Late Run Pushes No. 4 Alabama Past LSU, 80-73
by Staff Reporter
January 25, 20252 Comments

Will McLelland-Imagn Images
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The LSU Tigers showed a determination and effort that gave them every chance to stay with the No. 4/3 Alabama Crimson Tide on Saturday night at Coleman Coliseum before falling by a score of 80-73.
Alabama outscored the Tigers 50-43 in the second half of play to get the victory to improve to 17-3 and 5-1 in the SEC. LSU dropped to 12-7 and 1-5 in the league.
Jordan Sears led LSU with 21 points with six assists on 7-of-14 shooting with one trey and 6-of-6 from the free throw line. Sears has made all 28 free throws in SEC play this season.
Cam Carter had 17 points with Corey Chest scoring 12 points and grabbed 18 rebounds, with Daimion Collins adding 10 points. Chest’s 18 rebounds was the most since Darius Days had 18 against Louisiana Tech on Dec. 18, 2021.
Aden Holloway led Alabama with 19 points, while Mouhamed Dioubate added 14, Chris Youngblood 13, Grant Nelson 12 and Labaron Philon 11.
LSU was only able to shoot 39.4 percent from the field and 3-of-23 from three-point range, including just 1-of-11 in the final 20 minutes. LSU was 28-of-71 overall and 14-of-19 from the free throw line.
After shooting 50 percent in the first half, Alabama finished the game at 44.3 percent (27-of-61) with seven made three pointers and 19-of-24 at the free throw line.
For the second-straight road game, the Tigers found themselves tied after 20 minutes. After a half in which the Tigers – despite being outshot from the field – were able to turn around an SEC-game trend of points off turnovers, getting 13 points off eight Alabama turnovers compared to just five for Alabama off LSU’s six turnovers.
The Tigers had opportunities with 13 offensive rebounds which resulted in 10 points. They shot 39 percent in the first half (15-of-38), but just 2-of-14 from distance. Alabama shot 50 percent in the first half (13-of-26) and 4-of-12 from deep. Alabama was 10-of-13 at the free throw line with LSU 8-of-10. LSU out rebounded the Tide, 23-17, with Chest getting 15 boards in the first half.
The Tigers ended up out-rebounding Alabama, 43-41, with 17 offensive rebounds and a 14-11 advantage in second chance points. LSU finished the game up 17-11 in points off turnovers.
The first half featured eight lead changes and seven ties in a game that ended with 13 lead changes and eight ties.
The Tigers had two one-point leads in the second half, at 48-47 on a Carter driving layup with 16:22 to play, and then at 50-49 with 15:23 to go in the game on a dunk off a Carter pass.
But Alabama would come back to score the next four points, one bucket off a turnover and never trailed again, getting as much as a 13-point lead with 2:09 to play.
The Tigers continued fighting late in the game with Sears making three free throws, two Carter free throws and a Collins layup that cut the Alabama lead to 77-71 with 1:05 to play. LSU would get it to five at 78-73 on a Sears bucket with 39 seconds left, but the Tigers could not get any more points as Alabama was able to finish out the clock.
LSU will be back in action on Wednesday night at 6 p.m. CT as No. 1 Auburn comes to town. Auburn defeated Tennessee on Saturday night, 53-51.
(Release via LSU Athletics)
Box Score
Alabama outscored the Tigers 50-43 in the second half of play to get the victory to improve to 17-3 and 5-1 in the SEC. LSU dropped to 12-7 and 1-5 in the league.
Jordan Sears led LSU with 21 points with six assists on 7-of-14 shooting with one trey and 6-of-6 from the free throw line. Sears has made all 28 free throws in SEC play this season.
Cam Carter had 17 points with Corey Chest scoring 12 points and grabbed 18 rebounds, with Daimion Collins adding 10 points. Chest’s 18 rebounds was the most since Darius Days had 18 against Louisiana Tech on Dec. 18, 2021.
Aden Holloway led Alabama with 19 points, while Mouhamed Dioubate added 14, Chris Youngblood 13, Grant Nelson 12 and Labaron Philon 11.
LSU was only able to shoot 39.4 percent from the field and 3-of-23 from three-point range, including just 1-of-11 in the final 20 minutes. LSU was 28-of-71 overall and 14-of-19 from the free throw line.
After shooting 50 percent in the first half, Alabama finished the game at 44.3 percent (27-of-61) with seven made three pointers and 19-of-24 at the free throw line.
For the second-straight road game, the Tigers found themselves tied after 20 minutes. After a half in which the Tigers – despite being outshot from the field – were able to turn around an SEC-game trend of points off turnovers, getting 13 points off eight Alabama turnovers compared to just five for Alabama off LSU’s six turnovers.
The Tigers had opportunities with 13 offensive rebounds which resulted in 10 points. They shot 39 percent in the first half (15-of-38), but just 2-of-14 from distance. Alabama shot 50 percent in the first half (13-of-26) and 4-of-12 from deep. Alabama was 10-of-13 at the free throw line with LSU 8-of-10. LSU out rebounded the Tide, 23-17, with Chest getting 15 boards in the first half.
The Tigers ended up out-rebounding Alabama, 43-41, with 17 offensive rebounds and a 14-11 advantage in second chance points. LSU finished the game up 17-11 in points off turnovers.
The first half featured eight lead changes and seven ties in a game that ended with 13 lead changes and eight ties.
The Tigers had two one-point leads in the second half, at 48-47 on a Carter driving layup with 16:22 to play, and then at 50-49 with 15:23 to go in the game on a dunk off a Carter pass.
But Alabama would come back to score the next four points, one bucket off a turnover and never trailed again, getting as much as a 13-point lead with 2:09 to play.
The Tigers continued fighting late in the game with Sears making three free throws, two Carter free throws and a Collins layup that cut the Alabama lead to 77-71 with 1:05 to play. LSU would get it to five at 78-73 on a Sears bucket with 39 seconds left, but the Tigers could not get any more points as Alabama was able to finish out the clock.
LSU will be back in action on Wednesday night at 6 p.m. CT as No. 1 Auburn comes to town. Auburn defeated Tennessee on Saturday night, 53-51.
(Release via LSU Athletics)
Box Score
Filed Under: LSU Basketball
Originally published on TigerDroppings.com
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