Tennessee-Auburn four-factors preview: All about shooting percentage?

No. 4 Tennessee (NET Rankings) travels to Auburn to take on the No. 19 Tigers tomorrow at noon on ESPN. It’s another opportunity for the Vols to get one of those all-important Quadrant 1 wins.

Here’s a look at the teams’ respective four factors numbers. Spoiler: Every category but one looks even when you put offense versus defense, but Tennessee appears to have an advantage on both ends of the floor in shooting percentage. They need to make sure they outshoot Auburn and keep everything else close to a tie.

Four Factors: Straight-Up

Effective FG%

  • Tennessee 55.4 (No. 22) (down from 55.6 (No. 16))
  • Auburn 53.9 (No. 51)

Prior opponents:

  • Mississippi State 54.6 (No. 36)
  • Kentucky 53.6 (No. 59)
  • Ole Miss 53.5 (No. 64)
  • LSU: 52.7 (No. 93)
  • Vanderbilt: 50.3 (No. 198)
  • Kentucky: 52.8 (No. 93)

Conclusions: Tennessee’s recent focus on defense has had some marginal negative impact on its offensive effective field goal percentage, but it’s still really, really good. Auburn, meanwhile, is not much different from Tennessee’s last three opponents in this category, meaning they’re not as good as the Vols, but they are still good.

Turnover %

  • Tennessee 15.8 (No. 23) (down from 15.6 (No. 20))
  • Auburn 18.3 (No. 151)

Prior opponents:

  • Mississippi State 19.1 (No. 220)
  • Kentucky 18.7 (No. 185)
  • Ole Miss 18.7 (No. 172)
  • LSU 19.0 (No. 196)
  • Vanderbilt: 19.9 (No. 255)
  • Kentucky: 18.5 (No. 158)

Conclusions: Different game, same story. Tennessee protects the ball, and its opponent does not.

Offensive Rebound %

  • Tennessee 31.2 (No. 90) (up from 30.9 (No. 94))
  • Auburn 33.5 (No. 39)

Prior opponents:

  • Mississippi State 34.6 (No. 23)
  • Kentucky 37.9 (No. 4)
  • Ole Miss 31.9 (No. 64)
  • LSU 37.4 (No. 6)
  • Vanderbilt: 28.6 (No. 178)
  • Kentucky: 38.3 (No. 3)

Conclusions: Tennessee is trending in the right direction in OR%, but it’s still not up to the level of its recent competition. Auburn is good at this, but not as good as either Kentucky or LSU. They’re essentially right in between Mississippi State and Ole Miss.

Free Throw Rate

  • Tennessee 33.9 (No. 159) (down from 34.1 (No. 155))
  • Auburn 30.9 (No. 245)

Prior opponents:

  • Mississippi State 33.0 (No. 188)
  • Kentucky 42.2 (No. 14)
  • Ole Miss 32.8 (No. 200)
  • LSU 39.8 (No. 29)
  • Vanderbilt: 44.8 (No. 7)
  • Kentucky: 41 (No. 22)

Conclusions: Good news. Auburn is allergic to the free throw line. They’re worse at getting there than any of the Vols’ last five opponents.

Those are the straight-up comparisons of the teams’ respective averages in the four factors, but what about the fact that those numbers are impacted in any given game by the opponent?

Four Factors: Opponent impact

Effective FG%

When Tennessee has the ball

Tennessee’s EFG% is 55.4 (No. 22), while Auburn’s defense against that is 50.8 (No. 174).

When Auburn has the ball

The Tigers’ shooting offense is 53.9 (No. 51), while Tennessee’s shooting defense is 46.3 (No. 22).

Conclusions

Auburn’s defense shouldn’t be much of an impediment to Tennessee’s effective field goal percentage, so it will basically just be up to the Vols’ players to get good shots and then hit them. Expect the Vols to shoot well. On the other side of the ball, Auburn’s no slouch in this category, but Tennessee’s defense is equipped to make things more difficult for them than usual.

Turnover %

When Tennessee has the ball

Tennessee’s turnover % is 15.8 (No. 23), which is really, really good. But Auburn is the best team in the nation at forcing turnovers (25.3, No. 1).

When Auburn has the ball

Auburn’s turnover % is not especially good at 18.3 (No. 151), but neither is Tennessee’s turnover defense, which is 18.9 (No. 153).

Conclusions

This is strength-on-strength when Tennessee has the ball and weakness-on-weakness when Auburn has it. Expect the Vols to have a few more turnovers than usual (11.2 average) and Auburn to have about their average of 12.8.

Offensive Rebounding %

When Tennessee has the ball

Tennessee’s OR% is 31.2 (No. 90), while Auburn’s defense in that category is 32.9 (No. 331). This is the biggest advantage for the Vols on offense.

When Auburn has the ball

The Tigers’ OR% is 33.5 (No. 39), while the Vols’ defense in that category is 30.0 (No. 256). And again, this is the biggest advantage of the game for Tennessee’s opponent tomorrow.

Conclusions

Tennessee should have its way on the offensive board tomorrow, but Auburn should do the same on its own end. Tennessee averages 10.10 o-rebounds per game while Auburn averages 12.53. Expect both to get more.

Free Throw Rate

When Tennessee has the ball

Tennessee’s FT Rate is 33.9 (No. 159), while Auburn’s defense against that is 37.7 (No. 286).

When Auburn has the ball

The Tigers’ FT Rate is 30.9 (No. 245), while Tennessee’s defense against that is 34.3 (No. 220).

Conclusions

To me, this looks like we should expect Tennessee to earn a few more trips to the free throw line than usual (20.4) and Auburn to get somewhere around its average of 19.3. Probably not a deciding factor.

Summary and Score Prediction

The numbers suggest that these two teams are close enough to equal in turnovers, offensive rebounding, and free throw attempts to call this an even matchup. If either team tips the scales on any of those three categories, it could decide the game.

Tennessee does seem to have a real advantage in effective field goal percentage, though. The Vols are marginally better shooting the ball than Auburn, plus the Vols’ defense should present more of a problem to Auburn’s offense than vice versa. I expect the Vols to outshoot the Tigers. If they do that and also maintain equilibrium in the other categories, they should come away with the victory. But the game is close enough on paper that if they don’t do both of those things, Auburn will likely win.

The goals for the Vols:

  1. Keep the game even in turnovers, offensive rebounding, and free throw rate.
  2. Outshoot the Tigers.

KenPom gives Tennessee a 54% chance of winning this one and puts the score at Tennessee 76, Auburn 75.

Go Vols.

Who should Vols fans root for in this weekend’s Duke-North Carolina game?

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

Tennessee is still in the Top 4 despite having their Quadrant 1 win over Mississippi State Tuesday negated by the win at Texas A&M falling from Q1 to Q2 thanks to the Aggies’ loss to South Carolina Tuesday.

Comparing Tennessee’s and Duke’s Q1 resumes

The main curiosity in the Top 4 is why Duke remains ahead of the Vols with a worse overall record and a Q2 loss to boot. Looking at the detail of each team’s Q1 record probably provides the answer.

Tennessee has home wins over No. 5 Kentucky and No. 23 Mississippi State, neutral site wins over No. 1 Gonzaga and No. 24 Louisville, and road wins over No. 34 Florida, No. 37 Ole Miss, and No. 51 Memphis. Their Q1 losses are on the road to No. 5 Kentucky and No. 13 LSU (in overtime), and on a neutral court to No. 18 Kansas (also in overtime).

Duke has only 1 Q1 home win, but it is against No. 2 Virginia. The Blue Devils have neutral site wins over No. 5 Kentucky, No. 10 Texas Tech, and No. 20 Auburn, and they have road wins over No. 2 Virginia, No. 19 Florida State, No. 24 Louisville, and No. 42 Syracuse. Duke’s Q1 losses are on the road to No. 12 Virginia Tech, on a neutral court to No. 1 Gonzaga, and at home to No. 7 North Carolina.

Tennessee really has no bad losses, and the Vols’ best is a neutral-site win over No. 1 and a home win over No. 5. The LSU game would have been a “good” road win, but alas.

Duke has a home loss, but it’s to a No. 7 team. It’s best includes a road win over No. 2, a neutral-site win over No. 5, and a home-win over No. 2. That road win over No. 2 Virginia is probably the difference.

Can Tennessee jump Duke this weekend?

All that said, I wonder if Duke falls below Tennessee even if the Vols beat Auburn and the Blue Devils lose at No. 7 North Carolina this weekend. For them, it’s not a bad loss, but it is another loss. And for the Vols, it wouldn’t be the best win, but it would be a good one. This is where I should put my opinion, but I really have no clue. Regardless, they’ll almost certainly stay ahead of the Vols if they win this weekend, so I’m rooting hard for North Carolina.

Although it’s a legitimate question, I’m not all that concerned about the possibility of the Tar Heels actually jumping the Vols if they beat Duke Saturday. If they win, their Q1 resume would include a win over No. 1 Gonzaga, but it’s a win at home. Their best win would actually be the road victory over Duke. They’ve played No. 2 Virginia, No. 5 Kentucky, and No. 9 Michigan, but they lost all three of those games. The argument would be that Duke swept Virginia and UNC swept Duke, but I just think their overall resume is too far behind the Vols’ to jump Tennessee in one weekend, assuming Tennessee wins.

This weekend, what’s good for the Heels is good for the Vols.

Tennessee 71, Mississippi State 54: four-factors review

The Tennessee Vols improved their Quadrant 1 record to 8-3 with an impressive 71-54 win over the Mississippi State Bulldogs last night in Thompson-Boling Arena.

The Volunteers were a little sloppier with the ball than usual, but they won decisively in both offensive and defensive effective field goal percentage, and they achieved an important stalemate on the offensive glass.

Effective Field Goal Percentage

We noted in our four-factors preview of this game that both teams were highly-ranked in effective field goal percentage but that Tennessee’s defense would likely have more of an impact on the Bulldogs’ offense than vice versa.

Both teams shot about the same percentage from three (Tennessee 26.1% on 6-23; Mississippi State 25% on 4-16), but the Vols dominated from the field. While shooting 26-61 for 42.6%, Tennessee held the Bulldogs to 19-57 for 33.3%. Tennessee’s season average from the field is 50%, while Mississippi State’s is 46.9%, so the Vols were a little off on offense themselves but did extremely well on defense. They’re now 21st in both offensive and defensive efficiency, according to KenPom.

It was a strong showing in the shooting and shooting defense departments last night for the good guys.

Turnover Percentage

As we expected, Tennessee did get plenty of freebies courtesy of a generous Mississippi State squad, but the Vols were pretty sloppy protecting the ball themselves last night, and it was mostly their own fault.

The Bulldogs gave up 15 turnovers, slightly more than their average of 13.4, but the Vols were all too happy to return the favor. They gave up 17 turnovers, significantly more than their average of 11.2.

It wasn’t the best night for Tennessee in this category, but it didn’t matter.

Offensive Rebounding Percentage

It seems to be a recurring theme that opponents have an advantage on paper over the Vols in offensive rebounding, but that Tennessee makes sure it doesn’t happen when the game is played. The Bulldogs are a really good offensive rebounding team (No. 23 in KenPom), and Tennessee’s season-long numbers at preventing teams from racking up the o-boards are terrible (they’re No. 248).

And yet, the rebounding game last night was essentially a stalemate. The Bulldogs had only one more offensive rebound than Tennessee (16-15), and the Vols had 29 defensive boards to Mississippi State’s 24.

Turning a disadvantage in this category into a stalemate should be considered a resounding victory for the Vols.

Free Throw Rate

The numbers suggested an even contest in this category with both teams getting essentially their season averages for trips to the line. Tennessee shot 22 free attempts (slightly above their average of 20.55), while the Bulldogs shot 17 (slightly below their average of 19.21).

Call this a win for the Volunteers, although it didn’t really appear to be much of a factor either way.

Tennessee’s recent renewed focus on shooting and rebounding defense has been paying dividends lately, and both were key to the dominating victory on Senior Night.

Hello Defense My Old Friend

We’ve said it plenty of times this year: with the exception of seven seed UConn in 2014, every national champion of the KenPom era has had a Top 20 offense and defense (original story from the SB Nation Villanova blog last February). In the last week of the regular season, seven teams hit that criteria: Virginia, Gonzaga, Duke, Michigan State, North Carolina, Michigan, and Kentucky.

The Vols don’t have a Top 20 defense, haven’t for most of the season, and plunged into the 50’s after the loss at Kentucky.

After last night’s 71-54 win over Mississippi State? The defense still isn’t Top 20.

But it is 21st.

It started with a strong defensive performance against Vanderbilt; the offense didn’t sing in a 58-46 win, but the Commodores shot 32.1% from the floor. Still, that was Vandy, winless in SEC play. Then the Vols lost at LSU in overtime; the Tigers were without Tremont Waters, which makes it hard to judge, and though they only shot 38.5% from the floor, they got to the free throw line 700 31 times. Then Ole Miss buried a ton of tough threes, hitting 9-of-23 (39.1%) from the arc in another close game.

The defense was better, but it was tough to tell. But the last two games, against two of the best teams Tennessee has played all year? Kentucky shot 31.8%, their lowest total of the year. Second-lowest: 39.1% against Kansas. Mississippi State shot 33.3%, their second-lowest total of the year (31.1% at Rupp).

Via Sports-Reference, In the first 25 games of the season, the Vols allowed 39.7% from the floor and 33.4% from the arc. In the last five games – four against offenses rating in the Top 35 in KenPom – the Vols have allowed 35.7% from the floor and 31.1% from the arc.

And here’s what’s pushing Tennessee over the top. You know how all year we’ve been saying the Vols traded creating turnovers in 2018 for blocked shots in 2019 (still a thing they’re great at, ninth nationally in shot-blocking percentage and third in shot-blocking percentage allowed)? In the last two games, Kentucky turned it over 16 times with eight Tennessee steals, then Mississippi State gave it away 17 times with a dozen (!) Tennessee steals, a season high.

If there was a switch, apparently Rupp Arena flipped it, and the rematch taped it to the on position. Kentucky was playing without Reid Travis, to be fair, so I know we can’t hang everything on beating a team by 19 that beat us by 17. But Mississippi State is a five seed in the Bracket Matrix…and the Vols obliterated them.

Nevermind any concern about the Vols peaking too soon. This is their best basketball, right on time.

Tennessee-Mississippi State four-factors preview: defend after offensive boards

No. 5 Tennessee looks for another Quadrant 1 win tonight as Mississippi State comes to Thompson-Boling. It’s Senior Night, and the game tips at 9:00 ET and is televised on the SEC Network.

Here are the teams’ respective four factors numbers.

Four Factors: Straight-Up

Effective FG%

  • Tennessee 55.6 (No. 16) (holding steady at 55.9 (No. 16))
  • Mississippi State 54.6 (No. 36)

Prior opponents:

  • Kentucky 53.6 (No. 59)
  • Ole Miss 53.5 (No. 64)
  • LSU: 52.7 (No. 93)
  • Vanderbilt: 50.3 (No. 198)
  • Kentucky: 52.8 (No. 93)

Conclusions: The Bulldogs have one of the best shooting offenses we’ve seen recently, which is saying something.

Turnover %

  • Tennessee 15.6 (No. 20) (up from 15.9 (No. 24))
  • Mississippi State 19.1 (No. 220)

Prior opponents:

  • Kentucky 18.7 (No. 185)
  • Ole Miss 18.7 (No. 172)
  • LSU 19.0 (No. 196)
  • Vanderbilt: 19.9 (No. 255)
  • Kentucky: 18.5 (No. 158)

Conclusions: Oooh, these guys come bearing gifts! We like gifts.

Offensive Rebound %

  • Tennessee 30.9 (No. 94) (down from 31.3 (No. 86))
  • Mississippi State 34.6 (No. 23)

Prior opponents:

  • Kentucky 37.9 (No. 4)
  • Ole Miss 31.9 (No. 64)
  • LSU 37.4 (No. 6)
  • Vanderbilt: 28.6 (No. 178)
  • Kentucky: 38.3 (No. 3)

Conclusions: The Bulldogs are better than the Vols at grabbing their own misses, but they’re not as good as either Kentucky or LSU in that department.

Free Throw Rate

  • Tennessee 34.1 (No. 155) (down from 34.6 (No. 141))
  • Mississippi State 33.0 (No. 188)

Prior opponents:

  • Kentucky 42.2 (No. 14)
  • Ole Miss 32.8 (No. 200)
  • LSU 39.8 (No. 29)
  • Vanderbilt: 44.8 (No. 7)
  • Kentucky: 41 (No. 22)

Conclusions: This could be a welcome reprieve for the Vols, as the Bulldogs aren’t especially good at getting to the free throw line.

Those are the straight-up comparisons of the teams’ respective averages in the four factors, but what about the fact that those numbers are impacted in any given game by the opponent?

Four Factors: Opponent impact

Effective FG%

When Tennessee has the ball

Tennessee’s EFG% is 55.6 (No. 16), while Mississippi State’s defense against that is 50.1 (No. 145).

When Mississippi State has the ball

The Bulldogs’ shooting offense is 54.6 (No. 36), while Tennessee’s shooting defense is 46.6 (No. 23).

Conclusions

The hope here is that Tennessee will shoot about as well as it usually does and that Tennessee’s defense will impede the Bulldogs more than they’ll impede us.

Turnover %

When Tennessee has the ball

Tennessee’s turnover % is 15.6 (No. 20), while the Bulldogs’ turnover defense is 20.0 (No. 92).

When Mississippi State has the ball

Mississippi State’s turnover % is 19.1 (No. 220), but Tennessee’s turnover defense is only marginally better, at 18.7 (No. 166).

Conclusions

The Vols should have an advantage in the turnovers category. They generally protect the ball well and shouldn’t be troubled too much by the defense. On the other side of the ball, they don’t create many turnovers, but should get plenty of freebies anyway.

Offensive Rebounding %

When Tennessee has the ball

Tennessee’s OR% is 30.9 (No. 94), while Mississippi State’s defense in that category is 29.4 (No. 232).

When Mississippi State has the ball

The Bulldogs’ OR% is 34.6 (No. 23), while the Vols’ defense in that category is 29.8 (No. 248). As usual, this is the biggest advantage of the game for Tennessee’s opponent tonight.

Conclusions

Tennessee should be able to get its share of offensive rebounds, but the biggest threat tonight appears to be Mississippi State on the offensive boards. If the Vols don’t box out and rebound as a defense, this could spell trouble. The Bulldogs shoot very well and could do some real damage against a defense scattered by a missed shot.

Free Throw Rate

When Tennessee has the ball

Tennessee’s FT Rate is 34.1 (No. 155), while Mississippi State’s defense against that is 31.7 (No. 145).

When Mississippi State has the ball

The Bulldogs’ FT Rate is 33.0 (No. 188), while Tennessee’s defense against that is 34.2 (No. 216).

Conclusions

To me, this looks essentially like a stalemate, so I expect both teams to get about their average trips to the free throw line (20.55 for the Vols and 19.21 for the Bulldogs).

Summary and Score Prediction

Both teams sport high-powered, efficient-shooting offenses, but the Vols’ shooting defense should have more of an impact on the Bulldogs than vice versa. Tennessee also has an advantage in protecting the ball.

The danger for the Vols comes after Mississippi State misses shots. The Bulldogs are good at getting offensive rebounds, and Tennessee’s not especially well-equipped to keep them from doing it. Plus, I wonder if it’s more difficult to defend against good shooting teams after they get offensive rebounds when the defense is out of position.

The goals for the Vols:

  1. Make the most of their advantage in efficient shooting percentage.
  2. Box out. Get the rebound.
  3. When the Bulldogs get an offensive rebound, get back into proper defensive position quickly.

KenPom gives Tennessee a 78% chance of winning this one and puts the score at Tennessee 79, Mississippi State 71.

Go Vols.

Mississippi State Preview & #1 Seed Update

Let’s return to a question we posed before the Kentucky game: would you rather be the one seed in Kansas City, or the two seed in Louisville?

I’m not worried about the difference between playing a 15 or 16 seed, or even the potential quality of opponent in the Sweet 16. If Tennessee is trying to make its first Final Four and win the national championship, you want the easiest path to get there. And while we’ll break down the bracket as soon as it’s released like everyone else, in the advanced stats world, three teams have separated themselves at the top: Virginia, and the full-strength versions of Gonzaga and Duke.

They’re 1-2-3 everywhere you look, with the exception of the AP and Coaches Polls. North Carolina is third in both of those, set for a rematch with probably-full-strength #4 Duke on Saturday. The head-to-head police applaud the Tar Heels being ranked above the Blue Devils for now. We’ll see if that holds.

But everywhere else – Bracket Matrix, KenPom, NET, and Bart Torvik’s predictive bracketology – Virginia, Gonzaga, and Duke are 1-2-3 in some order.

In KenPom, those three teams are somewhere between a 6-8 point favorite against Tennessee on a neutral floor. The Vols are currently seventh in KenPom, but within one possession of the other three teams in front of them (and the next four behind them). When we get closer to Selection Sunday, we can argue for Tennessee’s resume – which is outstanding, by the way, and with the win over Kentucky now includes another elite victory to go with the two overtime losses and Rupp Arena bullet point. Tennessee deserves to be ranked higher than they are right now, and I can make a plenty good argument that they deserve that fourth one seed.

But if we’re talking about ratings instead of rankings? Virginia and full-strength Gonzaga and Duke have separated themselves from the field. Those are the only three teams that would be more than a push against Tennessee. If we’re trying to survive and advance? I’d like to see those three teams in the Final Four, and not before. And the best way to do that is to grab that last one seed.

I think Tennessee’s odds of getting to Minneapolis are higher as the one seed in Kansas City than the two seed with a short drive to Louisville, if that drive ends with facing Virginia or Duke in the Elite Eight. Let’s be clear: we’re trying to win the national championship, which could very well mean going through those teams eventually. But when we’re also trying to make the Final Four for the first time ever? Let’s save it for Minneapolis.

The good news for Tennessee: I think they control their own destiny for that last one seed.

A Rick Barnes vs Ben Howland Showdown of Old

Fun fact: Barnes beat the Russell Westbrook/Kevin Love UCLA team at Texas.

It took Howland an extra year to get here, but Mississippi State is a six seed and climbing in the latest Bracket Matrix. The Bulldogs started 12-1 with an impressive set of non-conference wins (St. Mary’s, Clemson, Cincinnati, and the last team to beat Wofford on December 19). Then they opened conference play with an overtime loss to South Carolina and a four point loss to an Ole Miss team we still weren’t sure of. Since then they’ve gone 9-5, including two losses to Kentucky and an overtime loss to LSU. They ripped off five straight wins over lower-tier SEC foes before falling at Auburn 80-75 on Saturday. Their most impressive road win is at Ole Miss (who returned the favor in Starkville), but they lost at South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, and Auburn.

Tennessee blew out this team in late February last season on the road behind 24 points from Admiral Schofield, then got a much tougher challenge in the SEC Tournament before prevailing 62-59.

This is another good offensive team, led by Quindary Weatherspoon and fueled by what Lamar Peters gives them from the point. 6’10” Aric Holman is back and joined by 6’10” freshman Reggie Perry, who has been great on the offensive glass. The Bulldogs as a team are 23rd in offensive rebounding percentage and 36th in effective field goal percentage, shooting it well inside and outside the arc.

They also lead the league in blocks and steals, but have been victimized by the three ball (36.6% allowed, 12th worst in the league). When they create chaos, they win: 15-2 when they force at least 13 turnovers (with losses to LSU and Kentucky), 6-6 when they don’t.

The Vols will need to be clean, and they’ll need to be good defensively again. This will be the fourth Top 20 offense the Vols have faced this season, and Auburn will make five on Saturday. For Tennessee to earn that last one seed, the defense we saw against Kentucky must become the rule.

Just like they drew it up for a critical final week battle: 9:00 PM ET, SEC Network. Go Vols.

College basketball TV schedule for Vols fans: Week of 3.4.19

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

Date Away Home Time TV
3/4/2019 #2 Virginia Syracuse 7:00 PM ESPN
3/5/2019 Wake Forest #4 Duke 7:00 PM ESPN
3/5/2019 Nebraska #9 Michigan State 7:00 PM ESPN2
3/5/2019 #3 North Carolina Boston College 8:00 PM ACCNE
3/5/2019 Mississippi State #5 Tennessee 9:00 PM SECN
3/5/2019 #6 Kentucky Ole Miss 9:00 PM ESPN
3/5/2019 #13 Kansas Oklahoma 9:00 PM ESPN2
3/6/2019 #10 LSU Florida 7:00 PM ESPN2
3/7/2019 SMU #12 Houston 9:00 PM ESPN

Monday

Tonight we’re rooting for Syracuse over Virginia.

Tuesday

The first order of business Tuesday is the Vols taking care of business at home against Mississippi State at 9:00 on the SEC Network.

But we’re also rooting for Duke, Michigan State, North Carolina, and Kentucky to all lose. Kansas can win.

Wednesday

On Wednesday, we want Florida to beat LSU.

Thursday

Root for SMU to upset Houston Thursday night.

Full college basketball TV schedule

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

Date Home Away Time TV
3/4/2019 #2 Virginia Syracuse 7:00 PM ESPN
3/4/2019 North Alabama North Florida 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/4/2019 Jacksonville Liberty 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/4/2019 NJIT Florida Gulf Coast 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/4/2019 Morgan State Maryland-Eastern Shore 7:00 PM
3/4/2019 Norfolk State Delaware State 7:00 PM
3/4/2019 Kennesaw State Lipscomb 8:00 PM ESPN+
3/4/2019 Jackson State Arkansas-Pine Bluff 8:30 PM
3/4/2019 Grambling Mississippi Valley State 8:30 PM
3/4/2019 Texas Southern Alabama A&M 8:30 PM
3/4/2019 Texas #8 Texas Tech 9:00 PM ESPN
3/4/2019 #18 Kansas State TCU 9:00 PM ESPN2
3/4/2019 Prairie View A&M Alabama State 9:00 PM ESPNU
3/4/2019 Northern Arizona Montana 9:00 PM
3/4/2019 Southern Utah Montana State 9:00 PM
3/4/2019 Weber State Idaho State 9:05 PM
3/5/2019 Xavier Butler 6:00 PM FS1
3/5/2019 Wake Forest #4 Duke 7:00 PM ESPN
3/5/2019 Nebraska #9 Michigan State 7:00 PM ESPN2
3/5/2019 #15 Virginia Tech #14 Florida State 7:00 PM ESPNU
3/5/2019 #19 Buffalo Ohio 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Bowling Green Akron 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Ball State Eastern Michigan 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Albany Binghamton 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Stony Brook Hartford 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Maine New Hampshire 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 South Carolina Texas A&M 7:00 PM SECN
3/5/2019 Northern Illinois Central Michigan 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Western Michigan Toledo 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Stephen F. Austin Abilene Christian 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Kent State Miami (OH) 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Longwood Hampton 7:00 PM ESPN3
3/5/2019 South Carolina Upstate Charleston Southern 7:00 PM ESPN3
3/5/2019 UNC Asheville Presbyterian 7:00 PM ESPN3
3/5/2019 Rhode Island Saint Joseph's 7:00 PM CBSSN
3/5/2019 Holy Cross Lafayette 7:00 PM
3/5/2019 Loyola (MD) Boston University 7:00 PM
3/5/2019 UMass Lowell Vermont 7:20 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 VCU George Mason 7:30 PM
3/5/2019 #3 North Carolina Boston College 8:00 PM ACCNE
3/5/2019 #11 Purdue Minnesota 8:00 PM BTN
3/5/2019 UIC Green Bay 8:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 IUPUI Wright State 8:00 PM ESPN+
3/5/2019 Pittsburgh Miami 8:00 PM ACCNE
3/5/2019 Mississippi State #5 Tennessee 9:00 PM SECN
3/5/2019 #6 Kentucky Ole Miss 9:00 PM ESPN
3/5/2019 #13 Kansas Oklahoma 9:00 PM ESPN2
3/5/2019 Auburn Alabama 9:00 PM ESPNU
3/5/2019 East Carolina Wichita State 9:00 PM CBSSN
3/5/2019 Utah State Colorado State 9:00 PM
3/5/2019 #17 Nevada Air Force 11:00 PM ESPN2
3/6/2019 LIU Brooklyn Sacred Heart 6:00 PM
3/6/2019 #16 Marquette Seton Hall 6:30 PM FS1
3/6/2019 Missouri Georgia 6:30 PM SECN
3/6/2019 #10 LSU Florida 7:00 PM ESPN2
3/6/2019 Penn State Rutgers 7:00 PM BTN
3/6/2019 Iowa State West Virginia 7:00 PM ESPNU
3/6/2019 St. Bonaventure Davidson 7:00 PM
3/6/2019 La Salle Dayton 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 Richmond UMass 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 George Washington Fordham 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 Wagner Fairleigh Dickinson 7:00 PM
3/6/2019 Bryant St. Francis (PA) 7:00 PM
3/6/2019 Detroit Mercy Northern Kentucky 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 Youngstown State Oakland 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 Louisiana Tech Florida Atlantic 7:00 PM
3/6/2019 Florida International Marshall 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 Rice Charlotte 7:00 PM
3/6/2019 Southern Miss Old Dominion 7:00 PM
3/6/2019 St. Francis (BKN) Robert Morris 7:00 PM
3/6/2019 SIU-Edwardsville Morehead State 7:30 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 UTSA Western Kentucky 7:30 PM
3/6/2019 Texas A&M-CC McNeese 7:30 PM
3/6/2019 Central Arkansas Sam Houston State 7:30 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 Northwestern State Nicholls 8:00 PM
3/6/2019 New Orleans SE Louisiana 8:00 PM
3/6/2019 Incarnate Word Houston Baptist 8:00 PM
3/6/2019 Duquesne Saint Louis 8:00 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 South Florida Tulane 8:00 PM ESPN3
3/6/2019 Providence Creighton 8:00 PM CBSSN
3/6/2019 Georgetown DePaul 8:30 PM FS1
3/6/2019 Arkansas Vanderbilt 8:30 PM SECN
3/6/2019 Ohio State Northwestern 9:00 PM BTN
3/6/2019 Clemson Notre Dame 9:00 PM ESPNU
3/6/2019 Georgia Tech NC State 9:00 PM ACCNE
3/6/2019 Oklahoma State Baylor 9:00 PM ESPN2
3/6/2019 Middle Tennessee UTEP 9:00 PM
3/6/2019 UT Martin Eastern Illinois 9:30 PM ESPN+
3/6/2019 Fresno State San Diego State 10:00 PM CBSSN
3/6/2019 Wyoming San José St 10:00 PM
3/6/2019 Oregon State Washington 10:00 PM PAC12
3/6/2019 UC Riverside Long Beach State 10:00 PM
3/6/2019 Oregon Washington State 11:00 PM
3/6/2019 Boise State New Mexico 11:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 TBD Radford 12:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 TBD Winthrop 2:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 Saint Peter's Marist 5:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 TBD Campbell 6:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 #20 Cincinnati #25 UCF 7:00 PM ESPN2
3/7/2019 Iowa #21 Wisconsin 7:00 PM ESPN
3/7/2019 Army Lehigh 7:00 PM
3/7/2019 Navy American 7:00 PM
3/7/2019 TBD Bucknell 7:00 PM
3/7/2019 TBD Colgate 7:00 PM
3/7/2019 Fairfield Manhattan 7:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 Temple UConn 7:00 PM CBSSN
3/7/2019 Troy Appalachian State 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/7/2019 South Alabama Coastal Carolina 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/7/2019 TBD TBD TBD ESPN+
3/7/2019 TBD TBD TBD ESPN+
3/7/2019 Valparaiso Indiana State 7:05 PM
3/7/2019 TBD Austin Peay 7:30 PM
3/7/2019 Bethune-Cookman Florida A&M 7:30 PM
3/7/2019 Coppin State Morgan State 7:30 PM
3/7/2019 Delaware State Maryland-Eastern Shore 7:30 PM
3/7/2019 Savannah State South Carolina State 7:30 PM
3/7/2019 North Carolina Central North Carolina A&T 7:30 PM
3/7/2019 Louisiana Little Rock 7:30 PM ESPN+
3/7/2019 Indiana Illinois 8:00 PM FS1
3/7/2019 California Baptist UT Rio Grande Valley 8:00 PM
3/7/2019 Howard Norfolk State 8:00 PM
3/7/2019 UL Monroe Arkansas State 8:00 PM ESPN+
3/7/2019 High Point Gardner-Webb 8:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 Alcorn State Texas Southern 8:30 PM
3/7/2019 Southern Prairie View A&M 8:30 PM
3/7/2019 Alabama State Grambling 8:30 PM
3/7/2019 Alabama A&M Jackson State 8:30 PM
3/7/2019 Northern Colorado Southern Utah 8:30 PM
3/7/2019 SMU #12 Houston 9:00 PM ESPN
3/7/2019 Idaho Weber State 9:00 PM
3/7/2019 UCLA Colorado 9:00 PM ESPN2
3/7/2019 Grand Canyon Utah Valley 9:00 PM
3/7/2019 Pacific Pepperdine 9:00 PM
3/7/2019 Niagara Monmouth 9:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 Eastern Washington Idaho State 9:05 PM
3/7/2019 TBD Jacksonville State 9:30 PM
3/7/2019 Evansville Illinois State 9:35 PM ESPN+
3/7/2019 UC Irvine Cal Poly 10:00 PM
3/7/2019 UC Santa Barbara CSU Northridge 10:00 PM ESPN3
3/7/2019 CSU Bakersfield Seattle 10:00 PM
3/7/2019 USC Utah 10:00 PM
3/7/2019 Hawai'i UC Davis 10:00 PM
3/7/2019 Montana Portland State 10:05 PM
3/7/2019 Montana State Sacramento State 10:05 PM
3/7/2019 California Stanford 11:00 PM ESPNU
3/7/2019 Portland San Diego 11:00 PM
3/8/2019 TBD Loyola-Chicago 1:05 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Bradley Missouri State 3:35 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Brown Princeton 4:00 PM ESPNU
3/8/2019 Western Carolina VMI 5:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Bowling Green #19 Buffalo 6:00 PM ESPNU
3/8/2019 TBD TBD 6:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Akron Kent State 6:30 PM
3/8/2019 Miami #15 Virginia Tech 7:00 PM ESPN2
3/8/2019 Minnesota #24 Maryland 7:00 PM FS1
3/8/2019 Northern Illinois Ball State 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Miami (OH) Ohio 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Eastern Michigan Toledo 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Central Michigan Western Michigan 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Yale Pennsylvania 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Dartmouth Columbia 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 Harvard Cornell 7:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 TBD Iona 7:00 PM ESPN3
3/8/2019 TBD Drake 7:05 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 The Citadel Samford 7:30 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 TBD Belmont 8:00 PM
3/8/2019 TBD TBD 8:00 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 TBD Loyola Marymount 9:00 PM
3/8/2019 Saint Joseph's VCU 9:00 PM ESPN2
3/8/2019 TBD Canisius 9:30 PM ESPN3
3/8/2019 Northern Iowa Southern Illinois 9:35 PM ESPN+
3/8/2019 TBD Murray State 10:00 PM
3/8/2019 TBD Santa Clara 11:00 PM

Tennessee climbs to No. 4 in the NET Rankings

After adding two more Quadrant 1 wins to their resume this past week, the Tennessee Volunteers moved from No. 7 to No. 4 in the all-important NET Rankings.

Here’s the summary version of the team sheets for the Top 8 teams in the most current NET Rankings (games through Saturday, March 2, 2019)

Comparing to last week, Tennessee’s Q1 record changed from 5-3 to 7-3. The only other team in the current Top 8 to improve its Q1 record was UNC, which went from 7-5 to 8-5 by beating Clemson.

Meanwhile, Kentucky took another Q1 loss and went from 9-3 to 9-4 (hi!). Duke and Houston also each took another Q1 loss, the Blue Devils going from 8-2 to 8-3 and Houston going from 4-1 to 4-2. Michigan State took a double hit, going from 11-3 to 10-4, meaning they not only lost to Indiana, they lost a Q1 win to Q2 due to Iowa losing the NET Ranking that used to qualify it as a Q1 team.

Gonzaga and Virginia both kept the same Q1 record they had last week.

That’s a pretty good week for Tennessee. They can’t be that far behind Duke, which has one more Q1 win but also one Q2 loss to the Vols’ none. Blame the efficiency numbers and the computers that love them there.

Opportunities moving forward

Tennessee still has two additional Q1 opportunities to go in the remainder of the regular season. They host Mississippi State tomorrow and travel to Auburn Saturday.

Virginia is the only other team in the current Top 8 that has two more regular-season Q1 opportunities (Louisville and at Syracuse). Go Cards and Orange.

Kentucky has one left (at Ole Miss), Houston has one left (at Cincinnati), and Duke and North Carolina play each other. Go Heels.

Gonzaga is done for the regular season already, and the Bulldogs just have to hope that everyone else blows their opportunities this week. The only thing that can explain them being ahead of Virginia right now is that they’ve played more games, and now that they’re done, their hold on the No. 1 spot is in jeopardy.

Virginia could finish with an 11-2 (or 11-4) Q1 record. Duke and Tennessee could both finish 9-3. You still have the conference tournaments, of course, but you would have to think that all three of those records would beat out Gonzaga’s regular-season 4-2.

Meanwhile, the Bracket Matrix still has Tennessee as the first No. 2 seed, behind Kentucky. I expect that to change once everybody updates.

The Vols still need to take care of business this week against Mississippi State and Auburn, but they have a real opportunity in front of them. And if Virginia stumbles and UNC beats Duke, things could get really interesting in the conference tournaments.

Vols Land 5-Star Corey Walker: What is and What Could (Ever) Be*

As we speculated two weeks ago, 5-star Wing Corey Walker committed to the Vols this past weekend in what was without a doubt the biggest recruiting weekend in the history of the Tennessee basketball program. 

What’s noteworthy about this commitment isn’t just that this is Barnes’s 2nd 5-star commitment in as many classes, who was not coincidentally joined by the other 5-star signee, 2019 Guard Josiah James, in Knoxville this past weekend; it’s also not just that Walker, the 247 Sports #23 overall player in the class, has the kind of all-around game – able to play inside and outside on both ends of the floor at 6’7 with a shot that projects out to NBA three-point range – that is tailor made for Coach Rick Barnes’s system.  It’s also that Walker, to be honest, wasn’t on most recruiting junkies’ radar when it came onto Tennessee’s 2020 board, yet here we are and he’s first in the boat.

Taking a step back to review the weekend for a moment, the Vols hosted not just Walker from the 2020 class but also 5-star Jaden Springer (247’s #18 player overall), who plays for former Tennessee point guard Bobby Maze’s B.Maze Elite AAU program; 4-star Samson Ruhsentzev (247 Sports #60 overall); and 4-star Keon Ambrose-Hylton (247 Sports #75 overall player).  This while previously scheduled visitors C Walker Kessler (247 Sports #12 overall player) and PG Jalen Cone (247 Sports #121 overall player but the #60 overall player by Rivals) were not able to make it due to their respective teams playing games and instate Vol lean Keon Johnson (247 Sports #32 overall player) didn’t make the drive from the midstate for the same reason.  Then there are SG Jayden Stone (247 Sports #49 player) as well PF PJ Hall (247 Sports #69 player in the country), who’s been the campus multiple times, most recently last month for the UF game.

So right now you’re talking about a board with very realistic targets that include the #12/18/32/49/60/69/75/121 players in the country – 2 of whom are 5-stars and one of whom sits 6 spots away – with one 5-star already committed.  That is, to put it mildly, bananas, and frankly I don’t know if there is a coach in the country, including the legends at places like Duke and UNC and Kentucky, who wouldn’t gladly trade places with Barnes when it comes to where they sit with their respective 2020 classes.  As a reminder, there is currently one 4-star player on the current roster that’s won 52 of its 64 games since the start of last season, and he (DJ Burns) reclassified from the 2019 class and is redshirting.  So when you’re talking about this kind of talent – talent that is basically being handpicked by Barnes to ensure that they fit what he’s building in Knoxville – that Tennessee is legitimately in on, it’s mind-boggling to consider the possibilities. 

There are, to be honest, too many bigtime players for the amount of spots that are going to be available in this class, but with Walker in the boat already Barnes and Tennessee can afford to be about as picky as they want.  To that end, there are two interesting wrinkles to keep in mind:

  1. The possibility that Kessler himself could reclassify to 2019.  Now, right now Tennessee does not have any scholarships available, but as discussed here there are multiple scenarios in which at least one becomes available. Now, the best case scenario is that a) Grant Williams decides to return for his senior season, b) a scholarship opens up because a player who hasn’t seen any playing time at all decides to transfer out, and c) Kessler reclassifies and signs with the Vols.  That’s a lot of “ifs” but none of them are particularly far-fetched.  Kessler has now missed two previously scheduled official visits, both of which would have been for massive home games (UF and UK), but they were both for legitimate reasons.  Nevertheless the Vols absolutely need to get him on campus for that visit.  Assuming he does one can then feel certain that Tennessee is in that one deep, and then those other “ifs” become less daunting, particularly “b.” The fact that Corey Walker is travel teammates with Kessler certainly is a positive for the Vols here
  2. How urgently Barnes and the staff think they need a true PG.  Both Springer and Johnson are combo guards – capable of being a lead guard but with a scorer’s mentality.  And Stone is a pure SG.  At 6’5 Johnson is potentially growing into more of a Wing anyway, joining the likes of Walker, Ruhsentzev, and Ambrose-Hylton.  So that leaves, right now at least, only Jalen Cone in terms of a true PG that the Vols have invested a lot of time in.  But Cone – a very good player in his own right, without a doubt – probably isn’t the same overall prospect as those Wings, and the Vols will also need at least one big man in that class too.  So do the Vols take a “lesser” prospect due to positional need or do they just try and load up on Combo Guards simply because they’re all studs? 

It’s a high class problem to have, and one that will likely sort itself out both as Tennessee’s roster matures and evolves as well as of course not every player on the board ultimately wants to be a Vol.  Ideally Kessler does reclassify and sign with the Vols and has such a great freshman year that he (and maybe James?) is a one-and-done guy, leaving those four spots for one less prospect.   We’re getting greedy now, but given what Barnes has done on the court as well as the kind of recruiting he’s doing now, it’s not just dreaming.  It’s an exciting time to be a Vol hoops fan for many reasons, and when one looks into the future things look even better.

*Apologies for the tortured Zeppelin reference

If Lexington Was The Exception, Knoxville Must Be The Rule

The best blueprint to beat Tennessee was fairly straightforward: get to the free throw line. The only teams to do it – Kansas (34), Kentucky (33), and LSU (31) – all got to the stripe at least 30 times, and all shot at least 15 more free throws than the Vols. Getting to the line slows Tennessee’s transition game, strains a fairly thin rotation, and makes UT’s elite offense merely very good.

Kentucky didn’t get 30 today, but they got 29. Tennessee was again on the wrong side of the disparity at -15. The Vols like jump shots (and are very good at them) and as a result won’t always shoot as many free throws, but when a team can defend the strength of Grant Williams inside without a ton of help, it can make Tennessee’s offense one-dimensional.

No matter what you thought of the officiating, Kentucky significantly outpaced the Vols at the stripe.

They lost by 19.

To be clear, Grant Williams and Jordan Bone were outstanding. Williams has never been so good against Kentucky, Bone never at all. And when one guard was on fire, the other fanned the flames: six assists from Lamonte Turner three days after he was the primary back court scorer? This team is so unselfish.

These Vols are obviously alive and well in the “best season ever” conversation. But it was going to be highly unfortunate to have that conversation without a win against Kentucky. You can check that box: that’s now 4-0 for Rick Barnes against Kentucky in Knoxville, where the Vols have won 8 of 12. And since Barnes’ arrival, Tennessee is now 5-4 against the Cats, none more satisfying than a 19-point beat down of a top five Calipari squad.

Tennessee beat Kentucky today because Williams and Bone were excellent. But the Vols routed the Cats, in spite of the -15 free throw differential, because of their defense.

Kentucky made 14 shots. Fourteen. Their previous season low was 20 against Cuonzo’s defense. The last time they made so few shots was against South Carolina five years ago.

Several of those 14 shots were of the tip-your-cap variety, some combination of great ball movement and a tough shot dropping. But far more often than not, Tennessee’s defense was everywhere. It was noticeable to the eye on every possession: more pressure on guards, better help on shooters, better everything. And not just better, but championship level good.

In Lexington, Kentucky shot 54.7%, the highest percentage the Vols have allowed all year. In Knoxville, Kentucky shot 31.8%, the lowest percentage the Vols have allowed in SEC play. In Lexington, Kentucky had 10 turnovers. In Knoxville, it was 17.

Lexington was the exception – the wake-up call, the face-punch, whatever you like – where Tennessee played its worst game of the year on so many levels. If the Vols want to win a national championship, today’s defense has to be the rule.

The Vols are now back on the edge of the Top 30 in defensive efficiency, swiftly closing in on the Top 20 mark almost every champion hits. They will immediately get more chances to shine: Mississippi State is 16th in offensive efficiency, Auburn 12th. To win the SEC, to earn a one seed, and to advance deep into March, the Vols need today’s defense. Their offense is good enough to have a chance to win everywhere that isn’t Rupp. But with today’s defense, the team that beat them in Rupp took an even bigger beating in Knoxville. The Vols were already a contender. If today’s defense becomes the rule and not the exception, it can make them a champion.