Chattanooga Times Free Press

Miller, Tide, hold off Hogs for 25th victory

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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Brandon Miller and the secondrank­ed University of Alabama men’s basketball team eked out another close win to wrap up a week that proved challengin­g on and off the court.

Miller scored 24 points and Mark Sears was 7-for-8 at the foul line over the final 1:04 to help the Southeaste­rn Conference­leading Crimson Tide secure an 86-83 victory over Arkansas on Saturday, three days after their overtime win at South Carolina.

Miller delivered his second straight standout performanc­e since police alleged in courtroom testimony that the freshman forward brought a gun to Darius Miles, a teammate at the time, who is charged with capital murder in a fatal shooting.

The week’s details cast a different light on Miller’s regular pregame introducti­on, which is a Tide staffer giving him a patdown. That, coach Nate Oats said, is over.

“I think that’s something that’s been going on all year,” Oats said to open his postgame news conference. “I don’t watch our introducti­ons. I’m not involved with them. I’m drawing up plays at that time. Regardless, it’s not appropriat­e. It’s been addressed, and I can assure you it definitely will not happen again the remainder of this year.”

Miller received a warmer reception at home than in South Carolina, where he heard chants of “lock him up” and “guilty” from Gamecocks fans a day after testimony about the gun, which was allegedly used by another man in the fatal shooting of 23-year-old Jamea Harris on Jan. 15.

Miller hasn’t been accused of or charged with any crime — or missed any playing time. Miller’s attorney said his client never handled the gun and that it had been left in his back seat. Police also said another Alabama player, guard Jaden Bradley, was at the scene. He started Saturday’s game and did not score.

No players were made available to reporters, and Oats declined to answer questions on the shooting case.

But there was plenty on the court to talk about regarding both the Tide (25-4, 15-1) and Arkansas (19-10, 8-8).

Razorbacks freshman Nick Smith Jr. — like Miller, he’s a potential NBA draft lottery pick — helped keep the visitors in the game with a late 3-pointer and finished with 24 points.

Miller helped key a 15-0 run for Alabama by scoring six straight points and eight total in that stretch for a 56-46 advantage midway through the second half — just the second lead of the game for the Tide. Arkansas missed eight straight shots and four consecutiv­e free throws during that span after leading most of the way.

“We really struggled to start the second half,” coach Eric Musselman said. “That was the difference in the game, was a stretch there to start the second half.”

The Razorbacks surged back with 20 points over the final 2:48, and Smith netted a 3 with 10 seconds left to make it 85-83.

Alabama’s Rylan Griffen then made the second of two free throws, and Ricky Council IV’s attempt at a tying 3 bounced off the rim.

Davonte Davis added 21 points for Arkansas, Council scored 20 and the rest of the team combined for 18.

Miller, who scored 41 against South Carolina on Wednesday, missed his first five 3-point attempts as the team got off to a 1-for-20 start from long range. He finally hit one with three minutes left.

Oats said Miller may be the most mentally tough player he has ever coached.

He said his star freshman “completely understand­s that the situation is tragic, and he takes it very seriously,” then added that he has “a special way about getting locked in to where he’s currently at, whether it’s practice or games or whatever. He’s been able to do that this week.”

Jahvon Quinerly had 16 points and seven assists for the Tide.

“We don’t win the game if he doesn’t play the way he does in the second half,” Oats said. “We don’t have a chance.”

Noah Clowney produced 10 points and 13 rebounds.

Arkansas held Alabama to only a trio of 3s, but the Tide scored 52 points in the paint.

“You’re not going to take away both,” Musselman said. “You’re not going to do it. That’s why they’re ranked second in the country.”

The Razorbacks used a 9-0 run followed by Smith’s baseline jumper with six seconds left in the first half to take a 37-28 lead into the break. It was the Tide’s lowest scoring first half since trailing No. 1 Houston 31-27 on Dec. 10 before rallying to win.

› Mississipp­i State 69, No. 25 Texas A&M 62

STARKVILLE, Miss. — scored 17 points, Shakeel Moore added 14 and Cameron Matthews had 11 for the Bulldogs (19-10, 7-9), who upset Texas A&M (21-9, 13-3) for their seventh win in the past nine games.

Mississipp­i State held the Aggies to one field goal in the final 14 minutes and outscored them 34-18 during the same time period.

Wade Taylor IV led Texas A&M with 21 points, including four 3-pointers, and Henry Coleman III and Andersson Garcia each had 11.

Texas A&M opened the second half on a 16-5 run and took a 44-35 lead after an Andre Gordon 3 with 14:09 remaining in the half. But the Aggies, who had won six straight games, then went more than 12 minutes without a basket, and Mississipp­i State responded with a 12-2 run to take the lead for good.

› Kentucky 86, Auburn 54 LEXINGTON, Ky. — Oscar Tshiebwe had 22 points and 17 rebounds, and Antonio Reeves scored 18 of his 21 points in the second half as the Wildcats (20-9, 11-5) pulled away to beat Auburn (19-10, 9-7).

Jacob Tobbin had 13 points and 12 rebounds, and Cason Wallace almost made it three Wildcats with double-doubles, scoring 19 points and handing out nine assists. Kentucky shot 56% from the field and won its fourth straight game.

After Allen Flanigan’s bucket to open the second half got the Tigers within nine, Reeves scored seven straight points in a 13-3 run for a 53-34 lead with 13 minutes to go. He added a trio of 3s the rest of the way, his final one giving Kentucky a 36-point lead by the final media timeout. The Wildcats stretched it to 40 before the remainder of the starters departed.

Jaylin Williams scored 13 points and Johni Broome 12 for Auburn, which shot just 34% and was outrebound­ed 41-23.

› Missouri 85, Georgia 63

ATHENS, Ga. — D’Moi Hodge and Nick Honor combined for 11 3-pointers and 35 points as Missouri (21-8, 9-7) outscored the Bulldogs 45-22 in the second half, finishing with seven 3s in each half on 28 total attempts.

Hodge hit six 3s and scored 18 points, while Honor added five 3s and had 17 points with Noah Carter adding 12 points and DeAndre Gholston 10.

Georgia’s Kario Oquendo scored 14 points, Mardrez McBride had 12 and Braelen Bridges chipped in 10, but the trio combined for only eight in the second half. The Bulldogs (16-13, 6-10) were 10-of-29 behind the arc but were outscored 32-11 off 19 turnovers, leading to their third straight loss.

Missouri has won more than 20 games in a season for the first time since winning 23 in 2013-14.

› Vanderbilt 88, Florida 72

NASHVILLE — Liam Robbins scored 18 points, grabbed nine rebounds and blocked five shots while leading six Commodores in double-figure scoring as Vanderbilt (16-13, 9-7) beat Florida (14-15, 7-9) to sweep the regular-season series.

Vanderbilt rebounded from an 85-77 loss at LSU and has won six of its past seven games. The Commodores also have their most SEC wins since the 2016-17 season.

Ezra Manjon added 15 points for the Commodores, who shot 52% overall and were 10-of-24 from long range. Tyrin Lawrence added 13 points and Colin Smith, Myles Stute and Trey Thomas had 11 each.

Riley Kugel scored 20 points for the Gators, who have lost three in a row and six of their past seven.

 ?? AP PHOTO/VASHA HUNT ?? Alabama forward Nick Pringle celebrates after a dunk during Saturday’s home win against Arkansas.
AP PHOTO/VASHA HUNT Alabama forward Nick Pringle celebrates after a dunk during Saturday’s home win against Arkansas.
 ?? AP PHOTO/ROGELIO V. SOLIS ?? Mississipp­i State forward Tolu Smith grimaces as he slams down a dunk during Saturday’s home win against No. 25 Texas A&M.
AP PHOTO/ROGELIO V. SOLIS Mississipp­i State forward Tolu Smith grimaces as he slams down a dunk during Saturday’s home win against No. 25 Texas A&M.

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