Tennessee
South Carolina vs. Tennessee odds, score prediction: 2024 college basketball picks for March 5 by proven model
The fourth-ranked Tennessee Volunteers can move one step closer to claiming the outright SEC regular-season championship when they take on the 17th-ranked South Carolina Gamecocks on Wednesday. The Volunteers (23-6, 13-3 SEC), who have won six in a row, can claim their first conference championship since the 2017-18 season with a victory. They own a one-game lead in the loss column entering the contest at Columbia, S.C. The Gamecocks (24-5, 12-4 SEC), who are looking to earn their first conference title since winning the SEC East in 2009, have won three in a row. Tennessee is 7-3 away from home, while South Carolina is 14-2 at home.
Tipoff is set for 7 p.m. ET at Colonial Life Arena. Tennessee leads the all-time series 52-29, including an 18-17 edge in games played in Columbia. The Volunteers are 5.5-point favorites in the latest Tennessee vs. South Carolina odds from SportsLine consensus, while the over/under for total points scored is 139.5. Before making any South Carolina vs. Tennessee picks, you need to see the college basketball predictions and betting advice from the SportsLine Projection Model.
The model simulates every Division I college basketball game 10,000 times. It enters Week 18 of the 2023-24 season on a 141-100 roll on all top-rated college basketball picks dating back to last season, returning more than $1,700 for $100 players. It is also off to a sizzling 26-17 start on top-rated spread picks this season. Anyone following has seen huge returns.
Now, the model has set its sights on Tennessee vs. South Carolina and revealed its CBB picks and predictions. You can head to SportsLine now to see the model’s picks. Here are several college basketball odds and trends for South Carolina vs. Tennessee:
- Tennessee vs. South Carolina spread: Tennessee -5.5
- Tennessee vs. South Carolina over/under: 139.5 points
- Tennessee vs. South Carolina money line: Tennessee -226, South Carolina +185
- TEN: The Volunteers have hit the game total over in 9 of their last 14 away games (+3.50 units)
- SC: The Gamecocks have won 21 of their last 28 games (+19.75 units on ML)
- Tennessee vs. South Carolina picks: See picks at SportsLine
Why Tennessee can cover
Senior guard Dalton Knecht has started all 29 games this season and is averaging 20.6 points, 4.9 rebounds and 1.9 assists in 29.6 minutes. He is in his first season with the program, after spending the past two years at Northern Colorado. In last week’s 92-84 win over Auburn, he poured in 39 points and had three steals. He registered his first double-double of the year in a 72-67 win at Missouri on Feb. 20. In that game, he scored 17 points, while grabbing 10 rebounds.
Junior forward Jonas Aidoo also helps lead the Volunteers. In 29 games, all starts, he is averaging 12.1 points, 7.6 rebounds, 1.9 blocks and one assist per game. He has posted eight double-doubles in 2023-24, including a 29-point and 11-rebound effort in a 74-56 win over Georgia Southern on Dec. 12. He scored 12 points, grabbed seven rebounds and blocked two shots in Saturday’s win at Alabama. See which team to pick here.
Why South Carolina can cover
Junior guard Meechie Johnson has been red hot for the Gamecocks, scoring 20 or more points in each of the past two games. In Saturday’s win over Florida, he scored 25 points, while grabbing four rebounds, dishing out three assists and adding two steals. He had 22 points, five rebounds and three assists in a 70-68 win at Texas A&M on Feb. 28. In 28 games, all starts, Johnson is averaging 14.2 points, 4.3 rebounds, three assists and one steal. He is also draining 80.8% of his free-throw attempts.
Senior forward B.J. Mack, who is in his first season at South Carolina following one year at South Florida and three at Wofford, has started all 29 games for the Gamecocks. In 24.7 minutes, he is averaging 13.2 points, 4.7 rebounds and 1.4 assists. He scored 16 points and grabbed five rebounds in the January win over the Volunteers. He has reached double-digit scoring in four of the past six games, including two 18-point performances with one of those being a near double-double, with nine rebounds against LSU on Feb. 17. See which team to pick here.
How to make South Carolina vs. Tennessee picks
SportsLine’s model is leaning Over on the total, projecting 141 combined points. The model also says one side of the spread hits nearly 60% of the time. You can see the picks at SportsLine.
So who wins Tennessee vs. South Carolina, and which side of the spread hits nearly 60% of the time? Visit SportsLine now to see the best bets from a model that’s 26-17 on top-rated college basketball picks this season, and find out.
Tennessee
Wild ride for temperatures: A look at Middle Tennessee’s first major heat wave of 2026
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) – Oppressive heat is done, but high humidity remains.
The jaw-dropping heat wave that closed the month of June and kicked off July is now officially complete. A heat wave is defined as a period of three or more consecutive days with temperatures in the 90s. Today, Sunday, July 5, Nashville’s high temperature was only 88 degrees, marking the end of the blistering seven-day stretch.
During our record-setting round of summer sizzle, Nashville achieved many notable milestones.
First, the low temperature last Sunday, June 28, was only 79°. That’s remarkably warm for a minimum temperature. Since 2013, there were only three other times the low in Nashville was that high.

Then, on Thursday, July 2, Nashville soared to 100 degrees for the first time in nearly a year. That day’s high missed the record by one.
Friday, July 3, turned even hotter. The airport thermometer peaked at 101° that afternoon setting a new record high for the date.
Finally, today, July 5, the high temperature was only 88 degrees. For the first time in a week, the temperature was held below 90. However, what’s stunning is that the high was set at 9:41 a.m., well before the typical high temperature time of day — mid-to-late afternoon.
In the coming days, we’ll get a break from what we endured last week. Expect spotty showers and storms. Clouds and rain in the area will hold temperatures to more seasonable levels, in the upper 80s and low 90s.
For life-saving weather alerts, customized messages on conditions and forecasts, and videos detailing upcoming weather events, download the WSMV 4 First Alert Weather app for iPhone or Android. Have weather pictures or videos? Share them here.
Tennessee
Tennessee Man Reaches For Item At Lowe’s. Then He Runs Into A Surprising New Touchscreen: ‘No Need To Wait’
Anyone who’s ever needed something locked behind a glass door (or some other security measure that makes it hard to just grab an item off the shelf) knows the drill. You try to click the button to call an employee, wait for an employee to show up, hope the employee isn’t busy with someone else first, and maybe even leave without your item because you’re tired of waiting or just frustrated at the friction of the shopping experience.
One Tennessee electrician went to grab wire for a job and expected the usual wait. Instead, he found Lowe’s had quietly changed the system to seemingly give customers more autonomy in the store.
Lowe’s Gets a Security Upgrade
In a trending video with more than 55,000 views, content creator and contractor Tim, of Tri Cities Electric (@tricities.electric), stopped at a Lowe’s in Tennessee to pick up some wiring for a job.
“One of my least favorite things about coming to Lowe’s was that I’ve obviously got to buy wire, and they keep it behind these cages,” he says, showing what look like wire doors on the retailer’s shelves.
This time, though, there was a touchscreen mounted right on the metal doors, so Tim tried it out.
“We simply click ‘use your cell phone,’ agree to whatever that is, put your phone number in,” he said.
A code landed on his phone seconds later, and he typed it back into the screen.
The screen accepted it, and two electromagnets holding the cage shut released on their own. No waiting for an associate required.
“Case is now unlocked. Got two electromagnets up here; they release. Now, I have all the access in the world to this. How neat. Good job, Lowe’s,” he said.
“No need to wait for wire at @Lowe’s anymore!” he wrote in the caption.
Why Stores Are Locking Everything
The National Retail Federation says that retail theft costs the industry about $95 billion across sectors, and stores have responded by locking down anything with resale value, Business Insider reported.
Visits by an Insider reporter to Walmart, Target, and Home Depot found the same pattern everywhere: power tools sealed in cages, spider-wrap alarms clipped onto smaller items, and security cameras trained on entire aisles.
Lowe’s specifically has cages on power tools, alarms on display units, and—as of last year—some tools that won’t even power on until they’re activated at checkout.
Retail Theft: Is It That Bad?
The “retail theft crisis” narrative is a lot messier than it sounds. Retail executives spent a solid year sounding alarms about “shrink”—inventory loss from theft, employee error, and accounting mistakes combined—but by 2024, several major chains were quietly walking those claims back, according to NPR.
Walgreens’ own finance chief admitted the company might have “cried too much” about theft the year before. And the industry’s go-to shrink figure, sourced from a National Retail Federation survey, has barely moved over the past decade—hovering around 1.4% to 1.6% of sales for years.
That hasn’t stopped the security theater, though: Nearly a third of shoppers say locked-up products make them think worse of a store, and more than a quarter say it’s enough to make them walk out without buying anything.
‘Better Than Home Depot’
The comments filled up with a mix of impressions about the tech.
“So then what’s the point of the cage….” a top comment read.
“Bout time because finding one of them associates isn’t easy,” a person said.
“Until someone leaves it open….” another wrote.
“And now you will be all kinds of marketing text or in that permissions agreement you gave them access to your contacts and to install software,” a commenter added.
Motor1 reached out to Tim via email and Instagram direct message for comment. We’ll be sure to update this if he responds.
Tennessee
Tennessee troopers investigating deadly crash involving UTV, train
SCOTT COUNTY, Tenn. (WVLT) – The Tennessee Highway Patrol is investigating a deadly crash involving a UTV and a train in Scott County.
According to THP’s preliminary report, the crash happened Saturday off of Route 27 near Helenwood just before 5 p.m. when the driver of the UTV, identified as 52-year-old Ronnie Lloyd, “failed to stop” at the railroad crossing and hit a moving train.
Lloyd was not wearing a helmet at the time of the crash, THP said.
Additional information was not released.
Copyright 2026 WVLT. All rights reserved.
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