GAME THREAD: Tennessee at Mississippi State, Thursday, 6:30 CST, 7:30 EST, SECN+

#1

RetroVol

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#1
This one is from Claude. Don't know what the "computer models" is about, but left it in.

I couldn't find the exact minutes from the box score in my search, but I'll trust your information about Prater's limited playing time. Let me create the revised post:




Mississippi State Bulldogs – Tennessee Game Preview (Jan. 8, 2026)​


The Coach: Sam Purcell​

Sam Purcell is in his fourth season at Mississippi State after coming from Louisville, where he spent nine years as Jeff Walz's top assistant and lead recruiter. He's been remarkably successful in Starkville, becoming the first coach in program history to win 20+ games in each of his first three seasons. Purcell has compiled 67 overall wins and 24 SEC wins, both program-bests for any coach through three seasons. He's led Mississippi State to the NCAA Tournament twice and recently signed a contract extension.

What Changed Since Last Year​

Mississippi State underwent a near-complete roster overhaul. Destiney McPhaul and Chandler Prater are the only two returners from last year's team. The Bulldogs lost their top four scorers including Jerkaila Jordan, Debreasha Powe, and Madina Okot (who transferred to South Carolina). Purcell rebuilt through the portal, bringing in six transfers: Trayanna Crisp (North Carolina), Awa Fane (JUCO), Saniyah King (Howard), Favour Nwaedozi (Japan), Kharyssa Richardson (Ole Miss), and Faith Wylder. They also added a strong freshman class ranked 11th nationally featuring Jaylah Lampley (No. 38 recruit), Madison Francis (No. 39), and Nataliyah Gray (No. 95).

Key Players​

Mississippi State has five players averaging double figures:

Favour Nwaedozi (F, 6-3, Jr.) – The Nigerian transfer from Japan has been a revelation. She's an SEC Player of the Year candidate averaging around 14.3 ppg with dominant rebounding (had a game with 21 points and 23 rebounds). Versatile post player who can score inside and outside and defend the full length of the floor.

Madison Francis (F, 6-1, Fr.) – Getting national recognition as one of the best freshmen in the country. Averages 13.1 ppg and is a force on defense with elite shot-blocking ability.

Destiney McPhaul (G, 5-8, Sr.) – The floor general and lone experienced returner with back-to-back 10-assist games. Provides senior leadership for this young roster.

Jaylah Lampley (G/F, 6-1, Fr.) – SEC Freshman of the Week honoree, averaging 10.9 ppg.

Chandler Prater (G, 5-8, Jr.) – Had five straight double-doubles during non-conference play, but notably played less than 10 minutes against Oklahoma, almost entirely in the first quarter. Something to monitor – unclear if injury, foul trouble, or coaching decision

Style of Play​

Mississippi State plays a deliberate, defense-first style that contrasts sharply with Tennessee's System. The Bulldogs sit in the top 20 in field-goal percentage (.504) and blocks per game. Their stout defense held early-season opponents under 62 points and to 34.7% shooting. They dominate the boards with Nwaedozi anchoring the glass. Not a high-volume three-point shooting team but efficient when they take them.

2025-26 Season So Far​

Mississippi State is 14-2 overall and 1-1 in SEC play.

The Good: They opened SEC play with a dominant 75-53 victory over Auburn, holding the Tigers to just 27.3% shooting. They ran through a soft non-conference slate with impressive margins.

The Bad: This team has zero quality wins. Their non-conference schedule featured Davidson, Georgia State, Mississippi Valley State, Jackson State, Alcorn State, Middle Tennessee, ULM, Pitt (79-44), Charlotte, Southern Miss, Alabama State, La Salle, and Samford. Pitt is the best win on that list, and the Panthers went 13-19 with a 5-13 ACC record last year.

The Ugly: Mississippi State is 0-2 against actual tests this season:
  • Lost at Texas Tech 62-69 – Their one real non-conference challenge, and they failed it.
  • Lost at #8 Oklahoma 47-95 – A historically bad performance. The Bulldogs shot 20% from the field (14-of-70) and 4% from three (1-of-25). Oklahoma set a program record for lowest shooting percentage allowed against a conference opponent. Mississippi State got destroyed on the glass 64-37 despite rebounding being their supposed strength.
We genuinely don't know how good this team is because they haven't beaten anyone of consequence.

Tennessee Update – Rolling at 2-0 in SEC​

Tennessee is 10-3 overall and 2-0 in SEC play after winning at Auburn 73-56 on Sunday.

Talaysia Cooper led with 18 points (7-for-12 FG), adding five rebounds, four assists, four steals, and two blocks. Janiah Barker added 17 points, eight rebounds, and three blocks. The Pauldo twins combined for 17 points and shot 5-for-7 from three.

Tennessee committed a season-high 25 turnovers but still won comfortably, which speaks to their defensive pressure creating havoc even when they're sloppy. The Lady Vols have won three straight and five of their last six.

Style Matchup: How the Systems Interact​

This matchup got a lot more interesting after Sunday's results. Both teams have clear strengths – and clear concerns.

Mississippi State's Issues:
  • Zero quality wins – literally untested against good competition
  • The Oklahoma game exposed that this young team can completely fall apart offensively against elite defensive pressure
  • They got destroyed on the glass (64-37 rebounding loss) despite that being their supposed strength
  • Something was going on with Prater (under 10 minutes, almost all first quarter)
  • Coming off a humiliating road loss – mental recovery is a concern
Tennessee's Issues:
  • 25 turnovers at Auburn is alarming, even in a win
  • Still prone to "meltdowns" per Caldwell – they blew a 17-point lead vs. Florida before recovering
  • 0-3 vs. ranked opponents this season
Key Factors:
  1. Can Mississippi State's offense recover? Shooting 20% from the field and 4% from three is catastrophic. If they're still in a shooting funk, Tennessee's defense will make it worse.
  2. Turnover battle: Tennessee commits turnovers (25 vs. Auburn) but also forces them. Mississippi State will need to protect the ball.
  3. Rebounding: Oklahoma absolutely dominated Mississippi State on the boards. If Tennessee can do the same, this could get ugly.
  4. Home court: Mississippi State desperately needs The Hump to restore confidence after the Norman nightmare.

Predictions​

Given Mississippi State's lack of quality wins and the contrast in team trajectories, Tennessee looks like a clear favorite. Mississippi State is reeling from a historically bad offensive performance against their first real test, while Tennessee is finding its stride with Cooper and Barker both playing well.

Historical betting patterns for similar matchups suggest Tennessee as roughly a 7-10 point favorite on the road. Computer models project something like Tennessee 75, Mississippi State 62.

Mississippi State's best path to an upset: use home court energy to recover their shooting touch early, dominate the glass (their supposed identity), and slow the pace to a grinding half-court game where their defense can limit possessions.

Game Information​

  • Date/Time: Thursday, January 8, 2026 at 6:30 PM CT / 7:30 PM ET
  • Location: Humphrey Coliseum, Starkville, MS
  • TV: SEC Network
  • Records: Tennessee (10-3, 2-0 SEC) vs. Mississippi State (14-2, 1-1 SEC)
  • Series: Tennessee leads the all-time series and won 86-73 in Starkville last January



Bottom Line: Mississippi State's 14-2 record is fool's gold. They've beaten nobody and collapsed in both games against quality opponents (Texas Tech, Oklahoma). Tennessee is rolling and has won three straight. The Bulldogs need this home game to prove the Oklahoma performance was an aberration, not a preview of what happens when they face real competition. For Tennessee, this is a chance to make a statement on the road against a wounded but talented opponent. Expect the Lady Vols to push tempo and test whether Mississippi State has mentally recovered from Norman.
 
#2
#2
One thing I suspect is true is that Purcell is busy convincing his team that of all the ranked SEC teams they'll play that Tennessee offers the best opportunity for them to get an upset win against IF they can hang in there and cause one of Tennessee's infamous "meltdowns" at just the right time. That's the most frustrati g thing about our team this year -- that maybe only a couple of them knew going in that they had little to no chance of winning. The rest of the coaches could actually, legitimately tell their teams that they do have a great shot at a win if everything goes as planned and Tennessee gets rattled.

I don't know if Mississippi State is one of those teams who could spark magic at home and upset us, but I sure hope not. It's an absolute must-win for Tennessee given how so many of our conference games are going to be extremely difficult to win road games, and probable losses. We HAVE to win Thursday, and there is no reason or excuse good enough if we don't.

Ohhhhmmmmmmm. Ohhhhhhhhhhmmmmmmmm. Ohhhhhhhhmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
 
#4
#4
Very important game here, one of several must-wins.

IMO we will need 18 wins to get a good slot in the NCAAT and not be in any danger of the bubble. To do that, in January, we need to win at least 4 of our next 6. However, 3 of the next 6 are ranked ahead of us by Her Hoops and two of these are road games. We all know we have the talent to go 6-0, but we haven't played like that yet. So we have to win this one on the road where we are favored, and what should be a tune-up game against Ark at home. Then we absolutely cannot lose 3 straight to Bama, UK, and OM.

In Feb (Part I), we must win 2 out of 5. I'm not giving away any games, but playing #1, 2, and 3 is tough, especially with 1 and 2 on the road.

In Feb (Part II), we need to win 2 out of 4. I think it's certainly doable, but it would include winning a game that would currently be considered an upset.

We are currently ranked #24 by Her Hoops. I think we are a little better than that but with our body of work it's hard to argue against it until we beat somebody -- which I hope is UK.

Here is our schedule and the Her Hoops rankings. And the minimum wins we need.

Screenshot 2026-01-06 105808.jpg
 
#5
#5
All I know is that NCAA tournament teams win games like the one Tennessee faces in this game. These are the games good teams should win - and have to win - to be in a solid position for March.

"But State is 14-2!" Yes, and just like I said about LSU, if you look at their schedule they've played nobody so far. Nobody. Tennessee must go in there and take that W. Much harder games coming up.
 
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#6
#6
Really think this could be a very close game and just looking at some numbers is really concerning. They beat Davidson by 9 and Davidson lost to Baylor who just beat undefeated Iowa St by two points in overtime. MIss St opened the SEC at home by beating Auburn by 22 points. Considering the way we played at Auburn this one is certainly one that should be closer cause they are a far better team at home than on the road. They only lost to Texas Tech an undefeated team on the road by 7. They have not lost a game at home this season 13 and 0.

It is going to be a challenge for Tennessee were not the super powerful basketball team we hoped to be. We struggle to score in long stretches of games and were prone to turn it over 20 times or more anytime we play. The Auburn game was only double digits because we shot the ball better than we have against any Power one team this season. Auburn the worst rebounding team in the SEC got 16 offensive boards to our 10 and won the turnover battle by 8. None of that can happen in this game as I don't see us shooing over 50 percent again hope we do, but it was unusual.

I hope the coaches can somehow get through to the team how important this game is for them to win. I am looking for a very close game. This qualifies as a quad one game right now for Tennessee don't know if it will be there all season depends on what Miss St does of course.

Tennessee 78 Miss St. 69 and I think we mostly get them at the end of the game at least I hope we do.
 
#9
#9
This one is from Claude. Don't know what the "computer models" is about, but left it in.

I couldn't find the exact minutes from the box score in my search, but I'll trust your information about Prater's limited playing time. Let me create the revised post:




Mississippi State Bulldogs – Tennessee Game Preview (Jan. 8, 2026)​


The Coach: Sam Purcell​

Sam Purcell is in his fourth season at Mississippi State after coming from Louisville, where he spent nine years as Jeff Walz's top assistant and lead recruiter. He's been remarkably successful in Starkville, becoming the first coach in program history to win 20+ games in each of his first three seasons. Purcell has compiled 67 overall wins and 24 SEC wins, both program-bests for any coach through three seasons. He's led Mississippi State to the NCAA Tournament twice and recently signed a contract extension.

What Changed Since Last Year​

Mississippi State underwent a near-complete roster overhaul. Destiney McPhaul and Chandler Prater are the only two returners from last year's team. The Bulldogs lost their top four scorers including Jerkaila Jordan, Debreasha Powe, and Madina Okot (who transferred to South Carolina). Purcell rebuilt through the portal, bringing in six transfers: Trayanna Crisp (North Carolina), Awa Fane (JUCO), Saniyah King (Howard), Favour Nwaedozi (Japan), Kharyssa Richardson (Ole Miss), and Faith Wylder. They also added a strong freshman class ranked 11th nationally featuring Jaylah Lampley (No. 38 recruit), Madison Francis (No. 39), and Nataliyah Gray (No. 95).

Key Players​

Mississippi State has five players averaging double figures:

Favour Nwaedozi (F, 6-3, Jr.) – The Nigerian transfer from Japan has been a revelation. She's an SEC Player of the Year candidate averaging around 14.3 ppg with dominant rebounding (had a game with 21 points and 23 rebounds). Versatile post player who can score inside and outside and defend the full length of the floor.

Madison Francis (F, 6-1, Fr.) – Getting national recognition as one of the best freshmen in the country. Averages 13.1 ppg and is a force on defense with elite shot-blocking ability.

Destiney McPhaul (G, 5-8, Sr.) – The floor general and lone experienced returner with back-to-back 10-assist games. Provides senior leadership for this young roster.

Jaylah Lampley (G/F, 6-1, Fr.) – SEC Freshman of the Week honoree, averaging 10.9 ppg.

Chandler Prater (G, 5-8, Jr.) – Had five straight double-doubles during non-conference play, but notably played less than 10 minutes against Oklahoma, almost entirely in the first quarter. Something to monitor – unclear if injury, foul trouble, or coaching decision

Style of Play​

Mississippi State plays a deliberate, defense-first style that contrasts sharply with Tennessee's System. The Bulldogs sit in the top 20 in field-goal percentage (.504) and blocks per game. Their stout defense held early-season opponents under 62 points and to 34.7% shooting. They dominate the boards with Nwaedozi anchoring the glass. Not a high-volume three-point shooting team but efficient when they take them.

2025-26 Season So Far​

Mississippi State is 14-2 overall and 1-1 in SEC play.

The Good: They opened SEC play with a dominant 75-53 victory over Auburn, holding the Tigers to just 27.3% shooting. They ran through a soft non-conference slate with impressive margins.

The Bad: This team has zero quality wins. Their non-conference schedule featured Davidson, Georgia State, Mississippi Valley State, Jackson State, Alcorn State, Middle Tennessee, ULM, Pitt (79-44), Charlotte, Southern Miss, Alabama State, La Salle, and Samford. Pitt is the best win on that list, and the Panthers went 13-19 with a 5-13 ACC record last year.

The Ugly: Mississippi State is 0-2 against actual tests this season:
  • Lost at Texas Tech 62-69 – Their one real non-conference challenge, and they failed it.
  • Lost at #8 Oklahoma 47-95 – A historically bad performance. The Bulldogs shot 20% from the field (14-of-70) and 4% from three (1-of-25). Oklahoma set a program record for lowest shooting percentage allowed against a conference opponent. Mississippi State got destroyed on the glass 64-37 despite rebounding being their supposed strength.
We genuinely don't know how good this team is because they haven't beaten anyone of consequence.

Tennessee Update – Rolling at 2-0 in SEC​

Tennessee is 10-3 overall and 2-0 in SEC play after winning at Auburn 73-56 on Sunday.

Talaysia Cooper led with 18 points (7-for-12 FG), adding five rebounds, four assists, four steals, and two blocks. Janiah Barker added 17 points, eight rebounds, and three blocks. The Pauldo twins combined for 17 points and shot 5-for-7 from three.

Tennessee committed a season-high 25 turnovers but still won comfortably, which speaks to their defensive pressure creating havoc even when they're sloppy. The Lady Vols have won three straight and five of their last six.

Style Matchup: How the Systems Interact​

This matchup got a lot more interesting after Sunday's results. Both teams have clear strengths – and clear concerns.

Mississippi State's Issues:
  • Zero quality wins – literally untested against good competition
  • The Oklahoma game exposed that this young team can completely fall apart offensively against elite defensive pressure
  • They got destroyed on the glass (64-37 rebounding loss) despite that being their supposed strength
  • Something was going on with Prater (under 10 minutes, almost all first quarter)
  • Coming off a humiliating road loss – mental recovery is a concern
Tennessee's Issues:
  • 25 turnovers at Auburn is alarming, even in a win
  • Still prone to "meltdowns" per Caldwell – they blew a 17-point lead vs. Florida before recovering
  • 0-3 vs. ranked opponents this season
Key Factors:
  1. Can Mississippi State's offense recover? Shooting 20% from the field and 4% from three is catastrophic. If they're still in a shooting funk, Tennessee's defense will make it worse.
  2. Turnover battle: Tennessee commits turnovers (25 vs. Auburn) but also forces them. Mississippi State will need to protect the ball.
  3. Rebounding: Oklahoma absolutely dominated Mississippi State on the boards. If Tennessee can do the same, this could get ugly.
  4. Home court: Mississippi State desperately needs The Hump to restore confidence after the Norman nightmare.

Predictions​

Given Mississippi State's lack of quality wins and the contrast in team trajectories, Tennessee looks like a clear favorite. Mississippi State is reeling from a historically bad offensive performance against their first real test, while Tennessee is finding its stride with Cooper and Barker both playing well.

Historical betting patterns for similar matchups suggest Tennessee as roughly a 7-10 point favorite on the road. Computer models project something like Tennessee 75, Mississippi State 62.

Mississippi State's best path to an upset: use home court energy to recover their shooting touch early, dominate the glass (their supposed identity), and slow the pace to a grinding half-court game where their defense can limit possessions.

Game Information​

  • Date/Time: Thursday, January 8, 2026 at 6:30 PM CT / 7:30 PM ET
  • Location: Humphrey Coliseum, Starkville, MS
  • TV: SEC Network
  • Records: Tennessee (10-3, 2-0 SEC) vs. Mississippi State (14-2, 1-1 SEC)
  • Series: Tennessee leads the all-time series and won 86-73 in Starkville last January



Bottom Line: Mississippi State's 14-2 record is fool's gold. They've beaten nobody and collapsed in both games against quality opponents (Texas Tech, Oklahoma). Tennessee is rolling and has won three straight. The Bulldogs need this home game to prove the Oklahoma performance was an aberration, not a preview of what happens when they face real competition. For Tennessee, this is a chance to make a statement on the road against a wounded but talented opponent. Expect the Lady Vols to push tempo and test whether Mississippi State has mentally recovered from Norman.
"Claude" from the latin claudus, meaning "lame or limping."
In modern forum English, it has come to be interpreted as "seeing through orange-tinted glasses."
 
#10
#10
Really think this could be a very close game and just looking at some numbers is really concerning. They beat Davidson by 9 and Davidson lost to Baylor who just beat undefeated Iowa St by two points in overtime. MIss St opened the SEC at home by beating Auburn by 22 points. Considering the way we played at Auburn this one is certainly one that should be closer cause they are a far better team at home than on the road. They only lost to Texas Tech an undefeated team on the road by 7. They have not lost a game at home this season 13 and 0.

It is going to be a challenge for Tennessee were not the super powerful basketball team we hoped to be. We struggle to score in long stretches of games and were prone to turn it over 20 times or more anytime we play. The Auburn game was only double digits because we shot the ball better than we have against any Power one team this season. Auburn the worst rebounding team in the SEC got 16 offensive boards to our 10 and won the turnover battle by 8. None of that can happen in this game as I don't see us shooing over 50 percent again hope we do, but it was unusual.

I hope the coaches can somehow get through to the team how important this game is for them to win. I am looking for a very close game. This qualifies as a quad one game right now for Tennessee don't know if it will be there all season depends on what Miss St does of course.

Tennessee 78 Miss St. 69 and I think we mostly get them at the end of the game at least I hope we do.
CKC went back to her standard formula against Auburn, whereas she played a bit more conventionally against FL. Perhaps that reflect the absence of Latham, who seems to have emerged as a stabilizing force.

I hope she tilts back to the FL scheme for this one. Auburn was a weak team missing a key scorer so we had some room for error and won with a very sloppy game (If the 3 ball had not been dropping, that game could have been a lot tighter).

I don;t think that will the same latitude against Miss St. (though I hope the improved 3 pt shooting continues).

Also, did anyone notice that Coops 3 pt shot looks different? She seems to have a higher release point and more arc on it.
 
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#11
#11
After a performance like Oklahoma, and playing at home, I wonder if they aren't determined to come out and prove they are better and that.
1 for 25 on 3s , id pack it in and make them prove they can hit the 3. Their confidence on 3s has got to be very down and thinking miss as they release the ball and miss going through their mind. A terrible place to be as a basketball player, confidence is paramount.
 
#12
#12
CKC went back to her standard formula against Auburn, whereas she played a bit more conventionally against FL. Perhaps that reflect the absence of Latham, who seems to have emerged as a stabilizing force.

I hope she tilts back to the FL scheme for this one. Auburn was a weak team missing a key scorer so we had some room for error and won with a very sloppy game (If the 3 ball had not been dropping, that game could have been a lot tighter).

I don;t think that will the same latitude against Miss St. (though I hope the improved 3 pt shooting continues).

Also, did anyone notice that Coops 3 pt shot looks difference. She seems to have a higher release point and more arc on it.
Yeah, I noticed. Her three last season was wild looking.
 
#14
#14
1 for 25 on 3s , id pack it in and make them prove they can hit the 3. Their confidence on 3s has got to be very down and thinking miss as they release the ball and miss going through their mind. A terrible place to be as a basketball player, confidence is paramount.
Of course, they are at home for this one, have shot 33% for the season and 33% against Auburn.
 
#18
#18
Oklahoma beat them by 48 points on Sunday. We need to win by at least 20. But I’ll take a win even if it’s by 1.

As for my score:
Lady Vols: 77
Mississippi Starks: 68.

I think Miss St will play hard, they don't want to go down 0-3 especially since we play them twice this season. But we're taking it. We must stack our wins before that brutal February comes.

Player of the Game will be Spearman (she had an embarrassing last game, she wants to bounce back).
 
#19
#19
As for my score:
Lady Vols: 77
Mississippi Starks: 68.

I think Miss St will play hard, they don't want to go down 0-3 especially since we play them twice this season. But we're taking it. We must stack our wins before that brutal February comes.

Player of the Game will be Spearman (she had an embarrassing last game, she wants to bounce back).
You're right that going down 0-3 to start league play is NOT something they want to do, so I fully expect State to fight like hell Thursday, and for whatever crowd they have there to be extra supportive since I really do feel as though nearly everyone is approaching games against Tennessee as being uniquely winnable since the Lady Vols have been consistently INconsistent.

As for Spearman, I didn't really consider her last game as being embarrassing. Frustrating, for sure, but she was definitely snake-bit then hog-tied by foul trouble. It happens sometimes, but she was working hard. I imagine she's spent time the past couple of days focusing on boxing out without wrapping up her man.

Only thing that truly bothered me about Zee's last game was that she forgot to be a leader on the bench. She was having a bad day and she forgot that she could still help her team by being supportive of everyone else instead of just sitting there looking uninvolved. The younger players, especially, need the veterans on the bench to show enthusiasm, IMO.
 
#20
#20
Pretty nervous about this one, though I haven't watched them this year to know that much about them, especially with all the turnover on their roster. As others have noted, they played a very weak non-conference schedule, but their rebounding, FG% defense (especially 2pt% defense), and blocks all look scary good. We will need to be disciplined boxing out and moving well without the ball to try to get some easy looks. Always good if we can hit some 3s on the road (9-21 at Auburn was encouraging!).

I think it'll be close, and I hope the experience gutting out a close win at Stanford pays off.

78-74 Lady Vols
 
#21
#21
This one is from Claude. Don't know what the "computer models" is about, but left it in.

I couldn't find the exact minutes from the box score in my search, but I'll trust your information about Prater's limited playing time. Let me create the revised post:




Mississippi State Bulldogs – Tennessee Game Preview (Jan. 8, 2026)​


The Coach: Sam Purcell​

Sam Purcell is in his fourth season at Mississippi State after coming from Louisville, where he spent nine years as Jeff Walz's top assistant and lead recruiter. He's been remarkably successful in Starkville, becoming the first coach in program history to win 20+ games in each of his first three seasons. Purcell has compiled 67 overall wins and 24 SEC wins, both program-bests for any coach through three seasons. He's led Mississippi State to the NCAA Tournament twice and recently signed a contract extension.

What Changed Since Last Year​

Mississippi State underwent a near-complete roster overhaul. Destiney McPhaul and Chandler Prater are the only two returners from last year's team. The Bulldogs lost their top four scorers including Jerkaila Jordan, Debreasha Powe, and Madina Okot (who transferred to South Carolina). Purcell rebuilt through the portal, bringing in six transfers: Trayanna Crisp (North Carolina), Awa Fane (JUCO), Saniyah King (Howard), Favour Nwaedozi (Japan), Kharyssa Richardson (Ole Miss), and Faith Wylder. They also added a strong freshman class ranked 11th nationally featuring Jaylah Lampley (No. 38 recruit), Madison Francis (No. 39), and Nataliyah Gray (No. 95).

Key Players​

Mississippi State has five players averaging double figures:

Favour Nwaedozi (F, 6-3, Jr.) – The Nigerian transfer from Japan has been a revelation. She's an SEC Player of the Year candidate averaging around 14.3 ppg with dominant rebounding (had a game with 21 points and 23 rebounds). Versatile post player who can score inside and outside and defend the full length of the floor.

Madison Francis (F, 6-1, Fr.) – Getting national recognition as one of the best freshmen in the country. Averages 13.1 ppg and is a force on defense with elite shot-blocking ability.

Destiney McPhaul (G, 5-8, Sr.) – The floor general and lone experienced returner with back-to-back 10-assist games. Provides senior leadership for this young roster.

Jaylah Lampley (G/F, 6-1, Fr.) – SEC Freshman of the Week honoree, averaging 10.9 ppg.

Chandler Prater (G, 5-8, Jr.) – Had five straight double-doubles during non-conference play, but notably played less than 10 minutes against Oklahoma, almost entirely in the first quarter. Something to monitor – unclear if injury, foul trouble, or coaching decision

Style of Play​

Mississippi State plays a deliberate, defense-first style that contrasts sharply with Tennessee's System. The Bulldogs sit in the top 20 in field-goal percentage (.504) and blocks per game. Their stout defense held early-season opponents under 62 points and to 34.7% shooting. They dominate the boards with Nwaedozi anchoring the glass. Not a high-volume three-point shooting team but efficient when they take them.

2025-26 Season So Far​

Mississippi State is 14-2 overall and 1-1 in SEC play.

The Good: They opened SEC play with a dominant 75-53 victory over Auburn, holding the Tigers to just 27.3% shooting. They ran through a soft non-conference slate with impressive margins.

The Bad: This team has zero quality wins. Their non-conference schedule featured Davidson, Georgia State, Mississippi Valley State, Jackson State, Alcorn State, Middle Tennessee, ULM, Pitt (79-44), Charlotte, Southern Miss, Alabama State, La Salle, and Samford. Pitt is the best win on that list, and the Panthers went 13-19 with a 5-13 ACC record last year.

The Ugly: Mississippi State is 0-2 against actual tests this season:
  • Lost at Texas Tech 62-69 – Their one real non-conference challenge, and they failed it.
  • Lost at #8 Oklahoma 47-95 – A historically bad performance. The Bulldogs shot 20% from the field (14-of-70) and 4% from three (1-of-25). Oklahoma set a program record for lowest shooting percentage allowed against a conference opponent. Mississippi State got destroyed on the glass 64-37 despite rebounding being their supposed strength.
We genuinely don't know how good this team is because they haven't beaten anyone of consequence.

Tennessee Update – Rolling at 2-0 in SEC​

Tennessee is 10-3 overall and 2-0 in SEC play after winning at Auburn 73-56 on Sunday.

Talaysia Cooper led with 18 points (7-for-12 FG), adding five rebounds, four assists, four steals, and two blocks. Janiah Barker added 17 points, eight rebounds, and three blocks. The Pauldo twins combined for 17 points and shot 5-for-7 from three.

Tennessee committed a season-high 25 turnovers but still won comfortably, which speaks to their defensive pressure creating havoc even when they're sloppy. The Lady Vols have won three straight and five of their last six.

Style Matchup: How the Systems Interact​

This matchup got a lot more interesting after Sunday's results. Both teams have clear strengths – and clear concerns.

Mississippi State's Issues:
  • Zero quality wins – literally untested against good competition
  • The Oklahoma game exposed that this young team can completely fall apart offensively against elite defensive pressure
  • They got destroyed on the glass (64-37 rebounding loss) despite that being their supposed strength
  • Something was going on with Prater (under 10 minutes, almost all first quarter)
  • Coming off a humiliating road loss – mental recovery is a concern
Tennessee's Issues:
  • 25 turnovers at Auburn is alarming, even in a win
  • Still prone to "meltdowns" per Caldwell – they blew a 17-point lead vs. Florida before recovering
  • 0-3 vs. ranked opponents this season
Key Factors:
  1. Can Mississippi State's offense recover? Shooting 20% from the field and 4% from three is catastrophic. If they're still in a shooting funk, Tennessee's defense will make it worse.
  2. Turnover battle: Tennessee commits turnovers (25 vs. Auburn) but also forces them. Mississippi State will need to protect the ball.
  3. Rebounding: Oklahoma absolutely dominated Mississippi State on the boards. If Tennessee can do the same, this could get ugly.
  4. Home court: Mississippi State desperately needs The Hump to restore confidence after the Norman nightmare.

Predictions​

Given Mississippi State's lack of quality wins and the contrast in team trajectories, Tennessee looks like a clear favorite. Mississippi State is reeling from a historically bad offensive performance against their first real test, while Tennessee is finding its stride with Cooper and Barker both playing well.

Historical betting patterns for similar matchups suggest Tennessee as roughly a 7-10 point favorite on the road. Computer models project something like Tennessee 75, Mississippi State 62.

Mississippi State's best path to an upset: use home court energy to recover their shooting touch early, dominate the glass (their supposed identity), and slow the pace to a grinding half-court game where their defense can limit possessions.

Game Information​

  • Date/Time: Thursday, January 8, 2026 at 6:30 PM CT / 7:30 PM ET
  • Location: Humphrey Coliseum, Starkville, MS
  • TV: SEC Network
  • Records: Tennessee (10-3, 2-0 SEC) vs. Mississippi State (14-2, 1-1 SEC)
  • Series: Tennessee leads the all-time series and won 86-73 in Starkville last January



Bottom Line: Mississippi State's 14-2 record is fool's gold. They've beaten nobody and collapsed in both games against quality opponents (Texas Tech, Oklahoma). Tennessee is rolling and has won three straight. The Bulldogs need this home game to prove the Oklahoma performance was an aberration, not a preview of what happens when they face real competition. For Tennessee, this is a chance to make a statement on the road against a wounded but talented opponent. Expect the Lady Vols to push tempo and test whether Mississippi State has mentally recovered from Norman.
Yes, I believe LVs will "make a statement" against Mississippi State. LVs will roll. LVs 96--Mississippi State 60. GBO.
 
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