Georgia falls to South Carolina- Post Game Notes and Quotes

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From Staff Reports

Team Notes

The starting lineup was graduates Noah Thomasson and Russel Tchewa, senior Jabri Abdur-Rahim, junior RJ Melendez and freshman Silas Demary Jr.

This is the second straight game for this starting lineup and the 7th time this starting lineup has been used this season.

The Bulldogs recorded six blocks, two and a half more than their season average.

Georgia’s 40 first-half points on the day marks the second-most this season against an SEC opponent.

The Bulldogs led for 18:10 of the first half.

Georgia went a perfect 9-for-9 from the free-throw line, doing so for the first time since Jan. 10, 2018 against Missouri.

For the second straight game, Georgia made at least seven 3-point shots in the first half, marking the sixth time they have done so in the opening 20 minutes this season.

The Bulldogs held the Gamecocks’ top points producer, Meechie Johnson, to 11 points on the day. He averaged 17.1 points entering the matchup.

Mike White’s team allowed zero blocked shots for the first time this season while the Gamecocks recorded zero blocks in a game for the first time since playing LSU on Feb. 14, 2023.

Three Georgia players scored in double-figures.

Individual Notes

Jabri Abdur-Rahim led the Bulldogs with 20 points, recording his fourth game scoring 20+ points this season and the sixth time in his career.

Russel Tchewa tallied two steals, matching his season high.

Jabri Abdur-Rahim recorded a new season-high two blocks, matching his career high.

Blue Cain led Georgia in bench scoring with 11 points, doing so for the fifth time this season and the seventh time he has scored in double-figures.

GEORGIA HEAD COACH MIKE WHITE

On Georgia’s second half struggles

“I wish I knew. I’m not sure I have a great answer right now. Obviously by our body language, by the way we shot the ball down the stretch, our level of confidence, our level of swagger, whatever you want to call it, we didn’t shoot the way we needed to down the stretch. We didn’t lose the game because we didn’t make shots. South Carolina is really good, really good. They’re really connected, tough, physical and sound.”

On issues defending inside the paint…

“I thought that they passed it really well to one another. We probably exerted ourselves a little bit too much with the press and with trapping the post. We were coss-matched at the end of the press at times because we were zone-pressing back to man, we were doing some switching with Mack because he presents problems with his ability to stretch you from three.”

On the team’s long scoring drought in the second half…

“I think that stretch included all zone, I don’t know that without watching the film. That was a big factor. Davis stunting, playing cat-and-mouse with our ball handlers at the top of the key with his length and size, Gray on the interior, Murray-Boyles at the nail and their wings did a good job of preventing us from throwing it to the corners. We tried a couple different things, we had four guards out there with our fives. I don’t know about the first couple possessions, but after that I thought we had some pretty good looks.”

On South Carolina’s productive shooting, what has to change for the Bulldogs..

“A lot. We had four or five silly fouls. Our communication wasn’t great. In our guys’ defense, we hadn’t pressed a ton this season. I’m not sure whether we pressed too much today or not. I’ll have a better answer after I study the film closely. We probably exerted ourselves a little bit too much and so some of our rotations were not there, especially late when we were playing from behind some of their baskets were so easy. I think it was guys just being really fatigued and our level of communication dropped.”

On South Carolina switching from man to zone defense late in the second half…

“They’ve only played a few possessions of zone all year. It was a good move by coach Paris, it was a surprising move. It was a zone they played early in the season. We spent a little more time on it for our game in Columbia. It is a zone that they had success with last year.”

On what needs to change to get the team back on track and ready to play a couple of games on the road…

“We’re going to focus on everything. We’re going to focus on being the best we can be. We will meet on Monday at length. This is three losses in a row and it’s something we haven’t been through yet this season. It will be heavy film and talking on Monday. We’re going to try to talk some things out. We’ve got to figure out what gives us the best chance to win moving forward.”

#1 | JABRI ABDUR-RAHIM | SR. | G

On how South Carolina performed…

“Everyone on the team played well. They’re a really good team. They’re going to go to the tournament. We really respect them, but we just got to do a better job of being better in the second half. I think that was the biggest problem. We came out and didn’t guard them really in either half. They made a lot of timely plays, and had some timely rebounds that hurt us.”

On the difference between this game and the last time Georgia played South Carolina…

“I think we just got to do a better job of being physical. I think when we went there we were really physical with them, and for whatever reason today we just lacked a little physicality. They punched us in the mouth, especially in the paint. That was probably their game plan, and they did a good job of executing it.”

On bouncing back after a few tough losses…

“This is a confident group. We’re resilient, and I think we’ve done a good job of showing out all year in games in different situations like battling illnesses and battling injuries, so I know we’re going to respond well. We just got to get ready to go to Mississippi State, and put this one behind us. This is such a tough league, and if you get in your feelings losses can compound and compound. We got to do a better job of flushing this one and moving on to the next one.”

“#3 | NOAH THOMASSON | Gr. | G

On Georgia’s losing streak…

“It’s very frustrating, but it’s a part of it and a learning opportunity. You never know what can happen next, we can win three in a row, so we just got to keep working hard and get ready for the next game.”

On the team’s recent struggles…

“We are doing a lot of really good things, we just have to clean up some things we aren’t doing really well and I think a lot of these results will be different.”

On facing the zone defense while struggling from 3-point range…

“We just got to step up and knock shots down, that’s all it is. They were good looks, you know it’s shots that I see Jabri, myself, Justin, Blue and Silas hit every single day. That’s what basketball is about, sometimes it goes in and sometimes it doesn’t.

SOUTH CAROLINA HEAD COACH LAMONT PARIS

Opening statement…

“I thought it was a tremendous, competitive effort by our guys. We started off defensively and weren’t getting some things done and then settled in to what we wanted to do. We changed some things up in the second half with some zone and then continued to play well and share the ball offensively. Normally you will see a dip on one side of things, maybe your defense picks up but then you can’t make shots, but we stayed pretty consistent with our offense too. That led to a pretty good performance against an extremely well-coached and talented team that knows who they are, they know what they do well and they do a good job of doing those things. I was impressed with our ability to counteract that.”

On their defensive efforts…

“Some of our mistakes were in there for sure. I thought to myself at one point, it clearly was in their [Georgia’s] plan to come out and fling it. They have good shooters. Maybe rather than moving the ball around for 20 seconds and not sure what you’re going to get it, if you get one you let it fly, and they did. I’m not in their locker room but it seemed like that’s what they were saying, and they were aggressive to shoot. We were late with some hands up, we made a couple mistakes on some switching, just a couple. A vast majority of it is credit to them. They raised up with great confidence and shot some aggressive threes right in our face sometimes. That was a little bit different than what they had been doing. They settled down a little bit, I think they were still 8-for-19 or something like that in the first half on 3-pointers and then it started to settle down a little bit. We also played in a way where they weren’t taking as many 3-pointers as well.”

On relying on Josh Gray…

“I always use that dreaded C-word with Josh, which is consistency. I just think for young people in general that’s a challenge, for probably everybody. He’s finding a more consistent way about his game. He knows who he is, he knows for the most part what to stick to, what path to follow, where to go and how to get back on path if he gets off track. Josh is massive. Josh is a good teammate. He plays hard, doesn’t say too much, not a lot of complaints coming out of his mouth, and I respect that. We’ve done a good job of finding him. He’s gotten rebounds for us. He’s kind of embraced that being a thing he can do at a very high level, particularly offensive rebounds. As I said, he’s massive, so when we go against big bodies it’s nice to have him in there or even when we play against smaller guys. It forces them to make an adjustment.”

Author

Joe Whitfield is the sports editor for the Albany Herald. He graduated from the Henry Grady School of Journalism at the University of Georgia. He is an avid Georgia Bulldog fan and passionate about local sports in Albany. He has two daughters and seven grandchildren.

Read Joe’s stories.

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