LIVE End Mar 13
UNC 68 -6.0 o148.0
WAKE 59 6.0 u148.0
LIVE 06:09 2nd Mar 13
CHAR 47 10.0 o144.5
FAU 51 -10.0 u144.5
LIVE End Mar 13
SJSU 52 16.0 o150.5
UNM 63 -16.0 u150.5
LIVE 06:42 2nd Mar 13
COLO 56 17.5 o127.5
HOU 65 -17.5 u127.5
LIVE 15:58 2nd Mar 13
TEX 36 6.0 o140.5
TXAM 40 -6.0 u140.5
LIVE 03:30 1st Mar 13
EMU 27 4.5 o149.5
M-OH 24 -4.5 u149.5
LIVE 15:14 1st Mar 13
FOR 7 6.5 o144.0
GW 11 -6.5 u144.0
BSU -2.0 o134.5
SDSU 2.0 u134.5
MAN 2.0 o144.0
IONA -2.0 u144.0
MORG 3.5 o161.5
HOW -3.5 u161.5
IOWA 10.0 o165.5
ILL -10.0 u165.5
WMU 10.5 o143.5
KENT -10.5 u143.5
NMSU 1.0 o136.5
KENN -1.0 u136.5
TLSA 3.5 o142.5
TEM -3.5 u142.5
MSST 3.0 o156.5
MIZZ -3.0 u156.5
DEP 13.0 o143.5
CREI -13.0 u143.5
BAY 6.0 o141.0
TTU -6.0 u141.0
STAN 10.5 o144.0
LOU -10.5 u144.0
LAS 12.5 o144.0
JOES -12.5 u144.0
MSM 4.0 o126.5
MRST -4.0 u126.5
ALCN 3.0 o134.0
COOK -3.0 u134.0
NCCU 1.0 o153.0
DSU -1.0 u153.0
LT 2.0 o142.0
MTU -2.0 u142.0
UCSB 3.5 o151.5
CSN -3.5 u151.5
USC 10.5 o148.0
PUR -10.5 u148.0
NEV 5.0 o138.0
CSU -5.0 u138.0
SEA -5.5 o132.5
AC 5.5 u132.5
OKLA 6.5 o159.0
UK -6.5 u159.0
SMU 7.0 o142.5
CLEM -7.0 u142.5
UTSA 5.0 o147.0
ECU -5.0 u147.0
KU 3.5 o151.0
ARIZ -3.5 u151.0
VILL 6.5 o134.0
CONN -6.5 u134.0
CP 4.5 o163.0
UCRV -4.5 u163.0
TST 6.0 o127.0
CBU -6.0 u127.0
UNLV 8.0 o141.0
USU -8.0 u141.0
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
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
BUT 57 12.0 o145.5
SJU 78 -12.0 u145.5
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
NW 63 8.5 o141.5
WIS 70 -8.5 u141.5
Final Mar 13
MARQ 89 -2.5 o145.0
XAV 87 2.5 u145.0
Texas A&M 5th SEC22-9
Missouri 7th SEC21-10

Texas A&M @ Missouri preview

Mizzou Arena

Last Meeting ( Feb 7, 2024 ) Texas A&M 79, Missouri 60

No. 15 Missouri has rolled to a 15-0 record at home while emerging as the surprise team of the Southeastern Conference.

The Tigers (17-5, 6-3 SEC) will have their hands full with No. 10 Texas A&M on Saturday in Columbia, Mo. Standout guard Wade Taylor IV is back to full strength and top form for the Aggies (17-5, 6-3), who have won four of their last five games.

Taylor poured in 25 points as the Aggies won 76-72 at South Carolina last weekend. After missing four games earlier this season due to an undisclosed injury, Taylor shot just 28.9 percent overall and 26.9 percent from 3-point range in the first four games of his return.

Then Taylor lit up the Gamecocks with 7-for-10 shooting from 3-point range. Aggies coach Buzz Williams credited Taylor's strong overall play, not just his shooting, for leading the team to the road victory.

"I am very aware of his ability as a quarterback -- not just to make plays for himself. He creates a peace and a calmness that his teammates rely on," Williams said. "The whole program is aware of the impact that he has.

"We refer to it as time, score, momentum. We did a really good job -- and he orchestrates 97 percent of, are we all on the same page? His willingness to do that, in addition to the talent he has, is a combination that is very rare."

Taylor leads the Aggies with 15.1 points and 4.4 assists per game. Fellow guard Zhuric Phelps averages 14.8 points and 5.1 rebounds.

"I do not necessarily think that we have the best players," Williams said. "I actually think our players receive that we are not the best individual players. I think it is the power of all of us. It is a cumulative effort."

Missouri built a 34-28 halftime lead at No. 4 Tennessee on Wednesday, then hung around when the heavily favored Volunteers reached a higher offensive gear. Missouri lost 85-81, but its NET ranking improved from 19 to 18.

"I'm proud of our guys," Tigers coach Dennis Gates said. "We still had a great game."

Gates saw room for improvement in his team's narrow loss to a potential No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

"When a team gets hot, you've got to minimize their second-chance points, which we did not do," Gates said. "When they missed it, we didn't recover the rebound.

"And then the other part of it is executing in the one-and-ones on our side when we get to the free throw line. Tamar Bates, one of the best free throw shooters in the country, wasn't able to execute the front end of a bonus twice. So that's four points, possibly, that was left on the board."

Bates (13.9 points per game), fellow guard Caleb Grill (13.1) and forward Mark Mitchell (12.4) pace Missouri in scoring. The Tigers feature uncommon depth, which Gates exploited Wednesday while deploying 13 players.

With starting guard Anthony Robinson II limited to six minutes at Tennessee due to foul trouble, reserves Marques Warrick and T.O. Barrett combined to produce 12 points and three assists in 17 minutes.

"Ant Robinson is very important to us," Gates said. "He picked up two fouls in the backcourt alone and when you do that, that puts your team at a disadvantage. And he can't take those risks that he's taking in the backcourt to try to get a steal or the physicality or extra possession."

--Field Level Media

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