Ole Miss hosts LSU at the SJB Pavilion tonight, February 25th, at 9 p.m. EST, with both programs mired in losing streaks that have effectively ended any postseason aspirations beyond the SEC Tournament. The Rebels have dropped nine consecutive games, their longest skid since before Chris Beard’s arrival, while LSU carries a five-game slide into Oxford despite playing competitive basketball in losses to Tennessee, Texas, and Alabama. What once looked like a potential NCAA Tournament resume builder for Ole Miss has collapsed into a battle for pride and momentum.
| Metric | LSU Fighting Tigers | Ole Miss Rebels |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Conf) | 14-13 (2-12) | 11-16 (3-11) |
| Points Per Game | 81.0 (74th) | 74.2 (234th) |
| Points Allowed | 76.3 (248th) | 74.7 (213th) |
| Offensive Rating | 116.5 (58th) | 108.7 (209th) |
| Defensive Rating | 109.8 (266th) | 109.4 (254th) |
| 3-Point % | 32.8% (253rd) | 33.0% (245th) |
| Blocks/G | 3.9 (99th) | 4.3 (63rd) |
| Defensive Rebounds/G | 25.3 (127th) | 23.8 (235th) |
| Offensive Rebounds/G | 11.3 (152nd) | 10.2 (250th) |
| Assists/G | 14.4 (144th) | 13.5 (213th) |
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Key Advantage
LSU shoots 47.3% from the field (64th nationally) against an Ole Miss defense allowing opponents to hit 43.7% (155th nationally). The Tigers have scored 81+ points in three of their last five games despite the losing streak, and the Rebels have surrendered 90+ in three of their last four. The 147.5 total assumes defensive competence that neither team has demonstrated recently.
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Market Analysis
The consensus prices LSU as a +1.5 underdog with the total at 147.5, implying a narrow Ole Miss victory in a moderately paced game. The fair win probability (54.12% Rebels, 45.88% Tigers) suggests the market sees home court as roughly equivalent to LSU’s superior offensive metrics, treating the SJB Pavilion advantage as a genuine mitigating factor for Ole Miss’s recent collapse.
That pricing logic relies on defensive assumptions that jar with recent results. LSU has allowed 83.0 points per game across its five-game skid, surrendering 90 to Alabama, 88 to Texas, and 85 to Tennessee. Ole Miss has been worse, giving up 94 to Florida, 90 to Mississippi State, and 93 to Alabama during its nine-game slide. Both units rank outside the top 200 nationally in points allowed. The 147.5 total prices regression to season-long means that ignores the defensive erosion visible in both programs. The primary risk is a return to form: if either team rediscovers its early-season defensive identity, possession volume compresses, and the total stalls. Nothing in the recent body of work suggests that correction arrives tonight.
LSU’s Late-Season Offensive Resurgence
Matt McMahon’s offense has found rhythm despite the losing streak. Freshman Jalen Reece has stabilized the point guard position, averaging 7.0 assists with just 1.7 turnovers over the last three games while playing 38.7 minutes per contest. Marquel Sutton has scored 21 points in consecutive outings, and Max Mackinnon dropped 27 at Texas in his return from injury. The Tigers have committed just 10 total turnovers across their last two games, a drastic improvement from earlier SEC play.
This offensive execution arrives at an opportune moment. Ole Miss ranks 254th nationally in defensive rating and has shown particular vulnerability on the perimeter, allowing opponents to shoot 33.9% from three (198th nationally). LSU’s 32.8% three-point shooting is modest, but the Tigers have gone over 40% from distance in two of their last three games. More critically, LSU’s two-point efficiency (54.9%, 82nd nationally) exploits the exact weakness in Ole Miss’s interior defense, which allows 51.1% shooting inside the arc (187th nationally). The Rebels block shots at a solid rate (4.3 per game, 63rd nationally), but volume finishing at the rim has still found success.
Ole Miss’s Collapse and the Home Court Mirage
Chris Beard’s team has lost nine straight, and the deterioration spans both ends. The Rebels have failed to crack 80 points in six of those nine losses while allowing 84.4 points per game. Malik Dia remains a capable scorer (24 points against Florida), and AJ Storr leads the team at 14.6 points per game, but the offense has grown stagnant without a consistent perimeter threat. Ole Miss turns the ball over just 9.7 times per game (27th nationally), a discipline that keeps possessions alive but cannot compensate for subpar shot quality against competent defenses.
The SJB Pavilion’s home advantage is real but potentially overstated. Ole Miss owns a 56-42 historical edge in Oxford against LSU, including four wins in the last five series meetings. Yet this specific team’s home form has cratered: the Rebels have lost five straight at home, including three during the current nine-game skid. The venue has not prevented defensive breakdowns or offensive stagnation. LSU’s own road competence, demonstrated in competitive losses at Tennessee and Texas, suggests the Tigers can execute their offensive game plan regardless of environment. The -1.5 spread assumes home court meaningfully alters team quality; recent evidence indicates it does not.
