Top Season Performances 80 1,000-point scorers 81-86
Season-by-Season Results 87-96
Year-By-Year Results 97
Series Results vs. All Opponents 98-106
Annual Statistical Leaders 107-108
Season-by-Season Team Statistics 109-110
SEC Statistical Champions 111
Georgia in the polls 112-114
Week-by-Week Polls 112-114
Results vs. Ranked Opponents 115
Holiday Tournament Results 116-117
SEC Tournament Results 118-119
NCAA Tournament Results 120-121
Championship Teams 122-133
Year-By-Year Season Box Scores 135-156
All-Time Jersey Numbers 157
All-Time Letterwinners Stats 158-160
Honor Roll 161-173
All-Time Team 174
WNBA Players 175-177
CREDITS/ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The 2024-25 Georgia Lady Bulldog Basketball Media Guide was produced with Adobe InDesign Desktop Publishing. The publication was designed, written and edited by UGA assistant AD Tray Littlefield and Julia Maenius. Special thanks to Tim Hix, Mike Mobley and Norm Reilly for their years of meticulous record-keeping and attention to detail. Covers designed by Griffin DeJoy. Printing by Burman Printing.
Photography credits: Tony Walsh, Chamberlain Smith, Ryan Leonard, Ben Clark, Steven Colquitt, Ashley Connell, Keith Currie, Donovan Eason, Dan Evans, Phillip Faulkner, Joel Gibson, Steve Guyer, Travis Hatfield, Becky Hay, John Kelley, David Marck, Ted Mayer, Amanda C. Melton, Perry McIntyre, Erin McCall, Parker Moore, Elizabeth Olivier, Meredith Page, Daniel Shirey, Evan Stichler, Scott Trubey, Dylan Wilson, Dale Zanine, NCAA Photos, WNBA Photos, UGA Photographic Services and USA Basketball.
COACHING STAFF
Head Coach Katie Abrahamson-Henderson
Over the last half century, the University of Georgia women’s basketball program has established itself among the nation’s most elite. The Lady Bulldogs boast remarkable postseason success, securing bids to 36 of 42 NCAA tournaments with five trips to the NCAA Final Four. Georgia ranks in the top-10 nationally in NCAA Tournament victories, Sweet-16 appearances and Final Fours.
1000 WINS
The Lady Bulldogs reached a unique milestone in 2020. During its game against East Carolina, Georgia became one of just four programs in the Southeastern Conference to reach the 1,000-win mark.
A WINNING LEGACY
Georgia has become a leader in women’s basketball, thanks to one of the prominent names in the sport, ANDY LANDERS.
• His 944 career wins rank No. 5 all-time in women’s basketball history
• He is one of six coaches nationwide to appear in five or more Final Fours
• 31 NCAA Tournament appearances
• 2007 Women’s Basketballl Hall of Fame inductee
• 2009 Georgia Sports Hall of Fame inductee
• 11 Southeastern Conference titles
• 25 former players in the WNBA
• 16 WNBA Draft picks
• Four-time National Coach of the Year
TERESA EDWARDS 1982-86
JANET HARRIS 1982-85
Left to right: Wanda Holloway, Janet Harris and Teresa Edwards were honored as all-tournament players.
KELLY MILLER 1997-2001
1984 SEC CHAMPIONS
SAUDIA ROUNDTREE (1994-96) WITH ANDY LANDERS
PAM IRWIN-OSBOLT (1996-99) WITH ANDY LANDERS
TOP PUBLIC NATIONAL UNIVERSITY
NICHE, 2024
The New York Times recently nicknamed Athens “Cool Town” for “recreating Rock ‘n’ Roll and changing American Culture.”
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Tony Walsh, Ryan Leonard, Dale Zanine, Steven Colquitt, Wes Blakenship, Ashley Connell, Keith Currie, Donovan Eason, Dan Evans, Phillip Faulkner, Joel Gibson, Steve Guyer, Travis Hatfield, Becky Hay, John Kelley, David Marck, Erin McCall, Perry McIntyre, Amanda C. Melton, Parker Moore, Elizabeth Olivier, Meredith Page, Evan Stichler, Ashley Strickland, Sean Taylor, Scott Trubey, Julianne Upchurch, Kelly Wegel, Dylan Wilson, Evey Wilson, NCAA Photos, WNBA Photos, UGA Public Affairs, USA Basketball.
COVERING THE LADY BULLDOGS
Media covering Lady Bulldog Basketball in need of assistance beyond this brochure – interviews, credentials, photography, etc. – should contact:
Tray Littlefield
UGA Sports Communications email: trayl@sports.uga.edu
MAIL ADDRESS
P.O. Box 1472
Athens, Ga. 30603
CELL PHONE: (205) 504-4566
WORKING CREDENTIALS
PRACTICE & GAME VIDEO
Interviews with Coach ABE, as well as practice and/or game video footage, can be found on the Sports Communications ftp site. Weekly interviews previewing upcoming games will be placed on the site by approximately 5:30 p.m. each Tuesday.
In addition, video featuring game highlights and postgame interviews with both head coaches will be offered for most home contests. That information will generally be available by 5:30 p.m. for weekend games and by 10:30 p.m. for weeknight contests.
Contact Tray Littlefield for instructions on how to access the ftp site. Media needing to obtain additional highlights of the Lady Bulldogs may do so by contacting Littlefield
GAME DAY MEDIA SERVICES
Credentials for members of the media to all regularseason home games can be obtained through the Sports Communications Office. Credentials will be issued on a game-by-game basis. Please contact Tray Littlefield.
PHOTOGRAPHERS & VIDEOGRAPHERS
Accredited photographers and videographers working on assignment will be issued credentials to access the designated camera locations. Use of flash is prohibited at all times and all strobe units must be approved by the UGA Sports Communications office.
SEC TOURNEY CREDENTIALS
Credentials to the 2025 Southeastern Conference Tournament, March 5-9 in Greenville, S.C. can be requested through Tammy Wilson at the Southeastern Conference . All credential requests will approved/ denied by the SEC via this process.
INTERVIEW SCHEDULE
Georgia generally practices in the afternoon. Most interviews will take place before practice around 1:30 p.m. Interviews will be conducted outside of the team's practice facility at Stegeman Coliseum. That schedule may change as the season progresses.
Media are encouraged to arrange for feature-type interviews during pre- or post-practice sessions instead of after games. The preferred day for interviews is Tuesdays throughout the season.
All media will enter Stegeman Coliseum at Gate A.
Press seating is located above Portal 2 in section K of the lower bowl. Radio broadcast positions are at the scorer’s table. TV announcer location is on the floor across from the scorer's table. We will have flip cards available at your seat. Live stats are available via statbroadcast. com.
POSTGAME INTERVIEWS
Interviews will be conducted in the Stegeman Coliseum press room. Media will be surveyed with 3:00 remaining in the game to determine which players will be available.
WIFI INFO AT STEGEMAN
Network Name: UGAAA-Gameday
Password: BulldogS1785!
Tray Littlefield
MEDIA OUTLETS COVERING THE LADY BULLDOGS
Jeff Dantzler, Radio Play-by-play (706) 549-6222; jeffdantzler1710@msn.com
Sara Tidwell/Marc Weiszer Athens Banner-Herald P.O. Box 912; Athens, GA 30613 stidwell@gannett.com
Paul Newberry/Charles Odum, Associated Press Centennial Tower Suite 2420; Atlanta, GA 30303 (404) 754-3562; email: pnewberry@ap.org; codum@ ap.org
Chip Towers, Charlotte Varnes Atlanta Journal-Constitution (706) 247-5590; ctowersajc@yahoo.com
Sports Editor, The Red & Black 540 Baxter St.; Athens, GA 30606 (706) 433-3040; sports@randb.com
Anthony Dasher, UGASports.com 1650 Cherokee Road; Winterville, GA 30683 (706) 410-5944; rdasher746@msn.com
Dean Legge, Dawg Post (706) 248-3576; dean@dawgpost.com
Jordan Hill, Dawgs 247 jordandavishill@gmail.com
Palmer Thombs, On3.com palmerthombs@gmail.com
Mike Griffith, Dawg Nation mikegriffith032@gmail.com
Seth Emerson, The Athletic semerson@theathletic.com
David Johnston; WRFC-Radio 1010 Tower Place; Bogart, GA 30622 (706) 549-6222; david.johnston@coxradio.com
Sports Director, WUOG Radio Tate Student Center; PO Box 2065; Athens, GA 30605 (706) 542-8481
LADY BULLDOGS BROADCAST STATEWIDE
Lady Bulldog broadcasts are part of the Georgia Bulldogs Sports Network. The Georgia Bulldogs Sports Network provides radio network production for many 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 Bulldogs Sports Marketing” staff in Athens, which also handles the sales and marketing for the University of Georgia Athletic Association.
Zach Klein, WSB-TV (ABC) 1601 West Peachtree St.; Atlanta, GA 30309 (404) 870-3201; zach.klein@wsbtv.com
Reggie Chatman, WXIA-TV (NBC) One Monroe Place NE; Atlanta, GA 30324 rchatman@11alive.com
Emily Gagnon, WGCL-TV (CBS) 425 14th Street NW; Atlanta, GA 30318 emily.gagnon@wanf.com
Jeff Dantzler will return as the voice of Lady Bulldog Basketball this season. Dantzler became the play-by-play voice of the Lady Bulldogs in 1993. He has called some of the greatest moments in the program’s storied history, including the 1995, 1996 and 1999 Final Fours; the 1996, 1997 and 2000 SEC Championship seasons; and the 2001 SEC Tournament title. Dantzler also has served primary play-by-play voice of Georgia Baseball since 1997, including trips to the College World Series in 2001, 2004, 2006 and 2008. In addition, he co-hosts the Georgia Bulldogs Sports Network’s pre- and post-game shows and a Sunday brunch call-in show for football, and is a contributing columnist to Bulldawg Illustrated. From 1997-2008, Dantzler also served as the color analyst for Georgia men’s basketball games.
In Athens, Lady Bulldog games have aired on WRFC AM 960 The Ref since 2007-08. Lady Bulldog Basketball games will air on georgiadogs.com, the official UGA app, and on The Varsity Network App, as well as the following stations this year:
WRFC AM 960 (Athens - Full Schedule) and WXKT FM 103.7 (Gainesville - Full Schedule),
Jeff Dantzler, one of the top play-by-play announcers in the nation, has spent over 30 years calling Lady Bulldog basketball games.
STEGEMAN COLISEUM
Stegeman Coliseum has provided the Lady Bulldogs with a superior home court advantage for decades. Georgia has compiled a 536-132 record in 49 seasons of competition at Stegeman, a winning percentage of 79 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 20-year 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 separate 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 major renovations the last few years, most recently a new weight room was added, while the ceiling was painted black this past summer. In 2017, renovations included a center-hung scoreboard, new seats, significantly upgraded sound and lighting systems and additional LED signage.The current projects follow a $13-million renovation in 2010 that transformed Stegeman’s concourses, upgrading the graphics, enhancing spectator access to concessions and restrooms and adding 5,000-square feet of concourse space on each side of the arena.
In addition, Stegeman Coliseum was utilized for rhythmic gymnastics and preliminary volleyball competition during the Centennial Olympic Games in 1996.
Blythewood, S.C.
MIYAH VERSE
TAHNEE
ISOKEN
RETURNING PLAYERS (WITH CAREER STATS)
No. Name Pos. Ht. Cl.
Hometown/Previous School
1 Asia Avinger G 5-7 Sr. 90-88 10.4 3.8 Cerritos, Calif. / Rosary HS / San Diego State Asia Sr
2 Savannah Henderson G 6-3 R-So. 19-0 2.6 0.8 Orlando, Fla. / Timber Creek HS Creek HS
*based on last season's stats at each respective school
Points
De'Mauri Flournoy (8.9 ppg at Georgia)
Asia Avinger (7.8 ppg at Georgia)
Nyah Leveretter (2.5 at Kentucky)
Rebounds
Nyah Leveretter (3.9 at Kentucky)
Asia Avinger (3.4 at Georgia)
Assists
Asia Avinger (131 total assists/4.4 apg at Georgia)
De'Mauri Flournoy (43 total assists/1.5 apg at Georgia)
Steals
Asia Avinger (37 total steals/1.2 spg at Georgia)
De'Mauri Flournoy (35 total assists/1.2 spg at Georgia)
Blocks
Nyah Leveretter (15 total blocks/0.6 bpg at Kentucky)
Fatima Diakhate (12 total blocks/0.4 bpg at Georgia)
Year Three for ABE and Staff
The 2024-25 season marks head coach Katie Abrahamson-Henderson’s third year at Georgia. Coach ABE owns a career 406-187 (.685) record over her 19 seasons overall, during which her teams have won an impressive 16 conference championships. This current Georgia staff has been with her nearly every step of the way. Associate head coach Tahnee Balerio and assistant coaches Isoken Uzamere, Nykesha Sales and Ebone Henry-Harris have combined to work with Coach ABE for a total of 42 seasons.
Georgia Signs No. 16 Ranked Class … Only SEC Team to Ink Four Top-100 Prospects
This year’s highly touted freshman class is ranked No. 16 nationally by ESPN.com in the final recruiting rankings for 2024. The Lady Bulldogs signed four ESPN top-100 players in a group that included guards Indya and Summer Davis (ranked No. 67 and 96, respectively), Trinity Turner (No. 74) and forward Mia Woolfolk (No. 71).
Georgia’s class ranked fifth best in the Southeastern Conference as the Lady Bulldogs are the only SEC program to ink four players all ranked in the ESPN top100.
24-25 PRESEASON NOTEBOOK
Double Trouble Dawgs
Indya and Summer Davis, twin sisters from Detroit, Mich., join a long line of twins to play for the Lady Bulldogs. Indya and Summer are the fourth pair to suit up for Georgia women’s basketball, joining Camille and Miriam Lowe (1990-93), Kelly and Coco Miller (1998-01) and Kara and Kim Braxton (2002-04). Kelly and Coco were both named All-Americans by the WBB Journal during their careers at Georgia, while Kara Braxton earned All-America status from Full Court Press back in 2002.
Avinger Returns to Lead Lady Bulldogs
Asia Avinger, who started all 30 games at point guard last season, ranked fifth in the SEC in assists with 4.37 dimes per game. Avinger played the second-most minutes for the Lady Bulldogs, only behind All-SEC performer Javyn Nicholson. The Cerritos, Calif., native was an All-Mountain West Team player during her three seasons at San Diego State before transferring to Georgia.
Flournoy is Georgia’s Leading Returning Scorer
Carrolton, Ga., native De’Mauri Flournoy is Georgia’s leading returning scorer from last season after she finished third on the team with 8.9 points per game. Flournoy paced the Lady Bulldogs in scoring seven times during the 2023-24 campaign and finished with a team-best 43 made 3-pointers. Her 25 treys during
conference play ranked 15th- best in the SEC.
Experienced Makolo Brings
“Winning Mentality”
Fifth-year guard Roxane Makolo helped lead No. 1 seed USC to the NCAA Elite Eight last season, marking the Trojans’ best year since 1984. Makolo is a combo guard who can play at the one through three spots. She moved to Quebec, Canada from at age six and eventually joined the Canadian National Team, where she helped lead the U16 squad to its first-ever gold medal.
Trilingual Makolo
Makolo is fluent in three languages, including English, French and Lingala (a regional language of the Congo). Makolo was born in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and lived there until she moved to Canada at six years old.
Turner Succeeds at Highest Level
Incoming freshman guard Trinity Turner led Dr. Phillips High School to three straight Class 7A state titles during her prep days. For her efforts, she was a three-time Florida Dairy Farmers Class 7A Player of the Year and the 2023 Orlando Sentinel Player of the Year. During the 2024 season, Turner led her team in points, rebounds, steals, blocks and assists.
2024-25 Season Notebook continued ...
First Verse for Georgia’s Fifth Freshman
Arizona native Miyah Verse will see the first action of her collegiate career after earning a redshirt last year. Verse played high school for national powerhouse Arizona Elite Prep and Mountain Ridge High School in Peoria, Ariz. The four-star prospect was ranked in ESPN’s Super 60, which ranks the top 60 recruits nationally.
Verse’s brother Jared is a rookie linebacker for the NFL’s Los Angeles Rams. The former Florida State standout was a first-round pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, going to the Rams with the 19th overall selection.
Woolfolk Gives Georgia Needed Post Depth
Freshman forward Mia Woolfolk will give the Lady Bulldogs another post option this season. The 2024 MaxPreps Virginia Player of the Year led Manchester High School to a 27-2 record and a state title in Virginia’s Class 6A.
A Winning Tradition
Georgia women’s basketball stands among the most elite programs in the SEC and the country. The Lady Bulldogs rank second in SEC history and 19th nationally with 1,073 all-time wins – one of just four league teams to reach the 1,000-victory mark (Tennessee, Georgia, LSU and South Carolina). Georgia also ranks second, only behind Tennessee, in total conference victories (344) and third, behind Tennessee and South Carolina, with seven league championships.
Roxane Makolo helped lead USC to the NCAA Elite Eight last season before transferring to Georgia. Makolo grew up in the Congo until age six, before moving to Canada. She is fluent in three languages -- English, French and Lingala.
Georgia unveiled its new court design this past fall. The updated court features a darker look with the classic standing Bulldog taking center stage.
COACHING STAFF
HEAD COACH KATIE ABRAHAMSON-HENDERSON
THE COACH ABE FILE
PERSONAL
Name: Katie Abrahamson-Henderson
Overall Record:406-187 (.685) in 19 seasons
Husband: Michael A. Henderson
Daughters: Savannah, Brooklyn
EDUCATION
University of Iowa, 1990
B.S. in sports administration Duquesne University, 1992 M.S., education
COACHING CAREER
2022-24, Georgia
Head Coach (34-30)
• 2023 NCAA Second Round
2016-22 UCF
Head Coach (131-49)
• 2017 WNIT Second Round
• 2018 WNIT Second Round
• 2019 NCAA First Round
• 2021 NCAA First Round
• 2022 NCAA Second Round
2010-16, Albany
Head Coach (146-47)
• Five NCAA Tournament appearances
• Five America East Tournament Championships
• Four America East Regular Season Championships
• Three America East Coach of the Year honors
2008-10, Indiana
Associate Head Coach
• 2009 WNIT Berth
2007-08, Washington
Assistant Coach and Co-recruiting Coordinator
2002-07, Missouri State University
Head Coach (95-61)
• Three NCAA Tournament berths
• Three Missouri Valley Conference Tournament Titles
• Two MVC Regular Season Championships
• 2005 WNIT Champions
2000-02, Michigan State
Associate Head Coach
• 2002 WNIT Berth
1994-00, Iowa State
Assistant Coach and Recruiting Coordinator
• Four consecutive NCAA appearances, including 1999 Elite Eight and 2000 Sweet Sixteen
• 2000 Big 12 Regular Season and Tournament Champions
• Two WNBA Draft Picks (2000)
1992-94, Maine
Assistant Coach
• 1994 North Atlantic Conference Regular Season Champion
1990-92, Duquesne
Assistant Coach
KATIE ABRAHAMSON-HENDERSON HEAD COACH
THIRD
SEASON AT GEORGIA (20TH OVERALL) // RECORD: 406-187 (.685)
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
- Record: 406-187 (.685) in 19 seasons
- Teams have averaged 21 wins per year during her career
- 2023 Atlanta Tipoff Club Whack Hyder College Coach of the Year
- 12 NCAA tournaments
- 13 20-win seasons
- Led Georgia to its most wins in five seasons (22) and its first win over a Power-5 team in the NCAA tournament since 2013 in her first year.
- Four-time Conference Coach of the Year -16 conference championships (nine tournament and seven regular season)
Katie Abrahamson-Henderson — a former Lady Bulldog who has experienced outstanding success as a head coach over the last two decades — was named the third full-time head coach in Georgia women's basketball history on March 26, 2022.
In 19 seasons as head coach, Coach ABE's teams have compiled an impressive 406-187 record — a near 70 percent win percentage and average of 21 victories per year. Her squads have also won seven conference regular season titles, nine league tournament crowns, have earned 12 NCAA Tournament berths and 15 postseason bids overall.
Coach ABE had an impactful first season in Athens. She led Georgia to 22 wins -- the program's highest win total in five years -- and a first-round NCAA tournament victory against Florida State, marking Georgia's first win against a Power 5 team in the NCAA tournament since 2013.
Diamond Battles was named to the 2023 All-SEC Second Team and the SEC All-Defensive Team after ranking among the SEC's best in scoring (14.7 ppg), steals (59) and assists (96).
The 2021-22 UCF Knights set the school record for most wins in a season with a 26-4 overall mark, including a 14-1 record in league play, on its way to winning the American Athletic Conference regular season and tournament championships. The Knights advanced to the NCAA tournament, where they narrowly lost to No. 2 seed UConn, 52-47, in the second round.
For her efforts, Coach ABE was named the 2022 AAC Coach of the Year, marking the fourth time in her career she has earned league Coach of the Year honors. Under her guidance, Battles earned AAC Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year and placed on the conference's first-team squad.
Overall, she has coached seven players to league Player of the Year accolades, five to Defensive Player of the Year and 20 student-athletes to first-team honors.
At UCF, her teams hit milestone after milestone with postseason bids each year (excluding the 2020 COVID season). In 2018-19, UCF earned the program's first-ever at-large bid to the NCAA tournament and followed with yet another trip and the highest seed in school history in 2021.
Coach ABE led UCF to a 131-49 record in six seasons. After being named head coach in 2016, her impact was felt immediately. Her team finished 21-12 that year — a 14-game improvement from the previous season and the second-best turnaround among Division I women's basketball programs.
Her 2018-19 squad finished with a 26-7 record and 13-3 mark in The American to finish in second place. This came after her 2017-18 team tied the program's Division I record for wins in a season and made back-to-back postseason appearances for the first time.
Prior to UCF, Coach ABE spent six seasons at Albany (2010-16), where she led the Great Danes to a combined nine America East Conference tournament and regular season titles, including four Players of the Year awards, four Defensive Players of the Year awards, one ScholarAthlete of the Year, one Rookie of the Year and nine firstteam all-conference selections.
She was chosen as the America East Coach of the Year three times, helping the Great Danes to a combined 8313 record in league play. Albany won 38 consecutive America East regular games, which set a new league record and, at the time, was a Division I record.
Coach ABE guided Missouri State to three Missouri Valley Conference tournament championships, a pair of MVC regular season titles and three NCAA berths from 2002-07.
In addition to her head coaching stops, Coach ABE was the associate head coach at Indiana from 2006-10, an assistant coach at Washington from 2007-08, the associate head coach at Michigan State from 2000-02, an assistant coach at Iowa State from 1994-00, an assistant coach at Maine from 1992-94 and an assistant coach at Duquesne from 1990-92.
As a player, she was a Parade Magazine and USA Today High School All-American and was a highly sought after recruit. After playing two seasons for Coach Landers at Georgia, the Cedar Rapids, Iowa native transferred to play for C. Vivian Stringer at Iowa. She was a member of two Big Ten championships teams. As a freshman at Georgia, she helped the Lady Bulldogs capture the 1986 Southeastern Conference Crown.
HEAD COACH KATIE ABRAHAMSON-HENDERSON
Abrahamson-Henderson played in 64 total games with 34 starts during her two seasons in Athens. She totaled 443 points and 253 rebounds from 1985-87.
She earned a B.S. in physical education with an emphasis in sports administration from the University of Iowa. She received her master's in education from Duquesne University in 1992.
SEASON-BY-SEASON
Coach ABE and her husband, Michael, have two daughters, Savannah and Brooklyn. Michael also had a celebrated college basketball career and eventually played for the Harlem Globetrotters. He led Long Island-C.W. Post to a pair of NCAA Tournaments and scored 1,173 career points from 1981-84.
Michael was a referee in the WNBA from 1998-01 and an NBA ref from 2001-06. He is currently a Division I women's basketball official in numerous conferences across the country.
GEORGIA BASKETBALL
ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH / RECRUITING COORDINATOR
TAHNEE BALERIO
(3RD SEASON AT GEORGIA // 15TH OVERALL)
Tahnee Balerio (pronounced TAWN-ee buh-LARE-ee-oh), who has coached and developed some of the best point guards in the country, was named the associate head coach and recruiting coordinator for Georgia women's basketball on April 8, 2022. The 2024-25 campaign marks her third season with the program.
A two-time All-Missouri Valley Conference selection, team captain and MVP as a player for Coach ABE at Missouri State, Balerio has spent the last decade and a half building programs into perennial winners. Her responsibilities include the development of the guards, recruiting and opponent scouting reports.
Balerio made an immediate impact in her first season at Georgia, leading the program to its most wins in five years, while helping develop Diamond Battles into an All-SEC guard. Overall, the Lady Bulldogs ranked fourth in the SEC in assists with 15.0 per contest, with Alisha Lewis leading all league players in that category.
“Tahnee is the best among today’s coaches,” Coach ABE said. “She is the entire package when it comes to recruiting, skill development and teaching the intellectual aspects of the game. Over the past 13 seasons, she has developed our guards into some of the best and most talented players in the nation. She is a relentless recruiter and someone players love. I am so excited to welcome Tahnee to Dawg Nation!”
“I am thrilled for the opportunity to coach at one of the top women’s basketball programs in the country,” Balerio said. “I have been fortunate to play and coach alongside Coach ABE throughout my career. She is truly a special person who has not only been my boss and mentor, but my family for over 20 years. Because of her relationships with her players and staff, she has built elite programs at each stop.
“When it comes to basketball, academics and the student-athlete experience, the University of Georgia has it all, and I am excited and honored to serve as this program’s associate head coach.”
Overall, Balerio’s teams have garnered nine NCAA tournament bids and won five conference crowns.
She was part of a staff that led UCF to five postseason appearances, three NCAA bids, and the 2022 American Athletic Conference regular season and conference titles. The Knights earned their first NCAA tournament appearance, first NCAA win and highest-ever seeding.
Throughout her career, Balerio has coached some of the top guards in the nation.
Under her guidance, Battles was named the 2022 AAC Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year and AAC Tournament MVP, while Lewis was tabbed the 2021 Newcomer and Sixth Player of the Year.
Kay Kay Wright was named to the 2020 Nancy Lieberman Award Watch List and was recognized among the nation’s best with a spot on the Naismith Trophy National Player of the Year Watch List. Wright was a consensus first-team All-AAC selection and finished her career second in assists (494) and third in points (1,614) in UCF history. The Preseason AAC Player of the Year (the first in program history to earn that distinction) is the only Knight to score 1,600 points, dish out over 400 assists and record over 250 steals in her career.
Prior to her stint in Orlando, Balerio spent six seasons at Albany, serving as an assistant coach for four years and the director of operations for two seasons. Albany captured four America East regular seasons crowns during those six years. Balerio witnessed Imani Tate post the fourth-highest scoring season in program history as Zakiya Saunders —another all-conference selection — broke the school record
for assists and ranked sixth in the NCAA with 6.9 assists per game.
Balerio played at Missouri State from 2005-08 under Coach ABE. She was a team captain, a two-time MVP, a two-time All-Conference selection and earned Scholar Athlete honors. Balerio led the Bears in scoring during the 2006-07 season, averaging 18.7 points per game – tops in the Missouri Valley Conference.
After graduation, she was the head junior varsity and assistant varsity coach at Hillcrest High School in Springfield, Mo.
Balerio earned her degree in entertainment management from Missouri State. She is married to Lily Grenci, and the couple has a one-year old daughter named Zelda Lynn Balerio, born March 23, 2022.
THE BALERIO FILE
Name: Tahnee Balerio Hometown: Buhler, Kansas College: Missouri State ('08) Family: Lily Grenci (wife) and Zelda Lynn (daughter born March, 2022)
COACHING CAREER
2022-present Georgia (Associate Head Coach/Recruiting) 2019-22 UCF (Associate Head Coach) 2016-19 UCF (Assistant Coach) 2012-16 Albany (Assistant Coach) 2010-12 Albany (Director of Ops) 2008-10 Hillcrest (Mo.) High School (Head JV Coach, Asst. Varsity)
HIGHLIGHTS
» 14 seasons on Coach ABE’s staff; 8 NCAA tournament bids; 5 conference championship teams
» Helped lead UCF and Albany to first NCAA tournament appearances
» Also guided UCF and Albany to first NCAA tourney win and highest-ever seeding
» Knights won the 2022 American Athletic Conference regular season and conference tournament crowns
» Developed top guards, including Diamond Battles , Kay Kay Wright and Zakiya Saunders
» Two-Time All-Conference selection, team captain and Scholar-Athlete of the Year as a player at Missouri State
» Led the MVC in scoring during the 2006-07 season
ISOKEN UZAMERE
(3RD SEASON AT GEORGIA // 13TH OVERALL) ASSISTANT COACH
Isoken Uzamere (pronounced E-suh-ken ooh-ZAH-mer-ay) was named an assistant coach for Georgia women's basketball on April 12, 2022. The 2024-25 campaign marks her third season with the program.
Uzamere works with the post players and assists with recruiting and scouting.
In her first season at Georgia, Uzamere helped lead the team to its most wins in five years, with 22 victories and a NCAA tournament appearance. She works primarily with Georgia's post players, helping Javyn Nicholson double her points per game and increase her rebounds by three per contest. She also played a crucial role in developing Brittney Smith into one of the top post players in the SEC.
“Coach “EAS” has all the values you look for when it comes to knowledge of the game, skill development and recruiting," Coach "ABE" said. "The way she connects with players, recruits and their parents make her one of the best in the business. She has developed first-team All Conference and Player of the Year talent. I have no doubt she will continue to do that with our current post players here at Georgia. As I’ve said many times, the number one reason I coach is to empower young women. Coach “EAS” embodies just that -- she is a tremendous person who will be an outstanding example for our team.”
Uzamere spent four seasons at Albany from 2012-16, before joining the Knights prior to the 2016-17 campaign. This past year at UCF, she helped Brittney Smith develop into one of the top forwards in the league as she earned AAC Sixth Player of the Year honors as a two-time All-Conference selection. Forward Masseny Kaba also garnered All-AAC accolades.
Under her guidance, Nyala Shuler finished her career ranked fourth in school history with 837 rebounds and finished in UCF’s career top-10 in blocks.
Uzamere was part of a staff that led UCF to five postseason appearances, three NCAA bids and the 2022 American Athletic Conference regular season and conference titles. The Knights earned their first NCAA tournament appearance, first NCAA win and highest-ever seeding.
At Albany, Uzamere was a graduate assistant from 2012-14 and served as an assistant coach from 2014-16. During her time there, the team won four America East titles with four NCAA Tournament berths, which included the team’s first-ever NCAA Tournament win in 2016 against No. 5 seed Florida.
In addition to her on-court coaching duties, she had many roles during her time at Albany. She worked with the post players, oversaw managers and student assistants, was the strength and conditioning and nutrition liaison and assisted with scouting.
In 2016, her post players accumulated numerous accolades. She helped guide forward Shereesha Richards to recognition as a two-time Associated Press Honorable Mention All-American. Richards picked up her third-straight America East Player of the Year award in 2016 and was also named to the America East All-Conference First Team and All-Defensive Team. Forward/Center Tiana-Jo Carter was the conference’s selection for Sixth Player of the Year.
Uzamere played forward for Hofstra and was a two-time Colonial Athletic Association All-Academic player in her junior and senior seasons. She served as the
THE UZAMERE FILE
Name: Isoken Uzamere Hometown: New York, N.Y. College: Hofstra ('11)
Albany (Graduate Assistant) 2012 Long Island Knights AAU (Head Coach)
HIGHLIGHTS
» 12 seasons on Coach ABE's staff
» Guided teams to eight NCAA tournament appearances
» Javyn Nicholson double her points per game and increase her rebounds by three per contest
» Helped develop Brittney Smith into a three-time All-Conference player and The American Sixth Player of the Year in 2022
» Masseny Kaba developed into one of the top players in the AAC; she was the only Knight in program history to record 800 rebounds and 100 blocks.
» Nyala Shuler finished her career ranked fourth in school history with 837 rebounds and finished top-10 in blocks.
» Albany won four America East titles and earned four NCAA tournament bids during her time there.
head coach of the Long Island Knights AAU Program in 2012 and was a counselor and coach at Game 7 Sports.
NYKESHA SALES
(3RD SEASON AT GEORGIA // 9TH OVERALL) ASSISTANT COACH
Nykesha Sales — an eight-time WNBA All-Star and one of the greatest players in women’s basketball history —was named an assistant coach for Georgia women's basketball on April 12, 2022.
Sales, a two-time All-American, Big EAST Player and Defensive Player of the Year and national champion at UConn (1994-98), served as an assistant coach at UCF for six seasons, leading the Knights to unprecedented and historic success. In her first year at Georgia, that success continued as the program recorded its most wins in five seasons on its way to the NCAA tournament.
Sales' responsibilities include the development of guards, scheduling, opponent scouting reports and recruiting.
“Nykesha Sales was one of the greatest players in our sport and has become an exceptional coach over the last seven years,” Coach ABE said. “As a former WNBA All-Star and collegiate national champion, Coach Sales gives our student-athletes a unique perspective of what it takes to win at the most elite levels. She made an immediate impact on our program at UCF as she developed All-Conference players each season. I am excited for our current team here at Georgia and our recruits to learn from one of the best.”
In her first season as a collegiate coach in 2016-17, Sales helped Aliyah Gregory become the first UCF player to earn American Athletic Conference First Team accolades, while teammate Zykira Lewis also earned All-Conference honors.
In 2018-19, Kayla Thigpen was named The American Sixth Player of the Year, becoming the first Knight to earn an AAC individual award. In 2020-21, Sales helped Tay Sanders earn AAC All-Conference honors — a distinction she earned once against in 2022.
Sales herself was an outstanding player who led the Huskies through remarkable success in the 1990’s.
She played at UConn from 1994-98, and finished her career as the Huskies’ alltime leading scorer and still ranks among the top five there with 2,178 career points. She also owns the school record for steals with 447.
Sales helped UConn capture the 1995 NCAA Division I National Championship, a Final Four appearance in 1996 and two Elite 8 berths. She was a two-time WBCA and Associated Press All-American, the 1998 BIG EAST Player of the Year and was first-time All-BIG EAST in 1997 and 1998.
Sales graduated from UConn in 1998 with a degree in business management. She played for the Orlando Miracle/Connecticut Sun from 1999-2007 and was selected as an eight-time WNBA All-Star. Sales led the Connecticut Sun to two WNBA Finals and still reigns as the franchise’s all-time leading scorer (3,955 points; 14.3 ppg), which ranks among the WNBA’s all-time top 30. In addition, she finished her career with 1,157 rebounds, 683 assists and 490 steals.
In 1997, she earned a gold medal with Team USA at the Women’s World University Games in Sicily, Italy. Sales was the team’s leading scorer, averaging 18.3 points per game. Later in 2000, she was named an alternate on the 2000 USA Basketball Olympic Team.
Sales also played professionally overseas for seven seasons in Turkey, Latvia, Po-
land, Czech Republic and Bosnia.
Sales was a member of the inaugural class (2006) of inductees to the University of Connecticut women’s basketball “Huskies of Honor” recognition program.
From 2013-16, she worked with the Connecticut Sun as a community liaison.
» An eight-time WNBA All-Star and two-time All-American at UConn
» Big EAST Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year as a player
» Played at UConn from 1994-98 and helped lead the Huskies to the 1995 NCAA National title.
» Finished her career as the Huskies' all-time leading scorer and still ranks among the top-5 there with 2,178 career points.
» Led the WNBA's Connecticut Sun to a pair of WNBA Finals and is still that franchise's all-time leading scorer with 3,955 (top-30 among all WNBA players all time.
» Played professionally overseas for seven seasons in Turkey, Latvia, Poland, Czech Republic and Bosnia.
» In her first season as a collegiate coach in 2016-17, Sales helped Aliyah Gregory become the first UCF player to earn American Athletic Conference First Team accolades.
ASSISTANT COACH/DIRECTOR OF PLAYER DEVELOPMENT
EBONE HENRY - HARRIS
(3RD SEASON AT GEORGIA // 9TH OVERALL)
Ebone Henry Harris — one of the greatest players in University of Albany women’s basketball history who was most recently on Katie Abrahamson-Henderson’s staff at UCF— serves as the Georgia Lady Bulldogs’ Assistant Coach/Director of Player Development.
“I am thrilled to have Ebone in Athens,” Abrahamson-Henderson said. “She has been an instrumental part of our program over the last six years, and I know she will have the same impact here at Georgia. She is detail-oriented, meticulous and, as someone who has played the game at a high level, a tremendous example for our student-athletes.
“As a player, Ebone became Albany’s all-time leading scorer and was also named conference Defensive Player of the Year on three occasions. Everything she did as a player was done at an elite level, and she continues to do that in her professional career.”
Over six seasons at UCF, Henry-Harris has served as the assistant recruiting coordinator/video director, with a hand in nearly every facet of the program.
She helped lead UCF to its first NCAA tournament bid, first NCAA tourney win and highest-ever seeding. The Knights also captured the 2022 American Athletic Conference regular season and tournament crowns.
As a player, Henry-Harris finished her career as UAlbany’s all-time leading scorer with 1,642 career points. She was the first player ever to be named a three-time America East Defensive Player of the Year and was a 2013 College Sports MidMajor All-American.
For her efforts on the court, UAlbany also retired her No. 5 jersey.
From 2013-16, she played professionally overseas for teams in Iceland, Puerto Rico, Montenegro and Bolivia, before joining Coach ‘ABE’s staff at UCF.
Henry-Harris is a native of San Diego, Calif., and graduated from Albany in 2013 with a bachelor’s degree in communication and rhetoric.
She is married to Jerrett Harris and the couple has a daughter, Lyric, and sons Jace and Jesiah.
Name:
Ebone Henry-Harris Hometown: San Diego, Calif. College: UAlbany ('13) Family: Jerrett (husband), Lyric (daughter) and Jace (son)
COACHING CAREER
2022-present Georgia (Director of Player Development) 2016-22 UCF (Assistant to the Rec. Coordinator/Video)
HIGHLIGHTS
» Played at Albany from 2009-13
» Finished career as Albany's all-time leading scorer
» First player ever to be named a three-time America East Defensive Player of the Year
» Her No. 5 jersey is retired at Albany
» Successful overseas career in Montenegro, Iceland and Bolivia in addition to Puerto rico
» Spent the last six seasons on UCF's staff
» Had a hand in nearly every facet of the program at UCF
» Helped UCF earn first NCAA tourney bid and highest-ever seeding
» UCF won the 2022 American Conference regular season and tournament crowns.
THE HENRY-HARRIS FILE
ASSISTANT COACH/DIRECTOR OF SCOUTING
ALIYAH GREGORY
(3RD SEASON AT GEORGIA)
Aliyah Gregory is in her third season on staff at the University of Georgia and serves as the Assistant Coach/ Director of Scouting.
Gregory played for Coach 'ABE' and had an illustrious career at UCF. She finished ranked sixth all time in Knights' history in points (1,437), fourth all time in made field goals (578) and seventh in free throws made (242). She was a first-team All-Conference player, becoming the first player in Knight history to earn that distinction.
The Tampa native earned a spot on the NCAA Team of the Week on Feb. 22, 2017 after scoring a career-best 34 points to lead UCF to the program's firstever win over a nationally ranked opponent with the victory over in-state rival South Florida. Her 15 made field goals is tied for the fourth-most in a single game at UCF. She entered the game needing 10 points to become the 22nd Knight to reach 1,000 career points and achieved the feat with 3:40 remaining in the first quarter.
In 2017 and 2018, Gregory helped lead UCF to back-to-back postseason appearances for the first time in program history.
After earning her degree in sport and exercise science in 2018, Gregory spent time coaching at the high school and AAU levels in Tampa and Orlando.
COACHING CAREER
2022-present
HIGHLIGHTS
Georgia (Director of Scouting and Video)
» Spent time coaching high school and AAU teams in Tampa and Orlando
» Played for Coach ABE at UCF
» Finished ranked sixth all time in Knights' history in points (1,437), fourth all time in made field goals (578) and seventh in free throws made (242). She was a first-team All-Conference player, becoming the first player in Knight history to earn that distinction.
» Helped lead UCF to back-to-back postseason appearances for the first time in program history.
THE GREGORY FILE
Name:
Aliyah Gregory Hometown: Tampa Bay, Fla. College: UCF ('18)
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT
MEGAN HERBOTH
(3RD SEASON AT GEORGIA)
Megan Herboth was named Executive Assistant for the Georgia women’s basketball program on June 13, 2022.
Prior to Georgia, Herboth worked in the communications office at UCF, where she had a hand in nearly every sport during her eight years in Orlando.
She was part of the Knights’ unprecedented run in women’s basketball. The team set the school record for most wins in a season, won the American Athletic Conference regular season and tournament titles and garnered its highest-ever NCAA tournament seeding. The Knights earned postseason bids during each of the last six years.
Herboth was named a 2022 Greater Orlando Sports Commission SPORTYS Award finalist for Best in Communications and Public Relations. She was also tabbed the American Volleyball Coaches Association Southeast Region Division SID of the Year in 2015.
She led publicity efforts for American Conference Coach of the Year Katie Abrahamson-Henderson, Conference and Defensive Player of the Year Diamond Battles and numerous other All-AAC accolades.
Herboth joined the UCF Athletics staff in July 2014 and was promoted in July 2016 to associate director of communications. She served as the primary communications contact for women's basketball, rowing, cross country and track and field and previously worked with volleyball, women's soccer, softball and men's tennis.
Prior to joining UCF, Herboth spent two years in the sports information office at Whitworth University in Spokane, Wash. She served as the primary contact for volleyball, cross country, golf, women's basketball, softball and track and field. The Pirates extended their Northwest Conference McIlroy-Lewis All-Sports winning streak to seven straight years in 2013-14, and the women's basketball team made back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances, winning the first NCAA Tournament game in program history in March of 2014.In addition to her sports information duties, she expanded Whitworth's social media presence and assisted with the Athletics Department's major fundraisers.
Before her time in Washington, she worked in the Athletics Communications office at the University of Alabama while pursuing a Master's degree in Human Performance with an emphasis in sport management. She primarily worked with the gymnastics and rowing programs, but assisted with all other sports. Her time with the Crimson Tide included national championships in football, gymnastics, softball and women's golf. She assisted hosting the NCAA Softball Championship, as well. Herboth capped off her time at Alabama by earning a CoSIDA Publications Award for her work on the rowing media guide.
BRIANNA PATTON
(1ST SEASON AT GEORGIA) DIRECTOR OF RECRUITING OPERATIONS
Brianna Patton, who has spent the last three years as the director of women's basketball recruiting at Ole Miss, returned to Georgia as the director of recruiting operations for Lady Bulldog basketball in May of 2024.
The Conyers, Georgia, native graduated from the University of Georgia in 2018 with a degree in sport management. She was a member of the Lady Bulldogs' staff as a manager during her time in school and also served as a graduate assistant on Coach ABE's staff at UCF.
"Returning to Georgia as the director of recruiting operations is a dream come true," Patton said. "As a Georgia graduate who worked with this program for several years and as a member of Coach ABE's staff at UCF, this is the perfect fit for me. This University and this team hold a special place in my heart, and I look forward to joining this outstanding staff in this role."
Patton was a member of a historic staff, leading the UCF Knights to a 26-4 season and its first win in NCAA Tournament history in 2021-22. UCF entered the NCAA Tournament on a 13game winning streak, its longest in program history. As a graduate assistant, Patton was a key piece of day-to-day operations, practices and game planning. She also worked in assisting in recruiting operations and with the program's academic advisors.
At Ole Miss, Patton helped the Rebels sign multiple top 10 recruiting classes during her three seasons.
Patton also spent time as a physical education teacher and coach for the Rockdale County Public Schools and worked as a gameday operations intern for the Atlanta Dream.
DIRECTOR OF SKILL DEVELOPMENT AND VIDEO ANALYTICS
OLIVIER CADET
Olivier Cadet is in his third season at Georgia and his first as the director of skill development and video analytics.
Cadet, from Broward county Florida, started his first year at Florida Atlantic University as a practice player to the women’s basketball program. The following year he transferred to the University of Central Florida where he served on Coach ABE's staff, helping the Knights capture the American Athletic Conference regular season and tournament crowns, as well as the team's highest-ever NCAA tournament seeding.
In his time at UCF, Cadet began as a practice player to assist coaching staff in player development.(2019-2020) He then went on to become head manager in 2020.(2020-2022) Additionally, Cadet worked for Synergy Sports Technology as a production assistant specializing in on demand video support for the purpose of scouting across the country.
Cadet was a member of a historic staff, leading the Knights to a 26-4 season and its first win in NCAA Tournament history. UCF entered the NCAA Tournament on a 13-game winning streak, its longest in program history. As a the Head Manager, Cadet was a key piece of day-to-day operations, practices and game planning.
Cadet graduated with his bachelor's degree in criminal justice from the University of Central Florida in 2022.
JARAY DAVIS
(3RD SEASON AT GEORGIA) GRADUATE MANAGER
Jaray Davis is in his third season with the Georgia women's basketball team after being promoted to graduate manager.
Davis earned a degree in exercise and sport science from the University of Georgia. He has served in numerous roles throughout campus, including with UGA rec sports and the Athletics' event management staff. He also spent time with Piedmont Wellness center as a fitness assistant and human performance coach.
Davis played a vital role in helping Coach ABE's staff to a successful first season in Athens. The 2022-23 Lady Bulldogs posted 22 wins -- the most for the program in five years -- and advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament.
GRADUATE ASSISTANT
NICK BUTTS
(2ND SEASON AT GEORGIA)
Nick Butts is in his second season at Georgia and serves as the team's graduate assistant.
Butts graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in statistics from Georgia's Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. He is currently pursuing a master's degree in the Terry College of Business.
Butts has effectively managed various aspects of team operations including helping with court activities during practice, recruiting, administrative duties, equipment, hydration, and team travel. Butts also has experience as a statistician for multiple sports at the University of Georgia.
Among other experiences, he also worked at Kennesaw State as an athletic communications in analytics student assistant.
DIRECTOR OF STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING
JOSH RUCCI
Josh Rucci joined the UGA strength and conditioning staff in January 2006 and has coordinated those efforts for Lady Bulldog Basketball since 2009. Josh also coordinates the strength and conditioning efforts for the Gymdogs.
From 2004-05, Rucci was a volunteer student assistant with the strength and conditioning program while an undergraduate at Bowling Green, working primarily with football and hockey. A native of Chicago, Rucci then completed a seven-month internship with the Bulls and helped the team to its second straight play-off appearance.
In 2006, Rucci came to UGA as a graduate assistant. He coordinated the strength and conditioning efforts for the cross country and golf programs and assisted with basketball, swimming & diving and gymnastics.
Rucci is a member of the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) and is a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS). He received his bachelor's as an Exercise Specialist in the Kinesiology program from BGSU in 2005 and his master's in Motor Behavior from UGA in 2008. Since that time Rucci has accrued many other certifications including the Functional Movement Screen, Strongfirst Kettlebell, and NASM Performance Enhancement Specialist.
He is married to the former Bridget Berish, and the couple have a son, Everett, and daughter, Emma Jean.
DIRECTOR OF ATHLETIC TRAINING
HANNAH STELZER
Hanna Stelzer is in her first season as the athletic trainer for the Georgia women’s basketball program.
Stelzer entered her current role after serving as the assistant athletic director for sports medicine at Houston Christian University since 2013. During her time in Houston, she was the primary healthcare administrator for approximately 350 student-athletes and the athletic trainer for the HCU women’s basketball team.
Among her many roles at HCU, Stelzer provided temporary coverage at for numerous teams, including men’s basketball, football, beach volleyball, indoor volleyball, track and field, baseball, softball, and men’s and women’s soccer. She served as the hiring manager and supervisor for seven full-time athletic trainers and one graduate assistant and also collaborated on renewal plans of the athletics insurance program and multi-year hospital partnership contract.
Stelzer served in roles as assistant athletic trainer from 2013-19 and associate head athletic trainer from 2019-22 before being promoted to assistant athletic director.
A graduate of Concordia University Chicago, Stelzer earned her master’s degree in athletic training from Texas Tech Health Sciences Center, where she completed her clinical rotations. In addition to being a certified athletic trainer, Stelzer has earned certifications in dry needling, BFR, American Red Cross CPR/AED/First Aid and mental health first aid.
Stelzer is a member of the Athletics Healthcare Administration Association, the National Athletic Trainers Association and Southwest Athletic Trainers Association.
ERICA UNDERHILL SPORTS NUTRITION
LEIGH ANN HOLLAND PROMOTIONS
DR. FRED REIFSTECK TEAM DOCTOR
DARRICE GRIFFIN SENIOR DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
Darrice Griffin was named Senior Deputy Director of Athletics January 1, 2021, after serving as Deputy Director of Athletics of Administration at UGA from December, 2017-December, 2020.
She had previously served as a senior member of the athletic administration at the University of Massachusetts from 2015-17.
In her role with the Bulldogs Griffin’s responsibilities have included the day-to-day oversight responsibilities for some internal operations including Human Resources and strategic organizational advancement of the Athletics Association. She also serves as the Deputy Title IX Coordinator and Sports Facilitator for several sports programs. In addition, Griffin represents the Athletics Association as a member of various SEC and institutional leadership groups.
At the time she joined the Georgia staff, Griffin had served as Deputy Director of Athletics at UMASS from July, 2017-December, 2017, after holding the position of Senior Associate Director of Athletics for Internal Operations/Senior Woman Administrator for two years.
As Deputy Director at UMASS she oversaw day-to-day operations relating to student-athletes, facilities and competitions, while also serving on numerous campus committees and as the liaison with many campus constituents. Additionally, Griffin was also the department’s Senior Woman Administrator during her entire tenure in Amherst.
Also during her time at UMass, Griffin had administrative oversight responsibilities for a number of Minutemen sports, including football, women’s basketball, men’s and women’s lacrosse, field hockey and softball. With those programs she assisted with budgeting, competitive scheduling and the well-being of coaches, staff and student-athletes.
Prior to her arrival in Amherst, Griffin spent the previous six years (2010-2015) at Columbia University, including the last four as Associate Athletics Director for Intercollegiate Sports Programs. In that role, she oversaw a number of Columbia's sports programs, was the University's liaison to Barnard College — Columbia’s partner institution in New York City — and was responsible for gender and diversity initiatives within the department of athletics.
With the Lions, Griffin had oversight for men's and women's basketball, men's and women's soccer, softball and baseball. She worked alongside the offices of admissions and financial aid, while also assisting in fundraising and development initiatives for both the athletic department at-large and her assigned sport programs. Griffin played a role in several student-athlete initiatives, including Columbia's The First-Year Transition Program and The Leaders for Life Program.
Within the University itself, Griffin was an active member of the President's Advisory Committee on Sexual Assault, had a leadership role on the University Bystander Intervention Task Force and played a key role in the University-wide initiative Step-Up.
Griffin originally joined the Lions as Director of Women's Basketball Operations and Special Projects in August 2009 before moving into the senior leadership position the following summer.
A native of Seagraves, Texas, Griffin was a standout basketball student-athlete at Texas Tech, graduating in 2007 with cum laude honors in psychology. She was a four-time recipient of the Texas Tech Student-Athlete Merit Award, a two-time Academic All-Big 12 Conference honoree and was named an Arthur Ashe Sports Scholar in 2007. Griffin comes from an elite basketball family. Her mother, Tami Wilson, played at Texas Tech from 1990-92 and her sister, Teddy, also played for the Lady Raiders from 2005-08.
Griffin was the 2004 Gatorade Player of the Year in Texas. She was also an All-Texas First-Team selection and a McDonald's All-American.
JERE W. MOREHEAD UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT
President Jere W. Morehead began his tenure as the 22nd University of Georgia president on July 1, 2013. Under his leadership, UGA has risen in the rankings of the best public colleges and universities and has completed a series of initiatives to enhance student learning and success, including a requirement for experiential learning for all undergraduates.
Additionally during President Morehead’s tenure, the university completed the most successful capital campaign in its history and established the UGA Innovation District, through which students and faculty partner with industry leaders to create products and enterprises that strengthen Georgia’s economy. UGA has increased its research expenditures by more than 50% over the past decade and is ranked first in the nation for the number of research-based products reaching the marketplace.
In keeping with his focus on student success, President Morehead launched the ALL Georgia program to support students from rural areas and created the Double Dawgs program, which enables students to save time and money by earning an undergraduate and graduate degree in five years or less. Demand for a UGA education has more than doubled during the past decade, and the university’s enrollment reached an all-time high last fall.
President Morehead has served the University of Georgia for more than 35 years in both faculty and administrative roles. Before becoming president, he was senior vice president for academic affairs and provost from 2010 to 2013. Prior to 2010, he held several key administrative assignments, including vice president for instruction, vice provost for academic affairs, associate provost and director of the Honors Program, and acting executive director of Legal Affairs.
He is the Meigs Professor of Legal Studies in the Terry College of Business, where he has held a faculty appointment since 1986. He is a co-author of several books and book chapters, including The Legal and Regulatory Environment of Business, and he has published scholarly articles on legal topics ranging from export controls to jury selection. He has served as editor-in-chief of the American Business Law Journal.
President Morehead currently serves as co-chair of the University Leadership Forum, a national initiative led by the Council on Competitiveness. Additional service includes membership on the boards of the Georgia Research Alliance, Georgia Chamber of Commerce, Atlanta Regional Council for Higher Education, Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, and Emory University Candler School of Theology. He also is a member of the National Football Foundation board of trustees.
He is the immediate past chair of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I board of directors. He previously served as president of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and chair of the SEC executive committee and as a member of the NCAA’s board of governors; presidential forum; working group on name, image, and likeness; and federal and state legislation working group.
In 2021, he received the Chief Executive Leadership Award from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education District III for outstanding leadership and service in support of education. He has received several university-wide teaching awards, including the Josiah Meigs Award—UGA’s highest honor for teaching excellence, the Russell Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, the Teacher of the Year Award in the Terry College of Business, and the Lothar Tresp Outstanding Honors Professor Award. He also earned the UGA School of Law’s premier honor for alumni, the Distinguished Service Scroll Award. Following a nearly $12 million capital campaign, the University System of Georgia Board of Regents named the Honors College at the University of Georgia in his honor.
JOSH BROOKS J. REID PARKER DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Josh Brooks, a finalist for Sports Business Journal’s Athletic Director of the Year in 2023, continues to lead the University of Georgia Athletic Association through historic success.
Georgia Athletics boasts remarkable accomplishments over the last three years, including a No. 7 final ranking in the 2023 LEARFIELD Directors Cup — Georgia's highest mark in 18 years, a record-setting student-athlete GPA in each of the last two academic campaigns, unparalleled fundraising and over 15 capital projects that have been completed or are in progress.
Bulldog athletic teams have won three team national championships and a total of seven SEC crowns, while there have been 15 individual national champions.
The women’s soccer and volleyball teams have made the NCAA tournament in back-to-back years for the first-time ever. During Wes Johnson’s first season as head coach, the baseball program advanced to a NCAA Super Regional for the first time since 2008. Keidane McAlpine guided the soccer team to the 2023 SEC Championship, finishing with its highest ranking ever at No. 13 nationally.
In addition to back-to-back national titles in 2021 and 2022, Georgia’s football team boasts an incredible 39-0 regular season record during Brooks’ three-year tenure. They have also recorded three-straight 12-0 regular seasons – the first time in SEC lore a program has done so. The Bulldogs enter the 2024 campaign having won an SEC and school record 27-straight regular season conference games and riding a school record 25-game home win streak.
From academic and athletic success to historic fundraising and a multitude of facility projects, Brooks has continued to sustain Georgia’s standing as a national powerhouse. The Georgia Bulldog Club set new fundraising records in each of the last three years with $86.4 million raised in 2022, $102 million in 2023 and $113 million in 2024.
Brooks has overseen substantial facility upgrades that include the brand-new Lindsey Hopkins Indoor Tennis Courts, improvements to the south side of Sanford Stadium, a $45 million renovation to Foley Field, a $38 million upgrade to the Jack Turner Softball Stadium, a new $1.8 million men’s and women’s basketball weight room as well as expansive updates to Stegeman Coliseum and a renovation project in the Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall.
Georgia also built a new, state-of-the-art track and field locker room and recently announced plans to construct a one-of-a-kind track facility off South Milledge Avenue. This project will include the only indoor track and field venue in the state of Georgia and will allow the Bulldogs to host NCAA and SEC events as well as summer camps.
While facility upgrades have been at the forefront, Georgia’s emphasis on Name, Image, and Likeness has further enhanced its commitment to the student-athlete experience. Georgia Athletics was one of the first departments to announce a comprehensive NIL program, which provides wide-ranging education, multi-media management tools and brand-building training. The Bulldogs became one of the first schools to build an in-house NIL department with an Athlete Manager to help student-athletes navigate this space.
Under his guidance, Georgia re-branded the mental health and performance department, bringing in a new full-time director and an additional clinical counselor as well as adding sports psychology services for every team. A Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee was also established as Courtney Gay was hired to lead in the department’s DEI efforts.
A native of Hammond, La., Brooks’ vision of competing for championships and postseason success and his passion for student-athletes began well before his time as Athletic Director.
Before returning to UGA in 2016 as Executive Associate Director of Athletics, Brooks served as Deputy Athletics Director at the University of Louisiana Monroe from 2015-16 and Director of Athletics at Millsaps College from 2014-15. He also served in capacities as Director of Football Operations (2008-11) and Assistant and Associate Athletic Director for Internal Operations (2012-14) in his previous stint at UGA.
Brooks also served as director of football operations at the University of Louisiana-Monroe beginning in 2004. He gained experience as a student at Louisiana State University, working as an equipment manager and a student assistant coach. During his four years at LSU, the Tigers participated in the 2000 Peach Bowl, 2002 Sugar Bowl, and won the 2001 Southeastern Conference championship.
Brooks graduated from LSU (’02) with a degree in Kinesiology and completed his master’s degree in Sport Management from UGA (‘14). He and his wife, Lillie, have twin sons, Jackson and James, born in July of 2009 and a third son, Davis, born in March of 2012.
He and his wife Lillie have become a vital part of the Athens community. On January 20, 2021, just two weeks after becoming Athletic Director, Brooks pledged $100,000 to create a need-based scholarship to support UGA students from Athens-Clarke County. His gift created a Georgia Commitment Scholarship (GCS), adding to the more than 550 endowed, need-based scholarships created under the GCS program since its launch in January 2017.
Travis
Derek Hammock
Christie Purks
Leland
PLAYER BIOS
#0 TRINITY TURNER
Fr. // Guard // 5-6 // Orlando, Fla. // Dr. Phillips High School Angie Watson Women's Basketball Scholarship
High School
» Four-star, top-100 prospect according to ESPN
» 2023 MaxPreps Girls Player of the Year in the state of Florida
» 2023.2024 SB Live Florida Player Of The Year
» 2024 Florida Dairy Farmers Miss Basketball
» 2022, 2023, 2024 3x Florida Dairy Farmers 7a Player Of The Year
» 2022, 2023, 2024 3x Orlando Metro Conference 1st Team
» 2023 Orlando Sentinel Girls Player Of The Year
» 2023 Geico State Invitational Elite 6 Espn All-Tournament Team
» Helped Dr. Phillips To Back-To-Back-To- Back Class 7a State Titles
» She Led Her Team All 5 Categories All Three Years (Points, Rebounds, Steals, Blocks and Assists)
» Totaled 1,998 points, 1,005 rebounds,701 assists and 372 steals in her career
» Played For Essence EYBL ( 2023 PLATINUM AND GOLD)
» Led Her To Team 99-12 In 4 Seasons
Personal
» Daughter of Shuwenda Turner and James Turner
» Sister to Jamiya, James, Jaquise, Briana, and Tia
» Father Played At Division 1 Basketball at Bethune-Cookman University
» Major: Finance
CAREER HIGHS
POINTS
Career: 30 vs. Boise State (1/15/22)
REBOUNDS
Career: 9 2X, last vs. Boise State (1/15/22)
ASSISTS
Career: 10 vs. Wofford (12/39/23)
BLOCKS
Career: 1 10 times
STEALS
Career: 5 2X,lastvs.NewMexico(2/4/23)
MINUTES
Career: 39 vs Florida (1/14/24)
MISCELLANEOUS STATS
DOUBLE-DIGIT POINTS
Career: 47
DOUBLE-DIGIT REBOUNDS
Career: x
DOUBLE-DOUBLES
Career: 1
20-POINT GAMES
Career: 8
#1 ASIA AVINGER
Career Highlights
Sr. // Guard // 5-7 // Cerritos, Calif. // San Diego State Vickie and Leon Farmer Scholarship Endowment
All-Mountain West Team (2022-23)
Mountain West All-Freshman Team (2021-22)
Mountain West All-Academic Team (2020-21 & 2021-22)
Mountain West Freshman of the Week (Jan. 10, 2022 & Jan. 17, 2022)
Preseason Mountain West Freshman of the Year (2020-21 & 2021-22)
2023-24 Season
» Started in all 30 games in her first season at Georgia
» Ranked fifth in the SEC with 131 assists on the season (4.4 per game)
» Scored 233 points (7.8 ppg) as Georgia’s third-leading scorer, also pulling in 3.4 rpg
» Led the Lady Bulldogs with 37 steals
» Totaled 10 double-digit scoring efforts
» Scored 15 points in Georgia debut, including a career-high four 3-pointers, in season opening win over North Carolina A&T
» Tallied 10 points with five assists and two steals against Belmont
» Recorded first career double-double with 11 points and a career-high 10 assists against Wofford
» Dished a team-high five assists in SEC opener against Texas A&M
» Tallied 12 points and eight assists against Alabama
» Scored a season-high 22 points at Florida
» Had a 14-point scoring effort at Auburn
» Posted 15 points and seven assists against Tennessee
» Reached double figures for the fourth-straight game with 10 points at Mississippi State
» Scored 10 points and dished five assists against LSU
» Grabbed a season-high eight rebounds in regular season finale at Vanderbilt
2022-23
Season
» Named to the All-Mountain West Team after averaging 11.6 points, 4.2 assists and 2.0 steals per game while shooting 48 percent from the field
» Appeared in 29 games (28 starts) and averaged 29.9 minutes per game
» Was one of just three players in the nation to average 11.0 points, 4.0 assists and 2.0 steals while shooting at least 45 percent
» Became just the second Aztec in the Mountain West era (1999-2023) to total at least 700 points and 200 assists in her first two years
» Finished third in the Mountain West in assist per game, assist-turnover ratio (1.73) and steals per game
» Scored in double-digits 16 times and led SDSU in scoring six times
» Led the Aztecs in assists 19 times and in steals 14 times
» Had four games with 20 or more points, including a season-high 25 twice
» Scored 25 points vs. Miami Ohio (12-20-22) on 9-for-12 shooting and 25 vs. first place UNLV (1-7-23) on 12-for-18 shooting while dishing out six assists
» Her 25 points and 12 field goals vs UNLV was the most by an Aztec on the year
» Tied a career-high with nine assists vs. Nevada (1-5-23)
2021-22 Season
» Named to the Mountain West All-Freshman Team after averaging 12.0 points and 3.9 assists, both of which were tops in the conference among freshmen
» Started 30 games and averaged 30.2 minutes
» Led SDSU in free throws made (96) and attempted (129)
» Scored in double-digits 20 times and topped 20 points on three occasions
» Scored 30 points on 10-for-12 shooting against Boise State (1-15-22) to become the first Aztec freshman to reach 30 points in the Mountain West era
» Won the Mountain West Freshman of the Week award twice
» Led the Aztecs in assists 22 times
» Was SDSU’s top scorer eight times
» Had nine rebounds in a game twice
» Had nine assists at New Mexico (1-9-22)…
» Was the Mountain West Preseason Freshman of the Year for the second straight year
2020-21 Season
» Was named the Mountain West Preseason Freshman of the Year but then suffered an injury that caused her to miss the entire season.
High School
» One of the nation's best combo guards according to espnW, Avinger came to SDSU as a four-star recruit ranked No. 56 in the nation according to ESPN
» A three-time All-CIF Southern Section pick, she was ranked as the No. 16 point guard in the nation by espnW
» Following her senior year, she was named the Orange County Register's Female Athlete of the Year and to the MaxPreps All-California First Team.
» She was also named the Trinity League MVP and the Orange County Player of the Year
» Averaged 13.8 points, 6.3 rebounds and 4.0 assists as a senior
» Helped lead Rosary HS to the 2020 CIF Southern California DI Regional championship before the tournament was suspended by COVID-19
Personal
» Born in Long Beach, Calif. to Nicole and Skinner Avinger
» Her father played football at Portland State
» Her brothers Noah (twin brother) and Lucky were on the SDSU football team; Noah now plays at New Mexico
» Worked at the Mamba Academy as a coaching assistant
» Was putting together an impressive freshman season before suffering a season-ending injury in the fourth game of the year back in 2022
» Daughter of Coach ABE and Michael Henderson
2023-24 Season (Redshirt Freshman)
» Played in 15 games
» Totaled 33 points, 13 rebounds, six assists, and five steals on the season
» Saw first action since coming back from a season-ending injury last season with six points against Wofford
» Tallied three points and a season-high three rebounds against Tennessee
» Scored a season-high nine points while adding two seals at South Carolina
» Posted three points and three rebounds in home finale against LSU
2022-23 Season (Freshman)
» Suffered a season-ending injury in the fourth game of the year and missed the rest of the season
» At the time of her injury, she was putting together an impressive freshman campaign
» Was team’s best 3-pointer shooter through first four games (4-of-9/44 percent)
» Had a 9-point effort vs. Kennesaw State; knocked in a pair of second-half 3-pointers
» Played over 17 minutes in her collegiate opener against Coastal Carolina
High School
» Consensus top-50 prospect nationally
» Ranked as the No. 41 overall prospect and No. 10 wing player nationally by ESPN
» McDonald's All-America Nominee
» Four star product according to ESPN and Prospects Nation
» Earned Elite 150 ranking from Prospects Nation
» Prepped at Timber Creek High School in Orlando, Fla.
» Played for the Central Florida Elite AAU Team
» Led Timber Creek to three-straight district championships, one regional title and a Final Four appearance in Florida’s Class 7A state tournament. It marked the first Final Four appearance in program history.
» Finished her prep career as Timber Creek’s all-time leading scorer with 1,094 career points
» Averaged 14.3 points, 4.4 rebounds and 1.8 assists per game in her final season
» Selected to the Orlando Sentinel First-Team All-Area team during her time at Timber Creek
Personal
» Birthday is July 12
» Native of Orlando, Fla.
» Early enrollee at UCF during 2022 spring semester
» Daughter of Georgia head coach Katie Abrahamson-Henderson and her husband, Michael. Sister to Brooklyn.
» Major: Sociology
CAREER GAME-BY-GAME
2022-23 (FRESHMAN)
2023-2024 (REDSHIRT FRESHMAN)
OVERALL
2023-24 Season (Freshman)
» Earned a redshirt
High School
#4 MIYAH VERSE
R-Fr. // Forward // 6-1 // Dayton, Ohio // Arizona Elite Prep Val Porter Family Women's Basketball Scholarship
» Prepped at national powerhouse Arizona Elite Prep and Mountain Ridge High in Peoria, Arizona
» Member of ESPN's Super 60 as one of the top players in the country
» Four-star prospect according to ESPN
» McDonald's All-American Nominee
» Earned an Elite 150 ranking from Prospects Nation
» Averaged 13.2 points and 9.8 rebounds per game during her sophomore season
» A track star who won the outdoor state championship in the discus throw
Personal
» Born July 25, 2005
» Daughter of Jannienne Verse and Eric Verse
» Brother is Jared Verse, who is a defensive lineman on the Los Angeles Rams
» Did not see time on the court – recovering from an ACL tear sustained at the end of the prior season
2022-23 (Junior at Kentucky)
» Played in 26 games and made 21 starts during the season
» Averaged 2.5 points per game and 3.9 rebounds per game in 19.9 minutes per game
» Combined for 15 blocks, 10 steals and six assists on the season
» Sustained a torn ACL at Vanderbilt, keeping her out for the remainder of the season
2021-22 (Sophomore at Kentucky)
» Played in 25 games with 11 starts during the season
» Averaged 2.2 points and 2.6 rebounds per game with 17 blocks
» Missed the first month of the season with a non-COVID related illness
» Returned for the Cats against West Virginia, notching four rebounds
» Played a career-high 37 minutes against Vanderbilt and earned her first career start
2020-21 (Freshman at Kentucky)
» Played 14 games, averaging 6.7 minutes per game
» In her collegiate debut against Murray State, recorded five boards and two blocks in 17 minutes
» Led Kentucky against Marshall, grabbing a career-high eight boards
» Scored a career-high seven points and recorded a career-high nine rebounds against Wofford.
High School
» Four-star prospect according to ProspectsNation.com and ESPN.com, which ranks her as the 20th best forward in the class
» A top-100 player in the class, according to ESPN.com
» Named an all-state performer by the South Carolina Basketball Coaches Association after completing a decorated high school career at Westwood High School
» Had her best season as a senior, averaging 13.3 points per game and 11.0 rebounds per game while earning 1.1 blocks per game
» Scored over 1,000 career points, hit 44 percent from the field as a senior and had a career field-goal percentage of 45 percent
» Was a McDonald’s All-American Game nominee in 2020
» Named to the South Carolina Basketball Coaches Association AAAA All-State Team in 2019 after averaging 11.9 points, 9.8 rebounds and 1.9 blocks per game
» Scored over 350 points as a junior hitting 44 percent from the field, including 13 3-pointers and 68 percent from the free-throw line
» Led Westwood to the AAAA State Tournament Final Four two seasons
» Saw significant varsity time as a freshman averaging 7.2 points, 9.7 rebounds and 2.5 blocks per game
Personal
» Born on Fort Campbell Military Base (Kentucky/Tennessee border)
» Daughter of Barry and Simquita Leveretter and sister to brother, Nicholas
» Started playing basketball when living in Japan for three years
» Aspires to be a sports reporter
» Major: Broadcast Journalism
2020-21 (FRESHMAN AT KENTUCKY)
CAREER GAME-BY-GAME
2022-23 (JUNIOR AT KENTUCKY)
2021-22 (SOPHOMORE AT KENTUCKY)
HENDERSON, Savannah
OVERALL CAREER STATISTICS Georgia Women's Basketball Individual Career Summaries All games
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 All-America squad.
February 16, 1981 – The Lady Dogs top Vanderbilt, 94-71, 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 WNIT.
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 twoweek 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 to the 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.
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, 97-82, two days later to advance to the Final Four.
March 31, 1985 – Georgia reaches 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 U.S. 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, 70-66, before what was then a Georgia Coliseum-record crowd of 9,011 to clinch the SEC title.
November 17, 1992 – La’Keshia Frett, the nation’s top prospect, becomes the fourth prep All-American to commit to UGA. The next spring, Kedra Holland, a fifth, also inks with the Lady Bulldogs.
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, 1995 – Sports Illustrated tabs the Lady Bulldogs as its pre-season No. 1 team.
A SWEET NATIONAL SWEEP
A day after securing Naismith National Coach and Player of the Year honors, Andy Landers and Saudia Roundtree also celebrated cutting down the nets at the 1996 Midwest Regional in Nacogdoches, Texas.
January 29, 1996 – Spurred by five straight wins over ranked foes (including 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 Bulldogs knock off top-ranked 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.
February 19, 1997 – A Kedra Holland-Corn layup with 5.5 seconds left gives the Lady Bulldogs a 66-64 win over Florida and clinches UGA’s second straight SEC Championship.
January 10, 1999 – Georgia downs LSU, 73-60, in Baton Rouge to improve to 14-0 on the season, the best start ever by the Lady Dogs.
March 22, 1999 – A youthful Georgia squad, with just one senior on the roster, pounces Iowa State, 89-71, in the Mideast Regional final to advance to a third Final Four in five years.
March 24, 1999 – Kelly Miller is named to the Kodak All-America team, the first Lady Bulldog sophomore ever to earn a spot on the prestigious unit.
March 25, 2000 – Paced by double-doubles from Tawana McDonald and Kelly Miller, Georgia tops North Carolina, 83-57, in the “Sweet 16” to give Landers his 650th win overall and the Lady Dogs’ their school-record 32nd victory of the campaign.
March 29, 2000 – The U.S. Basketball Writers Association tabs Landers its National Coach of the Year, the fourth such honor of his career.
April 20, 2001 – Kelly Miller, Deanna Nolan and Coco Miller are the No. 2 (Charlotte), No. 6 (Detroit) and No. 9 (Washington) picks in the WNBA draft, marking the first time a school has supplied three first-rounders.
March 24, 2003 – No. 19-ranked Georgia, a No. 5 seed, “upsets” No. 23-ranked Rutgers, a No. 4 seed, in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The Lady Bulldogs then drop a 66-63 decision to top-seeded Duke in the “Sweet 16” despite dressing out only seven players. Landers dubbed his team “The Miracle Workers.”
March 6, 2004 – Janese Hardrick’s running jumper with 0.9 seconds remaining in OT lifts Georgia to a 68-66 victory over No. 1 Tennessee in the semifinals of the SEC Tournament.
February 2, 2006 – Georgia shoots a sizzling 64.2 percent from the field to dispatch No. 21 Kentucky, 91-57, to supply Andy Landers with his 650th victory as the Lady Bulldogs’ head coach.
March 9, 2006 – Sherill Baker and Tasha Humphrey are named among the dozen finalists for the State Farm/Wade Trophy.
February 2, 2006 – With Andy Landers in attendance, Deanna “Tweety” Nolan leads the Detroit Shock to an 80-75 win over Sacramento in the decisive Game 5 of the WNBA Finals. Nolan is named Finals Most Valuable Player and hoists the championship trophy with two more former Lady Bulldogs – Kedra Holland-Corn and Kara Braxton – who are her teammates with the Shock.
November 12, 2006 – The Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame announces that Andy Landers will be inducted into its membership in 2007. The announcement is made in association with the State Farm Tip-off Classic, where the Lady Bulldogs defeat eventual NCAA Runner-up Rutgers, 78-69, despite having only seven players dressed out.
December 3, 2006 – Georgia defeats Georgia Tech, 79-69, to give his Andy Landers his 664th win with the Lady Bulldogs, making him the winningest college basketball coach in the State of Georgia’s history.
March 17, 2008 – Tasha Humphrey is named first-team All-SEC by the AP and in the process becomes only the third four-time consensus first-team All-SEC performer in league history.
February 28, 2009 – Andy Landers is inducted into the State of Georgia’s Sports Hall of Fame along with two other UGA greats – men’s basketball coach Hugh Durham and football All-American and Academic All-American Terry Hoage. August 13, 2009 – Teresa Edwards is inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame.
January 7, 2010 – Ashley Houts and Jasmine James score the game’s final five points to lead Georgia in a 61-60 overtime victory against Kentucky, improving the Lady Bulldogs to a best-ever 15-0.
March 22, 2011 – Jasmine James’ stickback with 2.9 seconds left lifts Georgia over No. 15 Florida State and secures a 19th trip to the “Sweet 16.”
August 12, 2011 – Teresa Edwards becomes the first Lady Bulldog enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
September 7, 2012 – Katrina McClain is inducted into the Naismith Hall of Fame
A NEW ERA
Longtime coaching veteran Katie Abrahamson-Henderson was named the third full-time head coach in Georgia history on March 26, 2022.
in ceremonies in Springfield, Mass., becoming the Lady Bulldogs’ second inductee in as many years.
November 12, 2012 – Georgia defeats Savannah State, 94-57, to give Andy Landers his 800th victory with the Lady Bulldogs. Landers becomes just the eighth NCAA Division I basketball coach to record 800 wins at a single school, joining women’s coaches Pat Summitt and Geno Auriemma and men’s mentors Jim Boehim, Dean Smith, Adolph Rupp, Mike Krzyzewski and Jim Phelan.
February 24, 2013 – Jasmine Hassell’s double-double leads UGA to a 73-54 win at Ole Miss, Andy Landers’ 900th career victory as a collegiate head coach.
March 30, 2013 – Jasmine James’ 16 points, including a pair of free throws with 23.5 seconds left, helps lift the Lady Bulldogs to a 61-59 upset of No. 4 Stanford in the “Sweet 16” of the NCAA Tournament.
April 12, 2015 – Joni Taylor was named just the second full-time coach in Georgia women’s basketball history.
March 17, 2018 – After being picked eighth in the SEC preseason poll, the Lady Bulldogs finished in second place and earned a right to host the NCAA first and second rounds in Athens for the first time since 2003.
December 3, 2020 – Georgia beat East Carolina to record the 1,000th win in program history. The Lady Bulldogs became just the second SEC program and the 14th nationally to reach that mark.
March 6, 2021 – The Lady Bulldogs defeated No. 2-ranked Texas A&M 74-68 to advance to the SEC tournament title game for the first time since 2004.
March 26, 2022 – Georgia names Katie Abrahamson-Henderson the third head coach in program history.
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
Game: 45
POINTS
Coco Miller vs. Charleston So. (12/6/97)
Season: 796 Katrina McClain (32 games) (1986-87)
Career: 2,641 Janet Harris (131 games) (1981-85)
POINTS PER GAME
Season: 24.9 Katrina McClain (796 in 32 games) (1986-87)
Career: 20.2 Janet Harris (2,641 in 131 games) (1981-85)
FIELD GOALS MADE
Game: 18
Coco Miller vs. Charleston So. (12/6/97); 18 Janet Harris vs. East Carolina (1/21/83)
Season: 310 Katrina McClain (32 games) (1986-87)
Career: 1,127 Janet Harris (131 games) (1981-85)
FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
Game: 30 Janet Harris vs. Valdosta St. (11/27/81); 30 Tina Price vs. Florida (1/4/78)
Season: 618 Coco Miller (34 games) (1998-99)
Career: 2,029 Janet Harris (131 games) (1981-85)
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Game (Min. 10): 1.000 Kara Braxton (11x11) vs. Furman (12/17/03); 1.000 Traci Waites (10-10) vs. Ga. Southern (12/11/85)
1.000 Wanda Holloway (10-10), vs LSU (03/04/84)
Season: .695 Katrina McClain (137x197) (1983-84)
Career: .620 Katrina McClain (873x1407) (1983-87)
3-POINT FIELD GOALS MADE
Game: 7 Coco Miller vs. Charleston So. (12/6/97)
7 Kim Berry vs. South Alabama (2/25/91)
7 Kim Berry vs. Georgia St. (1/24/90)
Season: 85 Cori Chambers (34 games) (2006-07)
Career: 282 Cori Chambers (135 games) (2003-07)
3-POINT FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
Game: 14 Alexis Kendrick vs. Ole Miss (1/22/04)
Season: 228 Cori Chambers (34 games) (2006-07)
Career: 742 Cori Chambers (135 games) (2003-07)
3-POINT FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Game (Min. 5): 1.000 Pachis Roberts (5x5), vs. Tenn. Tech (12/28/15)
Season (Min. 30): .515 Kim Berry (35x68) (1987-88)
Career (Min. 100): .428 Kim Berry (189x442) (1987-91)
FREE THROWS MADE
Game: 16 Kelly Miller vs. Auburn (1/17/99)
Season: 176 Katrina McClain (32 games) (1986-87)
Career: 522 Tasha Humphrey (126 games) (2004-08)
CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS MADE
36
Kelly Miller (12/30/00-2/1/01)
FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED
Game: 21 Katrina McClain vs. South Alabama (11/29/86)
Season: 240 Katrina McClain (32 games) (1986-87)
Career: 666 Tasha Humphrey (126 games) (2004-08)
GEORGIA TRIPLE DOUBLES
TERESA EDWARDS TRACY HENDERSON
24 pts., 10 rebs. & 10 asts. 14 pts., 13 rebs. & 10 blks. vs. Alabama (3/1/86) vs. Louisville (3/19/95)
SHACOBIA BARBEE
10 pts., 13 rebs. & 10 asts. vs. Stetson (11/15/15)
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
Game (Min. 10): 1.000 13 players 13 times; Diamond Battles at Vanderbilt (2/5/23)
Season: .942 Pam Irwin (49x52) (1996-97)
Career: .852 Pam Irwin-Osbolt (173x203) (1996-99)
REBOUNDS
Game: 24 Katrina McClain vs. Western Kentucky (2/10/86)
Georgia: 13 vs. TCU (11/11/11) 13 vs. Florida (1/29/97)
Opponent: 15 by Wofford (12/30/23)
3-POINT FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
Georgia: 32 vs. Florida (1/18/04) Opponent: 38 by Wofford (12/30/23)
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: 27 by South Carolina (2/15/18)
FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED
Georgia: 53 vs. Mississippi St. (2/17/90) Opponent: 43 by Vanderbilt (2/15/87)
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE (MIN. 20 ATTEMPTS)
Georgia: .955 vs. Mississippi St. (2/1/09) .955 vs. Illinois (3/15/86) Opponent: .938 by Vanderbilt (2/10/85)
REBOUNDS
Georgia: 68 vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/80) Opponent: 63 by Tennessee (1/8/96)
ASSISTS
Georgia: 35 vs. Louisville (3/17/84) Opponent: 24 2x, last by Tennessee (2/1/24)
BLOCKED SHOTS
Georgia: 13 vs. Georgia Southern (11/13/23) 13 vs. Georgia St. (11/27/01) 13 vs. Maine (11/18/01) 13 vs. Louisville (3/19/95) Opponent: 12 by Mercer (11/14/13) 12 by Virginia (12/4/96)
STEALS
Georgia: 34 vs. Georgia Southern (11/28/95) Opponent: 23 by Ohio St. (11/30/91)
CAREER GAMES PLAYED
GP Player (Career Starts) Seasons
140 Que Morrison (124) 2017-22
146 Malury Bates (5) 2017-23
135 Cori Chambers (106) 2003-07
134 Jasmine Hassell (95) 2009-13
134 Wanda Holloway (101) 1980-84
133 Anne Marie Armstrong (78) 2009-13
133 Ashley Houts (130) 2006-10
133 Janese Hardrick (47) 2003-07
132 Khaalidah Miller (95) 2010-14
132 Megan Darrah (94) 2004-08
132 Alexis Kendrick (132) 2002-06
132 Lisa O’Connor (126) 1982-86
131 Sherill Baker (122) 2002-06
131 Kelly Miller (131) 1997-01
131 Janet Harris (128) 1981-85
CAREER GAMES STARTED
GS Player (Games Played) Seasons
132 Alexis Kendrick (132) 2002-06
131 Kelly Miller (131) 1997-01
130 Ashley Houts (133) 2006-10
128 Janet Harris (131) 1981-85
126 Lisa O’Connor (132) 1982-86
125 Teresa Edwards (128) 1982-86
124 Que Morrison (140) 2017-22
123 Jasmine James (126) 2009-12
122 Tasha Humphrey (126) 2004-08
122 Sherill Baker (131) 2002-06
SEASON MINUTES PLAYED
Avg. Player (GP/Minutes) Season
37.7 Ashley Houts (32/1207) 2008-09
36.8 Ashley Houts (33/1215) 2007-08
36.7 Sherill Baker (32/1174) 2005-06
36.4 Pachis Roberts (31/1128) 2016-17
36.1 Janet Harris (34/1226) 1982-83
35.9 Jasmine James (34/1222) 2009-11
35.9 Jasmine James (33/1185) 2010-11
35.7 Kelly Miller (28/999) 1997-98
35.5 Ashley Houts (34/1201) 2009-10
35.1 Janet Harris (34/1195) 1984-85
34.6 Katrina McClain (32/1106) 1986-87
34.5 Khaalidah Miller (31/1071) 2011-12
TOTAL POINTS
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player, Opponent
45 C. Miller vs. Charleston So. (12/6/97)
43 K. McClain vs. Charlotte (2/10/87)
41 J. Harris vs. Clemson (12/15/82)
41 T. Price vs. Florida (1/4/78)
40 T. Edwards vs. Tennessee (1/29/86)
39 K. McClain vs. Vanderbilt (2/15/87)
39 K. McClain vs. Kentucky (2/23/86)
39 J. Harris vs. Florida (1/12/85)
39 J. Harris vs. Valdosta St. (11/27/81)
38 T. Humphrey vs. Santa Clara (1/18/05)
38 J. Harris vs. ECU (1/21/83)
37 S. Roundtree vs. LA Tech (3/25/96)
37 T. Edwards vs. Tennessee (3/20/86)
37 J. Harris vs. South Carolina (1/30/82)
37 D. Mitchell vs. Mercer (1/5/81)
37 B. Fuller vs. W. Carolina (2/16/76)
37 G. Connally vs. Texas A&M (1/14/18)
SEASON
No. Player (Games Played) Season
796 Katrina McClain (32) 1986-87
700 Janet Harris (34) 1984-85
692 Janet Harris (34) 1982-83
663 Janet Harris (30) 1981-82
661 Katrina McClain (32) 1985-86
630 Teresa Edwards (32) 1985-86
628 Tasha Humphrey (34) 2004-05
628 Kelly Miller (34) 1998-99
626 Coco Miller (34) 1998-99
624 Tasha Humphrey (32) 2005-06
CAREER
No. Player (Games Played) Seasons
2641 Janet Harris (131) 1981-85
2272 Tasha Humphrey (126) 2004-08
2195 Katrina McClain (125) 1983-87
2177 Kelly Miller (131) 1997-01
2131 Coco Miller (130) 1997-01
1989 Teresa Edwards (128) 1982-86
1850 La’Keshia Frett (122) 1993-97
1833 Wanda Holloway (134) 1980-84
1764 Tracy Henderson (122) 1993-97
1665 Sherill Baker (131) 2002-06
POINTS PER GAME
SEASON
Avg. Player (Points/Games)
Season
24.9 Katrina McClain (796/32) 1986-87
24.1 Tina Price (531/22) 1977-78
22.1 Janet Harris (663/30) 1981-82
22.1 Tina Price (465/21) 1976-77
21.3 Katrina McClain (661/32) 1985-86
20.6 Bernadette Locke (556/27) 1979-80
20.6 Janet Harris (700/34) 1984-85
20.4 Janet Harris (692/34) 1982-83
20.1 Tasha Humphrey (624/32) 2005-06
19.7 Teresa Edwards (630/32) 1985-86
CAREER
Avg. Player (Points/Games)
Seasons
20.2 Janet Harris (2,641/131) 1981-85
18.3 Tina Price (1466/80) 1974-78
18.0 Tasha Humphrey (2272/126) 2004-07
17.6 Katrina McClain (2195/125) 1983-87
16.6 Kelly Miller (2177/131) 1997-01
16.4 Coco Miller (2131/130) 1997-01
15.7 Saudia Roundtree (1038/66) 1994-96
15.5 Teresa Edwards (1989/128) 1982-86
15.2 La’Keshia Frett (1850/122) 1993-97
14.5 Tracy Henderson (1764/122) 1993-97
REBOUNDS
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player, Opponent
24 K. McClain vs. W. Kentucky (2/10/86)
23 J. Harris vs. S. Carolina (1/30/82)
23 W. Holloway vs. Vanderbilt (2/16/81)
22 K. McClain vs. Valdosta St. (12/4/86)
22 W. Holloway vs. Mercer (2/11/81)
20 J. Harris vs. Clemson (2/28/83)
20 J. Harris vs. Clemson (12/15/82)
20 W. Holloway vs. Pittsburgh (3/26/81)
19 C. Robinson vs. Texas A&M (1/14/17)
19 P. Phillips vs. Southern Cal (11/23/10)
19 J. Harris vs. Mercer (2/11/81)
18 P. Phillips vs. Arkansas (2/3/11)
18 A. Robinson vs. Florida St. (12/29/07)
18 T. Walker vs. S.C. State (2/23/94)
18 T. Jenkins vs. Ga. Tech (11/29/89)
18 J. Harris vs. Cincinnati (1/2/85)
18 J. Harris vs. Tennessee St. (11/23/84)
SEASON
CAREER
Wanda Holloway (134)
Tasha Humphrey (126) 2004-08 982 Angel Robinson (128) 2006-10 914 Tammye Jenkins (115) 1987-91 906 Christi Thomas (124) 2000-04
885 Tawana McDonald (124) 1998-02
874 Caliya Robinson (120) 2015-19
861 Cynthia Collins (122) 1979-83
Janet Harris is Georgia’s career leader in points, points per game and rebounding.
INDIVIDUAL TOP-10 LEADERS
FGs MADE
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player (FGs Attempted), Opponent
18 C. Miller (26) vs. Charleston So. (12/6/97)
18 J. Harris (21) vs. ECU (1/21/83)
17 K. McClain (24) vs. Charlotte (2/10/87)
17 T. Price (30) vs. Florida (1/4/78)
16 T. Humphrey vs. Santa Clara (11/18/06)
16 J. Harris (20) vs. Florida (1/12/85)
16 J. Harris (24) vs. Clemson (12/15/82)
16 J. Harris (30) vs. Valdosta St. (11/27/81)
15 11 times, most recent by C. Miller (21) vs. C. Michigan (12/18/97)
7 K. Berry 3 Times – (11) vs. S. Alabama (2/25/91); (11) vs. Georgia St. (1/24/90); (12) vs. Miss. St. (2/18/89)
6 20 times: G. Connally at Missouri (2/14/21) M. Engram vs. Texas A&M (1/14/18) T. Griffin vs. Florida(2/21/16); Kh. Miller vs. Auburn (2/24/11); A. Houts vs. Alabama (2/14/10); J. James vs. Chattanooga (11/19/09); C. Chambers 5 Times: (12) vs. Miss. St. (1/11/07), vs. Brown (12/30/06), vs. N.C. A&T (11/15/06), vs. Vanderbilt (3/3/06), and vs. UT-Martin (12/30/05); M. Darrah (8) vs. Ole Miss (1/5/06); M.B. Lycett (8) vs. S. Carolina (2/13/03); A. Kendrick (12) vs. Houston (12/20/02); K. Miller (8) vs. Iowa St. (3/22/99); K. Holland-Corn (10) vs. LA Tech (12/27/96); R. Powell (10) vs. Manhattan (12/30/94); M. Lowe (8) vs. Auburn (2/7/93); K. Berry 2 Times: (12) vs. Miss. St. (2/18/89) and vs. S. Carolina (2/3/88)
SEASON
No. Player (3FGs Attempted) Season
85 Cori Chambers (228) 2006-07
78 Cori Chambers (184) 2005-06
77 Kedra Holland-Corn (204) 1996-97
76 Tiaria Griffin (221) 2015-16
75 Kedra Holland (208) 1994-95
73 Cori Chambers (191) 2004-05
72 Khaalidah Miller (203) 2011-12
69 Kim Berry (163) 1988-89
63 Kedra Holland (155) 1995-96
59 Tiaria Griffin (185) 2014-15
55 Mary Beth Lycett (150) 2002-03
CAREER
No. Player (3FGs Attempted) Seasons
282 Cori Chambers (742) 2003-07
253 Kedra Holland-Corn (675) 1993-97
222 Tiaria Griffin (695) 2012-16
218 Khallidah Miller (702) 2010-14
189 Kim Berry (442) 1987-91
187 Kelly Miller (463) 1997-01
186 Gabby Connally (528) 2017-21
174 Rachel Powell (440) 1993-97
163 Megan Darrah (465) 2004-08
149 Janese Hardrick (409) 2003-07
145 Ashley Houts (133) 2006-10
Cori Chambers is Georgia’s all-time career 3-point shooter, hitting 282 in her four-year career.
3FG ATTEMPTS
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player (3FGs Made), Opponent
14 A. Kendrick (4) vs. Ole Miss (1/22/04)
13 D. Flournoy (2) vs. Mississippi State (2/8/24)
13 T. Griffin (4) vs. Indiana (3/19/16)
13 Kh. Miller (4) vs. Alabama (1/26/14)
13 T. Griffin (2) vs. S.C. State (11/26/13)
13 A.M. Armstrong (3) vs. TCU 12/22/10)
13 C. Chambers (6) vs. Middle Tennessee (12/7/06)
13 C. Chambers (5) vs. Miami (1/15/06)
13 C. Chambers (5) vs. Baylor (11/13/05)
12 Kh. Miller (2) vs. Missouri (1/9/14)
12 Kh. Miller (5) vs. Marist (3/18/12)
12 Kh. Miller (4) vs. Arkansas (1/1/12)
12 C. Chambers (6) vs. Miss. St. (1/11/07)
12 A. Kendrick (1) vs. Arkansas (2/8/04)
12 A. Kendrick (6) vs. Houston (12/20/02)
12 P. Irwin (5) vs. Ole Miss (2/26/98)
12 K. Holland-Corn (5) vs. Clemson (11/26/96)
12 K. Berry (4) vs. Arkansas (3/18/90)
12 K. Berry (7) vs. Georgia St. (1/24/90)
12 K. Berry (7) vs. Miss. St. (2/18/89)
12 G. Connally (3) at Baylor (12/4/19)
SEASON
No. Player (3FGs Made) Season
228 Cori Chambers (85) 2006-07
221 Tiaria Griffin (76) 2015-16
208 Kedra Holland-Corn (75) 1994-95
204 Kedra Holland-Corn (77) 1996-97
203 Khaalidah Miller (72) 2011-12
191 Cori Chambers (73) 2004-06
185 Tiaria Griffin (59) 2014-15
184 Cori Chambers (78) 2005-06
178 Khaalidah Miller (49) 2013-14
174 Jasmine James (46) 2009-10
163 Khaalidah Miller (53) 2010-11
163 Kim Berry (69) 1988-89
CAREER
No. Player (3FGs Made) Seasons
742 Cori Chambers (282) 2003-07
702 Khaalidah Miller (218) 2010-14
695 Tiaria Griffin (222) 2012-16
675 Kedra Holland-Corn (253) 1993-97
528 Gabby Connally (186) 2017-21
488 Taniyah Thompson (141) 2019-24
466 Alexis Kendrick (144) 2002-06
465 Megan Darrah (163) 2004-08
463 Kelly Miller (187) 1997-01
452 Ashley Houts (145) 2006-10
3FG PERCENTAGE
SINGLE-GAME (MIN. 5 3FGS)
Pct. Player (3FG-3FGA), Opponent
1.000 P. Roberts (6-6), Tennessee Tech (12/28/15)
.875 C. Miller (7-8) vs. Charleston So. (12/6/97)
.833 Kh. Miller (5-6) vs. S. Carolina (01/02/11)
.833 M.B. Lycett (5-6) vs. Auburn (02/09/03)
.833 M.B. Lycett (5-6) vs. VCU (12/30/01)
.833 C. Miller (5-6) vs. Ole Miss (01/27/00)
.833 K. Miller (5-6) vs. Florida State (12/30/98)
.800 Alisha Lewis (4-5) vs. Missouri (1/26/23)
.750 6 times (all 6-8):
SEASON (MIN. 100 3FGAS)
Pct. Player (3FG-FGA) Season
.486 Camille Lowe (52-107) 1990-91
.463 Kelly Miller (50-108) 2000-01
.439 Kelly Miller (54-123) 1998-99
.424 Cori Chambers (78-184) 2005-06
.423 Kim Berry (69-163) 1988-89
.412 Kim Berry (49-119) 1989-90
.407 Kedra Holland-Corn (63-155) 1995-96
.407 Rachel Powell (46-113) 1993-94
.402 Coco Miller (49-122) 1990-00
.384 Rachel Powell (53-138) 1994-95
.382 Gabby Connally (52-136) 2020-21
CAREER (MIN. 300 3FGAS)
Pct. Player (3FG-FGA)
Seasons
.428 Kim Berry (189-442) 1987-91
.404 Kelly Miller (187-463) 1997-01
.395 Rachel Powell (174-440) 1993-97
.380 Cori Chambers (282-742) 2003-07
.377 Coco Miller (136-361) 1997-01
.375 Kedra Holland (253-675) 1993-97
.375 Camille Lowe (130-347) 1989-93
.364 Janese Hardrick (149-409) 2003-07
.352 Gabby Connally (186-528) 2017-21
.351 Megan Darrah (163-465) 2004-08
FREE THROWS MADE
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player (FT Attempted), Opponent
16 K. Miller (18) vs. Auburn (1/17/99)
15 K. Miller (18) vs. C. Michigan (12/18/97)
15 P. Roberts (16) vs. Florida (1/22/17)
15 K. McClain (21) vs. S. Alabama (11/29/86)
13 G. Connally (14) vs. Texas A&M (1/14/18)
13 J. Hardrick (15) vs. Alabama (2/1/04)
13 S. Roundtree (12) vs. vs. La. Tech (3/25/96)
13 D. Dunlap (14) vs. Ole Miss (12/19/79)
12 T. Humphrey (14) vs. Temple (12/19/05)
12 K. Miller (14) vs. Arkansas (2/20/98)
12 T. Jenkins (16) vs. Clemson (2/7/90)
12 K. McClain (15) vs. Florida A&M (2/24/87)
12 Diamond Battles (16) vs. Auburn (2/23/23)
SEASON
No. Player (FTs Attempted) Season
176 Katrina McClain (240) 1986-87
148 Tasha Humphrey (177) 2005-06
146 D. Battles (192) 2022-23
139 Tasha Humphrey (180) 2004-05
138 Tasha Humphrey (176) 2007-08
137 Katrina McClain (176) 1985-86
136 Kelly Miller (163) 1998-99
131 Ashley Houts (165) 2007-08
130 Saudia Roundtree (174) 1995-96
118 Kelly Miller (144) 1997-98
CAREER
No. Player (FTs Attempted) Seasons
522 Tasha Humphrey (666) 2004-08
449 Katrina McClain (616) 1983-87
439 Ashley Houts (555) 2006-10
428 Kelly Miller (519) 1997-01
387 Janet Harris (588) 1981-85
374 Tammye Jenkins (591) 1987-91
361 La’Keshia Frett (463) 1993-97
360 Christi Thomas (525) 2000-04
336 Lady Hardmon (514) 1988-92
FT ATTEMPTS
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player (FTs Made), Opponent
21 K. McClain (15) vs. S. Alabama (11/29/86)
18 K. Miller (16) vs. Auburn (1/17/99)
18 K. Miller (15) vs. C. Michigan (12/18/97)
16 D. Battles (12) vs. Auburn (2/23/23)
16 P. Roberts (16) vs. Florida (1/22/17)
16 T. Humphrey (10) vs. Auburn (2/24/08)
16 T. Jenkins (12) vs. Clemson (2/7/90)
15 T. Jenkins (10) vs. Florida (1/8/89)
15 J. Hardrick (13) vs. Alabama (2/1/04)
15 K. McClain (12) vs. Florida A&M (2/24/87)
15 K. McClain (9) vs. LA Tech (12/17/86)
14 G. Connally (13) vs. Texas A&M (1/14/18)
14 T. Humphrey (12) vs. Temple (12/19/05)
14 K. Miller (12) vs. Arkansas (2/20/98)
14 L. Hardmon (7) vs. Iowa (1/5/91)
14 T. Phillips (10) vs. VCU (12/19/87)
14 K. McClain (9) vs. Kansas (3/14/87)
14 K. McClain (11) vs. S. Carolina (1/2/87)
SEASON
No. Player (FTs Made) Season
240 Katrina McClain (176) 1986-87
192 D. Battles (146) 2022-23
189 Cynthia Collins (110) 1980-81
180 Tasha Humphrey (139) 2004-05
180 Tammye Jenkins (109) 1987-88
177 Tasha Humphrey (148) 2005-06
176 Tasha Humphrey (138) 2007-08
176 Katrina McClain (137) 1985-86
174 Saudia Roundtree (130) 1995-96
165 Ashley Houts (131) 2007-08
CAREER
No. Player (FTs Made) Seasons
666 Tasha Humphrey (522) 2004-08
616 Katrina McClain (449) 1983-87
591 Tammye Jenkins (374) 1987-91
588 Janet Harris (387) 1981-85
555 Ashley Houts (439) 2006-10
525 Christi Thomas (360) 2000-04
519 Kelly Miller (428) 1997-01
514 Lady Hardmon (336) 1988-92
494 Cynthia Collins (252) 1979-83
463 La’Keshia Frett (361) 1993-97
INDIVIDUAL TOP-10 LEADERS
FT PERCENTAGE
SINGLE-GAME (MIN. 10 FTS)
Pct. Player (FT-FTA), Opponent
1.000 D. Battles (10X10) vs. Vanderbilt (2/5/23)
1.000 Q. Morrison (10X10) vs. Florida (1/2/22)
1.000 P. Roberts (10x10) vs. USF (11/26/16)
1.000 J. Hardrick (10x10) vs. Rutgers (11/12/06)
1.000 S. Baker (10x10) vs. Tennessee (3/4/06)
1.000 T. Humphrey (10x10) vs. Memphis (12/29/05)
1.000 J. Hardrick (10x10) vs. Tennessee (1/31/05)
1.000 A. Kendrick (10x10) vs. Rutgers (3/24/03)
1.000 K. Miller (10x10) vs. Florida (1/11/01)
1.000 S. Roundtree (10x10) vs. Auburn (1/12/96)
1.000 D. Carter (10x10) vs. Florida (1/22/92)
1.000 A. Shuler (11x11) vs. Tennessee (1/28/91)
1.000 C. Lowe (11x11) vs. Charlotte (1/14/91)
1.000 K. McClain (11x11) vs. Kentucky (2/23/86)
SEASON (MIN. 50 FTAs)
Pct. Player (FT-FTA) Season
.942 Pam Irwin (49-52) 1996-97
.890 Jenna Staiti (73-82) 2019-20
.884 Que Morrison (99-112) 2021-22
.879 Gabby Connally (58-66) 2018-19
.870 Que Morrison (67-77) 2020-21
.862 Pam Irwin-Osbolt (50-58) 1997-98
.848 Alexis Kendrick (89-105) 2002-03
.846 Lisa O’Connor (66-78) 1984-85
.841 La’Keshia Frett (90-107) 1995-96
.839 Pam Irwin-Osbolt (47-56) 1998-99
CAREER (MIN. 150 FTAs)
Pct. Player (FT-FTA) Seasons
.852 Pam Irwin-Osbolt (173-203) 1995-99
.830 Que Morrison (297-358) 2017-22
.827 Gabby Connally (229-277) 2017-21
.825 Kelly Miller (428-519) 1997-01
.805 Alexis Kendrick (252-313) 2002-06
.803 Camille Lowe (216-269) 1989-93
.799 Janese Hardrick (311-389) 2003-07
.795 Megan Darrah (171-215) 2004-08
.791 Ashley Houts (439-555) 2006-10
.784 Tasha Humphrey (522-666) 2004-08
ASSISTS
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player, Opponent
14 L. Hardmon vs. Georgia St. (1/6/92)
14 A. Shuler vs. Florida St. (1/31/91)
13 A. Houts vs. Auburn (1/29/09)
13 C. Green vs. Florida A&M (2/17/88)
13 A. Shuler vs. Florida (1/9/88)
13 T. Edwards vs. Tennessee Tech (3/16/85)
13 T. Edwards vs. Tennessee St. (2/6/85)
13 B. Locke vs. Albany St. (1/21/81)
12 A. Lewis vs. Vanderbilt (3/2/23)
12 A. Houts vs. Iowa (3/23/08)
12 S. Roundtree vs. Nebraska (12/21/95)
12 S. Roundtree vs. Miss. St. (2/10/95)
12 K. Robbins vs. Mercer (2/1/93)
12 T. Edwards vs. Rutgers (12/12/84)
12 T. Edwards vs. Auburn (3/3/84)
12 L. Sims vs. California (3/27/81)
12 T. Cole vs. Florida (2/10/19)
SEASON
No. Player (Games Played) Season
226 Saudia Roundtree (33) 1994-95
204 Adrienne Shuler (32) 1990-91
203 Taja Cole (29) 2018-19
195 Saudia Roundtree (33) 1995-96
189 Teresa Edwards (33) 1983-84
188 Teresa Edwards (30) 1984-85
185 Bernadette Locke (37) 1980-81
179 Lady Hardmon (30) 1991-92
176 Teresa Edwards (32) 1985-86
164 Kelly Miller (28) 1997-98
163 Ashley Houts (33) 2007-08
163 Kelly Miller (33) 2000-01
CAREER
No. Player (Games Played) Seasons
653 Teresa Edwards (128) 1982-86
639 Kelly Miller (131) 1997-01
565 Ashley Houts (133) 2006-10
553 Adrienne Shuler (118) 1987-91
545 Alexis Kendrick (132) 2002-06
436 Rachel Powell (122) 1993-97
433 Jasmine James (126) 2009-13
433 Lady Hardmon (121) 1988-92
425 Carla Green (119) 1985-89
421 Saudia Roundtree (66) 1994-96
BLOCKS
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player, Opponent
10 T. Henderson vs. Louisville (3/19/95)
9 T. McDonald vs. Houston (12/10/00)
8 C. Robinson vs. Texas A&M (1/14/18)
7 J. Staiti vs. Georgia Tech (11/29/20)
7 J. Staiti vs. Alabama (3/5/20)
7 C. Robinson vs. Arkansas (2/2/17)
7 C. Robinson vs. Vanderbilt (1/8/17)
7 C. Thomas vs. Georgia St. (11/21/03)
7 K. McClain vs. Missouri (1/8/87)
7 K. McClain vs. Chattanooga (1/6/86)
7 K. McClain vs. Western Ky. (3/29/85)
6 24 times, most recent by Jenna Staiti vs. Texas A&M (3/6/21)
SEASON
No. Player (Games Played)
Season
103 Tawana McDonald (33) 2000-01
101 Caliya Robinson (33) 2017-18
90 Tawana McDonald (35) 1999-00
87 Katrina McClain (29) 1984-85
87 Katrina McClain (31) 1985-86
85 Jenna Staiti (28) 2020-21
83 Tracy Henderson (33) 1994-95
74 Caliya Robinson (30) 2018-19
73 Katrina McClain (32) 1986-87
72 Tracy Henderson (33) 1995-96
CAREER
No. Player (Games Played)
Seasons
297 Tawana McDonald (124) 1998-02
292 Caliya Robinson (120) 2015-19
290 Katrina McClain (125) 1983-87
269 Jenna Staiti (152) 2016-22
267 Tracy Henderson (122) 1993-97
213 Angel Robinson (128) 2006-10
203 Jenna Staiti (124) 2017-pres.
194 Christi Thomas (124) 2000-04
179 Barbara Bootz (126) 1983-87
169 M. Bates (146) 2017-23
163 Tammye Jenkins (115) 1987-91
STEALS
SINGLE-GAME
No. Player, Opponent
10 A. Houts vs. Memphis (11/29/06)
10 S. Baker vs. Miss. St. (1/19/06)
10 K. Holland-Corn vs. Virginia (12/4/96)
10 A. Shuler vs. Howard (2/22/89)
9 S. Baker vs. Marist (3/19/06)
9 S. Baker vs. Middle Tennessee (11/30/05)
9 S. Baker vs. LMU (11/26/05)
9 K. Miller vs. Arkansas (1/21/98)
9 K. Holland-Corn vs. Wingate (12/10/96) 9 K. Thompson vs. Coppin St. (12/28/93) 9 B. Locke vs. UNC-Asheville (1/23/80)
Fifth-year seniors Diamond Battles and Brittney Smith eclipsed the 1,000 point mark during the 2022-23 season. Battles and Smith transfered to Georgia during their last year of elligibility awarded due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Battles finished her career with 1,350. Smith finished closely behind with 1,312.
40 MEGAN DARRAH
1973-74
Record: 3-13
Head Coach: Flossie M. Love
1/12 L Middle Georgia 44-54
1/17 W DeKalb 43-42
1/18 L at North Georgia 51-92
1/22 L Mercer 44-80
1/24 W at DeKalb 51-38
1/29 L West Georgia 36-72
2/1 L at Mercer 45-75
2/2 L at Tift 41-43
2/6 L at West Georgia 31-53
2/8 L Fort Valley 49-67
2/13 W Tift 69-45
2/15 L Berry 31-48
2/18 L at Berry 46-75
2/26 L North Georgia 46-76
3/1 L Mercer* 41-67
3/1 L Shorter* 59-69
*GAIAW Tournament (Clarkston, Ga.)
1974-75
Record: 8-9
Head Coach: Elsa Heimerer
1/10 L at Valdosta State 62-65
1/11 L at Georgia Southern 70-78
1/15 L at Fort Valley 57-68
1/17 W Georgia Southern 49-46
1/18 L Valdosta State 73-74
1/22 L at Berry 50-72
1/24 W Tift 119-55
1/25 W Georgia Tech 96-38
1/29 W North Georgia 84-64
2/4 L Berry 57-96
2/7 W Auburn 93-68
2/11 L Fort Valley 75-76
2/13 W Furman# 61-43
2/14 L at Winthrop# 76-93
2/18 W at North Georgia 66-60
2/21 W Savannah State* 54-47
2/21 L Mercer* 53-90
#Winthrop Tournament (Rock Hill, SC)
*GAIAW Tournament (Statesboro, Ga.)
1975-76
Record: 11-9
Head Coach: Elsa Heimerer
1/9 W Tift 74-48
1/10 W Georgia Tech 77-22
1/13 L Mercer 69-78
1/16 L at Valdosta State 61-84
1/17 L at Fort Valley 60-63
1/21 L at West Georgia 58-82
1/23 W North Georgia 49-48
1/28 W Albany State 77-58
1/30 W at Tift 90-61
2/4 W West Georgia 68-62
2/7 L Valdosta State 69-81
2/9 W at Mercer 72-61
2/12 L East Carolina# 66-80
2/13 W South Carolina# 62-60
2/14 L at Winthrop# 69-58
2/17 L Western Carolina# 75-77
2/19 W Fort Valley 73-66
2/23 W at Georgia Tech 60-35
2/27 W Shorter* 69-71
#Winthrop Tournament (Rock Hill, SC)
*GAIAWT ournament (Statesboro, Ga.)
1976-77
Record: 2-19
Head Coach: Elsa Heimerer
11/18 L at Georgia Southern 57-67
11/19 L at Valdosta State 65-101
1/6 L at North Georgia 51-53
1/8 L Valdosta State 68-94
1/10 L Albany State 73-88
1/14 L Georgia State 63-65
1/17 L at Fort Valley 53-84
1/19 L at Shorter 51-69
1/22 L Mississippi State 73-92
1/24 L Alabama 62-77
1/28 L Mercer 85-95
1/31 L at Georgia State 52-53
2/2 L Shorter 59-82
2/4 L Albany State 67-75
2/7 W Fort Valley 81-70
2/12 L Georgia Southern 69-80
2/14 L at Mercer 77-104
2/17 W East Carolina# 71-54
2/18 L Anderson JC# 79-99
2/22 L West Georgia 59-73
2/28 L North Georgia 56-72 #Winthrop Tournament (Rock Hill, SC)
1977-78
Record: 7-16
Head Coach: Dave Lucey
11/15 W at Albany State 94-93 11/17 L at Georgia Southern 73-94 11/30 L Shorter 70-109
12/2 W North Georgia 93-66
1/4 L Florida 79-83
1/7 L at Mercer 73-101
1/10 W at North Georgia 83-71
1/14 L Fort Valley 79-91
1/16 L Albany State 67-79
1/18 L at West Georgia 88-97
1/21 L at Mississippi State 54-86
1/23 L at Fort Valley 52-76
1/28 L at Shorter 69-82
1/30 L Georgia State 58-68
2/4 W West Georgia 82-76
2/6 L Mercer 78-87
2/9 L South Carolina# 49-71
2/10 W East Tenn. State# 95-83
2/11 W Anderson JC# 87-80
2/12 L East Carolina# 76-92
2/16 L at Georgia State 65-74
2/18 W Georgia Southern 71-63
2/23 L at 15 Valdosta State* 70-110 #Winthrop Tournament (Rock Hill, SC) *GAIAW Tournament (Valdosta, Ga.)
YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS
1980-81 NWIT CHAMPIONS
Record: 27-10
Head Coach: Andy Landers
11/19 W at Albany State 91-66
11/22 W Oral Roberts~ 103-73
11/25 W Georgia Tech 91-51
12/6 W UT-Chattanooga 81-79
12/10 W at Arkansas 61-49
12/12 W at Tulsa 97-79
12/13 L at Oral Roberts 58-63
12/17 L 6 Tennessee (OT)~ 68-73
12/20 W Georgia State 79-68
12/29 W Virginia Tech 65-50
12/31 L at UT-Chattanooga 74-79
1/5 W at Mercer 75-69
1/9 L Alabama% 61-72
1/10 W Appalachian State% 83-60
1/12 W Georgia Tech 79-53
1/15 W at Valdosta State 64-60
1/17 W at Florida 86-66
1/21 L Albany State 78-80
1/24 W Georgia Southern 55-52
1/26 L at Georgia State 63-66
1/29 W Ole Miss@ 75-68
1/30 L Alabama@ 68-80
1/31 W 7 Kentucky@ 73-62
2/4 L at Georgia Southern 70-82
2/7 W Valdosta State 104-69
2/11 W Mercer 124-91
2/14 W Alabama-Huntsville 100-53
2/16 W Vanderbilt 94-71
2/18 W at Furman 80-39
2/21 L at 20 Auburn 58-74
2/26 W Georgia Tech* 89-70
2/27 W Albany State* 83-74
2/28 W Georgia Southern* 85-53
3/12 L UAB^ 70-82
3/26 W Pittsburgh+ 100-69
3/27 W California+ 80-68
3/28 W Arizona State (OT)+ 75-73
~Home game in Marietta, Ga. %Clemson Invitational (Clemson, S.C.) @SEC Tournament (Baton Rouge, La.) *GAIAW Tournament (Atlanta, Ga.) ^AIAW Region III Tournament (Valdosta, Ga.) +NWIT (Amarillo, Texas)
1981-82 NCAA FIRST
ROUND
Record: 21-9
Head Coach: Andy Landers
11/27 L Valdosta State* 82-83
11/28 W McNeese State* 94-74
11/30 W at Florida 89-76
12/2 W Berry 91-76
12/4 W Georgia Tech 86-43
12/12 W at Mercer 76-70
12/17 W Mississippi State# 75-56
12/18 W Memphis State# 80-68
12/19 W Northern Illinois# 76-65
1/3 L at 14 Kentucky 59-62
1/6 L at Georgia State(OT) 77-79
1/9 W Florida 92-77
1/17 W Tennessee 66-63
1/22 L Drake^ 64-76
1/23 W Syracuse^ 91-46
1/27 L 1 Louisiana Tech~ 60-83
1/30 W 12 South Carolina (OT) 82-75
2/1 W Georgia State 98-60
2/3 W Tennessee Tech 94-74
2/6 L 11 Kentucky 76-77
2/8 W at Georgia Tech 69-52
2/11 L at 20 Tennessee 52-65
2/13 W at UT-Chattanooga 86-70
2/17 W at Vanderbilt 78-63
2/20 W Miami (Fla.) 91-51
2/22 W Vanderbilt 79-63
2/25 W 19 Auburn@ 66-65
2/26 L 8 Tennessee@ 44-55
2/28 W 4 LSU@ 77-66
3/12 L at 17 Arizona State\ 77-97 *Lady Sunshine Classic (Orlando, Fla.) #Lady Tiger Classic (Memphis, Tenn.) ^Optimist-ODU Classic (Norfolk, Va.) ~Home game in Marietta, Ga. @SEC Tournament (Lexington, Ky.) \NCAA First Round (Tempe, Ariz.)
1982-83
SEC CHAMPIONS
NCAA FINAL FOUR
Record: 27-7
AP Rank: No. 9
Head Coach: Andy Landers
11/26 W 14 Rutgers* 76-61
11/27 L UCLA* 57-75
12/1 W Berry College 90-67
12/4 W Georgia Tech 90-56
12/11 W Florida 88-66
12/15 W at Clemson 90-65
12/30 W Minnesota# 65-61
12/31 W Appalachian State# 94-32
1/3 W at Georgia State 97-42
1/6 W Kansas State~ 88-67
1/8 W Vanderbilt 76-70
1/10 W at Florida 76-60
1/11 W at Mercer 80-66
1/16 L 7 Tennessee 54-74
1/21 W East Carolina^ 80-61
1/22 W at South Carolina^ 74-72
1/26 W Georgia State 93-55
1/30 L at 7 Kentucky (OT) 59-66
1/31 W at Eastern Kentucky 68-54
2/6 L at Vanderbilt 62-63
2/7 W at Tennessee Tech 72-61
2/9 W UT-Chattanooga 74-60
2/12 L at 6 Tennessee 59-73
2/14 L at 14 Auburn 54-58
2/20 W 8 Kentucky 99-81
2/26 W Mercer (OT) 78-66
2/28 W Clemson 105-64
3/3 W 19 LSU@ 79-78
3/4 W 8 Tennessee@ 71-65
3/5 W 15 Ole Miss@ 72-69
3/19 W 18 North Carolina\ 72-70
3/25 W Indiana> 86-70
3/27 W 9 Tennessee> 67-63
4/1 L 2 Southern Cal! 57-81
*Crush Classic (Chicago, Ill.)
#Dial Soap Classic (Miami, Fla.)
^Nike-Carolina Classic (Columbia, S.C)
~Home game in Marietta, Ga.
@SEC Tournament (Lexington, Ky.)
\NCAA First Round (Athens)
>NCAA Regional (South Bend, Ind.)
Head Coach: Andy Landers
11/25 W St. John’s* 83-70 11/26 W Bowling Green* 99-50
*Wimmer’s Invitational (Lincoln, Neb.) ~Home game in Atlanta/Marietta, Ga. #Hilton Head Super Shootout (Hilton Head, S.C.) @SEC Tournament (Albany, Ga.) \NCAA First Round (Athens)
1990-91 SEC CHAMPIONS NCAA ELITE EIGHT
Record: 28-4
AP Rank: No. 3
USAT Rank: No. 6
Head Coach: Andy Landers
11/28 W Northeast Louisiana 109-70
12/1 W Loyola-Chicago 107-61
12/8 W at Middle Tennessee 80-62
12/11 W at South Carolina 74-56
12/13 W at Cincinnati 99-38
12/15 W at Ohio State 91-60
12/21 W 8 Northwestern(OT)* 93-83
12/22 L at 12 Stanford * 79-82
12/28 W Maryland # 91-73
12/30 L 17 Rutgers # 57-58
1/5 W at 15 Iowa ∆ 62-51
1/7 W Georgia State 77-45
1/9 W S.C. State 100-54
1/12 W Florida 89-68
1/14 W UNC-Charlotte 81-56
1/16 W DePaul 90-67
1/19 W 14 Ole Miss 77-64
1/26 W Vanderbilt 57-53
1/28 W at 3 Tennessee 81-74
1/31 W 22 Florida State 91-71
2/3 W at Kentucky 87-71
2/7 W 19 Clemson 96-59
2/10 W at 13 LSU (OT) 108-102
2/16 W at Mississippi State 90-59
2/20 W Alabama 83-47
2/23 W 5 Auburn 70-66
2/25 W South Alabama 125-64
3/1 W Alabama@ 78-69
3/2 L 12 LSU@ 74-83
3/16 W 17 UNLV\ 86-62
3/21 W 18 LBSU\ 87-77
3/23 L 11 Stanford> 67-75
*Cardinal Classic (Stanford, Calif.)
#Bell Atlantic Holiday Classic (New Brunswick, NJ)
∆Big Ten-SEC Challenge (Iowa City, Iowa) @SEC Tournament (Albany, Ga.)
\NCAA First Round (Athens) >NCAA Regional (Las Vegas, Nev.)
1991-92
Record: 19-11
Head Coach: Andy Landers
11/22 L 7 Stanford 66-92
11/25 L at Wis.-Green Bay 57-81
11/30 L Ohio State 79-82
12/6 W Mercer 99-69
12/8 W Notre Dame (OT) 90-86
12/10 W at South Alabama 77-61
12/14 L at DePaul 63-67
12/16 W at Loyola-Chicago 85-59
12/19 W at 20 Arkansas 79-62
1/4 W at 4 Vanderbilt 61-60
1/6 W at Georgia State 76-65
1/9 W at S.C. State 81-54
1/11 W Kentucky 83-65
1/14 L at UNC-Charlotte 64-74
1/18 W South Carolina 63-62 1/22 W at Florida 96-81
1/26 W Mississippi State 82-60
2/1 L at 7 Ole Miss 59-88
2/3 W Oral Roberts 77-74
2/5 W Winthrop 85-53
2/8 L at Auburn 56-84
2/10 W Florida A&M 101-63
2/15 L No. 3 Tennessee 51-55
2/18 W Cincinnati 93-50
2/22 L LSU 75-86
2/26 W at Florida A&M 93-66
2/29 L at 20 Alabama 81-105
3/6 W 12 Vanderbilt@ 58-57
3/7 W 3 Ole Miss@ 71-60
3/8 L 2 Tennessee@ 66-73 @SEC Tournament (Albany, Ga.)
1992-93
NCAA SECOND ROUND
Record: 21-13
AP Rank: No. 21
USAT Rank: No. 21
Head Coach: Andy Landers
12/6 W Middle Tennessee 80-65
12/12 L Santa Clara* 62-64
12/13 L Oregon State* 79-81
12/18 W Missouri-KC # 72-63
12/19 L at Ohio State # 72-89
12/21 W at Notre Dame 81-75
12/28 L San Diego State$ 63-70
12/29 W Rider College$ 97-57 1/2 L 2 Vanderbilt 66-90
11/27/78 L at Clemson 53-77 11/28/79 L Athens 81-83
12/15/82 W at Clemson 90-65 2/28/83 W Athens 105-64
12/30/83 W at Columbus, Ohio 78-64 11/25/85 W at Clemson 87-68
1/15/87 W Athens 65-62
2/13/88 L at Clemson 65-73 1/16/89 W Athens 96-75 3/18/89 L *at Clemson 65-78 2/7/90 W at Clemson 75-52 2/7/91 W Athens 96-59
11/25/96 L at Clemson 78-83
11/30/97 W Athens 70-67 3/20/99 W *at Cincinnati, Ohio 67-54 2/13/05 W at Duluth, Ga. 88-60 12/22/08 W “home” game at Duluth, Ga. 67-50 12/28/10 W at Clemson 59-47
12/16/91 W at Chicago 85-59 12/7/93 W at Chicago 102-88
LOYOLA MARYMOUNT: 2-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 2-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
11/26/05 W at Los Angeles 89-58 11/27/10 W at Los Angeles 76-45
MAINE: 2-0
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 1-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0 11/27/99 W at Orono (OT) 79-68 11/18/01 W Athens 88-57
MANHATTAN: 2-0
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 1-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
12/30/94 W at Riverdale 94-52 12/1/98 W Athens 97-63
MARIST: 2-1
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 1-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-1
12/21/04 W at Poughkeepsie 79-62 3/19/06 W * at Trenton, N.J. 75-60 3/18/12 L * at Tallahassee, Fla. 70-76
MARQUETTE: 2-1
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 0-1 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
12/8/93 L at Milwaukee 72-88 1/11/95 W Athens 104-60 11/27/21 W at Daytona Beach, Fla. 70-45
MARYLAND: 2-2
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 0-1 ◊ Neutral: 1-1
12/7/86 W Athens 65-49
12/15/87 L at College Park 48-66
12/28/90 W at New Brunswick, N.J. 91-73 11/24/18 L at Puerto Rico Clasico 51-58
MASSACHUSETTS: 2-0
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 1-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0 11/29/98 W at Amherst 80-57 11/19/00 W Athens 71-63
MCNEESE STATE: 1-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0 11/28/81 W at Orlando, Fla. 94-74
MEMPHIS: 3-0
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 2-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
12/18/81 W at Memphis 80-68 12/29/05 W at Memphis 97-44 11/29/06 W Athens 95-46
MERCER: 30-12
Home: 18-5 ◊ Away: 12-5 ◊ Neutral: 0-2
1/22/74 L Athens 44-80
2/1/74 L at Macon 45-75
3/1/74 L at Clarkston, Ga. 41-67 2/21/75 L at Statesboro, Ga. 53-90 1/13/76 L Athens 69-78
2/9/76 W at Macon 72-61
1/28/77 L Athens 85-95 2/14/77 L at Macon 77-104
1/7/78 L at Macon 73-101
2/6/78 L Athens 78-87 11/13/78 L at Macon 56-65 2/14/79 L Athens 58-66 1/12/80 W Athens (OT) 87-85 2/13/80 L at Macon 74-113 1/5/81 W at Macon 75-69 2/11/81 W Athens 124-91
1/5/90 W at DeLand, Fla. 85-70 1/10/05 W Athens 97-42 11/15/15 W Athens 76-55
SYRACUSE: 1-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
1/23/82 W at Norfolk, Va. 91-46
TEMPLE: 1-1
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 0-1 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
12/19/05 L at Philadelphia (OT) 66-69 11/16/07 W Athens 57-51
TENNESSEE: 19-54
Home: 11-16 ◊ Away: 5-24 ◊ Neutral: 3-14
12/17/80 L Marietta (OT) 68-73
1/17/82 W Athens 66-63
2/11/82 L at Knoxville 52-65
2/26/82 L # at Lexington, Ky 44-55
1/16/83 L Athens 54-74
2/12/83 L at Knoxville 59-73
3/4/83 W # at Knoxville 71-65
3/27/83 W * at South Bend, Ind. 67-63
1/22/84 L at Knoxville 59-63
2/19/84 W Athens 84-65
3/25/84 L * at Knoxville 61-73
12/9/84 W Athens 78-72
2/2/85 W at Knoxville
1/29/86 W Athens
3/20/86 L *
1/24/87 L at Knoxville
1/31/88 L Athens
3/5/88 L # at
1/29/89 L at
1/28/90 W Athens
L
1/28/91 W at Knoxville
2/15/92 L Athens 51-55
3/8/92 L # at Albany, Ga. 66-73
2/14/93 L at Knoxville 68-71
3/6/93 W #at Chattanooga, Tenn. 73-72
2/27/94 L Athens 59-75
3/5/94 L #at Chattanooga, Tenn. 72-86
2/25/95 L at Knoxville 61-83
4/1/95 L *at Minneapolis, Minn. 51-73
1/8/96 W Athens 77-71
3/31/96 L * at Charlotte, N.C. 65-83
12/8/96 W at Knoxville (OT) 94-93
1/14/98 L Athens 71-96
1/28/98 L at Knoxville 43-102
1/14/99 L at Knoxville 69-102
1/28/99 L Athens 79-95
2/28/99 L #at Chattanooga, Tenn. 69-85
1/17/00 W Athens 78-51
1/18/01 L at Knoxville 69-85
2/10/02 L Athens 50-52
3/1/02 L #at Nashville, Tenn. 67-81
2/20/03 L at Knoxville 60-87
2/12/04 L Athens 67-70
3/6/04 W #at Nashville (OT) 68-66
1/31/05 L at Knoxville 70-77
1/12/06 L at Knoxville 85-94
2/16/06 L Athens 55-58
3/4/06 L #North Little Rock, Ark. 79-89 1/14/07 L Athens 41-52
2/5/07 L at Knoxville 57-73
3/2/08 L Athens 63-72
2/5/09 L at Knoxville 43-73
1/21/10 W Athens 53-50
2/21/11 L at Knoxville 44-77
3/5/11 L #at Nashville 58-82
1/5/12 L at Knoxville 51-80
1/29/12 L Athens 50-67
TEXAS TECH: 2-0 Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 1-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0 12/14/84 W at Columbia, Mo. 80-68 12/2/21 W at Lubbock, Texas 66-56
SERIES RESULTS
TIFT COLLEGE: 4-1
Home: 3-0 ◊ Away: 1-1 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
2/2/74 L at Macon 41-43
2/13/74 W Athens 69-45
1/24/75 W Athens 119-55
1/9/76 W Athens 74-48
1/30/76 W at Macon 90-61
TOLEDO: 1-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
12/20/96 W at Anchorage, Alaska 85-52
TROY: 1-0
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
12/6/23 W Athens 86-70
TULANE: 1-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
3/20/10 W * at Tempe, Ariz. 64-59
TULSA: 1-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 1-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
12/12/80 W at Tulsa 97-79
UCLA: 3-4
Home: 1-1 ◊ Away: 2-1 ◊ Neutral: 0-2
11/27/82 L at Chicago, Ill. 57-75
3/21/85 W * at Los Angeles 78-42
12/30/00 W at Los Angeles 89-55
12/6/02 W Athens 91-83
11/25/05 L at Los Angeles (LMU) 64-84
11/14/18 L at Los Angeles 69-80
12/19/19 L Athens 50-59
UC-SANTA BARBARA: 1-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
11/22/99 W at Champaign, Ill. 85-64
UNC-ASHEVILLE: 5-0
Home: 5-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
1/23/80 W Athens 98-53
11/26/93 W Athens 122-59
1/23/95 W Athens 102-31
1/6/96 W Athens 101-36
2/5/97 W Athens 83-44
USC-UPSTATE: 1-0
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 0-0 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
11/26/19 W Athens 67-53
VALDOSTA STATE: 5-10
Home: 2-5 ◊ Away: 3-3 ◊ Neutral: 0-2
1/10/75 L at Valdosta 62-65
1/18/75 L Athens 73-74
1/16/76 L at Valdosta 61-84
2/7/76 L Athens 69-81
11/19/76 L at Valdosta 65-101
1/8/77 L Athens 68-94
2/23/78 L Athens 70-110
1/26/80 L Athens 65-69
2/18/80 W at Valdosta (2OT) 99-96
2/21/80 L at Statesboro 65-74
1/15/81 W at Valdosta 64-60
2/7/81 W Athens 104-69
11/27/81 L at Orlando, Fla. 82-83
12/4/86 W Athens 116-55
12/12/87 W at Valdosta 90-80
VANDERBILT: 41-30
Home: 21-9 ◊ Away: 13-14 ◊ Neutral: 7-7
2/17/79 W Athens 64-57
1/20/79 L at Nashville 63-80
2/16/81 W Athens 94-71
2/17/82 W at Nashville 78-63
2/22/82 W Athens 79-63
1/8/83 W Athens 76-70
2/6/83 L at Nashville 62-63
1/14/84 W Athens 87-86
2/12/84 W at Nashville 90-66
1/27/85 W at Nashville 83-67
2/10/85 W Athens 95-71
2/28/85 W Athens 79-67
1/12/86 W at Nashville 68-61
2/15/87 W Athens 89-72
3/5/87 W # at Albany, Ga. 54-53
2/21/88 W at Nashville 58-55
1/14/89 W Athens 83-62
1/13/90 L at Nashville 62-63
3/2/90 W # at Albany, Ga. 79-72
1/26/91 W Athens 57-53
1/4/92 W at Nashville 61-60
3/6/92 W # at Albany, Ga. 58-57
1/2/93 L Athens 66-90
3/8/93 L # at Chattanooga, Tenn. 64-78
1/16/94 L at Nashville 50-80
1/15/95 L Athens 52-65
3/5/95 L # at Chattanooga, Tenn. 56-82
2/16/96 L at Nashville 66-71
2/14/97 W Athens 71-45
3/22/97 W * at Missoula, Mont. 66-52
2/13/98 L at Nashville 65-68
2/14/99 L Athens 57-66 1/30/00 W at Nashville 84-73 2/27/00 W Athens 75-49 1/28/01 W Athens 76-59
2/25/01 L at Nashville 65-71
3/4/01 W # at Memphis, Tenn. 62-60 1/20/02 L Athens 47-64 2/16/03 L at Nashville 56-58 3/7/03 L # at North Little Rock, Ark. 70-74
W at Nashville
W
W Athens 66-55
2/15/09 L at Nashville 64-80 3/6/09 L # at North Little Rock, Ark. 61-69 1/14/10 L at Nashville 44-66 2/10/11 L Athens 59-69 1/26/12 L at Nashville 48-68 2/12/12 W Athens 76-63
3/3/13 W Athens 55-50
1/2/14 L at Nashville 58-66
3/6/14 W # at Duluth, Ga. 53-43 1/18/15 W Athens 64-53 1/31/16 W at Nashville, Tenn. 64-58
3/3/16 L #at Jacksonville, Fla. (OT) 58-62
1/8/17 W Athens 70-68
1/4/18 W at Nashville 81-52
2/18/18 W Athens 67-55
1/6/19 W at Nashville 71-64
1/9/20 L Athens 55-63
2/3/22 W Athens 71-56
2/5/23 W at Nashville 79-61
2/11/24 L Athens 55-61 3/3/24 L at Nashville 55-72
VILLANOVA: 1-2
Home: 0-1 ◊ Away: 1-1 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
12/28/86 W at Villanova 71-60
12/14/18 L at VIllanova 56-62 11/24/19 L Athens 58-63
VIRGINIA: 2-4
Home: 2-1 ◊ Away: 0-3 ◊ Neutral: 0-0
12/2/95 L at Charlottesville 65-94 12/4/96 W Athens 77-56
1/2/09 L at Charlottesville 60-62
12/20/09 W Athens 69-53
12/19/16 L Athens 43-66
11/16/17 W at Virginia 64-61
VCU: 4-0
Home: 1-0 ◊ Away: 2-0 ◊ Neutral: 1-0
12/19/87 W at Richmond 59-51
12/20/00 W at Richmond 77-63
12/30/01 W Athens 83-70
11/25/22 W at St.Thomas, Virgin Islands 68-54
VIRGINIA TECH: 4-0
Home: 0-0 ◊ Away: 1-0 ◊ Neutral: 3-0
12/29/80 W at Harriman, Tenn. 65-50
12/27/86 W at Villanova, Pa. 80-56 11/17/99 W at Blacksburg 65-60 11/30/19 W at Daytona Beach, Fla. 77-72
WEBER STATE: 1-0 Home: 0-0 ◊ Away:
POINTS
Year Player, Class G Pts. Avg.
79-80 Bernadette Locke, Jr 27 556 20.6
80-81 Deborah Mitchell, Fr 34 598 17.6
81-82 Janet Harris, Fr 30 663 22.1
82-83 Janet Harris, So. 34 692 20.4
83-84 Janet Harris, Jr 33 586 17.8
84-85 Janet Harris, Sr 34 700 20.6
85-86 Katrina McClain, Jr 31 661 21.3
86-87 Katrina McClain, Sr 32 796 24.9
87-88 Tammye Jenkins, Fr. 30 479 16.0
88-89 Tammye Jenkins, So. 30 438 14.6
89-90 Lady Hardmon, So. 29 409 14.1
90-91 Camille Lowe, So. 32 484 15.1
91-92 Deborah Carter, So. 24 291 12.1
92-93 Camille Lowe, Sr 34 455 13.4
93-94 La’Keshia Frett, Fr 28 393 14.0
94-95 La’Keshia Frett, So. 33 523 15.9
95-96 Saudia Roundtree, Sr 33 551 16.7
96-97 Kedra Holland-Corn, Sr 31 534 17.2
97-98 Kelly Miller, Fr. 28 489 17.5
98-99 Kelly Miller, So. 34 628 18.5
99-00 Coco Miller, Jr. 36 555 15.4
00-01 Coco Miller, Sr. 33 518 15.7
01-02 Kara Braxton, Fr 30 489 16.3
02-03 Christi Thomas, Jr 30 481 16.0
03-04 Christi Thomas, Sr 35 463 13.2
04-05 Tasha Humphrey, Fr. 33 628 19.0
05-06 Tasha Humphrey, So. 32 624 20.1
06-07 Tasha Humphrey, Jr. 29 468 16.1
07-08 Tasha Humphrey, Sr. 33 552 16.7
08-09 Ashley Houts, Jr 32 385 12.0
09-10 Ashley Houts, Sr 34 422 12.4
10-11 Jasmine James, So. 33 405 12.3
11-12 Jasmine Hassell, Jr 31 402 13.0
12-13 Jasmine Hassell, Sr 35 444 12.7
13-14 Shacobia Barbee, So. 30 367 12.2
14-15 Tiaria Griffin, Jr. 31 351 11.3
15-16 Tiaria Griffin, Sr. 30 441 14.7
16-17 Pachis Roberts, Sr 31 450 14.5
17-18 M.Engram/C. Robinson, Sr., Jr. 33 425 12.9
18-19 Caliya Robinson, Sr 30 439 14.6
19-20 Gabby Connally, Jr. 30 378 12.6
20-21 Jenna Staiti, Sr 28 415 14.8
21-22 Jenna Staiti, Gr 29 439 15.1
22-23 Diamond Battles, Gr 34 499 14.7
23-24 Javyn Nicholson, 5th 30 505 16.8
REBOUNDS
Year Player, Class G Reb. Avg.
79-80 Cynthia Collins, Fr 28 283 10.1
80-81 Wanda Holloway, Fr. 37 392 10.6
81-82 Janet Harris, Fr 30 371 12.4
82-83 Janet Harris, So. 34 397 11.7
83-84 Janet Harris, Jr 33 279 8.5
84-85 Janet Harris, Sr 34 351 10.3
85-86 Katrina McClain, Jr 31 314 10.1
86-87 Katrina McClain, Sr 32 391 12.2
87-88 Tammye Jenkins, Fr. 30 259 8.6
88-89 Tammye Jenkins, So. 30 229 7.6
89-90 Tammye Jenkins, Jr. 27 218 8.1
90-91 Tammye Jenkins, Sr. 28 208 7.4
91-92 Tara Cosby, Fr. 27 167 6.2
92-93 Medina Turner, Sr. 31 245 7.9
93-94 Tiffany Walker, Fr. 28 216 7.7
94-95 Tracy Henderson, So. 33 252 7.6
95-96 La’Keshia Frett, Jr 33 288 8.7
96-97 La’Keshia Frett, Sr 28 187 6.7
Elena Vishniakova,
Porsha Phillips, Jr 34 279
10-11 Porsha Phillips, Sr 34
12-13 Jasmine Hassell, Sr
13-14 Shacobia Barbee, So. 30
Donald, Sr 29 196
20-21 Jenna Staiti, Sr
23-24 Javyn Nicholson, 5th 30
FG PERCENTAGE
Year Player, Class
79-80 Cynthia Collins, Fr 164-292 .562
80-81 Wanda Holloway, Fr. 229-391 .586
81-82 Janet Harris, Fr 281-527 .533
82-83 Janet Harris, So. 299-537 .557
83-84 Katrina McClain, Fr 137-197 .695
84-85 Katrina McClain, So. 164-262 .626
85-86 Katrina McClain, Jr 262-396 .662
86-87 Sherelle Warren, Fr. 109-188 .580
87-88 Sherelle Warren, So. 187-316 .592
88-89 Sherelle Warren, Jr. 127-225 .564
89-90 Stacey Ford, Jr 159-258 .616
90-91 Deborah Carter, Fr. 109-208 .524
91-92 Deborah Carter, So. 115-226 .509
92-93 Nakia Hill, Fr 132-269 .491
93-94 Tracy Henderson, Fr. 148-289 .512
94-95 Tiffany Walker, So. 86-142 .606
95-96 Tracy Henderson, Jr. 208-359 .579
96-97 Tracy Henderson, Sr. 182-333 .547
97-98 Angie Ball, So. 56-104 .539
98-99 Angie Ball, Jr 95-191 .497
99-00 Tawana McDonald, So. 166-302 .550
00-01 Kelly Miller, Sr. 193-378 .511
01-02 Tawana McDonald, Sr. 84-153 .549
02-03 Christi Thomas, Jr 180-335 .537
03-04 Christi Thomas, Sr 173-321 .539
04-05 Tasha Humphrey, Fr. 236-421 .561
05-06 Sherill Baker, Sr. 242-457 .530
06-07 Angel Robinson, Fr 104-192 .542
07-08 Angel Robinson, So. 130-254 .512
08-09 Angel Robinson, Jr 147-265 .555
09-10 Jasmine Hassell, Fr 84-161 .522
10-11 Tamika Willis, So. 53-101 .525
11-12 Jasmine Hassell, Jr 164-302 .543
12-13 Jasmine Hassell, Sr 180-339 .531
13-14 Krista Donald, Jr 111-209 .531
14-15 Krista Donald, Sr 89-191 .466
15-16 Merritt Hempe, Sr 123-264 .466
16-17 Caliya Robinson, So. 173-353 .490
17-18 Stephanie Paul, So. 55-110 .500
18-19 Jenna Staiti, So. 83-161 .516
19-20 Jenna Staiti, Jr 145-294 .493
20-21 Jenna Staiti, Sr 171-334 .512
21-22
Jenna Staiti, Gr 181-350 .517
22-23 Jordan Isaacs, Sr 31-58 .534
23-24 Destiny Thomas, 5th 37-75 .493
FT PERCENTAGE
Year Player, Class FT-FTA Pct.
79-80 Michelle Hartley, Sr. 48-65 .738
80-81 Lou Sims, Fr 36-47 .766
81-82 Rhonda Malone, So. 26-31 .839
82-83 Lisa O’Connor, Fr. 95-125 .760 83-84 Rhonda Malone, Sr 18-22 .818 84-85 Lisa O’Connor, Jr. 66-78 .846
85-86 Traci Waites, So. 24-30 .800
86-87 Katie Abrahamson, So. 36-42 .857
87-88 Kim Berry, Fr. 32-41 .780 88-89 Adrienne Shuler, So. 63-78 .808 89-90 Sharon Baldwin, Sr 33-42 .786
95-96 La’Keshia Frett, Jr 90 107 .841 10-11 Porsha Phillips, Sr 92 114 .807
3-POINT PERCENTAGE
3-POINT FG MADE
Year Player, Class 3FG FGA
3-POINTERS PER GAME
ASSISTS
GEORGIA’S SEC TEAM STAT CHAMPIONS
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.
FG PERCENTAGE Season FGM-FGA Pct.
1983-84 978-1883 .519 1984-85 1173-2209 .531
1985-86 1193-2195 .544
1990-91 1055-2190 .482 1995-96 1051-2248 .468
FG DEFENSE Season FGM-FGA Pct.
1985-86 825-2032 .406 1986-87 785-2014 .390 2009-10 686-1980 .346 2017-18 662-1885 .351 FT PERCENTAGE Season FGM-FGA Pct.
Baker’s perimeter prowess wreaked havoc at a different level during her senior season of 2005-06. 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.
GEORGIA BASKETBALL
GEORGIA IN THE POLLS
GEORGIA IN THE POLLS
» Georgia first appeared in the Associated Press poll in the preseason edition of the 1981-82 campaign, the first season women’s basketball transitioned from the AIAW to come under the auspices of the NCAA.
» Since the beginning of the 1981-82 campaign, Georgia has been ranked in 556 weekly AP polls, including 269 weeks in the top 10.
» Georgia was ranked in every weekly edition of the AP poll from 1982-83 through the early portion of the 1991-92 season, a span of more than nine campaigns.
» The WBCA coaches’ poll was initiated beginning with the 1985-86 season and has been sponsored by USA Today throughout its existence. From 1992-93 until 1996-97, the poll was cosponsored by CNN.
1984-85 Week AP
11/18 No. 1
11/26 No. 1
12/2 No. 3
12/9 No. 3
12/16 No. 6
12/24 No. 6
12/30 No. 6
1/6 No. 5
1/13 No. 5
1/20 No. 5
1/27 No. 5
2/3 No. 7
2/10 No. 7
2/17 No. 6
2/24 No. 6
3/3 No. 8
3/10 No. 8
1989-90 Week AP Coaches
11/20 No. 4 No. 4
11/27 No. 4 No. 4
12/4 No. 4 No. 4
12/11 No. 4 No. 4
12/18 No. 3 No. 3
12/24 No. 3 No. 3
1/1 No. 3 No. 3
1/8 No. 3 No. 3
1/14 No. 5 No. 4
1/21 No. 7 No. 7
1/28 No. 4 No. 3
1/5 No. 4 No. 3
2/12 No. 7 No. 7
2/19 No. 7 No. 7
2/26 No. 6 No. 6
3/5 No. 7 No. 7
3/12 No. 7 No. 6
3/19 No. 13
1981-82 Week AP
11/18 No. 12
11/29 No. 16
12/6 No. 14
12/13 No. 11
12/20 No. 10
12/27 No. 9
1/3 No. 11
1/10 No. 14
1/17 No. 13
1/24 No. 16
1/31 No. 15
2/7 No. 15
2/14 No. 19
2/21 No. 18
2/28 No. 18
3/7 No. 18
3/14 NR 3/27 NR
1985-86 Week AP Coaches
11/12 No. 2 No. 2
12/1 No. 2 No. 2
12/8 No. 2 No. 2
12/15 No. 2 No. 2
12/22 No. 2 No. 2
12/29 No. 3 No. 3
1/5 No. 3 No. 3
1/12 No. 2 No. 2
1/19 No. 2 No. 2
1/26 No. 2 No. 2
2/2 No. 2 No. 2
2/9 No. 2 No. 2
2/16 No. 2 No. 2
2/23 No. 2 No. 2
3/2 No. 2 No. 2
3/9 No. 2 No. 2
3/18 No. 4
1986-87 Week AP Coaches
11/18 No. 10 No. 12
12/2 No. 9 No. 9
12/9 No. 9 No. 9
12/16 No. 9 No. 9
12/23 No. 11 No. 11
12/30 No. 11 No. 11
1/6 No. 10 No. 11
1/13 No. 12 No. 11
1/20 No. 12 No. 13
1/27 No. 10 No. 10
2/2 No. 10 No. 10
2/9 No. 9 No. 7
2/16 No. 8 No. 7
2/23 No. 6 No. 6
3/3 No. 5 No. 5
3/10 No. 6 No. 5
3/17 No. 9
1990-91
Week AP Coaches
11/18 No. 4 No. 4
11/26 No. 4 No. 4
12/3 No. 4 No. 4
12/10 No. 3 No. 3
12/17 No. 3 No. 3
12/24 No. 6 No. 5
12/31 No. 9 No. 8
1/7 No. 8 No. 8
1/14 No. 7 No. 7
1/21 No. 5 No. 5
1/28 No. 4 No. 4
2/4 No. 3 No. 3
2/11 No. 3 No. 3
2/18 No. 3 No. 2
2/25 No. 3 No. 2
3/4 No. 4 No. 4
3/11 No. 3 No. 4
4/1 No. 6
1982-83
Week AP
11/18 No. 7
11/28 No. 12
12/5 No. 13
12/12 No. 11
12/19 No. 10
12/26 No. 9
1/2 No. 9
1/9 No. 8
1/16 No. 9
1/23 No. 9
1/30 No. 10
2/6 No. 10
2/13 No. 12
2/20 No. 12
2/27 No. 12
3/6 No. 8
3/13 No. 8
1987-88 Week AP Coaches
11/23 No. 10 No. 8
11/30 No. 11 No. 10
12/7 No. 12 No. 12
12/14 No. 12 No. 9
12/21 No. 17 No. 19
12/28 No. 17 No. 19
1/4 No. 13 No. 15
1/11 No. 13 No. 14
1/18 No. 15 No. 16
1/25 No. 13 No. 12
2/1 No. 13 No. 12
2/8 No. 13 No. 13
2/15 No. 16 No. 17
2/22 No. 15 No. 16
2/29 No. 17 No. 17
3/7 No. 17 No. 16
3/14 No. 17 No. 16
3/22 No. 10
1992-93
Week AP Coaches
11/24 No. 18 No. 15
12/8 No. 13 No.13
12/15 No. 20 No. 21
12/22 NR NR
12/29 NR NR
1/5 NR NR
1/12 NR NR
1/19 NR NR
1/26 NR NR
2/2 NR NR
2/9 NR NR
2/16 NR NR
2/23 NR NR
3/2 NR NR
3/9 No. 23 No. 23
3/16 No. 21 No. 21
4/5 No. 21
1993-94 Week AP Coaches
11/16 No. 17 No. 5
11/30 No. 17 No. 17
12/7 No. 21 No. 17
12/14 No. 25 No. 21
12/21 No. 25 No. 21
12/28 No. 24 No. 24
1/4 No. 25 No. 21
1/11 NR No. 23
1/18 NR No. 23
1/25 NR NR 2/1 NR NR 2/8 NR NR 2/15 NR NR 2/22 NR NR
3/1 NR NR
3/8 NR NR
3/15 NR NR 4/4 NR
1988-89 Week AP Coaches
11/21 No. 4
11/28 No. 3 No. 3
12/5 No. 2 No. 2
12/12 No. 2 No. 2
12/19 No. 4 No. 5
12/26 No. 4 No. 5
1/2 No. 7 No. 6
1/9 No. 6 No. 6
1/16 No. 6 No. 6
1/23 No. 5 No. 4
1/30 No. 5 No. 6
2/6 No. 5 No. 6
2/13 No. 5 No. 6
2/20 No. 5 No. 6
2/26 No. 8 No. 8
3/6 No. 10 No. 10
3/13 No. 10 No. 10
3/19 No. 18
1994-95
Week AP Coaches
11/13 No. 19 No. 21
11/22 No. 18 No. 17
11/29 No. 17 No. 16
12/6 No. 16 No. 14
12/13 No. 14 No. 13
12/20 No. 13 No. 13
12/27 No. 12 No. 11
1/3 t-No. 11 No. 9
1/10 No. 8 No. 10
1/17 No. 11 No. 10
1/24 No. 11 No. 10
1/31 No. 11 No. 10
2/7 No. 10 No. 10
2/14 No. 12 No. 11
2/21 No. 9 No. 9
2/28 No. 11 No. 10
3/7 No. 12 No. 12
3/14 No. 12 No. 12
4/4 No. 4
1995-96
Week AP Coaches
11/14 No. 2 No. 3
11/21 No. 2 No. 4
11/27 No. 6 No. 6
12/4 No. 12 No. 11
12/11 No. 12 No. 12
12/18 No. 10 No. 10
12/25 No. 9 No. 10
1/1 No. 9 No. 9
1/8 No. 7 No. 8
1/15 No. 4 No. 6
1/22 No. 2 No. 2
1/29 No. 1 No. 1
2/5 No. 1 No. 1
2/12 No. 1 No. 1
2/19 No. 2 No. 2
2/26 No. 2 No. 2
3/4 No. 5 No. 5
3/11 No. 5 No. 5
4/2 No. 2
2000-01
Week AP Coaches
11/13 No. 3 No. 3
11/20 No. 6 No. 6
11/27 No. 7 No. 7
12/4 No. 5 No. 6
12/11 No. 4 No. 4
12/18 No. 4 No. 4
12/26 No. 4 No. 4
1/1 No. 4 No. 4
1/8 No. 4 No. 4
1/15 No. 4 No. 4
1/22 No. 5 No. 5
1/29 No. 5 No. 5
2/5 No. 7 No. 6
2/12 No. 5 No. 5
2/19 No. 4 No. 4
2/26 No. 6 No. 5
3/4 No. 4 No. 4
3/13 No. 4 NP
4/3 No. 13
2005-06
Week AP Coaches
11/7 No. 8 No. 10
11/21 No. 11 No. 11
11/28 No. 17 No. 17
12/5 No. 17 No. 16
12/12 No. 17 No. 17
12/19 No. 15 No. 18
12/26 No. 17 No. 18
1/2 No. 17 No. 18
1/9 No. 13 No. 17
1/16 No. 13 No. 16
1/23 No. 15 No. 15
1/30 No. 14 No. 14
2/6 No. 13 No. 13
2/13 No. 13 No. 13
2/20 No. 13 No. 12
2/27 No. 12 No. 12
3/6 No. 14 No. 12
3/13 No. 12 No. 12
4/5 No. 13
1996-97
Week AP Coaches
11/12 No. 3 No. 3
11/18 No. 2 No. 3
11/25 No. 2 No. 2
12/2 No. 5 No. 5
12/9 No. 4 No. 4
12/16 No. 3 No. 4
12/23 No. 4 No. 3
12/30 No. 5 No. 5
1/6 No. 5 No. 5
1/13 No. 4 No. 4
1/20 No. 5 No. 5
1/27 No. 7 No. 6
2/3 No. 6 No. 5
2/10 No. 6 No. 5
2/17 No. 5 No. 4
2/24 No. 4 No. 4
3/3 No. 7 No. 6
3/10 No. 6 No. 6
4/1 No. 7
2001-02
Week AP Coaches
11/6 No. 16 No. 15
11/19 No. 16 No. 14
11/26 No. 13 No. 13
12/3 No. 13 No. 11
12/10 No. 10 No. 9
12/17 No. 10 No. 9
12/24 No. 10 No. 8
12/31 No. 8 No. 7
1/7 No. 15 No. 8
1/14 No. 16 No. 14
1/21 No. 17 No. 16
1/28 No. 19 No. 18
2/4 No. 22 No. 21
2/11 No. 24 No. 24
2/18 No. 23 No. 22
2/25 No. 24 No. 24
3/4 NR NR 3/11 NR NR 4/1 NR
2006-07
Week AP Coaches
11/6 No. 9 NP
11/13 No. 9 No. 8
11/20 No. 8 No. 8
11/27 No. 8 No. 8
12/4 No. 8 No. 8
12/11 No. 11 No. 10
12/18 No. 11 No. 11
12/25 No. 11 No. 10
1/1 No. 15 No. 15
1/8 No. 15 No. 15
1/15 No. 16 No. 16
1/22 No. 14 No. 15
1/29 No. 14 No. 14
2/5 No. 9 No. 12
2/12 No. 11 No. 12
2/19 No. 11 t-No. 12
2/26 No. 10 No. 12
3/5 No. 14 No. 14
3/12 No. 13 No. 14
4/4 No. 13
1997-98
Week AP Coaches
11/7 No. 14 No. 14
11/17 No. 13 No. 11
11/24 No. 13 No. 8
12 /1 No. 10 No. 10
12/8 No. 15 No. 9
12/15 No. 11 No. 12
12/22 No. 15 No. 12
12/29 No. 17 No. 18
1/5 No. 20 No. 19
1/12 No. 19 No. 18
1/19 No. 18 No. 17
1/26 No. 17 No. 24
2/2 No. 24 NR
2/9 NR NR
2/16 NR NR
2/23 NR NR
3/2 NR NR
3/9 NR NR
2002-03
Week AP Coaches
11/5 No. 8 No. 9
11/18 No. 8 No. 9
11/25 No. 8 No. 17
12/2 No. 14 No. 20
12/9 No. 20 No. 20
12/16 No. 20 No. 22
12/23 No. 24 NR
12/30 NR NR
1/6 NR NR
1/13 NR NR
1/20 No. 24 No. 20
1/27 No. 18 No. 18
2/3 No. 17 No. 16
2/10 No. 14 No. 16
2/17 No. 13 No. 16
2/24 No. 14 No. 19
3/3 No. 17 No. 19
3/11 No. 19 No. 20
4/9 No. 11
2007-08
Week AP Coaches
11/5 No. 9 NP
11/12 No. 8 No. 10
11/19 No. 8 No. 9
11/26 No. 7 No. 8
12/3 No. 7 No. 8
12/10 No. 7 No. 7
12/17 No. 7 No. 7
12/24 No. 7 No. 7
12/31 No. 7 No. 7
1/7 No. 10 No. 10
1/14 No. 12 No. 11
1/21 No. 17 No. 14
1/28 No. 17 No. 14
2/4 No. 24 No. 21
2/11 NR No. 24
2/18 No. 24 No. 22
2/25 No. 22 No. 20
3/3 No. 23 No. 21
3/10 NR No. 24
4/8 No. 24
1998-99
Week AP Coaches
11/6 No. 7 t-No. 10
11/16 No. 7 No. 6
11/23 No. 6 No. 5
11/30 No. 5 No. 5
12/7 No. 5 No. 5
12/14 No. 5 No. 4
12/21 No. 4 No. 4
12/28 No. 4 No. 4
1/4 No. 4 No. 4
1/11 No. 4 No. 4
1/18 No. 5 No. 4
1/25 No. 4 No. 4
2/1 No. 8 No. 8
2/8 No. 10 No. 12
2/15 No. 14 No. 14
2/22 No. 14 No. 14
3/1 No. 14 No. 14
3/8 No. 12 No. 14
3/15 No. 12
3/39 No. 5
2003-04
Week AP Coaches
11/3 No. 11
11/11 No. 11 No. 11
11/17 No. 10 No. 10
11/24 No. 10 No. 10
12/1 No. 11 No. 9
12/8 No. 10 No. 9
12/15 No. 10 No. 9
12/22 No. 12 No. 11
12/29 No. 12 No. 11
1/5 No. 12 No. 9
1/12 No. 11 No. 9
1/19 No. 17 No. 16
1/26 No. 19 No. 17
2/3 No. 16 No. 17
2/10 No. 19 No. 17
2/17 No. 18 No. 17
2/24 No. 19 t-No. 15
3/1 No. 20 No. 15
3/8 No. 16 No. 14
3/15 No. 16 No. 15
4/7 No. 8
2008-09
Week AP Coaches
11/10 NR No. 25
11/17 NR No. 23
11/24 NR NR
12/1 NR NR
12/8 NR NR
12/15 NR NR 12/22 NR NR 12/29 NR NR
1/5 NR NR
1/12 NR NR 1/19 NR NR 1/26 NR NR
2/2 NR NR 2/9 NR NR
2/16 NR NR
2/23 NR NR
3/1 NR NR
3/9 NR NR 4/7 NR
1999-2000 Week AP Coaches
11/8 No. 3 No. 5
11/15 No. 3 NP
11/22 No. 3 No. 3
11/29 No. 2 No. 2
12/6 No. 5 No. 5
12/13 No. 5 No. 5
12/20 No. 5 No. 5
12/27 No. 5 No. 6
1/3 No. 7 No. 7
1/10 No. 7 No. 7
1/17 No. 7 No. 7
1/24 No. 3 No. 3
1/31 No. 3 No. 2
2/7 No. 3 No. 2
2/14 No. 3 No. 2
2/21 No. 3 No. 2
2/28 No. 2 No. 2
3/6 No. 4 No. 4
3/13 No. 4 No. 4 4/3 No. 5
2004-05
Week AP Coaches
11/8 No. 5 No. 5
11/15 No. 5 NP
11/22 No. 3 No. 3
11/29 No. 6 No. 6
12/6 No. 14 No. 14
12/13 No. 16 No. 16
12/20 No. 15 No. 15
12/27 No. 15 No. 15
1/3 No. 16 No. 16
1/10 No. 18 No. 18
1/17 No. 21 No. 21
1/24 No. 20 No. 20
1/31 No. 19 No. 19
2/7 No. 18 No. 18
2/14 No. 16 No. 16
2/21 No. 18 No. 18
2/28 No. 20 No. 20
3/7 No. 20 No. 20
3/14 No. 20 NP
4/6 No. 13
2009-10
Week AP Coaches
11/9 No. 21 NP
11/16 No. 16 No. 22
11/23 No. 14 No. 19
11/30 No. 13 No. 16
12/7 No. 13 No. 13
12/14 No. 11 No. 12
12/21 No. 9 No. 9
12/28 No. 9 No. 8
1/4 No. 8 No. 8
1/11 No. 6 No. 6
1/18 No. 8 No. 8
1/25 No. 9 No. 9
2/1 No. 14 No. 14
2/8 No. 19 No. 18
2/15 No. 20 No. 20
2/22 No. 24 No. 24
3/1 No. 22 No. 24
3/8 No. 23 NR
3/15 NR 4/7 No. 19
GEORGIA IN THE POLLS
2010-11
Week AP Coaches
10/29 No. 19 No. 19
11/15 No. 18 No. 18
11/22 No. 17 No. 18
11/29 No. 21 No. 22
12/6 No. 24 NR
12/13 NR NR
12/20 NR NR
12/27 NR NR
1/3 NR NR
1/10 NR NR
1/17 No. 24 NR
1/24 No. 20 No. 24
1/31 No. 24 NR
2/7 No. 24 NR
2/14 NR NR
2/21 No. 22 NR
2/28 NR NR
3/7 NR NR
4/7 No. 24
GEORGIA BASKETBALL
2015-16
Week AP Coaches
Georgia was not ranked during the 2015-16 season.
2020-21
Week AP Coaches
Pre NR NR
W1 NR NR
W2 RV NR
W3 RV NR
W4 RV RV
W5 RV RV
W6 RV RV
W7 RV RV
W8 RV RV
W9 22 23
W10 22 21
W11 25 25
W12 24 25
W13 22 23
W14 17 18
W15 16 21
W16 12 13
W17 10 12
Final 13
2011-12
Week AP Coaches
10/28 No. 12 No. 12
11/14 No. 12 No. 11
11/21 No. 10 No. 10
11/28 No. 14 No. 14
12/5 No. 13 No. 12
12/12 No. 13 No. 12
12/19 No. 13 No. 15
12/26 No. 17 No. 15
1/2 No. 16 No. 15
1/9 No. 19 No. 16
1/16 No. 15 No. 14
1/23 No. 17 No. 15
1/30 No. 17 No. 20
2/6 No. 21 No. 20
2/13 No. 18 No. 15
2/20 No. 18 No. 16
2/27 No. 16 No. 15
3/5 No. 20 No. 18
3/12 No. 20 No. 17
4/4 No. 20
2016-17
Week AP Coaches
Georgia was not ranked during the 2016-17 season.
2012-13
Week AP Coaches
11/5 No. 10 No. 11
11/12 No. 10 No. 10
11/19 No. 8 No. 8
11/26 No. 8 No. 8
12/3 No. 6 No. 6
12/10 No. 6 No. 6
12/17 No. 6 No. 6
12/24 No. 6 No. 6
12/31 No. 10 No. 10
1/7 No. 13 No. 10
1/14 No. 13 No. 13
1/21 No. 14 No. 14
1/28 No. 13 No. 13
2/4 No. 9 No. 9
2/11 No. 13 No. 13
2/18 No. 13 No. 13
2/25 No. 11 No. 11
3/4 No. 12 No. 12
3/11 No. 14 No. 14
4/10 No. 10
2017-18
Week AP Coaches
10/22 NR NR
11/13 NR NR 11/20 NR NR 11/27 NR NR
12/4 NR NR
12/11 NR NR
12/18 NR NR
12/25 NR NR 1/1 NR NR 1/8 NR NR
1/15 NR No. 24
1/22 No. 21 No. 20
1/29 No. 17 No. 18
2/5 No. 18 No. 18
2/12 No. 20 No. 19
2/19 No. 19 No. 19
2/26 No. 19 No. 18
3/5 No. 18 No. 17
3/12 No. 18 No. 17 4/2 No. 19
2021-22
Week AP Coaches
Pre RV 19
W2 RV 19
W3 RV 21
W4 20 19
W5 21 17
W6 17 14
W7 13 12
W8 13 12
W9 15 14
W10 17 15
W11 13 13
W12 15 12
W13 14 11
W14 17 14
W15 21 17
W16 25 20
W17 24 21
W18 RV 25
W19 RV 25 Final RV
2013-14
Week AP Coaches
11/4 No. 24 No. 22
11/11 No. 24 No. 22
11/18 No. 23 No. 21
11/25 No. 22 No. 21
12/2 No. 19 No. 18
12/9 No. 16 No. 17
12/16 No. 16 No. 15
12/23 No. 19 No. 15
12/30 No. 19 No. 18
1/6 No. 25 No. 21
1/13 NR NR
1/20 NR NR
1/27 NR NR
2/3 NR NR
2/10 NR NR
2/18 NR NR
2/24 NR NR
3/3 NR NR
3/10 NR NR 4/7 NR NR
2014-15
Week AP Coaches
11/10 NR NR
11/17 No. 24 NR
11/24 No. 22 No. 25
12/1 No. 19 No. 23
12/8 No. 16 No. 18
12/15 No. 15 No. 17
12/22 No. 14 No. 16
12/29 No. 19 No. 19
1/5 No. 20 No. 19
1/12 No. 18 No. 16
1/19 No. 22 No. 19
1/26 No. 21 No. 20
2/2 No. 22 No. 21
2/9 No. 24 NR
2/16 NR NR
2/23 NR NR
3/2 NR NR
3/9 NR NR
3/16 NR NR 4/6 NR
2018-19
Week AP Coaches
10/31 14 13 11/12 14 11/19 NR 24 11/26 NR NR 12/3 NR NR 12/10 NR NR 12/17 NR NR 12/24 NR NR 12/31 NR NR 1/7 NR NR 1/14 NR NR 1/21 NR NR 1/28 NR NR 2/4 NR NR 2/11 NR NR 2/18 NR NR 2/25 NR NR 3/4 NR NR 3/11 NR NR 3/18 NR NR
2022-23
Week AP Coaches
Georgia was not ranked during the 2022-23 season.
2023-24
Week AP Coaches
Georgia was not ranked during the 2023-24 season.
2019-20
Week AP Coaches
Georgia was not ranked during the 2019-20 season.
GEORGIA AGAINST RANKED OPPONENTS
GEORGIA FINAL AP RANKINGS
Season Rank
1982-83 No. 8
1983-84 No. 3
1984-85 No. 8
1985-86 No. 2
1986-87 No. 6
1987-88 No. 17
1988-89 No. 10
1989-90 No. 7
1990-91 No. 3
1991-92 NR
1992-93 No. 21
1993-94 NR
1994-95 No. 12
1995-96 No. 5
1996-97 No. 6
1997-98 NR
1998-99 No. 12
1999-00 No. 4
2000-01 No. 4
2001-02 NR
2002-03 No. 19
2003-04 No. 16
2004-05 No. 20
2005-06 No. 12
2006-07 No. 13
2007-08 NR
2008-09 NR
2009-10 No. 23
2010-11 NR
2011-12 No. 20
2012-13 No. 14
2013-14 NR
2014-15 NR
2015-16 NR
2016-17 NR
2017-18 No. 18
2018-19 NR
2019-20 NR
2020-21 No. 10
2021-22 NR
2022-23 NR
2023-24 NR
GEORGIA IN HOLIDAY TOURNAMENTS
‘75 WINTHROP INVITATIONAL Rock Hill, S.C.
2/13 Furman W 61-43
2/14 Winthrop L 73-93
‘76 WINTHROP INVITATIONAL Rock Hill, S.C.
2/12 East Carolina L 66-80
2/13 South Carolina W 62-60
2/14 Winthrop W 69-58
2/14 Western Carolina L 75-77
‘77 WINTHROP INVITATIONAL Rock Hill, S.C.
2/17 East Carolina W 71-54
2/18 Anderson JC L 79-99
‘78 WINTHROP INVITATIONAL Rock Hill, S.C.
2/9 South Carolina L 49-71
2/10 East Tennessee W 95-83
2/11 Anderson JC W 87-80
2/12 East Carolina L 76-92
‘79 LADY DOG INVITATIONAL Starkville, Miss.
1/4 Mississippi State L 46-58
1/5 Florida L 66-74
‘80 LADY KAT INVITATIONAL Lexington, Ky.
1/18 Kentucky L 61-82
1/19 Miami (Ohio) L 64-72
‘81 CLEMSON INVITATIONAL Clemson, S.C.
1/9 Alabama L 61-72
1/10 Appalachian State W 83-60
‘81 LADY SUNSHINE CLASSIC Orlando, Fla.
11/27 Valdosta State L 82-83
11/28 McNeese State W 94-74
‘81 LADY TIGER CLASSIC Memphis, Tenn.
12/17 Mississippi State W 75-56
12/18 Memphis State W 80-68
12/19 Northern Illinois W 76-65
‘82 OPTIMIST-ODU CLASSIC Norfolk, Va.
1/22 Drake L 64-76
1/23 Syracuse W 91-46
‘82 CRUSH CLASSIC Chicago, Ill.
11/26 No. 14 Rutgers W 76-61
11/27 UCLA L 57-75
‘82 DIAL SOAP CLASSIC Miami, Fla.
12/30 Minnesota W 65-61
12/31 Appalachian State W 94-32 ‘83 NIKE-CAROLINA CLASSIC Columbia, S.C.
1/21 East Carolina W 80-61
1/22 South Carolina W 74-72 ‘83 DETROIT CLASSIC Detroit, Mich.
11/25 St. John’s W 83-70
11/26 Bowling Green W 99-50
‘83 GIUSTI TOURNAMENT Portland, Ore.
12/18 Oregon W 89-64
12/19 Portland State W 64-34
12/20 Oregon State W 89-54 ‘83 BUCKEYE CLASSIC Columbus, Ohio
3/16 64 #15 Liberty W 77-48 3/18 32 #10 Missouri L 65-78
2002 • NO. 10 SEED MIDEAST 1st Round - West Lafayette, Ind. 3/16 64 #7 Old Dominion L 54-68
2003 • NO. 5 SEED MIDWEST
1st & 2nd Rounds - Athens
3/22 64 #12 Charlotte W 81-60
3/24 32 #4 Rutgers W 74-64
Regional - Albuquerque, N.M.
3/29 16 #1 Duke L 63-66
2004 • NO. 3 SEED WEST
1st & 2nd Rounds - Philadelphia
3/20 64 #14 Liberty W 78-53
3/22 32 #6 TCU W 85-71
Regional - Los Angeles
3/27 16 #2 Purdue W 66-64 3/29 8 #4 LSU L 60-62
2005 • NO. 6 SEED
1st & 2nd Rounds -Dallas
3/19 64 #11 Rice W 75-49
3/21 32 #3 Texas W 70-68
Regional - Chattanooga, Tenn.
3/26 16 #2 Duke L 57-63
2006 • NO. 3 SEED
1st & 2nd Rounds - Trenton, N.J.
3/19 64 #14 Marist W 75-60 3/21 32 #11 Hartford W 73-54
Regional - Bridgeport, Conn.
3/26 16 #2 Connecticut L 75-77
2007 • NO. 3 SEED
1st & 2nd Rounds - Minneapolis, Minn.
3/17 64 #14 Belmont W 53-36
3/19 32 #6 Iowa State W 76-56
Regional - Dallas, Texas 3/25 16 #2 Purdue L 65-78
2008 • NO. 7 SEED
1st & 2nd Rounds - Norfolk, Va. 3/23 64 #10 Iowa W 67-61 3/25 32 #2 North Carolina L 66-80
2009 • NO. 11 SEED 1st Round - Duluth, Ga. 3/21 64 #6 Arizona State L 47-58
2010 • NO. 5 SEED 1st & 2nd Rounds - Tempe, Ariz. 3/20 64 #12 Tulane W 64-59 3/22 32 #4 Oklahoma State W OT-74-71 Regional - Sacramento, Calif. 3/27 16 #1 Stanford L 36-73 2011 • NO. 6 SEED
2014 • NO. 8 SEED 1st Round - Storrs, Conn. 3/23 64 #9 Saint Joseph’s L 57-67
2016 • NO. 8 SEED 1st Round - South Bend, Ind. 3/19 64 #9 Indiana L 58-62
2018 •
•
2022 • NO. 6 SEED 1st and 2nd Rounds - Ames, Iowa 3/18 64 #11 Dayton W 70-54 3/20 32 #3 Iowa State L 44-67
2023 • NO. 10 SEED 1st and 2nd Rounds - Iowa City, Iowa 3/17 64 #7 Florida State W 66-54 3/29 32 #2 Iowa L 66-74 # Denotes opponent’s seed in tourney
GEORGIA NCAA TOURNEY NOTES
» Georgia is one of only six schools to advance to five Final Fours, doing so in 1983, 1985, 1995, 1996 and 1999.
» Georgia has earned bids to 36 of 41 NCAA Tournaments.
» Georgia’s totals of all-time NCAA Tourney games played (94) and games won (59) both rank in the top-10 among all schools.
RECORD BY ROUND
Rd. Times Rec. Last-result
64 27 22-6 ’23-W, 66-54 vs. Florida State 32 30 19-10 ’23-L, 66-74 vs. Iowa
Sweet 16 20 11-9 ’13-W, 61-59 vs. Stanford Elite Eight 11 5-6 ’13-L, 62-65 (OT) vs. Cal
Semis 5 2-3 ’99-L, 69-81 vs. Duke
Final 2 0-2 ’96-L, 65-83 vs. Tennessee
RECORD BY SEED
Seed Times Last Rec. Best result
No. 1 4 2000 8-4
No. 2 7 2001 17-7
No. 3 6 2021 16-6
No. 4 4 2018 5-5
No. 5 3 2010 5-3
No. 6 3 2022 5-3
Elite Eight (3 times)
Runner-up (’85, ’96)
Final Four (’95, ’99)
Elite Eight (‘13)
Sweet 16 (’03, ’10)
Sweet 16 (’05, 11)
No. 7 1 1998 0-1 Rd. of 64 (’98)
No. 8 3 2016 1-3 Rd. of 32 (’08)
No. 9 0 0-0
No. 10 2 2023 1-3 Rd. of 32 (’23)
No. 11 1 2009 0-1 Rd. of 64 (’09)
Un. 1 1993 1-1 Rd. of 32 (’93)
RECORD BY LOCATION
Location Rec. Last-result
Home 23-4 ’18, L, 40-66 vs. Duke
Road 2-4 ’96, W, 78-64 vs. S.F. Austin
Neutral 34-28 ’23-L, 66-74 vs. Iowa
RECORD BY REGIONAL
Reg. Times Last Rec. Best result
East 2 2001 1-2 Rd. of 32 (2001)
Mideast 8 2005 14-6 Champs (1995)
Midwest 5 2003 11-3 Champs (’95, ’96)
West 7 2004 15-6 Champs (1985)
Final Four 5 1999 2-5 Runner-up (’85, ’96)
* The NCAA discontinued using directional names for Regionals in 2005
ALL-REGIONAL HONOREES
JANET HARRIS
1983 Regional MOP
1983 – Teresa Edwards
Janet Harris
1984 – Teresa Edwards
Janet Harris
1985 – Teresa Edwards
Janet Harris
1986 – Teresa Edwards
TERESA EDWARDS
1985 Regional MOP
1987 – Katrina McClain
1991 – Stacey Ford
Lady Hardmon
1995 – Kedra Holland
S Roundtree
1996 – S. Roundtree
Tracy Henderson
SAUDIA ROUNDTREE
1996 Regional MOP
1997 – K. Holland-Corn
1999 – Kelly Miller
Pam Irwin-Osbolt
2000 – Coco Miller
Kelly Miller
2003 – Christi Thomas
THE FINAL FOUR...PLUS ONE MORE
Most women’s basketball followers would agree that the 1996 season was one of the most competitive ever, with traditional powers Georgia, Connecticut, Louisiana Tech, Stanford and Tennessee all fielding excellent teams which could stake legitimate claims as the nation’s top squad.
When the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the Lady Bulldogs and Lady Techsters – the only two teams to be ranked No. 1 during the regular season – found themselves bracketed together in the Midwest Regional.
La. Tech topped pre-season No. 1 Connecticut in the State Farm Tip-off Classic and occupied the top spot until a late January loss. The Lady Bulldogs, who had just defeated No. 4 Tennessee, No. 24 Auburn, No. 3 Connecticut, No. 10 Penn State and No. 20 Florida in succession, moved into the top spot for three weeks before losing at Vanderbilt. La. Tech then returned to No. 1 for the remainder of the season.
In a matchup well worthy of its billing, the Lady Bulldogs rallied from a ninepoint halftime deficit en route to a 90-76 victory. Saudia Roundtree, who received Naismith National Player of the Year honors a day earlier, cemented her status as such with a career-high 37 points.
No. 5-ranked Georgia topped Stanford in the NCAA semifinals to improve to 4-0 against the four teams ahead of the Lady Bullogs in the polls, but then lost in the national title tilt.
KELLY MILLER
1999 Regional MOP
2004 – Janese Hardrick
Christi Thomas
2005 – Tasha Humphrey
2006 – Tasha Humphrey
2013 -- Shacobia Barbee
Jasmine James
ALL-FINAL FOUR HONOREES
SAUDIA ROUNDTREE
1996 Final Four
LA’KESHIA FRETT
1996 Final Four
1985 – Teresa Edwards
Katrina McClain
1996 – La’Keshia Frett
Saudia Roundtree
Results
RecoRd: 27-10
Head coacH: aNdy LaNdeRS
toP ScoReR: deboRaH MItcHeLL (17.6) toP RebouNdeR: WaNda HoLLoWay (10.6)
11/19 W at Albany State 91-66
11/22 W # Oral Roberts 103-73
11/25 W Georgia Tech 91-51
12/6 W UT-Chattanooga 81-79
12/10 W at Arkansas 61-49
12/12 W at Tulsa 97-79
12/13
12/17
L at Oral Roberts 58-63
L # No. 6 Tennessee (OT) 68-73
12/20 W Georgia State 79-68
12/29 W vs. Virginia Tech 65-50
12/31 L at UT-Chattanooga 74-79
1/5 W at Mercer 75-69
1/9 L 1 vs. Alabama 61-72
1/10 W 1 vs. Appalachian State 83-60
1/12 W Georgia Tech 79-53
1/15 W at Valdosta State 64-60
1/17 W at Florida 86-66
1/21 L Albany State 78-80
1/24 W Georgia Southern 55-52
1/26 L at Georgia State 63-66
1/29 W 2 vs. Ole Miss 75-68
1/30 L 2 vs. Alabama 66-80
1/31 W 2 vs. No. 7 Kentucky 73-62
2/4 L at Georgia Southern 70-82
2/7 W Valdosta State 104-69
2/11 W Mercer 124-91
2/14 W Alabama-Huntsville 100-53
2/16 W Vanderbilt 94-71
2/18 W at Furman 80-39
2/21 L at No. 20 Auburn 58-74
2/26 W 3 vs. Georgia Tech 89-70
2/27 W 3 vs. Albany State 83-74
2/28 W 3 vs. Georgia Southern 85-53
3/12 L 4 vs. Alabama-Birmingham 70-82
3/26 W 5 vs. Pittsburgh 100-69
3/27 W 5 vs. California 80-68
3/28 W 5 vs. Arizona State (OT) 75-73
# Home Games Played in Marietta, Ga.
1 Clemson Invitational (Clemson, S.C.)
2 SEC Tourney (Baton Rouge, La.)
3 GAIAW Tourney (Atlanta, Ga.)
4 AIAW Region III Tourney (Valdosta, Ga.)
5 NWIT (Amarillo, Texas)
1981 NWIT CHAMPIONS
The 1981 Lady Dogs made major strides in Georgia’s ascension to one of the premier programs in the nation. That season contained numerous milestones in the history of Lady Bulldog Basketball, including the first 20-win season, the first victory over a ranked opponent and the first-ever Georgia AIAW title.
The Lady Dogs won the state tournament just two years after being the last seed in the 1978 tourney.
Georgia completed the campaign in impressive fashion by winning the 1981 NWIT title in Amarillo, Texas, where Cynthia Collins and Wanda Holloway were tabbed NWIT All-Americans.
1980-81 Final Statistics
(L-R): Cheryl Autry, Lou Sims, Barbara Murray, Rhonda Malone, LeAnn Harrell, Karen Miller, Lisa Parker, Wanda Holloway, Deborah Mitchell, Denise Dunlap, Sarah Edwards, Cynthia Collins, Bernadette Locke, Sherri Dugger and Anne Williamson.
1983 SEC CHAMPIONS NCAA FINAL FOUR
A youthful unit with a great deal of faith in itself caught fire late in the 1983 season and rode that momentum all the way to the NCAA Final Four.
After compiling just a 4-4 SEC record in regular season, the Lady Bulldogs traveled to the SEC Tournament in Knoxville as the No. 3 seed from the SEC East. There they notched victories over three top-20 teams in three days to capture Georgia’s first SEC Championship.
After dispatching North Carolina and Indiana, Georgia faced Tennessee for a fourth time during the campaign. While the Lady Vols captured both regular-season meetings quite convincingly, the Lady Dogs secured their second victory over UT in the post-season to win the Mideast Regional in South Bend, Ind.
The Cinderella run ended at the Final Four where Cheryl Miller-USC dispatched Georgia en route to the NCAA title.
# Home Game Played in Marietta, Ga.
1 Crush Classic (Chicago, Ill.)
2 Dial Soap Classic (Miami, Fla.)
3 Nike-Carolina Classic (Columbia, S.C.)
4 SEC Tourney (Knoxville, Tenn.)
5 NCAA 1st Round (Athens)
6 NCAA Mideast (South Bend, Ind.)
7 NCAA Final Four (Norfolk, Va.).
1982-83 Final Statistics
(L-R): Amanda Abrams, Lou Sims, Rhonda Malone, Janet Harris, Lisa O’Connor, Wanda Holloway, Shelia Easley, Cynthia Collins, Susie Gardner, Teresa Edwards, Laura Greeson and Alisa Carrandi.
JAnet HARRiS (17.8)
tOP RebOundeR: JAnet HARRiS (8.5)
11/25 W No. 3 1 vs. St. John’s 83-70
11/26 W No. 3 1 vs. Bowling Green 99-50
12/2 W No. 3 at Georgia Tech 89-52
12/3 W No. 3 Dist. of Columbia 102-61
12/12 W No. 3 at No. 4 Texas 67-61
12/15 L No. 3 at No. 1 Southern Cal 74-82
12/18 W No. 3 2 vs. Oregon 89-64
12/19 W No. 3 2 at Portland State 64-34
12/20 W No. 3 2 vs. Oregon State 89-54
12/29 W No. 3 3 vs. Miami (Ohio) 93-36
12/30 W No. 3 3 vs. No. 17 Clemson 78-64
1/3 W No. 3 No. 12 N.C. State 86-68
1/7 W No. 3 at Kentucky 69-68
1/12 W No. 2 Stephen F. Austin 106-51
1/14 W No. 2 Vanderbilt 87-86
1/16 W No. 2 Florida 86-66
1/22 L No. 4 at No. 11 Tennessee 59-63
1/26 W No. 4 at UT-Chattanooga 75-71
1/28 W No. 4 Augusta College 107-53
1/30 W No. 4 Mercer 78-57
2/2 W No. 4 at Georgia State 114-68
2/5 W No. 4 Kentucky 87-61
2/12 W No. 4 at Vanderbilt 90-66
2/15 W No. 4 No. 15 Auburn 84-68
2/19 W No. 4 No. 10 Tennessee 84-65
2/22 W No. 4 South Florida 87-35
2/25 W No. 4 at Florida 63-48
3/1 W No. 4 4 No. 18 Auburn 102-72
3/2 W No. 4 4 No. 9 LSU 84-77
3/3 W No. 4 4 No. 12 Alabama 74-65
3/17 W No. 3 5 Louisville 112-69
3/23 W No. 3 6 vs. No. 10 Ole Miss 73-63
3/25 L No. 3 6 at No. 15 Tennessee 61-73
1 Detroit Classic (Detroit, Mich.)
2 Giusti Tourney (Portland, Ore.)
3 Buckeye Classic (Columbus, Ohio)
4 SEC Tourney (Athens)
5 NCAA 1st Round (Athens)
6 NCAA Mideast (Knoxville, Tenn.)
1984 SEC CHAMPIONS
The 1983-84 Lady Bulldogs produced the first 30-win season in the history of Georgia Basketball and spent the entire campaign ranked among the nation’s top-four teams. Georgia secured its second-straight SEC Championship on its home floor at the then-Georgia Coliseum in Athens in dramatic fashion.
After cruising past No. 18 Auburn in the
SEC quarterfinals, the Lady Dogs had to rally from a 16-point second half deficit to top No. 9 LSU in the semifinals.
Georgia brok e open a tight title game with Alabama early in the half and withstood every Crimson Tide rally. Teresa Edwards, Janet Harris and Wanda Holloway all earned all-tourney honors.
1983-84 Final Statistics
(L-R): Jo Beth Weaver, Amanda Abrams, Laura Greeson, Teresa Edwards, Sheila Easley, Janet Harris, Barbara Bootz, Katrina McClain, Wanda Holloway, Lisa O’Connor, Rhonda Malone, Susie Gardner, Lou Sims and DeeDee Frasier.
1985 NCAA RUNNER-UP
The 1985 Lady Bulldogs fell one win shy of claiming the national title, rolling through their first four NCAA Tourney foes by more than 20 points per game and leading by nine points late in the first half of the national championship game.
After dispatching Tennessee Tech, Andy Landers’s alma mater, in the first round, the Lady Bulldogs traveled to historic Pauley Pavilion where they throttled No. 18 UCLA and upset top-seeded Long Beach State.
After topping Western Kentucky, the Lady Dogs opened up a 31-22 lead over Old Dominion in the NCAA final before the Monarchs trimmed that edge to one point at halftime.
The fir st 10 minutes of the second half featured no less than a dozen lead changes before fouls began to mount on UGA. Teresa Edwards fouled out with 8:10 left and Katrina McClain followed at the 5:34 mark and ODU went on a run 15-9 thereafter.
1984-85
1 Mid-America Classic (Columbia, Mo.)
2 Buckeye Classic (Columbus, Ohio)
3 SEC Tourney (Athens & Oxford, Miss.)
4 NCAA 1st Round (Athens)
5 NCAA West (Los Angeles, Calif.)
6 NCAA Final Four (Austin, Texas)
(L-R): Amanda Abrams, Traci Waites, Susie Gardner, Traci Inman, Lisa O’Connor, Katrina McClain, Barbara Bootz, Janet Harris, Regan Acosta, Teresa Edwards, Jo Beth Weaver and DeeDee Frasier.
RecORd:
RebOundeR: kAtRinA MccLAin (10.1)
11/22 W No. 2 1 vs. Central Michigan 97-55
11/23 W No. 2 1 at Tennessee Tech 79-64
11/25 W No. 2 at Clemson 87-68
11/30 W No. 2 at No. 15 N.C. State 92-67
12/2 W No. 2 Middle Tennessee 108-58
12/4 W No. 2 Georgia Tech 93-58
12/11 W No. 2 Georgia Southern 97-67
12/14 W No. 2 # Cincinnati 98-47
12/16 W No. 2 at Florida A&M 90-62
12/27 W No. 2 2 vs. No. 18 N. Carolina 87-70
12/28 L No. 2 2 at No. 3 Southern Cal 67-70
12/31 W No. 3 at No. 4 Long Beach State 93-68
1/6 W No. 3 at UT-Chattanooga 83-67
1/9 W No. 3 at Georgia Southern 97-47
1/12 W No. 2 at Vanderbilt 68-61
1/18 W No. 2 at No. 9 Auburn 95-61
1/22 W No. 2 South Carolina 93-70
1/26 W No. 2 at No. 9 Ole Miss 70-69
1/29 W No. 2 No. 11 Tennessee 84-74
2/2 W No. 2 No. 12 LSU 90-66
2/5 W No. 2 at Alabama 73-69
2/8 W No. 2 Mississippi State 87-47
2/10 W No. 2 No. 4 Western Ky. 93-61
2/13 W No. 2 Mercer 105-54
2/15 W No. 2 at Florida 83-47
2/17 W No. 2 at South Florida 90-47
2/23 W No. 2 Kentucky 113-67
3/1 W No. 2 3 Alabama 88-71
3/2 W No. 2 3 No. 10 Ole Miss 76-68
3/3 W No. 2 3 No. 9 LSU 94-72
3/15 W No. 2 4 Illinois 103-64
3/20 L No. 2 5 vs. No. 15 Tennessee 82-85
1 TTU Classic (Cookeville, Tenn.)
# Home Game Played in Marietta, Ga.
2 TransAmerica Classic (Los Angeles)
3 SEC Tourney (Athens)
4 NCAA 1st (Athens)
5 NCAA Mideast (Iowa City, Iowa)
1986 SEC CHAMPIONS
(L-R):
The most successful Georgia team from a rankings standpoint was the 1986 Lady Dogs, who spent the entire season ranked either No. 2 or No. 3 in the nation.
Georgia sported an impressive 26.0-point average margin of victory, including an even more impressive 19.8-point advantage in its 10 victories over ranked foes.
That season also capped the career s of the most successful senior class in UGA history. Teresa Edwards, Lisa O’Connor and Susie Gardner helped lead Georgia to a combined 116-7 record (.943), three SEC Championships (1983, 1984 and 1986), two Final Fours (1983, 1985) and a national runner-up finish (1985).
1985-86 Final Statistics
Seated
Rhonda Mikes, Traci Waites, Teresa Edwards, Susie Gardner, Carla Green and DeeDee Frasier. Standing: Anne Smith, Traci Inman, Lisa O’Connor, Katie Abrahamson, Barbara Bootz, Chris Toscas, Katrina McClain and Regan Acosta.
1991 SEC CHAMPIONS
G eorgia’s 1991 Lady Bulldogs raced through the SEC to a perfect 8-0 record in league play to set up a monumental date with Auburn for the conference title.
Before what was then a Georgia Coliseum-record crowd of 9,011, the Lady Dogs completed their undefeated run through the SEC with a 70-66 win over the 1989 and 1990 NCAA runner-up.
Camille Lowe poured in a game-high 26 points and Tammye Jenkins chipped in a double-double of 13 points and 11 rebounds to lead the Lady Dogs to that win and secure Georgia’s fourth SEC Championship in a nineyear span.
L owe and Stacey Ford earned All-SEC recognition, while Andy Landers was tabbed as the SEC Coach of the Year.
5
6
1990-91 Final Statistics
(Las Vegas, Nev.)
Seated (L-R): Adrienne Shuler, Kim Berry, Lady Hardmon, Camille Lowe, Deborah Reese and Vicky Jones. Standing: Kenya Robinson, Sharla Smith, Stacey Ford, Tammye Jenkins, Deborah Carter and Nancy Anderson.
Andy LAndeRS
tOP ScOReR: LA’keSHiA FRett (15.9)
tOP RebOundeR: tRAcy HendeRSOn (7.6)
11/25 W No. 18 Ohio State 79-70
11/27 W No. 18 at Middle Tennessee 95-71
12/7 W No. 16 Rutgers 105-70
12/12 W No. 16 1 at Georgia State 92-37
12/13 W No. 14 1 vs. Georgia Tech 113-81
12/17 W No. 14 at LSU 84-68
12/19 W No. 14 at Bowling Green 82-63
12/28 W No. 12 at Rutgers 92-74
12/30 W No. 12 at Manhattan 94-52
1/5 W No. 11 at Tennessee Tech 82-64
1/8 W No. 11 No. 24 Arkansas 72-67
1/11 W No. 8 Marquette 104-60
1/15 L No. 8 No. 10 Vanderbilt 52-65
1/18 W No. 11 No. 14 Alabama 91-67
1/22 W No. 11 at Kentucky 68-57
1/23 W No. 11 UNC Asheville 102-31
1/29 W No. 11 at South Carolina 80-58
2/1 W No. 11 S.C. State 90-45
2/4 W No. 11 at Mississippi State 69-66
2/8 L No. 10 No. 18 Florida 46-59
2/10 W No. 10 No. 14 Ole Miss (OT) 80-77
2/13 W No. 10 at Texas 80-75
2/15 W No. 12 New Mexico State 80-53
2/19 W No. 12 Auburn 78-56
2/21 W No. 9 Charleston Southern 91-33
2/25 L No. 9 at No. 2 Tennessee 61-83
3/4 W No. 11 2 vs. No. 18 Florida 88-71
3/5 L No. 11 2 vs. No. 7 Vanderbilt 56-82
3/17 W No. 12 3 Indiana 81-64
3/19 W No. 12 3 Louisville 81-68
3/23 W No. 12 4 vs. N.C. State 98-79
3/25 W No. 12 4 vs. No. 2 Colorado 82-79
4/1 L No. 12 5 vs. No. 3 Tennessee 51-73
1 ISES Southern Invitational (Atlanta, Ga.)
2 SEC Tourney (Chattanooga, Tenn.)
3 NCAA 1st & 2nd Rounds (Athens)
4 NCAA Midwest (Des Moines, Iowa)
5 NCAA Final Four (Minneapolis, Minn.)
1995 NCAA FINAL FOUR
Fueled by a mix of six stellar sophomores and the 1994 National Junior College Player of the Year, the 1995 Lady Dogs played well throughout the season and then upped its intensity in the post-season to earn a Final Four bid.
Georgia spent the campaign rank ed between No. 18 and No. 8 in the AP poll and eventually earned the No. 3 seed for the Midwest Regional.
Georgia’s thrilling win over No. 2 Colorado delivered the Lady Dogs to the Final Four. Kedra Holland scored 11 of her 15 points during the final 3:30 of the “Elite Eight” matchup to amazingly turn a seven-point deficit into an 82-79 victory.
Georgia then became the “home” team for the Final Four in Minneapolis, the hometown of Georgia sophomores Brandi Decker and Tracy Henderson.
1994-95 Final Statistics
Seated (L-R): Rachel Powell, Latrese Bush, Kim Thompson, Saudia Roundtree, Kedra Holland and Stephanie Wheeler. Standing: Brandi Decker, Tracy Henderson, Dorothy Sanders, Tiffany Walker, La’Keshia Frett and Tracy Walls.
1996 SEC CHAMPIONS
The 1996 Lady Bulldogs became the first team in the storied history of Georgia Basketball to win an SEC regular-season title and advance to the NCAA Final Four.
Georgia – and eventual National Player of the Year Saudia Roundtree – took the nation by storm in January, defeatingTennessee and Connecticut in a one-week span to vault to a No. 1 national ranking.
Despite being one of only two teams to be ranked No. 1 during the campaign, the Lady Dogs were seeded No. 2 in the Midwest Regional behind Louisiana Tech, the only other team to be No. 1 that season.
Georgia topped the Lady Techsters by 14 and then led Stanford by as many as 17 late in the second half of the NCAA semis but then fell short of the national title.
4
5 NCAA 1st & 2nd Rounds (Athens)
6
7 NCAA
Midwest (Nacogdoches, Texas)
Four (Charlotte, N.C.)
1995-96 Final Statistics
Seated (L-R): Kim Thompson, Latrese Bush, Kedra Holland, Rachel Powell, Kendi Taylor and Pam Irwin. Standing: Saudia Roundtree, Brandi Decker, Tracy Henderson, Signe Antvorskov, La’Keshia Frett, Tiffany Walker and Tracy Walls.
Seniors Brandi Decker, La’Keshia Frett, Tracy Henderson, Kedra Holland-Corn, Rachel Powell and Tiffany Walker – the most celebrated recruiting class in the history of women’s basketball – capped their collegiate careers in fine fashion.
Those six standouts helped UGA capture its second consecutive SEC title with an impressive 11-1 record in league play.
Georgia won a thrilling 94-93 overtime decision over Tennessee in Knoxville in December in a rematch of the previous season’s national title game and then won its last nine SEC games en route to edging Alabama for the league title.
The Lady Dogs ’ quest for a national title ended with a loss to No. 3 Stanford in the “Elite Eight” in Missoula, Mont.
With Georgia’s storied NCAA Tournament history, it should come as no surprise when the Lady Bulldogs make a deep run into “March Madness.” However, the accomplishments of the 1999 Lady Dogs – with just one senior in their ranks – would have to rank as the most startling.
The Lady Dogs were enjoying a very solid season in late January when they inexplicably lost four of their next five games. In the process, Georgia fell from No. 4 to No. 14 in the national polls.
The Lady Bulldogs quickly reemerged. A 25-point win at Florida ignited Georgia, and the Lady Dogs served notice they would be a post-season force when they led Tennessee by nine late in the first half of the SECTourney final.
After upsetting second-seeded Clemson in the Midwest Regional semis, Kelly Miller exploded in the “Elite Eight” matchup with Iowa State, scoring 18 in the first 12:40 of the game as Georgia built a 31-20 lead and would never be challenged.
1 Conoco Ladyjack Classic (Nacogdochese, Texas)
2 Boise State Christmas Classic (Boise, Idaho)
3 Cobb Civic Center (Marietta, Ga.)
4 SEC Tourney (Chattanooga, Tenn.)
5 NCAA 1st & 2nd Rounds (Athens)
6 NCAA Mideast (Cincinnati)
7 NCAA Final Four (San Jose, Calif.)
1998-99 Final Statistics
Seated (L-R): Camille Murphy, Pam Irwin-Osbolt, Kiesha Brown and Deana “Tweety” Nolan. Standing: Coco Miller, Shavonda Willis, Elena Vishniakova, Tawana McDonald, Angie Ball and Kelly Miller.
1999-2000 Results
RecORd: 32-4 AP RAnk: nO. 4 uSA tOdAy RAnk: nO. 5 HeAd cOAcH: Andy LAndeRS tOP ScOReR: cOcO MiLLeR (15.4) tOP RebOundeR: tAwAnA McdOnALd (8.8)
The 1999-2000 edition of the Lady Bulldogs raced from the gates and eventually finished as the winningest team in the program’s storied history. Before December arrived on the calendar, Georgia compiled a 7-0 record, including defeating three top-20 teams en route to winning the Preseason WNIT.
The Lady Dogs lost their SEC opener but then reeled off 13 straight conference victories to claim a third league title in a five-year span. The highlight of that streak was a nationally televised 27-point thumping of No. 2 Tennessee on MLK Day.
UGA’s 32 “Ws” topped the previous school record of 30 in 1984 and ’86.
1999-2000 Final Statistics
Seated (L-R): Kiesha Brown, Kelly McEntire, Tameiko Washington, Deana Nolan, Mary Beth Lycett, Beth Timmons, and Camille Murphy. Standing: Kelly Miller, Tiaunna Briggans, Shala Crawford, Tawana McDonald, Angie Ball, Shavonda Willis, Coco Miller, and Tina Taylor.
2001 SEC TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS
Seated (L-R): Tina Taylor, Kelly McEntire, Tameiko Washington, Camille Murphy, Kiesha Brown, Coco Miller, Kelly Miller. Standing: Mary Beth Lycett,Tiaunna Briggans, Amy King, ChristiThomas, Tawana McDonald, Ebony Felder, Beth Henson and Deanna Nolan.
The Lady Bulldogs bounced back from early-season losses to No. 1 Connecticut and eventual national champion Notre Dame in November to click on all cylinders a month later.
A brok en finger to Deanna “Tweety” Nolan disrupted what might have been one of Georgia’s greatest seasons ever.
Georgia began the calendar year with two impressive wins before Nolan broke her finger against Florida. While the Lady Dogs still won eight of nines game without Nolan, and eight of 10 after she returned, they never regained their January form.
Still, Georgia won the SEC Tourney title on Kelly Miller’s buzzer-beating jumper.
2/19/17 vs. LSU 70-65 W 2/23/17 vs. Alabama 71-65 W 1/14/18 at Texas A&M 92-84 W 2/22/18 at Alabama 49-43 W 2/3/19 at Auburn 58-59 L 2/24/19 at Alabama 76-67 W 2/16/20 Alabama 76-65 W 11/29/20 at Georgia Tech 75-69 W 2/4/21 at Alabama 83-76 W 11/26/21 Notre Dame 71-67 W 12/16/21 NC State 82-80 W 2/2/23 at LSU
No. 00
La’Keshia Frett 1994-97
Kim Braxton 2002 No. 0
Taja Cole 2017-18
Zoesha Smith 2020-24
Trinity Turner 2024-pres. No. 1
Ashley Houts
2007-10
Khaalidah Miller 2011-13
Terryuana Godwin 2014
Shanea Armbrister 2015-16
Donnetta Johnson 2018
Chloe Chapman 2019-24
Asia Avinger 2024-pres. No. 2
Tina Taylor 2001-05
Ebony Jones 2010-12
Sydnei McCaskill 2014
Terryuana Godwin 2015-16
Gabby Connally 2017-21
Savannah Henderson 2022-pres. No. 3
Pam Irwin-Osbolt 1996-99
Mary Beth Lycett 2000-03
Jasmine Lee 2008-09
Anne Marie Armstrong 2010-13
Tiaria Griffin 2014-16
Stephanie Paul 2016-20
Sarah Ashlee Barker 2020-22
Diamond Battles 2022-23 No. 4
Christi Thomas 2001-04
Danielle Taylor 2006-08
Ronika Ransford 2011
Danielle Bennett 2012-13
Hannahkohl Almire 2014
Caliya Robinson 201 5-18
Mikayla Coombs 2019-22
Miyah Verse 2023-pres. No. 5 (RETIRED)
Teresa Edwards 1983-86 No. 10
Donna Noonan 1976
Beth Morgan 1977
Jane Park 1978-79
Kelly Robbins 1992-93
Saudia Roundtree 1995-96
Jasmine James 2010-13
Samantha Glodis 2014
Hannahkohl Almire 2015-16
Caitlin Hose 2018-21
De'Mauri Flournoy 2022-pres. No. 11
Vicki Varross 1974-75
DiAnn Stone 1977-80
Kathy Meeks 1979
Cheryl Autry 1981
Amanda Abrams 1982-85
Angela Davis 1990
Christy Cagle 1992
Rachel Powell 1994-97
Matoya Jones 1998
Kiesha Brown 1999-01
Sherill Baker 2003-06
Meredith Mitchell 2009-12
Tiaria Griffin 2013
Pachis Roberts 2014-16
Maya Caldwell 2017-21
Asia Avinger 2023-24 No. 12
Meme Robinson 1974-75
Debbie Culpepper 1976
Patricia Griffith 1977
Sally Martin 1978
Alice Hart 1979
Lisa Kendrick 1987-90
Kenya Robinson 1991
Nikki Eason 2002
Sara Kate Greene 2005-06
Maria Taylor 2007
Jasmine Hassell 2010-13
Haley Clark 2015-18
Kaila Hubbard 2018-20
Taniyah Thompson 2023-24
Roxane Makolo 2024-pres. No. 13
Marilyn Brackett 1974-75
Phyllis Morrow 1976
Cherie Hester 1978
Diane Carson 1979
Barbara Murray 1981-82
Susie Gardner 1983-86
DeeDee Frasier 1984-87
Dorothy Sanders 1992-95
Jessica Pierce 2002-05
Merritt Hempe 2013-16
Stefanie Ingram 2022-24 No. 14
Dawn Young 1974-75
Tina Price 1976-77
Renee Nordan 1978
Deborah Arndt 1979-80
Carla Green 1986-89
Camille Lowe 1990-93
Julee Roberts 1998
Deanna “Tweety” Nolan
1999-01
Janese Hardrick 2004-07
Jasmine Carter 2014-15
Jenna Staiti 2017-22 No. 15
Margaret Tyson 1974-75
Tricia Griffith 1976
Susan Register 1978
Nancy Russom 1979
Cathy Bennett 1980
Anne Williamson 1981
Jo Beth Weaver 1983-84
Rhonda Mikes 1986
Jill Mitchell 1988
Jessica Barr 1990
Signe Antvorskov 1996-97
Amy King 2001
Desiré Bostice 2005-06
Jaleesa Rhoden 2008-10
Krista Donald 2012-14
Maori Davenport 2020-22 No. 20
Donna Noonan 1977
Beth Williams 1978
Traci Waites 1985-86
Sharla Smith 1991
Miriam Lowe 1990,92-93
Sherbiya Morris 1994
Tocshia Campfield 1997
Angela Puleo 2008-09
Shacobia Barbee 2013-16
Jordan Cole 2019-24 No. 21
Cindy Thomas 1978
Candis Broome 1979-80
Rhonda Malone 1981-84
Sharon Baldwin 1989-90
Vicky Jones 1991-93
Fain Spurlock 1998
Kelly McEntire 2000-01
Cori Chambers 2004-07
Porsha Phillips 2009-11
Kaelyn Causwell 2014
Shaniya Jones 2019-20
Reigan Richardson 2021-22
Fatima Diakhate 2022-pres. No. 22
Beth Morgan 1976
Phyllis Morrow 1977
Nancy Gates 1978
Tammy Waybright 1979
Kim “K.T.” Thompson 1993-96
Kiesha Brown 1997
Tameiko Washington 2000-02
Christy Marshall 2007-09
Kaelyn Causwell 2013
Malury Bates 2018-2023
Nyah Leveretter 2024-pres. No. 23
Bernadette Locke 1980-81
Alisa Carrandi 1982-83
Susie Gardner 1983-86
Lady Hardmon 1989-92
Kelly Miller 1998-01
Tamika Willis 2010-13
Halle Washington 2014-16
Que Morrison 2017-22
Alisha Lewis 2022-23
Summer Davis 2024-pres. No. 24
Cecilia Jones 1974
Carol Koeble 1976
DiAnn Stone 1977
Stephanie Wheeler 1992-95
Kendi Taylor 1996
Tawnya Nash 1998
Tiaunna Briggans 2000-01
Whitney Law 2002
Megan Darrah 2005-08
Marjorie Butler 2013-16
Simone Costa 2016-18
Kimora Jenkins 2021-22
Brittney Smith 2022-23
Indya Davis 2024-pres.
No. 25
Deedy Taylor
Laura Greeson
Shala Crawford
Sarah Stoddard
ALL-TIME LETTERWINNER STATS
Katie Abrahamson
Shanea Armbrister
Nancy Anderson
Signe Antvorskov
Darrah
Davenport
Angela Davis
Tena DeVore
GEORGIA BASKETBALL
ALL-TIME LETTERWINNER STATS
Khaalidah Miller
Sherbiya
Barbara
NATIONAL PLAYER OF THE YEAR
McCLAIN
Honda/Broderick Cup Champion/WBCA, AWSF, WBB News Service
ESPYs, Rawlings/WBCA, Boost/Naismith, USBWA, UPI, Basketball America
Kedra Holland-Corn was named National Player of the Week on Dec. 11, 1997, scoring 24 points against No. 12 Virginia and pouring 30 points and playing all 45 minutes of a 94-93 OT win at No. 4 Tennessee.
11/13/06
11/20/06
2/5/07
2/19/07
2/26/07
2/17/08
11/29/09
12/20/09
1/10/10
1/24/10
2/28/10
1/2/11
2/9/11
Caliya Robinson was named ESPNW National Player of the Week on Feb. 6, 2017 after pouring in 28 points in a double overtime win against Tennessee.
Jenna Staiti was named the ESPN National Player of the Week following Georgia's upset of No. 2 NC State in 2021. Staiti scored 21 points, brought down 11 rebounds and blocked six shots.
SEC FRESHMAN OF THE WEEK
2/16/11
Ashley Houts
Jasmine James
Jasmine James
Jasmine James
Jasmine James
Jasmine Hassell
Jasmine James
Khaalidah Miller
Khaalidah Miller
Khaalidah Miller
1/2/12 Erika Ford
2/6/12
2/25/13
1/26/15
12/29/15
2/9/16
2/16/16
1/9/18
1/14/18
1/15/19
12/30/19
12/8/20
1/20/21
12/28/21
1/4/22
Krista Donald
Shacobia Barbee
Mackenzie Engram
Caliya Robinson
Caliya Robinson
Caliya Robinson
Que Morrison
Gabby Connally
Donnetta Johnson
Javyn Nicholson
Sarah Ashlee Barker
Sarah Ashlee Barker
Jillian Hollingshead
Jillian Hollingshead
TASHA HUMPHREY
ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS
BERNADETTE LOCKE 1981 (2nd team)
BARBARA BOOTZ
1985, 1986, 1987
KELLY MILLER 2000 (3rd team); 2001 (2nd team)
COCO MILLER 2001 (3rd team)
SEC ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL
CAMILLE LOWE 1991, 1992, 1993
TINA TAYLOR 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005
KATIE FRYE 2003, 2004, 2005
REBECCA ROWSEY 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
SEC ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL
MITCHELL 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Year Honoree(s)
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
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,
2007 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
2013 A.M. Armstrong, M. Butler, J. Hassell, M. Hempe, J. James
2014 H. Almire, M. Butler, M. Hempe, H. Washington
2015 H. Almire, M. Butler,
H. Clark, T. Griffin, M. Hempe
2016 H. Almire, S. Barbee, M. Butler, H. Clark, M. Engram, T. Griffin
2017 H. Clark, M. Engram
2018 B. Blanaru, A. Henderson, H. Clark, M. Engram
2019 M. Caldwell, A. Henderson, Q. Morrison
2020 M. Bates
M. Caldwell
G. Connally
A. Henderson
C. Hose
K. Hubbard
Q. Morrison
S. Paul
J. Staiti
2021 M. Bates
M. Caldwell
C. Chapman
G. Connally
M. Coombs
C. Hose
Q. Morrison
J. Staiti
2022 S. Barker
M. Bates
C. Chapman
M. Coombs
Q. Morrison
J. Nicholson
J. Staiti
2023 M. Bates
C. Chapman
J. Isaacs
2024 C. Chapman
A. Evans
S. Henderson
MEREDITH
NCAA POSTGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS
REBECCA ROWSEY – 2008
ATLANTA SPORTS AWARDS
JAMES E. SULLIVAN MEMORIAL AWARD
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.
NCAA SILVER ANNIVERSARY AWARD
COCO & KELLY MILLER – 1999 SAUDIA ROUNDTREE – 1996
TERESA EDWARDS 2011
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
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 five Georgia female student-athletes to win the award since its inception in 1984, joining golfer Vicki Goetze (1992), swimmer Kristy Kowal (2000), gymnast Courtney Kupets (2009) and swimmer Allison Schmitt (2013).
TIFFANY WALKER – 1997
KELLY MILLER – 2001
NAISMITH HALL OF FAME
TERESA EDWARDS – 2011
Teresa Edwards was inducted into the Naismith Hall of Fame in August 2011. Upon taking the stage at Springfield’s Symphony Hall, Edwards immediately spoke to Andy Landers, her coach and mentor at the UGA.
“OK, Coach Landers....I’m nervous now,” Edwards joked. “I never knew I could be here. I’m beginning to feel the prestige of the moment.”
After thanking numerous groundbreakers in women’s basketball, Edwards talked about watching Julius “Dr. J” Irving and attempting to emulate his abilities on a “basketball goal” consisting of a bicycle tire nailed to a pine tree and Michael Jordan, who she called the greatest player ever.
“After tonight, I’m forever changed because you recognized my name with my game,” Edwards said. “For Coach...the University of Georgia...for everyone from Cairo...we’re in the Hall of Fame, baby.”
KATRINA McCLAIN – 2012
Katrina McClain was enshrined into the Naismith Hall of Fame in September 2012.
“What an honor,” McClain said. “I am so proud and humbled to be a part of such an amazing group of athletes who have meant so much to the game. I have so many people to thank.”
After opening by recognizing her family, McClain then turned to individuals who have meant the most to her career, including Andy Landers.
“I remember when he was recruiting me, Coach Landers told me I could be the greatest player in the world,” McClain said.
“He also told me if I wanted easy don’t come to Georgia. Coach Landers helped me really realize that you had to go out there and work hard. Coach helped us all understand that education came first. He stressed that, that we were there to get an education. And if we didn’t get that, we didn’t get to play.”
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL HALL OF FAME
TERESA EDWARDS 2010
The Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame’s mission is to “honor the past, celebrate the present and promote the future” of women’s basketball.
In 2006, Katrina McClain became the first former Lady Bulldog to earn induction. McClain, the 1987 National Player of the Year and a two-time All-American at UGA, also helped lead the U.S. to Gold Medals in both the 1988 and 1996 Olympics. McClain also played professionally in the U.S., Japan, Italy, Spain and Turkey.
In 2007, Andy Landers was enshrined in the Hall of Fame. Landers, the first full-time head coach in Lady Bulldog history, is a four-time National Coach of the Year honoree and ranks among the game’s leaders in virtually every statistic imaginable.
In 2010, as soon as she has completed the mandatory five years of retirement before induction, Teresa Edwards became the third Lady Bulldog representative in the hall. Edwards is the only U.S. basketball player – male or female – to play in five Olympic Games and captured four Gold Medals.
In 2015, Janet Harris, who helped bring Georgia to national prominence in the early-1980s, was officially enshrined into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame. Harris was the first player to ever record 2,500 points and 1,250 rebounds as a three-time WBCA All-American.
ANDY LANDERS 2007
KATRINA McCLAIN 2006
JANET HARRIS 2015
STATE SPORTS HALLS OF FAME
U.S. OLYMPIC HALL OF FAME
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 individuallyhonoring 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
TERESA EDWARDS 2001 Georgia Hall of Fame
TERESA EDWARDS – 2002
KATRINA McCLAIN – 2010
TERESA EDWARDS – 2009
KATRINA MCCLAIN 2005 Georgia Hall of Fame
KATRINA MCCLAIN 2006 South Carolina Hall of Fame
ANDY LANDERS 2009 Georgia Hall of Fame
FIBA HALL OF FAME
Teresa Edwards, the most decorated basketball player in Olympic history, was enshrined in the FIBA Hall of Fame in June 2013 in ceremonies in Mies, Switzerland.
“What can I say? It took me all around the world,” Edwards said. “Now the FIBA Hall of Fame is calling me home to stay forever. Who in their right mind wouldn’t be excited about this?”
Edwards helped the U.S. win four gold medals and a bronze in her five Olympics from 1984-2000, making her the most decorated Olympic basketball player ever. Oscar Schmidt of Brazil and Andrew Gaze of Australia played in five Olympics but never won a medal. Edwards also holds the unique distinction of being both the youngest and oldest women’s basketball player to ever win Olympic gold.
Edwards was among 12 members of the 2013 FIBA Hall of Fame class. Other inductees include: players JeanJacques Conceiçao (Angola), Andrew Gaze (Australia), Paula Gonçalves (Brazil), David Robinson (USA) and Zoran Slavnic (Serbia); coaches John ‘Jack’ Donohue (Canada), Cesare Rubini (Italy) and Pat Summitt (USA); technical officials Valentin Lazarov (Bulgaria) and Costas Rigas (Greece); and contributor Aldo Vitale (Italy).
UGA CIRCLE OF HONOR
TERESA EDWARDS – 2013
TERESA EDWARDS –1995
KATRINA McCLAIN – 1997
JANET HARRIS – 2002
SAUDIA ROUNDTREE – 2013
BERNADETTE LOCKE – 2009
KELLY AND COCO MILLER CLASS OF 2017
UGA LEADERSHIP AWARD
2003
REBECCA ROWSEY – 2007
The Lewis Leadership Award is given to the UGA female student-athlete who embodies dedication, motivation and discipline, and who seeks the good of the group above personal gain.
UGA SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD
EBONY JONES – 2011
The sportsmanship award goes annually to the UGA female student-athlete who consistently demonstrated good sportsmanship and ethical behavior in her daily participation in intercollegiate athletics and has displayed good citizenship outside of the sports-competition setting.
SEC COMMUNITY SERVICE TEAM
CHRISTI THOMAS 2003, 2004 KATIE FRYE 2005 PAM IRWIN-OSBOLT 1999
ANGEL ROBINSON 2009
JASMINE JAMES 2012, 2013
MERRITT HEMPE 2016
KIESHA BROWN 2000, 2001
ASHLEY HOUTS 2010
MARJORIE BUTLER 2014
MACKENZIE ENGRAM 2017, 2018
BETH LYCETT 2002
REBECCA ROWSEY 2006, 2007, 2008
MEREDITH MITCHELL 2011
ERIKA FORD 2015
PAUL 2019, 2020 MIKAYLA COOMBS 2022
SMITH 2023
FLOURNOY 2024
ASHLEY HOUTS – 2010
MARY BETH LYCETT–
MARY
STEPHANIE
EDWARDS
Five-time Olympian, Naismith Hall of Fame, Greatest Player Ever
TRACY HENDERSON
Two-time honorable mention All-American
O’CONNOR
1983 All-American
Two-time All-American, Four-time All-SEC
WANDA HOLLOWAY
UGA-Record
134 games played
ROUNDTREE
1996 National Player of the Year
Three-time All-SEC
BERNADETTE LOCKE
Program’s first All-American and Academic All-American
Four-time All-American
1987 National Player of the Year
ALL-TIME TEAM
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
LA’KESHIA FRETT
LADY HARDMON
JANET HARRIS
KATRINA MCCLAIN
LISA
SAUDIA
SHERILL BAKER New York, Los Angeles, Indiana, Detroit
ANNE MARIE ARMSTRONG Atlanta
ANGIE BALL Charlotte KARA BRAXTON Detroit, Tulsa, Phoenix, New York
KIESHA BROWN Washington, Houston, New York, Minnesota, L.A., Connecticut, Tulsa
KEDRA HOLLAND-CORN Sacramento, Detroit, Houston
TRACY HENDERSON Cleveland
ASHLEY HOUTS Washington
TASHA HUMPHREY Detroit, Washington, Minnesota
JASMINE JAMES Phoenix
CORI CHAMBERS Connecticut TERESA EDWARDS Minnesota STACEY FORD New York, Sacramento
LA’KESHIA FRETT Los Angeles, Sacramento, Charlotte, New York
LADY GROOMS Utah, Sacramento
JASMINE HASSELL
Indiana, Seattle COCO MILLER Washington, Atlanta, Los Angeles
ANGEL ROBINSON Seattle, Phoenix
ADRIENNE SHULER Washington
Charlotte, Indiana, Phoenix, Minnesota, Atlanta, Washington, New York
CHRISTI THOMAS Los Angeles, Minnesota, Chicago
MAYA CALDWELL Atlanta, Indiana
PIPELINE TO THE PROS
Georgia Lady Bulldogs have long been prominent figures in the professional ranks, both in the United States and overseas. All told, 50 Lady Bulldogs have gone on to play basketball professionally, including 26 in the WNBA.
Deanna Nolan is the most decorated Georgia alum in the WNBA. She was a perennial All-Star, helped the Detroit Shock to three WNBA titles, and was named the MVP of the 2006 WNBA Finals.
Former Georgia players also are making their mark on the sideline. Teresa Edwards was the interim head coach of the Tulsa Shock in 2011 and the Atlanta Dream in 2014, while Bernadette Mattox and Lady Grooms were assistant coaches for Connecticut and New York, respectively.
KELLY MILLER
DEANNA NOLAN
PHILLIPS
UGA WNBA CHAMPIONS
GEORGIA IN THE WNBA DRAFT
PLAYER Yr Team Selection
LADY GROOMS 1997 Utah 16 players allocated
LA’KESHIA FRETT 1999 Los Angeles 4th Round (40th overall)
ANNE MARIE ARMSTRONG Brazil, Israel, Turkey, Italy, Poland
SHERILL BAKER Israel, Italy, Greece
ANGIE BALL France, Italy
SHACOBIA BARBEE Spain, Turkey, Ecuador
MALURY BATES Australia, Russia
DIAMOND BATTLES Greece, Iceland
BARBARA BOOTZ Japan
KARA BRAXTON Italy, Poland
KIESHA BROWN Czech Republic, France, Israel, Russia, Spain, Turkey
MAYA CALDWELL Spain
CORI CHAMBERS Israel, Russia, Switzerland
CHLOE CHAPMAN Prague
CYNTHIA COLLINS Venezuela
SIMONE COSTA Britain, Portugal, Germany
MEGAN DARRAH Spain
TERESA EDWARDS France, Italy, Japan, Russia, Spain
MACKENZIE ENGRAM Israel, Sweden
STACEY FORD France, Italy, Japan, Spain
LA’KESHIA FRETT Hungary, Israel, Korea, Spain
CARLA GREEN Spain
LADY GROOMS Israel, Italy, Turkey
JANET HARRIS Italy, Japan, Spain
JASMINE HASSELL Israel, Spain, France
MERRITT HEMPE Germany, Russia, Spain, Greece
KEDRA HOLLAND-CORN France, Hungary, Italy, Spain
TASHA HUMPHREY Israel, Italy
ASHLEY HOUTS France, Israel
JASMINE JAMES Brazil
VERA JARDIN Portugal
TAMMYE JENKINS Greece, Japan, Spain
ALEXIS KENDRICK Serbia
ALISHA LEWIS Ireland, Germany
KATRINA McCLAIN Italy, Japan, Spain, Turkey
COCO MILLER China, France, Russia, Turkey
KELLY MILLER China, France, Russia, Turkey
QUE MORRISON Italy
JAVYN NICHOLSON Poland
DEANNA NOLAN Czech Republic, Israel, Italy, Poland, Spain, Russia
LISA O’CONNOR Japan
PORSHA PHILLIPS Israel
STEPHANIE PAUL France
PACHIS ROBERTS Greece, Australia
ANGEL ROBINSON France, Portugal, Spain, Turkey
CALIYA ROBINSON Spain, Turkey, France
DOROTHY SANDERS Spain
BRITTNEY SMITH Mexico, Germany
CHRISTI THOMAS Italy, Latvia, Spain, Turkey
TANIYAH THOMPSON Turkey
MEDINA TURNER Belgium, Spain
AUDREY WARREN Portugal, Finland
TERESA EDWARDS
KIESHA BROWN
ANGEL ROBINSON
UGA & USA BASKETBALL: A GOLDEN COMBO
Rarely over the past two decades has a United States National Team entered a major international competition without one or more Georgia Lady Bulldog included as a key ingredient on the roster.
Teresa Edwards and Katrina McClain headline an impressive list of 25 Lady Bulldogs who have represented USA Basketball in more than 40 different competitions worldwide.
Edwards and McClain were the backbone of virtually every U.S. team fielded for a major competition from 1986-96 and compiled a 109-4 (.965) record in USA Basketball competitions.
Edwards, who first played at the national level during the summer after her junior season of high school, is the only basketball player to represent the U.S. in five Olympic Games. All told, she was a member of 22 different USA Basketball teams, compiling an overall record of 205-14 (93.6). Along the way, Edwards compiled some incredible statistics – 2,008 points, 890 assists, 576 rebounds and 372 steals.
McClain is perhaps the most decorated international performer other that Edwards. In fact, they first played together during the summer before McClain’s arrival at Georgia, leading the South to a Gold Medal at the 1983 U.S. Olympic Festival. McClain capped her international career at the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games in Atlanta by averaging 14.1 points and posting team-bests of 8.3 rebounds per game and 63.9 percent field goal percentage.
Katie Abrahamson
1985 – National Sports Festival
Barbara Bootz
1985 – National Sports Festival
U.S. Junior Pan Am Team
1987 – Seoul Pre-Olympic Invitational
Kara Braxton
2002 – U.S. Young Women National Team
2006 – U.S. Senior National Team
Kiesha Brown
1995 – U.S. Olympic Festival
1996 – U.S. Junior National Team
Cori Chambers
2002 – U.S. Youth Development Festival
Teresa Edwards
1981 – National Sports Festival
1982 – National Sports Festival
U.S. Junior Pan Am Team
1983 – National Sports Festival
1984 – U.S. Olympic Team
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
1997 – U.S. Senior National Team
1998 – U.S. Senior National Team
1999 – U.S. Senior National Team
2000 – U.S. Olympic Team
La’Keshia Frett
1994 – R. William Jones Cup Team
1995 – World University Games
1997 – World University Games
1998 – U.S. Senior National Team (Goldmark Cup)
Stacey Ford
1988 – U.S. Junior National Team
Susie Gardner
1983 – National Sports Festival
1986 – Canadian Invitational Tournament
Carla Green
1986 – U.S. Olympic Festival
1987 – U.S. Olympic Festival
1989 – World University Games
Lady Hardmon
1989 – U.S. Junior National Team
1992 – R. William Jones Cup Team
1993 – World University Games
Janet Harris
1981 – National Sports Festival
1982 – National Sports Festival
Ashley Houts
2007 – U21 World Championships
2009 – World University Games
Tasha Humphrey
2003 – U.S. Youth Development Festival
2007 – Pan American Games
Teresa Edwards – 1984 Olympic Games
Coco & Kelly Miller – 1999 World University 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
Lisa O’Connor
1982 – National Sports Festival
1983 – National Sports Festival
1985 – R. William Jones Cup Team
1987 – World University Games
Tari Phillips
1987 – U.S. Olympic Festival
Angel Robinson
2004 – U.S. Youth Development Festival
2004 – U.S. Junior National Team
Saudia Roundtree 1995 – R. William Jones Cup Team
Adrienne Shuler
U.S. Select Team
Christi Thomas
U.S. Young Women National Team
OH, CANADA: LADY DOGS & MAPLE LEAVES
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, a native of the Toronto suberb of London, was a 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.
Christi Thomas – 2003 U21 World Championships
Ashley Houts – 2007 U21 World Championships
Tasha Humphrey was the second-leading scorer for the Gold Medal-winning U.S. team at the 2007 Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro. She had double figures in four of five outings to average 11.6 points.