2020 SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament schedule

2020 SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament.

NASHVILLE — The 2020 Southeastern Conference Men’s Basketball Tournament will take place March 11-15 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tenn.

Tennessee will open tournament play on Thursday as the No. 8 seed against No. 9 Alabama. Tipoff is slated for 1 p.m. ET and the contest will be televised by SEC Network.

2020 Southeastern Conference Men’s Basketball Tournament schedule

First Round — Wednesday, March 11

Game 1: No. 12 Ole Miss vs. No. 13 Georgia, 7 p.m., SEC Network
Game 2: No. 11 Arkansas vs. No. 14 Vanderbilt, 25 minutes after Game 1, SEC Network

Second Round — Thursday, March 12

Game 3: No. 8 Tennessee vs. No. 9 Alabama, 1 p.m., SEC Network
Game 4: No. 5 Florida vs. Game 1 winner, 25 minutes after Game 3, SEC Network
Game 5: No. 7 Texas A&M vs. No. 10 Missouri, 7 p.m., SEC Network
Game 6: No. 6 South Carolina vs. Game 2 winner, 25 minutes after Game 5, SEC Network

Quarterfinals — Friday, March 13

Game 7: No. 1 Kentucky vs. Game 3 winner, 1 p.m., ESPN
Game 8: No. 4 Mississippi State vs. Game 4 winner, 25 minutes after Game 7, ESPN
Game 9: No. 2 Auburn vs. Game 5 winner, 7 p.m., SEC Network
Game 10: No. 3 LSU vs. Game 6 winner, 25 minutes after Game 9, SEC Network

Semifinals — Saturday, March 14

Game 11: Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 winner, 1 p.m., ESPN
Game 12: Game 9 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 25 minutes after Game 11, ESPN

SEC Championship Game — Sunday, March 15

Game 13: Semifinal winners, 1 p.m., ESPN

*All times ET

SEC Tournament: Lady Vols fall to Kentucky in SEC quarterfinals

2020 SEC Women’s Basketball Tournament.

GREENVILLE — The Lady Vols’ run in the Southeastern Conference is over after a rough game Friday night against Kentucky.

Tennessee lost a close one to the Wildcats in Lexington in January, but in the postseason rematch Kentucky was dominant as it nabbed an 86-65 victory.

In January, the Wildcats outlasted the Lady Vols, 80-76.

The postseason tilt was tight early as Kentucky (22-7) held a 17-13 lead after the first quarter. But the Wildcats outscored the Lady Vols 27-15 in the second stanza and all but put things away.

Kentucky will play Mississippi State in the semifinals on Saturday night while the Lady Vols (21-10) will have to wait until Selection Monday to learn when and where they will play next.

Freshman Jordan Horston scored 24 points to pace Tennessee’s offense.

All-SEC standout Rennia Davis had 14 points and senior Lou Brown finished with 10 for the Lady Vols.

SEC Player of the Year Rhyne Howard, a Tennessee native and Bradley Central graduate, had 24 points for the Wildcats.

Tatyana Wyatt added 14 points. Sabrina Hines had 12 and Chastity Patterson finished with 11. Keke McKinney, a Knoxville native and Fulton High School product, scored seven for the Wildcats.

Georgia men’s basketball announces new season attendance record

For the second consecutive year, Georgia’s men’s basketball has surpassed Stegeman Coliseum’s annual attendance record.

For the second consecutive year, Georgia’s men’s basketball has surpassed Stegeman Coliseum’s annual attendance record.

Attendance spiked following Tom Crean’s 2018 appointment as the Bulldogs’ head coach. When Crean managed to secure the commitment of 2019’s top high school prospect Anthony Edwards, excitement built further for Georgia basketball fans.

So, an average season with an above-average NBA prospect ended on a sour note against rival Florida. Georgia fans have every right to feel dejected.

Win or lose, however, Georgia faithful kept buying tickets to hoot and holler for the Dawgs. The Steg was packed and, oh my, was it loud.

A sure sign of an impassioned fanbase, the majority of the home crowd stayed until each game’s final whistle all year.

Mind you, that’s not just because of the fans’ recognition of the inevitably horrific post-game traffic splitting from Carlton Street toward either Lumpkin Street or East Campus Road.

The 2019-2020 Bulldogs’ hopes aren’t dead. There’s still an entire conference tourney left to be played.

Crean’s squad, which entered the campaign with high hopes, needs to win next week’s SEC Tournament to qualify for the NCAA Tournament. Unless conference tournament results prove otherwise, the Dawgs are considered a bubble team for the National Invitation Tournament (NIT).

In that case, a conference quarterfinal or semifinal would ostensibly improve Crean and company’s chances, but after such an up-and-down season, nothing can be guaranteed (always the case in the sports) or even predicted (always the case in Georgia sports).

Should the Bulldogs receive an NIT invite, they have the opportunity of hosting another game in Athens, potentially adding to the season’s attendance record.

Opinion: No, Georgia basketball did not waste its only season with Anthony Edwards

After Anthony Edwards committed to UGA in February of 2019, many Georgia fans quickly deemed him the Dawgs’ deliverer from mediocrity.

Anthony Edwards arrived in Athens, Georgia to much fanfare.

Depending on which recruiting service you asked, Edwards was either the first- or second-ranked high school basketball prospect of the 2019 recruiting cycle.

After the senior out of Atlanta’s Holy Spirit Prep announced his commitment to Tom Crean’s Bulldogs in February of 2019, many Georgia fans quickly deemed him the Dawgs’ deliverer from mediocrity.

Reminder: this was over three months before Edwards had even graduated high school and over eight months before he would play in his first collegiate competition.

What is almost certainly the Dawgs’ only regular season featuring Anthony Edwards ends with an even 15-15 record. Unless the 2020 Bulldogs can replicate the results of 2008’s unlikely winners in next week’s SEC tournament, Georgia may not qualify for any further postseason play.

Crean’s squad, which entered the campaign with high hopes, needs to win the conference tourney to qualify for the NCAA Tournament. Unless tournament results prove otherwise, the Dawgs are considered a bubble team for the National Invitation Tournament (NIT).

A quarterfinal or semifinal appearance in the conference tourney would likely earn them a spot, anything less would likely leave them out. But Georgia basketball fans probably don’t want to think of any more what-ifs.

Though plagued with blown leads and those pesky what-ifs, the Bulldogs’ 2019-2020 campaign was highlighted by several miraculous finishes, wins over Georgia Tech and Auburn, and a slew of NBA-worthy clips from Edwards.

All of that sounds bad. And don’t get me wrong, it’s not great. But here’s the thing: Edwards is still projected as the top NBA draft pick by more than one draft analyst.

This isn’t a moral victory thing. Anyone who watched Georgia’s men’s basketball team all season saw the team fold and surrender late leads on multiple occasions.

To me, a recovering pessimist constantly checking my peripheral vision for any sort of bright side, such results don’t blind me from what I’ve learned to see truth of the matter:

If a star player like Anthony Edwards can come into Georgia’s historically average basketball program and maintain his projected draft position while packing Stegeman Coliseum to the brim, it shows young local talent that they can do the same and receive that fanfare and adoration similar to Edwards’.

That is, before they go get a fat paycheck in the NBA.

Though not assuredly, this could prove vital for a program currently struggling to tread water alongside a strong and balanced Southeastern Conference no longer run just by traditionally powerful Kentucky, Florida, and Tennessee (each of which can usually predict its two annual division games against Georgia as wins).

The Atlanta area is one of the highest-concentrated NBA breeding grounds in the United States. Georgia often lands local four-star recruits but very seldom secures commitments from upper echelon five-stars. The last was current Los Angeles Laker Kentavious Caldwell-Pope in 2011.

Examples: 2018’s Ashton Hagans and E.J. Montgomery enrolled at Kentucky. Wendell Carter enrolled at Duke in 2017. Kobi Simmons enrolled at Arizona in 2016.

So, yeah, in the short term, this isn’t ideal. Especially knowing that .500 winning percentage could’ve been a .533 or a possibly a .567, or heck, maybe even .600!

But since I’m speaking in hypotheticals, Georgia could very well have lost some of their eventual dramatic victories, namely against SMU, Vanderbilt, and Arkansas.

Given what Edwards’ success could mean for the future of Georgia men’s basketball recruiting in the future, I choose to see this year’s 15-15 record as a glass half full.

Even in the short term, the Bulldogs’ hopes aren’t dead. There’s still an entire conference tournament to be played.

Lady Vols to open SEC Tournament against Missouri

2020 SEC Women’s Basketball Tournament.

GREENVILLE — The Lady Vols now know who they will play in their postseason opener on Thursday night.

Tennessee, the Southeastern Conference Tournament’s No. 6 seed, will play No. 11 Missouri at 8 p.m. ET.

The Tigers (9-21) defeated Ole Miss, 64-53, Wednesday in a first-round game.

The 14th-seeded Rebels (7-23) were winless in the SEC this season, but they made things tough for Missouri out of the gate.

The Tigers, who got 16 points from freshman guard Aijha Blackwell, had a 34-24 lead at halftime, but the Rebels outscored Missouri 16-5 over the final 10 minutes of the contest.

Milicia Reid scored 15 points for the Rebels, who played Tennessee in a tight one before falling to the Lady Vols, 77-66, on Senior Night at Thompson-Boling Arena on Feb. 27.

UT beat Ole Miss 84-28 in Oxford on Jan.9.

The Lady Vols beat Missouri 77-66 on Jan. 2 in the only meeting between the two schools in Knoxville.

All-SEC standout Rennia Davis scored 19 points for the Lady Vols, while SEC all-freshman team member Jordan Horston scored 13 points and Tamari Key had 16.

Smith had a game-high 22 points for the Tigers in Big Orange Country.

Lady Vols prepare for SEC Tournament play

Lady Vols prepare for SEC Tournament play.

KNOXVILLE — The Lady Vols ended the 2019-20 regular season Sunday with a 56-55 win at Auburn.

Tennessee freshman Jordan Horston hit a shot with 0.6 seconds left on the clock to secure victory for the Lady Vols.

The win placed the Lady Vols with a 20-9 overall record and 10-6 in Southeastern Conference play. Tennessee has now recorded 20-win seasons in 43 of the last 44 years.

Tennessee will now play in the SEC Tournament in Greenville, S.C.

SEC Tournament play begins Thursday and the Lady Vols will play the winner of the No. 11 vs. No. 14 match-up at 8:30 p.m. ET. The contest will be televised by the SEC Network.