Alabama exacts revenge, knocks off rival Auburn in OT thriller


AUBURN, Ala. — There were minimal postseason implications when No. 7 Alabama met No. 1 Auburn on the final Saturday of the regular season. As Alabama coach Nate Oats put it Friday: “Not a whole lot riding on this game other than some pride.”

Still, the matchup produced compelling basketball, as forty minutes wasn’t enough to decide Saturday’s outcome. With just a few seconds left on the game clock, Alabama put the ball in the hands of senior Mark Sears — and he delivered with a signature moment. Sears’ floater as time expired lifted Alabama over Auburn, 93-91, denying its rival what could’ve been a program-record 16th SEC win and 28th regular-season win.

“In my mind, I was saying ‘This is going to be a game-winner,’” Sears said via the ESPN broadcast after the game.

Sears had been on a tear of late — 28 points per game over the last five outings. He then managed only nine points Saturday, but the game-winning shot was the most important basket of the game and one of the biggest shots of the season nationally.

Auburn’s Johni Broome led all scorers with a career-high 34 points. Alabama, meanwhile, was paced by Grant Nelson’s 23 points and eight rebounds.

Auburn will be motivated entering the postseason after back-to-back losses to end the regular season. A career game from Broome is a good sign entering this time of year, even in a losing effort.

With the win, Alabama basketball has locked in the No. 3 seed in next week’s SEC Tournament. Auburn will be the No. 1 seed as regular-season champions. The first meeting, an Auburn win, helped propel the Tigers to the regular-season title, so Saturday’s result was the ultimate revenge for the Crimson Tide. A third meeting next week in Nashville could be for the SEC Tournament title — and a No. 1 seed for Alabama.

The Nelson that Bama needs showed up Saturday

Nelson was arguably the best player on the court Saturday, pacing Alabama’s offense as some of its usual high scorers — Sears, Aden Holloway and Chris Youngblood — struggled from the field. It was the type of performance that helped Alabama reach the Final Four a year ago, and it’s what the Crimson Tide needed from Nelson entering March.

Nelson’s talent is undeniable but inconsistency is the last hurdle for him to overcome. His last 20-point game was on Jan. 18 and he’s only scored 10 points in one of his last five games entering Saturday. The senior battled Broome throughout Saturday, matching basket for basket, and he provided a key offensive rebound and go-ahead basket late in overtime to set up Sears’ game-winner.

Saturday’s win was huge for Alabama, which lost four of its last six games before Saturday, and it was an especially critical game for Nelson. His elite play changed the trajectory of Alabama’s season.

(Photo: Stew Milne / Getty Images)





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