Georgia scored first. 2-0 was the last lead they would enjoy all game long.
After the score, Tennessee promptly opened up an 11-4 lead. After some back-and-forth throughout the first half, the Lady Vols found their characteristic second gear in the second half, outscoring the Lady Bulldogs 44-24 on the way to a commanding victory. It's yet another victory in what is honestly the best longstanding rivalry in the SEC, with two Hall of Fame coaches playing a game with 1948 (now 1949) combined victories between them.
The story of the game was Ariel Massengale. The freshman point guard is going to be a joy for Lady Vols fans over the next four years, and tonight she exhibited the potential to be a serious scoring weapon, scoring 11 early points to create the lead that the Lady Vols would never relinquish. She also had 9 assists (and should have had several more, if the other gals hadn't missed so many chip shots) to only 1 turnover - a staggering A/TO of 9. She wasn't the only Lady Vol to have an absolutely stellar night, but she deserves the spotlight simply for showing off her offensive arsenal and giving Tennessee yet one more reason to be optimistic about the postseason.

Really, though, the greatest frustration for Georgia was Tennessee's full-court press. Even though it wasn't a turnover machine, the press forced Georgia to bring the ball up court slowly, often spending half the shotclock just getting past the halfcourt line. Georgia's a team that likes to slow down the tempo and force teams to play defense; with just 15 seconds on the clock, their halfcourt set became hurried and Georgia's shooting percentages suffered, only making 35% from the field and 19% from three. Several of Georgia's shots came as the clock wound down to zero, with the shotclock buzzer becoming a familiar tone while the ball was in the air. (Give Georgia credit for making far more of those shots than you'd think they should; Georgia is a talented team, after all.)
On the offensive end, Tennessee's passing was as crisp as has been seen in the last four years. Ariel set the team up very well from the point guard position, and from there the Lady Vols found ways to pass Georgia's defense out of position. As a result, Georgia fouled Tennessee 21 total times to Tennessee's 9 fouls. The difference in made free throws accounted for +17 points for Tennessee.
It's hard to find criticism in a 29 point victory, but improvement always demands hard judgment. Outside of Johnson and Massengale, Alicia Manning shot 0-4, Stricklen shot 5-15, Simmons shot 3-11, Williams shot 0-5, and Harrison shot 1-4. That's a whole lot of people with a whole lot of misses, and against a top ten team, that could be the difference between a victory and a loss. Many of those misses were relatively easy shots that just bounced out, so it's not like it's a matter of shot selection. There are just several Lady Vols who could be flirting with a shooting slump (especially Stricklen), which may be an issue when they play Kentucky and Notre Dame later in the season.
A few notes from Chris: the Lady Vols played a 6-man rotation for much of the game, using bench players more as a breather for the starters than as dedicated contributors. Despite this being the third game in five days, that blowout against Chattanooga allowed Summitt to rest her starters, which made a significant difference in the outcome. This is why taking care of business against overmatched teams is important. (Aside: the bench players made huge contributions while they played. This was also a key to the game.) Also, Chris noticed that Georgia largely dictated the tempo in most of the first half, but was never able to effectively close the gap once Tennessee jumped out to a lead. Playing a very talented team on their terms and holding serve is a credit to the team, even at home.
Moving forward, there is reason to pay attention to Glory Johnson against Arkansas on Sunday. Her 22 points and 13 rebounds would normally have earned her Player of the Game honors, if it weren't for Ariel's fantastic shooting performance. But more importantly for the stat sheet, Glory Johnson now sits at 996 rebounds in her Tennessee career, only four away from hitting the rare 1,000 point / 1,000 rebound career. That alone makes the Arkansas game worth the price of admission, even if it is a road game.
Arkansas is up on Sunday. The Lady Vols take to the road, where they are not as dominant, but where Stricklen has historically had career performances in front of her seemingly endless family. The story will be Johnson, who will almost certainly hit the 1,000 rebound mark, but it will also be a great opportunity for Tennessee to find their road legs and turn in a full performance without a friendly crowd behind them.
Player of the Game: Ariel Massengale. What can't this point guard do?

Sweet Mother of Breadsticks, Ariel!
0 recs | 19 comments
Oh, for Chris:
David Hooper - January 5, 2012
Thanks!
Chris Pendley - January 6, 2012
The Song Remains The Same
Nice to know with all that is crumbling around us on Rocky Top that we have this bright spot. Way to go Lady Vols.
Rocky Top - January 5, 2012
Kentucky will be the hurdle in the SEC this year.
David Hooper - January 5, 2012
I saw that- UK vs. ARK
Rocky Top - January 6, 2012
Did you watch any of that game?
If so, what were your thoughts? It looked like Arky made more of a game of it than I anticipated.
David Hooper - January 6, 2012
I started to watch it, until I realized I couldn't handle announcers that make look Mickey seem unbiased.
Chris Pendley - January 6, 2012
Oh, right.
Kentucky.
David Hooper - January 6, 2012
I'm either sad or happy you didn't go with a Little Mermaid pun in the title.
Not sure which.
Chris Pendley - January 6, 2012
I had so many of 'em too.
Probably should have gone with the “Whole New World” one.
David Hooper - January 6, 2012
That was Aladdin.
I’m gonna go hide in the corner now.
Chris Pendley - January 6, 2012
All those Disney movies
they sound the same.
David Hooper - January 6, 2012
I was listening to yahoo sports radio today.
Apparently Georgia’s coach was so mad at his players that when two of them came out with him for the post game press conference, it was obvious they had been crying?
Jeez…
TennesseeTyrants - January 6, 2012
I thought only Auriemma did that.
Chris Pendley - January 6, 2012
I noticed some things at the Georgia bench during the game
but I didn’t have a context to interpret them. But yeah, I could see the possibility for some ‘strong emotions’, shall we say. I’ll think on that and elaborate if I come to any conclusions.
David Hooper - January 6, 2012
Ok, follow me if this makes sense, and take with a huge grain of salt. I'm going completely by extrapolation here.
Landers was rather intense throughout the game from my sorta-close-ish viewpoint, it seemed he was very critical of every error and every opportunity that the Lady Vols had. One time early in the first half, Georgia made a mistake on defense and fouled Tennessee to allow free throws. I forget who was shooting, but Landers spent the entire free throw time screaming at one of the Georgia players on the bench about the breakdown in the last play. The odd thing was that nobody had substituted, so Landers was screaming at somebody who wasn’t even on the court.
There were a lot of instances like that throughout the game. I don’t know how uptight he normally is, but he was on edge throughout the game and had a really short fuse. (Danger: wild speculation ahead.) I kinda think it comes down to two things; first, Tennessee is the only SEC team to have a winning record over Georgia, and it’s not even close (46-17, IIRC). Summitt’s handed Landers’s keester to him so often that I think she’s in his head. It would explain some of the uptightness.
But also, Georgia obviously practices for technical perfection. The way they ran their sets was indicative of a team that believes that they can win if only they can execute just a little bit better, and that execution is sufficient. Given their talent (which is still easily second best in the SEC), that’s true for most games they’ll play. But Tennessee is a different beast, and that execution gives way when Tennessee can outrun them on the court and outjump them for the rebounds. Sometimes, Georgia can do the right technical things and still come up short against Tennessee’s willingness to play physical and take bruises.
I think that’s why I’ve been leery of Georgia this year; they’re very talented and very crisp, but it’s almost like they don’t know how to just make things up and wing it from time to time. And when things fell apart last night (as they do in every game for every team), Andy was quick to lose his cool and slow to consider that it just might be part of the flow of the game. You can’t win every possession, but if felt like Landers was pressuring Georgia to do just that.
At least, that would explain why Georgia never looked like they were having any fun out there, even before the game got away from them.
And again, huge dash of skepticism of my interpretation of things. But Landers was really on edge. That much was obvious.
David Hooper - January 6, 2012
quick way to lose your team...
This isn’t the 1950s Bear Bryant and General Neyland era where the players are going to put up with anything and everything. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but I’ve seen my share of mutinies in high school football from coaches that never let up and seem to believe they are Vince Lombardi.
Caban - January 6, 2012
I think so too.
Women tend to put up with it longer than men do, partly because of the whole male ego thing, but there’s always a breaking point. And this may have been a one-time thing. There may have been circumstances I wasn’t aware of. I may also have completely misread things. I really don’t know; it’s just the only thing I can fit to the pieces that also fits my preseason concerns of the team.
David Hooper - January 7, 2012
For what it's worth,
Georgia fans are getting a bit restless as well.
It’s perhaps a bit unfair, but there you go. Let’s see what happens when Tennessee travels to Georgia for the rematch.
David Hooper - January 7, 2012
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