South Carolina should have lost to Monmouth at home this year they were down 1 in OT and only a few seconds left they hit a crazy shot at the buzzer to win.
Saturday is going to be a tough one for UK. They better come out ready to go.
14+ isn't really a "good" game. I think you're selling USCjr a little short.. they will probably keep it to under 10 if this SEC officiating keeps up.
.. but I do think this Florida game will take it's toll. bad shooting, lots of contact fouls, 1 less day of prep, coming off of a big win... Any team is primed for a beating when that happens.
That means absolutely nothing.South Carolina should have lost to Monmouth at home this year they were down 1 in OT and only a few seconds left they hit a crazy shot at the buzzer to win.
They don't need firepower just more bodies,everyone on both teams may foul out on Saturday.True, but SC would have waxed Seton Hall, CU taters, and probably Memphis if Thornwell had not been suspended. SC doesn't have the offensive fire power to beat UK, but SC is a good team and it should be a tough game. I see UK ending up winning by 14 or more.
WOW only got to watch the 1st half & neither team looked good.43 fouls in 32 minutes.
Saturday is going to be a tough one for SC. They better come out ready to go.
a win is a win and Manmouth is a good mid major so not sure what the point you are trying to make ?South Carolina should have lost to Monmouth at home this year they were down 1 in OT and only a few seconds left they hit a crazy shot at the buzzer to win.
With this officiating, nobody is getting run out of any gym's. The officiating is bad both ways and one thing it creates is close games.You may be right..........one day rest, then travel to UK Friday. But everyone has to do that kind of stuff so it's not a good excuse if we get run out of the gym. I've seen many games that were close all the way through until one team has to start fouling, the other team makes their FTs, and the losing team then has to jack up crazy bad 3 pt shots and the game ends up double digit loss.