Tuesday, March 22, 2016

NIT: post mortem

Due to car troubles, I was unable to attend the Belmont game.  That was disappointing as I knew it would almost certainly be the last chance to see Kenny Gaines and Charles Mann in the Steg.  As it turns out, it was also a chance to see Yante Maten hulk smash a truly helpless opponent.  I suspect we'll see more of that over the next two years:
  • These two games were really about Yante Maten, weren't they?  Against Belmont, a team with no chance of guarding Maten, he had his way all evening.  He showed the full repertoire, and the Bruins had no answer.  Against St. Mary's, a team which also had no chance of guarding him, nothing would fall, and it was the difference in the game.  That's not to lay the loss entirely on his shoulders - he didn't get much help - but if Maten has even a normal night, Georgia is probably in the quarterfinals.
  • Much more will be written about Charles Mann and Kenny Gaines, but they can hold their heads up high as they ride off into the sunset.  Three postseasons is nothing to be ashamed of, and while I know they both wish it was one NIT and two NCAAs, they've helped change the culture a bit in Athens.  The fact that many of us are left feeling unsatisfied by this season is, in many ways, attributable to the work they've put in.
  • Teams like Belmont and St. Mary's drive me insane, and it's not entirely their fault.  St. Mary's, in particular, moved the ball beautifully, and thanks to some poor defense, ended up with quite a few layups, but both of those teams are going to live and die by the 3-point shot.  Threes are the great equalizer, and they are often at the root of Cinderella success in March (*ahem*MTSU*ahem*), but I have long been in favor of moving the 3-point line back even farther.  I suppose I'm old-fashioned, but watching a team jack up 30 3-pointers isn't my idea of a good time.  However, until the line moves, teams like Belmont and St. Mary's can, will, and should continue firing away.
  • I don't want to make excuses for Mark Fox (he's pretty good at that himself), but I suspect jet lag played into the result Sunday night.  I have a hunch we won't see many more 6-22 nights out of Maten.
  • Here's hoping all four freshmen put in some work this summer.  Each one has shown great promise at times.  The talent is evident.  If even one or two can make the kind of leap Maten made last summer, Georgia should be wearing white in the first round of the NCAA Tournament next year.
  • Also, here's hoping announcers practice pronouncing "Ogbeide" all summer.  They'll need to know that name next year.
  • The coast-to-coast dunk by Yante was great.  Turtle losing his mind (and his footing) might have been even better.
  • Maten's 3-point shot is going to make him almost impossible for most teams to guard next year.
  • Can Kenny Paul Geno improve his range over the summer?  If he can add just a little more scoring to everything else he does on the court he's going to be a huge asset off the bench (hopefully).
  • Chalk me up as excited to see any lineup with J.J. Frazier and Turtle Jackson in the game together.  They could be a dynamic pairing.
  • Houston Kessler has quietly regained a little confidence in his shot over the last few weeks.  I still hope the depth improves to the point where he's not counted on for 12 minutes per night, but when he's in, having the jumper as a threat is key.
So that's that.  A disappointing season?  That's a hard question to answer.  It certainly could have been better had the team gotten a few more breaks...but it probably should have been better regardless.

There will be plenty of time to analyze that.  For now, congratulations to the team on another postseason berth.  Now it's time to put in some work this summer and prepare for a deeper run next season.

Saturday, March 12, 2016

SEC Tournament: post mortem

Georgia will come up one game short.

I don't just mean the Kentucky game.  If you change any single loss on Georgia's schedule to a win, I believe they'd be dancing.  Instead it's a likely NIT home game as a 3 or 4 seed:
  • If you're tempted to get down, just remember: Yante Maten and J.J. Frazier are coming back next season.
  • Georgia played 30 minutes of great basketball against Mississippi State, followed by 6 minutes of garbage-ball, followed by 4 minutes of clinging desperately to a lead.  This team is a roller coaster.
  • The maroon Bulldogs really never had a chance.  They played well in stretches, and they hit some timely shots, but Maten just completely overwhelmed them.
  • The top of the key 3 is officially part of Maten's arsenal, arriving a year earlier than I thought it would.  That guy has 1st-team SEC written all over him next year.
  • As great as Georgia looked in stretches during the Mississippi State game, they barely played with a pulse for the majority of the South Carolina game.  Had the Gamecocks played with any sense of urgency they would have run the Bulldogs out of the building.  Instead it set up Frazier's heroics.
  • That sequence by J.J. at the end of the game was simply spectacular.  Splitting the double team was hard enough.  Hitting the floater over a seven footer?  High degree of difficulty.  Getting the steal and taking a foul?  Come on.
  • Have you ever seen Mark Fox so emotional on the sideline?  I haven't.  He knew what that game meant to his team.  Say what you want about Fox, but the man sure can coach with his back to the wall.  I'd like to see that same sense of urgency out of him in November.
  • The first half of the Kentucky game is as much fun as I've had watching Georgia basketball since...last year's Kentucky game.  That was big boy basketball, and Georgia hit them in the mouth, matching them punch for punch.  I didn't believe for a second it would hold, but I can handle losing when my team fights like that.
  • Are we seeing the emergence of Mike Edwards?  Listen, if Jonas Hayes can duplicate whatever he did with Yante Maten this summer, Edwards, Derek Ogbeide, and Maten are going to be an absolutely terrifying front court next season.
  • To state the obvious, the game turned when J.J. re-retwisted (intentionally redundant) that ankle.  I still think Georgia loses if it doesn't happen, but that sucked the life out of the team.  Frazier is clearly their emotional center.
  • Have I mentioned how much I hate Kentucky lately?  Or how pretentious and over-hyped "Big Blue Nation" is?
  • Jamal Murray, though...phew...go get your money, son.
  • It's not a stretch to say that Georgia would have beaten all but about 5 teams in the country with the game they played today, and they would have beaten Kentucky on most nights, too.  The Cats managed to shoot 50% and hit 9 3-point shots.  They're a great team, but someone with great defensive length and interior presence is going to send them packing sooner or later.
  • It may be Texas A&M tomorrow.  LSU...yikes...
  • Turtle: stay hot.
It wasn't the season we hoped it'd be, but there are reasons to love these Dawgs.  They will fight until there are no more games to play, and I will be right there with them.

Monday, March 7, 2016

The situation


The Numbers

CBSSports RPI: 72
ESPN BPI: 54
RPIForecast.com: 72
CBS Bracketology: Out
ESPN Bracketology: Next 4 out
 
The Resume

Good Wins: Georgia Tech, South Carolina, Ole Miss, @South Carolina, Alabama
Bad Losses: @Auburn

The Schedule

Potential Top 50 Wins: Kentucky (neutral)
Potential Bad Losses: MIssissippi State (neutral)

What It All Means

Georgia is not an NCAA Tournament team.  Don't let anyone tell you otherwise.

The fact that Lunardi has Georgia in his "Next 4 Out" category is a head-scratcher, and it may make you feel good, but despite being the most high-profile bracketologist out there, he's far from the most accurate.  Reality tells us that Georgia's resume just isn't very good:
  • 0-5 against the top 50 (that's bad)
  • 5-11 against the top 100 (that's very mediocre)
  • Loss to #162 Auburn (that's terrible)
  • Best wins against South Carolina twice (ok), Georgia Tech (resurgent, but not sexy), and Alabama (meh)
That's not to say the Dawgs can't play their way in - they certainly can.  I just don't want anyone thinking knocking off Mississippi State on Thursday or even South Carolina on Friday is enough to punch a ticket.  20 wins continues to be the magic number for this team, and that would almost certainly mean knocking off Kentucky in the semifinals in Nashville.

Possible, right?  Sure.  Probable?  Not so much.  As HeckWithTeck shows, Mark Fox is tough to beat in game 1, but has never won 2 games in the SEC Tournament, let alone 3.

It didn't have to be this way.  If you want to ruin your Monday, head over to the RPI wizard and play around a bit.  Had Georgia simply won at Auburn they'd have an RPI right at 60, and two wins in Nashville would probably have them dancing.  Had Georgia also won at home over Florida, the RPI would be in the 30's and a single win in Nashville would punch their ticket.

Or how about this?  Win the Chattanooga game (tons of missed free throws), the Kansas State game (blown lead and a missed goaltending call), and the Ole Miss road game (blown lead and missed travel call) and Georgia has an RPI in the 20's and is playing for seeding.  I'm going to stop before I bring myself to tears.

When you're a program like Georgia, every single game matters.  Last year a slow start cost Georgia a few seeds and left them matched up with Final Four-bound Michigan State.  This year it likely cost them a chance to play in the tournament at all.  It's something Mark Fox has to fix, or the ceiling on the program may be stuck in place.

[Georgia Basketball Blog]

Alabama: post mortem

This was a Mark Fox win through-and-through.  I don't mean for that to sound negative.  It's simply a statement of fact.  Consider these numbers, all of which Fox is likely thrilled about:
  1. Georgia held a 48-26 rebounding advantage(!).  Just complete domination on the boards.  Georgia had 19 offensive rebounds and Alabama had 18 defensive rebounds.  Amazing.
  2. Georgia held a 32-18 free throw advantage.  Georgia made 26 free throws and Alabama took 18.  Some of that was padded by J.J.'s free throw parade at the end of game, of course...
  3. Georgia attempted 15 3-point shots.  Had they hit their normal percentage, the game would have been a blowout.
  4. Alabama took 26 3-point shots, 4 more than their average.  Shannon Hale - a 30% shooter from distance coming in - took 7.  Justin Coleman - a 27% shooter from distance - took 4.
Fox has never been concerned with style points.  He wants you to take difficult shots, he wants to limit you to one shot per possession, and he needs just enough offense to win.  For one day at least it worked to perfection:
  • It's a shame that Senior Day occurred on the front end of spring break, but the folks that were there got loud for Kenny Gaines and Charles Mann.  They deserve it.  I'll write plenty more about them in the future, but they've helped put the program on a much firmer footing.
  • Houston Kessler had 5 offensive rebounds??  Well done, son.
  • In 2 minutes, E'Torrion Wilridge had a rebound and a beautiful assist into the post.  I have this feeling we'll be wondering in 2 or 3 years why we didn't see more of him during his freshman season.
  • Derek Ogbeide is a completely different player now than he was three months ago.  If he has a summer like Yante Maten had last year, Georgia is going to be lethal in the paint.
  • Maten - just awesome.  He needs to cut the turnovers a bit...and that's literally the only fair criticism I can lob his way at this point.
  • Seriously, though.  Maten running the break - two points.  Maten trailing the break - 2 points.  He makes stuff happen.
  • Mike Edwards needs to shoot 5,000,000 free throws this summer.  His ceiling is high, but he is going to be visiting the line more and more.  31% isn't even close to getting it done.
  • With that said, Mike also needs to keep running the floor the way he has been.  He routinely beats the defense down the floor.
  • Donta Hall was robbed.  That putback dunk was beautiful, and it was absolutely not an offensive foul.  The officiating was uneven yet again, and for once it felt like Georgia was the beneficiary of the bulk of the bad calls.
  • The crowd was not huge, but after Maten's fast break dunk, they sure were loud.  It sounded like a sellout for a few minutes there.
  • Georgia kept Alabama in the game with 15 turnovers, many of them practically unforced.  This has been a bugaboo for years, now, so I'm not holding my breath that it will get fixed...
Fun game.  That's all.  Put it in the rear view.  Everything is one game at a time right now.  The moment Georgia starts getting ahead of themselves, they'll get beat.  So credit to Mark Fox - he had them ready to play.  Let's hope we're saying the same thing Friday morning.

Friday, March 4, 2016

Game preview: Alabama

Let's hope Kenny Gaines and Charles Mann go out in style.


See you there.

South Carolina: post mortem

I won't allow myself to think the last two games represent Georgia taking a turn offensively.  There was still plenty to be concerned about tonight (like a million turnovers in the second half).  However, the lack of possessions ending in desperation heaves as the shot clock expired was very encouraging:
  • Biggest shot of the game?  For my money, it was Kenny Gaines hitting the transition three to tie the game at 55.  For some guys, that's not a very good shot.  It is for Kenny.  When he has hit feet set he's deadly.
  • Georgia really had no business being in that game, but South Carolina shot themselves right out of it.  In the lane, the Gamecocks were getting whatever they wanted, yet they hoisted 26 3-point shots.  A late flurry of makes made the percentage look better than it really was.
  • The Bulldogs had twice as many turnovers as South Carolina and they gave up 18 offensive rebounds.  The Gamecocks took 18 more shots, too.  So again, how did Georgia win?
  • 23-27 from the free throw line certainly didn't hurt.  Gaines nailing three of them early in the first half was a good omen.
  • Oh and by the way - Kenny Gaines is 15-30 from 3-point range in the last 3 games.  As long as he keeps that up, Georgia has a chance in every game they play.
  • And J.J. Frazier is 14-27...
  • 11 points off the bench.  That counts as a good night for those guys.
  • Michael Carrera is a warrior, but I bet he's hoping that's the last he's seen of Georgia.  The Bulldogs defense has a way of getting under his skin.  The one 3-pointer he hit was clutch, but the 9 he missed were important too.
  • Charles Mann continues to struggle his way through his senior season, but his strip of Sindarius Thornwell was huge.  HUGE.
  • Derek Ogbeide had 5 rebounds, and 4 of them were on the offensive end.  He and Yante Maten are going to terrorize some smaller teams next year.
  • I'm a little surprised Maten didn't get T'ed up for yelling at Carrera after his dunk.  Not a complaint.  Just an observation.
  • And while we're talking about Maten, good job selling the offensive foul on Silva.  That came at a big time, and Maten had his fair share of cheap ones go against him.
  • The officiating was choppy all night.  It was like a throwback game where the officials decided to let everything go in the paint.
  • Georgia's defense was really good.   Had Mindaugas Kacinas not shot out of his mind (he's a 32% shooter from distance but went 5-7) the Bulldogs may have run away with the game.  And remember, a flurry of threes after Georgia all but put the game away made things look way better for the Gamecocks.
The NCAA Tournament is a pipe dream, but the season is not over, and these guys are playing hard.  A win over Alabama on Saturday ensures the best possible seeding for the conference tournament at which point it's on Georgia to go make some noise.

The formula remains simple: play defense like you're capable of, limit turnovers, and let the shooters shoot.  By my estimation, any Frazier or Gaines shot is a good one right now.

Thursday, March 3, 2016

A thought experiment


Mark Fox is a flawed coach.  Also, the sky is blue and yes, a bear does take its morning constitutional in the woods.

This is not a revelation.  Every coach is flawed to some degree.  The question, now, is twofold: is Mark Fox willing to change, and is the administration willing to give him the time to do so?

So let's play a little game.  I am going to list what I perceive to be Mark Fox's greatest weaknesses right now.  My question to you is this: if you could instantly fix one and only one of these things, which one would it be?
  1. Ineffective offense.  The highest points/game ranking a Mark Fox-coached Georgia team has ever finished with is 153rd in the country.  Let that sink in.  This is year 7, and despite coaching scorers like Trey Thompkins, Travis Leslie, Dustin Ware, Gerald Robinson, Yante Maten, Kenny Gaines, and J.J. Frazier, dead middle of the pack is the most dynamic offense Georgia fans have seen in almost a decade.  There is little evidence that Fox is going to change, either.  Despite having his most athletic team in years, and despite promising a more up-tempo approach on offense, this season has just been more of the same.
  2. Refusal to take graduate transfers.  Here's an exercise for you: as you watch the NCAA Tournament later this month, count how many times an announcer references a graduate transfer making a big impact on one of those teams.  Your blood may start to boil a bit.  For whatever reason, Fox has refused to be a player in that market, and it has hurt his teams (see White, James).
  3. Misuse of freshmen talent.  In Fox's tenure at Georgia, there has been exactly one freshman allowed to make a big-time impact: Kentavious Caldwell-Pope.  Charles Mann, likely out of necessity, also saw a lot of minutes his freshman year.  Kenny Gaines?  He was stuck on the bench behind Sherrard Brantley.  E'Torrion Wilridge is currently riding the pine behind a game but less-skilled Kenny Paul Geno.  Mike Edwards and Derek Ogbeide had to wait in line behind Houston Kessler, and both have still logged less minutes than him.  Yes, freshmen make mistakes, but there is too much roster turnover in college basketball to avoid using them.  If the scheme is too complex, that's not their problem.  It's yours.
  4. Lack of roster depth.  I was going to call this one "recruiting," but in many ways Fox has righted that ship.  Last year's class was as talented as any class coming to Athens in many, many years.  However, roster depth has still suffered.  Georgia's points/game fall off a cliff after the big 4 of Frazier, Maten, Gaines, and Mann, and some of that is a shocking lack of quality depth.  Depth is created by good recruiting, and it's nourished by proper use of young talent.  Fox has struggled in both areas.  The 2016 class currently consists of two guards.  So does the graduating class.  In other words, expect more of the same.
  5. Drawing up out-of-bounds plays.  Ok, I'm being snarky now.  But really, could our out-of-bounds plays be any more uninspired?
Many of these things are intertwined.  I get that.  Fixing one may go a long way towards fixing another.  But you have to pick one.

I'm going with number 1.  I'll get into the offensive numbers in another post, but they are not pretty.  Even with the talent as it is (little depth, no grad transfers), a little bump in offensive efficiency would have this team in the tournament instead of playing for their lives.  That's how thin the margin has been.  Fox can coach a defense.  That is for sure.  But it's time for him to look in the mirror, realize his shortcomings, and turn the offense over to an assistant.

Friday, February 26, 2016

Auburn: post mortem

I almost just cut-and-paste my Vanderbilt post mortem, but Georgia showed enough life in the last few minutes to make that impractical.  I apologize in advance for the tone of this post.

That the team eclipsed its first half point total in the last 5 minutes of the game clearly demonstrates the biggest problem with this team and presents the most obvious solution:
  • Mark Bradley beat me to this, but he says exactly what I've been thinking ever since the LSU game: why does Georgia look so much better in desperation mode?  The answer should be obvious.  Mark Fox's sets aren't working.  When the Bulldogs run the offense as designed, they stagnate, and the shots are terrible.  When they run and ad lib, the shots are better.  J.J. Frazier is free to pull up in the lane where he is absolutely deadly.  Guys like Kenny Gaines are able to create shots that they can make as opposed to force shots they cannot.
  • So why won't Fox turn his team loose?  The cynic in me thinks he'd rather give up 70 points and lose than give up 80 points and win.  That's insane, right?  It can't be true...can it?
  • Because yes, when you go faster, you give up more points.  But something is not working right now, and I'm very hesitant to blame the players, because when things are at their worst, it looks like they're simply doing what their coach tells them to do.
  • Auburn is not a good team.  In fact, they are a bad team.  Yes, they hit a lot of 3-pointers, and that's literally their only chance at winning games this year.  But when Cinmeon Bowers left the game with 2 fouls, the ball should have entered to Yante Maten and/or Derek Ogbeide every single time down the court and Georgia should have run up the score from there.
  • That didn't happen, of course, because Maten inexplicably rode the pine almost the entire first half.  Mark Fox said he "wasn't playing well."  I'm no coach, and maybe he wasn't playing well...but it's almost like Fox is creating excuses as the game goes on.  "We might lose this game, so I'll bench our best player and use that as an excuse in case we do."  Too cynical?  Again, it probably is.  But every game is must-win right now, and he's just not coaching like that's the case.  It's hard to watch.
  • This really isn't a post mortem, is it?  It's just me complaining.  Sorry.
  • J.J. Frazier and Kenny Gaines average a combined 22.1 field goal attempts/game, and Georgia averages under 70 points/game.  Against Auburn, they combined for 30 shots and Georgia scored 81 points.  Hmm...
  • With the exception of Ogbeide, the freshmen are playing with 0 confidence right now.  With the season lost, Fox may want to consider rectifying that in the last four games.
  • This loss wasn't quite as bad as the home loss to an undermanned Vanderbilt team a few years ago.  Does that count as a silver lining.
Georgia has put up 3 50+ point halves this season.  Two of them came in losses.  This is not a coincidence.  The team plays better when they dig a big hole because they have to play differently.

The formula for this team seems simple to a dumb fan like me: go fast, and allow Maten, Gaines, or Frazier to take the first good look they get.  I'm certain it's not that easy, but I'm also certain that whatever Fox and his gang are doing is way too hard.

[DawgNation]

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Vanderbilt: post mortem

Stop me if you're heard this one before: a slow start and some questionable rotations doomed Georgia on the road.

And the world keeps spinning:
  • Mark Fox's excuse for yanking Derek Ogbeide less than 2 minutes into the game?  A hot gym.  I mean...I just...nope...
  • Ogbeide is looking every bit the 4* he was rated as coming out of high school.  If deployed correctly, he and Maten could do some damage in the post over the next two years.
  • I really do feel for Charles Mann and Kenny Gaines.  I'm confident this isn't how they saw their senior seasons playing out, but any postseason ship has likely sailed.  With that said, neither one of those guys has ever been one to let up, and I don't think they will now.
  • I find myself getting jealous when I watch a team like Vanderbilt play.  How many dunks and good looks from long distance did they end up with?  Georgia has at least 3 potentially deadly scorers in Maten, Gaines, and J.J. Frazier, yet very few sets (there are exceptions) end in good looks at the basket.  Why?
  • That's a rhetorical question, by the way.  Head on over to www.georgiabasketballblog.com and check the archives.
  • Bless his heart, Houston Kessler canned a 3.  I don't expect his minutes to change at this point, so maybe that little bit of confidence will lead to another one or two falling at Auburn.
  • Yante Maten hit another 3 too.  I'm telling you, that top of the key long ball will be a weapon for him next year - much like it was for Marcus Thornton his senior season.  The difference?  Maten's shot looks way better.
  • Damian Jones has already said he's going to the NBA.  He's ready.
  • It's hard to understand why Vanderbilt hasn't won more games this season.  I'm skeptical that Kevin Stallings' job is actually on the line, but just like Georgia fans, I imagine Commodore supporters are starting to reflect on what might have been.  The difference, of course, is that Vanderbilt still has a path to the tournament.
  • Kenny Paul Geno should spend all summer cranking 3-pointers in the gym.  I really like what Geno adds on the floor, and I think a lot of the criticism directed his way is unfair, but getting that jumper consistent will make him a real weapon his senior season.
  • E'Torrion Wilridge sure looked good in the first half, huh?  Apparently Mark Fox didn't think so.  Second half minutes: 0.
It's now SEC tournament or bust for the Georgia Bulldogs.  That doesn't mean there's nothing to play for.  Mark Fox, whether or not it's true, has to coach as if he's coaching for his job.  The freshmen, given their scant opportunities, have to start earning their minutes next year.  And Gaines and Mann simply have to control what they can control and finish strong.

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Florida: post mortem

I don't think I'll have time to post the situation this week, but that's ok, because there is no situation.  Georgia blew its last chance at a nice win, and its only "good" win just lost at Missouri.  Barring a very unlikely run in the SEC tournament, this team is not dancing.

It doesn't have to be this way, but I'll leave that for another post.

For now, a post mortem, even if my heart isn't in it:
  • Georgia wasted a great crowd.  The stands weren't full, but those that were there were loud.  Too bad they didn't get much to cheer for.
  • Derek Ogbeide was an absolute beast in the first three minutes of the game.  He was "eating glass" as the team would say.  If you heard someone yelling, "No!" as Houston Kessler inexplicably replaced him three minutes into the game, you were probably sitting near me.
  • The defense is good enough.  Plenty good enough.  If you hold a team to 19 first half points, you have to be up big at half.
  • If you want to find a half in which Georgia put up more than 40 points, you have to go all the way back to the LSU game.  It came in a loss.
  • It's not like this team lacks talent.  In fact, I'd go so far as to say Georgia had at least as much talent as Florida.  You think Michael White couldn't find a way to put up points with Yante Maten, Kenny Gaines, and J.J. Frazier?
  • I don't know what Maten plans to work on this summer, but if he decides to extend his range out past the 3-point line, Mark Fox's "offense" will be the only defense that can stop him.
  • Florida decided to take Maten away last night.  Fine.  That shouldn't be bad news!  Georgia should be a pick-your-poison type team on offense.  Instead, it was Frazier and Charles Mann playing hero-ball.  Hint: that's a bad formula.
  • Why didn't White press Georgia all night?  It's almost like he felt bad about his two previous dismantlings of Mark Fox Georgia teams and wanted to throw him a bone.
  • You think ESPN is tired of having the Bulldogs on Super Tuesday?  Two weeks in a row, just over 100 points scored.  Yuck.
  • It's not helping that I'm watching Duke - North Carolina right now.  61 points have been scored, and there are 6 minutes left in the first half.
Basketball is supposed to be fun.  When's the last time you had fun watching this team?  Clemson?  Georgia Tech?  Oakland?

It's not the losing that gets me.  I'm a Georgia basketball fan.  I can handle losing.

It's how Georgia loses.

I'll keep watching.  I'll keep cheering.  But as hope for this season wanes, it's going to have to be hope for the future that keeps me going...

Monday, February 15, 2016

Mississippi State: post mortem


Don't feel too bad, Mississippi State.  Sometimes Yante Maten happens:
  • That's two years in a row the Bulldogs from Mississippi have been victimized by a career day from a Georgia Bulldog.  Last year it was J.J. Frazier, and this year it was Maten, who had his way all night long.  He did get a tad sloppy with the ball, but that nit-picking, especially since he was hardly alone in that.
  • If Maten extends that range out past the 3-point line next season he is going to be an absolute terror.
  • Once Gavin Ware went to the bench with his second foul, Mark Fox was content to let Mississippi State shoot themselves to death, and they obliged.  Almost every shot was contested, too, unlike in the debacle against Kentucky.
  • Ware's last 4 games: 28 pts, 14 pts, 21 pts, 6 pts.  Georgia took him away.  Yes, the foul trouble played into that, but it wasn't the whole story.
  • Georgia won a game in which Kenny Gaines scored 0 points.  Amazing.
  •  Let's not ignore what Charles Mann is doing.  The last few minutes of the game were bad, sure, but he went for 21/7 and has been playing quite well of late.  Maybe it's a sense of urgency as his last season winds down.  I don't know.  Whatever it is, I hope he harnesses it and carries it forward.
  • Derek Ogbeide had 13 rebounds.  Are you excited about he and Maten in the post next season?  Of course you are.
  • Mike Edwards splashed a free throw.  Unfortunately, this is noteworthy.
  • Did you get worried when Mississippi State cut it to 10 after a 12-0 run?  I did.
  • Four bad shooting nights in a row for J.J. Frazier.  We'll all be happy if he manages to break out of that mini-slump on Tuesday night.
  • Georgia pressed and immediately forced a turnover.  It just about brought a tear to my eye.
  • The reaction to State's press was less exciting.  In fact, the last 8 minutes of the game were downright disturbing, not because the game was ever in jeopardy (it wasn't), but because Florida is going to press for 40 minutes Tuesday night.  Mississippi State scored 13 points in the last 67 seconds of the game!  Georgia relaxed, and that can't happen against better teams.
  • Unfortunately for Kenny Paul Geno, that was probably his last trip to Starkville.  He sure seems to have fun there!
  • Quinndary Weatherspoon is worth getting excited about if you're a Mississippi State fan.  If Malik Newman sticks around and grows into the player he was supposed to be, that'll be a nice one-two punch.
Georgia needed a win and they got it.  Mark Fox needs to have the team just as prepared on Tuesday night.  Literally every game matters for this team right now.

I'll be in my seat cheering them on.  I hope you will too.

Saturday, February 13, 2016

A walk in the lane

Well, at least Georgia's not the only team to lose on a missed traveling call.

[Deadspin]

Thursday, February 11, 2016

Kentucky: post mortem

Where do you even begin with a game like this?  I normally try to start positive, but that's not going to be possible today:
  • Georgia had 11 made baskets, and I missed 2 of them thanks to Michigan State and Purdue going into overtime.
  • In fact, 5 of the 11 made field goals came in the first 6:30.  Two of them came in the last 2 minutes.  That leaves almost 32 minutes of game time where Georgia made just 4 baskets.  Inconceivable.
  •  If Kentucky had stopped scoring at the 16:47 mark of the second half, they still would have won.
  • Georgia somehow finished the game without a single steal or blocked shot.
  • Literally the only positive for Georgia in the game?  Free throw shooting.  Part of me wishes they hadn't wasted a 23-27 night from the line on this game, and part of me is relieved they didn't shoot them like they normally do and lose by 45.
  • Teams that have beaten Kentucky this year: UCLA, Ohio State, LSU, Auburn, Kansas, and Tennessee.  They are good, but they are not the juggernaut we're used to.
  • Why did Houston Kessler and Kenny Paul Geno get such extensive minutes down the stretch?  If you want a silver lining to a blowout it's that you can get your freshmen some time on the court.  Fox's handling of his youngsters continues to boggle the mind...
  • It's pretty safe to say that if you hold J.J. Frazier without a field goal, you're going to beat the Bulldogs handily.
  • Let's not forget that Kentucky was without Alex Poythress...
  • I don't know about you, but I didn't see any surefire lottery picks on the floor for Kentucky.  Jamal Murray has shot the lights out two games in a row now, so perhaps he'll play his way into one of those spots.  The bad news is that a lot of these guys may be back next year.
It's not that Georgia lost - losing in Rupp is no great shame.  It's how they lost.  The hope was that Georgia would return to the tournament and, at the same time, return to relevance.  That simply has not happened.  Whatever the "eye test" is, this team doesn't pass.

However, the team could technically still squeeze their way into the tournament field.  That seems insane to type, and it means Fox can't just pack it in and go all in on the freshmen (not that he'd be likely to do so anyway).  Besides, the team owes it to two great seniors to fight until the bitter end.  That fight commences in Starkville on Saturday (where Arkansas was just blown out).  As to which Georgia team decides to show up, your guess is as good as mine.

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Unacceptable

If you want to make a case for firing Mark Fox, here's a good place to start:

Combined Stats for Georgia's 2 Biggest Games This Season


Georgia
Opponent
FGM-A
26-103 (25%)
58-111 (52%)
3PM-A
7-29 (24%)
21-43 (49%)
FTM-A
34-46 (74%)
24-37 (65%)
REB
70
73
AST
13
34
STL
2
17
BLK
2
10
TO
30
17
PTS
93
161

That's...really bad.

How ironic is it that the only category Georgia won is free throw shooting?

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

How good is good enough?

Seth Emerson has a fantastic article up about Kentucky's perception of Georgia.  For those considering whether or not Fox has the program headed in the right direction, here's the money quote:
“They’re a quality program. A solid program,” Jerry Tipton, who has been covering Kentucky for the Lexington Herald-Leader for decades, said of Georgia: “Not an upper-echelon program, but not a lower-echelon program either.”
Really gets you swelling with pride, doesn't it?

So you tell me, in year 7, is that good enough?  Or should the standard be raised?

Read the whole thing.  There's a lot of good stuff in there, including a Kentucky coach who can't pronounce Yante Maten's name.  Hopefully he'll hear it enough tonight that he'll never forget...

[DawgNation]

Monday, February 8, 2016

Auburn: post mortem

There are losses that are so bad, they simply have to be "thrown out."  Texas A&M was one such game.  Sometimes the other team plays so well, and beats you so thoroughly, that there's almost nothing to learn.  You just move on.

The win over Auburn feels like that.  Georgia beat a relatively bad, desperately shorthanded team soundly, and there's almost nothing to be learned.  Move on:
  • As much as I fret about Mark Fox's ability to take the program to the next level, another sellout would suggest that people are at least paying attention.  It was a good crowd that never really had a chance to affect the game because the outcome was hardly in doubt.
  • Aren't you glad J.J. Frazier and Yante Maten are coming back next year?  Many saw Maten's progression coming, but Frazier has taken his game to a level very few saw coming.  He didn't even play all that well on Saturday and he still led the team in scoring.
  • Then there's Maten, who throws up one of the quietest 12/12 lines imaginable to go along with 5 blocks.  I say quiet not because it didn't matter, but because it looks so easy you hardly notice.
  • To me, one of the biggest plays in the game was Frazier drawing the offensive foul right before halftime.  Instead of Auburn dribbling out the clock and perhaps cutting the lead to 6 points, Georgia had a chance to extend it even further.  Smart play by a wily veteran.
  • Auburn is going to live and die by the 3-point shot, and boy did they die a spectacular death on Saturday.
  • Derek Ogbeide needs to learn to defend without fouling, and he needs to do so quickly.  He's not very useful sitting on the bench.  The fact that he grabbed 5 rebounds in 6 minutes certainly whets the appetite for more.
  • It sure seems like E'Torrion Wilridge has turned some sort of corner.  He looks confident running the offensive sets, and his defense remains strong.
  • Some people will hate me for saying this, but I love watching Cinmeon Bowers play.  Bruce Pearl started him at point guard!
  • With that said, watching Yante Maten block his shot three possessions in a row was gratifying.  Good defense, big man.
  • I bet Connor O'Neill wants those free throws back...
  • Devon Gales got the biggest cheers of the night, and deservedly so.  I got choked up explaining to my wife who he is and what he's gone through.  It's wonderful the way the entire Bulldog Nation has embraced him.
Let's be clear - that game was boring, but I'm not complaining.  Good teams beat bad teams, and it doesn't always look pretty.  If Georgia is going to be a good team, we should expect and celebrate such games.

With that said, a whole different level of play will be required to spring the upset Tuesday night.  Will the Bulldogs finally step up and announce their intention to dance?

Friday, February 5, 2016

The situation


The Numbers

CBSSports RPI: 65
ESPN BPI: 53
RPIForecast.com: 75
CBS Bracketology: First four out
ESPN Bracketology: Out
 
The Resume

Good Wins: Georgia Tech, Clemson, Arkansas, South Carolina
Bad Losses: None

The Schedule

Potential Top 50 Wins: @Kentucky, Florida, @Vanderbilt, @South Carolina, Alabama
Potential Bad Losses: Auburn, @Mississippi State, @Auburn, Ole Miss

What It All Means

I almost didn't check the CBS Bracketology page, and when I did, I was as stunned as anyone to see Georgia anywhere near the field.  Apparently Jerry Palm was more impressed with the win over South Carolina than I was.

I still think we're about to see South Carolina slide down the RPI rankings as their schedule gets tougher.  Here's hoping they manage to stay in the top 50, and Georgia knocks them off again in Columbia.

And while it's still hard to make a case that Georgia belongs in the discussion, if you wanted to make that case, you'd start with the losses: all are to top 100 teams, and the worst home loss was to #58 Kansas State.  The Bulldogs were also without Derek Ogbeide for several losses, something the committee will have to consider if he continues to play well.

If Georgia goes 7-2 down the stretch, they're in.  Anything short of that and things start to get murky.  That's a tall order, which is why I'm not getting my hopes up just yet.  It does, however, set Saturday up as a must-win game at home versus a struggling Auburn team.  Get yourself to the Steg, get loud, and let's see what happens.

One more spot

If you're still of the mind that Georgia can play its way into the NCAA Tournament, an extra slot opened up today...

[Courier-Journal]

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

South Carolina: post mortem

Posting has been admittedly thin lately.  I'm traveling for work.  In fact, tonight's game was the first home game I've missed in two years.  So hey, I hope it was Georgia fans that bought my tickets, and I hope they enjoyed their evening:
  • I have complained here about the lack of big wins for Georgia (and for good reason), not just this season but over the past 4 or 5 seasons.  Tonight was a big one.  Is South Carolina really a top 25 team?  Their record would suggest so, but I'm skeptical.  However, it's a top 50 win over a likely tournament team, and I'll take it.  Now we hope the Gamecocks keep winning and we drop them again in Columbia.
  • J.J. Frazier: onions.
  • Yante Maten is locked in right now.  He has so much diversity in his game.  Post moves, jumpers, drives...and that's just on the offensive end.
  • Some huge minutes for E'Torrion Wilridge.  He must have done something to get back in Fox's good graces.  I like how he's defending, and his scoring will come as he gets more and more court time.
  • I like the more aggressive Kenny Gaines we saw tonight.  He's not a great finisher, but he's better when he mixes in some slashing and driving.  It keeps the defense honest.
  • Nice tip KPG.  If you want to watch someone who plays hard, watch him.
  • 9 blocked shots for each team.  Yowza.
  • Nothing really jumps off the stat sheet, honestly.  Georgia out-rebounded South Carolina, which is always huge for a Mark Fox-coached team, and they turned the ball over less than the Gamecocks as well.
  • I've said this before, but the potential in all four freshmen is evident.  There is reason for excitement, even if this season ends up falling a little short of expectations.
  • If you've been watching SEC basketball for a few years, it's hard to believe Michael Carrera is as good as he is right now.  He was all effort, little skill until he started to develop last season.  Now he's a guy who could log minutes for any team in the country.  However, he has always run hot, and the Bulldogs showed that it's still possible to get in his head.
  • In a lot of ways, South Carolina is what Georgia was supposed to be: a veteran-led team with some young talent grinding out wins.
  • Mike Edwards needs to shoot 10,000 free throws this offseason.  It's a serious liability for a player whose game should see him at the free throw line quite a bit over the next few years.
South Carolina's schedule doesn't get any easier, and this may have been the start of the Gamecocks coming back to Earth a bit.  No matter.  Georgia has a big win, and we can all breathe for a few more days.