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Georgia Bulldogs basketball

The Georgia Bulldogs men's basketball program is the men's college basketball team representing the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia. Established in 1891[dubious ], the team has competed in the Southeastern Conference since its inception in 1932. As of 2020 the Bulldogs have amassed a record of 1,434–1,319. Though it has been historically overshadowed by the school's football program, the Bulldogs' basketball squad has had its share of successes, including a trip to the NCAA Final Four in 1983 under head coach Hugh Durham.

Georgia Bulldogs
UniversityUniversity of Georgia
Head coachMike White (1st season)
ConferenceSEC
LocationAthens, Georgia
ArenaStegeman Coliseum
(Capacity: 10,523)
NicknameBulldogs
ColorsRed and black[1]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
NCAA tournament Final Four
1983
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1983
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1983, 1996
NCAA tournament round of 32
1983, 1985, 1996, 2002
NCAA tournament appearances
1983, 1985, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2008, 2011, 2015
Conference tournament champions
1932, 1983, 2008
Conference regular season champions
1914, 1917, 1931, 1990

History

Conference affiliations

 
Stegeman Coliseum

Georgia was a founding member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA), the first collegiate athletic conference formed in the United States. Georgia participated in the SIAA from its establishment in 1895 until 1921. In 1921, the Bulldogs, along with 12 other teams, left the SIAA and formed the Southern Conference.[2] In 1932, the Georgia Bulldogs left the Southern Conference to form and join the Southeastern Conference (SEC).

1931–1932

Coach Rex Enright led Georgia to great success in the old Southern Conference during the 1931 and 1932 seasons. His 1931 team finished with a 23–2 (15–1) record. The Bulldogs were upset in the Southern Conference tournament semi-finals by Maryland, 26–25.

The 1932 team didn't have the dominating record that the 1931 team did, finishing 19–7 (7–4). However, this team did something that the previous year's team could not do in winning the Southern Conference tournament defeating Mississippi State, Virginia, Duke, and North Carolina.

1981–1982

Coach Hugh Durham brought Georgia to its first ever postseason appearance in 1981. That team finished with a 19–12 (9–9) record. They earned a National Invitation Tournament (NIT) bid and the enthusiasm surrounding the program earned them home games in first defeating Old Dominion and then in a loss to South Alabama.

The 1982 Bulldogs were 19–12 (10–8) were once again NIT bound. This time UGA made it all the way to the NIT Final Four defeating Temple, Maryland, and Virginia Tech before losing a heartbreaker to Purdue at Madison Square Garden.

These two teams marked the beginning of a postseason streak of eight straight seasons, longest in Georgia basketball history. This string included three NCAA appearances (including one Final Four in 1983) and five NIT bids. This was a remarkable streak of consistency for a program that had never before experienced the postseason beyond the SEC tournament.

1983

Former NBA star Dominique Wilkins is considered the greatest player in school history.[3] However, Wilkins never played in the NCAA tournament; the Bulldogs made their first NCAA appearance in 1983—which would have been Wilkins' senior year had he not opted for the NBA. The 1983 team made it to the Final Four of the NCAA Championship before being eliminated by eventual champion North Carolina State. On the way to the Final Four, UGA defeated Virginia Commonwealth, #3 St. John's led by legendary coach Lou Carneseca and Chris Mullin, and defending national champion North Carolina led by Dean Smith and featuring Michael Jordan, Sam Perkins, and Brad Daugherty. The latter two victories coming at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, New York. UGA previously had won the Southeastern Conference tournament in Birmingham, Alabama, defeating Ole Miss, Tennessee, and Alabama to earn the league's automatic bid into the NCAA tournament.

1987

The 1987 Georgia basketball team had multiple key players injured during the season, leaving the team with only seven players on the roster. Coach Hugh Durham had no choice but to alter the playing style of his team after conference play had started, slowing the game down and "taking the air out of the ball." What looked to be a disastrous season, where the team might not win another game, turned into an inspiring one as the team rallied to an 18–12 (10–8) record and earning an NCAA tournament bid. When Durham ordered the NCAA tournament banner to be displayed at Stegeman Coliseum, he had it made in silver, rather than the traditional red, with the initials "TMW" at the bottom. The initials standing for what this team will forever be known as in UGA basketball history, "The Miracle Workers."

1996–1998

Tubby Smith led the Bulldogs to a 21–10 (9–7) record securing its first NCAA bid since the 1991 season. Georgia made the most of it by defeating Clemson and the West Regional's top seed, Purdue, in Albuquerque, New Mexico, before losing a heart stopping overtime game to Syracuse in the Sweet 16.

In 1997, Georgia finished 23–9 (10–6) winning the prestigious Rainbow Classic holiday tournament in Hawaii, defeating Washington State, Memphis, and Maryland. UGA beat LSU, South Carolina, and Arkansas to advance to the SEC tournament final in Memphis, losing the final to Kentucky.

Smith's successor, Ron Jirsa, led the 1998 Bulldogs to a 21–14 (8–8) record, reaching the 20 win mark for the third consecutive year for the first time in Georgia basketball history. They would go on to reach the 1998 NIT Final Four winning at Iowa, at North Carolina State, and beating Vanderbilt at home.

2008 SEC Tournament: The Dream Dawgs

In the 2007–2008 season, Georgia's men's basketball team came into the 2008 SEC men's basketball tournament with a 13–16 overall record and a 4–12 conference mark. At one point, the team sustained two five-game losing streaks during a 2-of-12 stretch in conference play. In the first round of the tournament, Georgia was slated to play Ole Miss, who had beaten the Bulldogs in the season-closer, securing the Rebels' only road SEC win of the season. The game went into overtime after Rebel David Huertas hit all three free throws after a three-point shooting foul, and looked to go into a second extra period after Chris Warren did the same. However, with 0.4 seconds left in overtime, Georgia senior Dave Bliss banked in the game-winner to shock the Rebels and send Georgia into a second-round matchup with Kentucky.

On the night of March 14, 2008, tornadoes hit Atlanta, in whose Georgia Dome the SEC Tournament was housed. The Georgia-Kentucky matchup was rescheduled for the early afternoon of March 15, 2008, with the winner advancing to play the SEC West's #1 seed, Mississippi State, later that evening. The remaining games in the tournament would be played at Alexander Memorial Coliseum, the basketball complex of Georgia Tech, UGA's in-state rival. Again playing an overtime game in which Georgia star Sundiata Gaines fouled out, Georgia freshman Zac Swansey hit a turnaround three-point jumper with 1.4 seconds left to give the Bulldogs the team's first ever win over Kentucky in the SEC Tournament.[4] That night, Georgia defeated Mississippi State 64–60 to become the first team since Kentucky in 1952 to win two tournament games in one day, and the first-ever #6 seed from a division to advance to the modern (post-1992) SEC tournament finals.

In the finals, Georgia faced Arkansas, which had lost to Georgia 82–69 in the regular season. Georgia prevailed again, at one point leading the Razorbacks by nineteen points en route to winning its first tournament championship in 25 years. Sundiata Gaines and Terrance Woodbury were both named to the All-Tournament Team, with Gaines winning the tournament's MVP. The improbable list of achievements—winning the tournament as a 6-seed, playing two games in one day to reach the finals, playing two games (against Kentucky and Mississippi State) in which Gaines fouled out with a substantial amount of time to play, doing it on a rival's home court, and winning four consecutive elimination games following a season during which their longest winning streak stood at three—earned the 2007–2008 team the nickname of Dream Dawgs.[5]

With the victory, Georgia secured itself an automatic bid in the 2008 NCAA tournament. Georgia's appearance in the tournament was the tenth overall in team history and the first since the 2002 NCAA basketball tournament. After their SEC Championship run, the Bulldogs were seeded 14th in the NCAA Tournament, playing against the #3 seeded Xavier Musketeers. After developing a lead early in the 2nd half, the Bulldogs could not hold on, as Xavier went on to win 73–61.

Coach Dennis Felton failed to follow up the surprise successes of 2008 with victories in 2008–09, and he was fired on January 29, 2009.

2009–2018: Mark Fox era

On April 3, 2009, Nevada head coach Mark Fox was announced as the next head coach of the Bulldogs.[6]

In nine seasons with Fox, the Bulldogs posted a 163–133 record and made the NCAA tournament twice, in 2011 and 2015. In both instances, the Bulldogs exited in the Round of 64.[7]

Fox was fired on March 10, 2018 following an 18–15 finish to the 2017–18 season as the Bulldogs failed to qualify for any postseason competition.[8]

2018–2022: Tom Crean era

On March 15, 2018, former Marquette and Indiana head coach Tom Crean was announced as the next head coach of the Bulldogs.[9]

2022–present: Mike White era

On March 13, 2022, former Florida head coach Mike White was announced as the next head coach of the Bulldogs.[10]

Team awards and records

Conference championships

Georgia has won one regular-season Southeastern Conference championship (1990) and two conference tournament championships (1983 and 2008). The Bulldogs were SEC Eastern Division co-Champs in 1994–1995. Georgia also was the Southern Conference champions for 1931–1932.

Conference affiliations:

Postseason

NCAA tournament results

The Bulldogs have appeared in the NCAA tournament 12 times. Their combined record is 7–12. However, their appearances in 1985 and 2002 have been vacated by the NCAA making their official record 5–10.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1983 #4 Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#5 VCU
#1 St. John's
#2 North Carolina
#6 NC State
W 56–54
W 70–67
W 82–77
L 60–67
1985* #6 Round of 64
Round of 32
#11 Wichita State
#3 Illinois
W 67–59
L 58–74
1987 #8 Round of 64 #9 Kansas State L 79–82 OT
1990 #7 Round of 64 #10 Texas L 88–100
1991 #11 Round of 64 #6 Pittsburgh L 68–76 OT
1996 #8 Round of 64
Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
#9 Clemson
#1 Purdue
#4 Syracuse
W 81–74
W 76–69
L 81–83 OT
1997 #3 Round of 64 #14 Chattanooga L 70–73
2001 #8 Round of 64 #9 Missouri L 68–70
2002* #3 Round of 64
Round of 32
#14 Murray State
#11 Southern Illinois
W 85–68
L 75–77
2008 #14 Round of 64 #3 Xavier L 61–73
2011 #10 Round of 64 #7 Washington L 65–68
2015 #10 Round of 64 #7 Michigan State L 63–70

* Vacated by the NCAA

NIT results

The Bulldogs have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) 14 times. Their combined record is 13–14.

Year Round Opponent Result
1981 First Round
Second Round
Old Dominion
South Alabama
W 74–60
L 72–73
1982 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Temple
Maryland
Virginia Tech
Purdue
W 73–60
W 83–69
W 90–73
L 60–61
1984 First Round Chattanooga L 69–74
1986 First Round
Second Round
Chattanooga
Clemson
W 95–81
L 65–77
1988 First Round
Second Round
Georgia Southern
Middle Tennessee
W 53–48
L 54–69
1993 First Round West Virginia L 84–95
1995 First Round Nebraska L 61–69
1998 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
Iowa
NC State
Vanderbilt
Penn State
Fresno State
W 88–70
W 80–79
W 77–70
L 60–66
W 95–79
1999 First Round Clemson L 57–77
2004 First Round Iowa State L 74–82
2007 First Round
Second Round
Fresno State
Air Force
W 88–78
L 52–83
2014 First Round
Second Round
Vermont
Louisiana Tech
W 63–56
L 71–79
2016 First Round
Second Round
Belmont
Saint Mary's
W 93–84
L 65–77
2017 First Round Belmont L 69–78

Players

All-Americans

Player Position Year(s) Selectors
Bob Lienhard (2) Center 1969, 1970 Helms Athletic Foundation
Dominique Wilkins (2) Forward 1981, 1982 The Sporting News, NABC, UPI, Associated Press
Vern Fleming (2) Guard 1983, 1984 Kodak, NABC
James Banks Forward 1984 Playboy
Cedric Henderson Forward 1985 Associated Press
Litterial Green (2) Guard 1989, 1991 Basketball Weekly, Associated Press
Alec Kessler Center 1990 UPI
Jumaine Jones Forward 1999 Associated Press
Jarvis Hayes (2) Forward 2002, 2003 Associated Press
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope Guard 2013 Associated Press
Yante Maten Forward 2018 Associated Press
[11]

Basketball Hall of Fame

Southeastern Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year

Notable former players

Head coaches

No. Name Seasons Record Pct.
1 Walter Forbes 1906–07 2–2 .500
2 C.O. Heidler 1908–10, 12 16–6 .727
3 W.A. Cunningham 1911, 17 10–6 .625
4 Howell Peacock 1913–16 30–7 .811
5 Alfred Scott 1918 6–1 .857
6 Kennon Mott 1919 5–3 .625
7 Herman Stegeman 1920–31 170–78 .685
8 Rex Enright 1932–37 69–51 .575
9 Vernon Smith 1938 1–1 .500
10 Frank Johnson 1938 8–5 .615
11 Elmer A. Lampe 1938–46 82–84 .499
12 Ralph Jordan 1947–50 44–39 .530
13 Jim Whatley 1950–51 24–18 .571
14 Harbin Lawson 1952–65 112–241 .317
15 Ken Rosemond 1966–73 92–111 .453
16 John Guthrie 1974–78 46–86 .348
17 Hugh Durham 1979–95 297–215† .580
18 Tubby Smith 1996–97 45–19 .703
19 Ron Jirsa 1998–99 35–30 .538
20 Jim Harrick 2000–03 37–52‡ .416
21 Dennis Felton 2004–09 84–91 .480
22 Pete Herrmann 2009 (interim) 3–9 .250
23 Mark Fox 2009–18 163–133 .551
24 Tom Crean 2018–2022 47–75 .385
25 Mike White 2022-Present 16-16 .500

† – Does not include 1 win and 1 loss from the 1985 NCAA tournament vacated due to sanctions.

‡ – Does not include 30 wins and 1 loss vacated due to sanctions.[12]

Home venues

See also

References

  1. ^ University of Georgia Brand Guide (PDF). June 26, 2019. Retrieved December 2, 2018.
  2. ^ "Southern Conference History" (PDF). Southern Conference 2006 Media Guide. Retrieved December 11, 2006.
  3. ^ "UGA Men's Basketball". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved January 12, 2008.
  4. ^ "Georgia Takes Down Kentucky In Overtime". Retrieved March 22, 2008.[dead link]
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on March 18, 2014. Retrieved March 22, 2008.
  6. ^ "Fox leaves Nevada for Georgia". ESPN. April 3, 2009. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  7. ^ "NCAA basketball tournament History: Georgia". ESPN. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  8. ^ "Georgia fires Mark Fox after disappointing 9th season". Associated Press. March 10, 2018. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  9. ^ "Tom Crean named Bulldogs' head coach". GeorgiaDogs.com. March 15, 2018. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  10. ^ "Mike White Named Georgia Head Coach" (Press release). Florida Gators. March 13, 2022. Retrieved March 13, 2022.
  11. ^ "Georgia All-Americas". Georgia Bulldogs. Retrieved January 10, 2015.
  12. ^ "Georgia Basketball All-Time Head Coaches". University of Georgia athletic department. Retrieved March 22, 2018.

External links

  • Official website  

georgia, bulldogs, basketball, this, article, about, basketball, program, university, georgia, women, program, georgia, lady, bulldogs, basketball, georgia, bulldogs, basketball, program, college, basketball, team, representing, university, georgia, athens, ge. This article is about the men s basketball program at the University of Georgia For women s program see Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball The Georgia Bulldogs men s basketball program is the men s college basketball team representing the University of Georgia in Athens Georgia Established in 1891 dubious discuss the team has competed in the Southeastern Conference since its inception in 1932 As of 2020 the Bulldogs have amassed a record of 1 434 1 319 Though it has been historically overshadowed by the school s football program the Bulldogs basketball squad has had its share of successes including a trip to the NCAA Final Four in 1983 under head coach Hugh Durham Georgia Bulldogs2022 23 Georgia Bulldogs basketball teamUniversityUniversity of GeorgiaHead coachMike White 1st season ConferenceSECLocationAthens GeorgiaArenaStegeman Coliseum Capacity 10 523 NicknameBulldogsColorsRed and black 1 UniformsHome Away AlternateNCAA tournament Final Four1983NCAA tournament Elite Eight1983NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1983 1996NCAA tournament round of 321983 1985 1996 2002NCAA tournament appearances1983 1985 1987 1990 1991 1996 1997 2001 2002 2008 2011 2015Conference tournament champions1932 1983 2008Conference regular season champions1914 1917 1931 1990 Contents 1 History 1 1 Conference affiliations 1 2 1931 1932 1 3 1981 1982 1 4 1983 1 5 1987 1 6 1996 1998 1 7 2008 SEC Tournament The Dream Dawgs 1 8 2009 2018 Mark Fox era 1 9 2018 2022 Tom Crean era 1 10 2022 present Mike White era 2 Team awards and records 2 1 Conference championships 3 Postseason 3 1 NCAA tournament results 3 2 NIT results 4 Players 4 1 All Americans 4 2 Basketball Hall of Fame 4 3 Southeastern Conference Men s Basketball Player of the Year 4 4 Notable former players 5 Head coaches 6 Home venues 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditConference affiliations Edit Stegeman Coliseum Georgia was a founding member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association SIAA the first collegiate athletic conference formed in the United States Georgia participated in the SIAA from its establishment in 1895 until 1921 In 1921 the Bulldogs along with 12 other teams left the SIAA and formed the Southern Conference 2 In 1932 the Georgia Bulldogs left the Southern Conference to form and join the Southeastern Conference SEC 1931 1932 Edit Coach Rex Enright led Georgia to great success in the old Southern Conference during the 1931 and 1932 seasons His 1931 team finished with a 23 2 15 1 record The Bulldogs were upset in the Southern Conference tournament semi finals by Maryland 26 25 The 1932 team didn t have the dominating record that the 1931 team did finishing 19 7 7 4 However this team did something that the previous year s team could not do in winning the Southern Conference tournament defeating Mississippi State Virginia Duke and North Carolina 1981 1982 Edit Coach Hugh Durham brought Georgia to its first ever postseason appearance in 1981 That team finished with a 19 12 9 9 record They earned a National Invitation Tournament NIT bid and the enthusiasm surrounding the program earned them home games in first defeating Old Dominion and then in a loss to South Alabama The 1982 Bulldogs were 19 12 10 8 were once again NIT bound This time UGA made it all the way to the NIT Final Four defeating Temple Maryland and Virginia Tech before losing a heartbreaker to Purdue at Madison Square Garden These two teams marked the beginning of a postseason streak of eight straight seasons longest in Georgia basketball history This string included three NCAA appearances including one Final Four in 1983 and five NIT bids This was a remarkable streak of consistency for a program that had never before experienced the postseason beyond the SEC tournament 1983 Edit Former NBA star Dominique Wilkins is considered the greatest player in school history 3 However Wilkins never played in the NCAA tournament the Bulldogs made their first NCAA appearance in 1983 which would have been Wilkins senior year had he not opted for the NBA The 1983 team made it to the Final Four of the NCAA Championship before being eliminated by eventual champion North Carolina State On the way to the Final Four UGA defeated Virginia Commonwealth 3 St John s led by legendary coach Lou Carneseca and Chris Mullin and defending national champion North Carolina led by Dean Smith and featuring Michael Jordan Sam Perkins and Brad Daugherty The latter two victories coming at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse New York UGA previously had won the Southeastern Conference tournament in Birmingham Alabama defeating Ole Miss Tennessee and Alabama to earn the league s automatic bid into the NCAA tournament 1987 Edit The 1987 Georgia basketball team had multiple key players injured during the season leaving the team with only seven players on the roster Coach Hugh Durham had no choice but to alter the playing style of his team after conference play had started slowing the game down and taking the air out of the ball What looked to be a disastrous season where the team might not win another game turned into an inspiring one as the team rallied to an 18 12 10 8 record and earning an NCAA tournament bid When Durham ordered the NCAA tournament banner to be displayed at Stegeman Coliseum he had it made in silver rather than the traditional red with the initials TMW at the bottom The initials standing for what this team will forever be known as in UGA basketball history The Miracle Workers 1996 1998 Edit Tubby Smith led the Bulldogs to a 21 10 9 7 record securing its first NCAA bid since the 1991 season Georgia made the most of it by defeating Clemson and the West Regional s top seed Purdue in Albuquerque New Mexico before losing a heart stopping overtime game to Syracuse in the Sweet 16 In 1997 Georgia finished 23 9 10 6 winning the prestigious Rainbow Classic holiday tournament in Hawaii defeating Washington State Memphis and Maryland UGA beat LSU South Carolina and Arkansas to advance to the SEC tournament final in Memphis losing the final to Kentucky Smith s successor Ron Jirsa led the 1998 Bulldogs to a 21 14 8 8 record reaching the 20 win mark for the third consecutive year for the first time in Georgia basketball history They would go on to reach the 1998 NIT Final Four winning at Iowa at North Carolina State and beating Vanderbilt at home 2008 SEC Tournament The Dream Dawgs Edit In the 2007 2008 season Georgia s men s basketball team came into the 2008 SEC men s basketball tournament with a 13 16 overall record and a 4 12 conference mark At one point the team sustained two five game losing streaks during a 2 of 12 stretch in conference play In the first round of the tournament Georgia was slated to play Ole Miss who had beaten the Bulldogs in the season closer securing the Rebels only road SEC win of the season The game went into overtime after Rebel David Huertas hit all three free throws after a three point shooting foul and looked to go into a second extra period after Chris Warren did the same However with 0 4 seconds left in overtime Georgia senior Dave Bliss banked in the game winner to shock the Rebels and send Georgia into a second round matchup with Kentucky On the night of March 14 2008 tornadoes hit Atlanta in whose Georgia Dome the SEC Tournament was housed The Georgia Kentucky matchup was rescheduled for the early afternoon of March 15 2008 with the winner advancing to play the SEC West s 1 seed Mississippi State later that evening The remaining games in the tournament would be played at Alexander Memorial Coliseum the basketball complex of Georgia Tech UGA s in state rival Again playing an overtime game in which Georgia star Sundiata Gaines fouled out Georgia freshman Zac Swansey hit a turnaround three point jumper with 1 4 seconds left to give the Bulldogs the team s first ever win over Kentucky in the SEC Tournament 4 That night Georgia defeated Mississippi State 64 60 to become the first team since Kentucky in 1952 to win two tournament games in one day and the first ever 6 seed from a division to advance to the modern post 1992 SEC tournament finals In the finals Georgia faced Arkansas which had lost to Georgia 82 69 in the regular season Georgia prevailed again at one point leading the Razorbacks by nineteen points en route to winning its first tournament championship in 25 years Sundiata Gaines and Terrance Woodbury were both named to the All Tournament Team with Gaines winning the tournament s MVP The improbable list of achievements winning the tournament as a 6 seed playing two games in one day to reach the finals playing two games against Kentucky and Mississippi State in which Gaines fouled out with a substantial amount of time to play doing it on a rival s home court and winning four consecutive elimination games following a season during which their longest winning streak stood at three earned the 2007 2008 team the nickname of Dream Dawgs 5 With the victory Georgia secured itself an automatic bid in the 2008 NCAA tournament Georgia s appearance in the tournament was the tenth overall in team history and the first since the 2002 NCAA basketball tournament After their SEC Championship run the Bulldogs were seeded 14th in the NCAA Tournament playing against the 3 seeded Xavier Musketeers After developing a lead early in the 2nd half the Bulldogs could not hold on as Xavier went on to win 73 61 Coach Dennis Felton failed to follow up the surprise successes of 2008 with victories in 2008 09 and he was fired on January 29 2009 2009 2018 Mark Fox era Edit On April 3 2009 Nevada head coach Mark Fox was announced as the next head coach of the Bulldogs 6 In nine seasons with Fox the Bulldogs posted a 163 133 record and made the NCAA tournament twice in 2011 and 2015 In both instances the Bulldogs exited in the Round of 64 7 Fox was fired on March 10 2018 following an 18 15 finish to the 2017 18 season as the Bulldogs failed to qualify for any postseason competition 8 2018 2022 Tom Crean era Edit On March 15 2018 former Marquette and Indiana head coach Tom Crean was announced as the next head coach of the Bulldogs 9 2022 present Mike White era Edit On March 13 2022 former Florida head coach Mike White was announced as the next head coach of the Bulldogs 10 Team awards and records EditConference championships Edit Georgia has won one regular season Southeastern Conference championship 1990 and two conference tournament championships 1983 and 2008 The Bulldogs were SEC Eastern Division co Champs in 1994 1995 Georgia also was the Southern Conference champions for 1931 1932 Conference affiliations 1891 95 Independent 1896 1920 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1921 32 Southern Conference 1932 present Southeastern ConferencePostseason EditNCAA tournament results Edit The Bulldogs have appeared in the NCAA tournament 12 times Their combined record is 7 12 However their appearances in 1985 and 2002 have been vacated by the NCAA making their official record 5 10 Year Seed Round Opponent Result1983 4 Round of 32Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four 5 VCU 1 St John s 2 North Carolina 6 NC State W 56 54W 70 67W 82 77L 60 671985 6 Round of 64Round of 32 11 Wichita State 3 Illinois W 67 59L 58 741987 8 Round of 64 9 Kansas State L 79 82 OT1990 7 Round of 64 10 Texas L 88 1001991 11 Round of 64 6 Pittsburgh L 68 76 OT1996 8 Round of 64Round of 32Sweet Sixteen 9 Clemson 1 Purdue 4 Syracuse W 81 74W 76 69L 81 83 OT1997 3 Round of 64 14 Chattanooga L 70 732001 8 Round of 64 9 Missouri L 68 702002 3 Round of 64Round of 32 14 Murray State 11 Southern Illinois W 85 68L 75 772008 14 Round of 64 3 Xavier L 61 732011 10 Round of 64 7 Washington L 65 682015 10 Round of 64 7 Michigan State L 63 70 Vacated by the NCAA NIT results Edit The Bulldogs have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament NIT 14 times Their combined record is 13 14 Year Round Opponent Result1981 First RoundSecond Round Old DominionSouth Alabama W 74 60L 72 731982 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals TempleMarylandVirginia TechPurdue W 73 60W 83 69W 90 73L 60 611984 First Round Chattanooga L 69 741986 First RoundSecond Round ChattanoogaClemson W 95 81L 65 771988 First RoundSecond Round Georgia SouthernMiddle Tennessee W 53 48L 54 691993 First Round West Virginia L 84 951995 First Round Nebraska L 61 691998 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals3rd Place Game IowaNC StateVanderbiltPenn StateFresno State W 88 70W 80 79W 77 70L 60 66W 95 791999 First Round Clemson L 57 772004 First Round Iowa State L 74 822007 First RoundSecond Round Fresno StateAir Force W 88 78L 52 832014 First RoundSecond Round VermontLouisiana Tech W 63 56L 71 792016 First RoundSecond Round BelmontSaint Mary s W 93 84L 65 772017 First Round Belmont L 69 78Players EditAll Americans Edit Player Position Year s SelectorsBob Lienhard 2 Center 1969 1970 Helms Athletic FoundationDominique Wilkins 2 Forward 1981 1982 The Sporting News NABC UPI Associated PressVern Fleming 2 Guard 1983 1984 Kodak NABCJames Banks Forward 1984 PlayboyCedric Henderson Forward 1985 Associated PressLitterial Green 2 Guard 1989 1991 Basketball Weekly Associated PressAlec Kessler Center 1990 UPIJumaine Jones Forward 1999 Associated PressJarvis Hayes 2 Forward 2002 2003 Associated PressKentavious Caldwell Pope Guard 2013 Associated PressYante Maten Forward 2018 Associated Press 11 Basketball Hall of Fame Edit Dominique Wilkins inducted on April 3 2006Southeastern Conference Men s Basketball Player of the Year Edit 1981 Dominique Wilkins 2013 Kentavious Caldwell Pope 2018 Yante MatenNotable former players Edit Shandon Anderson Willie Anderson Kentavious Caldwell Pope Nic Claxton Anthony Edwards Terry Fair Vern Fleming Sundiata Gaines Litterial Green Jarvis Hayes Jumaine Jones Alec Kessler Bob Lienhard LaVon Mercer Mark Slonaker Jim Umbricht Dominique Wilkins Dennis WilliamsHead coaches EditNo Name Seasons Record Pct 1 Walter Forbes 1906 07 2 2 5002 C O Heidler 1908 10 12 16 6 7273 W A Cunningham 1911 17 10 6 6254 Howell Peacock 1913 16 30 7 8115 Alfred Scott 1918 6 1 8576 Kennon Mott 1919 5 3 6257 Herman Stegeman 1920 31 170 78 6858 Rex Enright 1932 37 69 51 5759 Vernon Smith 1938 1 1 50010 Frank Johnson 1938 8 5 61511 Elmer A Lampe 1938 46 82 84 49912 Ralph Jordan 1947 50 44 39 53013 Jim Whatley 1950 51 24 18 57114 Harbin Lawson 1952 65 112 241 31715 Ken Rosemond 1966 73 92 111 45316 John Guthrie 1974 78 46 86 34817 Hugh Durham 1979 95 297 215 58018 Tubby Smith 1996 97 45 19 70319 Ron Jirsa 1998 99 35 30 53820 Jim Harrick 2000 03 37 52 41621 Dennis Felton 2004 09 84 91 48022 Pete Herrmann 2009 interim 3 9 25023 Mark Fox 2009 18 163 133 55124 Tom Crean 2018 2022 47 75 38525 Mike White 2022 Present 16 16 500 Does not include 1 win and 1 loss from the 1985 NCAA tournament vacated due to sanctions Does not include 30 wins and 1 loss vacated due to sanctions 12 Home venues EditAthens YMCA 1905 1911 Memorial Hall 1911 1919 The Octagon 1919 1920 Moss Auditorium 1919 1925 Woodruff Hall 1923 1964 Stegeman Coliseum 1964 present See also EditUga mascot Clean Old Fashioned HateReferences Edit University of Georgia Brand Guide PDF June 26 2019 Retrieved December 2 2018 Southern Conference History PDF Southern Conference 2006 Media Guide Retrieved December 11 2006 UGA Men s Basketball New Georgia Encyclopedia Retrieved January 12 2008 Georgia Takes Down Kentucky In Overtime Retrieved March 22 2008 dead link Dream Dawgs Archived from the original on March 18 2014 Retrieved March 22 2008 Fox leaves Nevada for Georgia ESPN April 3 2009 Retrieved March 15 2018 NCAA basketball tournament History Georgia ESPN Retrieved March 15 2018 Georgia fires Mark Fox after disappointing 9th season Associated Press March 10 2018 Retrieved March 15 2018 Tom Crean named Bulldogs head coach GeorgiaDogs com March 15 2018 Retrieved March 15 2018 Mike White Named Georgia Head Coach Press release Florida Gators March 13 2022 Retrieved March 13 2022 Georgia All Americas Georgia Bulldogs Retrieved January 10 2015 Georgia Basketball All Time Head Coaches University of Georgia athletic department Retrieved March 22 2018 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georgia Bulldogs basketball amp oldid 1145739511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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