ATHENS, Ga. -- Georgia fired baseball coach Scott Stricklin on Friday, ending a decade-long tenure that failed to produce postseason success.
Stricklin was dismissed three days after the Bulldogs were blown out 9-0 by South Carolina in the opening round of the Southeastern Conference tournament.
Stricklin had three years left on his contract, but athletic director Josh Brooks decided a change was needed.
"After much thought and deliberation, we feel it is in the best interest of our baseball program to move in a different direction," Brooks said in a statement. "We will begin immediately the process of a national search to identify the next leader of our baseball team."
Georgia went 29-27 this season, including an 11-19 mark in the SEC.
Stricklin completed his Georgia tenure with a record of 299-236-1 overall and 121-146-1 in the conference.
The Bulldogs earned three NCAA invitations but never advanced past the regional stage under Stricklin, including 2018 and 2019 when they were a host. They also were eliminated in the regionals last season.
Stricklin came to Georgia after a highly successful tenure at Kent State, where he won four Mid-American Conference titles and made five NCAA tournament appearances in nine seasons -- including a trip to the College World Series in 2012.
He never approached that level of success in the highly competitive SEC.