georgia women’s program.

She is in her fourth season as only the team’s second full-time coach. Andy Landers’ 36-year stint as coach included five Final Four appearance­s, 20 Sweet 16s and seven Southeaste­rn Conference regular-season championsh­ips.

Taylor, who played at Alabama, was Landers’ top assistant when he retired.

Four-time Olympian Teresa Edwards was one of many former players who returned to cheer Georgia’s 66-62 win over Tennessee on Sunday. Edwards said she wants Taylor to surpass milestones reached by Landers, because Georgia is looking for its first national championsh­ip.

“I think her impact is coming,” Edwards said. “Anybody following Andy has a challenge. At the same time we didn’t get to the mountainto­p so we left plenty of room for Joni to grow. I think in her short period of time she’s working really hard to change that culture back to what we built, back to the winning culture.”

Taylor led Georgia to a 26-7 record and 12-4 finish in the SEC last season, including the second round of the NCAA tournament . She was given a raise to $750,000 per year on a new contract through 2024.

Georgia was ranked No. 14 in the preseason Top 25 but fell out of the Top 25 with losses in November to UCLA , Georgia Tech and Maryland. The win over Tennessee was important in the Lady Bulldogs’ resurgence, especially following a close loss at No. 7 Mississipp­i State.

Georgia (12-5, 3-1 SEC) has won six of seven entering Thursday’s game at Missouri.

Taylor’s goal is to keep coaching as long as possible next month and then return for the end of the regular season and the SEC tournament scheduled to begin on March 6 in Greenville, S.C. As was the case two years ago, associate head coach Karen Lange will be the interim head coach while Taylor is away.

“If I have a smooth delivery this time around the way I did the first time, I plan to be back as soon as possible to finish the season before taking some time off,” she said.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Georgia head coach Joni Taylor, who is due to give birth next month, has not let pregnancy slow her down as she remains as intense as ever on the sideline.
AP FILE Georgia head coach Joni Taylor, who is due to give birth next month, has not let pregnancy slow her down as she remains as intense as ever on the sideline.

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