COLUMBIA, S.C. — After a loss on the road Wednesday, 21st-ranked Tennessee looks to bounce back with a win over South Carolina at Colonial Life Arena on Saturday. The game will tip at 6 p.m. ET and will be televised live on ESPN2 and streamed online via WatchESPN.
The Vols (12-5, 3-3 SEC) rallied back from a 10-point deficit with less than seven minutes remaining against Missouri earlier in the week but fell short after a turnover in the finals seconds of the game. Kyle Alexander has stepped up during the past two games, posting back-to-back double-digit scoring performances for the first time in his career, including a career-high 14 points against Texas A&M. At Mizzou, he finished with 12 points on 6-of-6 shooting to go along with four rebounds and three blocks.
South Carolina (12-6, 3-3 SEC) struggled early in the season after returning just two starters from last year’s Final Four team. The Gamecocks fell to Clemson, Illinois State and Temple in non-conference play before dropping three of their first four SEC contests. However, USC enters Saturday’s matchup riding a two-game winning streak, including a 14-point, second-half comeback to defeat No. 18 Kentucky behind the play of forward Chris Silva, who tied a career-high with 27 points and grabbed eight boards.
After Saturday night’s showdown, the Vols return home for their second meeting with the Vanderbilt Commodores on Jan. 23 at 7 p.m. ET. UT then heads to Ames, Iowa, to face Iowa State as part of the Big 12/SEC Challenge on Jan. 27 at 4 p.m. ET. Both games will be televised on ESPNU.
THE SERIES
• Overall: UT leads, 42-27
• In Knoxville: UT leads, 25-9
• In Columbia: SC leads, 16-14
• Neutral Sites: UT leads, 3-2
• Current Streak: SC has won three straight
• Last Meeting: SC won, 82-55, in Columbia, 2/25/17
• Rick Barnes vs. South Carolina: 6-3
• Rick Barnes vs. Frank Martin : Martin leads, 7-4
RIGHT NOW
• In SEC games, reigning SEC Player of the Week Grant Williams is tied for third in the league with a scoring average of 18.8 ppg.
• Junior Kyle Alexander is 11-for-12 from the field over UT’s last two games for 26 total points.
• The Vols are rated No. 14 in the NCAA RPI and own the nation’s fifth-rated SOS, per ESPN.
A WIN WOULD…
• Give Tennessee four true road wins in six tries this season. The Vols totaled four true road wins all of last season.
• Snap South Carolina’s three-game win streak in the series.
• Give the Big Orange seven wins over teams occupying a top-100 spot in the current NCAA RPI.
ABOUT SOUTH CAROLINA
• In his sixth season at the helm, Frank Martin has South Carolina (12-6, 3-3 SEC) trending in the right direction, sitting at 47th in the latest RPI standing. Last season, the Gamecocks advanced to their first Final Four and won a program-record 26 games.
• However, USC lost three starters from that team, including SEC Player of the Year Sindarius Thornwell. The two returners are junior forward Chris Silva and sophomore forward Maik Kotsar.
• South Carolina struggled early on in the season, dropping contests against Clemson, Illinois State and Temple during non-conference play. The Gamecocks then lost three of their first four to begin their SEC slate but enter Saturday’smatchup riding a two-game winning streak.
• After going on the road to get a win at Georgia, South Carolina returned home and erased a 14-point, second-half deficit to upset No. 18 Kentucky, 76-68. Silva matched a career-high with 27 points and grabbed eight boards to pace USC.
• On the season, Silva leads the Gamecocks in scoring (14.9 ppg) and rebounding (7.9 rpg). In SEC play, he’s improved his scoring to 19.3 ppg.
• Graduate transfer guard Frank Booker is the team’s other double-digit scorer, tallying 11.3 ppg to go along with 3.3 rpg, 1.2 spg and 1.1 apg in 26 minutes of action a game.
LAST MEETING WITH SOUTH CAROLINA
• Tennessee struggled from the field against the SEC’s top-rated defense, suffering an 82-55 defeat at South Carolina on Feb. 25, 2017. Senior guard Robert Hubbs III was the only Volunteer to finish in double figures, scoring 16 points on the afternoon.
• Statistically, South Carolina entered Saturday’s game allowing its opponents only 64.7 points per game on a 39.8 field goal percentage—both conference-bests. Those figures held true, as Tennessee was limited to 55 points—its lowest scoring output of the season—on just 33.3 percent shooting.
• Looking to get back on track after a home loss to Vanderbilt three days prior, the Vols got off to a rocky start, committing five turnovers over the first four minutes of action. Those miscues allowed South Carolina to race out to an early 8-2 lead—an advantage that would grow to as many as 27-9 after a pair of 8-0 runs.
• The Vols would respond late in the opening frame, though, as Hubbs and freshman Grant Williams led a charge that saw UT pull back to within single digits by intermission. The pair finished with eight points apiece in the opening frame.
• UT looked poised to maintain the momentum after halftime, whittling the deficit to four after a coast-to-coast layup from Hubbs. But not long thereafter, South Carolina got back-to-back 3-pointers from Duane Notice, opening up a 12-3 run that restored the Gamecocks’ lead to double figures and ultimately put the home side out of reach for good.
• Along with his eight points, Williams led UT with eight rebounds to go along with a season-high four steals. Admiral Schofield and Lamonté Turner—who made his fifth career start—finished with seven points apiece. Sophomore Kyle Alexander added five points and a team-high three blocked shots. UT finished with 20 turnovers and just three assists.
MEMORABLE VOL PERFORMANCES AGAINST SOUTH CAROLINA
• On Dec. 6, 1969, unranked Tennessee strolled into Columbia and upset the No. 1-ranked Gamecocks, 55-54, thanks to 20 points from Jimmy England, and double-doubles by Don Johnson (18 pts, 12 rebs) and Bobby Croft (12 pts, 13 rebs).
• A two-overtime thriller in Columbia saw South Carolina pull out a 111-107 win on Feb. 10, 1993, despite 20-point efforts from Allan Houston (29), Lang Wiseman (26) and Corey Allen (22).
• Wayne Chism scored 23 points, JaJuan Smith added 19 and Tyler Smith had 13, but it was Chris Lofton’s 25-footer with 12.0 seconds remaining that lifted the Vols to an 89-87 win over South Carolina in the 2008 SEC Tournament in Atlanta on March 14, 2008.
• 2011 first-team All-SEC guard Scotty Hopson had a bright career against South Carolina, owning a sterling 6-0 record against the Gamecocks. Hopson threw down a posterizing dunk in the 2011 Knoxville win that placed fourth in the CBS Dunk of the Year Contest.
FORMER BIG 12 RIVALS BARNES, MARTIN NOW UNDER SEC BANNER
• Tennessee coach Rick Barnes and South Carolina headman Frank Martin meet for the 12th time as conference rivals Saturday, but just the fifth time under the SEC banner.
• The two squared off seven times as coaches in the Big 12 Conference, when Barnes was with Texas and Martin was at the helm at Kansas State.
• Martin owns a 7-4 edge in head-to-head meetings.
• The 51-year-old Martin went 117-54 in five seasons at Kansas State, taking his 2009-10 squad to the Elite Eight and winning the Big 12 Coach of the Year award that same season. Barnes was one of the top coaches in the Big 12 during his 17-year tenure at Texas, winning four Big 12 Coach of the Year awards.
• Martin accepted the head coaching position at South Carolina in 2012 and owns a 108-80 record with the Gamecocks, who advanced to the Final Four last season.
TRENDING NOW
• In SEC play, Tennessee leads the league in assists per game (15.3) while ranking second in scoring offense (79.2), assist/turnover ratio (1.4) and rebounding defense (32.7 rapg).
• The Vols have 19 steals over their last two games.
• Admiral Schofield has led the Vols in rebounding in each of the last four games (7.8 rpg), and he has 11 offensive rebounds during that span. He has been UT’s leader (or shared the lead) on the boards in seven of the last eight contests.
• Admiral Schofield also leads the team with 20 total steals through 17 games. In his first two seasons combined, he totaled 21 steals in 61 games played.
• In three of Tennessee’s last five games, a Vol has set a new career-high for scoring: 25 for Lamonté Turner vs. Auburn; 37 for Grant Williams at Vanderbilt; and 14 for Kyle Alexander vs. Texas A&M.
ALEXANDER LOCKED IN
• Junior forward Kyle Alexander is coming off back-to-back games with 10 or more points for the first time in his career.
• After a 6-for-6 shooting night at Missouri Wednesday, the Canadian big man is 11-for-12 from the field over UT’s last two games. He is averaging 13.0 ppg over that span.
• In Tennessee’s win over Texas A&M on Jan. 13, Alexander scored a career-high 14 points, and he followed that up with 12 points on perfect shooting at Mizzou.
• The Missouri game Wednesday night marked the first time in Alexander’s career that the Vols lost when he scored in double-figures (4-1).
-UT Athletics