Ebony JONES
Jasmine HASSELL
Tamika WILLIS
Anne Marie ARMSTRONG Jasmine JAMES
Danielle BENNETT
Khaalidah MILLER
NCAA Tourney Bids
Sweet 16s
Final Fours
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19
5
877
795
National Coach of the Year Awards
20-Win Seasons
SEC Titles
4
27
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Table of contents Lady Bulldog Basketball
M E D I A
Table of Contents............................................................ 2-3 Why Georgia................................................................... 4-5 Athens, Ga. .................................................................... 6-7 The University of Georgia................................................ 8-9 Winning Tradition..........................................................10-11 Campus Life................................................................ 12-13 UGA Athletics.............................................................. 14-15 Lady Bulldog Staff....................................................... 1594 42
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78
7
4.397
1 Tf -0.057 Tw 9 0 0 10 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810 810
Athens, GA
Hot College Music Scenes
1. ATHENS Athens’ ever-thriving music scene fostered world-wide megabands such as R.E.M. and the B-52s. Historic venues such as the Georgia Theatre and the 40-Watt Club make Athens a must-stop for a wide variety of emerging and established stars from Taylor Swift to Snoop Dogg.
2. 3. 4. 5.
Austin, Texas Cambridge, Massachusetts Chapel Hill, North Carolina Madison, Wisconsin
Best College Sports Towns 1.
Madison, Wisconsin
2. ATHENS 3. 4. 5.
Austin, Texas Gainesville, Florida Boulder, Colorado
Sportstown, USA! Two-thirds of the Grammy- and CMAawarding winning group Lady Antebellum are UGA graduates.
Roam if you want to to the spiritual home of alternative rock and the canine abode of Uga, where ‘How ‘bout them Dogs?’ is a rhetorical question and the soft Southern sun bathes ecletic, athletic student bodies. — SI On Campus
7
Campus Life
2x2 Floor Plan 4x2 Floor Plan
13
UGA Athletics…Success on My Levels Bubba Watson John Isner
Hines Ward
Bulldog athletes are prominent professionals in numerous sports, including football players Matthew Stafford and Hines Ward, tennis player John Isner and golfer Bubba Watson, who is married for former Lady Bulldog Angie Ball, and served as a guest coach for last year’s nationally televised win over LSU.
A.J. Green
Matthew Stafford
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Media Exposure
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he Lady Bulldogs receive maximum media exposure, annually ranking among the nation’s most-televised teams while also being covered daily by a top-10 market in Atlanta. Georgia has appeared on television more than 350 times over the past 30 years, including nearly 240 in the past 17 seasons alone. Of late, the Lady Bulldogs have become more and more popular in TV selections. Georgia has enjoyed double-digit televised dates during 17 of the past 16 seasons. In 2010-11, a school-record 20 Lady Bulldog games aired on television.
22
Sherill Baker
Pro Bulldogs Porsha Phillips (Right)
Kedra Holland-Corn
s would be expected from one of the nation’s premier programs, Georgia has long been producing players who enjoyed tremendous success in the professional ranks. All told, 35 Lady Bulldogs have gone on to play at the next level. No less than 21 Lady Bulldogs have gone on to play in the WNBA, combining to own a staggering 98 seasons of experience in the league. In the past dozen years alone, 13 Georgia players have been chosen in the WNBA Draft, including eight first-round picks. Four Lady Bulldogs have won a combined eight WNBA Championship rings. Deanna “Tweety” Nolan headlines that ledger with three rings and a 2006 WNBA Finals MVP trophy in her hardware collection. In 2011-12, nine former Georgia players also competed overseas in Europe.
A
Coco Miller
Tasha Humphrey
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Deanna Nolan
Ashley Houts
Media information M E D I A
Georgia Basketball
Phone (706) 542-1176 Fax (706) 542-7984
Head Coach
Andy Landers (Tennessee Tech ’74)
Overall Record
877-289 (.752), 37 seasons
Record at UGA
795-268 (.748), 33 seasons
Associate Head Coach Joni Crenshaw (Alabama ’02)
Assistant Coaches Angie Johnson (Louisville ’91) Robert Mosley (Miles ’99)
Director of Operations La’Keshia Meredith (Georgia ’97)
Recruiting Ops Coord. Kelly Mathis (Pfeiffer ’09)
Operations Coord. Jon Bollier (Piedmont ’09)
Athletic Trainer
Shannon Becker (Wis.-La Crosse ’04)
Grad. Asst. Manager Katherine Graham (LSU’12)
Student Managers
Eryn Delaney, Will Dyer, Kennington Groff, Mac MacIntosh, Lindsey Rosenberg, Connor Starrs
Student Athletic Trainer Sarah Parker
Basketball Ops Student Matt Oxford
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Lady Bulldogs broadcast statewide
Lady Bulldog broadcasts are part of the Georgia Bulldog Radio Network, which is owned by IMG Sports. IMG provides radio network production for more than 30 major college athletic programs in the SEC and other prominent conferences nationwide. Day-to-day management of the network is overseen by the company’s “Georgia Sports Properties” staff in Athens, which also handles the sales and marketing of Bulldog sports. In Athens, Lady Bulldog games have aired on WRFC AM 960 The Ref since 2007-08 and either WRFC or sister stations WNGC FM or Magic 102.1 FM since 1991. All games also air on 103.7 FM in Gainesville. One constant remains the exceptionally exciting play-by-play of Jeff Dantzler, who is in his 20th season with the Lady Bulldogs and also is play-by-play announcer for Bulldog Baseball and co-hosts pre- and postgame shows for Georgia Football. The following stations also will air the Lady Bulldogs this year: WCLA AM 1470 (Claxton) WTGA FM 101.1 (Thomaston) WDDK FM 103.9 (Greensboro) WPAX AM 1240 (Thomasville) WKLY AM 980 (Hartwell) WTGA AM 1590 (Thomaston)
Media Outlets Covering the Lady Bulldogs
Jeff Dantzler, Radio Play-by-play 1010 Tower Place; Bogart, GA 30622 (706) 549-6222; jeffdantzler1710@msn.com
Sports Editor, The Red & Black 540 Baxter St.; Athens, GA 30606 (706) 543-1809; sports@randb.com
Scott Howard, WNGC-Radio 850 Bobbin Mill Rd.; Athens, GA 30605 (706) 549-1715; solongeverybody@yahoo.com
Paul Newberry, Associated Press Centennial Tower Suite 2420; Atlanta, GA 30303 (404) 522-8971; email: pnewberry@ap.org
Anthony Dasher, UGASports.com 196 Alps Road; Suite 2-155; Athens, GA 30606 (706) 380-4801; dash@ugasports.com
Dave Johnston; WRFC-Radio 1010 Tower Place; Bogart, GA 30622 (706) 549-6222; davidj@southernbroadcasting.com
Roger Clarkson, Athens Banner-Herald News P.O. Box 912; Athens, GA 30613 (706) 208-2238; roger.clarkson@onlineathens.com
Dean Legge, Dawg Post 126 Bordeaux Lane; Athens, GA 30605 (706) 248-3576; dean@dawgpost.com
Sports Director; WUOG Radio P.O. Box 2065; Athens, GA 30602 (706) 542-7100
Chip Towers, Atlanta Journal-Constitution 1341 Arizona Bend; Bogart, GA 30622 (706) 247-5590; ctowers@ajc.com
Gentry Estes, 24/7 Sports 176 Spring Lake Drive; Athens, GA 30605 (205) 765-4499; gestes@247.com
Zach Klein, WSB-TV (ABC) 1601 West Peachtree St.; Atlanta, GA 30309 (404) 897-7587; zach.klein@wsbtv.com
Seth Emerson, Macon Telegraph P.O. Box 4167; Macon, GA 31208 (301) 728-3806; semerson@macontel.com
David Ching, DawgNation/espn.com 207 Pinefield Way; Athens, GA 30607 (706) 662-5018; davidchingespn@gmail.com
Jenna Herb, WXIA-TV (NBC) 1611 West Peachtree St.; Atlanta, GA 30309 (404) 873-9146; jherb@wxia.gannett.com
David Paschall, Chattanooga Times Free Press P.O. Box 1447; Chattanooga, TN 37401 (423) 757-6524; dpaschall@timesfreepress.com
Will Hammock, Gwinnett Daily Post P.O. Box 603, Lawrenceville, GA 30046 (770) 963-9205; will.hammock@gwinnettdailypost.com
Chip Zeller, WAGA-TV (FOX) P.O. Box 4207; Atlanta, GA 30302 (404) 898-0150; chip.zeller@foxtv.com
Stegeman Coliseum
Stegeman Coliseum Records
Individual Georgia Opponent
Points 43 by K. McClain vs. Charlotte (2/10/87) 35 by Jennifer Gillom (Ole Miss) vs. Tennessee 1986 SEC Tourney (3/1/86) 35 by Valerie Still, Kentucky (2/6/82) Rebounds Assists Steals
Blocks
24 by K. McClain vs. Western Ky. (2/10/86)
23 by Cheryl Taylor, Tennessee Tech (3/16/85)
14 by A. Shuler vs. Florida St. (1/31/91)
12 by Lori Gross, Vanderbilt (1/14/84)
10 by A. Houts vs. Memphis (11/29/06) 10 by Stephanie Edwards, Louisville (3/17/84) 10 by S. Baker vs. Mississippi St, (1/19/06) 10 by K. Holland-Corn vs. Virginia (12/4/97) 10 by A. Shuler vs. Howard (2/22/89) 10 by T. Henderson vs. Louisville (3/19/95)
9 by Meribeth Feenstra, Liberty (3/16/01)
Team Georgia Opponent Points 124 vs. Mercer (2/11/81) Rebounds 68 vs. UNC Asheville (1/23/80) Assists 35 vs. Louisville (3/17/84) Steals 34 vs. Georgia Southern (11/28/95) Blocks 13 vs. Georgia State (12/4/01)
97 by Connecticut (1/20/97)
63 by Tennessee (1/8/96) 24 by Clemson (11/28/79) 23 by Ohio State (11/30/91)
11 by Liberty (3/16/01) 13 vs. Maine (11/18/01) 13 vs. Louisville (3/19/95)
Stegeman Coliseum has provided the Lady Bulldogs with a superior home court advantage for decades. Georgia has compiled a 384-84 record in 37 seasons of competition at Stegeman, a winning percentage of 82.1 percent. From Dec. 2, 1984 through Dec. 4, 1987, Georgia recorded 40 consecutive home victories. At the time, that streak ranked eighth all-time in NCAA history. It still stands as the 25th-longest home winning streak in the history of Division I women’s hoops. Christened in 1964 as the Georgia Coliseum, the venue was officially renamed and dedicated to the memory of Herman James Stegeman on Saturday, March 2, 1996. Stegeman made many contributions to Georgia’s athletic program during his 20year tenure (1919-39). He was a pioneer in the development of college basketball in the south, originating the region’s first big basketball tournament when he organized the Southern Conference Tournament in Atlanta from 1921-32. Stegeman Hall on the UGA campus was named for Coach Stegeman in 1946 and for years it was home of the University’s athletic and physical education departments. The athletic department moved its offices to the new coliseum in 1964, and Stegeman Hall was demolished in 1995 following completion of the Ramsey Student Center for Physical Activities. The Coliseum is actually two structures, the roof and the building beneath it. The only connection is an aluminum bellows which seals the joints and permits the rise and fall of the roof with temperature change. Stegeman has undergone thorough renovations in the last few years, most recently receiving a 21st Century face lift prior to the 2010-11 campaign. The $12 million project was highlighted by the installation of glass facades from the venue’s distinctive overhang roof, creating an additional 10,000 square feet of concourse space. In addition, Stegeman Coliseum was utilized for rhythmic gymnastics and preliminary volleyball competition during the Centennial Olympic Games in 1996.
M E D I A
Lady Bulldogs In Stegeman Season-by-Season
1975-76.........................6-2 1976-77.......................1-10 1977-78.........................3-7 1978-79.........................4-6 1979-80....................... 11-4 1980-81.........................9-1 1981-82.........................9-1 1982-83.........................9-1 1983-84.......................15-0 1984-85.......................12-1 1985-86.......................14-0 1986-87.......................13-0 1987-88.........................8-4 1988-89....................... 11-1 1989-90.........................8-1 1990-91.......................15-0 1991-92.........................9-4 1992-93.......................12-3 1993-94.........................7-2 1994-95.......................13-2 1995-96.......................12-0 1996-97.......................12-2 1997-98.........................7-4 1998-99.......................12-2 1999-00....................... 11-1 2000-01.......................14-1 2001-02.........................9-4 2002-03.......................14-0 2003-04.......................10-2 2004-05.......................13-2 2005-06.........................9-2 2006-07....................... 11-2 2007-08.......................13-3 2008-09.........................9-3 2009-10.......................14-2 2010-11.......................12-2 2011-12.......................13-2 Totals.......................384-84
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Radio/TV Spotter’s chart M E D I A
Andy Landers
No. 1 Khaalidah Miller
No. 10 Jasmine James
No. 11 Tiaria Griffin
795-268 in 33 seasons at UGA 877-289 in 37 seasons overall
5-9 • Senior • Guard Memphis, Tenn.
5-9 • Junior • Guard Atlanta, Ga.
5-7 • Freshman • Guard Monticello, Miss.
No. 20 Shacobia Barbee No. 23 Tamika Willis 5-10 • Freshman • Guard/Forward Murfreesboro, Tenn.
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6-2 • Senior • Forward College Park, Ga.
No. 2 Ebony Jones 6-2 • Senior • Forward Cedar Hill, Texas
No. 3 Anne Marie Armstrong No. 4 Danielle Bennett 6-3 • Senior • Guard/Forward Norcross, Ga.
No. 12 Jasmine Hassell No. 13 Merritt Hempe 6-2 • Senior • Forward Lebanon, Tenn.
No. 24 Marjorie Butler 5-8 • Freshman • Guard Knoxville, Tenn.
5-10 • Senior • Guard Springfield, Mo.
No. 15 Krista Donald
6-2 • Freshman • Forward Fredericksburg, Va.
5-11 • Sophomore • Guard/Forward Lake, Miss.
No. 31 Erika Ford
No. 32 Kaelyn Causwell
5-9 • Sophomore • Guard Alpharetta, Ga.
6-4 • Freshman • Forward Sacramento, Calif.
preseason outlook M E D I A
Keeping the Balance In Tact Andy Landers is always excited when fall practices officially begin. But as Landers spoke of his 34th edition of the Georgia Lady Bulldogs, there was a non-traditional adjective attached to preseason discussions. “I’m excited, but it’s tempered excitement this time around,” Landers said. “But I’m excited about this particular basketball team.” Landers then flowingly talked about what he liked about the 2012-13 Lady Bulldogs. The immediate item that jumps off the page about this Georgia roster is its numbers...14 players strong. That tally should provide the Georgia staff with a multitude of options. “In terms of depth, we probably have the deepest roster that we’ve had in a number of years and I think that is going to benefit us as we go down the road,” Landers said. More impressive than the quantity, however, is the quality...and the balance. “It’s a balanced team in terms of its classifications,” Landers said. “We have six seniors and five freshmen so we have loads of experience and loads of inexperience.” But beyond the sheer numbers, Landers dug deeper into the elements that comprise Georgia’s lineup for the coming winter. “The experienced players look the part,” Landers said. “They know what they know, and it’s right. They know what it takes to win. They know the commitment. They know the toughness. They know what to expect from other teams because they’ve been there and done that. “The freshmen, on the other hand, also have the look,” Landers continued. “They have the look of a group of players that want to contribute right away, a look that their abilities would lend themselves to do that. They’re going to be critical. They’re quick learners. They’re talented. They have good attitudes. They’re developing very good work
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ethics. When we blend those two pieces together with the attributes and skills of our other returning players, I think we have the makings of a very good basketball team.” The Lady Bulldogs have four starters – and their double-digit scoring averages – back from last season. While that quartet is expected to be the backbone of the Georgia lineup once again, their varied skill sets give Landers the ability to mix and match pieces to comprise a different looking puzzle. “I think we have four positions that are obviously solid and that have experienced starters coming back,” Landers said. “But as we go forward we have to evaluate how the new people are doing in practice and what their potential is to make us a better basketball team. “I’m not opposed to change,” Landers added. “I’m not opposed to sitting a starter down and starting someone else, even a freshman. I’m not opposed to moving those starters around to different positions maybe than they played last year. Those are thoughts and options that I believe to be on the table as we go forward. Will there be just one new starter? I really don’t know.” Regardless, Landers felt confident that he and his players would be fine controlling the aspects of the game they could determine. As for the “tempered” attached to his “excitement.” Well, the legendary coach hoped that issues outside of his control would not again affect his squad. A year ago, a rash of injuries, illnesses, etc., forced players to miss more than a combined 160 individual days of practice. By comparison, Landers said the average season supplied 25-40 missed sessions. “You hear it from every coach that you talk to but I’m going to put a different spin on what I’m about to say,” Landers started. “I
Lady Bulldog Roster Overview Starters Returning.................................................................................4 No. Player Ht. Cl. Pos. GP-GS PPG RPG 12 Jasmine Hassell 6-2 1 Khaalidah Miller 5-9 3 Anne Marie Armstrong 6-3 10 Jasmine James 5-9
Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr.
F G G/F G
31-31 13.0 31-31 12.4 31-28 11.5 24-22 10.6
5.7 4.2 6.2 4.7
A
B
14 8 67 2 92 33 81 3
S
20 58 69 64
Letterwinners Lost (starter’s stats below).............................................. 2 No. Player Ht. Cl. Pos. GP-GS PPG RPG 11 Meredith Mitchell
6-1
Sr.
G
31-27
9.2
5.1
A
72
B 9
S
57
Other Letterwinners Returning........... 5 (9 total letterwinners returning) No. Player Ht. Cl. Pos. GP-GS PPG RPG 31 Erika Ford 15 Krista Donald 23 Tamika Willis 2 Ebony Jones 4 Danielle Bennett
5-9 So. 5-11 So. 6-2 Sr. 6-2 Sr. 5-10 Sr.
F G/F F F G
30-12 27-1 31-2 1-0 17-0
5.5 5.0 3.5 2.0 1.7
3.4 3.2 3.2 1.0 0.9
A
33 15 11 0 6
B 0 4 9 0 1
S
30 10 20 0 4
Newcomers...........................................................................................5 No. Player Ht. Cl. Pos. Hometown / Previous School 11 Tiaria Griffin 13 Merritt Hempe 20 Shacobia Barbee 24 Marjorie Butler 32 Kaelyn Causwell
5-7 6-2 5-10 5-8 6-4
Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr.
G F G/F G F
coached for roughly 25 years before we had a serious injury. That’s crazy. That’s unbelievable. That’s unheard of. I became somewhat spoiled and didn’t even know it. In the past 10-12 years, it seems like its been injury after injury after injury. “If you’re going to compete anywhere close to your potential – and it doesn’t matter what sport you’re talking about – your players have to be healthy,” Landers stated. “When you play shorthanded or you go through stints in a season without key players, it takes a toll. Sometimes you go through those periods where you have play-
Monticello, Miss. / Hattiesburg HS Fredericksburg, Va. / Stafford HS Murfreesboro, Tenn. / Riverdale HS Knoxville, Tenn. / The Webb School Sacramento, Calif. / Wesleyan (Ga.)
ers injured and out and you win and you think ‘Boy. We were able to bridge that gap.’ But sooner or later it catches up with you. The wear and tear that it has on everyone else trying to pull everything together.” So while he feels very good about the tangibles, it’s the intangibles that concern him. “The thing that we’re hopeful for, which we have very little control over, is that we have good health and don’t have serious injuries,” Landers said. “If we do have injuries, you hope that they’re the kind that we can recover from quickly and the kind that don’t revisit you or aggravate you or slow you down
preseason outlook throughout the rest of the year. That’s a big, quartet of returning starters. Senior Danielle big part of what I think has happened to us in Bennett, sophomore Erika Ford and freshthe past. It’s taken our depth away and worn men Marjorie Butler and Tiaria Griffin also offer a diverse array of complimentary skills. us down.” Anne Marie Armstrong, Krista Donald and Should all of the aforementioned come to fruition, the result could be a memorable Shacobia Barbee are listed as “guard/forwards” on the roster and each provides the campaign in Athens. Landers enters the season just five victo- opportunity to mix additional length to the ries shy of his 800th victory on the sidelines backcourt without compromising athleticism. James has been an invaluable cog in at Georgia. He also is just 23 “Ws” away from his 900th career victory. While those Georgia’s fortunes since the day she set accomplishments would enhance Landers’ foot on campus. James’ junior year was hinlegendary career, he would rather 2012-13 dered by a pair of knee sprains that forced be remembered for team accomplishments her to miss a combined seven outings. When healthy, James has proven herself to than individual ones. be one of the nation’s best and most versatile perimeter players. The backcourt Miller’s total 3-point takes (203) and Five true guards and three traditional forwards with undeniable perimeter skills pro- makes (72) from in 2011-12 rank fourth and vide the Lady Bulldogs with plenty of options sixth, respectively among UGA’s single-season leaders. While Miller seems destined to in the backcourt. The nucleus of the guard corps is Jas- become one of Georgia’s most prolific threemine James and Khaalidah Miller, half of the point shooters ever, her knack for scoring in other ways and ball-handling ability are just Jasmine James will look to lead UGA in average assists and steals for a third straight year. two of her other valuable commodities. Ford was certainly capable when moved from the frying pan into the fire during her initial campaign in Athens. She poured in a career-high 18 points in her first career start against Northeastern and nearly matched that with a team-high 17 in her first SEC start against No. 6 Kentucky. With a season of adjustment under her belt, Bennett, a former junior college standout, has perhaps the potential to see the most significant increase in contributions among Georgia’s returning guards. Butler arrives in the final stages of recovery from a torn ACL in her left knee suffered last November. Butler is success personified, with no less than one team (in basketball) and 10 individual state titles (in track & field) during her career at the Webb School. Griffin scored in bunches throughout her prep career in the Magnolia State, aver-
M E D I A
aging more than 20 points per game as a sophomore, junior and senior while securing first-team All-State recognition during her final two seasons.
The frontcourt
In addition to the trio of aforementioned “guard/forward” players, Georgia also features five more traditional inside presences. Returning starters Jasmine Hassell and Armstrong, who both earned honorable mention All-America recognition from the WBCA last season, remain in place as proven rock-solid performers at the ‘5’ and ‘4’ spots, respectivley. Seniors Tamika Willis and Ebony Jones and freshmen Kaelyn Causwell and Merritt Hempe, along with Donald and Barbee, give UGA a deep and diverse group of forwards. Hassell emerged as a dominating and In SEC play last season, Anne Marie Armstrong led Georgia in ppg, rpg, 3-point FG pct., FT pct., consistent low-post performer a year ago. apg, bpg and spg. She averaged a team-best 13.0 points per game and did so at the third-most efficient Donald, too, was hindered by a nagging FG percentage in the SEC (.543). Hassell PCL injury in her left knee. When healthy, also notched more double-digit outings (23) she proved to own a confident game from than she did in 68 games combined as a 15 feet in and a knack as perhaps Georgia’s freshman and sophomore (20). most explosive leaper on the boards. Armstrong was tabbed first-team All-SEC Barbee was the key component to Riverby league coaches after emerging as the dale High’s juggernaut of late. A two-time league’s most diverse player. Last season, Miss Tennessee Basketball for Class AAA, she amazingly led the Lady Bulldogs in total she completed her career with eye-grabbing rebounds (191), assists (92), blocks (33) and tallies of 2,221 points, 1,416 boards and 468 steals (69) and in SEC play ranked among steals...and a pair of state titles. the league’s top-10 leaders in no less than Causwell also comes to Athens from a nine of 13 statistical categories kept. pair of rich basketball traditions. She was Willis showed flashes of the potential a member of four straight state title teams that had her ranked among the nation’s top at Wesleyan School, and her father, Duane, 40 recruits four years ago, none more so was a standout collegiate player at Temple than her nine-point outburst in the first half who enjoyed a 12-year NBA career. against archrival Georgia Tech. Hempe’s impressive contributions at StafJones missed all but one game a year ford High School increased significantly as ago due to knee and ankle injuries but also her career progressed, from 12.6 ppg as a has shown a rare combination of height sophomore to 20.0 as a junior to 23.7 (deand speed that provides the potential for a spite constant multiple defender attention) breakout final season in Athens. as a senior.
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personnel
In this section...
Andy Landers bio.................................................. 42-43 Andy Landers by the numbers....................................44 Joni Crenshaw bio.......................................................45 Angie Johnson bio.......................................................46 Robert Mosley bio.......................................................47 La’Keshia Frett Meredith bio.......................................48 Support Staff bios.................................................. 49-52 Administration bios......................................................53 Khaalidah Miller bio............................................... 54-55 Ebony Jones bio.................................................... 56-57 Anne Marie Armstrong bio..................................... 58-60 Danielle Bennett bio.............................................. 61-62 Jasmine James bio................................................ 63-65 Tiaria Griffin bio...........................................................66 Jasmine Hassell bio.............................................. 67-69 Merritt Hempe bio........................................................70 Krista Donald bio................................................... 71-72 Shacobia Barbee bio...................................................73 Tamika Willis bio.................................................... 74-76 Marjorie Butler bio.......................................................77 Erika Ford bio........................................................ 78-79 Kaelyn Causwell bio....................................................80
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Staff Biographies
Andy
Landers
P E R S O N N E L
Head Coach ◊ 38th Season Overall (877-289) ◊ 34th Season at Georgia (795-268) ◊ Tennessee Tech ’74 It’s a late afternoon in mid-July and a former Lady Bulldog is en route back to Athens for a quick visit. In the car is a bag of assorted home-grown vegetables intended for delivery to Andy Landers’ house. When the player drives up to Landers’ home late in the day, she finds him in the midst of cutting his grass...with the same meticolous attention to detail that he uses to draw up a practice plan on a daily basis. The obvious question has to be posed. How many college coaches in any sport with 877 career victories can be found pushing a lawnmower? The aforementioned anecdote tells you all you need to know about Landers, the first and still only full-time women’s basketball head coach in the University of Georgia’s history. Landers has long preached that “hard work is what built Georgia Basketball and what continues to be the backbone of everything we do.” And that goes for him, too.
Formative years on the farm
Landers’ work ethic and love of basketball were forged on a farm in Maryville, Tenn., where summers weren’t spent lounging. There was always a project or a chore. And on the rare occasion when there wasn’t, Landers fostered an affinity for basketball. “I grew up as a kid in the rural country,” Landers said. “You can’t go out and play baseball or football by yourself, but you can shoot hoops. When there are no other kids and you’re looking for something to do, that’s what you have. I gravitated towards basketball and fell in love with it at an early age. I played on teams starting in elementary school all the way up through high school.” And at an early age, Landers knew that coaching basketball was in his blood and in his future.
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“I was in sixth grade when I decided that’s what I wanted to do,” Landers said. “A lot of it had to do with the fact that I had an uncle, A.J. Wilson, who coached at one of the county high schools and had incredible success with both football and basketball. Sometimes experiences like that just stick with you.”
From 12-year-old dreamer to 26-year-old UGA coach Once Andy Landers, just a dozen years old, decided that coaching would be his chosen profession, he blazed a trail to prominence. He became head coach at Roane State College in Harriman, Tenn., when he was just 22 and proceded to compile an 82-21 record and notch two top-10 national finishes in four seasons. He then set his sites on something significantly bigger. The date was March 7, 1979, when Landers fired off a letter to Vince Dooley, the University of Georgia’s newly named Athletics Director, to inquire about interviewing to become UGA’s head coach. “For the past couple of years I have been possessed with the idea that the University of Georgia should feature the outstanding women’s basketball program in America,” Landers stated in the correspondance’s second paragraph. “Georgia has the potential necessary to achieve this recognition and my ultimate goal in coaching is to take a major college basketball program and build it from the ground up into an immediate national power.” About six weeks later – April 24, 1979 – a 26-year-old Landers was introduced as the Lady Bulldogs’ initial full-time head coach. Under Landers’ direction, the Lady Bulldogs quickly ascended from a program which may not have been even the fifth-best in the state of Georgia to one that is now among the top-5 nationally in virtually every ranking imaginable.
Staff Biographies
Angie
Johnson
P E R S O N N E L
Assistant Coach ◊ 19th Season as a Collegiate Coach ◊ 1st Season at Georgia ◊ Louisville ’91
Angie Johnson, who possesses nearly two ally by ESPN’s Hoopgurlz in the falls of decades of coaching experience in the Big Personal 2009 and 2007, respectively. In addition, Ten and Atlantic Coast Conferences, joined Birthdate: January 13, 1969 the Seminoles signed at least two top-100 Hometown: Ashland, Ky. the Lady Bulldogs’ staff in June 2012. prospects during five of the past six years. “Angie’s work over the past 15 years was Education Off the court, Johnson worked closely with paramount to the success of the Florida High School: Florida State’s athletic academic support State program, and we look forward to her staff in monitoring the academic progress Ashland Paul G. Blazer (’87) having that impact at the University of Geor- College: of the team and helped the Seminoles gia,” Andy Landers said. “Angie is extremely achieve unprecedented performances in the Louisville (’02) – Biology well connected in the recruiting world, very classroom. Florida State had 25 members well organized and has all the values and Career Milestones on the All-ACC Academic Women’s Basqualities that we want on our coaching staff.” ◊ Four-year letterwinner at ketball Team since the award’s inception in Louisville Johnson had been at Florida State since 1998. FSU also had an ACC-best 67 ACC 1997. In addition, she was an assistant ◊ Ranked among the Academic Honor Roll selections. In 2007-08 Cardinals’ top-10 career coach at Wisconsin from 1994-97. and in 2008-09, Mara Freshour earned Acaleaders in rebounds and In Johnson’s 18 seasons of coaching at demic All-ACC honors as well as ESPN The games played the Division I level, 12 teams have advanced Magazine Academic All-District accolades. to postseason play. That tally includes 10 Coaching Career Prior to coaching collegiately, Johnson trips to the NCAA Tournament (eight at FSU Wisconsin was the assistant coach at her alma mater, and two at Wisconsin), including Florida 1994-97 Assistant Coach Paul G. Blazer High School. Florida State State’s first-ever “Elite Eight” in 2010. Johnson was a four-year letterwinner at “UGA has one of the richest winning 1997-12 Assistant Coach Louisville from 1987-91 and ranked among histories in women’s basketball and has Georgia the Cardinals’ top-10 leaders in career reAssistant Coach every component needed to be even more 2012 bounds (621) and games played (120) when of a national powerhouse,” Johnson said. she graduated. “Its first-rate facilities, academic excellence and amazing Johnson, who earned her bachelor’s degree in biology, athletic traditions are among the things that initially draw you was a standout off the court as well. She was a Woodford in, but what I continually hear from staff and players is that R. Porter Scholar and recipient of the 1991 Ed Kallay Senior the family atmosphere created by Coach Landers is the best Award, the highest honor the athletic department bestows, part of Georgia Basketball. To have this opportunity to work which is given to the male and female senior athlete for exalongside him is an honor and I couldn’t be more thrilled.” emplifying the characteristics of leadership, exuberance for As Florida State’s recruiting coordinator, Johnson helped sport, devotion to U of L, commitment to community service assemble classes that were ranked No. 6 and No. 7 nation- and dedication to excellence in their sport.
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Staff Biographies
La’Keshia
Meredith
P E R S O N N E L
Director of Basketball Operations ◊ 8th Season at Georgia ◊ 2nd season as DOBO ◊ Georgia ’97 La’Keshia Meredith, a four-time All-SEC She was a Naismith All-America pick as performer for Georgia and seven-year Personal a junior and earned All-America recognition standout in the WNBA as the former Birthdate: June 12, 1975 from Naismith, the U.S. Basketball Writers La’Keshia Frett, joined the Lady Bulldog Hometown: Hampton, Va. Association and the Associated Press (third staff in October 2005. She served as an Family: Married Dion Meredith team) as a senior in 1997. All told, Frett in August 2009 assistant coach with the Lady Bulldogs for helped lead Georgia to a combined 98-27 six seasons before transitioning to become Education (.784) record from 1993-97. the program’s director of basketball opera- High School: Phoebus (’93) “Frett” is still a frequent name within the College: tions in May 2011. Georgia records. Most notably, she still is Georgia (’97) – “I’m always impressed by people who No. 6 in scoring (1,980) and No. 8 in reConsumer Economics want to expand their knowledge of the inner bounds (842) among careeer leaders. workings of college athletics,” Andy Land- Career Milestones In 1997, Meredith was a first-round draft ers said. “That is precisely what La’Keshia ◊ 1993 National Prep Player pick in the ABL, where she played two seais striving to do. It’s understating the obvisons for the Philadelphia Rage. She then of the Year ous that it’s a tremendous relief to me that ◊ Four-year time All-SEC was drafted by the Los Angeles Sparks of La’Keshia will be assuming this role. She the WNBA. Over the next seven summers, and two-time All-America has been an asset to our program for a Meredith played for the Sparks (1999-00), performer at Georgia long time, and we’re fortunate to have ◊ Nine-season professional the Sacramento Monarchs (2001-03), the someone with Keshia’s qualifications and Charlotte Sting (2004) and the Liberty (2004playing career in ABL, broad understanding of our operations in 05). All but one of the teams has reached WNBA and overseas that position.” the playoffs, including trips to the Western As a player, Meredith enjoyed remarkable Coaching Career Conference Finals in 1999, 2000 and 2003. Georgia success at the prep, collegiate and profes- 2005-11 Assistant Coach She also played overseas in Hungary, Israel, sional levels. She was the 1993 National 2011- Director of Korea and Spain. Prep Player of the Year and then helped lead Meredith was a three-time All-American Basketball Ops Georgia to back-to-back Final Four appearat Phoebus High School and then headlined ances and consecutive SEC titles. Within the professional one of the most celebrated recruiting classes in women’s ranks, her teams advanced to the WNBA playoffs in six of hoops history that featured five of USA Today’s top-20 her seven seasons in the league. prospects in the nation. Meredith and her classmates Kedra While at Georgia, Meredith was the 1994 SEC Freshman Holland-Corn and Tracy Henderson went on to become of the Year and was named All-SEC by league coaches three of the top-15 overall picks in the 1997 ABL Draft, the each of her four years, earning first-team recognition as a first draft conducted when professional women’s basketball sophomore, junior and senior. emerged in the U.S. following the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.
48
Staff Biographies
Jon Bollier
Kelly Mathis
Operations Coordinator ◊ 3rd Season
Recruiting Operations Coordinator ◊ 1st Season
Jon Bollier was named Operations Coordinator for Lady Bulldog Basketball in August 2010 after serving as a student manager for the team during the 2009-10 season. He is responsible for film exchange and breakdown, oversees the team’s student managers and assistants and coordinates game scheduling. Bollier brought a wealth of basketball experience with him to Athens. He served as a counselor for camps at Butler, Texas, Wake Forrest and here at Georgia. He also was the Camp Director for Mill Creek High School’s summer basketball camp in 2007-08. Bollier spent two summers coaching international basketball camps as well – in Brazil in 2005 and in Macedonia in 2007. A native of Leo, Ind., Bollier moved to Dacula, Ga., the summer before his senior year of high school and started on the football and basketball teams at Mill Creek in the school’s first year of existence. Bollier played one season of basketball at Gardner-Webb University and Covenant College before receiving his bachelor’s degree in Sociology from Piedmont College’s Athens campus in 2009.
Kelly Mathis joined the Georgia staff as coordinator of recruiting operations 2012. From 2011-12, she served as recruiting coordinator at Florida State and also was camp director for Seminole Girls’ Basketball Camps. Mathis was an assistant basketball coach at Washington and Lee University from 201011. In addition to coaching post players and defensive fundamentals, Mathis coordinated recruiting, team travel and film exchange and breakdown. From 2009-10, Mathis was business manager for Next Level Training in Knoxville, Tenn. She gained additional experience working basketball camps for the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame, Francis Marion, Davidson and Maryville High School. Mathis played at Pfeiffer University in Misenheimer, N.C. She helped the Lady Falcons to a 26-5 finish and the Conference Carolinas title as a sophomore, the same season she set the school single-game field goal percentage against Belmont Abbey by connecting on 9-of-10 shots from the floor. A native of Maryville, Tenn., Mathis earned her bachelor’s degree in sports management from Pfeiffer in 2009.
Katherine Marisela Graham Rodriguez Graduate Assistant Manager ◊ 1st Season
Student Assistant Coach ◊ 1st Season
Katherine Graham is in her first season as a graduate assistant manager at Georgia. Graham was a four-year letter winner at LSU, starting every game of her senior and junior season. She is one of only two players in LSU history to record a triple-double and the only player to do it in SEC play. Graham achieved this on Feb. 7, 2010, against Ole Miss. She was the 25th player in Tiger history to finish with 500 career rebounds (513), while also finishing her career with 295 assists and 713 points. Named to the SEC Coaches All-Defensive Team in her senior season, Graham proved effective offensively as well, finishing with a team high 102 assists on the year. She was also the Tigers’ third leading scorer at 8.2 points per game. She was also selected to the SEC Community Service Team. At Ramsay High School in Birmingham, Ala., Graham was coached by new Lady Bulldogs assistant coach Robert Mosely. In her time at Ramsay, the team went 126-13 including four straight Class 5A state titles. She also earned Class 5A all-state honors as a junior and senior.
Marisela Rodriguez is serving as a student assistant coach with the Lady Bulldogs this season after a knee injury that prematurely ended her playing career. Rodriguez signed with Georgia in April 2011 after a standout career at Garden City Community College in her hometown of Garden City, Kans. Rodriguez was a two-time All-Jayhawk Conference Western Division selection for Garden City. She earned first-team honors as a sophomore after being a second-team pick as a freshman. Rodriguez also was tabbed the Kansas Jayhawk Conference’s Western Division Freshman of the Year in 2010. In 2009-10, Rodriguez produced team-best averages of 13.1 points, 9.3 rebounds and 2.0 blocks per game and also contected on a team-high 55.6 percent of her shots from the floor. Rodriguez then averaged 11.2 ppg and 7.8 rpg as a sophomore while notching nine double-doubles. Rogriguez was named third-team All-State for Class 6A as a senior at Garden City High when she averaged 12.3 ppg, 9.1 rpg and 2.5 bpg while leading GCHS to its first state tournament appearance in 21 years.
49
P E R S O N N E L
Staff Biographies
P E R S O N N E L
Eryn Delaney
Eryn Nicole DeLaney is in her third season as a student manager with the Lady Bulldogs. The Decatur, Ga., native attended Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School where she lettered in basketball and lacrosse. The daughter of Naomi Black and Paul DeLaney Jr., Eryn is a senior double majoring in psychology and sociology.
Matt Oxford
Matt Oxford is in his first season assisting with the Lady Bulldogs’ basketball operations. A sports management major, Matt is the son of Aleisa and the late James Oxford and a native of Watkinsville, Ga., where he attended Oconee County High School. He also has worked with UGA’s Sports Communications staff since 2009.
50
Will Dyer
William Martin Dyer is in his second season as a student manager with the Lady Bulldog Basketball program. The Canton, Ga., native lettered in football and basketball while attending Cherokee High School. Will is the son of Bobby Dyer and Ellen McElye and is currently a senior majoring in recreation and lesiure studies.
Kennington Groff Mac Macintosh
Kennington Rebecca Groff is in her first year as a student manager with the Lady Bulldogs and is currently a junior at UGA. The Johns Creek, Ga., native lettered in basketball, softball and lacrosse at Wesleyan. Kennington is the daughter of Bill and Cathy Groff and is double majoring in public relations and spanish.
Mac MacIntosh, a senior at UGA, is in his fourth season as a student manager with the Lady Bulldogs. An economics major, MacIntosh is the son of Susan and Jeff MacIntosh. A native of Winston-Salem, N.C., Mac attended Mount Tabor High School and served as a student manager for their 31-1 state champion basketball team his senior year.
Sarah Parker Lindsey rosenberg Connor starrs
Sarah Parker is in her second year as a student athletic trainer with the Lady Bulldogs. Sarah is a senior double majoring in exercise and sport science and athletic training. She is the daughter of Dan and Becky Parker and a native of Hartwell, Ga., where she lettered in tennis and cheerleading for Hart County High School.
Lindsey Brook Rosenberg is in her second season as a student manager with the Lady Bulldogs. The Atlanta, Ga., native is the daughter of I.J. and Beth Ann Rosenberg. Lindsey, a sophomore at UGA, came from Centennial High School where she was an All-Region basketball selection and also lettered in track and field.
Connor William Starrs is in his second year as a student manager with the Lady Bulldogs. The Dallas, Texas, native came to Athens after lettering in basketball and golf at Highland Park High School, alma mater of former UGA quarterback Matthew Stafford. The son of Arthur and Mary Beth Starrs, Connor is a senior studying history.
PLAYER BIOGRAPHIES
Khaalidah
Miller
P E R S O N N E L
5-9
◊
Junior
2011-12 Season
1 54
◊
Guard
◊
Atlanta, Ga.
◊ Named honorable mention All-SEC by the AP. ◊ Among SEC leaders, ranked No. 12 in scoring, No. 2 in 3-pointers per game, No. 3 in minutes played, No. 6 in 3-point FG pct. and No. 8 in steals. ◊ Recorded 23 double-digit scoring performances, equaling Jasmine Hassell for the team high. ◊ Led the Lady Bulldogs offensively seven times, doing so against Georgetown, Montanta State, Appalachian State, Florida (in Athens), Mississippi State (in Athens), LSU and Marist. ◊ Connected on 72 3-pointers, the sixth-best single-season effort in Lady Bulldog annals. ◊ Attempted 203 shots from behind the 3-point arc, the fourth-most in a season in program history. ◊ Accounted for 49.0 percent of Georgia’s 3-pointers overall (72-of-147) and 49.2 percent in SEC play (34-of-69). ◊ 51.4 percent of her field goals made – 72-of-140 – were from behind the 3-point arc. ◊ Extremely hot early against TCU, scoring 14 first-half points and connecting on 4-of-7 3-point FGs. ◊ The only Lady Bulldog to reach double figures in the scoring column in each of Georgia’s first four games...a streak that eventually extended to seven outings. ◊ Exploded for a season-high 23 points against Appalachian State, including 17 in the second half. ◊ Played the final 3:13 of the first half and the entire second stanza at point guard against Appalachian State as Jasmine James missed the contest with a sprained knee and Meredith Mitchell (who started at point) took an inadvertent elbow to her right eye. ◊ Scored a game-high 21 points against Marist, her fifth career top-20 performance.
◊
2010-11 Season
Frederick Douglass High School
◊ Named to the coaches’ All-SEC Freshman team. ◊ Three-time SEC Freshman of the Week honoree – Jan. 3, Jan. 20 and Feb. 7. ◊ Among SEC statistical leaders, ranked No. 12 in 3-pointers per game (1.3). ◊ In stat leaders for SEC games only, ranked No. 24 in scoring (10.7 ppg), No. 2 in 3-point FG pct. (.379) and No. 5 in 3-pointers per game (2.1). ◊ Georgia’s leading scorer in seven games – Loyola Marymount, Mercer, South Carolina (in Athens), at Kentucky, Alabama (twice) and Auburn. ◊ Became the 67th freshman to start for Andy Landers at Georgia when she opened the game at TCU. ◊ Provided significantly increased contibutions following Christmas...after posting two double-digit scoring performances in the first 11 games before the holidays, had 12 such outings in the 23 games after the break. ◊ At Florida International, was 4-of-4 from the line in the final 43 seconds after the Panthers pulled within three with five seconds remaining. ◊ Scored 12 first-half points in the SEC opener against South Carolina by hitting all four 3s she attempted, including a 24-footer with three seconds left in the period. ◊ Named SEC Freshman of the Week on Jan. 3 after averaging 13.0 points while connecting on 44.8 percent of her field goals, 50.0 percent of her 3-pointers and 71.4 percent of her free throws in games versus Louisiana Tech, Florida International and South Carolina. ◊ Named SEC Freshman of the Week for the second straight time on Jan. 10 after exploding for 24 points at No. 10 Kentucky. Her scoring and field goals made (10) at Kentucky were season-high tallies for the team.
PLAYER BIOGRAPHIES
P E R S O N N E L
6-2
◊
Senior
◊
Forward
◊
2011-12 Season
◊ Saw action in only one game – at Mercer – due to left knee and right ankle issues. ◊ Missed the first eight games of the campaign due to a posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) injury to her left knee suffered during the preseason. ◊ Began to work her way back into the rotation in late November...dressed out for the first time in Las Vegas at the UNLV Lady Rebel Round-up after Thanksgiving. ◊ Saw her first action of the season at Mercer. Checked in with 2:16 left in the first half. ◊ Scored final points in an 80-43 win over the Bears, converting on a difficult catch and lay-up in transition. ◊ Sprained her right ankle in practice on Dec. 16. Traveled to the Las Vegas Holiday Hoops Classic but did not dress out for either outing. ◊ Dressed out but did not see action against Appalachian State and Furman. ◊ Knee injury flared up after Christmas and prevented her from returning to action.
2010-11 Season
◊ Named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll. ◊ Awarded the Sportsmanship Award for all University of Georgia female student-athletes for 2010. ◊ Dallas-area native who had two homecomings during 2010 A
56
Cedar Hill, Texas
◊
Cedar Hill High School
PLAYER BIOGRAPHIES
5-10
◊
Senior
◊
Guard
◊
Springfield, Mo.
◊
P E R S O N N E L
Hillsborough (Fla.) Community College
2011-12 Season
◊ Logged action in 17 of 31 contests during her initial campaign in Athens, including eight SEC outings. ◊ A 3-point specialist, 30 of her 43 shots from the field – or 69.8 percent – were taken from behind the arc. ◊ Scored five points in 18 minutes of action against West Georgia in preseason exhibition. ◊ Popped for six points in just eight minutes of PT against South Carolina State. ◊ Equaled her career high with a pair of assists versus South Carolina State...that mark includes 17 outings at SIU Edwardsville in 2009-10. ◊ Scored her first points in SEC play at Tennessee. ◊ All three of her double-digit minutes played outings came
61
PLAYER BIOGRAPHIES
5-10
◊
Freshman
◊
Guard/Forward
◊
Murfreesboro, Tenn.
◊
P E R S O N N E L
Riverdale High School
High School
◊ Coached by Hillary Hodges as a freshman and sopho-
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15 2
CONFERENCE OPPONENTS
O P P O N E N T S O P P O N E N T S
91
Recap
In this section...
2011-12 Season Notebook.................................... 96-97 Balanced attack I-IV: The “O” Balanced attack V: The “D” Practice time hard to come by Quartet honored by SEC Trio earns SEC Player of Week FOW recognition rolls in too Armstrong leads SEC stat leaders James tops 1,000 mark Hassell a double-digit fiend Mitchell’s production up in SEC play 20 wins...yet again! Iron women to the end The most “W’s”...ever! Overall/SEC Individual Stats & Double Digits.............98 Home, Road & Neutral Individual Stats.......................99 Game-by-Game Results............................................100 Single Game Superlatives.........................................101 Game-by-Game Team Stats.............................. 102-103 SEC Standings & SEC Team Stats...........................104 SEC Tournament & SEC Individual Stats..................105 Box Scores.........................................................106-110
95
SEASON NOTEBOOK Balanced attack I: “O” averages
The Lady Bulldogs’ 2011-12 lineup sported four players averaging double digits in scoring, both overall and in Southeastern Conference action. Overall, Jasmine Hassell paced Georgia at 13.0 points per game, while Khaalidah Miller contributed 12.4 ppg, Anne Marie Armstrong added 11.5 ppg and Jasmine James chipped in 10.6 ppg. In SEC play, Armstrong led the way at 13.1 ppg, followed by Hassell at 12.3, Miller at 11.1 and Meredith Mitchell at 10.1. “We’re a balanced basketball team,” Andy Landers said midway through the campaign. “I thought we would be going, and I think we will be all year. I think on any given night, any one of about seven or eight players could step up and be very, very big for us.”
R E C A P
96
Georgia hits its “magic number”
Four Lady Bulldogs earned post-season Southeastern Conference accolades. In balloting of league coaches, Anne Marie Armstrong was tabbed first-team All-SEC and named to the league’s All-Defensive team, Jasmine Hassell was voted second-team All-SEC and Erika Ford was included on the All-Freshman unit. The AP named Armstrong and Hassell second-team and Khaalidah Miller honorable mention All-SEC.
Practice time hard to come by Jasmine Hassell’s 13.0 ppg represented one of four double-digit averages for Georgia.
Balanced attack IV: “O” by half
Georgia’s offensive balance during 2011-12 extends past the Lady Bulldogs’ individually to UGA’s team point production by period. Of the Lady Bulldogs’ 2122 total points, 1057 were tallied in the first halves and 1065 were notched in the second stanza. In SEC play, Georgia’s 1034 points included 519 and 515 in the first and second halves, respectively.
Balanced attack III: “O” times 10 Balanced attack V: “D” steals The aforementioned seven Lady Bulldogs produced a combined 99 double-digit outings in 2011-12. Georgia had three or more double-figure individual tallies in 25 of 31 games. On 11 occasions, four or more players popped for 10 or more. Five Lady Bulldogs scored in double-digits twice – in outings against No. 6 Kentucky and at Alabama.
Only four Lady Bulldogs did not miss a workout due to a health condition – Jasmine Hassell, Khaalidah Miller, Tamika Willis and Danielle Bennett. “We’re calling those four our ‘birthday party ponies,’” Landers quipped. “They’re healthy as horses so we ride them hard for two hours every day.”
The 2011-12 Lady Bulldogs furthered one of the greatest statistical indicators in any sport eight times this season. Georgia scored 80 or more points on eight occasions and improved to 433-7 when hitting that mark during Andy Landers’ 33 seasons in Athens. That converts to a 98.409090909 winning percentage.
Balanced attack II: “O” leaders
Seven different players led Georgia offensively during the season. In fact, a different Lady Bulldog did so in each of the first six games of 2011-12. In succession, Anne Marie Armstrong, Jasmine Hassell, Jasmine James, Meredith Mitchell, James/Khaalidah Miller and Erika Ford/Hassell led the Lady Bulldogs during their first half-dozen outings. Krista Donald joined that ledger of Lady Bulldog leaders when she tied Jasmine James for top scoring honors at Alabama on Feb. 5.
Four Lady Bulldogs have secured 50 or more thefts three times. The last quartet to have 50-plus steals for UGA was Teresa Edwards (70), Janet Harris (61), Cynthia Collins (53) and Wanda Holloway (52) in 1982-83 – the first of Georgia’s five Final Four teams. The 1980-81 team also had four players with more than 50 takeaways.
Georgia had four Lady Bulldogs with 50plus steals for the first time since 1982-83. Meredith Mitchell’s career-high six steals against Ole Miss made her the fourth player to top the 50-steal mark. On the year, Anne Marie Armstrong collected a team-best 69 steals, Jasmine James had 64 thefts (and the team’s best per-game average of 2.7 spg), Khaalidah Miller had 58 takeaways and Mitchell had 56.
Andy Landers said he couldn’t remember anything like it in his 33 seasons at the University of Georgia. Injuries, illnesses and even dental procedures forced Lady Bulldogs to miss a combined 164 individual days of practice. As a point of reference, Landers estimates a season usually includes approximately 25-30 missed practices. That tally doesn’t even include losing 6-4 Marisela Rodriguez before the year due to a pre-existing knee injury. An extremely abridged recap of each Lady Bulldog’s individual setbacks during the 201112 season goes like this... • Anne Marie Armstrong – illness and left ankle • Brittney Crews – illness • Krista Donald – left PCL and dental • Erika Ford – stress fracture in right leg and dental • Jasmine James – right MCL and family funeral • Ebony Jones – left PCL and right ankle • Meredith Mitchell – eye and right ankle
Quartet honored by SEC
Trio earns SEC Player of Week
Jasmine James, Anne Marie Armstrong and Meredith Mitchell were SEC Players of the Week during the season. Jasmine James was selected on Nov. 21 after averaging 13.3 points, 7.0 rebounds, 5.3 assists and 2.7 steals in wins over Georgia Southern, College of Charleston and No. 23 Southern Cal. Armstrong was tabbed on Feb. 13 after she scored a career-high 23 points by connecting on 11-of-16 field goals and logged a career-high 40 minutes of playing time against Vanderbilt. Mitchell was chosen on Feb. 27 after averaging 15.0 points, 5.0 assists and 4.0 steals in victories over Ole Miss and LSU in her final two games at Stegeman Coliseum. Her 20 points vs. the Rebels were her most ever in SEC play.
FOW recognition rolls in too
Both of the Lady Bulldogs’ first-year players secured SEC Freshman of the Week honors.
SEASON NOTEBOOK Krista Donald was named as such on Feb. 6, a day after she posted game-high tallies of 18 points and nine rebounds in a victory at Alabama. Erika Ford won the accolade on Jan. 2 after averaging 9.5 points and 6.0 rebounds in a pair of wins over Furman and Arkansas. Nine Lady Bulldogs have captured SEC FOW honors 20 times since its inception in 2006, including Donald, Ford, Jasmine Hassell, Jasmine James and Khaalidah Miller.
Armstrong tops SEC stats leaders
In stats for SEC games only, Anne Marie Armstrong led the league with nine top-10 listings among the 13 categories kept as outlined in the next column. Armstrong was No. 3 in steals; No. 6 in rebounding; No. 6 in defensive rebounds; No. 6 in assists; No. 6 in minutes played; No. 7 in scoring; No. 7 in blocks; No. 8 in FG pct.; and No. 9 in assists-to-TOs.
SEC Only Top-10 Stat leaders
20 wins...yet again!
UGA By The Numbers
With UGA’s Feb. 16 win at South Carolina, the Lady Bulldogs notched their 27th 20-win campaign during Andy Landers’ 33 seasons in Athens...and Landers’ 30th in 37 campaigns as a collegiate head coach. According to us (Georgia includes his three 20-win efforts at Roane State in his career totals), Landers’ total of 30 20-win campaigns ranks third all-time. James tops 1,000 mark According to the NCAA (it doesn’t count Jasmine James became Lady Bulldog Bas- Roane since it’s a two-year school), he’s now ketball’s 32nd 1,000-point career scorer with tied for fifth with 27 20-win efforts. 7:42 left in the second half at South Carolina 20-win years...what UGA says on Feb. 16. Rk. Coach, school No. James is the first player to wear “No. 10” 1. Pat Summitt 36 since Saudia Roundtree won 1996 National 2. C. Vivian Stringer, Rutgers 32 Player of the Year honors. Roundtree, a 3. Andy Landers, Georgia 30 native of Anderson, S.C., was in Columbia 20-win years...what NCAA says cheering on her alma mater when James Rk. Coach, school No. topped the millennium mark. 1. Pat Summitt 36
Overall................................22-9 / 11-5 (3rd) Home................................................ 13-2 Away:.................................................. 7-3 Neutral:............................................... 2-4 Day Games:......................................... 11-5 Night Games:....................................... 11-4 November Games:................................. 6-1 December Games:................................. 5-1 January Games:..................................... 5-4 February Games:................................... 6-1 March Games:........................................ 0-2 Monday Games:..................................... 0-1 Tuesday Games:.................................... 3-0 Wednesday Games:............................... 2-0 Thursday Games:................................... 6-3 Friday Games:........................................ 1-1 Saturday Games:................................... 0-1 Sunday Games:.................................... 10-3 Overtime Games:................................... 0-0 Television Games:.................................. 9-6 vs. Ranked Opponents:.......................... 3-5
Hassell a double-digit fiend
Georgia’s record when...
Rk. Player, School 1. Anne Marie Armstrong, Georgia 2. Jennifer George, Florida Glory Johnson, Tennessee A’dia Mathies, Kentucky Valencia McFarland, Ole Miss 6. Tiffany Clarke, Vanderbilt Christina Foggie, Vanderbilt
Cat. 9 6 6 6 6 5 5
2. C. Vivian Stringer, Rutgers 3. Jody Conradt, Texas Jasmine Hassell recorded her 20th double4. Sylvia Hatchell, North Carolina figure performance of the season at South 5. Andy Landers, Georgia Carolina, the 26th game of 2011-12. Robin Selvig, Montana By contrast, Hassell had 20 double-digit Tara VanDerveer, Stanford
32 29 28 27 27 27
outings in 68 games combined during her first two seasons at UGA. Iron women to the end FYI, Hassell finished the season tied with Anne Marie Armstrong, Jasmine James, Khaalidh Miller with a team-high 23 double- Khaalidah Miller and Meredith Mitchell played figure outings during 2011-12. all 40 minutes at South Carolina on Feb. 16. All told, five different Lady Bulldogs – add Mitchell’s production up in SEC play Erika Ford – played 40 minutes 25 times. Senior Meredith Mitchell’s statistical Conversely, only six opposing players played contributions made significant jumps during every second of a game. Georgia’s SEC slate. The Midfield, Ala., native averaged 7.6 The most “W’s”...ever! points, 4.4 rebounds and 1.9 assists in 13 The combined coaching victories on the non-conference games. sidelines for the Jan. 29 game between Mitchell then averaged 10.1 ppg, 5.9 rpg Georgia and Tennessee represented the most and 2.8 apg in 16 league outings...numbers in the history of women’s college basketball. that were even deflated slightly by the fact At that point, Andy Landers and Pat Sumthat she only played two minutes at Alabama mitt had recorded 871 and 1,086 wins, reAnne Marie Armstrong was on the SEC’s most oc- on Feb. 5 due to an injury suffered early in spectively, during their careers. That added mplete players. that contest. up to a staggering 1,957 total victories.
The Lady Bulldogs’ record was...
Leading at Halftime:............................. 20-2 Home Games:.................................. 12-1 Road Games:..................................... 6-0 Neutral Games:.................................. 2-1 Trailing at Halftime:................................. 1-7 Home Games:.................................... 0-1 Road Games:..................................... 1-3 Neutral Games:.................................. 0-3 Tied at Halftime:..................................... 1-0 Home Games:.................................... 1-0 Road Games:..................................... 0-0 Neutral Games:.................................. 0-0 UGA Shoots 50 percent or better:.......... 3-0 UGA Shoots 40-49 percent:................. 17-4 UGA Shoots 39 percent or less:............. 2-5 Opp. Shoots 50 percent or better:.......... 0-3 Opp. Shoots 40-49 percent:................... 6-2 Opp. Shoots 30-39 percent:................. 13-4 Opp. Shoots 29 percent or less:............. 3-0 UGA Outrebounds (or ties) Opp.:......... 16-2 Opp. Outrebounds Georgia.................... 6-7 UGA Has Fewer (or equal) TOs:.......... 19-7 Opp. Has Fewer TOs:............................. 3-2 UGA Scores 80 points or more:.............. 8-0 UGA Scores 70-79 points:...................... 5-1 UGA Scores 69 points or less:............... 9-8
R E C A P
97
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS All Games: 22-9 (13-2 home; 7-3 Road; 2-4 Neutral)
No. Player G-GS MP-Avg. FG-FGA Pct. 3FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A TO B 12 Jasmine Hassell 31-31 836-27.0 164-302 .543 0-0 .000 74-119 .622 176-5.7 14 53 8 1 Khaalidah Miller 31-31 1071-34.5 140-369 .379 72-203 .355 32-41 .780 131-4.2 67 50 2 3 Anne Marie Armstrong 31-28 960-31.0 141-309 .456 23-66 .348 50-66 .758 191-6.2 92 85 33 10 Jasmine James 24-22 810-33.8 91-234 .389 19-62 .306 53-86 .616 113-4.7 81 66 3 11 Meredith Mitchell 31-27 986-31.8 107-267 .401 16-57 .281 54-84 .643 159-5.1 72 65 9 31 Erika Ford 30-12 622-20.7 65-191 .340 7-34 .206 27-45 .600 103-3.4 33 47 0 15 Krista Donald 27-1 354-13.1 47-97 .485 3-5 .600 37-55 .673 86-3.2 15 33 4 23 Tamika Willis 31-2 401-12.9 46-87 .529 0-1 .000 15-25 .600 100-3.2 11 30 9 2 Ebony Jones 1-0 4-4.0 1-2 .500 0-0 .000 0-1 .000 1-1.0 0 0 0 4 Danielle Bennett 17-0 114-6.7 11-43 .256 6-30 .200 1-2 .500 15-0.9 6 15 1 33 Brittney Crews 13-1 42-3.2 2-6 .333 1-3 .333 2-4 .500 2-0.2 1 5 0 TEAM 130-4.2 13 Total 31 815-1907 .427 147-461 .319 345-528 .653 1207-38.9 392 462 69 Opponents 31 662-1712 .387 150-508 .295 323-489 .661 1122-36.2 337 611 109
BY PERIOD Georgia Opponents
1st 1057 832
2nd OT 1065 965 -
DEADBALL REBOUNDS Georgia Opponents
Total 2122 1797
S 20 58 69 64 57 30 10 20 0 4 2
Pts.-Avg 402-13.0 384-12.4 355-11.5 254-10.6 284-9.2 164-5.5 134-5.0 107-3.5 2-2.0 29-1.7 7-0.5
334 212
2122-68.5 1797-58.0
TOTAL 91 71
SEC Regular Season Games: 11-5 (6-2 home; 5-3 Road)
Jasmine James
Player G-GS MP-Avg. FG-FGA Pct. 3FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. OR DR Rebs.-Avg. PF-D A TO B S Pts.-Avg. Anne Marie Armstrong 16-16 545-34.1 84-175 .480 12-35 .343 29-39 .744 37 71 108-6.8 46-2 49 50 25 33 209-13.1 Jasmine Hassell 16-16 436-27.3 84-169 .497 0-0 .000 29-52 .558 48 39 87-5.4 46-0 6 31 3 13 197-12.3 Khaalidah Miller 16-16 571-35.7 67-186 .360 34-103 .330 10-14 .714 16 56 72-4.5 22-0 35 24 1 30 178-11.1 Meredith Mitchell 16-16 560-35.0 60-146 .411 11-33 .333 30-49 .612 33 62 95-5.9 41-2 45 39 6 32 161-10.1 Jasmine James 11-9 340-30.9 35-96 .365 7-21 .333 27-42 .643 6 31 37-3.4 28-1 31 32 1 21 104-9.5 Erika Ford 16-6 335-20.9 33-93 .355 2-13 .154 11-19 .579 26 29 55-3.4 25-0 18 24 0 16 79-4.9 Krista Donald 5 11 0 4 12-0 134-11.2 19-46 .413 1-1 1.000 14-23 .609 14 17 31-2.6 15-0 53-4.4 Tamika Willis 16-0 202-12.6 16-28 .571 0-0 .000 11-16 .688 16 25 41-2.6 22-0 5 11 4 8 43-2.7 Danielle Bennett 8-0 63-7.9 4-26 .154 2-17 .118 0-0 .000 3 7 10-1.3 9-0 1 8 1 3 10-1.3 0 1 1 0 0 Brittney Crews 6-1 14-2.3 0-1 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0 0-0.0 2-0 0-0.0 TEAM 29 34 63-3.9 6 Total 16 402-966 .416 69-223 .309 161-254 .634 228 371 599-37.4 256-5 196 237 41 160 1034-64.6 16 354-914 .387 78-276 .283 160-238 .672 228 378 606-37.9 240-3 188 293 62 119 946-59.1 Opponents BY PERIOD Georgia Opponents
R E C A P
1st 519 430
2nd OT 515 516 -
Total 1034 946
DEADBALL REBOUNDS Georgia Opponents
Double-Digit Lady Bulldogs Points
Jasmine Hassell Khaalidah Miller Meredith Mitchell Anne Marie Armstrong Jasmine James Erika Ford Krista Donald * Danielle Bennett Tamika Willis
Season 23 23 18 16 13 5 3 0 0
Career Rebounds
* – Bennett’s double-digit games at SIU-Edwardsville in 2009-10
Tamika Willis
98
43 37 44 32 52 5 3 4 2
Meredith Mitchell Jasmine Hassell Krista Donald Khaalidah Miller Jasmine James Anne Marie Armstrong Erika Ford
Assists
Jasmine James
TOTAL 50 40
Season
Career Double-Doubles Season
Career
Season
Career 20-Point Games Season
Career
2 2 2 2 1 1 1 0
6 5 2 2 3 1 1
Meredith Mitchell Jasmine Hassell Krista Donald Khaalidah Miller Jasmine James Anne Marie Armstrong Erika Ford
1 Anne Marie Armstrong Jasmine Hassell Meredith Mitchell Khaalidah Miller Krista Donald Jasmine James
2 2 2 2 1 1 1 3 2 2 1 1 0
5 3 2 2 4 1 1 3 5 2 4 1 6
SINGLE-GAME SUPERLATIVES 2011-12 single-game superlatives
Category
Lady Bulldog Team Highs & Lows High
Total Points: 85 vs. S.C. St. 1st Half Points: 49 vs. Furman 2nd Half Points: 51 vs. Ole Miss-2 Rebounds: 60 vs. Appalachian St. FGs Made: 33 vs. Mercer FGs Attempted: 75 vs. Auburn FG Percentage: .526 vs. Ole Miss-2 3FGs Made: 13 vs. TCU
Low
Category
48 vs. Vanderbilt-1 24 vs. Tennessee-1 18 vs. Ole Miss-1 26 vs. Gonzaga
17 vs. Tennessee-2 42 vs. Florida-1 .288 vs. Tennessee-2
1 vs. Georgia Tech, Mercer, Furman, Vanderbilt-1 3FGs Attempted: 30 vs. TCU 3 vs. Mercer 3FG Percentage: .556 vs. Arkansas .111 vs. Vanderbilt-1, Tennessee-2
Opponent Team Highs & Lows
High
Low
Total Points: 80 by Tennessee-1 37 by Appalachian St. 1st Half Points: 37 by Marist 10 by Appalachian St. 2nd Half Points: 44 by Gonzaga, Tennessee-1 18 by Ole Miss-2 Rebounds: 52 by Tennessee-1 23 by S.C. St. FGs Made: 30 by Gonzaga 12 by Appalachian St. FGs Attempted: 71 by Georgia Tech 38 by Georgia Southern FG Percentage: .522 by Marist .222 by Appalachian St. 3FGs Made: 11 by TCU 2 by Georgia Southern,
Appalachian St., Mississippi St.-1, LSU 3FGs Attempted: 29 by TCU 4 by Georgia Southern 3FG Percentage: .500 by Georgia Southern .167 by Mercer, Montana St., Appalachian St.,
FTs Made:
20 vs. Appalachian St., 3 vs. Tennessee-1, Mississippi St.-1, Furman Vanderbilt-1 FTs Attempted: 28 vs. Georgia Tech 5 vs. Mississippi St.-1 FT Percentage: .846 vs. Florida-2 .300 vs. Vanderbilt-1
FTs Made: FTs Attempted: FT Percentage:
Assists: Turnovers: Blocked Shots:
Assists: 16 by Tennessee-1, Vanderbilt-1, Vanderbilt-2 Turnovers: 31 by Charleston Blocked Shots: 10 by Auburn Steals: 15 by Florida-1
21 vs. Northeastern 5 vs. S. Carolina-2 24 vs. Florida-1 9 vs. Mercer 6 vs. Furman, Tennessee-1 0 vs. Mercer, Vanderbilt-1, Tennessee-2, S. Carolina-2 Steals: 21 vs. TCU 2 vs. S. Carolina-2
Category
21 by Marist 3 by Mississippi St.-1 28 by Tennessee-1 4 by Mississippi St.-1 .857 by Gonzaga .400 by Charleston, Mercer, Montana St. 5 by S. Carolina-2 0 by Georgia Southern, S. Carolina-2 2 by Florida-2
Individual Team Highs & Lows
Georgia Opponent
Points: Rebounds: FGs Made: FGs Attempted:
24 by Jasmine Hassell vs. Georgia Tech 14 by Meredith Mitchell vs. Ole Miss-1
34 by Christina Foggie (Vanderbilt-1) 13 by Glory Johnson (Tennessee-1)
11 by Anne Marie Armstrong vs. Vanderbilt-2 20 by Anne Marie Armstrong vs. Mississippi St.-1 20 by Khaalidah Miller vs. Ole Miss-1
12 by Christina Foggie (Vanderbilt-1) 24 by Christina Foggie (Vanderbilt-1) 24 by Tyaunna Marshall (Georgia Tech)
3FGs Made: 3FGs Attempted: FTs Made:
5 by Khaalidah Miller vs. TCU, Georgetown, Marist 12 by Khaalidah Miller vs. Arkansas, Marist
7 by Christina Foggie (Vanderbilt-1) 16 by Christina Foggie (Vanderbilt-1)
5 Georgia Southern
9 by Meredith Mitchell vs. Tennessee-2 FTs Attempted: 12 by Meredith Mitchell vs. Tennessee-2
R E C A P
9 by Hasina Muhammad (Auburn) 9 by Lanita Bartley (Florida-2) 11 by Glory Johnson (Tennessee-1) 11 by Hasina Muhammad (Auburn)
Assists: Blocked Shots: Steals: Minutes Played:
9 by Jasmine James vs. TCU 9 by Ariel Massengale (Tennessee-1) 5 by Anne Marie Armstrong vs. S. Carolina-1 7 by Matha Atwal (Mississippi St.-2) 8 by Jasmine James vs. TCU 5 by Rachel Semansky (Montana St.) 40 by five players 25 times, most recent 40 by six players, most recent by by Jasmine James vs. Marist Jasmine Lister (Vanderbilt-2)
Jasmine Hassell
101
GAME-BY-GAME TEAM STATISTICS Date Opponent
FGs
Pct.
3FGs
Pct.
FTs
Pct. REB A TO BL STL
1/12 Georgia Florida
20-42 22-66
.476 .333
3-9 5-25
.333 .200
18-22 6-11
.818 .545
30 7 24 38 14 23
5 11 2 15
29-32=61 16-39=55
1/15 Georgia at Mississippi State
30-71 23-50
.423 .460
5-13 2-11
.385 .182
3-5 3-4
.600 .750
40 29
9 15 11 22
3 6
9 7
34-34=68 26-25=51
1/19 Georgia Kentucky
27-61 27-68
.443 .397
3-9 6-20
.333 .300
7-14 9-18
.500 .500
36 13 14 47 8 16
2 4
7 5
36-28=64 32-37=69
1/22 Georgia At Ole Miss
26-73 17-57
.356 ,298
4-16 5-24
.250 .208
5-13 8-13
.385 .615
54 15 14 38 12 17
1 10 2 7
43-18=61 15-32=47
1/26 Georgia At Vanderbilt
22-60 25-48
.367 .521
1-9 9-20
.111 .450
3-10 9-12
.300 .750
28 13 17 38 16 20
0 12 3 7
26-22=48 31-37=68
1/29 Georgia Tennessee
17-59 23-47
.288 .489
2-18 5-12
.111 .417
14-19 16-21
.737 .762
34 8 14 37 12 19
0 10 7 7
28-22=50 29-38=67
2/2 Georgia Mississippi State
26-64 23-56
.406 .411
5-12 3-13
.417 .231
13-22 11-16
.591 .688
39 12 17 38 12 24
3 15 9 10
36-34=70 26-34=60
2/5 Georgia at Alabama
32-67 26-69
.478 .377
3-8 5-21
.375 .238
14-24 9-13
.583 .692
46 15 12 41 11 15
1 5
8 9
36-45=81 31-35=66
2/12 Georgia Vanderbilt
28-62 26-56
.452 .464
7-16 6-18
.438 .333
13-21 5-10
.619 .500
36 20 13 37 16 19
3 10 1 10
40-36=76 28-35=63
2/16 Georgia at South Carolina
25-50 21-59
.500 .356
2-7 8-23
.286 .348
9-14 9-14
.643 .643
32 11 13 34 14 10
5 2
4 4
29-32=61 31-28=59
2/19 Georgia at Florida
22-57 21-55
.386 .382
2-11 5-19
.182 .263
11-13 14-19
.846 .737
32 42
1 3
11 2
25-32=57 27-34=61
2/23 Georgia Ole Miss
30-57 18-55
.526 .327
8-21 6-15
.381 .400
19-26 10-19
.731 .526
46 16 15 27 10 19
3 14 1 5
36-51=87 34-18=52
2/26 Georgia LSU
22-51 18-47
.431 .383
7-18 2-7
.389 .286
11-19 8-10
.579 .800
30 14 14 34 10 24
1 16 4 6
26-36=62 23-23=46
3/2 Georgia vs. South Carolina
22-53 21-57
.415 .368
2-11 3-20
.182 .150
9-13 14-20
.692 .700
38 33
5 7
0 0
2 5
26-29=55 30-29=59
3/18 Georgia Marist
27-67 24-46
.403 .522
10-24 7-15
.417 .467
6-8 21-25
.750 .840
35 31
8 14 8 17
2 13 2 4
32-38=70 37-39=76
11 11 11 16
11 5
PTS
Anne Marie Armstrong
R E C A P
Brittany Crews
103
SEC TEAM STATISTICS 2011-12 Southeastern Conference Standings All Games W-L Pct H A
N
Kentucky Tennessee Georgia LSU Arkansas South Carolina Vanderbilt Florida Auburn Mississippi State Alabama Ole Miss
28-7 27-9 22-9 23-11 24-9 25-10 23-10 20-13 13-17 14-16 12-19 12-18
4-2 6-1 2-4 2-1 4-2 4-2 1-1 4-3 2-2 0-2 2-2 0-1
Scoring Offense Team
R E C A P
1. Tennessee 2. Kentucky 3. Vanderbilt 4. Georgia 5. Florida 6. LSU 7. Arkansas 8. S. Carolina 9. Alabama 10. Auburn 11. Ole Miss 12. Mississippi St.
G
36 35 33 31 33 34 33 35 31 30 30 30
Team
1. S. Carolina 2. Arkansas 3. LSU 4. Georgia 5. Auburn 6. Kentucky 7. Tennessee 8. Mississippi St. 9. Florida 10. Vanderbilt 11. Ole Miss 12. Alabama
104
G
35 33 34 31 30 35 36 30 33 33 30 31
Avg. Team
Pts
Avg. Team
1800 1727 1841 1797 1741 2083 2165 1814 2005 2029 1867 1992
8-0 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-2 7-1 6-2 3-5 2-6 1-7 1-7
5-3 6-2 5-3 4-4 4-4 4-4 2-6 2-6 2-6 2-6 1-7 1-7
Scoring Margin
Pts
2664 2589 2369 2122 2228 2115 2049 2143 1840 1755 1730 1705
Scoring Defense
.813 .750 .646 .604 601 .585 .667 .634 .313 .250 .125 .125
74.0 74.0 71.8 68.5 67.5 62.2 62.1 61.2 59.4 58.5 57.7 56.8
Off.
1. Kentucky 74.0 2. Tennessee 74.0 3. Georgia 68.5 4. Vanderbilt 71.8 5. S. Carolina 61.2 6. Arkansas 62.1 7. LSU 62.2 8. Florida 67.5 9. Auburn 58.5 10. Mississippi St. 56.8 11. Ole Miss 57.7 59.4 12. Alabama
FT Percentage
51.4 52.3 54.1 58.0 58.0 59.5 60.1 60.5 60.8 61.5 62.2 64.3
FT
1. Vanderbilt 454 2. LSU 488 3. Tennessee 536 4. Kentucky 528 5. Georgia 345 6. Arkansas 380 7. Florida 382 8. Alabama 419 9. Mississippi St. 288 10. Auburn 310 11. Ole Miss 291 12. S. Carolina 372
Def.
59.5 60.1 58.0 61.5 51.4 52.3 54.1 60.8 58.0 60.5 62.2 64.3
FTA 623 684 759 784 528 583 592 655 454 489 469 633
.800 .750 .710 .676 .727 .714 .697 .606 .433 .467 .387 .400
18-0 6-5 13-3 8-5 13-2 7-3 13-3 8-7 14-2 6-5 12-3 9-5 18-1 4-8 13-3 3-7 8-6 3-9 10-6 4-8 8-7 2-10 8-8 4-9
FG Percentage
Diff. Team
+14.5 +13.9 +10.5 +10.3 +9.8 +9.8 +8.1 +6.8 +0.5 -3.6 -4.6 -4.9
1. Vanderbilt 867 2. Tennessee 968 3. LSU 758 4. Georgia 815 5. Florida 835 6. Kentucky 925 7. S. Carolina 807 8. Arkansas 751 9. Auburn 653 10. Ole Miss 660 11. Mississippi St. 645 12. Alabama 659
FG Defense
Pct Team
.729 .713 .706 .673 .653 .652 .645 .640 .634 .634 .620 .588
FG
FG
1. LSU 658 2. Mississippi St. 655 3. Arkansas 628 4. Tennessee 814 5. S. Carolina 672 6. Ole Miss 700 7. Vanderbilt 741 8. Florida 739 9. Auburn 623 10. Georgia 662 11. Kentucky 748 12. Alabama 736
FGA
Blocked Shots
1. Vanderbilt 181 2. Tennessee 192 3. Auburn 139 4. Kentucky 211 5. Georgia 147 6. LSU 111 7. Florida 176 8. Arkansas 167 9. S. Carolina 157 119 10. Ole Miss 11. Mississippi St. 127 12. Alabama 103
1. Auburn 2. Mississippi St. 3. Tennessee 4. LSU 5. Florida 6. S. Carolina 7. Vanderbilt 8. Arkansas 9. Kentucky 10. Ole Miss 11. Alabama 12. Georgia
Team
League Games School W-L Pct H A 13-3 12-4 11-5 10-6 10-6 10-6 9-7 8-8 5-11 4-12 2-14 2-14
3-Point FG Percentage 487 568 420 659 461 353 599 580 569 435 466 400
3-Point FG Defense Team
3FG 3FGA
1. S. Carolina 63 2. Arkansas 126 3. Tennessee 178 4. Mississippi St. 143 5. LSU 181 6. Kentucky 105 7. Vanderbilt 154 8. Auburn 119 9. Georgia 150 135 10. Ole Miss 11. Florida 136 12. Alabama 143
290 485 649 518 643 368 531 404 508 452 454 444
Rebounding Margin
Pct Team
.464 .437 .432 .427 .403 .402 .398 .384 .382 .365 .360 .358
FGA
Pct Team
Assists
.346 .364 .367 .370 .376 .377 .378 .383 .385 .387 .411 .415
Reb. Opp.
1. Tennessee 43.5 2. LSU 39.2 3. Florida 42.7 4. S. Carolina 37.8 5. Vanderbilt 38.1 6. Arkansas 38.7 7. Kentucky 39.4 8. Georgia 38.9 9. Auburn 37.3 10. Ole Miss 40.7 11. Alabama 39.0 12. Mississippi St. 39.8
1868 2214 1754 1907 2073 2302 2026 1957 1708 1808 1794 1843
1902 1801 1711 2201 1788 1859 1962 1928 1620 1712 1820 1775
3FG 3FGA
1. Vanderbilt 2. Tennessee 3. Florida 4. LSU 5. Arkansas 6. Georgia 7. Kentucky 8. Ole Miss 9. Auburn 10. S. Carolina 11. Mississippi St. 12. Alabama
G
33 36 33 34 33 31 35 30 30 35 30 31
34.9 33.0 37.4 34.3 34.7 35.5 36.6 36.2 36.4 42.0 40.4 42.5
Asts 506 525 459 457 431 392 439 361 359 391 298 292
Pct Team
.372 .338 .331 .320 .319 .314 .294 .288 .276 .274 .273 .258
Steals
Pct Team
.217 .260 .274 .276 .281 .285 .290 .295 .295 .299 .300 .322
1. Kentucky 2. Georgia 3. Auburn 4. Arkansas 5. Alabama 6. Mississippi St. 7. Florida 8. S. Carolina 9. LSU 10. Tennessee 11. Vanderbilt 12. Ole Miss
G
30 30 36 34 33 35 33 33 35 30 31 31
G
35 31 30 33 31 30 33 35 34 36 33 30
Blks 181 153 167 146 138 139 130 127 129 106 84 69
Stls
422 334 295 317 284 274 298 299 282 287 257 222
Turnover Margin
Diff. Team +8.6 +6.2 +5.3 +3.5 +3.5 +3.2 +2.8 +2.7 +0.9 -1.3 -1.5 -2.6
TOs Opp.
1. Kentucky 614 2. Georgia 462 3. Arkansas 488 4. S. Carolina 498 5. Alabama 561 6. Florida 560 7. Tennessee 545 8. Auburn 566 9. Vanderbilt 569 10. Mississippi St. 525 11. Ole Miss 565 12. LSU 658
939 611 622 627 616 589 566 570 567 517 516 577
Avg. 6.03 5.10 4.64 4.29 4.18 3.97 3.94 3.85 3.69 3.53 2.71 2.23
Avg.
12.06 10.77 9.83 9.61 9.16 9.13 9.03 8.54 8.29 7.97 7.79 7.40
Diff.
+9.29 +4.81 +4.06 +3.69 +1.77 +0.88 +0.58 +0.13 -0.06 -0.27 -1.63 -2.38
Assists-to-TO Ratio
Avg. Team
15.33 14.58 13.91 13.44 13.06 12.65 12.54 12.03 11.97 11.17 9.93 9.42
Asts
1. Tennessee 525 2. Vanderbilt 506 3. Arkansas 431 4. Georgia 392 5. Florida 459 6. S. Carolina 391 7. Kentucky 439 8. LSU 457 9. Ole Miss 361 10. Auburn 359 11. Mississippi St. 298 12. Alabama 292
TOs Ratio 545 569 488 462 560 498 614 658 565 566 525 561
1.0 0.9 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.7 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.5
SEC INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Scoring
Player, School
G
Rebounding Player, School
17.0 17.7 15.4 15.0 14.7 14.2 13.5 13.0 13.0 12.8 12.8 12.5 12.4 11.7 11.5 11.4 11.3 11.2 11.1 11.1 11.1 11.0 11.0 10.6 10.6 10.6 10.0 9.9 9.7 9.6 9.5
G Rebs Avg.
1. Johnson, UT 36 2. George, UF 33 3. Byrd, OM 28 4. Holzer, VU 33 5. Clarke, VU 33 6. Alwal, MSU 30 7. Barrett, LSU 34 8. Baugh, UT 35 9. Stricklen, UT 35 10. Daniels, AR 33 11. Armstrong, UGA 31 33 12. Welch, SC 13. Hogue, UA 24 14. Jones, LSU 34 15. Brown, MSU 29 16. Hassell, UGA 31 17. Stewart, UF 33 18. Perkins, UA 29 19. Bruner, SC 35 20. Simmons, AU 30
2012 Southeastern Conference Tournament
Pts Avg.
1. Dunlap, UK 33 562 1. Foggie, VU 33 585 2. Stricklen, UT 35 539 3. Mathies, UK 34 509 4. Johnson, MSU 30 440 5. Johnson, UT 36 1511 6. McFarland, OM 30 405 7. Porter, MSU 29 377 8. Hassell, UGA 31 402 9. Barrett, LSU 34 435 10. George, UF 33 422 11. Lister, VU 33 413 31 384 12. Miller, UGA 13. Byrd, OM 28 328 14. Armstrong, UGA 31 355 31 353 15. Robinson, UA 33 373 16. Ricketts, AR 32 357 17. Jones, UF 18. Clarke, VU 33 367 19. Grant, SC 35 387 20. Simmons, UT 36 398 21. Holzer, VU 33 364 22. Goss, UK 35 384 23. Sutton, SC 35 372 24 254 24. James, UGA 30 317 25. Tanner, AU 33 330 26. Watkins, AR 34 337 27. Webb, LSU 28. Snowden, UK 35 340 32 307 29. Harris, AR 30. Muhammad, AU 30 286
355 289 235 247 237 215 242 234 232 210 191 200 143 198 166 176 181 157 183 155
9.9 8.8 8.4 7.5 7.2 7.2 7.1 6.7 6.6 6.4 6.2 6.1 6.0 5.8 5.7 5.7 5.5 5.4 5.2 5.2
FG Percentage Player, School
FG FGA
1. Baugh, UT 105 2. Clarke, VU 137 3. Hassell, UGA 164 4. Johnson, UT 186 5. George, UF 175 6. Holzer, VU 153 7. Byrd, OM 126 8. Jones, LSU 103 9. Armstrong, UGA 141 10. Foggie, VU 195 11. Webb, LSU 141 12. Stricklen, UT 198 13. Mathies, UK 181
FT Percentage Player, School
182 242 302 346 326 287 240 221 309 433 319 456 424
FT FTA
1. Lister, VU 87 2. Foggie, VU 104 3. Perkins, UA 66 4. Massengale, UT 66 5. Barrett, LSU 177 6. Johnson, MSU 83 7. Watkins, AR 82 8. Stricklen, UT 87 9. Goss, UK 98 10. Jones, LSU 95 11. Bartley, UF 84 12. McFarland, OM 74 13. Mathies, UK 96
104 125 83 85 236 111 111 118 134 130 117 104 141
3FG Percentage
Pct Player, School 3FG 3FGA
.577 .566 .543 .538 .537 .533 .525 .466 .456 .450 .442 .434 .427
1. Foggie, VU 2. Alverson, AU 3. Spani, UT 4. Mathies, UK 5. Grant, SC 6. Miller, UGA 7. Stricklen, UT 8. Lister, VU 9. Snowden, UK 10. Jones, UF 11. Harris, AR 12. McFarland, OM 13. Glymph, AU
Assists
Pct Player, School
.837 .832 .795 .776 .750 .748 .739 .737 .731 .731 .718 .712 .681
91 56 34 51 64 72 56 46 60 67 71 41 54
219 136 85 135 176 203 159 132 174 198 213 125 165
Blocked Shots
Pct Player, School
.416 .412 .400 .378 .364 .355 .352 .348 .345 .338 .333 .328 .327
Steals
G Asts Avg. Player, School
1. Lister, VU 33 2. Massengale, UT 33 3. McFarland, OM 30 4. Ricketts, AR 33 5. Johnson, MSU 30 6. James, UGA 24 7. Walker, SC 35 8. Bartley, UF 33 9. Armstrong, UGA 31 10. Kenney, LSU 32 11. Sutton, SC 35 12. Jennings, AU 30 13. Mathies, UK 34
176 162 142 143 109 81 113 105 92 90 97 83 93
5.33 4.91 4.73 4.33 3.63 3.38 3.23 3.18 2.97 2.81 2.77 2.77 2.74
G Blks Avg.
1. Alwal, MSU 30 2. Stewart, UF 33 3. Watkins, AR 33 4. Williams, AU 30 5. George, UF 33 6. Holzer, VU 33 7. Johnson, UT 36 8. Armstrong, UGA 31 9. Muhammad, AU 30 10. Clarke, VU 33 McKinney, LSU 27 32 12. Bishop, UK 13. Hilliard, AU 30
G
1. Porter, MSU 29 2. Ricketts, AR 33 James, UGA 24 4. Mathies, UK 34 5. Armstrong, UGA 31 6. McFarland, OM 30 7. Bartley, UF 33 8. Miller, UGA 31 9. Mitchell, UGA 31 10. Walker, SC 35 11. Ouardad, AU 30 12. Evans, UK 35 13. Myers, UA 27
82 70 63 57 53 48 41 33 31 33 27 31 28
2.73 2.12 1.91 1.90 1.61 1.45 1.14 1.06 1.03 1.00 1.00 0.97 0.93
R E C A P
Stls Avg. 91 88 64 87 69 62 63 58 57 63 52 60
3.14 2.67 2.67 2.56 2.23 2.07 1.91 1.87 1.84 1.80 1.73 1.71
105
BOX SCORES No. 14/15 Georgia 85, South Carolina State 48 11/30/11 • Athens, Ga.
S.C. State (2-3)
Player FGs 3FGs Fox 1-5 0-0 Flowers 4-4 0-0 Alston 0-4 0-0 Knotts 3-5 1-3 Duren 2-8 1-2 Williams 2-5 0-0 Goodwin 0-0 0-0 Johnson 2-2 2-2 Petes 0-0 0-0 Richardson 0-0 0-0 Perkins 1-3 0-2 Hemphill 3-4 0-0 TOTALS 18-40 4-9
FTs Rb Pf Pts 2-3 1 1 4 2-2 1 1 10 0-0 5 1 0 3-4 2 3 10 1-2 3 1 6 0-0 0 0 4 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 6 0-0 0 2 0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 2 3 2 0-1 5 0 6 8-12 23 12 48
Georgia (6-1)
Ford Willis Hassell Miller
3-6 2-5 3-3 4-10
1-3 0-0 0-0 3-6
3-4 0-0 6-8 0-0
3 5 4 4
2 2 4 3
10 4 12
A 2 1 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 8
B 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
S MP 0 31 0 23 0 23 4 30 0 40 0 9 0 3 0 5 0 2 0 5 0 10 0 19 4 200
2 0 4 27 0 2 2 23 1 0 1 19
R E C A P
107
BOX SCORES
13
No. 17/15 Georgia 83, Furman 58 12/28/11 • Athens, Ga.
Furman (8-4)
Player Durdaller Hodges Booker Thompson Morrissey Roberts Reimer Randolph Murphy Bryan Peterson Griswold TOTALS
FGs 3FGs FTs Rb Pf Pts A 1-3 0-1 2-2 4 2 4 0 3-4 0-0 1-1 4 4 7 1 3-5 0-0 3-4 4 4 9 2 3-13 2-9 1-2 4 0 9 1 0-3 0-0 0-0 2 1 0 2 4-10 0-0 7-10 2 1 15 0 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 0 3-12 2-6 0-1 1 3 8 5 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 0 3-6 0-0 0-2 9 3 6 0 0-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 0 20-60 4-17 14-22 41 19 58 11
B 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
S MP 1 12 0 14 0 31 1 30 1 13 1 19 0 3 0 7 3 28 0 7 0 24 0 12 7 200
Georgia (11-3)
Ford 5-11 0-0 4-7 10 3 14 0 0 1 14 Armstrong 8-14 0-1 3-3 7 3 19 2 3 4 30 Hassell 6-10 0-0 3-4 6 2 15 0 0 1 23 Miller 4-9 1-3 0-0 6 0 9 4 0 4 40 Mitchell 3-9 0-0 6-6 6 2 12 5 1 3 36 Bennett 2-3 0-1 0-0 0 3 4 0 0 0 5 Donald 2-4 0-0 4-5 2 2 8 1 1 1 17 Willis 1-4 0-0 0-0 2 2 2 2 1 0 10 Crews 0-0 0-0 0-2 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 TOTALS 31-64 1-5 20-27 43 17 83 14 6 15 200 Half: UGA 49, FU 31. TOs: FU 25 (Booker 7), UGA 14 (Mitchell 4). Officials: Grinter, N. Sisk, Rezac. Att. - 3,149.
16 R E C A P
Arkansas (11-2, 0-1)
Player Robinson Daniels Watkins Berna Ricketts Peak Hatcher Townsend Gatling Williams Harris Bowen TOTALS
FGs 3FGs 2-6 1-4 3-6 0-0 5-16 0-2 2-5 2-5 6-15 1-3 1-3 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-3 0-1 0-3 0-0 1-8 0-6 1-2 0-0 23-67 4-22
FTs Rb Pf Pts 0-0 2 0 5 0-0 6 1 6 5-5 9 4 15 0-0 5 2 6 1-2 0 1 14 0-0 2 1 2 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0 1 0 0-0 0 0 4 0-0 1 1 0 1-2 2 0 3 0-0 1 2 2 7-9 39 13 57
A 0 0 0 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
B 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
1/5/12 • Knoxville, Tenn.
FGs 3FGs 6-16 1-5 4-7 1-2 4-7 0-0 1-8 1-6 3-12 0-2 1-5 1-4 1-3 0-0 1-1 0-0 1-4 0-2 22-63 4-21
FTs Rb Pf Pts 1-2 7 3 14 0-0 5 2 9 0-0 2 4 8 0-0 2 2 3 2-4 3 2 8 0-0 2 3 3 0-0 2 2 2 0-0 2 2 2 0-0 3 1 2 3-6 32 21 51
A 2 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 7
B 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 6
S MP 1 38 0 24 0 24 0 25 2 34 0 9 0 16 0 17 0 13 3 200
Tennessee (11-3, 2-0)
Manning 0-4 0-0 0-0 5 0 0 1 0 0 20 Johnson 8-11 0-0 6-11 13 1 22 0 1 2 32 Stricklen 5-15 0-3 2-3 8 1 12 3 0 3 36 Simmons 3-11 2-7 2-2 2 3 10 1 0 0 29 Massengale 8-12 2-3 1-1 3 1 19 9 0 0 35 Bass 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 Williams 0-5 0-0 2-2 2 0 2 2 0 1 9 Burdick 1-2 0-0 1-2 2 0 3 0 0 0 9 Harrison 1-4 0-0 2-3 1 1 4 0 0 0 7 Baugh 2-2 0-0 4-4 10 2 8 0 0 0 20 TOTALS 28-66 4-13 20-28 52 9 80 16 1 6 200 Half: UT 36, UGA 27. TOs: UGA 12 (Bennett 3, Mitchell 3), UT 11 (Baugh 2, Burdick 2, Johnson 2, Manning 2, Stricklen 2). Officials: Napier, Trammell, Day. Att. - 13,721.
Mitchell 4-8 3-3 1-2 7 2 12 1 0 2 32 Armstrong 5-9 2-2 3-3 7 0 15 5 2 1 35 Hassell 9-11 0-0 1-3 7 2 19 0 0 0 30 Miller 4-15 4-12 0-0 5 1 12 1 0 2 40 James 0-4 0-0 1-2 3 1 1 3 1 0 36 Donald 0-3 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 1 0 0 5 Willis 1-2 0-0 1-2 5 2 3 0 0 0 10 Ford 2-2 1-1 0-0 2 1 5 0 0 0 12 TOTALS 25-54 10-18 7-12 37 10 67 11 3 5 200 Half: UGA 38, Ark. 28. TOs: Ark. 8 (Peak 2), UGA 13 (James 6). Officials: Inouye, Morris, Pethtel. Att. - 2,736.
Jasmine Hassell connected on 81.8 percent of her shots from the floor against Arkansas.
17
No. 19/16 Georgia 61, Florida 55 1/12/12 • Athens, Ga.
Florida (11-6, 1-3)
Player FGs 3FGs Allen 6-13 1-4 Madu 2-6 0-0 George 7-12 0-0 Jones 4-13 3-10 Bonds 2-10 1-6 Bartley 0-7 0-2 Stewart 1-2 0-0 Vilaro Aragones 0-2 0-2 Shine 0-1 0-1 Svete 0-0 0-0 TOTALS 22-66 5-25
Auburn (9-6, 1-2)
108
Player Mitchell Armstrong Hassell Miller James Bennett Donald Willis Ford TOTALS
Georgia (12-2, 1-0)
B S MP 0 0 34 4 2 27 0 2 23 0 3 32 0 5 32 0 0 2 0 0 13 0 2 17 0 1 18 0 0 2 4 15 200
Muhammad 3-13 0-2 9-11 2 1 15 1 0 1 30 Alverson 5-9 3-6 0-0 3 0 13 0 1 0 29 Hilliard 1-4 0-0 0-0 1 3 2 0 1 1 17 Simmons 0-2 0-0 0-0 4 2 0 0 1 1 13 Jennings 0-2 0-0 5-8 3 0 5 2 0 3 22 Ouardad 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 1 0 2 8 West 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 Glymph 2-6 0-3 0-0 4 0 4 3 0 2 23 Williams 0-1 0-0 2-2 3 3 2 1 3 1 16 Tanner 2-8 0-1 0-0 6 4 4 0 4 0 27 Davis 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 TOTALS 13-48 3-13 16-21 35 15 45 8 10 11 200 Half: UGA 30, AU 17. TOs: UGA 19 (Armstrong 3, Donald 3, James 3, Mitchell 3, Willis 3), Auburn 30 (Glymph 7). Officials: Mattingly, Inouye, Suffren. Att. - 2,855.
No. 6/7 Tennessee, No. 16/15 Georgia 51
Georgia (12-3, 1-1)
S MP 0 20 0 21 0 25 3 21 2 31 1 10 0 1 0 7 0 3 0 15 2 22 0 9 8 200
1/8/12 • Auburn, Ala.
FGs 3FGs FTs Rb Pf Pts A 4-15 0-4 2-2 8 2 10 1 3-7 0-1 0-0 5 2 6 5 5-15 0-0 4-4 6 4 14 0 5-12 1-6 1-1 7 1 12 2 6-14 1-4 1-3 3 5 14 3 1-1 1-1 0-0 1 0 3 0 1-2 0-0 0-0 2 2 2 1 1-3 0-0 3-4 3 1 5 0 2-6 0-1 0-0 7 3 4 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 28-75 3-17 11-14 47 20 70 14
15
1/1/12 • Athens, Ga.
No. 16/15 Georgia 70, Auburn 45
georgia (13-3, 2-1)
Player Mitchell Armstrong Hassell Miller James Bennett Donald Willis Ford Crews TOTALS
14
No. 17/15 Georgia 67, Arkansas 57
FTs Rb Pf Pts A 1-2 6 3 14 2 0-0 3 2 4 2 1-1 8 4 15 1 2-3 2 1 13 1 2-3 2 4 7 3 0-0 8 5 0 2 0-2 0 0 2 3 0-0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 6-11 38 19 55 14
Georgia (14-3, 3-1)
B S MP 0 4 30 0 1 24 1 2 36 0 1 34 0 3 29 0 4 23 1 0 17 0 0 4 0 0 2 0 0 1 2 15 200
Mitchell 2-8 0-1 1-2 5 0 5 0 2 2 40 Armstrong 5-12 1-3 8-8 6 2 19 1 2 3 38 Hassell 2-3 0-0 0-0 3 3 4 0 1 0 19 Miller 7-10 2-4 3-4 4 0 19 1 0 1 37 James 1-5 0-1 5-6 1 4 7 4 0 1 36 Donald 2-2 0-0 1-2 3 1 5 0 0 2 11 Willis 1-1 0-0 0-0 3 2 2 0 0 2 12 Ford 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 0 0 7 TOTALS 20-42 3-9 18-22 30 12 61 7 5 11 200 Half: UGA 29, UF 16. TOs: UF 23 (George 6), UGA 24 (Armstrong 10). Officials: Brewton, Hall, Cross. Att. - 2,832.
Khaalidah Miller tied for game-high scoring honors with 19 points against Florida in Athens.
18
No. 19/16 Georgia 68, Mississippi State 51 1/15/12 • Starkville, Miss.
Georgia (15-3, 4-1)
Player Mitchell Armstrong Hassell Miller James Donald Willis Ford TOTALS
FGs 3FGs 2-4 0-0 10-20 2-6 5-13 0-0 7-12 3-6 2-7 0-1 0-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 4-12 0-0 30-71 5-13
FTs Rb Pf Pts 0-0 6 1 4 0-0 9 4 22 2-4 9 1 12 0-0 4 1 17 1-1 1 1 5 0-0 1 0 0 0-0 1 1 0 0-0 5 2 8 3-5 40 11 68
A 5 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 9
B 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 3
S MP 2 40 2 36 0 34 1 39 0 10 1 4 0 6 3 31 9 200
Mississippi state (11-6, 1-3)
Grant 3-9 2-5 2-2 4 2 10 1 0 3 37 Brown 0-0 0-0 1-2 0 4 1 1 0 0 7 Bett 4-6 0-0 0-0 3 0 8 0 1 0 14 Porter 6-9 0-2 0-0 0 2 12 2 0 1 32 Johnson 5-12 0-2 0-0 0 2 10 5 0 2 32 Rector 0-2 0-2 0-0 2 0 0 0 0 0 7 Gaynor 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 Alwal 3-7 0-0 0-0 11 1 6 2 4 1 32 Young 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Robinson 2-4 0-0 0-0 1 0 4 0 1 0 22 James 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 0 0 0 10 TOTALS 23-50 2-11 3-4 29 12 51 11 6 7 200 Half: UGA 34, MSU 26. TOs: UGA 15 (Mitchell 5), MSU 22 (Johnson 5). Officials: Brooks, Gulbeyan, Spence. Att. - 1,422.
HISTORY
In this section...
Georgia Basketball Timeline...............................112-113 Individual Records.....................................................114 Team Records/Opponent Records............................115 Stegeman Coliseum Records....................................116 Individual Game, Season, Career Top-10s.........117-121 Class-by-Class Individual Top-5s..............................122 Single-Game Team Top-10s......................................123 Opponent Single-Game Top-5s.................................124 Team Season Top-10s, Scoring Margins, OT games..................................125 1,000-point scorers............................................ 126-128 Year-by-Year Results, All-time head coaches............129 Season-by-Season Results............................... 130-147 Records vs. All Opponents & Conferences....... 148-149 Series Results vs. All Opponents...................... 150-160 Annual Statistical Leaders................................. 161-163 Season-by-Season Team Statistics................... 164-165 Statistical Leaders.....................................................166 Results vs. Ranked Opponents.................................167 Week-by-Week AP Polls.................................... 168-169 Holiday Tournament Results.............................. 170-171 SEC Tournament Results.................................. 172-173 NCAA Tournament Results................................ 174-175 Televised Games............................................... 176-177 Championship Teams........................................ 178-183 All-Time Letterwinners...............................................184 All-Time Jersey Numbers..........................................185 All-Time Letterwinners Stats.............................. 186-189 Honor Roll......................................................... 190-201 USA Basketball.................................................. 202-203 WNBA Players................................................... 204-205 All-Time Team............................................................206 UGA Athleticx............................................................207 Endowed Scholarships..............................................208
111
GEORGIA BASKETBALL TIMELINE Georgia’s
Milestone Wins No. 1
Jan. 17, 1974
UGA 43, DeKalb 42
No. 50 Jan. 28, 1980 UGA 83, Piedmont 66
No. 100 Feb. 25, 1982 UGA 66, Auburn 65
No. 150 Feb. 15, 1984 UGA 84, Auburn 68
No. 200 Jan. 9, 1986 UGA 97, Ga. Southern 47
No. 250 Dec. 19, 1987 UGA 59, VCU 51
No. 300 Jan. 6, 1990 UGA 70, Florida 58
No. 350 Jan. 11, 1992 UGA 83, Kentucky 65
No. 400 Nov. 27. 1994 UGA 95, MTSU 71
No. 450 March 15, 1996 UGA 98, St. Francis 66
No. 500 Dec. 1, 1998 UGA 97, Manhattan 63
No. 550 Feb. 24, 2000 UGA 72, Alabama 37
No. 600 Feb. 21, 2002 UGA 73, Alabama 62
No. 650 Nov. 26, 2004 UGA 77, Idaho 55
No. 700 Nov. 29, 2006 H I S T O R Y
UGA 95, Memphis 46
No. 750 Dec. 1, 2008 UGA 77, ETSU 57
No. 800 Jan. 13, 2011 UGA 59, Arkansas 56
112
January 17, 1974 – The Lady Bulldogs defeat DeKalb College, 43-42, to secure their first victory in their second game. It will be February 28, 1983 before Georgia once again sports a .500 winning percentage as a program. January 9, 1976 – Georgia defeats Tift College, 74-48, in their season opener and first-ever game in then-Georgia Coliseum. The Lady Bulldogs go on to finish 11-9 that season, their only winning campaign prior to Andy Landers’ arrival. April 24, 1979 – In his first head coaching hiring since becoming UGA’s AD, Vince Dooley names 26-year-old Andy Landers as the Lady Bulldogs’ first full-time coach. January 30, 1980 – The Lady Bulldogs thump North Georgia College, 87-42, to secure only the second winning season in school history. June 16, 1980 – Bernadette Locke is named to the second team of the Skoal/CoSIDA Academic AllAmerica squad. February 16, 1981 – The Lady Dogs top Vanderbilt, 9471, to give Georgia its first 20-win season. March 28, 1981 – Georgia downs Arizona State, 75-73 in overtime, in Amarillo, Texas to win the Women’s NIT Championship. June 2, 1981 – Janet Harris, the National Player of the Year out of Chicago’s Marshall High School, signs with Georgia in the first of Landers’ numerous recruiting coups. November 18, 1981 – Landers’ Lady Bulldogs enter the AP Top 20 poll for the first time in history at No. 12. Other than a two-week hiatus at the end of the 1981-82 season, Georgia remained in the poll for more than a decade until December 9, 1991. May 4, 1982 – Janet Harris becomes only the fourth freshman ever named Kodak All-America team. March 6, 1983 – Led by tournament MVP Teresa Edwards, Georgia defeats Ole Miss, 72-69, to claim the Lady Bulldogs’ first SEC Championship. The No. 15 Lady Rebels represent the third ranked foe Georgia beat en route to the crown in Knoxville, Tenn. (also topping No. 8 Tennessee and No. 19 LSU). March 2, 1984 – In the first-ever SEC post-season awards, Andy Landers is named SEC Coach of the Year and freshman Katrina McClain is named SEC Rookie of the Year. March 3-5, 1984 – Georgia captures the SEC Tourney title by defeating three nationally-ranked teams in consecutive days, downing No. 18 Auburn, No. 9 LSU and No. 12 Alabama en route to the crown.
On The Map Quickly
In only his fourth season in Athens, Andy Landers guided the Lady Bulldogs to the 1983 NCAA Final Four in Norfolk, Va., the first of what is now five trips to the pinnacle of women’s hoops.
May 24, 1984 – Teresa Edwards earns a spot on the U.S. Olympic team, becoming the youngest member of the squad for the L.A. Games. January 6, 1985 – In a clash between two of the nation’s premier programs, Georgia defeats the sixth-ranked Southern Cal Women of Troy, 77-56, in front of 7,544 fans at the Georgia Coliseum. March 21 & 23, 1985 – The Lady Bulldogs top No. 18 UCLA (and Jackie Joyner), 78-42, at Pauley Pavilion and then down No. 3 Long Beach State, 9782, two days later to advance to the Final Four. March 31, 1985 – Georgia reaches to the NCAA title game by defeating Western Kentucky, 91-78, before falling to Old Dominion, 70-65. March 3, 1986 – Katrina McClain is named MVP of the SEC Tourney after leading the Lady Dogs to their third championship in a four-year span. In three games, McClain scored 79 points (26.3 ppg), grabbed 31 rebounds (10.3 rpg), blocked seven shots and collected seven steals.
March 27, 1986 – Teresa Edwards and Katrina McClain are both named Kodak All-Americans, giving UGA two honorees for two straight years. September 29, 1988 – Teresa Edwards scores 18 points to lead the United States to a 77-70 win over Yugoslavia in the Gold Medal game of the Seoul Olympics. January 5, 1991 – The Lady Bulldogs make history as one of four teams to participate in the first-ever regular-season network TV broadcast of women’s hoops, downing Iowa 62-51 on CBS. February 23, 1991 – Georgia tops No. 5 Auburn, 7066, before what was then a Georgia Coliseumrecord crowd of 9,011 to clinch the SEC title. November 17, 1992 – La’Keshia Frett, the nation’s top prep prospect, joins an outstanding recruiting class which already includes three other prep All-Americans. The next spring, Kedra Holland, a fourth, also inks with UGA. March 6 & 8, 1993 – The Lady Bulldogs play two No. 1 teams in a span of three days at the SEC Tourney. Georgia defeats Tennessee, 73-72, in Saturday’s quarterfinals and then faces Vanderbilt, the nation’s new No. 1, two days later in the final. March 3, 1994 – La’Keshia Frett is named the SEC Freshman of the Year. March 25, 1995 – Kedra Holland explodes to score 11 of her 15 points in the last 3:15 of the Midwest Regional Championship game to lead Georgia to an 82-79 win over No. 2 Colorado. November 9, 1996 – Sports Illustrated tabs the Lady Bulldogs as its pre-season No. 1 team. January 29, 1996 – Spurred by five straight wins over ranked opponents (including both No. 3 Connecticut and No. 4 Tennessee), Georgia climbs to No. 1 in both polls. March 24, 1996 – Andy Landers and Saudia Roundtree are tabbed the Boost/Naismith National Coach and Player of the Year. March 25, 1996 – The Lady Dogs knock off topranked Louisiana Tech, 90-76, in the Midwest Regional Championship to advance to a second straight Final Four. July 19, 1996 – On her 32nd birthday, Teresa Edwards opens the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games in Atlanta with the reading of the Athlete’s Oath at the Opening Ceremonies on behalf of athletes from all 197 nations competing in Atlanta. Katrina McClain is one of eight U.S. Olympic greats selected to assist the delivery of the Olympic flag to the ceremonies.
GEORGIA BASKETBALL TIMELINE Landers’
Milestone UGA Wins No. 1
Nov. 10, 1979
UGA 88, Piedmont 69
No. 50 Dec. 18, 1981 UGA 80, Memphis St. 68
No. 100 Dec. 29, 1983 UGA 93, Miami (Ohio) 36
No. 150 March 29, 1985 UGA 81, Western Ky. 78
No. 200 Feb. 15, 1987 UGA 89, Vanderbilt 72
No. 250 Feb. 22, 1989 UGA 86, Howard 49
No. 300 Feb. 23, 1991 UGA 70, Auburn 66
No. 350 Dec. 15, 1993 UGA 67, Georgia Tech 52
No. 400 Jan. 8, 1996 UGA 77, Tennessee 71
No. 450 Dec. 29, 1997 UGA 94, Fairfield 68
No. 500 Dec. 29, 1999 UGA 78, East Tenn. 51
No. 550 Dec. 2, 2001 UGA 54, California 54
No. 600 Feb. 1, 2004 UGA 71, Alabama 68
No. 650
H I S T O R Y
113
H I S T O R Y
114
TEAM RECORDS Game: Season: Game: Season: Game: Season: Game: Season: Game: Season:
Points
125 vs. South Alabama (64) (2/25/91) 2,988 1980-81 (37 games)
Field Goals Made
52 vs. Valdosta St. (12/4/86) 1,234 1980-81 (37 games)
Season:
Game: Season: Game: Season:
Assists
35 vs. Louisville (3/17/84) 678 1985-86 (32 games)
101 vs. UNC Asheville (1/23/80) 2,554 1980-81 (37 games)
Game:
Field Goal Percentage
Season:
16 vs. Mercer (2/4/87); 16 vs. Kentucky (2/1/81) 188 2001-02 (30 games)
Field Goals Attempted
.684 vs. N.C. State (39x57) (11/30/85) .544 1985-86 (1193x2195)
3-Point Field Goals Made 13 vs. TCU (11/11/11); 13 vs. Florida (1/29/97); 13 vs. Georgia St. (1/24/90) 228 2005-06 (32 games)
34 vs. Tennessee (2/21/11); 34 vs. TCU (12/22/10); 34 vs. Ole Miss (1/22/04) 626 2007-08 (33 games)
3-Point Field Goal Percentage
Game: Season:
Season:
72 vs. Rider (12/29/92); 72 vs. Appalachian State (12/31/82) 1,717 1980-81 (37 games)
Game: Season:
3-Point Field Goals Attempted
Game:
Rebounds
Game:
.778 vs. Kentucky (7x9) (3/5/09) .416 1990-91 (92x221)
Free Throws Made
40 vs. Mississippi State (2/17/90) 545 1998-99 (34 games)
Free Throws Attempted 53 vs. Mississippi State (2/17/90) 782 1990-91 (32 games)
Free Throw Percentage
Game (Min. 20): .955 vs. Mississippi State (21x22) (2/1/09) .955 vs. Illinois (21x22) (3/15/86) Season: .781 2005-06 (442x566)
Blocked Shots
Season Average records Points: Rebounds: Assists: Blocks: Steals: Game: Season:
89.2 1985-86 (2855, 32 games) 46.4 1993-94 (1300, 28 games) 21.2 1985-86 (678 in 32 games) 6.3 2001-02 (188, 30 games) 12.8 1990-91 (408, 32 games)
Steals
34 vs. Georgia Southern (11/28/95) 443 1980-81 (37 games)
Opponent Single-Game records Points
Individual: 43 LaToya Thomas, Mississippi State (1/13/02) Team: 113 Mercer (2/13/80)
Field Goals Made
Individual: 17 Sharon Tucker, Oral Roberts (11/22/80) Team: 51 Mercer (2/13/80)
Field Goals Attempted
Individual: 35 LeAnn Harrell, Valdosta State (2/18/80) Team: 95 Valdosta State (2/18/80)
Field Goal Percentage
Individual: .842 Valerie Still, Kentucky (16x19) (2/6/82) Team: .678 Arizona State (40x59) (3/12/82)
3-Point Field Goals Made
Individual: 9 Wendi Willits (Arkansas) (2/21/99) Team: 13 Chattanooga (11/19/10) 13 Georgia Southern (11/21/06); 13 Santa Clara (11/18/05); 13 Eastern Kentucky (1/22/90)
3-Point Field Goals Attempted
Individual: 17 Cornelia Gayden, LSU (2/20/93) Team: 35 Tulane (3/20/10)
3-Point Field Goal Percentage
Individual: 1.000 Courtney Newton, S. Carolina (5x5) 1/27/11) Team: .857 Auburn (6x7) (2/28/89)
Free Throws Made
Individual: 18 Dana Chatman, LSU (2/10/91) Team: 34 Tennessee (3/5/94)
Free Throws Attempted
Individual: 21 Dana Chatman, LSU (2/10/91) Team: 51 South Carolina (1/16/93)
Free Throw Percentage
Individual (Min. 10): 1.000 Phylesha Whaley, Oklahoma (13x13) (12/11/97) Team (Min. 15): .950 Tennessee (19x20) (1/12/06)
Rebounds
Individual: 26 Susan Taylor, Valdosta State (2/18/80) Team: 63 Tennessee (1/8/96)
Assists
Individual: 18 Dawn Marsh, Tennessee (3/7/88) Team: 32 Arizona State (3/12/82); 32 Mercer (2/13/80)
Blocked Shots
H I S T O R Y
Individual: 10 Marita Payne, Auburn (1/16/05) Team: 12 Rice (3/19/05); 12 Kentucky (1/18/80)
Steals
Individual: 10 Stephanie Edwards, Louisville (3/17/84) Team: 23 Ohio State (2/6/94))
115
STEGEMAN COLISEUM RECORDS Points
Georgia: 43 Katrina McClain vs. Charlotte (2/10/87) Opponent: 35 Jennifer Gillon, Ole Miss (vs. Tennessee) in the 1986 SEC Tournament (3/1/86); 35 Valerie Still, Kentucky (2/6/82) Georgia: Opponent:
Field Goals Made
17 Katrina McClain vs. Charlotte (2/10/87) 16 Valerie Still, Kentucky (2/6/82)
Field Goals Made
52 vs. Valdosta St. (12/4/86) 38 by Clemson (11/28/79)
Field Goals Attempted
Field Goals Attempted
3-Point Field Goals Made
Georgia: .675 vs. Valdosta St. (12/4/86) Opponent: .617 by Texas (11/26/84)
Georgia: Opponent:
30 Tina Price vs. Florida (1/4/78) 31 Eva Lemeh, Vanderbilt (2/16/81)
7 Kim Berry vs. South Alabama (2/25/91) 9 Wendi Willits, Arkansas (2/21/99)
3-Point Field Goals Attempted
Georgia: Opponent:
13 Cori Chambers vs. Middle Tennessee (12/7/06) 15 Alexis Rack, Mississippi St. (2/1/09) 15 Doneeka Hodges, LSU (1/25/04)
Georgia: Opponent:
16 Kelly Miller vs. Auburn (1/17/99) 15 Barbara Williams, USC-Aiken (1/7/80)
Georgia: Opponent:
Georgia:
3-Point Field Goals Made
Opponent:
13 vs. TCU (11/11/11); 13 vs. Florida (1/29/97) 13 by Santa Clara (11/19/05); 13 by Eastern Ky. (1/22/90)
3-Point Field Goals Attempted
Georgia: Opponent:
32 vs. Florida (1/18/04) 30 by Florida (3/1/09)
3-Point Field Goal Percentage
Georgia:
.667 vs. Auburn (1/17/99); .667 vs. Loyola (12/1/90) Opponent: .857 by Auburn (2/28/89)
Free Throws Made
Georgia: 40 vs. Mississippi St. (2/17/90) Opponent: 26 5 times: Oklahoma (12/13/99): Alabama (2/28/93); Arkansas (1/13/93); Northeast Louisiana (11/28/90); Vanderbilt (2/15/87) Georgia: Opponent: Georgia:
Free Throws Attempted 53 vs. Mississippi St. (2/17/90) 43 by Vanderbilt (2/15/87)
Free Throw Percentage
.955 vs. Mississippi St. (2/1/09) .955 vs. Illinois (3/15/86) Opponent: .938 by Vanderbilt (2/10/85)
Rebounds
Free Throws Attempted
Georgia: Opponent:
68 vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/80) 63 by Tennessee (1/8/96)
Rebounds
Georgia: Opponent:
35 vs. Louisville (3/17/84) 24 by Clemson (11/28/79)
Georgia: Opponent:
13 vs. Georgia St. (11/27/01); 13 vs. Maine (11/18/01); 13 vs. Louisville (3/19/95) 12 by Virginia (12/4/96)
Georgia: Opponent:
34 vs. Georgia Southern (11/28/95) 23 by Ohio St. (11/30/91)
18 Kelly Miller vs. Auburn (1/17/99) 18 Barbara Williams, USC-Aiken (1/7/80) 24 Katrina McClain vs. Western Kentucky (2/10/86) 23 Cheryl Taylor, Tennessee (3/16/85)
Georgia: Opponent:
14 Adrienne Shuler vs. Florida St. (1/31/91) 12 Lori Gross, Vanderbilt (1/14/84)
Georgia: Opponent:
10 Tracy Henderson vs. Louisville (3/19/95) 10 Marita Payne, Auburn (1/16/05)
Georgia:
10 Ashley Houts vs. Memphis (11/29/06) 10 Sherill Baker vs. Mississippi St. (119/06); 10 Kedra Holland-Corn vs. Virginia (12/4/96); 10 Adrienne Shuler vs. Howard (2/22/89) 10 Stephanie Edwards, Louisville (3/17/84)
Opponent:
Field Goal Percentage
Free Throws Made
Georgia: Opponent:
116
Georgia: Opponent:
Georgia: 101 vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/80) Opponent: 83 by Florida (12/15/79)
Georgia: Opponent:
H I S T O R Y
Points
Georgia: 124 vs. Mercer (2/11/81) Opponent: 97 by Connecticut (1/20/97)
Assists
Blocked Shots Steals
Kelly Miller
Assists
Blocked Shots
Steals
TEAM SINGLE-GAME TOP-10 PERFORMANCES Points
No. Opponent 125 vs. South Alabama (2/25/91) 124 vs. Mercer (2/11/81) 122 vs. UNC-Asheville (11/26/93) 119 vs. Tift (1974-75) 118 vs. Oral Roberts (11/22/98) 116 vs. Oral Roberts (1/25/93) 116 vs. Valdosta State (12/4/86) 114 vs. Georgia State (2/2/84) 113 vs. Georgia Tech (12/13/94) 113 vs. Kentucky (2/23/86)
Rebounds
No. Opponent 72 vs. Rider (12/29/92) 72 vs. Appalachian St. (12/31/82) 68 vs. Marquette (1/11/95) 68 vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/80) 66 vs. Ga. Southern (12/4/01) 66 vs. S.C. State (1/26/89) 64 vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/95) 63 vs. Southern Utah St. (1/15/90) 61 vs. Tennessee State (1/18/89) 61 vs. Vanderbilt (1/14/84)
FGs Made
No. Opponent 52 vs. Valdosta State (12/4/86) 50 vs. Louisville (3/17/84) 49 vs. UNC-Asheville (11/26/93) 49 vs. Xavier (1/3/85) 49 vs. Augusta (1/28/84) 49 vs. Georgia State (2/2/83) 47 vs. Mercer (2/11/81) 46 vs. Chattanooga (2/16/87) 46 vs. Mercer (2/13/86) 46 vs. Central Michigan (11/22/85)
FGs Attempted
No. Opponent 101 vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/80) 96 vs. Augusta (1/28/84) 91 vs. Marquette (1/11/95) 91 vs. Northwestern (12/21/90) 89 vs. Mercer (2/4/87) 88 vs. St. Francis (3/15/96) 88 vs. Mississippi State (1/28/96) 88 vs. Ga. Southern (11/28/95) 87 vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/95) 87 vs. Coppin State (12/29/93)
FG Percentage
Pct. Opponent .684 vs. N.C. State (11/30/85) .677 vs. Florida A&M (12/16/85) .676 vs. Mercer (2/13/86) .675 vs. Valdosta State (12/4/86) .673 vs. Mississippi State (3/2/86) .667 vs. Detroit (12/19/88) .656 vs. Mercer (1/14/85) .643 vs. Ga. Southern (12/11/85) .642 vs. Kentucky (2/2/06) .639 vs. Vanderbilt (2/10/85)
3FGs Made
No. Opponent 13 vs. TCU (11/11/11) 13 vs. Florida (1/29/97) 13 vs. Georgia State (1/24/90) 12 vs. Alabama (2/14/10) 12 vs. Florida (1/4/07) 12 vs. Ole Miss (1/5/06) 12 vs. Iona (12/6/05) 12 vs. Stetson (1/10/05) 12 vs. Florida (1/18/04) 11 8 times, most recent vs. Mercer (12/17/07)
3FGs Attempted
No. Opponent 34 vs. Tennessee (2/21/11) 34 vs. TCU (12/22/10) 34 vs. Ole Miss (1/22/04) 33 vs. Iona (12/19/04) 33 vs. Ga. Southern (11/24/97) 32 vs. Florida (1/18/04) 31 vs. Arkansas (2/8/04) 30 vs. TCU (11/11/11) 29 vs. Baylor (11/13/05) 28 vs. Detroit (12/22/09) 28 vs. TCU (11/27/04)
3FG Percentage
Pct. Opponent (MIN. 5 MADE) 1.000 vs. Vanderbilt (1/30/00) .778 vs. Kentucky (3/5/09) .778 vs. Austin Peay (12/16/97) .714 vs. Detroit (12/19/88) .667 vs. Auburn (1/17/99) .667 vs. Loyola (12/1/90) .667 vs. South Carolina (2/3/88) .643 vs. Richmond (12/21/06) .636 vs. Georgia State (12/12/94) .619 vs. Florida (1/29/97)
FTs Made
No. Opponent 40 vs. Mississippi State (2/17/90) 37 vs. South Alabama (2/25/91) 36 vs. Middle Tenn. St. (2/12/85) 35 vs. Oklahoma (12/13/98) 35 vs. Oral Roberts (11/22/98) 34 vs. UCLA (12/5/02) 33 vs. Oklahoma (11/22/00) 33 vs. Central Michigan (12/18/97) 32 vs. Vanderbilt (1/18/07) 31 vs. Georgia Tech (12/17/01)
FTs Attempted
No. Opponent 53 vs. Mississippi State (2/17/90) 51 vs. South Alabama (2/25/91) 51 vs. Middle Tenn. St. (2/12/85) 51 vs. Alabany State (12/17/79) 46 vs. Oklahoma (12/13/98) 45 vs. Georgia State (1/3/83) 44 vs. Georgia Tech (12/27/01) 44 vs. Oklahoma (11/22/00) 44 vs. Northeast La. (11/28/90) 42 vs. Vanderbilt (1/18/07) 42 vs. Eastern Kentucky (1/22/90)
FT Percentage
Pct. Opponent (MIN. 15 MADE) .955 vs. Mississippi State (2/1/09) .955 vs. Illinois (3/15/86) .952 vs. Tennessee (3/4/06) .952 vs. Mississippi State (2/6/00) .944 vs. Missouri-K.C. (12/18/92) .941 vs. LSU (2/10/08) .941 vs. Iowa (12/20/95) .938 vs. Tennessee (3/6/04) .938 vs. Mississippi State (2/8/86) .923 vs. Kentucky (3/2/07)
Assists
No. Opponent 35 vs. Louisville (3/17/84) 34 vs. Florida A&M (12/16/85) 33 vs. Ole Miss (1/16/03) 32 vs. Morris Brown (1/7/02) 32 vs. UT-Chattanooga (12/2/84) 31 vs. Winthrop (1/7/93) 31 vs. Florida A&M (2/26/92) 31 vs. Southern Utah St. (1/15/90) 31 vs. Albany State (2/27/81) 30 vs. Florida (1/12/03) 30 vs. Midddle Tenn. St. (12/1/96) 30 vs. N.C. State (1/3/90) 30 vs. N.C. State (11/30/85)
Blocked Shots
No. Opponent 16 vs. Kentucky (2/1/81) 13 vs. Ga. Southern (12/4/01) 13 vs. Georgia State (11/27/01) 13 vs. Maine (11/18/01) 13 vs. Louisville (3/19/95) 12 vs. Houston (12/10/00) 12 vs. Tennessee Tech (11/23/85) 11 vs. Kentucky (1/7/10) 11 vs. LSU (1/3/02) 11 vs. East Tenn. St. (12/29/99) 11 vs. Alcorn State (12/4/99) 11 vs. Boise State (12/20/98)
Wanda Holloway
Steals
No. Opponent 34 vs. Ga. Southern (11/28/95) 27 vs. UNC-Asheville (11/26/93) 27 vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/80) 26 vs. Xavier (1/3/85) 25 vs. Morris Brown (1/7/02) 25 vs. Georgia Tech (12/4/82) 25 vs. S.C. State (12/19/95) 23 vs. Arkansas (1/21/98) 23 vs. Wingate (12/10/96) 23 vs. Coppin State (12/29/93) 23 vs. Southern Utah St. (1/15/90)
H I S T O R Y
Tammye Jenkins
123
TEAM SEASON TOP-10 PERFORMANCES Points
No. Season 2938 1980-81 2855 1985-86 2820 1999-00 2795 1983-84 2792 1984-85 2786 1998-99 2736 1990-91 2734 1995-96 2699 1994-95 2626 2000-01
Games 37 32 36 33 34 34 32 33 33 33
Points Per Game
Avg. Season 89.2 1985-86 85.5 1990-91 85.0 1983-84 82.1 1984-85 81.9 1998-99 81.8 1994-95 80.7 1989-90 80.7 1988-89 79.8 2005-06 79.6 2000-01
Pts./Games 2855/32 2736/32 2795/33 2792/34 2786/34 2699/33 2402/30 2421/30 2554/32 2626/33
Rebounds
No. Season 1717 1980-81 1491 1994-95 1481 1992-93 1473 1999-00 1415 2003-04 1399 2010-11 1380 1998-99 1379 1983-84 1377 2009-10 1365 1995-96
FGs Made
No. Season 1234 1980-81 1193 1985-86 1188 1983-84 1173 1984-85 1094 1999-00 1077 1982-83 1055 1990-91 1051 1995-96 1043 1998-99 1043 1994-95
FG Attempts
No. Season 2554 1980-81 2334 1999-00 2304 1994-95 2286 1998-99 2284 1983-84 2248 1995-96 2248 1982-83 2220 1992-93 2211 2003-04 2209 1984-85
Games 37 36 33 34 33 33 34 34 35 34
3FGs Made
No. Season 228 2005-06 215 2006-07 207 2007-08 203 2004-05 191 2003-04 179 1995-96 170 2009-10 167 1996-97 160 2010-11 160 2002-03
Games 32 34 33 34 35 33 34 31 31 31
3FG Attempts
Games 37 33 34 36 35 34 34 33 34 33
No. Season 626 2007-08 625 2006-07 606 2003-04 601 2004-05 593 2009-10 581 2005-06 572 2010-11 513 1995-96 489 1996-97 478 2002-03
Games 37 32 33 34 36 34 32 33 34 33
No. Season 545 1998-99 534 1990-91 519 2000-01 508 1992-93 495 1999-00 493 1987-88 490 2006-07 488 2003-04 475 2007-08 470 1980-81
FTs Made
FT Atttempts
No. Season 782 1990-91 759 1998-99 748 1980-81 735 1987-88 723 2000-01 720 1992-93 715 1989-90 708 1999-00 692 1994-95 688 1982-83
Assists
No. Season 678 1985-86 676 1985-86 657 1983-84 609 1999-00 604 1995-96 594 1994-95 591 2000-01 582 1990-91 573 1986-87 570 1998-99
Blocks
Games 33 34 35 34 34 32 34 33 31 31
No. Season 188 2001-02 187 2009-10 187 1999-00 177 2000-01 169 1994-95 168 1983-84 158 1986-87 156 1985-86 154 1984-85 148 2002-03
Games 34 32 33 34 36 31 34 35 33 37
No. Season 443 1980-81 410 1984-85 408 1990-91 394 1995-96 391 1983-84 391 1982-83 385 1999-00 383 1981-82 371 2005-06 369 1985-86
Steals
Games 32 34 37 31 33 34 30 36 33 34 Games 32 32 33 36 33 33 33 32 32 34 Games 30 34 36 34 33 33 32 32 34 31 Games 37 34 32 33 33 34 36 30 32 36
Scoring margins
Pts. 72 71 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 64
Largest Victories
Score 106-34 102-31 102-31 102-32 105-36 106-38 116-49 112-46 101-36 119-55
Opponent (Date) vs. Savannah State (12/10/05) vs. UNC Asheville (1/23/95) vs. S.C. State (1/26/89) vs. Tennessee St. (1/18/89) vs. Morris Brown (1/7/02) vs. Xavier (Ohio) (1/3/85) vs. Oral Roberts (1/25/93) vs. Southern Utah St. (1/15/90) vs. UNC Asheville (1/6/96) vs. Tift (1974-75)
Pts. 59 41 41 40 39 39 37 37 36 36 36
Largest Defeats
Score 43-102 38-79 51-92 70-110 74-113 70-109 36-73 53-90 65-101 36-72 44-80
Opponent (Date) vs. Tennessee (1/28/98) vs. Texas A&M (3/27/11) vs. North Georgia (1973-74) vs. Valdosta St. (1973-74) vs. Mercer (2/13/80) vs. Shorter (11/30/77) vs. Stanford (3/27/10) vs. Mercer (1974-75) vs. Valdosta St. (11/19/76) vs. West Georgia (1973-74) vs. Mercer (1973-74)
Overtime Games (25-9)
Date Opponent W-L Score 12/2/78 North Georgia W 63-59 1/12/80 Mercer W 87-85 L 63-65 2/2/80 at Georgia Southern 2/18/80 at Valdosta State W 99-96 L 68-73 12/17/80 vs. Tennessee W 75-73 3/28/81 vs. Arizona State 1/6/82 at Georgia State L 77-79 W 82-75 1/30/82 South Carolina 1/30/83 at Kentucky L 59-66 W 78-66 2/26/83 Mercer 12/12/84 at Western Kentucky L 67-72 12/15/86 vs. Northwestern St. W 95-94 12/21/90 vs. Northwestern W 93-83 2/10/91 at Louisiana State W 108-102 12/8/91 Notre Dame W 90-86 2/10/95 Mississippi W 80-77 12/8/96 at Tennessee W 94-93 1/4/98 Wisconsin L 64-74 2/20/98 at Arkansas W 86-81 11/27/99 at Maine W 79-68 2/3/00 Florida W 81-76 11/20/01 Middle Tennessee St. W 77-72 12/16/01 at N.C. State W 68-63 1/19/03 South Carolina W *97-91 1/22/04 at Ole Miss L *79-90 3/6/04 vs. Tennessee W 68-66 2/27/05 Vanderbilt L 59-66 12/19/05 at Temple L 66-69 2/15/07 at Kentucky W 82-72 12/29/07 vs. Florida State W 71-62 1/07/10 Kentucky W 61-60
March Madness Thriller
Janese Hardrick’s running jumper with just 0.9 of a second left in overtime lifted Georgia to a 68-66 win over No. 1 Tennessee in the semifinals of the 2004 SEC Tournament.
Date Opponent W-L Score 2/4/10 LSU W 49-46 3/22/10 vs. Oklahoma St. W 74-71 2/3/11 Arkansas W 57-54 bold face denotes double-overtime games
125
H I S T O R Y
1,000-POINT SCORERS 13. Kedra Holland-Corn
No. 25 5-8 G houston, texas
19. Camille Lowe
No. 14 5-11 G/F Macon, Ga.
14. Ashley Houts
No. 1 5-6 G Trenton, Ga.
20. Stacey Ford
No. 53 6-2 F/C anderson, S.C.
15. Lisa O’Connor
No. 43 6-1 F Cartersville, Ga.
21. TAwana Mcdonald
No. 40 6-4 C flint, mich.
16. Cori Chambers
No. 21 5-9 G New Rochelle, N.Y.
22. Janese Hardrick
No. 14 5-6 G Powder Springs, Ga.
17. Tina Price
No. 14 5-8 G Dublin, Ga.
23. Angel Robinson
No. 33 6-5 F Marietta, Ga.
18. Lady Hardmon
No. 23 5-10 G Atlanta, Ga.
24. sherelle warren
No. 54 6-3 C dyersburg, tenn.
Sea. G-GS FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 94 28-2 90-223 .404 28-39 .718 69-2.5 34 3 38 246-8.8 40-58 .690 128-3.9 61 10 78 413-12.5 95 33-22 149-362 .412 96 33-26 137-300 .457 36-47 .766 109-3.3 87 8 70 373-11.3 124-4.0 117 4 116 534-17.2 97 31-30 187-399 .469 83-108 .769 125-80 563-1284 .438 187-252 .742 430-3.4 299 25 302 1566-12.5
Sea. G-GS 07 34-31
FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 91-219 .416 105-136 .772 105-3.1 124 0 93
Sea. G-GS FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 90 26-19 75-202 .371 21-30 .700 89-3.4 45 6 30 179-6.9 66-81 .815 116-3.6 71 9 37 484-15.1 91 32-31 183-354 .517 12 30-23 105-251 .418 41-51 .804 114-3.8 69 10 41 278-9.3 138-4.1 118 16 45 455-13.4 93 34-34 162-362 .448 88-107 .822 122-107 525-1169 .449 216-269 .803 457-3.7 303 41 153 1396-11.4
H I S T O R Y
127
1,000-POINT SCORERS 25. Alexis Kendrick
No. 31 5-7 G inglewood, calif.
29. kara braxton
No. 54 6-6 F Jackson, Mich.
26. cynthia collins
No. 35 5-11 F danielsville, Ga.
30. megan darrah
No. 24 6-3 G/F Moreland, Ga.
27. Carla Green
No. 14 5-9 G Lagrange, Ga.
31. Jasmine James
Sea. G-GS FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 03 31-31 121-320 .378 89-105 .848 112-3.6 158 1 55 372-12.4 62-75 .827 137-3.9 155 1 36 323- 9.2 04 35-35 110-314 .350 05 34-34 74-199 .372 54-71 .761 135-4.0 117 2 36 228-6.7 81-184 .440 47-62 .758 120-3.8 115 1 51 234-7.3 06 32-32 132-132 386-1017 .380 252-313 .805 504-3.8 545 5 178 1157-8.8
Sea. G-GS 80 28-28 81 35-33 82 25-21 83 34-22 122-104
Sea. G-GS 86 26-0 87 32-30 88 31-24 89 30-28 119-82
FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 164-292 .562 78-149 .523 283-10.1 17 10 55 406-14.5 152-298 .510 110-189 .589 304-8.6 52 9 56 414-11.8 68-163 .417 40-84 .476 158-6.3 69 6 43 176-7.0 49-95 .516 24-72 .333 116-3.4 50 6 53 122-3.6 433-848 .511 252-494 .510 861-7.1 188 31 207 1118-9.1
FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 21-55 .382 21-29 .724 29-1.1 29 0 15 63-2.4 146-271 .539 59-96 .615 91-2.8 141 6 72 351-11.0 110-296 .372 113-153 .739 94-3.0 147 14 64 347-11.2 135-334 .404 70-98 .714 169-5.6 108 5 87 354-11.8 412-956 .431 263-376 .699 383-3.2 425 25 238 1115-9.4
28. pam irwin-osbolt Sea. G-GS 96 33-0 97 30-4 98 28-28 99 34-15
H I S T O R Y
128
FG-FGA Pct. 91-199 .457 78-202 .386 144-314 .459 88-200 .440
No. 3 5-10 G decatur, tenn.
FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL 27-37 .730 80-2.4 47 4 49-52 .942 66-2.2 45 2 50-58 .862 87-3.1 71 8 47-56 .839
ST Pts.-Avg. 35 235-7.1 26 235-7.8 41 381-13.6
Sea. G-GS 02 30-25 03 21-14 04 20-17 71-56
Sea. G-GS 05 34-3 06 32-32 07 34-27 08 32-32 132-94
Sea. G-GS 10 34-33 11 33-33
12
FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 198-367 .540 92-147 .626 205-6.8 68 59 54 489-16.3 134-243 .551 60-82 .732 153-7.3 52 43 30 330-15.7 108-226 .478 57-88 .648 160-8.0 23 25 27 274-13.7 440-836 .526 209-317 .659 518-7.3 143 127 111 1093-15.4
FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 68-200 .340 30-42 .714 108-3.2 30 9 19 193-5.7 114-290 .393 49-59 .831 151-4.7 81 12 20 326-10.2 84-207 .406 47-58 .810 156-4.6 59 11 32 253-7.4 99-269 .368 45-56 .804 149-4.7 66 11 35 292-9.1 365-966 .378 171-215 .795 564-4.3 236 43 106 1064-8.1
FG-FGA Pct. 130-419 .310 150-400 .375
No. 10 5-9 G Memphis, Tenn.
FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 85-132 .644 173-5.1 101 3 60 391-11.5
65-108 .602 24-22 91-234 .389 53-86 .616 91-88 371-1053 .352 203-326 .623
32. Saudia Roundtree Sea. G-GS 95 33-32 96 33-33 66-65
116-3.5 118 113-4.7 81 402-4.4 300
3 61 405-12.3 3 64 254-10.6 9 185 1050-11.5
No. 10 5-7 G anderson, S.C.
FG-FGA Pct. FT-FTA Pct. Reb.-Avg. A BL ST Pts.-Avg. 185-442 .419 105-150 .700 155-4.7 226 4 63 487-14.8 197-486 .405 130-174 .747 184-5.6 195 1 76 551-16.7 382-928 .412 235-324 .725 339-5.1 421 5 139 1038-15.7
SEASON-BY-SEASON RESULTS & STATISTICS 1999-2000 Season SEC Champions
Record: 32-4 AP Rank: No. 4 USAT Rank: No. 5 Head Coach: Andy Landers
11/15 W No. 3 1 Alabama-Birmingham 76-75 11/17 W No. 3 1 at No. 17 Virginia Tech 65-60 11/21 W No. 3 1 vs. No. 20 Boston College 78-70 11/22 W No. 3 1 vs. No. 12 UCSB 85-64 11/26 W No. 3 2 vs. Stephen F. Austin 85-44 11/27 W No. 3 2 at Maine (OT) 79-68 11/30 W No. 2 at Georgia Southern 102-70 12/2 L No. 2 No. 23 LSU 74-80 12/4 W No. 2 3 vs. Alcorn State 78-38 12/5 W No. 2 3 at Houston 98-68 12/9 W No. 5 Hampton 107-46 12/12 W No. 5 at Tennessee Tech 77-72 12/19 W No. 5 4 vs. Ohio State 91-59 12/20 W No. 5 4 at Long Beach State 87-67 12/29 W No. 5 East Tennessee State 78-51 1/2 L No. 5 at No. 17 Illinois 65-82 1/9 W No. 7 at Alabama 71-62 1/13 W No. 7 at Florida 78-71 1/17 W No. 7 No. 2 Tennessee 78-51 1/20 W No. 7 5 vs. Georgia Tech 86-58 1/23 W No. 7 at No. 10 Auburn 68-54 1/27 W No. 3 at Ole Miss 75-51 1/30 W No. 3 at Vanderbilt 84-73 2/3 W No. 3 Florida (OT) 81-76 2/6 W No. 3 No. 20 Mississippi State 83-67 2/10 W No. 3 South Carolina 84-61 2/17 W No. 3 at Kentucky 73-69 2/20 W No. 3 at Arkansas 72-69 2/24 W No. 3 Alabama 72-37 2/27 W No. 3 Vanderbilt 75-49 3/3 W No. 2 6 vs. Kentucky 63-45 3/4 L No. 2 6 vs. No. 17 Mississippi State 61-62 3/18 W No. 4 7 Montana 74-46 3/20 W No. 4 7 Stanford 83-64 3/25 W No. 4 8 vs. North Carolina 83-57 3/27 L No. 4 8 vs. No. 8 Rutgers 51-59 1 Preseason WNIT (1st-Athens; 2nd-Blacksburg, Va.; 3rd/4th-Champaign, Ill.) 2 Dead River Classic (Orono, Maine.) 3 Hilton Hobby Classic (Houston, Texas) 4 The Beach Classic (Long Beach, Calif.) 5 Cobb Civic Center (Marietta, Ga.) 6 SEC Tournament (Chattanooga, Tenn.) 7 NCAA 1st & 2nd Rounds (Athens) 8 NCAA West Regional (Portland, Ore.)
1999-2000 Individual Statistics
2000-01 Season
SEC Tourney Champions A TO B S Pts.-Avg.
(Overall: 32-4 ◊ Home: 11-1 ◊ Road: 13-1 ◊ Neutral: 8-2)
Player G-GS MP-Avg. FGs Pct. 3FGs Pct. FTs Pct. Reb.-Avg. C. Miller 36-36 1080-30.0 215-487 .442 49-122 .402 76-98 .776 114-3.2 114 65 5 57 555-15.4 K. Miller 36-36 1169-32.5 203-456 .445 44-122 .361 94-115 .817 168-4.7 162 79 5 75 544-15.1 Nolan 36-36 1008-28.0 178-325 .548 10-27 .370 70-89 .787 164-4.6 126 104 27 56 436-12.1 McDonald 35-34 896-25.6 166-302 .550 0-0 .000 88-136 .647 309-8.8 35 74 90 47 420-12.0 Ball 35-35 911-26.0 109-213 .512 0-0 .000 33-47 .702 164-4.7 36 59 8 29 251-7.2 Crawford 36-2 537-14.9 89-172 .517 0-0 .000 65-109 .596 182-5.1 13 65 35 32 243-6.8 Murphy 36-1 588-16.3 52-132 .394 30-79 .380 21-28 .750 53-1.5 56 44 1 26 155-4.3 Brown 36-0 501-13.9 36-100 .360 0-4 .000 15-24 .625 68-1.9 55 42 6 34 87-2.4 Washington 19-0 87-4.6 13-24 .542 0-2 .000 5-9 .556 22-1.2 2 8 2 5 31-1.6 Briggans 31-0 279-9.0 15-45 .333 0-0 .000 13-30 .433 52-1.7 7 15 7 12 43-1.4 Willis 16-0 52-3.3 9-27 .333 0-0 .000 4-9 .445 19-1.2 0 4 0 2 22-1.4 Lycett 23-0 94-4.1 8-34 .235 4-16 .250 9-12 .750 16-0.7 3 11 1 7 29-1.3 McEntire 14-0 32-2.3 1-10 .100 0-1 .000 2-2 1.000 2-0.1 0 2 0 2 4-0.3 Timmons 14-0 16-1.1 0-7 .000 0-2 .000 0-0 .000 0-0.0 0 1 0 1 0-0.0 Team 140-3.9 10 Georgia 36 7250 1094-2334 .469 137-375 .365 495-708 .699 1473-40.9 609 583 187 385 2820-78.3 Opponents 36 7250 805-2159 .373 144-462 .312 441-660 .668 1349-37.5 405 766 78 249 2195-61.0
2000-01 Individual Statistics
(Overall: 27-6 ◊ Home: 14-1 ◊ Road: 7-4 ◊ Neutral: 6-1)
Player G-GS MP-Avg. FGs Pct. 3FGs Pct. FTs Pct. Reb.-Avg. A TO B S Pts.-Avg. C. Miller 33-32 1017-30.8 207-452 .458 31-96 .323 73-87 .839 134-4.1 101 61 5 65 518-15.7 K. Miller 33-33 1079-32.7 193-378 .511 50-108 .463 80-97 .825 179-5.4 163 73 1 68 516-15.6 McDonald 33-33 614-25.6 124-265 .468 0-0 .000 91-119 .765 230-7.0 41 70 103 50 339-10.3 Thomas 29-11 623-21.5 130-255 .510 3-16 .188 75-121 .620 188-6.5 18 43 42 26 338-11.7 Nolan 24-19 817-24.8 126-278 .453 18-55 .327 51-69 .739 94-3.9 78 50 7 49 321-13.4 Brown 33-13 675-20.5 53-159 .333 1-12 .083 53-71 .746 102-3.1 93 45 5 28 160-4.8 Briggans 33-22 616-18.7 52-105 .495 0-0 .000 26-49 .531 111-3.4 11 35 10 20 130-3.9 Washington 33-0 371-11.2 33-75 .440 1-1 1.000 23-36 .639 82-2.5 19 26 1 13 90-2.7 Lycett 27-0 257-9.5 25-74 .338 12-40 .300 13-26 .500 49-1.8 26 31 2 7 75-2.8 Murphy 16-2 219-13.7 18-57 .316 11-42 .262 18-21 .857 20-1.3 27 17 0 7 65-4.1 Taylor 21-0 89-4.2 11-20 .550 2-5 .400 4-7 .571 10-0.5 5 10 0 12 28-1.3 King 21-0 130-6.2 12-31 .387 0-0 .000 5-7 .714 19-0.9 5 9 1 3 29-1.4 Henson 16-0 39-2.4 4-9 .444 0-0 .000 4-7 .571 9-0.6 0 3 0 2 12-0.8 McEntire 20-0 54-2.7 1-6 .167 0-1 .000 3-6 .500 1-0.1 4 4 0 1 5-0.3 TEAM 130-3.9 7 Georgia 33 6600 989-2164 .457 129-376 .343 519-723 .718 1358-41.2 591 484 177 351 2626-79.6 Opponents 33 6600 727-1953 .372 146-486 .300 449-644 .697 1235-37.4 374 692 87 246 2049-62.1
Record: 27-6 AP Rank: No. 4 USAT Rank: No. 13 Head Coach: Andy Landers
11/12 L No. 3 1 at No. 1 Connecticut 70-99 11/19 W No. 3 Massachusetts 71-63 11/22 W No. 6 2 vs. No. 12 Oklahoma 94-70 11/24 L No. 6 2 vs. No. 5 Notre Dame 73-75 11/27 W No. 7 Georgia Southern 85-57 11/29 W No. 7 Chattanooga 81-43 12/3 W No. 7 3 vs. No. 5 Rutgers 82-53 12/8 W No. 5 4 vs. Georgia Tech 78-61 12/10 W No. 5 Houston 92-61 12/18 W No. 4 Dartmouth 110-73 12/20 W No. 4 at VCU 77-63 12/28 W No. 4 at Georgia State 107-75 12/30 W No. 4 at UCLA 89-55 1/4 W No. 4 Illinois 100-59 1/7 W No. 4 Alabama 96-41 1/11 W No. 4 No. 10 Florida 72-59 1/14 W No. 4 at No. 9 LSU 64-55 1/18 L No. 4 at No. 2 Tennessee 69-85 1/20 W No. 4 Auburn 77-60 1/25 W No. 5 Ole Miss 74-51 1/28 W No. 5 No. 16 Vanderbilt 76-59 2/1 L No. 5 at No. 9 Florida 64-75 2/4 W No. 5 at Mississippi State 78-74 2/8 W No. 7 at South Carolina 92-55 2/15 W No. 5 Kentucky 91-58 2/18 W No. 5 Arkansas 81-60 2/22 W No. 4 at Alabama 71-48 2/25 L No. 4 at No. 18 Vanderbilt 65-71 3/2 W No. 6 5 vs. OIe Miss 80-61 3/3 W No. 6 5 vs. Arkansas 63-44 3/4 W No. 4 5 vs. No. 15 Vanderbilt 62-60 3/16 W No. 4 Liberty 77-48 3/18 L No. 4 Missouri 65-78 1 State Farm Tip-off Classic (Hartford, Conn.) 2 Coaches vs. Cancer Challenge (Madison, Wis.) 3 Honda Elite 4 Classic (Orlando, Fla.) 4 Cobb Civic Center (Marietta, Ga.) 5 SEC Tournament (Memphis, Tenn.) 6 NCAA 1st & 2nd Rounds (Athens)
141
H I S T O R Y
2005-06 season
Record: AP Rank: USAT Rank: Head Coach:
23-9 No. 12 No. 13 Andy Landers
11/13 L No. 8 1 vs. No. 6 Baylor 72-84 92-91 11/18 W No. 8 Santa Clara 11/21 W No. 11 at TCU 80-51 64-84 11/25 L No. 11 2 vs. UCLA 11/26 W No. 17 2 at Loyola Marymount 89-58 11/30 W No. 17 at Middle Tennessee 90-72 72-66 12/4 W No. 17 Georgia Tech 12/6 W No. 17 Iona 97-60 103-34 12/10 W No. 17 Savannah State 12/19 L No. 15 at No. 25 Temple (OT) 66-69 12/29 W No. 17 at Memphis 97-44 81-47 12/30 W No. 17 at Tennessee-Martin 1/5 W No. 17 at Ole Miss 84-70 1/8 W BT /TT1 1 Tf 6.75 0 0 9 106.065 375.0331 Tm (at Ole Miss)Tj ET BT /Span </ActualText (þÿ41 Tm5.0211 Tm 4.186 -14.443 Td [( )-139( )]TJ EMC8 375.0331 Tm (W)Tj ET BT /Span </ActualText (þÿ2<</Td [( )-1072( 0 AJ EMC ET BT 5.0331 Tm (at Ole Miss)Tj E
H I S T O R Y
144
SERIES RESULTS VS. ALL OPPONENTS DeKalb: 2-0
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 1-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
1/17/74 W Athens 1/24/74 W at DeKalb
DePaul: 2-2
Denver: 1-0
Detroit: 3-1
Eastern Washington: 1-0 East Tennessee State: 3-0 Home: 2-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
2/10/78 W at Rock Hill, S.C. 73-51 12/29/99 W Athens 12/1/08 W Athens
95-83 78-51 77-57
Home: 2-0 ◊ Away: 1-1 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
Erskine: 0-2
District of Columbia: 2-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
1/11/88 W Athens 12/19/88 W at Detroit 11/22/08 L at Detroit 12/22/09 W Athens
87-47 Home: 0-1 ◊ Away: 0-1 ◊ Neutral: 0-0 53-76 98-54 1/17/79 L Athens 50-64 66-70 1/29/79 L at Due West, S.C. 66-42
Home: 2-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
12/3/83 W Athens 1/30/90 W Athens
102-61 81-45
Drake: 0-1
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-1
1/22/82 L at Norfolk, Va.
64-76
Duke: 0-3
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-3
3/26/99 L * at San Jose, Calif. 3/39/03 L * at Albuquerque, N.M. 3/26/05 L * Chattanooga, Tenn.
69-81 63-66 57-63
East Carolina: 2-2 Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 2-2
H I S T O R Y
68-54 109-90 91-55 92-60
90-67 Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0 63-67 75-51 74-62 11/29/08 W at Las Vegas, Nev. 65-72
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
11/26/10 W at Los Angeles
Home: 2-0 ◊ Away: 2-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
43-42 1/31/83 W at Richmond, Ky. 51-38 1/22/90 W Athens 3/14/97 W * Athens 12/30/03 W at Richmond, Ky.
Home: 2-0 ◊ Away: 0-2 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
1/16/91 W Athens 12/14/91 L at Chicago 2/22/93 W Athens 12/5/93 L at Chicago
Eastern Kentucky: 4-0 1/20/93 W Athens
2/12/76 L at Rock Hill, S.C. 2/17/77 W at Rock Hill, S.C. 2/12/78 L at Rock Hill, S.C. 1/21/83 W at Columbia, S.C.
152
66-80 71-54 76-92 80-61
Fairfield: 1-0
12/29/97 W at Philadelphia, Pa.
94-68
Florida: 46-14
Home: 25-3 ◊ Away: 19-10 ◊ Neutral: 2-1
1/4/78 L Athens 11/18/78 L at Gainesville 1/5/79 L at Starkville, Miss. 12/15/79 W Athens 1/2/80 W at Gainesville 1/17/81 W at Gainesville 11/30/81 W at Gainesville 1/9/82 W Athens 12/11/82 W Athens 1/10/83 W at Gainesville 1/16/84 W Athens 2/25/84 W at Gainesville 1/12/85 W at Gainesville 1/19/85 W Athens 2/15/86 W at Gainesville 1/4/87 W Athens 1/9/88 W at Gainesville 1/8/89 W Athens 1/6/90 W at Gainesville 1/12/91 W Athens 1/22/92 W at Gainesville
79-83 60-69 66-74 85-71 79-66 86-66 89-76 92-77 88-66 76-60 86-66 63-48 88-73 67-56 83-47 78-65 96-66 101-77 70-58 89-68 96-81
2/9/94 L at Gainesville 2/8/95 L Athens 3/4/95 W # at Chattanooga, Tenn. 1/25/96 W at Gainesville 2/20/96 W Athens 1/29/97 W Athens 2/19/97 W at Gainesville 1/7/98 L at Gainesville 2/17/98 W Athens 1/7/99 W Athens 2/18/99 W at Gainesville 1/13/00 W at Gainesville 2/3/00 W Athens (OT) 1/11/01 W Athens 2/1/01 L at Gainesville 1/27/02 L at Gainesville 2/17/02 W Athens 1/12/03 W at Gainesville 3/1/03 W Athens 1/18/04 L Athens 2/26/04 L at Gainesville 3/5/04 W # at Nashville, Tenn. 1/27/05 W Athens
70-64 72-79 46-59 88-71 72-61 89-81 86-73 66-64 61-94 79-62 84-72 91-66 78-71 81-76 72-59 64-75 64-73 73-62 105-62 76-67 73-83 59-69 76-72 81-61
2/24/05 W at Gainesville 1/8/06 W Athens 1/29/06 W at Gainesville 1/4/07 W Athens 1/28/07 W at Gainesville 1/24/08 W at Gainesville 2/14/08 W Athens 1/18/09 L at Gainesville 3/1/09 W Athens 1/10/10 W Athens 2/21/10 L at Gainesville 1/16/11 W Athens 2/27/11 L at Gainesville 1/12/12 W Athens 2/19/12 L at Gainesville
63-38 92-55 89-70 89-57 77-54 82-55 85-66 45-61 84-75 61-52 57-64 70-64 71-74 61-55 57-61
Florida A&M: 6-0
Home: 3-0 ◊ Away: 3-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
1/21/85 W Athens 12/16/85 W at Tallahassee 2/24/87 W Athens 2/17/88 W at Tallahassee 2/10/92 W Athens 2/26/92 W at Tallahassee
85-50 90-62 89-51 86-55 101-63 93-66
Florida Atlantic: 1-0 Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
1/12/94 W Athens
109-54
Florida International: 3-1 Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 2-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-1
2/14/94 W Athens 12/5/97 L at Tallahassee, Fla. 12/30/07 W at Miami 12/30/10 W at Miami
72-50 68-83 70-56 70-65
Florida State: 8-0
Home: 3-0 ◊ Away: 2-0 ◊ Neutral: 3-0
1/3/88 W at Tallahassee 2/16/89 W Athens 2/21/90 W at Tallahassee 1/31/91 W Athens 12/30/98 W Athens 1/21/07 W at Duluth, Ga. 12/29/07 W at Miami (OT) 3/22/11 W * at Auburn, Ala.
91-72 90-70 80-76 91-71 95-72 70-65 71-62 61-59
Jasmine James averaged 14.3 points per game in six outings against Florida entering 2012-13.
ANNUAL STATISTICAL LEADERS Points Year Player, Class 79-80 Bernadette Locke, Jr. 80-81 Deborah Mitchell, Fr. 81-82 Janet Harris, Fr. 82-83 Janet Harris, So. 83-84 Janet Harris, Jr. 84-85 Janet Harris, Sr. 85-86 Katrina McClain, Jr. 86-87 Katrina McClain, Sr. 87-88 Tammye Jenkins, Fr. 88-89 Tammye Jenkins, So. 89-90 Lady Hardmon, So. 90-91
G 27 34 30 34 33 34 31 32 30 30 29
Pts. 556 598 663 692 586 700 661 796 479 438 409
Avg. 20.6 17.6 22.1 20.4 17.8 20.6 21.3 24.9 16.0 14.6 14.1
H I S T O R Y
161
ANNUAL STATISTICAL LEADERS FG Percentage Year Player, Class 79-80 Cynthia Collins, Fr. 80-81 Wanda Holloway, Fr. 81-82 Janet Harris, Fr. 82-83 Janet Harris, So. 83-84 Katrina McClain, Fr. 84-85 Katrina McClain, So. 85-86 Katrina McClain, Jr. 86-87 Sherelle Warren, Fr. 87-88 Sherelle Warren, So. 88-89 Sherelle Warren, Jr. 89-90 Stacey Ford, Jr. 90-91 Deborah Carter, Fr. 91-92 Deborah Carter, So. 92-93 Nakia Hill, Fr. 93-94 Tracy Henderson, Fr. 94-95 Tiffany Walker, So. 95-96 Tracy Henderson, Jr. 96-97 Tracy Henderson, Sr. 97-98 Angie Ball, So. 98-99 Angie Ball, Jr. 99-00 Tawana McDonald, So. 00-01 Kelly Miller, Sr. 01-02 Tawana McDonald, Sr. 02-03 Christi Thomas, Jr. 03-04 Christi Thomas, Sr. 04-05 Tasha Humphrey, Fr. 05-06 Sherill Baker, Sr. 06-07 Angel Robinson, Fr. 07-08 Angel Robinson, So. 08-09 Angel Robinson, Jr. 09-10 Jasmine Hassell, Fr. 10-11 Tamika Willis, So. 11-12 Jasmine Hassell, Jr.
H I S T O R Y
162
FG-FGA 164-292 229-391 281-527 299-537 137-197 164-262 262-396 109-188 187-316 127-225 159-258 109-208 115-226 132-269 148-289 86-142 208-359 182-333 56-104 95-191 166-302 193-378 84-153 180-335 173-321 236-421 242-457 104-192 130-254 147-265 84-161 53-101 164-302
FT Percentage Pct. .562 .586 .533 .557 .695 .626 .662 .580 .592 .564 .616 .524 .509 .491 .512 .606 .579 .547 .539 .497 .550 .511 .549 .537 .539 .561 .530 .542 .512 .555 .522 .525 .543
Year Player, Class 79-80 Michelle Hartley, Sr. 80-81 Lou Sims, Fr. 81-82 Rhonda Malone, So. 82-83 Lisa O’Connor, Fr. 83-84 Rhonda Malone, Sr. 84-85 Lisa O’Connor, Jr. 85-86 Traci Waites, So. 86-87 Katie Abrahamson, So. 87-88 Kim Berry, Fr. 88-89 Adrienne Shuler, So. 89-90 Sharon Baldwin, Sr. 90-91 Adrienne Shuler, Sr. 91-92 Camille Lowe, Jr. 92-93 Deborah Reese, Jr. 93-94 Rachel Powell, Fr. 94-95 La’Keshia Frett, So. 95-96 La’Keshia Frett, Jr. 96-97 Pam Irwin, So. 97-98 Pam Irwin, Jr. 98-99 Pam Irwin-Osbolt, Sr. 99-00 Kelly Miller, Jr. 00-01 Coco Miller, Sr. 01-02 Mary Beth Lycett, Jr. 02-03 Mary Beth Lycett, Sr. 03-04 Janese Hardrick, Fr. 04-05 Janese Hardrick, So. 05-06 Tasha Humphrey, So. 06-07 Janese Hardrick, Sr. 07-08 Ashley Houts, So. 08-09 Angela Puleo, So. 09-10 Ashley Houts, Sr. 10-11
FT-FTA 48-65 36-47 26-31 95-125 18-22 66-78 24-30 36-42 32-41 63-78 33-42 67-80 41-51 93-111 49-62 116-155 90-107 49-52 50-58 47-56 94-115 73-87 30-38 37-41 88-106 79-96 148-177 85-102 131-165 26-33 115-141
Pct. .738 .766 .839 .760 .818 .846 .800 .857 .780 .808 .786 .838 .804 .838 .790 .748 .841 .942 .862 .839 .817 .839 .789 .902 .830 .823 .836 .833 .794 .788 .816
STATISTICAL CHAMPIONS SEC individual Stat Champions Scoring
Steals
Year Player, Class 88-87 Katrina McClain, Sr.
G Pts. Avg. Year Player, Class G Stl 32 796 24.9 79-80 Bernadette Locke, Jr. 27 114 90-91 Adrienne Shuler, Sr. 32 103 Rebounds 96-97 Kedra Holland-Corn, Sr. 31 116 Year Player, Class G Reb. Avg. 05-06 Sherill Baker, Sr. 32 149 84-85 Janet Harris, Sr. 34 351 10.3 Blocked Shots 86-87 Katrina McClain, Sr. 32 391 12.2 G Blk 87-88 Tammye Jenkins, Fr. 30 259 8.6 Year Player, Class 27 48 08-09 Angel Robinson, Jr. 32 298 9.3 83-84 Barbara Bootz, Fr. 29 87 10-11 Porsha Phillips, Sr. 34 365 10.7 84-85 Katrina McClain, So. 85-86 Katrina McClain, Jr. 31 87 Field Goal Percentage 86-87 Katrina McClain, Sr. 32 73 Year Player, Class FGM FGA Pct. 98-99 Tawana McDonald, Fr. 27 56 83-84 Katrina McClain, Fr. 137 197 .695 99-00 Tawana McDonald, So. 35 90 84-85 Katrina McClain, So. 164 262 .626 00-01 Tawana McDonald, Jr. 33 103 85-86 Katrina McClain, Jr. 262 396 .662 Minutes Played 89-90 Stacey Ford, Jr. 159 258 .616 G MP 95-96 Tracy Henderson, Jr. 208 359 .579 Year Player, Class 05-06 Sherill Baker, Sr. 32 1174 Free Throw Percentage 07-08 Ashley Houts, So. 33 1215 Year Player, Class FTM FTA Pct. 08-09 Ashley Houts, Jr. 32 1207 95-96 La’Keshia Frett, Jr. 90 107 .841 10-11 Porsha Phillips, Sr. 92 114 .807
3-Point Percentage
Year Player, Class 87-88 Kim Berry, Fr. 89-90 Miriam Lowe, Fr. 05-06 Janese Hardrick, Jr.
3FG FGA 35 68 22 40 41 92
Pct. .515 .550 .446
3-Pointers Per Game
Year Player, Class 88-89 Kim Berry, So.
Assists
H I S T O R Y
Year Player, Class 84-85 Teresa Edwards, Jr. 90-91 Adrienne Shuler, Sr. 91-92 Lady Hardmon, Sr. 94-95 Saudia Roundtree, Jr. 95-96 Saudia Roundtree, Sr.
G 3FG Avg. 30 163 5.4
G 30 32 30 33 33
Ast Avg. 188 6.3 204 6.4 179 6.0 226 6.8 195 5.9
Tawana McDonald swatted a school-record 297 shots en route to leading the SEC in blocks for three straight seasons.
166
Avg. 4.2 3.2 3.7 4.7 Avg. 1.8 3.0 2.8 2.3 2.3 2.6 3.1 Avg. 36.7 36.8 37.7
Baker Reigns as Steals Queen Sherill Baker established a name for herself as one of the nation’s premier defensive players en route to breaking UGA’s freshman and sophomore steals records. Baker’s perimeter prowess wreaked havoc at a different level during her senior season of 200506. Baker was dubbed the “Queen of Thieves” while leading the nation in steals by averaging 4.7 per game – 0.7 better than any other player in the country. Somewhat amazingly considering Georgia’s status as a women’s basketball powerhouse, Baker was the Lady Bulldogs’ first team or individual NCAA statistical champion. Baker eventually finished the campaign with 149 steals, giving her 426 for her career. Those totals not only shattered the previous Georgia season (116) and career (342) records, they easily topped the existing Southeastern Conference marks (141 and 372) as well.
SEC Team Stat Champions Season 1984-85 1985-86 1990-91 1995-96 2005-06
Scoring G 34 32 32 33 32
Pts. 2792 2855 2736 2734 2554
Avg. 82.1 89.2 85.5 82.9 79.8
FG Percentage
Season 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1990-91 1995-96
FGM-FGA 978-1883 1173-2209 1193-2195 1055-2190 1051-2248
FG Defense
Season 1985-86 1986-87 2009-10
FGM-FGA 825-2032 785-2014 686-1980
FT Percentage
Season 1985-86 2004-05 2005-06 2007-08
FGM-FGA 469-642 444-580 442-566 475-650
Pct. .731 .766 .781 .731
3FG Percentage
Season 3FG-FGA Pct. Pct. 1987-88 60-146 .411 .519 2005-06 228-581 .392 .531 3FG Defense .544 3FG-FGA Pct. .482 Season 106-389 .272 .468 1993-94 2001-02 138-458 .301
Season 1982-83 1995-96 2000-01 2005-06
Steals G 34 33 33 32
Stls. 391 394 351 371
Avg. 11.5 11.9 10.6 11.6
Blocked Shots
Season 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1999-00 2001-02
G 33 34 32 36 30
Blks. 168 154 156 187 188
Avg. 5.1 4.5 4.9 5.2 6.3
Assist-to Ratio
Season 2005-06
A TO Rat. Pct. 3FGs Per Game 524 431 1.22 G 3FGs Avg. .406 Season 34 215 6.32 Turnover Margin .390 2006-07 Season UGA Opp. Diff. .346 2000-01 14.7 21.0 +6.3 2005-06 13.5 19.6 +6.1
ALL-TIME JERSEY NUMBERS No. 00 Sara Kate Greene............... 2005-06 Vicky Jones......................... 1991-93 La’Keshia Frett.................... 1994-97 Maria Taylor...............................2007 Fain Spurlock............................1998 Kim Braxton...............................2002 Jasmine Hassell................ 2010-12 Kelly McEntire..................... 2000-01 Cori Chambers.................... 2004-07 No. 1 No. 13 Porsha Phillips...................2009-11 Ashley Houts....................... 2007-10 Marilyn Brackett................... 1974-75 Khaalidah Miller..................2011-12 Phyllis Morrow...........................1976 No. 22 Cherie Hester............................1978 Beth Morgan..............................1976 No. 2 Diane Carson............................1979 Phyllis Morrow...........................1977 Tina Taylor........................... 2001-05 Barbara Murray................... 1981-82 Nancy Gates..............................1978 Ebony Jones...................... 2010-12 Susie Gardner..................... 1983-86 Tammy Waybright......................1979 DeeDee Frasier................... 1984-87 Kim “K.T.” Thompson........... 1993-96 No. 3 Dorothy Sanders................. 1992-95 Kiesha Brown............................1997 Pam Irwin-Osbolt................. 1996-99 Jessica Pierce..................... 2002-05 Tameiko Washington........... 2000-02 Mary Beth Lycett.................. 2000-03 Christy Marshall................... 2007-09 Jasmine Lee........................ 2008-09 No. 14 Anne Marie Armstrong...... 2010-12 Dawn Young ....................... 1974-75 No. 23 Tina Price............................ 1976-77 Bernadette Locke................ 1980-81 No. 4 Renee Nordan...........................1978 Alisa Carrandi...................... 1982-83 Christi Thomas.................... 2001-04 Deborah Arndt..................... 1979-80 Susie Gardner..................... 1983-86 Danielle Taylor..................... 2006-08 Carla Green......................... 1986-89 Lady Hardmon..................... 1989-92 Ronika Ransford........................2011 Camille Lowe....................... 1990-93 Angie Ball............................ 1997-00 Danielle Bennett......................2012 Julee Roberts............................1998 Kelly Miller........................... 1998-01 Deanna “Tweety” Nolan....... 1999-01 Tamika Willis...................... 2010-12 No. 5 (retired) Janese Hardrick.................. 2004-07 Teresa Edwards................... 1983-86 No. 24 No. 15 Cecilia Jones.............................1974 No. 10 Margaret Tyson.................... 1974-75 Carol Koeble..............................1976 Donna Noonan..........................1976 Tricia Griffith..............................1976 DiAnn Stone..............................1977 Beth Morgan..............................1977 Susan Register..........................1978 Stephanie Wheeler.............. 1992-95 Jane Park............................ 1978-79 Nancy Russom..........................1979 Kendi Taylor...............................1996 Kelly Robbins...................... 1992-93 Cathy Bennett............................1980 Tawnya Nash.............................1998 Saudia Roundtree............... 1995-96 Anne Williamson........................1981 Tiaunna Briggans................ 2000-01 Jasmine James.................. 2010-12 Jo Beth Weaver................... 1983-84 Whitney Law..............................2002 Rhonda Mikes...........................1986 Megan Darrah..................... 2005-08 No. 11 Jill Mitchell.................................1988 Vicki Varross........................ 1974-75 Jessica Barr...............................1990 No. 25 DiAnn Stone........................ 1977-80 Signe Antvorskov................. 1996-97 Deedy Taylor..............................1980 Kathy Meeks..............................1979 Amy King...................................2001 Laura Greeson..........................1982 Cheryl Autry...............................1981 Desiré Bostice..................... 2005-06 Anne Smith................................1986 Amanda Abrams.................. 1982-85 Jaleesa Rhoden.................. 2008-10 Kim Berry............................. 1988-91 Angela Davis.............................1990 Krista Donald...........................2012 Kedra Holland-Corn............. 1994-97 Christy Cagle.............................1992 Shala Crawford..........................2000 Rachel Powell...................... 1994-97 No. 20 Beth Henson..............................2001 Matoya Jones............................1998 Donna Noonan..........................1977 Brittany Carter...........................2008 Kiesha Brown...................... 1999-01 Beth Williams.............................1978 Sarah Stoddard.........................2009 Sherill Baker........................ 2003-06 Traci Waites......................... 1985-86 Meredith Mitchell................. 2009-12 Sharla Smith..............................1991 No. 30 Miriam Lowe................... 1990,92-93 Lisa Griffin.................................1976 No. 12 Sherbiya Morris.........................1994 Tina Price..................................1978 Meme Robinson.................. 1974-75 Tocshia Campfield.....................1997 Dee Turton.................................1979 Debbie Culpepper.....................1976 Angela Puleo....................... 2008-09 Adrienne Shuler................... 1988-91 Patricia Griffith...........................1977 Latrese Bush....................... 1995-98 Sally Martin................................1978 No. 21 Candace Williams......................2010 Alice Hart...................................1979 Cindy Thomas...........................1978 Lisa Kendrick....................... 1987-90 Candis Broome.................... 1979-80 No. 31 Kenya Robinson........................1991 Rhonda Malone................... 1981-84 Cheryl Stanton...........................1974 Nikki Eason...............................2002 Sharon Baldwin................... 1989-90 Tricia Griffith..............................1978
No. 43 Cindy Thomas...........................1979 Lou Sims............................. 1981-83 Denise Dunlap..................... 1980-82 Camille Murphy................... 1999-02 Lisa O’Conner..................... 1983-86 Alexis Kendrick.................... 2003-06 No. 44 Erika Ford.................................2012 Joy Richman........................ 1974-77 Tena DeVore........................ 1988-90 No. 32 (retired) Cherie Hester............................1977 Nancy Anderson........................1991 Katrina McClain................... 1984-87 Tara Cosby................................1992 Ebony Felder....................... 2002-04 Arieal Johnson...........................2011 No. 33 Bunny Fuller..............................1976 No. 45 (retired) Karen Miller...............................1981 Sheila Easley....................... 1982-83 Sarah Edwards....................... 1980 Traci Inman.......................... 1985-86 Deborah Mitchell.................... 1981 Katie Abrahamson............... 1986-87 Janet Harris...................... 1982-85 Kelly Tempel........................ 1987-88 No. 50 Wendy Walker...........................1989 Tracy Henderson................. 1994-97 Jane Park............................... 1977 Angie Ball............................ 1998-00 Becky Nash......................... 1978-79 Katie Frye............................ 2002-05 Tracy Walls.......................... 1993-96 Angel Robinson................... 2007-10 Rebecca Rowsey...... 2004-05,07-08 Brittany Crews...........................2012 No. 51
No. 34
Sherri Leiker........................ 1974-75 Ulanda Fleming.........................1979 Michelle Hartley.........................1980 Wanda Holloway.................. 1981-84 Chris Toscas..............................1986
No. 35
Dianna Lott.......................... 1997-98
Paula Van Sant..........................1974 Renee Nordan...........................1976 Nakia Hill...................................1993 Elena Vishniakova............... 1998-99 Tasha Humphrey................. 2005-08
No. 52
Cynthia Collins.................... 1980-83 No. 53 Deborah Carter.................... 1991-92 Coco Miller.......................... 1998-01 LeAnn Harrell............................1981 Barbara Bootz..................... 1984-87 Stacey Ford......................... 1988-91 No. 40 Renee Nordan...........................1977 Vera Jardim......................... 1992-94 Joan Benson....................... 1978-79 No. 54 Deborah Reese................... 1991-94 Tawana McDonald............... 1999-02 Sherelle Warren................... 1987-90 Shavonda Willis................... 1999-00 Kara Braxton....................... 2002-04 No. 41 Gale Russell........................ 1974-75 No. 55 DiAnn Stone........................ 1978-79 Teresa Duncan..........................1980 Allison Campbell.................. 1974-75 Sarah Edwards..........................1981 Gail Livings................................1976 Lisa Parker ......................... 1981-82 Lisa Parker.......................... 1981-82 Regan Acosta...................... 1985-86 Sarah Edwards..........................1982 Tiffany Walker...................... 1994-97 Tammye Jenkins.................. 1988-91 Medina Turner..................... 1992-93
No. 42
Katie Abrahamson............... 1986-87 Tari Phillips.......................... 1987-88 Ali Watt......................................2009 Brandi Decker...................... 1994-97 Keshunda Pharr........................1998 Marquita Driskell........................2003
185
H I S T O R Y
ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS’ STATISTICS
H I S T O R Y
Player
Years
G-GS
Katie Abrahamson Amanda Abrams Regan Acosta Nancy Anderson Signe Antvorskov Deborah Arndt Cheryl Autry Sharon Baldwin Angie Ball Sherill Baker Jessica Barr Kim Berry Barbara Bootz Desiré Bostice Kara Braxton Kim Braxton Tiaunna Briggans Candace Broome Kiesha Brown Latrese Bush Christy Cagle Tocshia Campfield Alisa Carrandi Deborah Carter Cori Chambers Cynthia Collins Tara Cosby Shala Crawford Brittany Crews Megan Darrah
1985-87 1981-85 1984-86 1990-91 1995-97 1979-80 1980-81 1988-90 1996-00 2002-06 1989-91 1987-91 1983-87 2004-06 2001-04 2001-02 1999-01 1979-80 1996-01 1994-98 1991-92 1996-97 1981-83 1990-92 2003-07 1979-83 1991-92 1999-00 2011-12 2004-08
64-34 124-48 43-0 9-0 64-5 21-n/a 25-n/a 57-31 109-78 131-122 27-0 113-23 126-60 48-0 71-56 16-0 64-22 17-n/a 111-25 108-16 14-0 15-1 26-0 56-36 135-106 122-104 27-4 36-2 6-1 132-94
186
FGs Pct. 194-420 157-327 16-30 1-6 80-144 6-27 45-128 178-387 265-529 676-1520 51-102 227-566 364-747 31-59 440-836 7-20 67-150 10-30 173-467 162-466 1-5 9-30 13-29 224-434 552-1332 433-848 96-210 89-172 0-1 365-966
.462 .480 .533 .167 .556 .222 .352 .460 .501 .445 .500 .401 .487 .525 .526 .350 .447 .333 .370 .348 .200 .300 .448 .516 .414 .511 .457 .517 .000 .378
3FGs Pct.
FTs Pct.
– 55-68 – 86-138 – 19-44 0-0 .000 1-4 0-0 .000 68-110 – 13-29 – 28-39 11-42 .262 59-79 0-0 .000 95-150 33-123 .268 280-368 0-0 .000 42-54 189-442 .428 98-125 – 136-198 0-0 .000 12-25 4-20 .200 209-317 0-0 .000 6-16 0-0 .000 39-79 – 0-4 10-59 .169 139-195 29-123 .236 64-95 0-0 .000 7-9 0-1 .000 6-10 – 5-8 6-26 .231 127-174 282-742 .380 104-125 – 252-494 1-1 1.00 41-76 0-0 .000 65-109 0-0 .000 0-0 163-465 .351 171-215
.809 .623 .432 .250 ,618 .448 .718 .747 .633 .761 .778 .784 .687 .480 .659 .375 .494 .000 .713 .674 .778 .600 .625 .730 .832 .510 .540 .596 .000
REB-Avg. 253-3.9 151-1.2 50-1.2 6-0.7 184-2.9 9-0.4 39-1.6 426-7.5 449-4.1 570-4.4 79-2.9 119-1.1 441-3.5 67-1.4 518-7.3 22-1.4 163-2.5 13-0.8 292-2.6 161-1.5 14-1.0 23-1.5 12-0.5 315-5.6 447-3.3 861-7.1 167-6.2 182-5.1 0-0.0
AST BLK STL
PTS-Avg.
130 241 4 1 15 10 81 153 82 399 14 160 123 3 143 0 18 6 293 88 10 7 14 63 226 188 10 11 1
443-6.9 400-3.2 51-1.2 3-0.3 228-3.6 25-1.2 118-4.7 426-7.5 625-5.7 1665-12.7 144-5.3 741-6.6 864-6.9 74-1.5 1093-15.4 20-1.2 173-2.7 20-1.2 495-4.5 415-3.8 9-0.6 24-1.6 31-1.2 581-10.4 1490-11.0 1118-9.2 234-8.7 243-6.8 0-0.0
19 1 1 0 14 n/a n/a 5 43 24 0 5 179 6 127 4 17 n/a 14 4 0 2 1 18 23 31 8 35 0
43 160 9 0 23 n/a 37 82 75 426 22 102 89 8 111 2 32 6 114 107 2 3 8 59 153 207 16 32 0
HONOR ROLL
National Freshman of the Year SEC Freshman of the Year
1982 Janet HaBrrNisew–s Service AWSF, WB
H I S T O R Y
Tammye Jenkin AWSF
Tasha Humphrey – 2005 USBWA
194
s – 1988
in Katrina McCla 1984
La’Keshia Frett 1994
Christi Thoma s 2001
Tasha Humphrey Ashley Houts Kara Braxton 2005 2007 2002
HONOR ROLL
Freshman All-Americans Deborah Mitchell
Janet Harris
1981 – AWSF
1982 – AWSF, WBB News Service
La’Keshia Frett
Coco Miller
1994 – Basketball Times 1998 – WBB Journal, WBB News Service
Teresa Edwards 1983 – AWSF, WBB News Service
Kelly Miller
1998 – WBB Journal, WBB News Service
Lisa O’Connor
Katrina McClain Tammye Jenkins 1984 – AWSF, WBB News Service
1988 – AWSF, WBB News Service
Christi Thomas
Kara Braxton
Alexis Kendrick
1983 – AWSF, WBB News Service
2001 – WBB Journal, 2002 – Basketball Times, 2003 – womenscollegehoops.com womenscollegehoops.com womenscollegehoops.com
Freshman All-SEC Selections
Janese Hardrick Tasha Humphrey
Ashley Houts
Jasmine James
H I S T O R Y
2004 – gballmag.com 2005 – gballmag.com 2007 – Basketball Times, 2010 – gballmag.com gballmag.com
195
HONOR ROLL
Academic All-Americans SEC Honor Roll In 1985, the Southeastern Conference instituted an Academic Honor Roll to recognize players with a GPA of 3.0 or better either cumulatively or for the year. A total of 36 current and former Lady Bulldogs have been honored a total of 17 times, including a dozen standouts (several of whom are pictured below and to the left) who have received the accolade three or more times.
Year Honoree(s)
tte Locke Bernadend team) 1981 (2
Kelly Miller
2000 (3rd team); 2001 (2nd team)
Coco Miller
2001 (3rd team
)
SEC Academic Honor Roll H I S T O R Y
Barbara Bootz 1985, 1986, 1987
196
Camille Lowe
1991, 1992, 1993
Tina Taylor 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005
Katie Frye
2003, 2004, 2005
Rebecca Rowsey 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
Meredith Mitchell 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
1985 B. Bootz 1986 B. Bootz, T. Edwards, S. Gardner 1987 B. Bootz 1989 T. DeVore 1990 T. DeVore, T. Jenkins 1991 S. Ford, T. Jenkins, C. Lowe 1992 C. Lowe 1993 C. Lowe, M. Lowe, D. Reese 1994 V. Jardim, D. Reese 1995 T. Walker 1996 B. Decker, T. Walls 1997 R. Powell, T. Walker 1998 F. Spurlock 1999 C. Miller, K. Miller 2000 C. Miller, K. Miller 2001 C. Miller, K. Miller, M.B. Lycett, K. McEntire 2002 M.B. Lycett, T. Taylor 2003 K. Frye, M.B. Lycett, T. Taylor
Year Honoree(s)
2004 E. Felder, K. Frye, R. Rowsey, T. Taylor, C. Thomas 2005 M.Darrah, E. Felder, K. Frye, R. Rowsey, T. Taylor 2006 M. Darrah, E. Felder, R. Rowsey 2007 A. Houts, T. Humphrey, R. Rowsey, M. Taylor 2008 M. Darrah, A. Houts, T. Humphrey, L. Moss, A. Puleo, R. Rowsey 2009 A. Houts, M. Mitchell 2010 A.M. Armstrong, E. Jones, M. Mitchell 2011 A.M. Armstrong, E. Jones, M. Mitchell, J. Rhoden 2012 B. Crews J. James M. Mitchell
HONOR ROLL
NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships
7
r – 199 Tiffany Walke
Kelly Miller – 20
01
James E. Sullivan MeMorial Award
NCAA Silver Anniversary Award
Coco & Kelly Miller – 1999
Teresa Edwards – 2011
The James E. Sullivan Memorial Award is presented annually by the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) to the top amateur athlete(s) in the nation who have achieved athletic excellence and also exhibited leadership, character, sportsmanship and the ideals of amateurism.
The Silver Anniversary Award recognizes distinguished individuals on the 25th anniversary of the conclusion of their college athletics careers. Edwards became UGA’s fourth honoree, joining Fran Tarkenton (1986), Thomas Lyons (1996) and Kathyrn McMinn (2009).
SEC Female Athlete of the year Saudia Roundtree – 1996
Rebecca Rowsey – 2008
In addition to being 1996 National Player of the Year, Saudia Roundtree was named the top female student-athlete in the SEC for all sports in balloting of the league’s 12 institutions. Roundtree is one of four Georgia female student-athletes to win the award since its inception in 1984, joining golfer Vicki Goetze (1992), swimmer Kristy Kowal (2000) and gymnast Courtney Kupets (2009).
H I S T O R Y
197
HONOR ROLL
State Sports Halls of Fame U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame
ards Teresa EdHw all of Fame
2001 Georgia
cClain Katrina M a Hall of Fame
2006 S. Carolin
Katrina
2005 GeorgiaMcClain Hall of Fame
Andy L
2009 Georgia anders Hall of Fame
s Teresa Edward
– 2009
Teresa Edwards’ bittersweet acceptance speech drew a standing ovation during ceremonies inducting her into the United States Olympic Hall of Fame. The former Lady Bulldog thanked those who helped her along the way during her career, first mentioning Andy Landers and all her former teammates. Edwards then spoke of Katrina McClain before individually honoring her deceased father and her mother, Mildred, who was in attendance. Edwards then turned to closing the book on her glorious career on the hardwood. “To accept this honor this evening for me is to say goodbye to the true love of my life,” Edwards stated. Edwards is one of only three American athletes – along with Carl Lewis and Lisa Leslie – to win Gold Medals at four separate Games and holds the unique honor of being both the youngest (20 in 1984) and oldest (36 in 2000) women’s basketball player to capture Olympic Gold
U.S. high school Hall of Fame
s Teresa Edward
– 2002
Katrina McCla in
H I S T O R Y
– 2010
199
HONOR ROLL
H I S T O R Y
200
HONOR ROLL
NCAA Woman Of the year
Peach of An Athlete The Atlanta Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America holds the Peach of an Athlete Role Model Banquet to honor students who excel in academics, athletics and service to the community. Since the 1980s, the banquet has recognized deserving athletes whose character, scholastic achievement, athletic excellence and commitment to community service most closely match the aims and ideals of the Scouting program. Rebecca Rowsey, a five-time member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll and three-time selection to the SEC Community Service team, was one of UGA’s three Peach of an Athlete honorees in 2008.
The NCAA Woman of the Year Award honors graduating student-athletes who have distinguished themselves throughout their collegiate careers in the areas of academic achievement, athletics excellence, service and leadership. Since it’s inception in 1991, the program has recognized nearly 2,000 state and conference honorees. The NCAA Woman of the Year selection committee determines the top 10 and top three honorees in each division. Nominees from Divisions I, II and III will be considered equally for national awards. The University of Georgia has produced three national winners of the Woman of the Year – swimmer Lisa Ann Coole in 1997, swimmer Kristy Kowal in 2000 and swimmer Kimberly A. Black in 2001.
Mary Beth Lycett – 2003
Rebecca Rowsey – 2008
SEC Community Service Team
Pam Irwin-Osbolt Kiesha Brown 1999
2000, 2001
Mary Beth Lycett Christi Thomas 2002
2003, 2004
Katie Frye 2005
Rebecca Rowsey Angel Robinson 2006, 2007, 2008
2009
Ashley Houts 2010
Meredith Mitchell 2011
H I S T O R Y
Jasmine James 2012
201
USA BASKETBALL Ashley Houts
Oh, Canada: Lady Dogs & Maple leaves
2007 – U21 World Championships 2009 – World University Games
Tasha Humphrey
2003 – U.S. Youth Development Festival 2007 – Pan American Games
Christy Marshall
2005 – U.S. Youth Development Festival
Katrina McClain
1983 – National Sports Festival 1985 – World University Games 1986 – Goodwill/FIBA World Championships 1987 – Pan American Games 1988 – U.S. Olympic Team 1990 – Goodwill/FIBA World Championships 1991 – Pan American Games 1992 – U.S. Olympic Team 1994 – FIBA World Championships 1996 – U.S. Olympic Team
Rhonda Mikes
1985 – World University Games
Coco Miller
1999 – World University Games
Kelly Miller
1999 – World University Games
Christi Thomas secured a spot on the all-tournament team at the 2003 U21 World Championships after averaging 10.0 points and 7.0 rebounds in three medal-round games in Croatia.
Lisa O’Connor
1982 – National Sports Festival 1983 – National Sports Festival 1985 – R. William Jones Cup Team 1987 – World University Games
Two former Lady Bulldogs have represented their native nation of Canada in international competiton. Angie Ball, a native of Scarsborough near Toronto, was a standout for Georgia from 1997-2000. She was a freshman on the Lady Bulldogs’ 1997 SEC Championship team and was a starter on Georgia’s 1999 NCAA Final Four squad and 2000 SEC Championship team that secured a school-record 23 victories. Ball was a member of the 15-player Canadian National Team during both 1998 and 1999. Jaleesa Rhoden, who hailed from the Toronto suberb of London, was a
Tari Phillips
1987 – U.S. Olympic Festival
fixture on the Canadian Junior National Team for several years. In 2004, Rhoden represented Canada at the Confederation of Pan American Basketball Associations (COPABA) qualifying tournament for the 2005 U19 World Championships. The following year, Rhoden took part in those World Championships in Tunisia. After a redshirt season at Georgia in 2006-07 due to a knee injury, Rhoden saw her first competitive action in more than a year when she helped Canada to a ninth-place showing at the 2007 U19 World Championships in Slovakia.
Angel Robinson
2004 – U.S. Youth Development Festival 2004 – U.S. Junior National Team
Saudia Roundtree
1995 – R. William Jones Cup Team
Adrienne Shuler
1990 – U.S. Select Team
Christi Thomas
2003 – U.S. Young Women National Team
Christi Thomas – 2003 U21 World Championships
Ashley Houts – 2007 U21 World Championships
203
H I S T O R Y
WNBA PLAYERS UGA Pros
H I S T O R Y
Georgia Lady Bulldogs have long been prominent figures in the professional ranks, both in the United State and overseas. All told, 35 Lady Bulldogs have gone on to play basketball professionally, including 21 in the WNBA. Deanna “Tweety” Nolan is the most decorated Georgia alum in the WNBA. She was a perennial All-Star for the three-time WNBA Champion Detroit Shock and was named the MVP of the 2006 WNBA Finals. No less than 13 Lady Bulldogs have been selected in the last 11 editions of the WNBA Draft, including eight first-round picks. Former Georgia players also are making their mark on the sideline. Teresa Edwards was the interim head coach of the Tulsa Shock in 2011, while Bernadette Mattox and Lady Grooms were assistant coaches for Connecticut and New York, respectively.
Sherill Baker
Angie Ball Charlotte
Detroit, Tulsa, Phoenix, New York
Washington, Houston, New York, Minnesota, L.A., Connecticut, Tulsa
Kedra Holland-Corn
Ashley Houts
Tasha Humphrey
Tawana McDonald
New York, Los Angeles, Indiana, Detroit
Sacramento, Detroit, Houston
204
Washington
Kara Braxton
Detroit, Washington, Minnesota
Kiesha Brown
Indiana
Deborah Carter Utah, Washington
Coco Miller
Washington, Atlanta, Los Angeles
Cori Chambers Connecticut
Kelly Miller
Charlotte, Indiana, Phoenix, Minnesota, Atlanta, Washington, New York
WNBA PLAYERS
Overseas Pros
Sherill Baker Angie Ball Barbara Bootz Kara Braxton Kiesha Brown
Cori Chambers Cynthia Collins Megan Darrah Teresa Edwards Stacey Ford La’Keshia Frett
Teresa Edwards Minnesota
Stacey Ford
New York, Sacramento
La’Keshia Frett
Los Angeles, Sacramento, Charlotte, New York
Lady Grooms Utah, Sacramento
Tracy Henderson Cleveland
Carla Green Lady Grooms Janet Harris Kedra Holland-Corn Tasha Humphrey Ashley Houts Vera Jardin Tammye Jenkins Alexis Kendrick Katrina McClain Coco Miller Kelly Miller Deanna Nolan Lisa O’Connor Porsha Phillips Angel Robinson Dorothy Sanders Christi Thomas Medina Turner
Deanna Nolan Detroit
Porsha Phillips San Antonio
Adrienne Shuler Washington
Israel, Italy, Greece France, Italy Japan Italy, Poland Czech Republic, France, Israel, Russia, Spain, Turkey Israel, Russia, Switzerland Venezuela Spain France, Italy, Japan, Russia, Spain France, Italy, Japan, Spain Hungary, Israel, Korea, Spain Spain Israel, Italy, Turkey Italy, Japan, Spain France, Hungary, Italy, Spain Israel, Italy France, Israel Portugal Greece, Japan, Spain Serbia Italy, Japan, Spain, Turkey China, France, Russia, Turkey China, France, Russia, Turkey Czech Republic, Israel, Italy, Poland, Spain, Russia Japan Israel France, Portugal, Spain Spain Italy, Latvia, Spain, Turkey Belgium, Spain
H I S T O R Y
Christi Thomas
Los Angeles, Minnesota, Chicago
205
ALL-TIME TEAM All-time Team
H I S T O R Y
In conjunction with the 25th season of Lady Bulldog Basketball in 1997-98, former letterwinners selected Georgia’s all-time team. The squad was announced during the “Silver Celebration of Excellence” on Nov. 30, 1997, when more than 80 former players and staff returned to Athens for an NCAA/ABL doubleheader. The afternoon included a 70-67 win by Georgia over Clemson and an Atlanta Glory victory over the Portland Power. The ABL tilt displayed the impact UGA has had in the development of women’s professional basketball in the U.S., with no less than five former Lady Bulldogs on those ABL rosters. The cast of players chosen was as impressive as the Lady Dogs record during the past quarter-century, with the unit supporting six Olympic Gold Medals, two National Players of the Year, 15 All-America certificates, two SEC Players of the Year and two SEC Tourney MVP Trophies. “That’s a team I’d like to coach,” Andy Landers said. “I’d stack that group up against any 25th anniversary team of any program in the nation.”
Teresa Edwards
Five-time Olympian, Naismith Hall of Fame, Greatest Player Ever
Wanda Holloway UGA-Record 134 games played
206
La’Keshia Frett
Lady Hardmon Three-time All-SEC
Four-time All-American
Two-time honorable mention All-American
Bernadette Locke
Katrina McClain
Lisa O’Connor
Saudia Roundtree
Two-time All-American, Four-time All-SEC
Program’s first All-American and Academic All-American
1987 National Player of the Year
Janet Harris
1983 All-American
Tracy Henderson
1996 National Player of the Year
UGA Athletics
2011-12 University of Georgia Athletic Results Overall Record
Sport
SEC SEC Postseason Record Finish Finish Sport
Baseball 31-25 14-15 5th (E) Men’s Basketball 15-17 5-11 10th Women’s Basketball 22-9 11-5 3rd Men’s Cross Country 3rd Women’s Cross Country 4th * Equestrian 11-3 Football 10-4 7-1 1st (E) Men’s Golf 4th Women’s Golf 5th Gymnastics 18-9 4-2 3rd Soccer 13-7-2 6-3-2 4th (E)
– – t-33rd 29th – 2nd 20th 17th 29th 7th 17th
Overall Record
SEC SEC Postseason Record Finish Finish
Softball 45-17 17-11 Men’s Swimming & Diving 6-1-1 Women’s Swimming & Diving 8-1 Men’s Tennis 26-2 10-1 Women’s Tennis 24-5 9-2 Men’s Indoor Track & Field Women’s Indoor Track & Field Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Volleyball 11-19 7-13
3rd (E) 3rd 1st 2nd (E) 2nd (E) 3rd 5th 3rd 4th 4th (E)
t-9th 12th 2nd t-5th t-5th t-28th t-23rd t-64th t-24th –
* Equestrian is not an NCAA sponsored sport. UGA was 2nd at the Varsity Equestrian Championships.
University of Georgia head Coaches
Jack Bauerle
Swimming & Diving
Meghan Boenig Equestrian
Steve Holeman Soccer
Josh Brewer Women’s Golf
Andy Landers
Women’s Basketball
Manuel Diaz Men’s Tennis
Wayne Norton Track & Field
Danna Durante Gymnastics
David Perno Baseball
Mark Richt Football
Mark Fox
Men’s Basketball
Chris Haack Men’s Golf
Lizzy Stemke Volleyball
Lu Harris-Champer Softball
H I S T O R Y
Jeff Wallace
Women’s Tennis
207
ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS Ensuring The Future Of UGA Athletics
In an effort to permanently fund UGA student-athlete scholarships, the University of Georgia Athletic Association founded the Athletic Scholarship Endowment Program. The Endowment Program allows friends of the Athletic Association to invest in the educational opportunities of our deserving student-athletes through endowing a named scholarship for $200,000. The Athletic Association does not receive University, State or Federal funding to cover the full costs of in-state and out of state student-athlete scholarships. The interest generated from the endowment is critical in offsetting the scholarship costs for our current student-athletes. As the costs of higher education escalate, building a strong endowment is crucial to enhancing the lives of our studentathletes while preparing them for life beyond athletics. Contact The Georgia Bulldog Club at 877-GA-DAWGS today to learn more about endowment opportunities for one of UGA’s 21 varsity sports. All Athletic Scholarship Endowment Donors are invited to an annual reception where they have the opportunity to connect with the recipient of their scholarship. To date, more than 200 scholarships have been endowed. Currently eight endowed scholarships are awarded annually to Lady Bulldog Basketball players. In addition, a ninth scholarship has been gifted by sisters Megan and Kelcy Freeman. Funds from the Turner Family Scholarship, which endowed several scholarships in several sports, are now directed toward overall facility improvements for UGA Athletics. The Mike and Ruth Kooyman Scholarship was redirected to the men’s basketball program.
Vincent J. & Barbara Dooley Scholarship Endowment
H I S T O R Y
1996-97 – Tiffany Walker 1997-98 – Latrese Bush 1998-99 – Kelly Miller 1999-00 – Kiesha Brown 2000-01 – Mary Beth Lycett 2001-02 – Camille Murphy 2002-03 – Mary Beth Lycett 2003-04 – Ebony Felder 2004-05 – Jessica Pierce 2005-06 – Alexis Kendrick 2006-07 – Cori Chambers 2007-08 – Megan Darrah 2008-09 – Danielle Taylor 2009-10 – Ebony Jones
Leon & Vickie Farmer Scholarship Endowment
2003-04 – Alexis Kendrick 2004-05 – Sherill Baker 2006-07 – Tasha Humphrey 2007-08 – Tasha Humphrey 2008-09 – Ashley Houts 2009-10 – Ashley Houts 2010-11 – Khaalidah Miller 2011-12 – Khaalidah Miller 2012-13 – Jasmine James
Edwina Chastain Johnson Scholarship Endowment
Jasmine James
Victoria P. Farmer Scholarship Endowment
1998-99 – Kiesha Brown 1999-00 – Coco Miller 2000-01 – Tina Taylor 2001-02 – Tawana McDonald 2002-03 – Sherill Baker 2003-04 – Christi Thomas 2004-05 – Alexis Kendrick 2005-06 – Cori Chambers 2006-07 – Megan Darrah 2007-08 – Angel Robinson 2008-09 – Porsha Phillips 2009-10 – Jasmine Hassell 2010-11 – Jasmine Hassell
Tamika Willis 2012-13 – Tamika Willis
Val Porter Family Scholarship Endowment
Jasmine Hassell 2011-12 – Jasmine Hassell 2012-13 – Jasmine Hassell
Tom & Jeanette Greeson Scholarship Endowment
2007-08 – Ashley Houts 2008-09 – Jaleesa Rhoden 2009-10 – Jaleesa Rhoden 2010-11 – Anne Marie Armstrong 2011-12 – Anne Marie Armstrong 2012-13 – Anne Marie Armstrong
1998-99 – Coco Miller 1999-00 – Kelly Miller 2000-01 – Camille Murphy 2001-02 – Mary Beth Lycett 2002-03 – Christi Thomas 2003-04 – Marquita Driskell 2004-05 – Cori Chambers 2005-06 – Angel Robinson 2006-07 – Ashley Houts 2007-08 – Lindsey Moss 2008-09 – Angel Robinson 2009-10 – Angel Robinson 2010-11 – Jasmine James
Marjorie Butler 2011-12 – Brittney Crews 2012-13 – Marjorie Butler
Dr. Archie Sime & Betty Johnson Rushton Family Athletic Scholarship
(rotates between football & women’s basketball) 2011-12 – Ebony Jones 2012-13 – Ebony Jones
A.M. Armstrong
Andy Landers Scholarship Endowment
Khaalidah Miller 2010-11 – Ronika Ransford 2011-12 – Jasmine James 2012-13 – Khaalidah Miller
Ebony Jones
2006-07 – Jaleesa Rhoden 2007-08 – Maria Taylor 2008-09 – Jasmine Lee 2009-10 – Jasmine James 2010-11 – Meredith Mitchell 2011-12 – Meredith Mitchell 2012-13 – Krista Donald
Turner Family Scholarship
Krista Donald
208
2000-01 – Kiesha Brown 2001-02 – Tameiko Washington 2002-03 – Katie Frye 2003-04 – Sherill Baker 2004-05 – Katie Frye 2005-06 – Sara Kate Greene 2006-07 – Christy Marshall 2007-08 – Christy Marshall 2008-09 – Angela Puleo 2009-10 – Tamika Willis 2010-11 – Tamika Willis 2011-12 – Tamika Willis
2002-03 – Ebony Felder 2003-04 – Katie Frye 2004-05 – Rebecca Rowsey 2005-06 – Megan Darrah 2006-07 – Angel Robinson
Mike & Ruth Kooyman Scholarship
2003-04 – Tina Taylor 2004-05 – Janese Hardrick 2005-06 – Tasha Humphrey 2006-07 – Rebecca Rowsey 2007-08 – Rebecca Rowsey 2008-09 – Meredith Mitchell
The Tallest “Tree” in our forest
Katrina McClain 2012 Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame Inductee • 1987 National Player of the Year • Two-time consensus first-team All-American (1986 & 1987) • Three-time U.S. Olympian (1988, 1992 & 1996) • 1988 & 1992 USA Basketball Female Athlete of the Year • Also enshrined into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame, the U.S. High School Hall of Fame, the State of Georgia Sports Hall of Fame, the State of South Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame & UGA Athletics’ Circle of Honor • UGA’s third Naismith Hall of Fame inductee, joining Dominique Wilkins (2006) & Teresa Edwards (2011)
s s s s s
s s s s s
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Averaged 16.5 ppg & 10.5 rpg en route With UGA teammate Teresa Edwards Hit 73.9 percent of FGs to help U.S. to to All-Final Four honors in 1985 and 1988 Olympic Gold Medals Gold Medal in 1996 Atlanta Olympics
LADY BULLDOGS SCHEDULE Nov 11 Nov 14 Nov 16 Nov 18 Nov 20
Rutgers Presbyterian S.C. State Belmont Savannah State
2:00 pm 7:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm
UNM Thanksgiving Tournament Albuquerque, N.M. Nov 23 Saint Bonaventure 5:30 pm Nov 24 New Mexico or 7 or 9:00 pm North Texas Nov 28 Furman Dec 2 Georgia Tech Dec 4 Mercer Dec 16 Lipscomb Dec 19 TCU Dec 28 Illinois Jan 3 Missouri Jan 6 Tennessee Jan 10 Alabama Jan 13 South Carolina Jan 17 Arkansas Jan 20 Texas A&M Jan 27 Florida Jan 31 Alabama Feb 3 Kentucky Feb 7 Auburn Feb 10 LSU Feb 17 Florida Feb 21 Arkansas Feb 24 Mississippi Feb 28 Mississippi State Mar 3 Vanderbilt Mar 6-10 SEC Tournament
7:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 8:00 pm 8:00 pm 7:00 pm 1:00 pm 9:00 pm 1:00 pm 8:00 pm 5:00 pm 1:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 1:30 pm 1:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 8:00 pm 1:30 pm
Home games in Bold Red and played at Stegeman Coliseum. All times (Eastern) and dates are subject to change. georgiadogs.com
Kaelyn CAUSWELL
Erika FORD
Merritt HEMPE
Tiaria GRIFFIN
Marjorie BUTLER
Shacobia BARBEE