The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech holds off No. 20 Georgia in road victory

- By Brandon Sudge

Three seconds remained on the clockwhen Nerea Hermosa missed a pair of free throws and Georgia had the final gasp on its home court Sunday afternoon. Geor- gia Tech sat in its timeout huddle, and the last-second heartbreak suffered at Purdue a few days earlier had to cross the Jackets’ minds.

Tech held a two-possession lead until Sarah Ashlee Barker made a clutch 3-pointer with four seconds to play to give the Lady Bull- dogs a glimmer of hope, though trailing by a point. On Wednesday, Tech’s Sarah Bates and Eylia Love com- bined to miss four consecutiv­e free throws that led to a buzzer-beating bank shot by Purdue’s Jeanae Terry that gave Tech the shock of a one-point defeat.

Georgia tried to force Tech into the same situation. UGA coach Joni Taylor called a timeout after Hermosa’s second miss and drew up a play with an option. Mikayla Coombs could pass it to Malury Bates, who had four baskets in Sunday’s contest, in the paint, or find Que Morrison on a screen. It went to Morrison, who would drive toward the basket. Her shot and the final buzzer went off simultaneo­usly, and the shot fell short.

Tech (6-2) flipped its fate, and walked out of Stegeman Coliseum after knocking off No. 20 Georgia (7-1) 55-54.

“Today, we finished it off,” said Yellow Jackets coach Nell Fortner, who has beaten Georgia in each of her trips to Athens. “You have to stay the course, and I’m super proud of them for that.”

The two teams feature a lot of similariti­es, and Taylor knew it would “be a grind” throughout regulation. It lived up to that billing in every way possible: an ugly game with plenty of defense, a series of swings and plenty of veteran players ended up in a prevailing finish by the Jackets.

Morrison led Georgia with 15 points, and Tech featured threedoubl­e-digit scorers — Love and Hermosa with 14 points apiece and Lorela Cubaj adding 11.

“It hurts because it’s a loss and it’s Tech,” Morrison said. “We need to feel this loss to get stronger as a team.”

At the opening tip, Tech pounced and took advantage of Georgia’s slow starts that has plagued the Lady Bull- dogs in three of their past four games. Tech built a lead that swelled to as high as eight points. Georgia looked sloppy, committing six turnovers, allowing seven offensive rebounds in the first five minutes and getting only half as many shot attempts (10) as Tech (20) through the first period.

Love scored nine of her 14 points in the first quarter. Taylor said anearly hole proved crucial in the final result, and Georgia must allow fewer live-ball turnovers in order to find an early rhythm.

“That first quarter really ate us alive,” Morrison said.

Over the next quarter-anda-half, momentum flipped and Georgia looked much like the team that had won its first seven contests and notched a couple of signature wins over Notre Dame and Marquette. The Lady Bulldogs went on a 16-5 run over the second and third quarters. Tech had prolonged scoring droughts, and it led to Georgia’s fast-paced offense to come to life. Over that stretch, Barker made two 3-point shots and Morrison notched eight of her 15 points.

Suddenly, after Georgia held an 11-point lead, Tech flipped the fortune in its favor. A smothering defense, mainly in a 2-3 zone, rattled Georgia. Taylor said the Lady Bulldogs became “undiscipli­ned” on defense, and the frontcourt talents of Hermosa and Lorela Cubaj went to work. Tech took advantage of Cubaj’s passing, and Georgia didn’t get enough pressure on one of the country’s top players.

Tech finished the game on a 25-13 run, with a smaller and more-dominant 7-0 run in that stretch. Georgia finished with 11 fourth-quarter points at a 24% clip that allowed Tech to claw its way back into contention.

Bates, who struggled to find a shooting rhythm, made two game-changing 3-pointers. Avyonce Carter also entered immediatel­y after Georgia built its lead to 11, and made some significan­t plays while not regularly being a major contributo­r in Fortner’s short-bydesign rotation.

“Little things don’t make the headlines of the newspaper, but there are so many little things in the game of a big win that can go unnoticed,” Fortner said. “That definitely didn’t go unnoticed on me. There are things that happened after that 11-point deficit that pointed to being tough and being dogged in the process.”

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