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
Memphis 1st AAC26-5
South Florida 9th AAC13-18

Memphis @ South Florida preview

Yuengling Center

Last Meeting ( Jan 18, 2024 ) South Florida 74, Memphis 73

Memphis guard Tyrese Hunter missed a game for the first time this season on Sunday when a knee injury kept him sidelined.

The good news: If Hunter has to sit out the 14th-ranked Tigers' Thursday game against South Florida in Tampa, coach Penny Hardaway appears to have a quality backup in place.

Former Virginia and Georgetown guard Dante Harris stepped up as Memphis outscored Temple 90-82 on Sunday to remain atop the American Athletic Conference.

Harris provided 14 points and two steals while making 6 of 8 shots from the field in 29 minutes. He was added to the roster as a midseason transfer in late December.

"We knew his talent could help us," Hardaway said of Harris, whose status is expected to be a game-time decision on Thursday. "It really showed (Sunday) how valuable he really is. We just said, 'Hey, we're already winning. Come in, be part of a good team that's already winning. Keep doing the things you need to do to be a good teammate.' And that's what he's done."

The 6-foot Harris played more than 32 minutes per game in the 2010-22 season while averaging 11.9 points and 4.1 assists for Georgetown. Last season, he saw limited game time for Virginia.

Through 10 games for Memphis, he is contributing 3.2 points per game in 13.5 minutes. He has connected on 13 of 23 field-goal attempts (56.5 percent).

The Tigers (20-4, 10-1 AAC) don't need big numbers from him every night with teammates such as PJ Haggerty (21.6 ppg) around to take the big shots. Haggerty and Dain Dainja (12.5 ppg) were the stars last week as Memphis averaged 86.5 points in a pair of home wins.

Memphis, which leads Division I in 3-point shooting at 40.3 percent, enjoyed two good games from beyond the arc last week. The Tigers went 9 of 21 against Tulsa before hitting 8 of 19 against Temple.

While the Tigers continue to stalk a league title, the Bulls (12-12, 5-6) come into town after taking a 75-70 home loss against Wichita State on Sunday. USF hit 52.2 percent of its field-goal attempts but committed 14 turnovers and was dominated 42-22 on the boards, allowing 19 offensive rebounds that led to 24 points.

It was the Bulls' first game after an emotional 100-91 double-overtime victory against Temple on Feb. 6, a night when the league honored former USF coach Amir Abdur-Rahim by naming a sportsmanship award for him.

Abdur-Rahim, who led the Bulls to the 2023-24 AAC regular-season title, died on Oct. 24 from complications after surgery. He was 43 years old, leaving behind a wife and three children.

"No motivational speech needed," guard Kobe Knox said after the triumph over the Owls. "We knew who we had to win this game for, and it was self-explanatory."

Now Knox and his teammates will have to get up for their first matchup of the season with the Tigers. Their game last Jan. 18 in Memphis helped turn around their season. USF erased a 20-point second-half deficit and won 74-73, the second contest in a 15-game winning streak that produced the program's first regular-season conference title.

The Tigers own a 32-8 lead in the all-time series, including a 15-3 advantage in Tampa.

--Field Level Media

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