Final Nov 21
JMU 99 -3.0 o146.0
UIC 81 3.0 u146.0
Final Nov 21
MIA 69 -9.0 o143.0
DRKE 80 9.0 u143.0
Final OT Nov 21
OHIO 81 -2.0 o146.5
MTU 83 2.0 u146.5
Final Nov 21
LAS 67 -1.5 o144.0
UCSD 72 1.5 u144.0
Final Nov 21
OKST 78 2.0 o163.0
FAU 86 -2.0 u163.0
Final Nov 21
USF 74 -6.5 o145.5
PORT 68 6.5 u145.5
Final Nov 21
ECU 78 -4.0 o135.0
JVST 86 4.0 u135.0
Final Nov 21
MONM 62 4.5 o146.5
YSU 72 -4.5 u146.5
Final OT Nov 21
HALL 69 7.0 o126.0
VCU 66 -7.0 u126.0
Final Nov 21
BRAD 82 -7.0 o135.5
TXST 68 7.0 u135.5
Final Nov 21
TOL 103 -13.0 o154.5
STET 78 13.0 u154.5
Final Nov 21
RMU 86 9.5 o151.5
COR 76 -9.5 u151.5
Final Nov 21
UNCG 58 17.5 o146.5
IND 69 -17.5 u146.5
Final 0OT Nov 21
BAY 99 -2.5 o150.5
SJU 98 2.5 u150.5
Final Nov 21
SYR 66 11.0 o155.0
TEX 70 -11.0 u155.0
Final Nov 21
NIAG 73 14.0 o136.5
KENT 76 -14.0 u136.5
Final Nov 21
EMU 68 7.0 o134.5
OAK 64 -7.0 u134.5
Final Nov 21
RAD 51 22.0 o144.5
CLEM 79 -22.0 u144.5
Final Nov 21
EDW 59 -0.0 o0.0
UNF 108 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
JOHNSU 52 -0.0 o0.0
CHAT 72 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
BRY 66 -12.5 o153.0
STONE 67 12.5 u153.0
Final Nov 21
NJIT 64 12.5 o135.0
BUCK 81 -12.5 u135.0
Final Nov 21
MER 72 18.5 o150.0
SCAR 84 -18.5 u150.0
Final OT Nov 21
SEMO 77 1.5 o149.5
CARK 73 -1.5 u149.5
Final OT Nov 21
PRE 58 8.5 o135.0
SFA 55 -8.5 u135.0
Final Nov 21
VAN 73 2.5 o150.5
NEV 71 -2.5 u150.5
Final Nov 21
TRN 78 -0.0 o0.0
SHSU 105 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
46 -0.0 o0.0
WIU 73 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
TXWES 66 -0.0 o0.0
UNT 73 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
MINCR 60 -0.0 o0.0
NDSU 67 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
ORU 68 21.5 o149.5
MISS 100 -21.5 u149.5
Final Nov 21
LNDNWD 64 9.5 o145.0
VALP 77 -9.5 u145.0
Final Nov 21
CCSU 54 -2.0 o142.0
SH 67 2.0 u142.0
Final Nov 21
PRIN 62 -7.5 o152.5
WRST 80 7.5 u152.5
Final Nov 21
UTM 77 11.5 o155.5
AMCC 81 -11.5 u155.5
Final Nov 21
TAMCOM 56 24.5 o144.5
OKLA 84 -24.5 u144.5
Final Nov 21
TST 49 31.0 o147.0
MICH 72 -31.0 u147.0
Final Nov 21
TTU 77 -10.5 o149.5
STJOE 78 10.5 u149.5
Final Nov 21
GRAM 58 23.5 o152.5
UNM 80 -23.5 u152.5
Final Nov 21
TENN 64 -12.5 o126.5
UVA 42 12.5 u126.5
Final Nov 21
EWU 81 14.0 o158.5
WSU 96 -14.0 u158.5
Final Nov 21
AFA 69 16.0 o136.0
CAL 78 -16.0 u136.0
Final Nov 21
ORE 78 -6.5 o139.5
ORST 75 6.5 u139.5
Final Nov 21
MEM 68 2.0 o154.5
SF 64 -2.0 u154.5
Baylor 1st Big 1226-5
Texas 4th Big 1221-10

Baylor @ Texas preview

Frank C. Erwin Jr. Center

Last Meeting ( Feb 12, 2022 ) Texas 63, Baylor 80

No. 21 Texas and No. 3 Baylor will have plenty on the line when the Big 12 rivals square off for the second time this season on Monday in Austin, Texas.

The game has huge implications for the regular-season Big 12 race and seeding both in the conference and NCAA tournaments.

Monday's encounter between the Longhorns (21-8, 10-6 Big 12) and Bears (24-5, 12-4), however, carries additional significance.

It marks the final men's basketball contest in the 45-year history of the Frank Erwin Center, the Longhorns' home since 1977. The arena is being torn down to facilitate the expansion of the Dell Medical School at the University of Texas and will be replaced by the Moody Center.

Baylor manhandled the Longhorns 80-63 on Feb. 12 in Waco, and Texas is determined to show that it is better than the performance it put forth that day. The Longhorns have won five of their past seven games, with the only setbacks the aforementioned loss to Baylor and at home to now-No. 12 Texas Tech on Feb. 19.

Texas is in the midst of one of its best stretches of play and heads into Monday's game on the heels of a gritty 82-81 win at West Virginia on Saturday. Timmy Allen led the Longhorns with a season-high 26 points and 10 rebounds. Marcus Carr finished with 15 points and Jase Febres added a season-best 14 for the Longhorns.

"People have been questioning us all year," Allen said. "We're proving to ourselves what we're capable of. We know who we are, and we've seen it all year in practice and we're starting to flourish in the games."

Allen (7 of 9), Carr (6 for 6) and Febres (5 of 6, including 4 of 5 from 3-point range) combined to make 18 of their 21 shots for Texas, which sank 63.4 percent of its attempts from the floor.

"We set this game up like an NCAA Tournament game - survive and advance," Texas coach Chris Beard said. "That's as happy as our locker room has been all year."

Baylor heads to Austin after a rousing 80-70 home victory over then-No. 5 Kansas on Saturday night. The Bears are now 10-1 against top-10 opponents over the past two seasons.

Just seven players saw the court on Saturday for Baylor, which avenged an 83-59 loss at Kansas on Feb. 5.

Flo Thamba led the Bears with a career-high 18 points. Jeremy Sochan added 17 points, Adam Flagler had 13 and Matthew Mayer recorded 12 rebounds.

The Bears trailed 16-4 midway through the first half and by 13 points with 5:49 remaining before mounting a comeback that brought them to within 32-31 at intermission. Baylor did not trail over the final 11 minutes, holding Kansas to 34.3 percent shooting in the game and 29.4 percent in the second half.

"A great Navy seal told me, ‘It's not what you don't have, it's what you have,'" Baylor coach Scott Drew said after Saturday's win. "So, you've got to focus on what you have, and that's what we've been doing.

"This one's a little bigger at Texas from the standpoint it's your last game at their arena. I'm sure there's gonna be a lot of emotion involved with that."

--Field Level Media

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