
There are bad losses.
There are disappointing losses.
And then there’s what Georgia just put on the floor.
This wasn’t just a loss—it was a complete and total embarrassment.
For the second straight season, Georgia walked into the NCAA Tournament and got run off the floor by a mid-major. This time it was Saint Louis, and it wasn’t even competitive. The Billikens didn’t just beat the Bulldogs—they humiliated them, cruising to a 102-77 win that somehow felt even worse than the final score suggests.
At some point, this stops being about the players.
This is on Mike White.
From the opening tip, Georgia looked unprepared, unfocused, and frankly overwhelmed.
They never held a lead.
They trailed by as many as 40 points.
Let that sink in—40 points in an NCAA Tournament game.
Saint Louis shot 58% from the field, moved the ball effortlessly with 27 assists, and absolutely owned the paint, outscoring Georgia 66-28 inside. That’s not a bad night—that’s a coaching failure.
Meanwhile, Georgia shot just 35%, looked completely out of rhythm offensively, and had no answers defensively. The Bulldogs were also beaten on the glass 47-36, outworked in every hustle category, and showed zero ability to adjust.
That’s not just losing.
That’s getting exposed.
Jeremiah Wilkinson showed up. He dropped 30 points and competed.
The problem?
Nobody else did.
Kanon Catchings went 0-for-11 from the field. Somto Cyril gave you next to nothing in limited minutes. The supporting cast completely disappeared on the biggest stage of the season.
And here’s the real issue—that’s not just on the players.
That’s on the system. That’s on preparation. That’s on coaching.
Because when multiple key players no-show in the NCAA Tournament, it’s not a coincidence—it’s a reflection of leadership.
If this were a one-time thing, maybe you chalk it up to a bad matchup.
It’s not.
This is back-to-back years of getting embarrassed by a mid-major on the biggest stage in college basketball.
That’s the identity of the program right now.
And that falls squarely on Mike White.
Yes, Georgia had a “nice” season. Yes, expectations weren’t sky-high coming in. But let’s stop lowering the bar. This is an SEC program with resources, talent, and investment.
Making the tournament isn’t the goal.
Competing when you get there is.
And Georgia didn’t just fail to compete—they looked like they didn’t belong on the same floor.
At some point, you have to ask the hard question: Check out the Top Sportsbooks for betting on March madness!
What exactly is the direction of this program under Mike White?
Because right now, it’s mediocrity dressed up as progress.
You can’t sell “development” and “culture” when your team gets blown out by 25+ in the NCAA Tournament—especially when it’s happening again.
There’s too much money, too much talent, and too much pride in that program to accept this.
This should be Mike White’s last game as Georgia’s head coach.
Not because of one loss—but because of what this loss represents.
A program that isn’t moving forward.
A team that isn’t prepared for the moment.
And a coach who, at this point, has run out of excuses.
The offseason is coming, and with it the chaos of the transfer portal.
But none of that matters if the leadership doesn’t change.
Georgia has pieces. They have potential. But they need someone who can elevate the program—not someone who keeps proving, year after year, that this is the ceiling.
Because if this is the ceiling?
It’s not good enough.
Not even close.
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