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Ja’Kobi Gillespie leads Tennessee to 69-65 win over No. 19 Vanderbilt — and more

Ja’Kobi Gillespie leads Tennessee to 69-65 win over No. 19 Vanderbilt

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Ja’Kobi Gillespie scored 17 points as Tennessee outlasted No. 19 Vanderbilt 69-65 in a back-and-forth affair on Saturday.

A turnaround jumper by Nate Ament, who was double-teamed by Commodores Jalen Washington and Chandler Bing, gave the Volunteers (20-7, 10-4 Southeastern Conference) a 66-65 lead with less than a minute to play. Ament finished with 13 points.

After that shot, Vanderbilt (21-6, 8-6) sent Tennessee to the line twice, with the Volunteers making 2 of 4 attempts.

Vanderbilt’s Tyler Tanner missed a 3-point attempt from the top of the arc with three seconds left that would have tied it. Amari Evans added a free throw with one second left for the final score.

Jaylen Carey, who played in his first game at Vanderbilt’s Memorial Gym after transferring from Vanderbilt to Tennessee, was heckled by Commodore fans every time he touched the ball. He finished with seven points.

Tanner led the Commodores with 16 points and got them out of a 9:58 scoring funk that extended from the end of the first half early into the second. He scored on a throwaway 3-pointer as the shot clock expired to snap the skid 3:50 into the second half.

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Tennessee: At Missouri on Tuesday night.

Vanderbilt: Hosts Georgia on Wednesday night.

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Michigan basketball just falls short vs Duke in battle of 1-seeds

WASHINGTON – On a day in which the path for Michigan basketball to the No. 1 overall seed in the 2026 NCAA tournament seemed clearer than ever, the No. 1 Wolverines received a reminder that the tourney will be anything but a walk in the park.

A back-and-forth battle at Capital One Arena on Saturday, Feb. 21, finished with No. 3 Duke prevailing, 68-63, as Michigan made just six of 24 3-point tries in snapping an 11-game win streak.

Earlier in the day, the NCAA tourney selection committee released its top 16 projected seeds for March Madness; Michigan was slotted in as the top squad – placed in the Midwest region, with a regional in Chicago – and Duke was No. 2. Those rankings looked prescient as the Wolverines and Blue Devils were virtually even for much of Saturday night.

Michigan players shoot around before their game against Duke at Capital One Arena in Washington on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026.

Yaxel Lendeborg finished with 21 points and seven rebounds, while star guard Elliot Cadeau struggled with his shot en route to eight points. Cadeau also sat during the first half with an apparent left arm injury, and Aday Mara was limited early due to foul trouble.

Ones to watch

The first half showed how small a margin exists between the No. 1 and No. 3 teams in the nation – per the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll – in the battle for the top overall seed in next month’s NCAA Tournament; Duke went into the break up by two, thanks to a 6-0 run, but the teams went back and forth for most of the half, trading the lead 13 times (with five ties). Still, Michigan led for 10:29, to 4:32 for Duke, thanks to its scorching work inside the arc – 11-for-14.

That made up for a rough time outside the arc, as the Wolverines hit just three of 13 3-point tries over the first two minutes. Two of those makes (on four tries) belonged to Lendeborg, who accounted for nearly half of U-M’s first-half offense, at 16 points. L.J. Cason (seven points) and Morez Johnson Jr. (six) supplied most of the rest, as Aday Mara played just six minutes while struggling with foul trouble.

Even with the individual struggles, Michigan might have taken a lead into the second half if not for a familiar foe: turnovers. The Wolverines had just one more giveaway than the Blue Devils, but Duke turned the six U-M giveaways into nine points, while Michigan had just two points off five takeaways.

What’s next for Michigan basketball

The Wolverines (25-2, 15-1 Big Ten) return to conference play at home against Minnesota (13-14, 6-10) on Tuesday (8:30 p.m., Big Ten Network). The Golden Gophers have won three of four Big Ten games, including a rout of Rutgers on Saturday afternoon when Cade Tyson hit seven of nine 3-pont tries en route to 27 points. Minnesota is just 3-10 at Crisler Center dating back to February 2019, but one of those wins was the Gophers’ most recent visit, a 73-71 squeaker on Jan. 4, 2024 in U-M’s final season under coach Juwan Howard.

This story will be updated.

Tony Garcia is the Wolverines beat writer for the Detroit Free Press. Email him at [email protected] and follow him on X at @RealTonyGarcia.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Michigan basketball falls to Duke in battle of NCAA 1-seeds

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