AMER -0.0 o0.0
0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 23
UNC 87 -15.5 o153.0
HAW 69 15.5 u153.0
Final Nov 23
UGA 69 5.5 o150.5
MARQ 80 -5.5 u150.5
Final Nov 23
LAS 92 -11.0 o146.5
STET 77 11.0 u146.5
Final OT Nov 23
CSB 73 1.5 o142.5
FIU 76 -1.5 u142.5
Final Nov 23
BU 75 2.0 o144.5
UMBC 71 -2.0 u144.5
Final Nov 23
DEL 71 6.5 o139.5
UVM 75 -6.5 u139.5
Final Nov 23
MRSH 45 20.0 o150.0
PUR 80 -20.0 u150.0
Final Nov 23
PRE 71 -2.0 o139.0
MONM 61 2.0 u139.0
Final Nov 23
UWG 54 14.5 o154.0
GASO 64 -14.5 u154.0
Final Nov 23
SFPA 65 21.0 o144.5
GTWN 82 -21.0 u144.5
Final Nov 23
LIU 79 14.0 o138.0
CHAR 76 -14.0 u138.0
Final Nov 23
KC 65 -2.0 o143.0
ALBY 67 2.0 u143.0
Final Nov 23
PRST 65 2.5 o152.5
STT 91 -2.5 u152.5
Final Nov 23
BRWN 83 -8.5 o143.0
CAN 76 8.5 u143.0
Final Nov 23
QUIN 70 5.5 o153.0
UMASS 80 -5.5 u153.0
Final Nov 23
KTYST 59 -0.0 o0.0
NKU 85 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 23
UIC 55 2.0 o149.5
ECU 72 -2.0 u149.5
Final Nov 23
NE 59 2.0 o135.0
FGCU 55 -2.0 u135.0
Final Nov 23
UNH 49 12.5 o138.5
MRST 54 -12.5 u138.5
Final Nov 23
FERR 55
GMU 100
Final Nov 23
FUR 67 -9.0 o147.5
CHSO 46 9.0 u147.5
Final Nov 23
CIN 81 -7.0 o149.5
GT 58 7.0 u149.5
Final Nov 23
SCST 72 -4.5 o142.5
INDPU 62 4.5 u142.5
Final Nov 23
FAIR 66 10.5 o139.0
YALE 91 -10.5 u139.0
Final Nov 23
BGSU 68 -4.5 o146.5
BELL 80 4.5 u146.5
Final Nov 23
UAB 83 -7.0 o145.0
ILST 84 7.0 u145.0
Final Nov 23
AMER 73 -0.0 o0.0
56 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 23
WOF 74 3.5 o150.5
MILW 76 -3.5 u150.5
Final Nov 23
JMU 71 -3.0 o140.0
JVST 65 3.0 u140.0
Final Nov 23
UMES 40 36.0 o154.0
ILL 87 -36.0 u154.0
Final Nov 23
SPRI 46 -0.0 o0.0
WAG 81 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 23
DSU 66 8.0 o139.5
MSM 76 -8.0 u139.5
Final Nov 23
DETU 57 24.0 o141.0
WAKE 67 -24.0 u141.0
Final Nov 23
NEOM 84 11.5 o149.0
AKR 92 -11.5 u149.0
Final Nov 23
LEM 61 11.5 o151.5
AMCC 82 -11.5 u151.5
Final Nov 23
CCU 70 -3.0 o135.0
AAMU 77 3.0 u135.0
Final Nov 23
FRES 72 3.5 o140.5
LBSU 69 -3.5 u140.5
Final Nov 23
MASS 80 -2.0 o148.0
TEM 87 2.0 u148.0
Final Nov 23
NIU 52 17.5 o143.0
DEP 98 -17.5 u143.0
Final Nov 23
NORAL 74 -9.5 o146.0
ULM 62 9.5 u146.0
Final Nov 23
IDHO 67 2.5 o145.5
SUU 82 -2.5 u145.5
Final Nov 23
ULL 74 6.5 o152.0
GW 83 -6.5 u152.0
Final Nov 23
UCSD 80 1.0 o155.0
TOL 45 -1.0 u155.0
Final Nov 23
SCUS 74 3.0 o155.5
QNC 98 -3.0 u155.5
Final Nov 23
TLSA 53 9.5 o146.5
L-IL 89 -9.5 u146.5
Final Nov 23
ALST 77 -2.0 o149.0
LAM 75 2.0 u149.0
Final Nov 23
RID 57 4.5 o142.0
BUCK 53 -4.5 u142.0
Final Nov 23
NMSU 65 11.5 o141.0
UNLV 72 -11.5 u141.0
Final Nov 23
KENT 68 -2.5 o135.0
CLEVST 52 2.5 u135.0
Final Nov 23
YSU 57 3.0 o128.5
SFA 64 -3.0 u128.5
Final Nov 23
STON 63 11.0 o153.0
CLMB 82 -11.0 u153.0
Final Nov 23
STAMB 49 -0.0 o0.0
SIUE 83 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 23
PV 98 19.5 o160.0
UNCO 114 -19.5 u160.0
Final Nov 23
CP 66 20.5 o148.0
SMC 80 -20.5 u148.0
Final Nov 23
EWU 68 7.0 o151.5
CALBA 79 -7.0 u151.5
Final Nov 23
MVSU 43 45.0 o144.0
BYU 87 -45.0 u144.0
Final Nov 23
STAN 71 1.0 o147.5
SCU 69 -1.0 u147.5
Connecticut 0th Big East31-8
Alabama 0th Southeastern31-6

Connecticut @ Alabama preview

Veterans Memorial Coliseum

No. 20 Connecticut set a school record by making 17 3-pointers Thursday night in an 83-59 rout of Oregon at the Phil Knight Invitational in Portland, Ore.

No. 18 Alabama also used the 3-point arc to its advantage when it toppled No. 12 Michigan State 81-70 in the final first-round matchup.

The Huskies and Crimson Tide will collide in a semifinal game Friday night that could see the arc again play a major role.

That UConn (6-0) is using long-range shooting as much as it is qualifies as surprising to some. The Huskies' identity has been as a defense-first outfit under coach Dan Hurley, getting offense from its defense and relying on scoring in the lane or via penetration.

But this UConn team has more shooters than Hurley has ever had, and it showed all of them off against Oregon, hitting 45.9 percent from the beyond the arc. East Carolina transfer Tristen Newton drained five in a row at one point in the first half, when he scored 21 of his team-high 23 points.

"Unlike some of our past teams, we can go on runs because we've got several guys who can hurt you from the 3-point line," Hurley said. "We've got a good passing team, we've got a good shooting team. We put our opponents in a tough spot because we have the two big guys who are a big concern."

Those would be Adama Sanogo and 7-foot-2 freshman Donovan Clingan. Sanogo averages a team-high 19.8 points and 7.7 rebounds per game, while Clingan is contributing 9.5 points and 6.8 boards per contest. With shooters like Newton and Virginia Tech transfer Naheim Alleyne on the perimeter, the Huskies present a quandary for most foes.

Alabama (5-0) won't be like most foes UConn has played. In fact, the Crimson Tide will be the first ranked opponent for the Huskies and vice versa. This will be a measuring-stick game for both programs.

Freshman Brandon Miller has injected Alabama with an explosive scoring option that didn't always exist last season. Miller pumped in 17 of his 24 points in the first half against Michigan State.

Alabama has shown it can outdo the Huskies from deep. It drilled a whopping 21 3-pointers on Nov. 18 when it destroyed visiting Jacksonville State 104-62. Miller had 28 points on just 12 shot attempts in that game, hitting 7 of 9 from long range.

"To take 12 shots and go 3 of 5 from the line and end up with 28 points, that's going to be as efficient as you're going to see," Crimson Tide coach Nate Oats said.

Miller is averaging 21 points and 9.2 rebounds, while Ohio transfer Mark Sears has stuffed the stat sheet, contributing 13.6 points, 5.4 rebounds and 3.8 assists per game. And Sears hasn't shot as efficiently as he did for two seasons with the Bobcats.

The winner will play for the tournament title Sunday against either No. 1 North Carolina or Iowa State, who meet in a Friday afternoon semifinal.

--Field Level Media

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