The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Amid struggles, Bulldogs tough to beat on road

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — A lot has gone wrong for Georgia basketball this season, but there is no denying the Bulldogs are a much more competitiv­e team than they’ve been in recent years. That’s especially true on the road.

With a 76-64 win over Van- derbilt last Wednesday in Nashville, Georgia improved to 4-4 on the road this season. To put that into perspec- tive, consider that it took 37 games over four seasons for the Bulldogs to accumulate four road wins coming into this year. That’s right, they were 4-33 in that span.

And even when Georgia has come up short away from home, it hasn’t been without a good fight. Florida needed overtime to get by the Bull- dogs 102-98 in Gainesvill­e on Jan. 27. Arkansas had to hang on to win 78-75. Even Kentucky couldn’t blow them out at Rupp Arena, winning 105-96 on Jan. 20.

So far, only Mississipp­i State has managed to beat Georgia by double figures away from Stegeman Coliseum, pulling away late to win 75-62 on Feb. 7 in Starkville. Otherwise, the Bulldogs have been in it to the end.

Georgia (15-12, 5-9 SEC) is hopeful that trend will con- tinue tonight when it travels to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to take on the LSU Tigers (7 p.m., SEC Network).

“We don’t have as many wins as we like, but we’re a more competitiv­e better basketball team obviously,” Georgia second-year coach Mike White said. “We’re bet- ter than we were early and better than we were last year. We are building and we’re better, but we want results though. We’ve got to get better.”

The teams have already met once this season. The Bulldogs blew a double-fig- ure lead in the second half and fell behind in the final seconds. But Russel Tchewa’s three-point play with 2.3 sec- onds remaining lifted Geor- gia to a 68-66 win on Jan. 24 at Stegeman Coliseum.

But the Tigers (14-13, 6-8) have been playing much bet- ter of late. In the last three games, they knocked off then

Georgia men at LSU, 7 p.m., 750, 1380 17th-ranked Kentucky 75-74 at the Pete Maravich Center and followed that with a 64-63 win over No. 11 South Carolina in Columbia on Feb. 17.

Both teams are coming off blowout losses at home this past Saturday, Georgia 97-76 to No. 14 Auburn and LSU 87-67 to Mississipp­i State.

There is a lot on the line today as far as postseason pursuits. Currently, the Bulldogs are tied with Arkansas for 11th place in the SEC. That places them among the league’s bottom four teams, which will mean a Wednesday night play-in game at the SEC Tournament March 13 in Nashville. Meanwhile, the Tigers are just one game better. They are in a threeway tie with Ole Miss and Texas A&M at 6-8 in conference play.

After today, the Bulldogs have the Aggies and Ole Miss at home before wrapping up the regular season March 9 at Auburn. LSU’s remaining games are on the road at Vandy and Arkansas and at home against Missouri, the SEC’s only winless team in conference play.

Don’t bother bringing up postseason scenarios to the Bulldogs. “I’m just not focused on the postseason. I’m focused on LSU,” White said.

Said Georgia guard Silas Demary Jr., the only freshman in the league to start every game this season: “LSU is a good team. They just got two big-time wins . ... They have some momentum. We just want to go in there with some confidence.”

The key for the Bulldogs is playing good defense. With last Wednesday’s road win over Vanderbilt, Georgia improved to 25-1 over the last two seasons when they hold opponents to 70 or fewer points. One of those victories came against LSU. At 76.8 points per game, the Bulldogs actually are scoring at a higher clip against SEC competitio­n than they were in non-conference play (75.4).

 ?? JASON GETZ/AJC FILE ?? Tight end Brock Bowers is considered a first-round lock for the draft, but he will limit his workouts at the NFL Scouting Combine while recovering from an ankle injury that kept him out of the Orange Bowl.
JASON GETZ/AJC FILE Tight end Brock Bowers is considered a first-round lock for the draft, but he will limit his workouts at the NFL Scouting Combine while recovering from an ankle injury that kept him out of the Orange Bowl.
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