No. 2 Tennessee jumps on top early, slams Saint Peter’s

Mar 21, 2024; Charlotte, NC, USA; Tennessee Volunteers forward Jonas Aidoo (0) dunks over Saint Peter's Peacocks forward Mouhamed Sow (35) in the first half of the first round of the 2024 NCAA Tournament at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

Credit: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

CHARLOTTE — Dalton Knecht poured in 23 points and Tennessee blew out Saint Peter’s 83-49 in the NCAA Tournament Midwest Region first-round game Thursday night, preventing the development of another Cinderella postseason for the Peacocks.

Jonas Aidoo posted 15 points and Zakai Zeigler provided 11 points and 10 assists for the Volunteers, who built a 29-point lead in the first half.

Second-seeded Tennessee (25-8) takes on seventh-seeded Texas (21-12), which eliminated 10th-seeded Colorado State 56-44 earlier Thursday, in the second round on Saturday. That contest will pit Tennessee coach Rick Barnes against his former team.

Latrell Reid’s 17 points and Marcus Randolph’s nine points paced No. 15 seed Saint Peter’s (19-14), which was trying to duplicate the deep tournament run it enjoyed two years ago by reaching the Elite Eight as a No. 15 seed. The Peacocks were winners of eight of their past 10 games prior to Thursday.

Knecht drained four of his eight 3-point shots as part of Tennessee’s 11-for-24 shooting from long range. The Peacocks were 4-for-24 on 3-point attempts.

Saint Peter’s gave up more than 65 points only once in its previous 11 games, but the Volunteers reached that mark 12 minutes before the game’s end.

The Volunteers went up 29-7, and that pretty much signaled the direction of this game. Aidoo had three dunks in the first 3 1/2 minutes.

Knecht and Aidoo each had 13 points in the first half, which ended with Tennessee leading 46-20. The Volunteers shot 64 percent from the field before the break compared to 23.3 percent for Saint Peter’s.

There was a feisty moment in the half when Tennessee reserve Jordan Gainey and the Peacocks’ Reid were assessed technical fouls, but the Volunteers led 36-15 at the time. It counted as Reid’s third personal foul, so that was another blow to the Peacocks.

Tennessee entered the tournament on a two-game skid with losses to teams — Kentucky and Mississippi State — that were ousted in the tournament earlier Thursday.

–Bob Sutton, Field Level Media

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