Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia can’t stop LSU’s streak

- BY BRYAN LAZARE

BATON ROUGE, La. — A little more than a month ago, LSU point guard Tremont Waters went to the bench for two games. Since returning to the starting lineup in the Tigers’ final nonconfere­nce game, Waters has been a different player.

He delivered his best game of the season Wednesday night as No. 25 LSU beat Georgia 92-82 to remain unbeaten in Southeaste­rn Conference play.

Waters scored a season-high 26 points, making nine of his 14 field-goal attempts and seven of 11 free throws. In addition, he had four assists and four steals with no turnovers in 32 minutes to help the Tigers win their eighth straight overall.

“I was just playing basketball,” Waters said. “My teammates and coaching staff told me to just keep playing and let the game come to me. That is what I did. It was not our best game. Going into the game, things were a little shaky. We were able to pull it out. We have to just keep building and learn from it.”

Waters, who has averaged 17.5 points and 7.8 assists over the last six games, had a hand in 13 straight points by the Tigers late. He scored 10 points and had an assist that led to a three-point play by Kavell Bigby-Williams as LSU extended a seven-point lead to 12 with 45 seconds to play.

Skylar Mays matched his season best for the Tigers (15-3, 5-0) with 20 points, Naz Reid had 15 and Ja’vonte Smart added 10.

“Tre was great, and Sky was great in the first half,” LSU coach Will Wade said. “They bailed us out with their offense. We were able to score at will against their matchup (zone defense) and their man (defense). We scored 92 points and only turned it over eight times. Our defense looked like it did at the beginning of the year.”

Rayshaun Hammonds paced Georgia (9-9, 1-5) with 18 points, Nicolas Claxton had 15, Derek Ogbeide added 14 and Jordan Harris scored 10.

The Bulldogs made 54 percent of their field-goal attempts (30-of-56), including 47 percent on 3-pointers (8-of-17).

“LSU is really good,” firstyear Georgia coach Tom Crean said. “They are extremely talented, and (Wade) has done a fantastic job of getting a bunch of young guys to understand what it takes to win, and that is to be so good on the glass. Also, when you play LSU, it starts with Tremont and his ability to pass.”

A 14-0 run early in the first half enabled LSU to take control. Trailing 13-8, the Tigers got two baskets, one a 3-pointer, from Waters to tie the score. Smart’s 3-pointer put LSU in front for good at 16-13.

The Tigers took a 48-36 lead into halftime.

Georgia had no answer for LSU’s starting backcourt of Waters and Mays, who shot a combined 14-of-23 from the field with six assists and no turnovers. Mays was 8-of-8 at the foul line.

The Bulldogs dropped their fourth consecutiv­e game. All five of Georgia’s SEC defeats have been by double digits.

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