SB Nation - Login for mobile commenting

Dawg Sports

Georgia Bulldogs Begin Weekend with Lacrosse Victories, Track Records, and an Encouraging Gymnastics Performance

It has been both a busy week and a busy day, for reasons having nothing whatever to do with actual sporting events being played. Nevertheless, actual sporting events have been played, and we thought you might be interested in knowing about them, so here is a brief rundown of your Friday Georgia sports action before you call it a night and get your weekend underway:

Gymnastics

The Gym Dogs were in Salt Lake City on Friday night to take on No. 1-ranked Utah. The teams took turns on the bars and on the vault in the first two rotations, with each side taking one event. On the vault, the Athenians rode Kaylan Earls’s 9.825, Cat Hires’s 9.85, and Kat Ding’s 9.9 to an overall 49.175 mark, but that was not enough to match the Red Rocks’ 49.225 score in the event. On the bars, Georgia earned a pair of 9.825s, plus a 9.9 from Gina Nuccio and a 9.925 from Ding to cobble together a cumulative 49.275 tally to top Utah’s 49.25 on the same apparatus.

Star-divide

The third rotation had the Bulldogs competing in the floor exercise, where a trio of 9.825s, a 9.875 from Nuccio, and a 9.95 from Noel Couch gave Georgia a 49.3 total. Because the Utes notched a beam score of 49.175, the Red and Black found themselves sporting a 147.75-147.65 lead heading into the final frame. There, the Gym Dogs carded two 9.825s, a 9.85 from Couch, and a 9.9 from Shayla Worley, combining for the 49.2 mark on the beam that awarded the Athenians a 196.95 score for the meet.

Unfortunately, the Red Rocks delivered an otherworldly performance on the floor, receiving two 9.95s and two 9.875s en route to the 49.5 tally that pushed the home team’s total to 197.15 overall. While the setback was disappointing, the effort was not, and, after earning an overall 197.25 in last week’s meet and following up that performance with this one, the Gym Dogs at long last are starting to look like the team they were when Suzanne Yoculan was striding the floor in high heels and short skirts. I’m not prepared to say Jay Clark has turned a corner, but the last two weekends at least offer some cause for hope.

Track and Field

We begin with signing day news. Yes, there’s a track and field signing day, and Georgia nabbed five athletes, including Bahamian sprint champion Shaunae Miller and Estonian decathlete Maicel Uibo. Meanwhile, those competitors who are on campus already were in action in the Virginia Tech VPI Elite meet in Blacksburg, where six Bulldogs carded career-best marks when Chris Foster improved upon his top collegiate time with a 48.1-second 400-meter dash, Quintunya Chapman finished the women’s 200 in 25.22 seconds, Jared Dunn tied his individual record with an 8.27 time in the 60 hurdle prelims, and Justin Welch (67’8”), Caleb Whitener (60’7.25”), and Burke McCarty (56’8.75”) all hit personal high water marks in the weight throw.

Lacrosse

Honestly, I didn’t know we had lacrosse teams, until Dawg2011 mentioned that fact in a comment, but my eight-year-old son happens to be a big fan of lacrosse, and the University of Georgia seems to excel at sports with high financial barriers to participation, and tonight happened to be the first game of the season for both the men’s and women’s club teams, so I thought, what the heck? I’m not guaranteeing this will be a regular thing, but, for now, here goes:

The Red and Black ladies opened the season at Georgia Tech and were up 3-0 with 26 and a half minutes remaining in the first half, thanks to a pair of early goals by sophomore attack wing Murphy Ferguson. A Yellow Jacket goal just inside the 14-minute mark cut the Bulldog lead to 7-2, but the Athenians surged ahead by an 11-3 margin. Georgia held off another Georgia Tech charge, extending the Classic City Canines’ advantage to 19-9 with 187 seconds left on the clock before an interception by goalie Emily Seidel sealed the deal. Midfielders Lisa “Avatar” Riondet and Taylor “Kevin” Lugash were among the standout performers in the ten-goal victory.

While the Red and Black women were closing out their victory over the Engineers, the Bulldog men were entertaining Ole Miss at the Georgia Rec Complex. A goal by midfielder Matt O’Neil allowed the Red and Black to forge a 1-1 tie with the Rebels at the end of the first quarter, then attacker Michael Trainer exploded for a trio of goals in the second period to give the Athenians a 5-3 halftime advantage. Thanks to a fourth goal by Trainer and a second by attacker Trent Dean, the home team was up, 8-3, after three quarters, and midfielders Justin Mobley and Conner Reed tacked on two more in the fourth frame to give the Athenians the 10-4 triumph to start both Georgia lacrosse teams at 1-0 for the season.

Go ‘Dawgs!

Like Dawg Sports on Facebook

0 recs  |  9 comments

Comments

Seeing lacrosse made me remember the UGA Rugby club team

I only know of the club team because Life University put up billboards along I-75 in Cobb bragging about victories over various schools, including UGA.

Oh well. They can have their rugby. We’re at least accredited.

And their commercials are worse than ours, . . .

. . . if such a thing may be imagined.

I think I just read, and I read it several times, we won at lacrosse.

and the University of Georgia seems to excel at sports with high financial barriers to participation.

Next in line: Ice Hockey and ice sports. UGA skate team. Football? meh. Basketball? w/e.

wow.

Hereafter follows a link to a 1:28 clip from a really terrific 1950s film.

It is safe for work and young children (although not necessarily suited to them — just completely safe for them).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kj7i88LQ9DE

I recommend the entire film. It’s really top drawer.

Lacrosse isn't too terribly expensive to play

… at the high school level at least. My school got a team my senior year, and I decided to play because I missed the contact that came with football. I was able to buy all my pads for around $250. That was only about one week’s pay from my job of installing sprinkler systems.

Club, on the other hand, is incredibly expensive due to all the travel costs. I wanted to play at UGA, but they wanted about $750. That’s ungodly expensive for anyone, much less a sophomore in college. You can buy a lot of beer with that kind of money.

Nice to see Lax mentioned!

I played at UGa in the late 80’s, so this is great to see posted here. I follow college lax as intensely as I do college football, and just got in from the UNC v. Denver scrimmage a minute ago. Next weekend, UNC plays Penn St. at Kennesaw St and then plays Mercer at the Lovett School on Sunday, so if you guys in the area want to see good lax action (with the exception of Mercer) it’s coming your way next weekend.
Keep us posted on the Dawgs if you can. I try to follow the MCLA (club) teams, but updates can be hard to come by.

Thanks, hayduke3.

I’ll try to keep on top of it. As I say, my son has developed an interest in the sport, which has led me to develop an interest in the sport, so I’ll try to stay up to date with it, but, if I fall behind, don’t hesitate to remind me! Seriously, if I miss a match, please feel free to point it out to me.

My son too. He will be a 3rd generation player.

If you have time and are in the Atlanta area take him to one of the UNC games next weekend. I live in Chapel Hill so the Heels are kind of an adopted team, and they are looking like a contender this year.

You must Login with your SB Nation account and be a member of Dawg Sports to post a comment.