Vanderbilt’s 86-82 wire-to-wire road win over Tennessee on March 7 secured the Commodores the No. 4 seed and their first double-bye at the SEC Tournament since their 2012 championship run. The rivals meet again this afternoon, March 13, at 3:30 p.m. EDT at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, where Vanderbilt’s 86.9 points per game will test a Tennessee defense that held Auburn to 62 in the second round. Tennessee’s 69.2 points allowed per game is the sharper defensive mark in this matchup, but Vanderbilt’s 120.9 offensive rating is the higher output.
| Metric | Tennessee Volunteers | Vanderbilt Commodores |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Conf) | 22-10 (11-7) | 24-7 (11-7) |
| Points Per Game | 79.8 (88th) | 86.9 (13th) |
| Points Allowed | 69.2 (60th) | 75.1 (220th) |
| Offensive Rating | 117.0 (51st) | 120.9 (14th) |
| Defensive Rating | 101.4 (55th) | 104.5 (120th) |
| 3-Point % | 33.7% (196th) | 35.4% (100th) |
| Offensive Rebounds/G | 15.8 (2nd) | 10.7 (189th) |
| Turnovers/G | 11.8 (205th) | 9.7 (33rd) |
| Blocks/G | 3.7 (116th) | 4.7 (27th) |
| Assists/G | 17.1 (31st) | 16.4 (46th) |
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Key Advantage
Pace and Possessions: Vanderbilt’s 9.7 turnovers per game against Tennessee’s 11.8 is the decisive ball-security gap in a neutral-site environment where transition opportunities compress. Watch whether Tennessee’s second-ranked offensive rebounding rate generates enough extra possessions to offset Vanderbilt’s cleaner offensive execution.
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Market Analysis
The spread sits at Vanderbilt -1.5 (-110) with a 146.5 total, and the moneyline implies roughly 52% win probability for the Commodores against Tennessee’s 48%. The narrow spread reflects Vanderbilt’s 86-82 win in Knoxville six days ago, a result that complicates any assumption of Tennessee superiority despite the Volunteers’ 101.4 defensive rating.
Tanner’s All-SEC Season Faces Tennessee’s Perimeter Adjustment
Vanderbilt sophomore Tyler Tanner enters with historic SEC numbers: 21.5 points, 5.5 assists, and 2.3 steals per game in conference play, the only player in the league to exceed 21/5/2 in at least three decades. Tanner’s 76 steals lead the conference and all high-major players nationally, creating a defensive playmaking layer that Tennessee’s ball-handlers must navigate. Tennessee’s Ja’Kobi Gillespie averages 2.7 made three-pointers per game and paces the Volunteers at 17.9 points, but his 32.9% shooting from deep is a gap Vanderbilt’s perimeter defense can exploit.
The first meeting showcased Tanner at his best: 25 points, three assists, and two steals in a wire-to-wire road win. Tennessee’s response in the rematch hinges on perimeter containment, where the Volunteers’ 33.7% three-point defense has been inconsistent. Vanderbilt’s 35.4% team mark from three and 9.5 attempts per game creates spacing that Tennessee’s help defense must honor, opening driving lanes for Tanner and AK Okereke, who averaged 14.5 points on 58.8% shooting over the final four regular-season games.
Neutral-Site Dynamics and Tournament Pressure
The shift to Bridgestone Arena removes Tennessee’s home-court advantage and places both programs in a familiar neutral environment. Vanderbilt’s 13-0 non-conference record includes multiple neutral-site victories, while Tennessee’s 22-10 mark reflects a team more comfortable in defined home or road settings than in tournament conditions.
The 146.5 total implies 73.25 points per team, a figure that sits above Tennessee’s 69.2 points allowed but below Vanderbilt’s 86.9 scoring average. Tennessee’s 15.8 offensive rebounds per game, second nationally, generate second-chance opportunities that could push the Commodores’ defensive rating of 104.5 past its season average. Vanderbilt’s 4.7 blocks per game provides a rim-protection counter that protects against Tennessee’s interior scoring, while the Commodores’ 44.4% shooting defense in their last 10 games has tightened selectively.
