No. 17 Missouri whips struggling Georgia
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) -- Missouri's second game without Laurence Bowers went a lot better than the first.
Alex Oriakhi had 13 points on 5-for-5
shooting, eight rebounds and four blocks without the 6-foot-9 Bowers as
an inside complement to help the 17th-ranked Tigers rebound from their
biggest loss of the season with a 79-62 victory over Georgia on
Wednesday night.
"I knew it was a game where I had to
demand the ball and post up strong," Oriakhi said. "I knew I had an
advantage inside and my teammates did a great job of finding me, and
when they missed shots I did my best to clean it up."
Coach Frank Haith said he wasn't sure if
Bowers, who leads Missouri with a 16.8-point average and is second with
6.9 rebounds, would be ready Saturday at No. 10 Florida. Bowers has a
sprained right knee.
"Oh, he's doing great, he's actually
doing really well," Haith said. "We got some really good news at how
it's coming along. I still don't know that he'll play Saturday, but
we're really pleased with his progress thus far."
Even with Bowers in street clothes at the end of the bench, Georgia had its hands full.
"In some ways, it makes them more
difficult to defend when he's not in the game," coach Mark Fox said. "I
know he's a terrific player, but he doesn't shoot the 3 quite as much as
some of these other guys."
Earnest Ross scored 15 points while
surviving two spills for the Tigers (13-3, 2-1 SEC), who were held to a
season-low 49 points in a 15-point loss at Mississippi on Saturday.
Missouri is 10-0 at home this season and 26-1 at the Mizzou Arena in two
seasons under Haith.
Vincent Williams had a career-best 23
points on 7-for-10 shooting for Georgia (6-10, 0-3), nine more than his
previous best after entering with a 4.1-point average. Kentavious
Caldwell-Pope, the Bulldogs' lone player averaging in double figures,
added 15 points.
"Vincent's really the only player who's
been in our program for the three-and-a-half years I've been there,"
Fox said. "And he knows what we're supposed to do, how we're supposed to
function."
Ross was held to three points at
Mississippi while missing six of seven shots, Oriakhi had four points
and six rebounds and Missouri was 2 for 18 from 3-point range. The
Tigers were 9 for 22 against Georgia, getting three apiece from Ross and
Jabari Brown, who added 15 points.
"Coach always talks about `How do you
handle adversity, how do you play when things don't go your way?"
Oriakhi said. "I think it was a great test and we'll have to build off
this."
Ross missed the last 2:52 of the first
half after injuring his left leg. Then he landed hard on his back after
getting fouled under the basket with just under 6 minutes to go, making
one of two free throws not long before limping to the bench for good.
"Earnest is OK," Haith said. "Earnest played great, he was very aggressive and all over the court. He's an energy guy."
Georgia is in a stretch of three Top 25
opponents in five games that started with a 33-point loss at Florida
Jan. 9 and ends with Florida, now No. 10, at home on Jan. 23. The
Bulldogs have lost three straight but shot 46 percent.
"I see us heading pretty far, we'll be fine," Williams said. "Just a tough start, we'll be fine."
Haith juggled his lineup, with forwards
Tony Criswell and Stefan Jankovic each getting their first start in
place of Ross and Keion Bell. Jankovic scored Missouri's first five
points but lasted just 4 minutes in the half after drawing three fouls,
the last just 37 seconds after re-entering.
"Stefan, he puts his hands on everybody," Haith said. "Those are easy fouls for the referees when you do that."
Bell got a lot of work at point guard
in relief of Pressey, who had five points and six assists in 30 minutes,
and had 14 points and four assists.
Ross scored a career-high 30 points for Auburn against Georgia on Feb. 5, 2011.
The Tigers hit five 3-pointers and
twice led by 14 points in the first half, but were outscored 8-2 over
the last 3 minutes as Georgia shaved the gap to eight points at the
break.
Six players were whistled for at least two fouls in the first half, four from Missouri.