Final Nov 25
RAD 63 -14.0 o141.5
CHS 48 14.0 u141.5
Final Nov 25
HAMP 64 6.5 o135.0
DUQ 59 -6.5 u135.0
Final Nov 25
M-OH 70 -4.5 o136.0
SIE 58 4.5 u136.0
Final Nov 25
BALL 63 3.0 o148.5
EKY 61 -3.0 u148.5
Final Nov 25
CHAMP 58 -0.0 o0.0
SOU 121 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
HOW 77 -2.0 o153.0
UMBC 95 2.0 u153.0
Final Nov 25
DREX 81 5.5 o146.0
PFW 87 -5.5 u146.0
Final Nov 25
UAB 98 -11.5 o156.0
ULL 86 11.5 u156.0
Final OT Nov 25
JAC 89 -4.0 o147.5
MER 90 4.0 u147.5
Final Nov 25
BSU 83 -13.0 o148.0
SDST 82 13.0 u148.0
Final OT Nov 25
MEM 99 8.0 o149.0
CONN 97 -8.0 u149.0
Final Nov 25
INDPU 88 5.5 o143.0
AAMU 83 -5.5 u143.0
Final Nov 25
ILST 64 2.5 o149.0
GW 72 -2.5 u149.0
Final OT Nov 25
SIU 79 5.0 o143.5
LT 85 -5.0 u143.5
Final Nov 25
CSN 89 -8.0 o155.0
DEN 60 8.0 u155.0
Final Nov 25
PSU 85 -16.0 o151.5
FOR 66 16.0 u151.5
Final Nov 25
HP 73 -14.5 o145.5
ODU 67 14.5 u145.5
Final Nov 25
COLO 56 7.5 o144.0
MSU 72 -7.5 u144.0
Final Nov 25
LONG 64 10.5 o142.0
KSU 80 -10.5 u142.0
Final Nov 25
MW 74 7.5 o137.5
UMASS 81 -7.5 u137.5
Final Nov 25
RICH 67 -0.0 o0.0
FLATC 57 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
MICH 75 -9.5 o146.5
VT 63 9.5 u146.5
Final Nov 25
CLEM 70 -2.5 o144.5
SF 55 2.5 u144.5
Final Nov 25
LIU 65 12.5 o153.0
WIN 87 -12.5 u153.0
Final Nov 25
TAMCOM 65 1.5 o137.5
STONE 67 -1.5 u137.5
Final Nov 25
UNH 57 17.0 o146.0
CLMB 83 -17.0 u146.0
Final Nov 25
WIGB 69 25.0 o154.0
OSU 102 -25.0 u154.0
Final Nov 25
COR 84 -1.5 o159.0
IONA 68 1.5 u159.0
Final Nov 25
TNST 78 10.0 o153.0
CHAT 85 -10.0 u153.0
Final Nov 25
NCAT 81 3.0 o160.0
BUFF 82 -3.0 u160.0
Final Nov 25
WCOLL 43 -0.0 o0.0
NAVY 94 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
CARU 36 -0.0 o0.0
NCCU 91 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
MISCM 35
NICH 79
Final Nov 25
LEM 77 13.0 o152.5
UTRGV 97 -13.0 u152.5
Final OT Nov 25
MOSU 74 2.5 o133.5
BC 76 -2.5 u133.5
Final Nov 25
UTECH 66 11.0 o146.0
MONT 69 -11.0 u146.0
Final Nov 25
INST 77 -3.0 o152.0
USI 87 3.0 u152.0
Final Nov 25
ORST 55 5.0 o127.5
UNT 58 -5.0 u127.5
Final Nov 25
RU 50 -0.0 o0.0
SDAK 112 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
IW 63 7.0 o141.5
USA 84 -7.0 u141.5
Final Nov 25
UTSA 72 11.0 o150.0
TROY 86 -11.0 u150.0
Final Nov 25
UMES 35 35.0 o145.5
ARK 109 -35.0 u145.5
Final Nov 25
EMU 74 -2.5 o130.0
HCU 73 2.5 u130.0
Final Nov 25
QUIN 67 10.5 o158.5
SLU 81 -10.5 u158.5
Final Nov 25
MCNS 58 -1.5 o134.0
LIB 62 1.5 u134.0
Final Nov 25
CMU 65 13.0 o128.0
MINN 68 -13.0 u128.0
Final Nov 25
SJSU 71 4.0 o136.0
UTEP 65 -4.0 u136.0
Final Nov 25
SCAR 66 5.0 o148.5
XAV 75 -5.0 u148.5
Final Nov 25
RSTATE 69
ORU 68
Final Nov 25
AUB 83 -3.5 o144.5
ISU 81 3.5 u144.5
Final Nov 25
NORF 76 6.5 o146.5
UCD 55 -6.5 u146.5
Final Nov 25
45 -0.0 o0.0
WEB 93 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
UALR 34 23.0 o152.0
ILL 92 -23.0 u152.0
Final Nov 25
ERAZ 46 -0.0 o0.0
IDST 97 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 25
ACU 82 -3.0 o149.5
USM 74 3.0 u149.5
Final Nov 25
LBSU 48 7.5 o132.0
UNCG 71 -7.5 u132.0
Final Nov 25
DAY 90 9.5 o158.5
UNC 92 -9.5 u158.5
Utah 0th Pacific-1212-13
Washington St. 0th Pacific-1214-13

Utah @ Washington St. preview

Beasley Coliseum

Last Meeting ( Jan 25, 2020 ) Washington St. 64, Utah 76

Washington State is coming off a 1-3 road trip and Utah is coming off a 1-3 homestand.

One of the two has to improve Thursday night when they meet in a Pac-12 Conference contest in Pullman, Wash.

The Cougars are just 1-4 since an 8-0 start, including consecutive losses last week on their trip to the Southern California schools. After a 91-61 rout at UCLA on Jan. 14, they fell 85-77 Saturday night at USC.

Despite a game-high 27 points from Isaac Bonton, Washington State (9-4, 2-4) never led. It cut a 15-point second-half deficit down to four on two occasions down the stretch but couldn't stop the Trojans when it mattered.

"We got off to a slow start," said Cougars coach Kyle Smith. "We were playing catch-up and they're a very good team. We have to get back to defending better. We gave up some silly points in transition and we're turning the ball over way too much. For a team that takes pride in our defense, we're not defending well."

Washington State allows just 66 points per game, but permitted 88 per game during its trip to Southern California. That's too much for an offense scoring just 69.3 points and hitting only 41.4 percent from the field.

Bonton is averaging 18.9 points per game, while Noah Williams is adding 12.0.

As for Utah (5-6, 2-5), it is trying to pick up the pieces from a 72-63 home loss Saturday night to California, which entered the game with one conference win. The Utes presented the Golden Bears with their second after blowing a 12-point halftime lead and allowing 50 second-half points.

Wasted in the defeat was another outstanding performance from Timmy Allen. The junior collected a game-high 26 points to go along with six rebounds and five assists, boosting his averages to a team-best 17.3 points, 5.8 rebounds and 3.4 assists.

"We can't take any team lightly," Allen said to the Deseret News after the loss to Cal. "We can't get complacent and we can't get comfortable. We are not good enough to do that."

One reason Utah is on the wrong side of .500 is that besides Allen, it has just one other double-figure scorer. That's Alfonso Plummer, who's hitting for 13 points.

--Field Level Media

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