Final Mar 13
BGSU 67 11.5 o149.0
AKR 96 -11.5 u149.0
Final Mar 13
DUQ 59 2.0 o130.0
SBON 64 -2.0 u130.0
Final Mar 13
BUT 57 12.0 o145.5
SJU 78 -12.0 u145.5
Final Mar 13
IND 59 2.0 o142.0
ORE 72 -2.0 u142.0
Final Mar 13
GT 70 23.0 o144.5
DUKE 78 -23.0 u144.5
Final Mar 13
ISU 92 -2.5 o146.0
BYU 96 2.5 u146.0
Final Mar 13
USF 68 3.0 o144.5
WICH 73 -3.0 u144.5
Final Mar 13
ARK 80 4.5 o147.0
MISS 83 -4.5 u147.0
Final OT Mar 13
OHIO 85 -2.5 o158.5
TOL 90 2.5 u158.5
Final Mar 13
DAV 75 4.0 o142.0
SLU 83 -4.0 u142.0
Final Mar 13
ALST 84 1.0 o137.5
TXSO 79 -1.0 u137.5
Final Mar 13
UNC 68 -6.0 o148.0
WAKE 59 6.0 u148.0
Final Mar 13
MARQ 89 -2.5 o145.0
XAV 87 2.5 u145.0
Final Mar 13
NW 63 8.5 o141.5
WIS 70 -8.5 u141.5
Final Mar 13
CHAR 59 10.0 o144.5
FAU 64 -10.0 u144.5
Final Mar 13
SJSU 52 16.0 o150.5
UNM 63 -16.0 u150.5
Final Mar 13
COLO 68 17.5 o127.5
HOU 77 -17.5 u127.5
Final 2OT Mar 13
TEX 94 6.0 o140.5
TXAM 89 -6.0 u140.5
Final Mar 13
EMU 75 4.5 o149.5
M-OH 81 -4.5 u149.5
Final Mar 13
FOR 81 6.5 o144.0
GW 88 -6.5 u144.0
Final Mar 13
BSU 62 -1.5 o134.5
SDSU 52 1.5 u134.5
Final Mar 13
MAN 65 2.5 o144.0
IONA 77 -2.5 u144.0
Final Mar 13
MORG 91 3.5 o161.5
HOW 90 -3.5 u161.5
Final Mar 13
IOWA 94 10.0 o164.5
ILL 106 -10.0 u164.5
Final Mar 13
WMU 66 10.5 o143.5
KENT 73 -10.5 u143.5
Final Mar 13
NMSU 77 1.0 o136.5
KENN 80 -1.0 u136.5
Final Mar 13
TLSA 75 3.0 o143.5
TEM 71 -3.0 u143.5
Final 2OT Mar 13
DEP 81 13.0 o143.5
CREI 85 -13.0 u143.5
Final Mar 13
STAN 73 10.5 o144.0
LOU 75 -10.5 u144.0
Final Mar 13
BAY 74 6.5 o142.0
TTU 76 -6.5 u142.0
Final Mar 13
LAS 70 12.5 o144.0
JOES 75 -12.5 u144.0
Final Mar 13
MSST 73 3.0 o158.5
MIZZ 85 -3.0 u158.5
Final Mar 13
NCCU 79 1.0 o153.0
DSU 77 -1.0 u153.0
Final Mar 13
MSM 62 4.5 o127.0
MRST 58 -4.5 u127.0
Final Mar 13
ALCN 60 3.0 o134.0
COOK 69 -3.0 u134.0
Final 2OT Mar 13
LT 75 2.0 o142.0
MTU 77 -2.0 u142.0
Final Mar 13
USC 71 10.5 o151.0
PUR 76 -10.5 u151.0
Final Mar 13
NEV 59 5.0 o138.0
CSU 67 -5.0 u138.0
Final Mar 13
UCSB 78 3.5 o151.5
CSN 72 -3.5 u151.5
Final Mar 13
SEA 69 -6.0 o133.5
AC 63 6.0 u133.5
Final Mar 13
KU 77 3.0 o153.0
ARIZ 88 -3.0 u153.0
Final Mar 13
SMU 54 7.0 o142.5
CLEM 57 -7.0 u142.5
Final Mar 13
UTSA 65 5.0 o147.0
ECU 70 -5.0 u147.0
Final Mar 13
VILL 56 7.0 o135.0
CONN 73 -7.0 u135.0
Final Mar 13
OKLA 84 6.5 o161.5
UK 85 -6.5 u161.5
Final Mar 13
CP 96 4.5 o164.0
UCRV 83 -4.5 u164.0
Final Mar 13
UNLV 58 8.0 o142.0
USU 70 -8.0 u142.0
Final Mar 13
TST 51 5.5 o128.0
CBU 55 -5.5 u128.0
Kentucky 6th SEC21-10
Georgia 11th SEC20-12

Kentucky @ Georgia preview

Stegeman Coliseum

Last Meeting ( Jan 20, 2024 ) Georgia 96, Kentucky 105

Fresh off an impressive win over fellow top-10 team Florida in its Southeastern Conference opener, No. 6 Kentucky hits the road for the first time in league play on Tuesday when it travels to Athens to take on Georgia.

The Wildcats (12-2, 1-0 SEC) topped the Gators 106-100 at home on Saturday, increasing their scoring mark to 90.2 points per game, second nationally only to No. 5 Alabama's 91.1. Winner in five of its last six games, Kentucky will look to earn its first victory at Georgia since January 2020.

If there was any question about how first-year head coach Mark Pope would fare following John Calipari's tenure in Lexington, doubts have been put to bed so far.

The Wildcats' win over then-No. 6 Florida was their third against a top-seven team, after prior victories over No. 6 Duke in Atlanta and No. 7 Gonzaga in Seattle. There was no shortage of excitement Saturday, as the Wildcats shot 57.8 percent from the field and 48.3 percent (14-for-29) on 3-pointers -- including Koby Brea's 23 points and seven triples.

"If you guys didn't have fun (Saturday), then you should quit now and find a new job," Pope told reporters. "That was just an elite-level game. Physically, it was a bloodbath. Just an incredible game. ... How fun is this league going to be?"

Without a single contributing player from last year's roster, a brand-new Kentucky team already has shown the Wildcats won't shy away from big games.

"The players love the opportunity to compete," Pope said. "I don't think they're scared. I don't think they spend a ton of time stressing or fretting about the outcome. They're doing a terrific job of staying in the moment and competing for every possession."

Otega Oweh's 15.9 points per game lead the team, followed by Lamont Butler's 13.8 and Brea's 12.7. A year after Brea led the country with a 49.8 percent 3-point shooting mark at Dayton, the sharpshooter again is atop the Division I leaderboard at 52.3 percent.

Georgia (12-2, 0-1) lost on Saturday for the first time since Nov. 23, falling at then-No. 24 Ole Miss 63-51 to snap a seven-game winning streak. The Bulldogs had a chance to extend their best start to a season since the 1930-31 campaign but shot just 29.3 percent from the field and connected on only 2 of 18 3-point attempts in the loss.

"2-for-18 from three is not who we are. We'll shoot it better than that," Georgia head coach Mike White said.

Asa Newell led the team with 13 points and 13 rebounds. Just a freshman, Newell paces the Bulldogs with 15.4 points per game, followed by De'Shayne Montgomery's 13.5 (in just four games) and Dakota Leffew's 12.3.

With plenty of opportunities to add resume-boosting wins in SEC play, White's group will be eager to return to their home court on Tuesday.

"We expect a big crowd, and our guys will be jacked up to play another really good team," White said. "How unique is it that we'll be saying that for 18 straight games. It's an incredible gauntlet ahead of us, but we're going to be competitive."

--Field Level Media

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