Doors Left to Open

How much of Gonzaga’s loss is everyone else’s gain?

If the Zags are, in fact, a No. 2 seed now…they’re still almost certainly headed to Anaheim. With the Pac-12 looking like a one-or-two-bid league, none of the other contenders on the top two lines of the bracket are west of Texas. So even if a fourth No. 1 seed is now open, whoever earns it will be looking at a somewhat similar fate as teams near the bottom of the No. 2 line a week ago: headed west with a chance to meet Gonzaga in the Elite Eight, now with a slightly easier path to get there. “Teams will remain in or as close to their areas of natural interest as possible.” And since Gonzaga is the only candidate for whom Anaheim is of even remote natural interest…you get the idea.

With all the favorites winning in the ACC Tournament on Thursday, the bigger question now shifts to, “Will the selection committee put three teams from the same conference as No. 1 seeds?” It’s happened once before in the 64-team format: in 2009, Louisville, Pittsburgh, and UConn all sat atop the bracket from the Big East. Since then, however, we’ve only seen two years with two No. 1 seeds from the same conference: 2016 (North Carolina & Virginia) and 2018 (Villanova & Xavier).

If Virginia’s locked in, does it matter who wins between Duke and North Carolina? It seems less complicated for the Blue Devils to prevail: everyone in the free world wants to put full-strength Duke atop the bracket, especially after Zion Williamson went 13-of-13 from the floor in his return last night. A Duke win would remove some of the luster from Carolina’s pair of regular season victories in the rivalry, as they were Zion-free, and the Tar Heels already trail in NET (seventh) and KenPom (fifth). Another Carolina win would almost certainly ensure they’re a No. 1 seed, but it’s just tougher for me to see the committee putting Duke on the No. 2 line.

Of course, none of this should matter if Tennessee wins the SEC Tournament.

About that…

You know the drill by now: the Vols won the SEC Tournament when it was reinstated in 1979…and that’s it. Tennessee made the semifinals from 1982-84 and again in 1989, and famously made a run to the title game behind Allan Houston in 1991. Since then, the Vols made it to Saturday in 2008, 2010, and 2014, and to Sunday in 2009 and last season. Four times in the last 20 years the Vols received a double-bye, but lost their first game on Friday (1999, 2000, 2006, 2012). This is a historic season, but just winning tonight still qualifies as noteworthy when it comes to the Vols and this tournament.

Tennessee beat Mississippi State ten days ago in one of its finest performances of the season, 71-54 in Knoxville. The Bulldogs shot 36.6% from the floor, 4-of-20 from the arc, and 12-of-22 from the line. They also turned it over 17 times, a signature performance from the defense the Vols will need to advance this month. But last night, Mississippi State burned it down: 53.4% from the floor, 11-of-25 (44%) from the arc, and 7-of-9 at the line in an 80-54 beat down of Texas A&M.

The worst part about the double bye is catching a team that’s good and warmed up in a new arena. Last night’s performance certainly qualifies for Mississippi State. To get to the No. 1 seed conversation and another potential rubber match with Kentucky, the Vols have to go through the Bulldogs first. It will require the poise this Tennessee team should know well by now.

Put the coffee on. We’ll see you tonight.

Conference Tournament Week rooting guide for Vols fans

The conference tournaments have been going on for a couple of days now, and the teams that Tennessee fans care most about start playing today. Besides the Vols, who should Tennessee fans watch and root for this week? We have answers. Or opinions, at least.

Here’s the latest info from the team sheets, updated through the games on Tuesday night and sorted by NET Rankings:

Gonzaga

Virginia overtakes Gonzaga for the top spot, as the Bulldogs lost this week to St. Mary’s. I thought that the Zags’ long hold on the top spot was in jeopardy when their regular season ended, so the thing that surprised me wasn’t that Virginia jumped them but that they didn’t fall further. They’re barely over .500 in Q1 wins (4-3), and their computer rankings don’t seem to justify that second spot. I won’t be surprised if they drop further as the ACC and SEC tournaments progress.

Virginia

As for the Cavaliers, nobody’s catching them for that top spot. They could help the Vols, though, by giving either Duke or North Carolina another loss thus maybe freeing up room below them on the 1-line.

Root for: Virginia to win out if it means beating either Duke or North Carolina. If either or both of Duke and North Carolina have already lost, root for Virginia to lose as well. It won’t matter, but hey.

Houston

I still don’t know what to make of Houston’s position among this group of teams, as they, like Gonzaga, haven’t played as many Q1 opponents as the other teams on the list. The Cougars will have a couple of make-or-break opportunities in the AAC Tourney, though, so we might find out if they’re truly legit this week. If the chalk holds, they’ll get UConn (No. 94 NET) tomorrow and two Q1 opponents in UCF (No. 28) on Saturday and Cincinnati (No. 27) on Sunday. Even if they win out, though, I don’t see how the Cougars stay in the fourth spot due to the better opportunities for the teams competing with them for it.

Root for: Houston to lose. The sooner the better.

Tennessee/Kentucky

The rest is where it gets especially interesting. The SEC Tournament will likely determine the pecking order between Tennessee and Kentucky. Assuming they each take care of business tomorrow, they’ll meet on Saturday. That game would decide which of them is the first SEC team in the NET Rankings and, assuming LSU awaits in the championship, could also give that team an additional (and important) Q1 opportunity.

Root for: Tennessee, Kentucky, and LSU to all win tomorrow and Tennessee to win out. If the Vols lose to Kentucky on Friday, root for Kentucky and LSU to both lose, the sooner the better.

Duke/North Carolina

Similarly, the ACC Tournament will likely determine the Duke-North Carolina pecking order. UNC plays Louisville tonight at 7:00, and Duke plays Syracuse after that. Assuming they both win, they’ll meet again tomorrow at 9:00. Whoever wins that will likely face Virginia on Saturday at 8:30.

Root for: Duke and North Carolina to both lose. If they play each other, root for UNC to win and hope the Selection Committee doesn’t want three ACC teams on the 1-line.

Here are the tip times (many are approximate) and TV schedules again for convenience:

Curated, through Friday:

Date Time TV
3/15/2019 UConn #11 Houston 12:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 Ohio State #6 Michigan State 12:30 PM BTN
3/15/2019 Florida #9 LSU 1:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Alabama #4 Kentucky 7:00 PM SECN
3/15/2019 Mississippi State #8 Tennessee 9:00 PM SECN
3/15/2019 Iowa #10 Michigan 9:25 PM BTN

Complete, through Friday:

Date Time TV
3/15/2019 UConn #11 Houston 12:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 Rhode Island VCU 12:00 PM NBCSN
3/15/2019 Ohio State #6 Michigan State 12:30 PM BTN
3/15/2019 Florida #9 LSU 1:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 UAB Old Dominion 1:30 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 Memphis UCF 2:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 George Mason St. Bonaventure 2:30 PM NBCSN
3/15/2019 Nebraska #19 Wisconsin 2:55 PM BTN
3/15/2019 #22 Auburn South Carolina 3:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Grambling Prairie View A&M 3:30 PM ESPN3
3/15/2019 Southern Miss Western Kentucky 4:00 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 South Alabama Texas State 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Saint Joseph's Davidson 6:00 PM NBCSN
3/15/2019 New Orleans Sam Houston State 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Howard Norfolk State 6:00 PM
3/15/2019 Central Michigan #18 Buffalo 6:30 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 Xavier #25 Villanova 6:30 PM FS1
3/15/2019 #12 Florida State #2 Virginia 7:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Alabama #4 Kentucky 7:00 PM SECN
3/15/2019 Minnesota #13 Purdue 7:00 PM BTN
3/15/2019 Iowa State #15 Kansas State 7:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 SMU #24 Cincinnati 7:00 PM ESPNU
3/15/2019 Weber State Montana 7:30 PM
3/15/2019 North Carolina Central North Carolina A&T 8:00 PM
3/15/2019 UL Monroe Georgia Southern 8:30 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 SE Louisiana Abilene Christian 8:30 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Saint Louis Dayton 8:30 PM NBCSN
3/15/2019 #5 Duke #3 North Carolina 9:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Mississippi State #8 Tennessee 9:00 PM SECN
3/15/2019 San Diego State #14 Nevada 9:00 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 West Virginia #17 Kansas 9:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 Seton Hall #23 Marquette 9:00 PM FS1
3/15/2019 UT Rio Grande Valley New Mexico State 9:00 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Wichita State Temple 9:00 PM ESPNU
3/15/2019 Colorado Washington 9:00 PM PAC12
3/15/2019 Northern Illinois Bowling Green 9:00 PM
3/15/2019 Iowa #10 Michigan 9:25 PM BTN
3/15/2019 Long Beach State UC Irvine 9:30 PM ESPN3
3/15/2019 Alabama State Texas Southern 9:30 PM ESPN3
3/15/2019 Southern Utah Eastern Washington 10:00 PM
3/15/2019 Oregon Arizona State 11:30 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Grand Canyon Utah Valley 11:30 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Fresno State Utah State 11:30 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 CSU Fullerton UC Santa Barbara 11:59 PM ESPNU

The Whole is Greater

As the Vols entered the NCAA Tournament last year, there was no blueprint. SEC Champions at 25-8 (13-5) and a No. 3 seed, Tennessee was capable of winning games in a variety of ways. Turns out we didn’t have the drawings for Kyle Alexander’s absence and divine intervention on a Loyola-Chicago bounce. You just never know in March. But that team had as good of a chance to advance in the NCAA Tournament as any in Tennessee’s history.

And, as we’ve known for months now, this year’s team is more than just better than last year.

March works both ways. The only Tennessee team to make the Elite Eight in 2010 lost five times in the regular season by double digits, then by 29 to Kentucky in the SEC Tournament. They survived No. 11 seed San Diego State in round one, and took advantage of an upset in thrashing No. 14 Ohio in round two. And then they played one of the finest games in school history in beating No. 2 Ohio State, and were seconds away from the Final Four against No. 5 Michigan State.

Sometimes you get that path to the promised land: 11, 14, two, and five. Or the one that was in front of the Vols last season: 14, 11, then what would have been seven and nine in Atlanta.

Sometimes you get chalk. The next-closest Tennessee team to the promised land was 2007, who survived a knock-down, drag-out No. 4 vs No. 5 game with Virginia in the second round, then had a 20-point lead on No. 1 Ohio State before giving it away at the free throw line.

And sometimes you get 2014: millimeters away from firing the coach, then winning in overtime in the First Four, then beat downs of No. 6 UMass and another thrashing of another Cinderella in No. 14 Mercer in round two. And then falling to No. 2 Michigan in the Sweet 16 on a hotly disputed charge call.

When we throw around, “The best in school history,” how do we define it? In recent years, was it 2008? Ranked number one after another of the finest games in school history at Memphis, outright SEC Champions, but vanquished by 19 points in a bad match-up in the Sweet 16? Is it Pearl’s first team, easily one of the most memorable seasons in school history, who fought their way to a No. 2 seed only to fall in round two?

Seasons are always heavily influenced by where they end in March, but as all of them end with a loss save the champion, you have to be sure to celebrate appropriately along the way. Last year’s Vols got the nets and the SEC rings at 13-5. This year’s Vols went 15-3 and will come away empty handed on that particular piece of jewelry.

But everything, ultimately, is about giving yourself the best chance to win in the bracket. Not all jewelry is created equal. Build your team to produce its best basketball at the right time, and win enough games to make that path as easy as possible.

We love KenPom for many reasons, but one is its objectivity. So when ranking the best teams in recent history, it looks like this in that metric:

SeasonKenPomFinish
201423.69S16
201822.27R2
200822.17S16
200619.44R2
201018.50E8
200718.29S16

Cuonzo Martin’s last team, play-for-play, rated the best of this era before this season began. It lost a ton of close games (0-6 in games decided by six points or less) and rated 341st in luck in KenPom. But it was also capable of evisceration, as it did to Virginia by 35 and plenty of other teams down the stretch. This team, after all, had more NBA players on it than any in Tennessee’s recent history.

Meanwhile the 2008 Vols – 13-3 in games decided by six points or less – finished fourth in luck in KenPom. The 2010 Vols weren’t far behind at 20th, going 6-1 in games decided by six points or less before falling to Michigan State.

Which season is best or most memorable? Much of that is up to you to decide. You never know in March.

Here’s what we do know: no matter what happens in the SEC Tournament, this Tennessee team will be better positioned to make a run to the Final Four than any I’ve ever seen.

Tennessee’s current KenPom rating is 27.93. That would make them a 4-6 point favorite over 2008, 2014, and last season; they’d be almost a 10-point favorite over the 2010 Elite Eight squad. And they’re 145th in luck, going 4-3 in games decided by six points or less. As always, the best way to win close games is not to play them. And Tennessee is playing them against the right teams: five of those seven close game opponents are going to the NCAA Tournament, six if Alabama can get in.

This team has some incredible parts. Grant Williams just won SEC Player of the Year back-to-back. Admiral Schofield and Jordan Bone also earned first-or-second team all-conference honors. In the post-Ernie/Bernie era, only three Tennessee teams have placed three players on first-or-second All-SEC teams:

  • 1981: Gary Carter, Dale Ellis, Howard Wood
  • 2008: Chris Lofton, Tyler Smith, JaJuan Smith
  • 2019: Grant Williams, Admiral Schofield, Jordan Bone

We have seen incredible individual efforts from these guys. Grant Williams with 43 at Vanderbilt. Admiral Schofield with 30 against Gonzaga. Jordan Bone with 27 against Kentucky. But Tennessee’s best basketball still does not follow any individual blueprint. This goes the other way too: Lamonte Turner certainly struggled from the arc in Tennessee’s losses, but he also went a combined 0-for-7 in Tennessee’s two best performances of the season against Kentucky and Mississippi State, and had a signature performance in one of Tennessee’s best wins at Ole Miss.

We’re well-versed in what gets Tennessee beat: opponents getting to the free throw line far more often than the Vols. What qualifies as Tennessee’s best basketball is, in part, the opposite of this: great defense without putting the other team on the line. What the Vols did against Kentucky and Mississippi State is what will get them through in March.

But the Vols are also more than great individuals on the other end of the floor. The Vols are 24-1 when they have at least 15 assists, 3-3 when they don’t.

For all the strengths of their individuals, Tennessee’s best basketball still comes when the team flows together: a commitment to great defense without fouling, and an offense that flows through good ball movement creating great shots. One fly, we all fly indeed.

College basketball TV schedule for Vols fans: Conference Tournament Week

Here’s our list of games worth watching this week, specifically curated for fans of the Tennessee Volunteers.

Date Time TV
3/15/2019 UConn #11 Houston 12:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 Ohio State #6 Michigan State 12:30 PM BTN
3/15/2019 Florida #9 LSU 1:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Alabama #4 Kentucky 7:00 PM SECN
3/15/2019 Mississippi State #8 Tennessee 9:00 PM SECN
3/15/2019 Iowa #10 Michigan 9:25 PM BTN

Monday

No. 1 Gonzaga is back in action this evening. If the Vols can make it to the Final Four, the Bulldogs may be one of the other teams there, so it’s time to start paying attention to them again.

The SEC Tournament

The SEC Tournament tips off Wednesday, and we’ll be watching the Vanderbilt-Texas A&M game at 9:00 on the SEC Network, as it is one of two early games in the Vols’ bracket. Tip times for tournament games, by the way, are often dependent on what time the immediately-prior game finishes, so many of the tip times are approximate.

The winner of the Commodores-Aggies game takes on Mississippi State around 9:00 on Thursday, also on the SECN, and then the winner of that one advances to meet the Vols at around 9:00 on Friday. That one’s on the SECN, too.

Meanwhile, LSU and Kentucky both also play their first games on Friday. The Tigers are on ESPN at 1:00, and Kentucky is on the SECN at 7:00.

Here’s the full SEC Tournament Bracket.

The ACC Tournament

Why should Vols fans care about the ACC Tournament? Because the 1-seed line is currently crowded with ACC teams. Virginia, Duke, and North Carolina are all in action on Thursday. The Cavaliers tip at 12:30 on ESPN, North Carolina tips at 7:00 on ESPN, and Duke tips around 9:00. All games are on ESPN, and, like the SEC Tournament games, many of the tip times are approximate.

The ACC Tourney continues on Friday, but there are no pre-seeded teams scheduled for that day, so you’ll just have to watch the ACC Tournament bracket for updates.

Other games of interest

In addition to the SEC and ACC Tournament games, Houston, Michigan State, and Michigan all have games scheduled for this Friday. Houston plays at noon on ESPN2, Michigan State plays at 12:30 on BTN, and Michigan plays at 9:25 on BTN.

Full college basketball TV schedule

And here is the full searchable college basketball TV schedule for this week. This was prepared Monday, 3/11/19, so by the time you see this, it TBD teams may have already been decided.

Date Time TV
3/15/2019 UConn #11 Houston 12:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 Rhode Island VCU 12:00 PM NBCSN
3/15/2019 Ohio State #6 Michigan State 12:30 PM BTN
3/15/2019 Florida #9 LSU 1:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 UAB Old Dominion 1:30 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 Memphis UCF 2:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 George Mason St. Bonaventure 2:30 PM NBCSN
3/15/2019 Nebraska #19 Wisconsin 2:55 PM BTN
3/15/2019 #22 Auburn South Carolina 3:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Grambling Prairie View A&M 3:30 PM ESPN3
3/15/2019 Southern Miss Western Kentucky 4:00 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 South Alabama Texas State 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Saint Joseph's Davidson 6:00 PM NBCSN
3/15/2019 New Orleans Sam Houston State 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Howard Norfolk State 6:00 PM
3/15/2019 Central Michigan #18 Buffalo 6:30 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 Xavier #25 Villanova 6:30 PM FS1
3/15/2019 #12 Florida State #2 Virginia 7:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Alabama #4 Kentucky 7:00 PM SECN
3/15/2019 Minnesota #13 Purdue 7:00 PM BTN
3/15/2019 Iowa State #15 Kansas State 7:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 SMU #24 Cincinnati 7:00 PM ESPNU
3/15/2019 Weber State Montana 7:30 PM
3/15/2019 North Carolina Central North Carolina A&T 8:00 PM
3/15/2019 UL Monroe Georgia Southern 8:30 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 SE Louisiana Abilene Christian 8:30 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Saint Louis Dayton 8:30 PM NBCSN
3/15/2019 #5 Duke #3 North Carolina 9:00 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Mississippi State #8 Tennessee 9:00 PM SECN
3/15/2019 San Diego State #14 Nevada 9:00 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 West Virginia #17 Kansas 9:00 PM ESPN2
3/15/2019 Seton Hall #23 Marquette 9:00 PM FS1
3/15/2019 UT Rio Grande Valley New Mexico State 9:00 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Wichita State Temple 9:00 PM ESPNU
3/15/2019 Colorado Washington 9:00 PM PAC12
3/15/2019 Northern Illinois Bowling Green 9:00 PM
3/15/2019 Iowa #10 Michigan 9:25 PM BTN
3/15/2019 Long Beach State UC Irvine 9:30 PM ESPN3
3/15/2019 Alabama State Texas Southern 9:30 PM ESPN3
3/15/2019 Southern Utah Eastern Washington 10:00 PM
3/15/2019 Oregon Arizona State 11:30 PM ESPN
3/15/2019 Grand Canyon Utah Valley 11:30 PM ESPN+
3/15/2019 Fresno State Utah State 11:30 PM CBSSN
3/15/2019 CSU Fullerton UC Santa Barbara 11:59 PM ESPNU

Auburn 84, Tennessee 80: four-factors review

The Vols’ last game of the regular season didn’t turn out like they’d hoped, as they fell to the Auburn Tigers, 84-80. That, combined with LSU’s win over Vanderbilt resulted in LSU winning (for now — it may end up getting asterisked) the SEC Regular Season Championship with a 16-2 record.

It’s better to be disappointed now than two weeks from now, and this game can serve as a good, hard lesson to learn. The team made history this regular season, and yet when it came down to the last game, it couldn’t claim the thing that really mattered. The good news is that that wasn’t the final but the mid-term, and if the Vols can take that lesson into the NCAA Tournament, they can still ace the class.

The game against the Tigers could have turned out differently, of course, for a variety of reasons. Here’s a closer look at the outcome from a four-factors perspective.

In the preview, we said that we expected the following:

  • The Vols would shoot well and have some negative impact on Auburn’s usual shooting percentage.
  • Tennessee would have a few more turnovers than usual (11.2) and Auburn would have about its average of 12.8.
  • Both teams would get more than their averages on the offensive boards. Tennessee’s average was 10.1, and Auburn’s was 12.53.
  • Tennessee would earn a few more trips to the free throw line than usual (20.4), and Auburn would get somewhere around its average of 19.3.
  • Tennessee had to win on shooting percentage and had to keep turnovers, offensive rebounding, and free throw rate even.

Where it went according to plan

On the offensive boards, Tennessee did get a few more than its average of 10.1 as expected by netting 15. The Tigers should have gotten more than their average of 12.53, too, but they got only 7.

Where it went wrong

It’s really not that everything went terribly wrong. It’s just that nearly everything went a little bit wrong.

The Vols’ offense didn’t shoot poorly, but they weren’t up to their season standards. They shot 47.5% from the field (49.9% for the season) and 32.1% from three (35.2% for the season).

Meanwhile, the defense did not only not hold Auburn to below its average shooting percentage, it allowed them to shoot a higher percentage than usual: 46.4% from the field (44.9% for the season) and 38.2% from the arc (37.5% for the season). Tennessee should have had an advantage in these categories, but they didn’t.

The numbers suggested that Tennessee would end up with more turnovers than usual (11.2) in this game just because Auburn is really good at forcing them. That happened, as they turned the ball over 13 times. The surprising part to me is that Auburn had only 5 turnovers in this game despite averaging 12.8 per game. Tennessee’s not especially good at creating turnovers, and Auburn suddenly decided it wasn’t Christmas anymore.

Based on their opponents’ defensive numbers, the Vols should have gotten more trips to the free throw line than usual (20.4), and the Tigers should have gotten about their average of 19.3. Instead, the Vols got less than their average (16) while the Tigers got more (24). This is almost certainly a result of taking the tasty three-point bait instead of doing what they do with Grant Williams and an inside-out game.

Based on their season-long statistical resumes, the Vols had two main goals against Auburn: (1) keep the game even in turnovers, o-rebounds, and free throw rate; and (2) outshoot the Tigers. They won on offensive rebounds, but they lost on turnovers and free throw attempts, and they failed to win the effective shooting percentage battle.

Vols (Probably) Lose an SEC Title at Auburn. What’s the Big Picture?

All of these things can be true at the same time:

  • The Vols were on the wrong end of an unfortunate call in the final minutes of a big game. An Auburn three should have been ruled basket interference.
  • There are plenty of other things Tennessee could have done better to win; limiting turnovers (13) and not getting carried away from the arc (28 attempts) were a good place to start today.
  • The Vols are a jump-shooting team, and a really good one at that. As a result, they don’t get to the free throw line as much (29.8% free throw rate in league play, 13th in the SEC).
  • Vol opponents were whistled for 20+ fouls 10 times this season. All of them came in November-January.

The Vols got a bad call. The Vols did plenty of other things wrong. The Vols don’t get to the line very often because they’re a great jump-shooting team. The Vols don’t get to the line as much as they did earlier this year.

All of it was a factor in Auburn’s 84-80 win. And all of it could be a factor in the games that matter most. And those games are coming soon.

When you’re trying to win the big prize – a position Tennessee is still getting used to – everything that precedes the NCAA Tournament is about producing your best basketball for those three weeks. And the more you win, the easier the path in the bracket.

Tennessee’s best basketball was the last two games: 71-52 over Kentucky, 71-54 over Mississippi State. The defensive end gave it that qualifier. Today, Auburn launched 34 threes and, to their absolute credit, made 13 of them (38.2%). The Vols probably got a little caught up in it, firing 28 of their own. Before we’re too quick to judge that, however, keep in mind that 28 was the second-highest total of the season…behind 29 against Gonzaga. It can work both ways.

It works better for Tennessee playing inside-out; Auburn didn’t have the interior presence of Gonzaga, so it was certainly less wise today. But Tennessee works best overall when it defends at a higher level than we saw today. Part of it was Admiral Schofield’s foul trouble, limiting him to only 25 minutes. But that’s also simply part of who Tennessee is: the Vols play a short rotation, and can be vulnerable when the whistle doesn’t go their way.

So yes, the whistle got weird at LSU and Auburn. That’s half of Tennessee’s losses and two-thirds in SEC play; unless Vanderbilt gets the Holy Spirit tonight, the Vols (and possibly Kentucky) will become the first team to go 15-3 in SEC play and fail to win the title. Some of it is bad luck. Some of it is poor officiating. Some of it is Tennessee needing to be even better.

Much like the loss at Rupp, Tennessee can use this as a learning experience. On the whole, a 27-4 (15-3) season with overtime losses to Kansas and LSU, a four-point loss at Auburn, and falling at Rupp Arena? That’s an excellent year, worthy of the one seed conversation. When it started at 23-1 (11-0) and finished 4-3 – due more than anything to the increased degree of difficulty in the schedule – it feels a little more disappointing.

But the last word of this season is a long way from being written.

If the Vols are out of the No. 1 seed conversation, their biggest loss today is potentially having to face the very best teams (Virginia and full-strength Duke) in the Elite Eight instead of the Final Four. I don’t think the Vols are totally eliminated from the No. 1 seed conversation – what Kentucky and North Carolina do today and next week will matter – but they had to be considered the favorite going into today.

But the biggest picture finds a Tennessee team that just put its best basketball on the floor in Knoxville, then took itself out of it at Auburn before hot three-point shooting and a bad call finished them off. The Vols no longer control their own destiny for the SEC title and a No. 1 seed. But they absolutely control their own destiny for their best basketball showing up in the NCAA Tournament.

Keep getting better.

Your Gameday Gameplan: SEC regular championship weekend

It’s Gameday on Rocky Top, with No. 4 (NET Rankings) Tennessee (27-3, 15-2) traveling to No. 19 Auburn (21-9, 10-7). The Vols are in contention with LSU (and possibly Kentucky) for the title of SEC Regular Season Champion, and the outcomes of today’s games will decide it.

Here’s the Gameday Gameplan for Vols fans. Where and when to find the Vols game on TV, what other games to watch, and what to listen to and read as you wait for kickoff.

When is the Vols game, and what TV channel is it on?

Here are the particulars for today’s Tennessee game:

The best other games for Vols fans to watch today

Here’s our list of games to watch today and tomorrow, curated just for Vols fans:

Date Home Away Time TV
3/9/2019 #5 Tennessee Auburn 12:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Florida #6 Kentucky 2:00 PM CBS
3/9/2019 Baylor #13 Kansas 2:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Louisville #2 Virginia 4:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 #4 Duke #3 North Carolina 6:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 #7 Michigan #9 Michigan State 8:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Vanderbilt #10 LSU 8:30 PM SECN
3/10/2019 #12 Houston #20 Cincinnati 12:00 PM CBS

And here’s the complete list of this weekend’s games in case you’re looking for something else:

Date Home Away Time TV
3/9/2019 #5 Tennessee Auburn 12:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 #14 Florida State Wake Forest 12:00 PM ACCNE
3/9/2019 VMI #22 Wofford 12:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 #23 Villanova Seton Hall 12:00 PM FOX
3/9/2019 Syracuse Clemson 12:00 PM
3/9/2019 Notre Dame Pittsburgh 12:00 PM ACCNE
3/9/2019 Butler Providence 12:00 PM
3/9/2019 TCU Texas 12:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 Florida Atlantic Marshall 12:00 PM
3/9/2019 Robert Morris Fairleigh Dickinson 12:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Albany UMBC 1:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Saint Louis St. Bonaventure 1:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Georgia South Carolina 1:00 PM SECN
3/9/2019 Florida #6 Kentucky 2:00 PM CBS
3/9/2019 #8 Texas Tech Iowa State 2:00 PM ESPNN
3/9/2019 Baylor #13 Kansas 2:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 NC State Boston College 2:00 PM ACCNE
3/9/2019 Texas A&M Mississippi State 2:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 George Mason George Washington 2:00 PM
3/9/2019 South Alabama Appalachian State 2:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Troy Coastal Carolina 2:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 LIU Brooklyn St. Francis (PA) 2:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 #11 Purdue Northwestern 2:30 PM BTN
3/9/2019 Georgetown #16 Marquette 2:30 PM FOX
3/9/2019 Chattanooga East Tennessee State 2:30 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 UMKC Chicago State 3:00 PM
3/9/2019 Old Dominion UAB 3:00 PM
3/9/2019 UTSA Southern Miss 3:00 PM
3/9/2019 Texas State UT Arlington 3:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Oregon State Washington State 3:00 PM PAC12
3/9/2019 Ole Miss Missouri 3:30 PM SECN
3/9/2019 Bradley Loyola-Chicago 3:35 PM CBSSN
3/9/2019 Louisville #2 Virginia 4:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 #25 UCF Temple 4:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 Towson James Madison 4:00 PM
3/9/2019 Grand Canyon Seattle 4:00 PM
3/9/2019 West Virginia Oklahoma State 4:00 PM ESPNN
3/9/2019 UL Monroe Little Rock 4:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 UMass Rhode Island 4:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Fordham La Salle 4:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Arizona State Arizona 4:00 PM
3/9/2019 UNLV Colorado State 4:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Central Arkansas Northwestern State 4:00 PM
3/9/2019 SE Louisiana Nicholls 4:30 PM
3/9/2019 Incarnate Word Abilene Christian 4:30 PM
3/9/2019 Georgia State Georgia Southern 5:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 USC Colorado 5:00 PM PAC12
3/9/2019 Louisiana Arkansas State 5:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 St. John's Xavier 5:00 PM FOX
3/9/2019 UMass Lowell Hartford 5:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Arkansas-Pine Bluff Mississippi Valley State 5:30 PM
3/9/2019 Sam Houston State Stephen F. Austin 5:30 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 McNeese Lamar 5:30 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 #4 Duke #3 North Carolina 6:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Oklahoma #18 Kansas State 6:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 Alabama A&M Grambling 6:00 PM
3/9/2019 Houston Baptist Texas A&M-CC 6:00 PM
3/9/2019 Yale Princeton 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Alcorn State Prairie View A&M 6:00 PM
3/9/2019 Brown Pennsylvania 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Davidson Richmond 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Alabama Arkansas 6:00 PM SECN
3/9/2019 New Mexico Wyoming 6:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Samford UNC Greensboro 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Northern Iowa Drake 6:05 PM CBSSN
3/9/2019 UNC Wilmington Elon 6:30 PM
3/9/2019 Alabama State Jackson State 6:30 PM
3/9/2019 Air Force Boise State 7:00 PM
3/9/2019 San José St Fresno State 7:00 PM
3/9/2019 UCLA Utah 7:00 PM PAC12
3/9/2019 Dartmouth Cornell 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Harvard Columbia 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Northern Arizona Northern Colorado 7:00 PM
3/9/2019 Dayton Duquesne 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Monmouth Quinnipiac 7:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Western Illinois South Dakota State 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Maine Vermont 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Binghamton Stony Brook 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 North Texas Florida International 7:00 PM
3/9/2019 #7 Michigan #9 Michigan State 8:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Charlotte Rice 8:00 PM
3/9/2019 DePaul Creighton 8:00 PM FS1
3/9/2019 UC Riverside UC Davis 8:00 PM
3/9/2019 Murray State Belmont 8:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 Vanderbilt #10 LSU 8:30 PM SECN
3/9/2019 Southern Texas Southern 8:30 PM
3/9/2019 Wichita State Tulane 8:30 PM CBSSN
3/9/2019 UTEP Middle Tennessee 8:30 PM
3/9/2019 Mercer Furman 8:30 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 CSU Bakersfield Utah Valley 9:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 California Baptist New Mexico State 9:00 PM
3/9/2019 Eastern Washington Weber State 9:00 PM
3/9/2019 Idaho Idaho State 9:05 PM
3/9/2019 Tulsa Memphis 9:30 PM ESPNU
3/9/2019 North Dakota Omaha 9:30 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Siena Rider 9:30 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Pepperdine San Francisco 10:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 UC Santa Barbara Cal Poly 10:00 PM
3/9/2019 Oregon Washington 10:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Hawai'i CSU Fullerton 10:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Montana Sacramento State 10:05 PM
3/9/2019 Montana State Portland State 10:05 PM
3/9/2019 San Diego State #17 Nevada 10:30 PM CBSSN
3/9/2019 CSU Northridge UC Irvine 10:30 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 San Diego BYU 11:59 PM ESPN2
3/10/2019 #12 Houston #20 Cincinnati 12:00 PM CBS
3/10/2019 Illinois Penn State 12:00 PM FS1
3/10/2019 Rutgers Indiana 12:00 PM BTN
3/10/2019 TBD Hofstra 12:00 PM
3/10/2019 Navy Colgate 12:00 PM CBSSN
3/10/2019 Gardner-Webb Radford 1:00 PM ESPN
3/10/2019 UConn East Carolina 2:00 PM ESPNU
3/10/2019 Iowa Nebraska 2:00 PM BTN
3/10/2019 Lehigh Bucknell 2:00 PM CBSSN
3/10/2019 TBD TBD 2:05 PM CBS
3/10/2019 Delaware William & Mary 2:30 PM
3/10/2019 Liberty Lipscomb 3:00 PM ESPN
3/10/2019 TBD TBD 4:00 PM ESPN+
3/10/2019 SMU South Florida 4:00 PM ESPNU
3/10/2019 #21 Wisconsin Ohio State 4:30 PM
3/10/2019 TBD Northeastern 6:00 PM
3/10/2019 TBD Iona 6:00 PM ESPN3
3/10/2019 TBD TBD 6:30 PM ESPN+
3/10/2019 Oral Roberts North Dakota State 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/10/2019 Drexel Charleston 8:30 PM
3/10/2019 TBD Canisius 8:30 PM ESPNU
3/10/2019 South Dakota Purdue Fort Wayne 9:30 PM ESPN+

GRT game-week audio

Will’s regular Friday appearance with Josh Ward and Will West on WNML’s Sports 180 was preempted by the Lady Vols broadcast, so I thought this would be a good time to recommend to y’all Josh Ward’s daily Vols podcast Locked On Vols.

Pre-game prep

And in case you missed any of it, here’s some additional reading material to get you game-ready:

College basketball TV schedule for Vols fans: Weekend of 3.9.19

Here’s our list of games worth watching this weekend, specifically curated for fans of the Tennessee Volunteers.

Date Home Away Time TV
3/9/2019 #5 Tennessee Auburn 12:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Florida #6 Kentucky 2:00 PM CBS
3/9/2019 Baylor #13 Kansas 2:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Louisville #2 Virginia 4:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 #4 Duke #3 North Carolina 6:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 #7 Michigan #9 Michigan State 8:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Vanderbilt #10 LSU 8:30 PM SECN
3/10/2019 #12 Houston #20 Cincinnati 12:00 PM CBS

Saturday

Today’s the last day of the SEC regular season, and heading into today’s action, Tennessee and LSU are tied at 15-2 while Kentucky is one game back at 14-3. There are three games that will impact the SEC regular season championship today, and fortunately, they’re not all on at the same time.

First up, is Tennessee at Auburn at noon on ESPN. Check out our narrative and four factors game previews.

If Tennessee wins, the game at 2:00 on CBS between Kentucky and Florida won’t matter, as the Wildcats will still be at least one game behind regardless of anything else. If the Vols lose, however, we’ll not only want Kentucky to lose as well, we’ll need them to. You don’t have to actually choke out the words, “Go Gators,” but you do want those guys to win today.

And then at 8:30 tonight on the SEC Network, winless (in the conference) Vanderbilt goes to an LSU team playing without their suspended head coach. It’s extremely unlikely, but we want the Tigers to lose. Hey, this is college basketball, where crazy things can happen.

Of course, the SEC regular season championship isn’t the only thing of importance today, as the Vols are also jockeying for a 1-seed in the NCAA Tournament.

On that front, the biggest game to watch today is the showdown between Duke and North Carolina at 6:00 on ESPN. In case you’re wondering, yes, we have an opinion on who Vols fans should root for in the Blue Devils-Tar Heels game.

Also important is the Michigan-Michigan State game at 8:00 on ESPN. Those two teams are more remote threats, but they could become factors under certain circumstances.

Sunday

Tomorrow, Houston (which remains No. 6 in the all-important NET Rankings) could have its hands full with Cincinnati. That game is on at noon on CBS.

Full college basketball TV schedule

And here is the full searchable college basketball TV schedule for this weekend:

Date Home Away Time TV
3/9/2019 #5 Tennessee Auburn 12:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 #14 Florida State Wake Forest 12:00 PM ACCNE
3/9/2019 VMI #22 Wofford 12:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 #23 Villanova Seton Hall 12:00 PM FOX
3/9/2019 Syracuse Clemson 12:00 PM
3/9/2019 Notre Dame Pittsburgh 12:00 PM ACCNE
3/9/2019 Butler Providence 12:00 PM
3/9/2019 TCU Texas 12:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 Florida Atlantic Marshall 12:00 PM
3/9/2019 Robert Morris Fairleigh Dickinson 12:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Albany UMBC 1:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Saint Louis St. Bonaventure 1:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Georgia South Carolina 1:00 PM SECN
3/9/2019 Florida #6 Kentucky 2:00 PM CBS
3/9/2019 #8 Texas Tech Iowa State 2:00 PM ESPNN
3/9/2019 Baylor #13 Kansas 2:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 NC State Boston College 2:00 PM ACCNE
3/9/2019 Texas A&M Mississippi State 2:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 George Mason George Washington 2:00 PM
3/9/2019 South Alabama Appalachian State 2:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Troy Coastal Carolina 2:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 LIU Brooklyn St. Francis (PA) 2:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 #11 Purdue Northwestern 2:30 PM BTN
3/9/2019 Georgetown #16 Marquette 2:30 PM FOX
3/9/2019 Chattanooga East Tennessee State 2:30 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 UMKC Chicago State 3:00 PM
3/9/2019 Old Dominion UAB 3:00 PM
3/9/2019 UTSA Southern Miss 3:00 PM
3/9/2019 Texas State UT Arlington 3:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Oregon State Washington State 3:00 PM PAC12
3/9/2019 Ole Miss Missouri 3:30 PM SECN
3/9/2019 Bradley Loyola-Chicago 3:35 PM CBSSN
3/9/2019 Louisville #2 Virginia 4:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 #25 UCF Temple 4:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 Towson James Madison 4:00 PM
3/9/2019 Grand Canyon Seattle 4:00 PM
3/9/2019 West Virginia Oklahoma State 4:00 PM ESPNN
3/9/2019 UL Monroe Little Rock 4:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 UMass Rhode Island 4:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Fordham La Salle 4:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Arizona State Arizona 4:00 PM
3/9/2019 UNLV Colorado State 4:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Central Arkansas Northwestern State 4:00 PM
3/9/2019 SE Louisiana Nicholls 4:30 PM
3/9/2019 Incarnate Word Abilene Christian 4:30 PM
3/9/2019 Georgia State Georgia Southern 5:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 USC Colorado 5:00 PM PAC12
3/9/2019 Louisiana Arkansas State 5:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 St. John's Xavier 5:00 PM FOX
3/9/2019 UMass Lowell Hartford 5:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Arkansas-Pine Bluff Mississippi Valley State 5:30 PM
3/9/2019 Sam Houston State Stephen F. Austin 5:30 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 McNeese Lamar 5:30 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 #4 Duke #3 North Carolina 6:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Oklahoma #18 Kansas State 6:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 Alabama A&M Grambling 6:00 PM
3/9/2019 Houston Baptist Texas A&M-CC 6:00 PM
3/9/2019 Yale Princeton 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Alcorn State Prairie View A&M 6:00 PM
3/9/2019 Brown Pennsylvania 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Davidson Richmond 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Alabama Arkansas 6:00 PM SECN
3/9/2019 New Mexico Wyoming 6:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Samford UNC Greensboro 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Northern Iowa Drake 6:05 PM CBSSN
3/9/2019 UNC Wilmington Elon 6:30 PM
3/9/2019 Alabama State Jackson State 6:30 PM
3/9/2019 Air Force Boise State 7:00 PM
3/9/2019 San José St Fresno State 7:00 PM
3/9/2019 UCLA Utah 7:00 PM PAC12
3/9/2019 Dartmouth Cornell 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Harvard Columbia 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Northern Arizona Northern Colorado 7:00 PM
3/9/2019 Dayton Duquesne 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Monmouth Quinnipiac 7:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Western Illinois South Dakota State 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Maine Vermont 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Binghamton Stony Brook 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 North Texas Florida International 7:00 PM
3/9/2019 #7 Michigan #9 Michigan State 8:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Charlotte Rice 8:00 PM
3/9/2019 DePaul Creighton 8:00 PM FS1
3/9/2019 UC Riverside UC Davis 8:00 PM
3/9/2019 Murray State Belmont 8:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 Vanderbilt #10 LSU 8:30 PM SECN
3/9/2019 Southern Texas Southern 8:30 PM
3/9/2019 Wichita State Tulane 8:30 PM CBSSN
3/9/2019 UTEP Middle Tennessee 8:30 PM
3/9/2019 Mercer Furman 8:30 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 CSU Bakersfield Utah Valley 9:00 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 California Baptist New Mexico State 9:00 PM
3/9/2019 Eastern Washington Weber State 9:00 PM
3/9/2019 Idaho Idaho State 9:05 PM
3/9/2019 Tulsa Memphis 9:30 PM ESPNU
3/9/2019 North Dakota Omaha 9:30 PM ESPN+
3/9/2019 Siena Rider 9:30 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Pepperdine San Francisco 10:00 PM ESPN2
3/9/2019 UC Santa Barbara Cal Poly 10:00 PM
3/9/2019 Oregon Washington 10:00 PM ESPN
3/9/2019 Hawai'i CSU Fullerton 10:00 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 Montana Sacramento State 10:05 PM
3/9/2019 Montana State Portland State 10:05 PM
3/9/2019 San Diego State #17 Nevada 10:30 PM CBSSN
3/9/2019 CSU Northridge UC Irvine 10:30 PM ESPN3
3/9/2019 San Diego BYU 11:59 PM ESPN2
3/10/2019 #12 Houston #20 Cincinnati 12:00 PM CBS
3/10/2019 Illinois Penn State 12:00 PM FS1
3/10/2019 Rutgers Indiana 12:00 PM BTN
3/10/2019 TBD Hofstra 12:00 PM
3/10/2019 Navy Colgate 12:00 PM CBSSN
3/10/2019 Gardner-Webb Radford 1:00 PM ESPN
3/10/2019 UConn East Carolina 2:00 PM ESPNU
3/10/2019 Iowa Nebraska 2:00 PM BTN
3/10/2019 Lehigh Bucknell 2:00 PM CBSSN
3/10/2019 TBD TBD 2:05 PM CBS
3/10/2019 Delaware William & Mary 2:30 PM
3/10/2019 Liberty Lipscomb 3:00 PM ESPN
3/10/2019 TBD TBD 4:00 PM ESPN+
3/10/2019 SMU South Florida 4:00 PM ESPNU
3/10/2019 #21 Wisconsin Ohio State 4:30 PM
3/10/2019 TBD Northeastern 6:00 PM
3/10/2019 TBD Iona 6:00 PM ESPN3
3/10/2019 TBD TBD 6:30 PM ESPN+
3/10/2019 Oral Roberts North Dakota State 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/10/2019 Drexel Charleston 8:30 PM
3/10/2019 TBD Canisius 8:30 PM ESPNU
3/10/2019 South Dakota Purdue Fort Wayne 9:30 PM ESPN+

Tennessee at Auburn Preview

Since the SEC expanded in 2012-13 and went to an 18-game schedule, here are your champions:

  • 2013: Florida wins at 14-4, three others at 12-6
  • 2014: Florida goes undefeated at 18-0, two others 12-6
  • 2015: Kentucky goes undefeated at 18-0, Arkansas 13-5
  • 2016: Texas A&M and Kentucky split at 13-5
  • 2017: Kentucky wins at 16-2, Florida 14-4
  • 2018: Tennessee and Auburn split at 13-5

We’ve never seen three teams win at least 14 games, which is where things sit right now. If Kentucky beats Florida on Saturday, that’s three teams with at least 15 wins. And if the Vols win at Auburn and LSU beats 0-17 Vanderbilt (which we’ve also never seen on the other end of the spectrum), the league title will be shared at 16-2.

There are plenty of questions about Will Wade at the moment, including whether the LSU administration wants the image of him on a ladder cutting down nets if/when the Tigers beat Vanderbilt Saturday night. As the Vols can only control the Vols, we’ll focus on Auburn and a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. But it’s worth pointing out how amazing a 16-2 run through the SEC would be, even if it ends with an unprecedented tie for the title.

What’s the Simplest Path to a No. 1 Seed?

In Thursday’s Bracket Matrix, Virginia and Duke are unanimous No. 1 seeds in the 90 brackets in the pool; Gonzaga is just behind with an average seed of 1.07. And Tennessee is currently the fourth No. 1 seed with an average seed of 1.38, a good bit ahead of Kentucky (1.81) and North Carolina (1.83).

If Tennessee wins at Auburn and Duke wins at Chapel Hill, that could do it. There are various thoughts on if you want Duke or Carolina to prevail, but if we’re looking for simplicity, that includes giving up on the notion that Tennessee could be seeded higher than both Duke and UNC and back atop the Louisville region. A North Carolina win on Saturday could introduce that possibility, giving both Duke and Carolina five losses to Tennessee’s three. But given Tennessee’s history with the selection committee and the names on the front of the jersey, I’m not sure I like those odds. Could the selection committee put three ACC teams on the top line? Probably not, but when a program with zero Final Fours under its belt is the alternative, it makes me nervous.

In the last three years, the average No. 1 seed has 4.67 losses on Selection Sunday. So a Tennessee team at 28-3 (16-2), if it goes through Auburn, should feel pretty good about its chances heading to the SEC Tournament. But we also have a bit of institutional memory here: in 2008 the Vols went to the SEC Tournament at 28-3 (14-2), lost by a point in the semifinals post-tornado, and were given a No. 2 seed despite being No. 1 in RPI. It’s one of the better what-if’s in recent Tennessee history: that team’s path to the Final Four went through a criminally under-seeded Butler team in the second round, then ran into a match-up nightmare in the Sweet 16 against No. 3 Louisville. Had the Vols earned the final No. 1 seed instead of Kansas (who, to their credit, ultimately won it all), we could have seen Chris Lofton vs Steph Curry in the Elite Eight.

But we’ve seen a 28-3 Tennessee team that spent time at No. 1 in the regular season get denied on Selection Sunday. In this decade, six major conference teams failed to earn a No. 1 seed despite having less than five losses:

  • 2012 Missouri (30-4) – lost to No. 15 Norfolk State in Round One
  • 2014 Villanova (28-4) – lost to No. 7 UConn in Round Two
  • 2015 Virginia (29-3) – lost to No. 7 Michigan State in Round Two
  • 2015 Arizona (31-3) – lost to No. 1 Wisconsin in Elite Eight
  • 2017 UCLA (29-4) – lost to No. 2 Kentucky in Sweet 16
  • 2017 Arizona (30-4) lost to No. 11 Xavier in Sweet 16

So the committee could say, “See, we got it right, none of those teams made the Final Four (and only one made the Elite Eight).” This is a disgruntled list you don’t want to be on, though the last three times it happened to teams from a diminished Pac-12. If the Vols do fall to No. 2 even after a win at Auburn, feeling sorry for yourself is a recipe for disaster.

But the Vols have the Bracket Matrix, NET, and Torvik’s predictive bracketology all on their side at the moment. Nothing is certain, but you can make a really good argument for the Vols as the favorite to earn that final No. 1 seed.

But all of those roads go through Auburn.

On The Plains

Auburn rallied from down 11 at halftime to win at Alabama on Tuesday. I would imagine sharing the floor with their in-state brethren offered some support, but tomorrow will be the first game back at Auburn since tornadoes took 23 lives in the area. It’s also senior day for Bryce Brown; there will be emotions of all kinds in the building.

The Tigers are 21-9 (10-7), but other than a three-point loss at South Carolina, every defeat is to a Top 50 team in KenPom. Their only losses at home are to Kentucky (82-80) and Ole Miss (60-55). The Rebels took the invitation to launch threes and went 13-of-33 (39.4%) while Auburn hit just 5-of-20 (25%).

Austin Wiley missed the last three games with a leg injury; Pearl referred to him as “doubtful, but not out” yesterday. Without him this is a much smaller team. But Chuma Okeke can still bang, and this team beat the Vols in Knoxville last year solely on the strength of offensive rebounds in a stat line that’s still hard to believe: 22 offensive rebounds, 24 defensive rebounds.

Teams that have wanted to play fast with Tennessee have often regretted it (Louisville, Memphis, Georgia, Arkansas, South Carolina, etc.). The Tigers have the best-of-Pearl quality of controlled chaos: third in the league in turnovers allowed, third in creating turnovers. Statistically they aren’t crashing the offensive glass as hard this year, but the memories of last season will linger until the Vols prove otherwise.

But it’s the willingness to shoot and let shoot that’s most striking about this team: in SEC play, almost half of Auburn’s field goal attempts are from three (49.2%). And 43.6% of opponent attempts are from three.

One thing about this: it’s been less about Auburn’s makes than the opponent’s when it comes to wins and losses. When the opposition shoots less than 33.3% from the arc, Auburn is 11-1, its only loss to Duke. When teams hit at least 33.3% from three, Auburn is 10-8.

So, do you take the bait? Only seven teams have taken less than 20 threes against the Tigers this year. The Vols have taken less than 20 threes 15 times this year. Tennessee is 333rd nationally in the percentage of points they get from the arc. It could be a poise game in an emotionally charged environment.

Much is on the line. The Vols and Tigers will go first (Noon, ESPN), with Duke and Carolina at 6:00 PM and LSU hosting Vanderbilt at 8:30 PM. Tennessee has never won back-to-back SEC Championships. I think this team has plenty of history left.

Go Vols.