BATON ROUGE – Rashaun Agee’s layup and subsequent free throw with 24 seconds left ended up being the winning points in Texas A&M’s 94-91 triple overtime win over LSU Saturday in the regular season finale at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center.

LSU finished the regular season at 15-16 and 3-15 in the Southeastern Conference and will play the first game in the SEC Tournament on Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. against Kentucky (the No. 9 seed). The tournament is set for Bridgestone Arena in Nashville.

Texas A&M finishes the regular season 21-10 and 11-7 in the league.

Just like the opening game of the conference season, the LSU margin of defeat was just three points but it took 15 extra minutes to decide this contest.

Agee put A&M back in the lead after LSU’s Jalen Reece had give the Tigers a 91-90 advantage with 42 seconds left in triple OT on an in the paint jumper.

After the Agee three-point play, Reece missed an attempt with 10 seconds left and LSU was forced to foul with 6.8 seconds remaining. Ali DIbba went make-miss to make it 94-91 with LSU getting the rebound and calling a time out with just under six seconds to play. Max Mackinnon was able to get a look from distance but the shot missed and A&M rebounded as the buzzer sounded.

Agee had 26 points with 11 rebounds, while Rylan Griffen had 24 points. Pop Isaacs had 18 points with Dibba scoring 12.

Five players were in double figures for the Tigers with Max Mackinnon scoring 20, Jalen Reece 17 and five assists, Mike Nwoko 16 points and 13 rebounds while Robert Miller III and Marquel Sutton had 12 points each.

LSU started strong against the Texas A&M press, jumping out to two 15-point advantages in the first 13 minutes at 26-11 (8:52) and 8-13 (7:24) to play as the Aggies opened shooting less than 30 percent while LSU was able to get their percentage much like Tuesday’s Auburn game over 50 percent.

But Texas A&M began to hit some shots and force some turnovers and LSU went to the half up five, 38-33.

LSU shot 14-of-28 in the half, while A&M was 10-of-35 (28.6%).

The Tigers held the lead until the 7:25 mark of the second half when Dibba scored off an LSU turnover to give the Aggies a 61-60 lead. The teams stayed tied the rest of the way with A&M’s biggest lead coming on two occasions at three points in the final three minutes of regulation.

LSU was down two, 70-68, after a 1-of-2 free throw situation by Nwoko. Isaacs missed a three-pointer, Sutton grabbed the defensive rebound and drove the lane to tie the game at 70-70 with 38 seconds left.

A&M missed a three in the final 18 seconds and LSU had the final shot but a three-pointer missed and the game headed to overtime at 70-70.

In the first overtime, A&M led 76-74 with 1:45 left. After a free throw miss and Nwoko rebounds, Miller got the ball to Mackinnon who hit a three-pointer to give LSU a 77-76 lead with 1:23 to play. Agee responded with a three-pointer for A&M to give the Aggies a 79-77 lead.

After Reece missed a three-pointer and A&M got the defensive rebound with 42 seconds left, Agee turned it over and Miller got the steal, got the ball to Jalen Reece who drive down the court to hit a jumper with under seven seconds to tie the game at 79-79.

Texas A&M got to the paint but couldn’t score, sending the game to double overtime.

In the second overtime, LSU took an 83-81 lead with 1:04 to play on a fast break layup. On A&M’s next possession, Marcus Hill scored to tie the game at 83 with 50 seconds remaining. He was fouled and made the free throw to give the Aggies the lead at 84-83.

LSU missed a three pointer with 36 seconds left and had to foul after the A&M rebound. Griffen went make-miss to put the lead at 85-63 for the Aggies.

Mike Nwoko drew a foul on LSU’s possession and hit two free throws to tie the game at 85 with 12 seconds to play. A&M didn’t get a shot off as Reece forced a turnover and steal as the horn sounded forcing the triple overtime.

LSU never had the lead in the third overtime, rallying to tie the game for the last time at 87-87 on two Nwoko free throws with 3:20 left.

Nwoko made 12-of-14 free throws in the contest and it was his second double double of the season.

For the game, LSU shot 44.3 percent (31-of-70), with eight distance makes (28.6 percent) and 21-of-30 from the line. A&M finished the game at 36.9 percent (31-of-84), with 10 three-pointers and 23-of-32 from the line.

LSU had a season high 22 turnovers which resulted in a 23-15 advantage for the Aggies in points off turnovers.

The Tigers registered a 54-49 advantage rebounding and both teams had 42 points in the paint.

The game was the final regular season home game for the six LSU seniors – Jaden Bobbett, PJ Carter, Rashad King, Pablo Tamba, Sutton and Mackinnon. They were honored in pregame ceremonies.

LSU vs. Texas A&M Men’s Basketball
March 7, 2026
Post-game Quotes
LSU Head Coach Matt McMahon

Opening Statement…
“A heck of a college basketball game this Saturday evening. I was really proud of the fight and competitive spirit of our players, and I thought they laid it on the line for what ended up being 55 minutes. Unfortunately for us, we had too many turnovers that led to empty possessions. I thought our initial defense, from a field-goal percentage standpoint, was good enough to win. Even though we won the glass for the game (54 rebounds to Texas A&M’s 49), we gave up 18 second-chance opportunities; between that and the turnovers, they had 14 more shots on goal for the game. I hate that we couldn’t pay it off with a win for our seniors here on Senior Day. I was thankful for the fans who came out; I thought they were really into the game especially in the second half and overtimes, we were appreciative of that. I give credit to Texas A&M, I thought (Texas A&M Forward) Rashaun) Agee and (Texas A&M Guard Rylan) Griffen for them especially were just terrific. Unfortunately, we just couldn’t get that one stop we needed at the end to get over the hump.”

On managing the front court during a long game with foul trouble…
“We were trying to be efficient there from the standpoint that both Robert Miller III and Mike Nwoko had four fouls for what felt like a really long time. I thought they did a good job of playing with those fouls and both did a lot of good things in the game. Rob scored it around the goal and got eight rebounds while blocking four shots. Mike got 13 rebounds and had a double-double (16 points), so we were just trying to balance their foul trouble and keep them fresh as we worked our way through the three overtimes.”

On the performance from his seniors tonight on senior day…
“I love our players. These guys have come to work every day to get better and improve. We’re disappointed with the result today. I would have loved to finish Senior Day with a victory. I thought we laid it out on the line for 55 minutes but unfortunately weren’t able to make enough plays. I touched on the empty possessions, those really hurt us overall because when we got good shots on goal, I thought we were pretty efficient there offensively.”

LSU Senior Forward Marquel Sutton
What’s the mood in the locker room, what was (LSU Head) Coach (Matt McMahon) saying…
“He was basically lifting up the seniors. This is our last game in the PMAC , so he was telling us not to let this reflect on our family time, since our families are here. Don’t let the loss keep us down around them; cherish the family and stay connected. Also, we are zero-zero now. and the (SEC) Tournament is next, so we got the chance to still go out there and prove ourselves.”

LSU Freshman Guard Jalen Reece
On being the point guard, leading the offense, what’s your mentality going into postseason play…
“Go out there and fight, until the end. I think we are going to make a run in the (SEC) tournament, so I’m not really worried about what we are going to do. We are going to play hard every time out. So I think it’s a matter of time til we just start winning. I think the tournament is where we are going to shock people.”

Texas A&M Head Coach Bucky McMillan

Opening Statement …
“I thought LSU played well in the game. I told (LSU Head) Coach (Matt) McMahon I’ve watched them play all year long. They have been in these spots, in the close game, where their record could be totally different. I really felt if their point guard did not get hurt, and I felt (Jalen) Reece played well. I think you could play both those guys together if their point guard didn’t get hurt before conference play. They were a top-25 team, I think they could be right there with anybody in the league. I feel really bad for LSU because of that. All these close games, three or four points. I knew they are a good team. We have lost one of our main guys, too. Losing a point guard like that is such a detrimental loss. I knew this would be a really tough game; it was predicted to be a close game. Back and forth battle. If I were to point to something, while we won even though shooting a lower percentage, we limited turnovers. We only had ten turnovers in a three-overtime game. We were able to force 22 and we were to get 18 off rebounds in the game to thirteen. That allowed us to overcome a bad shooting percentage tonight in the game.

“I couldn’t have lived if we had gone to a fourth overtime. I would have just walked out of there. We were supposed to be fouling on the other side of half court, I do not know what happened. We walk out there and point to the spot we were supposed to be fouling. If he had made that three, LSU would have won by forfeit. I would have just walked out of there, I couldn’t have done it anymore. We were playing for a lot today. We know that, obviously, this time of year everyone is fighting to get the NCAA tournament. I am just happy we got out of here with a win. I say this to the LSU fans, this season, LSU has a very good team. It is very unfortunate the injury that they had, because I promise you, this team, all these close games, they could have come out on the other side of a lot of these games. We are happy to come out of here with a win.”

On Jalen Reece …
“He has played really well. One thing about a younger guy when they are thrown to the fire, by this time of year they are not really a freshman. They are not young, they are matured and a veteran. He is a great player. I actually know his dad. Years ago he coached in the Jordan Brand Classic with me when I coached high school. His dad is a great coach. I watched Reece play in high school. He is a great player, he is playing like a great player, a veteran player this time of year. We probably have a little more depth. He was getting leaned on for 51 minutes he played in the game, went seven to 12 from the field, had 17 points, five assists, and had only two turnovers. We played senior guards that have thrown that thing away, six, seven, times versus a press. And he played two games, it felt like, and he only had two turnovers.”