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LSU lands top seed, Wildcats no. 2 in upcoming Southeastern Conference Tournament in Nashville


By Keith Taylor
Kentucky Today

Four teams — LSU, Kentucky, Tennessee and South Carolina — will receive a double-bye when the Southeastern Conference Tournament begins the week in Nashville.

The Tigers (26-5, 16-2) edged out Kentucky (26-5, 15-3) and Tennessee (27-4, 15-3) to win the regular-season title for the first time in more than a decade. Kentucky is a No. 2 seed and will play at 7 p.m. Friday night and will take on the winner of the Alabama-Mississippi contest. LSU will face the winner of Arkansas and Florida at 1 p.m. Friday. South Carolina nabbed the No. 4 seed, while Auburn is No. 5.

Kentucky’s Immanuel Quickley fires up a shot against Florida on Saturday. (Photo by Tammie Brown, Kentucky Today)

Kentucky defeated Florida 66-57 in its home finale Saturday, giving the Wildcats a sweep of the Gators. The Wildcats (26-5, 15-3 SEC) also swept Mississippi State, Auburn and Vanderbilt this season, but earned a split with No. 4 Tennessee.

The Wildcats lost two non-conference games by a combined margin of three points but suffered a 19-point setback to Tennessee earlier this month in Knoxville. Kentucky senior PJ Washington said the Wildcats are ready for the postseason and said a pair of losses in the preseason helped change the team’s mental focus.

“It’s switched ever since we started losing early in the season, honestly,” Washington said, “Since going on that 10-game streak and then on from there. We’re just out to win every game and be focused in practice and walkthroughs and stuff like that. Just to focus on every opponent and not take anybody lightly. We’ve been doing that and we know everybody’s going to give us their best game of the season. We’ve just gotta come out and be the aggressor.”

Kentucky coach John Calipari isn’t sure the league tournament will affect his team’s seeding in the NCAA Tournament.

“They say tournaments really don’t matter so if you lose in the first round, we still should be whatever seed we were, because there are going to be some teams that do that. Why can’t we do that?” Calipari said. “ Well, you’re not them, that’s why. What is that about? What our seed is now, basically they said that’s your seed. The tournaments aren’t that big a deal. They are — they matter when they matter.”

SEC Tournament at Bridgestone Arena, Nashville
(All Times EST)

Wednesday’s games

• 7 p.m., Missouri vs. Georgia
• 10 p.m., Texas A&M vs. Vanderbilt

Thursday’s games

• Noon, Arkansas vs. Florida.
• 3:30 p.m., Auburn vs. Missouri-Georgia winner
• 7 p.m., Alabama vs. Ole Miss
• 10 p.m., Miss, State vs. Texas A&M-Vanderbilt winner

Friday’s games

• Noon, LSU vs. Arkansas-Florida winner
• 3:30 p.m., South Carolina vs. Missouri, Georgia or Auburn
• 7 p.m. Kentucky vs. Alabama-Ole Miss winner
• 10 p.m., Tennessee vs. Mississippi State, Texas A&M or Vanderbilt

Saturday’s games

Semifinals
• 1 and 3:30 p.m.

Keith Taylor is sports editor for Kentucky Today. Reach him at keith.taylor@kentuckytoday.com or twitter @keithtaylor21


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