UGA’s Yante Maten has 27 points and 11 rebounds in a 93-82 win vs. LSU
Yante Maten has 27 points and 11 rebounds in a 93-82 win against the Tigers.
ATHENS — Yante Maten puts a lot of stock in moving into second place on Georgia’s career scoring list.
“It means a lot,” he said, “just being able to represent my school the way I’ve tried to for the past four years and just having the opportunity to make plays night in and night out.”
Maten had 27 points and 11 rebounds, freshman Rayshaun Hammonds scored a career-high 21 and Georgia beat LSU 93-82 on Saturday.
Juwan Parker added 15 points as the Bulldogs (16-12, 7-9 Southeastern Conference) overcame an abysmal 3-point performance in the first half by dominating the boards and forcing LSU to lean too much on its guards to score from the perimeter.
Freshman Tremont Waters finished with 25 points and Skylar Mays added 20 for LSU (16-12, 7-9). The Tigers have lost six straight SEC road games.
Maten, with 1,797 career points, passed Alec Kessler and Vern Fleming to take the second spot on Georgia’s career scoring list. He also moved past Charles Claxton for the fifth spot in rebounding.
“No. 1 is the quality of person I’ve been around,” Bulldogs coach Mark Fox said.
“He’s got tremendous character. He’s as good a person as I’ve been associated with. We’ve had a lot of great kids. He’s an absolute stud of a person.”
Georgia, with a season high in points, has won three of four entering the last week of the regular season, but the Bulldogs showed why they’ve been so fickle this year, leading by 22 early in the second half before falling flat offensively and letting LSU pull within single digits in the closing minute. Fox wasn’t too concerned. “At one time we had three freshmen on the court and those guys are going to make some errors, but we’re starting to trust them more,” Fox said.
“It’s just fortunate we had the lead so we could play through those mistakes.”
Georgia missed 14 of 16 attempts beyond the arc in the first half, but kept possessions alive with 12 offensive rebounds.
Derek Ogbeide put an accent on the effort at the buzzer, his onehanded putback giving the Bulldogs an 11-point lead after Turtle Jackson missed for the fourth time.
The lead swelled to 19 in the first two minutes of the second half as Maten hit a jumper and grabbed a defensive rebound while falling out of bounds.
He fed the ball to Jackson, who quickly assisted on Teshaun Hightower’s 3.
Maten, the SEC’s leading scorer and third-leading rebounder, had his way with LSU for the second time this season.
The senior forward scored 21 points and hit the game-winning basket with five seconds to go at Baton Rouge. The Tigers had no means of containing him this time either, getting out-rebounded 4934.
“They imposed their will on the backboard and in the paint, and we just weren’t able to compensate for that,” first- year coach Will Wade said. “It’s pretty simple. That’s all there was to it.”