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
Auburn 1st SEC27-4
Vanderbilt 12th SEC20-12

Auburn @ Vanderbilt preview

Memorial Gymnasium

Last Meeting ( Jan 31, 2024 ) Vanderbilt 54, Auburn 81

Bruce Pearl knows that No. 1 Auburn will be challenged at Vanderbilt as the Tigers try to bounce back from their first Southeastern Conference loss on Tuesday in Nashville, Tenn.

A 90-81 defeat to Florida on Saturday was also Auburn's first home loss since Feb. 17, 2024, but it didn't drop the Tigers (21-2, 9-1 Southeastern Conference) from their perch atop the Top 25.

Vanderbilt (17-6, 5-5) has built a 12-1 home record after knocking off Texas 86-78 on Saturday. The Commodores' lone home loss came Jan. 7 against then-No. 14 Mississippi State.

"You've got to embrace the grind," Pearl said. "There's no question it's a grind. It's a grind for everybody. We go to Vanderbilt where they've only lost once at home and have beaten Kentucky, Texas and Tennessee. We know that is going to be a tough place to win."

Auburn senior forward Johni Broome leads five Tigers players in double figures with 18.1 points per game. He also pulls down a team best 10.9 rebounds. He had 18 points, 11 rebounds and six assists against Florida and Miles Kelly scored a game-high 22 points, but it wasn't enough to overcome the Gators' sharp shooting.

Even though the Tigers had their 14-game winning streak snapped, Pearl saw the potential for a loss was creeping up on the horizon.

"We've had greater effort-energy or have matched the effort-energy of every team that we've played," Pearl said. "I knew we were due for a letdown."

Against Texas, Vanderbilt overcame a 39-35 halftime deficit to scrap their way to victory. Neither team lit it up from the field -- both barely shot 40 percent from the floor -- but the Commodores held a 25-11 advantage in second-chance points.

Vanderbilt also held a 26-17 edge in bench points, where it was led by Jaylen Carey's breakout performance. The James Madison transfer followed coach Mark Byington to Vanderbilt and had a double-double with game-high tallies of 18 points and 14 rebounds.

"I'm just trusting my guys more," Carey said. "I'm kind of like the guy who knew the whole system, so it was kind of rough for me at first because I'm having to teach everybody, like if we just trust the offense it's going to come to all of us. That was my frustration at the beginning of the year, but now it's starting to come through more, just putting everybody in positions that I know they can excel at for sure."

Tyler Nickel and Jason Edwards each tallied 17 points for Vanderbilt. Edwards leads the Commodores in scoring at 17.6 points per game.

Byington noted there are no easy games on the rest of the Commodores' schedule, and effort matters for Vanderbilt.

"I think we've got to be gritty and pesky," Byington said. "Like, we've got to play hard, extremely hard. If we don't do that, we're not going to win any games or many more games. So we understand that. We coach that way, our guys get it and they're built that way. They're competitive. They're going to play really, really hard and compete."

--Field Level Media

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