Two top-10 men’s basketball teams fall in a wild night of men’s hoops

Follow along here to recap a chaotic Tuesday night slate of men’s hoops highlighted by two top-10 teams falling on the road. 

No. 20 Michigan outlasts No. 7 Purdue

Michigan upsets Purdue Men's basketball

Michigan made a statement Tuesday night, taking down the Boilermakers 75-73 for its fifth consecutive win. 

Tonight marks Dusty May’s first top-10 win with Michigan since coming to Ann Arbor from Florida Atlantic. 

The Wolverines defeated Purdue for the first time since 2022 after falling 91-64 to the Boilermakers just two weeks ago. Michigan (19-5, 11-2 Big Ten) now sits atop the conference standings, one win ahead of Michigan State.

Purdue (19-6, 11-3 Big Ten) held a 37-26 lead with under four to play in the first half, but Michigan closed the first 20 minutes on a 9-0 run to pull within two points as the teams headed to the locker rooms. 

The Wolverines trailed by as much as 10 in the second half, but Purdue was unable to put the home team away. Michigan took its first lead of the second half with 5:33 left, powered by a 13-4 run. The Boilermakers quickly regained the lead, but a 7-0 run from the Wolverines with under three to play gave Michigan a 73-67 lead with 39 seconds remaining. 

Braden Smith kept the game interesting down the stretch for Purdue, knocking down two contested 3-pointers in the final 20 seconds. Smith had a chance to win the game after two missed free throws from the Wolverines, but he was unable to connect from deep in the closing seconds. Smith finished with a game-high 24 points in the loss. 

In total, Michigan led for just 3:14 on the night. 

Michigan big man Danny Wolf had another big game for May’s squad, dropping 15 points, nine rebounds and two blocks in the win. 

The Wolverines will now travel for a rivalry game against Ohio State, while Purdue will return home to take on No. 16 Wisconsin on Saturday. 

Kentucky stuns No. 5 Tennessee with second-half surge

Kentucky men's basketball

No. 15 Kentucky made a statement Tuesday night, using a commanding second-half stretch to pull away from No. 5 Tennessee for a 75-64 victory at Rupp Arena.

The Wildcats (17-7, 6-5 SEC) hit 12 three-pointers and shot 50% from the field, controlling the game late after the Vols (20-5, 7-5) had tied it at 54-all with just over eight minutes to play. Koby Brea’s go-ahead three-pointer then sparked a 21-10 closing run as Kentucky’s defense held Tennessee to just three field goals the rest of the way.

Kentucky’s win came despite the loss of senior guard Lamont Butler, who exited in the second half after aggravating a shoulder injury while diving for a loose ball. Butler, who had recently missed three games due to the same injury, was ruled out for the remainder of the game and later returned to the bench in a warm-up jacket. He finished with six points, four assists, three rebounds, and three steals before leaving.

Otega Oweh led Kentucky with 13 points and six rebounds, while Ansley Almonor and Trent Noah each added 11 points, combining to shoot 5-for-7 from beyond the arc. The Wildcats also capitalized on Tennessee’s struggles from deep, as the Vols shot just 3-for-18 from three.

Tennessee was led by Zakai Zeigler, who finished with 17 points and six assists. Igor Milicic Jr. added 16 points and nine rebounds. The Vols briefly held a lead midway through the second half but couldn’t sustain their momentum as Kentucky’s hot shooting proved to be the difference.

The Wildcats now turn their attention to a showdown with No. 8 Auburn, while Tennessee looks to bounce back at home against Florida.

Kansas State hangs on to beat No. 13 Arizona

Kansas State men's basketball

The fans in Bramlage Coliseum enjoyed another night on Cloud Nine, as Kansas State (13-11, 7-6 Big 12) picked up its second straight ranked win at home, upsetting No. 13 Arizona 73-70.

It’s the program’s fourth win against a top-25-ranked opponent in their last six games.

Late-game scoring determined the Big 12 matchup’s winner, as neither team led by more than 10 points or could get the lid of the basket from deep — they shot a combined 3-41 from three. Tied at 62 apiece with three minutes left, K-State made three of its last four shots while Arizona (17-7, 11-2) knocked down only one of its last four. 

Kansas State struggled to shut the door on Arizona due to missed free throws, though, holding just a three-point lead in the final seconds, giving Arizona a final chance to send it to overtime. 

Hoping to recreate his last-second half-court buzzer-beater from two weeks ago, Arizona guard Caleb Love couldn’t strike gold, missing the three-quarter-court heave to hand K-State its sixth straight conference win. 

This post was originally published on this site be sure to check out more of their content.