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Georgia completes improbable run through SEC tournament

ATLANTA — Georgia lingered on the home court of its bitter rival, even after cutting down the nets and donning the hats and T-shirts of a championship weekend. The Bulldogs wanted to find out where they would be playing next.

Imagine that.

Georgia is heading to the NCAA tournament.

After enduring a tornado, a change of venue and a doubleheader, the gritty Bulldogs provided one last surprise in the finale of an improbable SEC tournament, building a big lead in the first half and holding on for a 66-57 victory over Arkansas to claim their first NCAA bid since 2002.

“We showed everybody what we were made of,” Bulldogs guard Billy Humphrey said. “Right now, I feel like we can beat anybody.”

The Bulldogs (17-16) became just the third team in the tournament’s modern era to win four games in four days— well, actually it was four wins in three days since they had to play two on the same day, an impromptu bit of scheduling forced by a tornado that slammed into the Georgia Dome.

When it was done, Georgia sliced down the nets on the home court of Georgia Tech, which provided a replacement venue for the tournament after the dome was damaged Friday night. The Bulldogs remained on the court after the ceremony, watching the NCAA selection show on the video board above the court.

“It’s really gratifying,” said coach Dennis Felton, who had only eight scholarship players remaining after injuries, defections and disciplinary problems. “Regardless of how much adversity we went through and how much we had to go through as a team, the guys we had left had enough character to keep fighting for another day.”

Arkansas (22-11) beat Vanderbilt and regular-season champion Tennessee on its way to the final, good enough for its third straight NCAA appearance. The Razorbacks, seeded ninth in the East Region, face Indiana at Raleigh, N.C., on Friday.

Who could have envisioned Georgia also being part of March Madness? Then again, who could have imagined the SEC championship being decided at an Atlantic Coast Conference school in an arena that wasn’t even half-filled?

The Bulldogs, who beat as many SEC teams at the tournament as they did during the entire regular season, are seeded 14th in the West and will face third-seeded Xavier at Washington, D.C., on Thursday.

“We can take Xavier!” Terrance Woodbury said. “We can do it!”

Woodbury scored 16 points and the Bulldogs headed to the NCAAs for the first time since the scandalous era of former coach Jim Harrick, which landed the program on probation and prompted it to decline a certain postseason trip with a 19-win team in 2003.

Felton took over as coach, with a mandate to clean things up. But when the Bulldogs finished last in the SEC East this season, there was plenty of speculation he would be out of the job as soon as the team made its expected exit from the league tournament.

Nothing went as expected in Atlanta, however.

The devastating tornado, which rumbled over the Georgia Dome and wreaked havoc downtown, forced a postponement of Georgia’s quarterfinal game against Kentucky. Not only that, the tournament had to be moved to Alexander Memorial Coliseum on Georgia Tech’s nearby campus because of fears the dome wasn’t safe.

The revised schedule, which was vehemently opposed by Felton, forced the Georgia-Kentucky winner to play two games on Saturday. Amazingly, the Bulldogs knocked off the Wildcats for the first time ever in the tournament, then came back six hours later to beat SEC West champion Mississippi State.

Never showing any signs of fatigue, Georgia completed the run against Arkansas, racing to a 19-point lead and going on to their easiest victory of the weekend, leading all the way. The Bulldogs won their first three games by a total of 10 points with two decided in overtime.

Now, Felton’s job is safe. Athletic director Damon Evans gave him a hug on the court.

“He’s our basketball coach. He’s going to be our basketball coach,” Evans said. “Of course he’ll be back.”

The Bulldogs started quick again, the third straight game in which they built a double-digit lead in the first half. Woodbury hit consecutive 3-pointers and tournament MVP Sundiata Gaines scored with a nifty move through the lane, putting Georgia up 28-9 just past the midway point of the opening half.

“I thought Woodbury was just spectacular,” said first-year Arkansas coach John Pelphrey.

The Razorbacks cut the margin to 36-26 by halftime and closed to 56-53 — the closest they had been since the opening minutes — when Sonny Weems scored on a drive to the hoop.

Weems and Darian Townes led Arkansas with 17 points apiece.

Georgia, it seemed, was finally running out of gas. But the Bulldogs had come too far to let the second tournament championship in school history slip away.

Albert Jackson went in for a dunk with 2:51 remaining after a wild sequence in which Georgia missed twice but kept coming up with the loose balls. Humphrey sealed it with a 3, getting off the shot after running down most of the shot clock.

“Georgia played those two games yesterday, but I don’t think them being tired had anything to do with it,” Weems said. “When you’re competing for a conference championship, you always have to come out and play good.”

After senior Dave Bliss swatted away Arkansas’ final shot, the celebration began in a cozy arena that wasn’t even half-filled. Jackson jumped into Bliss’ arms. Jeremy Price carried a teammate around the court.

Instead of worrying about his job, Felton was the last to climb the ladder during the net-cutting ceremony. He waved the prized nylon above his head for the cheering Georgia fans.

With no way to accommodate all those with tickets once the tournament moved from the 26,000-seat dome to the 9,191-seat coliseum, the SEC only let in those with working credentials, the bands and cheerleaders, and family and friends of the players.

Georgia had hardly any support at its first two games, but there must have been at least 2,000 wearing red and black on Sunday — more than half of the 3,700 in attendance.

“SEC! SEC! SEC!” they chanted as the final seconds ticked away.

© 2008, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

       15 Comments

Posted by VolJunkie on March 16, 2008 at 5:54 p.m. (Suggest removal)

UGA earned this, 4 wins in 3 days, one for the history books ... bonus Jack w/ double cheese, UK possibly heads to the NIT.

Posted by DenmarkVol_aka_Mbumburu on March 16, 2008 at 6 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Congrats, Dawgs. Inspired basketball.

Posted by LargeOrange on March 16, 2008 at 6:09 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Good tough effort for the Dawgs, they earned their ticket to the dance yesterday and today with a lot of heart and hustle.

Posted by TommyJack on March 16, 2008 at 6:35 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Gotta hand it to the dawgs. that was amazin.

Posted by andy112382 on March 16, 2008 at 7:14 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Heck of a run at the right time for them, but I still hate the dawgs, anyone who lives down here in dawgs country knows what I am talking about when I say how obnoxious their fans are.

Posted by murrayvol on March 16, 2008 at 7:36 p.m. (Suggest removal)

This offers some perspective on how tough every night is in the SEC. And how special the Vols' 14-2 conference record really is.

Posted by LiveFaith on March 16, 2008 at 7:39 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I'm sorry, but as a Vol held hostage in GA, I pulled for them against UK, of course.

But after that, what this 4-12 SEC team accomplished is pert-near to movie material. Probably one of the greatest, most intriguiing events in the history of College BB. Wow.

Had this been Michigan, ND, OSU, Duke, UNC, or one of the other media darlings, this would be, titled, and enshrined in our minds for decades to come. Anyone ever heard of Doug Flutie?

Firing Fulton was foolish already IMO. Will not happen this year.

Posted by Tenn_Dawg on March 16, 2008 at 8:20 p.m. (Suggest removal)

It is good to read all the positive posts. I am very proud of what the Dawgs did and no matter what happens with UGA in the Dance this was very special and it was nice to get excited about UGA BB even if it was only for four days. Hopefully UGA can use this as some sort of spring board into next year. Just like football the SEC East will be a beast next year. UK, UT, UF and Vandy will all be better so UGA has its work cut out for them. Good luck in your bracket and hopefully UT will get the opportunity to pop UNC in the mouth. Go SEC and bring home another National Championship.

Posted by Kwitcherbellyachin on March 16, 2008 at 8:30 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Congrats to the Dawgs on a terrific SEC run. I am anxious to see how you guys do against Xavier next week.

Posted by pdhuff on March 16, 2008 at 8:47 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Vandy would have made a DVD.

Great run, Dawgs.

Posted by rabidvolfan on March 16, 2008 at 9:06 p.m. (Suggest removal)

We got screwed in the field of 65. What a crock. If I was Pearl I would stop playing such a tough schedule. What good does it do?

Posted by orangeblood on March 16, 2008 at 9:09 p.m. (Suggest removal)

i congratulate uga...but they get ripped today if hill misses that ridiculous turn-around jumper ( i know...if....lol)

Posted by andy112382 on March 16, 2008 at 11:14 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Guess having basically a home-court advantage during a tourney does indeed have its perks after all!

I must admit, i am torn here, it is great to see people so positive for once on here, but the way I feel about uga is on par with how i feel towards florida and bama being surrounded by so many dawg fans, so I feel about how a bama-hater would feel seeing so many having the warm-fuzzy feeling towards the tide.

Posted by pdhuff on March 17, 2008 at 8:20 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Congrats, Dawgs. Now go lose to Xavier by 16 and sleep with your memories.

Improbable run, indeed. These tourneys serve to provide funds for new Suburbans for execs. Hope springs eternal.

Posted by johnlg00 on March 17, 2008 at 11:50 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I've never been a UGA fan in anything, except occasionally when they play out of conference, but that was one of the most amazing displays of heart, guts, courage, whatever terms one wants to use, that I have ever seen on a basketball court. That is why I love college basketball. IMHO, this could not have happened in any other sport. In fact, given how tough it is to play big-time college basketball at a high level, I am just astounded that it happened at all. Xavier should be a tough draw for the 'Dogs, but the X-men should not take a win for granted--they could ask UK, Miss St., and Arkansas how that worked out for them. BTW, how the HELL did UK get into the tourney when Ole Miss, Florida, Va Tech, and AZ St. didn't? I guess it really IS a case of who you are at least as much as it is how you play in the tourney selections.

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