Final Jan 8
L-MD 72 3.0 o140.0
ARMY 74 -3.0 u140.0
Final Jan 8
NAVY 59 2.5 o140.5
HC 70 -2.5 u140.5
Final Jan 8
CCAR 51 7.5 o126.0
APP 74 -7.5 u126.0
Final Jan 8
L-IL 79 -2.0 o148.0
LAS 68 2.0 u148.0
Final Jan 8
NKU 61 2.5 o136.0
YSU 72 -2.5 u136.0
Final Jan 8
CONN 66 1.0 o142.0
VILL 68 -1.0 u142.0
Final OT Jan 8
DEP 80 2.5 o133.0
HALL 85 -2.5 u133.0
Final Jan 8
FSU 80 2.5 o152.5
MIA 65 -2.5 u152.5
Final Jan 8
FOR 61 17.0 o145.0
VCU 73 -17.0 u145.0
Final Jan 8
HP 93 -8.5 o153.5
CHSO 79 8.5 u153.5
Final Jan 8
CLEV 80 2.0 o139.5
RMU 69 -2.0 u139.5
Final Jan 8
TEM 79 3.5 o145.5
ECU 80 -3.5 u145.5
Final Jan 8
MISS 73 3.5 o148.5
ARK 66 -3.5 u148.5
Final Jan 8
MURR 71 5.5 o138.0
UNI 68 -5.5 u138.0
Final Jan 8
UNCA 76 4.0 o153.5
LONG 85 -4.0 u153.5
Final Jan 8
GW 75 6.0 o152.0
URI 67 -6.0 u152.0
Final Jan 8
ND 65 2.5 o138.5
NCST 66 -2.5 u138.5
Final Jan 8
RICH 58 11.5 o130.0
GMU 64 -11.5 u130.0
Final Jan 8
ALA 88 -11.5 o157.0
SCAR 68 11.5 u157.0
Final Jan 8
WCU 69 12.5 o144.5
WOF 77 -12.5 u144.5
Final Jan 8
AMER 54 3.0 o124.5
BU 60 -3.0 u124.5
Final Jan 8
DAY 72 -10.5 o147.5
MASS 76 10.5 u147.5
Final Jan 8
DRKE 64 1.5 o126.5
BRAD 57 -1.5 u126.5
Final Jan 8
WIN 83 -3.5 o159.5
WEBB 89 3.5 u159.5
Final Jan 8
PRE 67 -3.5 o148.0
SCUS 77 3.5 u148.0
Final OT Jan 8
JOES 81 -3.0 o134.0
DUQ 85 3.0 u134.0
Final Jan 8
FAU 75 -5.5 o154.0
CHAR 64 5.5 u154.0
Final Jan 8
COLO 74 6.0 o149.0
UCF 75 -6.0 u149.0
Final Jan 8
USC 69 6.0 o149.0
IND 82 -6.0 u149.0
Final Jan 8
ETSU 70 -2.0 o151.5
MER 68 2.0 u151.5
Final OT Jan 8
FUR 67 -14.0 o138.0
CIT 63 14.0 u138.0
Final Jan 8
MILW 73 3.0 o155.5
IPFW 78 -3.0 u155.5
Final OT Jan 8
LAF 62 3.5 o131.5
BUCK 65 -3.5 u131.5
Final Jan 8
LEH 62 6.5 o138.5
COLG 67 -6.5 u138.5
Final Jan 8
SIU 86 9.5 o156.0
BEL 90 -9.5 u156.0
Final OT Jan 8
INST 95 1.5 o162.0
VALP 98 -1.5 u162.0
Final Jan 8
ILST 51 -5.5 o130.5
EVAN 69 5.5 u130.5
Final Jan 8
SBON 68 3.5 o141.5
SLU 73 -3.5 u141.5
Final Jan 8
BUT 65 3.0 o137.0
PROV 84 -3.0 u137.0
Final OT Jan 8
GASO 78 3.0 o155.0
GAST 82 -3.0 u155.0
Final Jan 8
UMKC 58 1.5 o137.5
NEOM 77 -1.5 u137.5
Final Jan 8
ASU 55 14.0 o144.5
KU 74 -14.0 u144.5
Final Jan 8
PSU 52 7.0 o163.0
ILL 91 -7.0 u163.0
Final Jan 8
VT 59 9.0 o142.5
STAN 70 -9.0 u142.5
Final Jan 8
TAM 80 2.5 o147.0
OKLA 78 -2.5 u147.0
Final Jan 8
SDST 72 2.0 o156.0
STT 73 -2.0 u156.0
Final Jan 8
USD 80 31.5 o157.0
GONZ 93 -31.5 u157.0
Final Jan 8
RICE 59 11.0 o122.5
UNT 81 -11.0 u122.5
Final Jan 8
AFA 38 18.5 o130.0
SDSU 67 -18.5 u130.0
Final Jan 8
UVA 61 4.0 o128.5
CAL 75 -4.0 u128.5
Alabama 3rd SEC13-2
South Carolina 12th SEC10-5

Alabama @ South Carolina preview

Colonial Life Arena

Last Meeting ( Jan 9, 2024 ) South Carolina 47, Alabama 74

No. 5 Alabama will look to build on a positive debut in Southeastern Conference play when it takes on South Carolina on Wednesday at Columbia, S.C.

The Crimson Tide (12-2, 1-0 SEC) couldn't have played much better than they did during a 107-79 rout of then-No. 12 Oklahoma on Saturday.

Meanwhile, the Gamecocks (10-4, 0-1) would like to put their own conference opener behind them after a dismal performance Saturday. They were crushed 85-50 by then-No. 17 Mississippi State.

Alabama has won nine consecutive games against South Carolina.

Alabama's victory on Saturday was its fourth this season over a ranked opponent. The Crimson Tide's prior three such wins came in non-conference play against Illinois, Houston and North Carolina.

"That non-conference schedule really showed us our weaknesses, and we were able to capitalize in practice," Alabama guard Mark Sears said after Saturday's win.

Sears continues to be the catalyst for a Crimson Tide squad that enters Wednesday's contest on a six-game winning streak. Sears, who totaled 22 points and 10 assists against the Sooners, is averaging team bests of 18.3 points and 4.4 assists per game this season.

Alabama scored 100 or more points in a game for the 14th time in the past two seasons, which is the most in the nation during that span. The Crimson Tide enter the week leading the country in average scoring (91.1 points per game) but have allowed 77.4 points, which ranks 313th.

"We're capable of being a great defensive team," Alabama coach Nate Oats said after the Oklahoma game. "I still think there's a lot of chemistry to be figured out."

South Carolina had a seven-game winning streak snapped against Mississippi State, and the Gamecocks' scoring output was a season low and was 16 points less than their previous low after they shot just 29.1 percent from the field and went only 2-for-19 from 3-point range.

But what concerned South Carolina coach Lamont Paris more was the apparent lack of fight from his team early.

The Gamecocks were held to 10 points over the first 14-plus minutes of the game and trailed by 30 four minutes into the second half.

"We'll show a lot of the stuff on the film when we see it, just situations where it's you versus that guy," Paris said after the loss. "Ability kind of, sort of matters, but who you are as a competitor really matters in that one particular moment. And how many ever those that were in the game, we got the short end of the stick in those situations. So that was surprising."

Zachary Davis scored 22 points against the Bulldogs, but the Gamecocks' leading scorer this season, Collin Murray-Boyles (15.8 points per game), will try to bounce back after being held to five points.

Murray-Boyles has been a force on the glass as well for South Carolina, averaging 9.4 rebounds per game. He figures to battle Alabama's Grant Nelson (8.8) in the paint.

"We got 17 more games, and it's going to be a lot of similar games to that," South Carolina forward Nick Pringle said. "So we've got to step up our game a lot to be able to handle the rest of the games coming our way."

--Field Level Media

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