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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Robert Zeglinski

No. 1 Auburn survived against Georgia, and preserved men’s college basketball history

Dream seasons have an abundance of whimsy, magic, clutch play, and the unthinkable. Try as you might not; you never forget them or the inherent joy they brought you. Every victory, every big play is embedded in your mind forever. Then there’s the season Bruce Pearl’s Auburn (-16) men have had. A No. 1 overall ranking. Four wins over top-25 teams, including the perennial NBA-lite powerhouse, Kentucky. An undefeated (thus far) slate through what seems like a tougher gauntlet of an SEC than usual.

An unprecedented 19-game winning streak, by far the longest in the country.

And, of course, a clear favorite for a top seed — a No. 1 seed, to be precise — in next month’s NCAA tournament.

On Saturday afternoon, that dream (at least for a top seed) almost came to a screeching halt against, of all teams, last-place Georgia. Dreams often have a way of breaking your heart and ripping it out of your chest, don’t they?

With starting point guard and two-way senior glue guy Zep Jasper out due to COVID-19 protocols, Auburn found itself unexpectedly tested against the rival Bulldogs. Georgia may have shot poorly overall (just 40.7 percent), but shooting 20-of-29 from the stripe (thanks to overzealous defense on the part of the Tigers) meant a massive scrappy underdog stayed in the game.

Whatever plans Auburn had for the dance weren’t in jeopardy with one single loss after their wondrous season. But those aspirations for a No. 1 seed and, perhaps, ideally, an easier draw during March Madness? You better bet Pearl’s crew was nervously sweating every last drop out on the road against a rival.

What didn’t help Auburn’s undisciplined defense was a combined generous 13-of-35 shooting from two of the SEC’s best guards this year — K.D. Johnson and Wendell Green Jr. — that let Georgia fight their way back from a 15-point second-half deficit. In what is customary of these sorts of affairs that are supposed to be wire-to-wire blowouts, every gasp of air Auburn surrendered to Georgia, the choking Bulldogs took and filled their lungs with it to capacity like oxygen.

A powerhouse was now ripe for an upset. Somehow, someway, we had a tie 72-72 game in the final moments.

Enter Green Jr. and the power of redemption.

On a day where his shot would simply not fall, Green Jr. rescued the Tigers anyway. And in a game that will now receive a classic label, he took a momentary lapse in Georgia’s comeback attempt, grasped it tightly, and refused to let go.

The nail-biter win also fell right in line with Auburn men’s lore. It’s the first time the Tigers have started 22-1, tied with the 1998-1999 squad for the best start in program history. That team is the last and only Auburn men’s team ever to capture a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. Pearl’s crew is quite obviously looking to add to that oh-so-exclusive pantheon. A team with a consensus +900 odds to win the national title (second only to Gonzaga) deserves as much.

There’s still about a month to go before March explodes with its usual chaos. Auburn could not afford a setback this devastating or this soon. But they’re back on track, and still on a path toward history, and their dream.

Gannett may earn revenue from Tipico for audience referrals to betting services. Tipico has no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. See Tipico.com for Terms and Conditions. 21+ only. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO).

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