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MBB Preview/Live Thread: Mizzou looks to keep rolling against South Dakota

  • One fun fact about the Coyotes: true freshman Vince Buzelis is the younger brother of the Chicago Bulls’ Matas Buzelis and was a member of the Lithuanian U16 National Team.
  • Shawn Phillips, Jr., will miss tonight’s game for Mizzou with an illness. Trent Pierce and Trent Burns are also expected to remain out, though Burns was seen dunking in warmups.
  • Tonight’s starting five for Mizzou: Anthony Robinson II, Sebastian Mack, Jevon Porter, Mark Mitchell and Luke Northweather.
  • The starting five for South Dakota: Jordan Crawford, Shey Eberwein, Evan Anderson, Isaac Bruns and Cameron Fens.
  • Luke Northweather is headed to the locker room after contact to his face that appeared to cause some bleeding. Nicholas Randall has checked in during the first minute of action. The Northweather situation didn’t look too serious; I’d be surprised if he doesn’t return to the game.
  • We’ve reached the under-16 timeout and this game has been very high scoring so far, just as expected. Mark Mitchell has quickly piled up five points (Jevon Porter is a close second with four), and Mizzou leads 11-8.
  • Annor Boateng just checked in for Jevon Porter with 14:28 remaining in the first, making his return from injury and his season debut.
  • Mizzou leads 20-13 at the under-12 timeout and has shut off the scoring faucet for USD, at one point holding them scoreless for over four minutes. Luke Northweather has also returned to the game for the Tigers. Jayden Stone will have free throws when we return; he tried to posterize a Coyotes defender but had to settle for two shots from the charity stripe instead.
  • Dennis Gates calls timeout after an 8-0 South Dakota run ties the game at 21 with 10:06 left in the first half. The Tigers have gone ice cold on offense and are scoreless over the last 2 minutes, 36 seconds of game time.
  • Mizzou leads 29-26 at the under-eight timeout. Mark Mitchell is having another strong performance with 11 points on 3-of-5 shooting from the field, but 12 second-chance points have kept the Coyotes in the game.

Missouri vs. South Dakota

Where | Mizzou Arena; Columbia, Mo.

Radio | Tiger Radio Network

Kenpom prediction | Mizzou -24

ESPN win probability | 98.4% chance

G: Anthony Robinson II (JR, 13.2 PPG)

G: Sebastian Mack (JR, 10.0 PPG)

F: Jevon Porter (SR, 6.0 PPG)

F: Mark Mitchell (SR, 18.0 PPG)

C: Shawn Phillips, Jr. (SR, 8.8 PPG)

Notable Sixth Man: Jacob Crews (GR, 12.6 PPG)

G: Shey Eberwein (R-SO, 10.4 PPG)

G: Jordan Crawford (JR, 9.2 PPG)

G: Isaac Bruns (JR, 17.4 PPG)

G: Evan Anderson (R-FR, 4.4 PPG)

C: Cameron Fens (SR, 8.2 PPG)

Notable Sixth Man: Uzziah Buntyn (FR, 10.0 PPG)

Note: these starting lineups are projected.

Get to know South Dakota: an average team from a fun league

From Sam Snelling’s preseason preview:

“[Coyotes head coach Eric] Peterson spent his first two seasons building the program up and last year had something of a breakthrough. He broke through by playing fast on offense, with the second fastest offense tempo in the country, even faster than Alabama. In his first three seasons he owns just one top 100 win, a neutral site win over BYU, a game where the Coyotes shot over 50% from three and the Cougars shot just 21%. Going a bit further, Peterson has won just 2 non-conference road games since taking over, beating Western Michigan and Western Illinois. And the collective work against Power Conference teams is an 0-5 record with an average loss of 22.2 points per game.”

The Coyotes (pronounced ki-yotes, like the high school in Varsity Blues) lost star Chase Forte to the transfer portal from a squad that went 19-14 with a winning record in conference play last year, but return All-Summit League performer Isaac Bruns. The 6-foot-5 junior averaged 14.6 points per game last season and has increased his scoring early this year as the focal point of the South Dakota offense.

Peterson added Jordan Crawford from Eastern Kentucky and Ethan Kizer from South Alabama in the offseason, alongside SLU’s Josiah Dotzler, who was expected to play a key role for the team before tearing his ACL. But the mass of the team’s production has come from returners and true freshman. A trio of true freshman — Uzziah Buntyn, Vince Buzelis, Jesse McIntosh — have combined to score an average of 26.8 points per night.

That production has helped USD to a 3-2 start to the season with recent wins over Southern Indiana and Western Michigan. The Coyotes lost their opening two matchup, an 81-79 overtime loss to Utah Tech and 92-76 defeat at Creighton, but have won three straight with the help of a solid offense.

South Dakota is your average Summit League team in multiple ways. The team was picked to finish in the middle of the conference’s preseason poll and is currently fifth of the nine Summit League teams in KenPom’s rankings. USD also shares a similar style of play to a lot of the league’s squads: fast-paced and exciting offense paired with a porous defense. South Dakota currently sits at 316th on KenPom in adjusted defensive efficiency and has finished below 332nd in that category each of the last three years.

Mizzou has gotten burned on defense by a couple of strong individual performances this season, including 24 points with five made triples from Luke Almodovar for SEMO and 31 points from VMI’s TJ Johnson. The latter’s offensive outburst allowed the Keydets to keep the margin within 10 at halftime before they trailed off in the second half. South Dakota has some solid depth and a lot of good role players, but Bruns is easily the biggest threat to watch for Thursday. Stop him and getting the win becomes significantly less complicated.

Mizzou has won the three games where it controlled the rebounding battle against mid-major opponents by an average of 22 points. The other game? An extremely uncomfortable 89-84 win over SEMO. The Coyotes run with a four guard lineup, but the fifth starter is 7-foot center Cameron Fens, who gives USD better height than most of the mid-majors Mizzou has played this year. The Tigers will need to gain the upper hand on the boards against a South Dakota team scoring 13 second chance points a game against Division I opponents.

Turnovers have been arguably the main weakness in an otherwise very good Mizzou offense, as the Tigers are coughing the ball up an average of just under 14 times per game. That’s also exact the number they surrendered last game against Prairie View A&M, leading to 16 of the Panthers’ 73 points. South Dakota has forced an average of just under 15 turnovers in four games against Division I opponents this year, one of the few strengths of the team’s defense. MU will need to take care of the ball if it wants to reach the projected margin of a 24-point win.

My prediction: Mizzou 94 – South Dakota 76

MU should get close to reaching triple digits Thursday night. But the Tigers haven’t been able to put together a complete defensive performance over 40 minutes, and a dip in intensity should allow the Coyotes to get hot on offense at some point during the matchup. This should be a comfortable win for Mizzou, though I’m expecting the game to play out much like the Howard and Prairie View A&M games: a win by roughly 20 points that isn’t quite as close as the final score shows.

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