Final Mar 12
RICH 65 5.5 o130.5
DAV 69 -5.5 u130.5
Final Mar 12
UVA 60 1.0 o129.0
GT 66 -1.0 u129.0
Final Mar 12
CIN 56 8.5 o136.5
ISU 76 -8.5 u136.5
Final Mar 12
CHAR 64 3.5 o136.5
RICE 61 -3.5 u136.5
Final Mar 12
SCAR 68 4.0 o139.5
ARK 72 -4.0 u139.5
Final Mar 12
WYO 61 -1.0 o136.0
SJSU 66 1.0 u136.0
Final OT Mar 12
GRAM 65 6.0 o126.0
SOU 62 -6.0 u126.0
Final Mar 12
FOR 88 4.5 o155.5
URI 71 -4.5 u155.5
Final Mar 12
ND 56 10.5 o145.5
UNC 76 -10.5 u145.5
Final Mar 12
COLO 67 7.0 o130.0
WVU 60 -7.0 u130.0
Final Mar 12
NW 72 -3.5 o128.5
MINN 64 3.5 u128.5
Final Mar 12
TEX 79 2.5 o149.5
VAN 72 -2.5 u149.5
Final Mar 12
BUT 75 -2.0 o147.5
PROV 69 2.0 u147.5
Final Mar 12
FRES 71 13.0 o139.0
NEV 86 -13.0 u139.0
Final Mar 12
LAS 78 4.0 o146.0
MASS 71 -4.0 u146.0
Final Mar 12
LAM 54 12.5 o134.0
MCNS 63 -12.5 u134.0
Final Mar 12
RID 64 8.5 o143.5
QUIN 78 -8.5 u143.5
Final Mar 12
UMES 70 16.5 o139.5
NORF 77 -16.5 u139.5
Final Mar 12
IOWA 77 5.0 o155.0
OSU 70 -5.0 u155.0
Final Mar 12
UTEP 60 7.5 o136.0
LIB 81 -7.5 u136.0
Final Mar 12
DEP 71 5.0 o144.0
GTWN 67 -5.0 u144.0
Final Mar 12
NAVY 52 4.0 o131.5
AMER 74 -4.0 u131.5
Final Mar 12
CAL 73 7.0 o139.0
STAN 78 -7.0 u139.0
Final Mar 12
LSU 62 9.5 o145.5
MSST 91 -9.5 u145.5
Final Mar 12
AFA 59 12.5 o130.5
UNLV 68 -12.5 u130.5
Final Mar 12
KSU 56 6.0 o138.5
BAY 70 -6.0 u138.5
Final OT Mar 12
SHU 62 3.5 o137.5
MW 66 -3.5 u137.5
Final Mar 12
FAMU 76 7.0 o136.5
JKST 91 -7.0 u136.5
Final 2OT Mar 12
USC 97 1.0 o153.0
RUTG 89 -1.0 u153.0
Final Mar 12
COPP 63 17.0 o142.5
SCST 68 -17.0 u142.5
Final Mar 12
HALL 55 10.5 o128.5
VILL 67 -10.5 u128.5
Final Mar 12
CSB 66 5.5 o143.0
UCSB 71 -5.5 u143.0
Final Mar 12
FIU 56 8.0 o133.0
JVST 65 -8.0 u133.0
Final Mar 12
DSU 57 12.5 o141.0
UVU 74 -12.5 u141.0
Final OT Mar 12
UCF 94 10.5 o155.5
KU 98 -10.5 u155.5
Final Mar 12
OKLA 81 3.5 o146.5
UGA 75 -3.5 u146.5
Final Mar 12
SYR 53 9.0 o150.0
SMU 73 -9.0 u150.0
Final Mar 12
CP 86 -1.5 o149.0
UCD 76 1.5 u149.0
Final Mar 12
MONT 91 3.0 o147.0
UNCO 83 -3.0 u147.0
Final Mar 12
UTA 75 8.5 o147.5
GC 98 -8.5 u147.5
Mississippi State 9th SEC20-11
Missouri 6th SEC21-10

Mississippi State @ Missouri preview

Bridgestone Arena

Last Meeting ( Feb 1, 2025 ) Missouri 88, MS State 61

Missouri and Mississippi State came to the Southeastern Conference tournament in Nashville seeking to improve their standing with the NCAA Tournament selection committee.

That process will continue when the seventh-seeded Tigers (21-10) face the 10th-seeded Bulldogs (21-11) in the second round of the SEC tournament on Thursday night.

The No. 21-ranked Tigers were bidding for a top-four seed in the SEC tourney and a top-four seed in the NCAA field earlier this season. Then they closed their league schedule by losing four of five games.

"We still left a lot on the table, where I thought we could have turned the corner and finished in a double bye, even competed for a (conference) championship," Tigers coach Dennis Gates said. "Things needed to happen that didn't."

Missouri enjoyed success earlier this season, forcing live-ball turnovers by applying man-to-man defensive pressure and mixing in match-up zones extending past the 3-point line.

But during their past four losses, the Tigers allowed an average of 94 points.

"We know what we can do," said Missouri forward Mark Mitchell, who leads the Tigers with an average of 14.3 points and adds 4.7 rebounds per game. "We know the type of team we have, and we're going to keep working."

Gates extended his playing rotation to 10 and 11 players at various points this season, so he doesn't believe fatigue factored into his team's late fade. Only four Tigers average more than 23 minutes per game.

"It has not creeped into our program," Gates said. "What I do see is that our guys ... instead of targeting guys, we've been the target."

Missouri won the earlier meeting with the Bulldogs 88-61 in Starkville, Miss., on Feb. 1, with Caleb Grill scoring 20 points off the bench and Tamar Bates adding 14. Grill averages 14.2 points per game this season and Bates averages 12.9.

Josh Hubbard scored 24 points for Mississippi State in that loss to Missouri, and KeShawn Murphy scored 16 points off the bench.

"We were on a winning streak, and we just underestimated them," Hubbard told the SEC Network. "It was an early game, and we didn't play our best basketball -- we didn't play Bulldog basketball.

"We have a good opportunity to get our 'get' back."

Mississippi State coach Chris Jans came to Nashville with a simple goal.

"Win games, win games," he said. "That's the mantra, that's the goal. Win as many games as we can.

"Does that mean we're playing (in the title game) Sunday? I hope so," Jans added.

While the Tigers had a bye Wednesday, the Bulldogs rolled over LSU 91-62 behind Hubbard's 26 points.

Mississippi State held LSU to 39.3 percent shooting from the field, including 19.2 percent (5-for-26) from 3-point range.

"When we reconvened on Monday to get ready for the SEC tournament, (defense) was the message," Jans told the SEC Network. "If we're going to go down there, we're going to play our brand of basketball. We just haven't been as good at it this year."

--Field Level Media

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