Missouri
How to Stream the Southeast Missouri State vs. Tennessee State Game Live – February 10
The Tennessee State Tigers (14-10, 7-4 OVC) travel to face the Southeast Missouri State Redhawks (8-16, 3-8 OVC) after winning three road games in a row. It begins at 4:45 PM ET on Saturday, February 10, 2024.
Catch tons of live college basketball, plus original programming, with ESPN+ or the Disney Bundle.
Southeast Missouri State vs. Tennessee State Game Info
- When: Saturday, February 10, 2024 at 4:45 PM ET
- Where: Show Me Center in Cape Girardeau, Missouri
- TV: ESPN+
- Live Stream: Watch this game on ESPN+
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How to Watch Other OVC Games
Southeast Missouri State Stats Insights
- Southeast Missouri State is 6-4 when it shoots higher than 42.3% from the field.
- The Redhawks are the 339th-ranked rebounding team in the nation, the Tigers sit at 253rd.
- The Redhawks score an average of 67.4 points per game, just 2.6 fewer points than the 70 the Tigers allow.
- When it scores more than 70 points, Southeast Missouri State is 6-2.
Watch live college basketball games from all over the country, plus ESPN originals and more NCAA hoops content on ESPN+!
Southeast Missouri State Home & Away Comparison
- In 2023-24 Southeast Missouri State is scoring 13.7 more points per game at home (73.7) than on the road (60).
- At home, the Redhawks give up 67.1 points per game. On the road, they allow 76.8.
- At home, Southeast Missouri State drains 6.7 triples per game, 1.2 more than it averages on the road (5.5). Its 3-point shooting percentage is also higher at home (32.4%) than away (27%).
Rep your team with officially licensed college basketball gear! Head to Fanatics to find jerseys, shirts, and much more.
Southeast Missouri State Upcoming Schedule
Date | Opponent | Score | Arena |
---|---|---|---|
1/30/2024 | @ Lindenwood | L 58-54 | Hyland Performance Arena |
2/3/2024 | Western Illinois | L 76-55 | Show Me Center |
2/8/2024 | Tennessee Tech | W 88-69 | Show Me Center |
2/10/2024 | Tennessee State | – | Show Me Center |
2/15/2024 | @ Eastern Illinois | – | Lantz Arena |
2/17/2024 | @ SIU-Edwardsville | – | Sam M. Vadalabene Center |
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Missouri
ESPN’s Peter Burns details how Missouri fan ‘saved my life’ as he choked on food
US LBM Coaches Poll: Georgia shows weakness, but don’t read too much into it
The latest US LBM Coaches Poll is out and Georgia remains at the top despite a close call against Kentucky in week 3.
Sports Pulse
ESPN personality Peter Burns said a Missouri fan “saved my life” this past weekend after he was choking on a piece of food.
Host of ESPN and SEC Network shows like “SEC Now” and “SEC This Morning,” Burns said on social media Monday that he was dining with co-workers in Columbia, Missouri on Friday night ahead of the Missouri vs. Boston College game the following day. During the dinner, Burns said he began to choke on a piece of food and he motioned to the people at the table he couldn’t breathe.
A friend tried the Heimlich maneuver but was unsuccessful. Burns asked a second person to try it but it also didn’t work. Burns said then a nurse came over to attempt it, only for it to not work.
After about two minutes of not being able to breathe, Burns said he started to lose his vision and began “blacking out.”
Luckily, a man by the name of Jack Foster came and tried to dislodge the food “right as I was about to lose consciousness,” Burns said, and it worked. Foster told Burns he was a youth sports coach and he had just gone through training on how to perform CPR and save people from choking.
“That training is why I am here right now. I’m thankful for him and all involved that helped saved my life that night,” Burns said.
The ESPN personality added that Missouri football trainers assisted him later that night. As a result of the incident, Burns has slight fractures in four of his ribs.
Choking is the fourth leading cause of unintentional injury death, according to the National Safety Council, and it accounted for 5,553 deaths in 2022.
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Missouri
Missouri Bird Flu Case Raises Possibility of Human Transmission
By Robin Foster HealthDay Reporter MONDAY, Sept. 16, 2024 (Healthday News) — In a disclosure that can’t eliminate the possibility that bird flu may have spread from one human to another for the first time, U.S. health officials have reported that a person who lived with a Missouri resident infected …
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Missouri
Silver alert issued for missing Kanas City, Missouri, man, 86
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Authorities issued a silver alert Sunday night for a missing 86-year-old man out of Kansas City, Missouri.
Victor Sahagun was last seen around 9 a.m. Sunday in the 5800 block of E. 26th Terrace.
Sahagun, who has a diagnosis of dementia, is five-feet, nine-inches tall, 160 pounds, with brown eyes and gray hair.
At the time of his disappearance, Sahagun was wearing a gray shirt, green jacket, black sweatpants and black shoes.
His family says he left Sunday morning on foot without a cell phone, wallet or keys. He also goes by Victor Sahagun Mejia.
Anyone with information abut Sahagun’s whereabouts should call 911 or call KCPD at 816-234-5043.
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