PHOTOS: Tennessee runs away against LSU men’s basketball in Knoxville

LSU falls to 12-10 on the season and 4-5 in SEC play.

LSU was hoping to get a winning streak going after its strong showing against Arkansas on Saturday, but that wasn’t in the cards for the Tigers.

Coach Matt McMahon’s team fell behind early against Tennessee, and though it rallied in the second half, it wasn’t able to recover against a Volunteers team that had a red-hot night from the floor.

They shot over 50% in the game, scoring 88 points in a 20-point victory. Dalton Knecht was particularly effective, scoring a game-high 27 points. LSU, meanwhile, only had two players score in double figures: [autotag]Will Baker[/autotag] (16) and [autotag]Derek Fountain[/autotag] (11).

LSU drops to 12-10 (4-5 SEC), and it will return home to face another major test on Saturday as Alabama comes to town. The Tigers will look for revenge after a loss in Tuscaloosa earlier this season.

In the meantime, here are the photos from Wednesday night’s loss.

Instant Analysis: LSU overpowered in road loss to No. 6 Tennessee

The Tigers rallied in the second half, but it wasn’t enough to erase the big early hole they found themselves in on the road.

LSU’s men’s basketball team ultimately couldn’t keep the momentum from the Arkansas win going on the road against a top-10 opponent. The Tigers fell at Tennessee 88-68, dropping to 12-10 on the year and 4-5 in SEC play.

With [autotag]Jalen Cook[/autotag] unavailable, LSU had about the worst start to the game possible. Tennessee jumped out to an early 13-0 lead, and while the Tigers would respond to cut the deficit to just six, they couldn’t hold off the Volunteers for long.

The Vols shot 58.1% with three players scoring in double figures, led by Dalton Knecht, and LSU struggled to keep up with a sub-40% shooting percentage as Tennessee raced out to a 50-27 halftime lead.

LSU would not go down without a fight in the second half, however. It trailed by 23 at the nine-minute mark, but a 13-0 run cut the Tennessee lead to just 10.

However, the Tigers never got it back within single digits as the Volunteers pulled away to a 20-point win in the final minutes after shooting above 50% for the game.

LSU had an encouraging performance on the boards, outrebounding the Vols 40-26 as [autotag]Trae Hannibal[/autotag] led the way with 11, but it shot just 41.4%. Only [autotag]Will Baker[/autotag] (16 points) and [autotag]Derek Fountain[/autotag] (11) scored in double figures.

Tennessee, meanwhile, had four. LSU had particular difficulty containing Knecht, who went off for a game-high 27 points.

It’s a disappointing loss, but it’s one LSU can’t dwell on as it has another huge opportunity coming up on Saturday when it hosts Alabama, which is coming off a road loss to rival Auburn on Wednesday night.

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How to watch, betting odds as LSU men’s basketball travels to face No. 6 Tennessee on Wednesday night

The Tigers are looking for a massive win on the road Wednesday night.

After a big win over Arkansas on Saturday that ended a three-game losing streak, LSU’s men’s basketball team will hit the road on Wednesday night for what should be a much tougher contest.

The Tigers face No. 6 Tennessee in Knoxville. The Volunteers are coming off a big win on the road against Kentucky. Prior to that, they lost on their home court to a red-hot South Carolina team.

If LSU is going to salvage something at the end of the season, it likely needs to start in Knoxville. Here’s everything you need to know as coach Matt McMahon’s team looks for a big win, including the latest betting odds from BetMGM.

Gators floating on The Athletic’s NCAA Tournament bubble

The Gators are on The Athletic’s bubble with the Auburn game staring them down on Saturday.

The NCAA Tournament is beginning to appear on the horizon over the current college basketball schedule. While there are still plenty of games left to play, the postseason picture is slowly but surely coming into view.

The Athletic’s Justin Williams was one of a few to release their tournament bubble watch articles, in which he surveys the country looking at which teams are in and those with work left to do. Among those teams mentioned are the Florida Gators, who landed in the “on the bubble” category, which is the third of three tiers.

The Alabama Crimson Tide and Tennessee Volunteers were listed as locks for the Big Dance, while the Kentucky Wildcats, Auburn Tigers and South Carolina Gamecocks are still projected to be in the final field. The Ole Miss Rebels, Mississippi State Bulldogs and Texas A&M Aggies join the Orange and Blue on the final level.

The Gators return home to host Auburn inside the O’Connell Center on Saturday, Feb. 10. Tipoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET and the game will be broadcast on the SEC Network.

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Where Florida basketball sits in ESPN’s tournament bubble watch

The Gators still have work to do to make it into the Big Dance but it is within reach.

The month of March is just a few weeks away and the NCAA Tournament brackets are starting to heat up in anticipation of this year’s edition of the Big Dance.

With conference tournaments scheduled to start in early-to-mid March, there is still plenty of basketball to be played but the postseason picture is slowly coming into focus. ESPN’s John Gasaway recently put together his bubble watch outlook, which included the Florida Gators and their Southeastern Conference peers.

According to Gasaway, the Orange and Blue are among four teams with “work to do” to get into the tournament.

“When you play nothing but extremely close games, any winning streak will be brief,” Gasaway begins. “Florida won overtime contests at home against Georgia and on the road at Kentucky only to come up short by one point at Texas A&M. Walter Clayton Jr. and Zyon Pullin each missed what might have been a game-winner in the final seconds.

“At 15-7, the Gators are being projected as a No. 11 seed, one that’s powered in part by the offensive rebounding of Tyrese Samuel.”

Todd Golden’s gang is joined by the Ole Miss Rebels, Mississippi State Bulldogs and Texas A&M Aggies in the category. The Tennessee Volunteers, Alabama Crimson Tide and Auburn Tigers were all listed as “locks” while the South Carolina Gamecocks and Kentucky Wildcats represent the schools that “should be in”.

The Gators return home to host Auburn inside the O’Connell Center on Saturday, Feb. 10. Tipoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET and the game will be broadcast on the SEC Network.

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Florida basketball falls two spots in KenPom during bye week

The Gators lost some ground in KenPom despite not even playing this week.

Todd Golden’s Gators basketball program is coming off a tough road loss at the Texas A&M Aggies last weekend which snapped a four-game winning streak that included a triumph over the Kentucky Wildcats inside Rupp Arena the game before.

Following the loss, the Pomeroy College Basketball Ratings saw the Gators fall two spots from our previous update to No. 33 overall. This week, despite not playing until Saturday, Florida fell to No. 35 as of Wednesday, putting them between No. 34 Texas Tech Red Raiders and No. 36 Indiana State Sycamores.

The Pomeroy rankings use adjusted efficiency margin — the difference between adjusted offensive efficiency and adjusted defensive efficiency — to rank all teams.

Golden’s gang now has a margin of plus-17.02 (up 0.28 points) which means the team is expected to score 17.02 more points than the average opponent. They rank 17th in adjusted offensive efficiency (118.6) and a slightly-improved 81st in adjusted defensive efficiency (101.6).

KenPom also has Florida’s overall strength of schedule rated at plus-7.60, which remains 33rd in the nation; its non-conference schedule rating received a score of plus-1.52 which puts the Gators at No. 126.

The Gators will return home to host the Auburn Tigers inside the O’Connell Center on Saturday, Feb. 10. Tipoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET and the game will be broadcast on the SEC Network.

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Gators slip a spot in Basketball Power Index during bye week

The Gators are taking a break this week but ESPN’s BPI still has them moving.

The Gators are getting a much-needed breather this week between their road loss at the Texas A&M Aggies and their upcoming game with the Auburn Tigers on Saturday. Despite the lack of action, Florida is still moving in the college basketball objective rankings.

In ESPN’s latest Basketball Power Index update following the victory, Todd Golden’s team remained in the same spot as our last update at No. 28 overall. However, on Wednesday, Florida found itself at No. 29 between the No. 28 Cincinnati Bearcats and No. 30 Clemson Tigers.

Florida’s BPI rating — a measurement of a team’s true strength moving forward — rose 0.2 points to 11.1. The offensive BPI increased 0.1 points to 7.8 and the defensive BPI remained steady at 3.2.

The win-loss projection increased ever-so-slightly to 20.5-10.5, with an also slightly improved 10.5-7.5 prediction for the conference schedule. ESPN gives Florida a distant 0.4% chance to win the Southeastern Conference while the remaining strength of schedule ranks at No. 57.

The Gators will return home to host Auburn inside the O’Connell Center on Saturday, Feb. 10. Tipoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET and the game will be broadcast on the SEC Network.

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Florida still in NET rankings top 40 in bye week update

The Gators are off this week but have been in and out of the NET rankings top 40 following the TAMU loss.

Florida basketball is getting a breather this week after a tough 67-66 loss at the Texas A&M Aggies on Saturday. The Gators have been grinding away at the Southeastern Conference schedule, working their way back into the NCAA Tournament picture.

The Orange and Blue fell three spots to No. 39 overall in the NET rankings after the loss and by Tuesday had fallen to No. 41. However, in Wednesday’s update, Todd Golden’s gang moved back up to No. 39, putting them between the No. 38 Texas Longhorns and No. 40 Boise State Broncos.

Here’s how the quadrant system breaks things up:

  • Quadrant 1: Home 1-30, Neutral 1-50, Away 1-75
  • Quadrant 2: Home 31-75, Neutral 51-100, Away 76-135
  • Quadrant 3: Home 76-160, Neutral 101-200, Away 135-240
  • Quadrant 4: Home 161-353, Neutral 201-353, Away 241-353

The Gators remain 1-7 against Quadrant 1 opponents, 3-0 against Quadrant 2 opponents, 7-0 against Quadrant 3 opponents and 4-0 against Quadrant 4 opponents. They hold a 15-7 record overall and a 5-4 mark in Southeastern Conference play.

The Gators will return home to host the Auburn Tigers inside the O’Connell Center on Saturday, Feb. 10. Tipoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET and the game will be broadcast on the SEC Network.

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Oregon looks to turn around ‘bad habits’ and defensive intensity as crunch time sets in

The Oregon Ducks have struggled all season defensively, but now head coach Dana Altman is highlighting some offensive issues.

After a blazing start to the Pac-12 season, the Oregon Ducks have fallen off.

It started with a difficult road trip to Colorado and Utah, where the Ducks picked up a pair of losses. Then, it was a home loss to the Arizona Wildcats — a game where Oregon never seemed to have a chance — that kept the ball rolling in the wrong direction. Most recently, it was a road loss to the UCLA Bruins, who had a losing record entering the game.

All season, Oregon head coach Dana Altman has hammered home that the Ducks need to improve their defensive tenacity if they want to win games and be successful in March. But on Tuesday, Altman highlighted a bigger issue that may be the root of some of the Ducks’ problems.

“We’ve got a little bit of a bad habit,” Altman said. “Really good teams, whether they are hitting shots or not, they play with tremendous energy. We have a tendency when the balls not going in, we don’t play with that same intensity. That bothers me. We have enough old guys; you expect that with freshmen because that’s how they’ve always played, but older guys should have figured out by now that there are just going to be games where it’s not going in.”

There have been plenty of games “where it’s not going in,” for Oregon this season, and like Altman said, the team has been unable to find a different way to attack their opponent and win games.

Against Arizona, the Ducks were losing entering the second half, but the deficit would’ve been manageable if they had been able to diversify their offensive approach and ramp up their defensive intensity. Instead, the Ducks kept shooting low-percentage shots (they went 3/9 from deep in the second half) and Arizona pulled away.

Against UCLA, Oregon’s offense was flowing when they weren’t doing the same thing each time they came up the court. Sometimes they ran it through N’Faly Dante down low, and sometimes Jackson Shelstad was creating his own shot. But when the offense wasn’t flowing, it was because the team wasn’t moving as much and players were shooting tough shots that didn’t need to take.

Offensive woes aside, the Ducks are still in a rough spot. Despite improving defense being a season-long focus, the Ducks’ defense hasn’t gotten much better in the last month, and it was a big part of Oregon losing their last five games.

“We can win many more games if we were all locked in defensively,” Altman said. “I know that’s the way for consistency, year in and year out, game in and game out, you have to guard and rebound. We have not met our standard, and because of that, we are 15-7. Defensively if we don’t get things turned around here in the next five to six weeks, we’re not going to accomplish what we set out to accomplish at the start of the year. We’ll have to do with fewer numbers now, too.”

Oregon will host Washington State and Washington this week, both of whom they beat earlier this season in Pullman and Seattle. The Ducks are at a point in their season where nearly every game feels “must-win,” and these games are no different.

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SEC Nation will run segment on Florida Gators basketball

Television program SEC Nation will air special presentation on Florida Gators basketball on Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. ET

Florida basketball is preparing for a marquee matchup against the No. 12 Auburn Tigers on Saturday afternoon, but before the showdown, the team will be featured on the television program, SEC Nation.

Florida gave SEC Nation camera crews a behind-the-scenes look at the program for a week while the Gators trained for their matchups against the Georgia Bulldogs and Mississippi Bulldogs.

The coverage for the Georgia game should bring extra entertainment considering the game finished in overtime for the Gators, 102-98.

Florida head coach Todd Golden was mic’d up throughout most of the week and the television program will reveal what goes in Golden’s mind while the Orange and Blue are working the hardwood.

SEC Nation will televise at 9:30 p.m. ET on Tuesday on the SEC Network.

Meanwhile, the Florida Gators are hard at work as they get ready for a ranked matchup against No. 12 Auburn on Saturday. Tipoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. and the game will broadcast on the SEC Network.

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