STORRS, Conn. -- Jaden Bradley scored 21 points, Motiejus Krivas made the go-ahead basket with 1:12 left and fourth-ranked Arizona beat No. 3 UConn 71-67 on Wednesday night.
Koa Peat had 16 points and 12 rebounds and Krivas finished with nine points and 14 rebounds as the Wildcats (5-0) outrebounded UConn by 20.
Freshman Eric Reibe had 15 points for UConn (4-1). He had a chance to tie the game when he was fouled in the lane with 8 seconds left. His layup rolled off the rim and he missed both free throws. Tobe Awaka hit two free throws to ice the game.
Solo Ball had 14 points and Silas Demary Jr. added 13 for UConn, which played without starting center Tarris Reed. Jr. because of an ankle injury.
Arizona, which led by two points at halftime, held UConn to one field goal in the first 5 1/2 minutes of the second half. Arizona took its first double-digit lead on a driving layup by Brayden Burries with 14:57 left before UConn began chipping away.
A three-pointer by Alex Karaban with 4:38 to play pulled the Huskies within a point. Reibe tied the game with a three-pointer before Jaylin Stewart's basket with 3:02 left gave UConn a 62-60 lead, its first since 17:14 remained in the first half.
Reed missed UConn's season opener and both exhibition games after injuring his hamstring in the preseason. He is averaging a team-leading 20 points and also tops the Huskies with 9.3 rebounds per game.
Bradley went over 1,000 career points with 11:01 left in the first half.
NO. 7 MICHIGAN 86,
MIDDLE TENNESSEE 61
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Yaxel Lendeborg had season highs with 25 points and 12 rebounds to lead No. 7 Michigan to a win over Middle Tennessee.
The Wolverines (4-0) tuned up for next week's three-game tournament in Las Vegas, where they might face No. 2 Houston in a field with many AP Top 25 teams.
The Blue Raiders (3-1) went on a 13-2 run in the first half to pull within one and trailed by just six points at halftime before getting routed.
Lendeborg, a preseason All-America player and UAB transfer, scored nine points in the opening minutes of the second half to give Michigan a 19-point lead.
The Blue Raiders had just two players score at least 10 and were held 34 points below their average. Penn State transfer Jahvin Carter matched a career high with 18 points and Kamari Lands, who previously played at Arizona State and Louisville, had 11.
NO. 22 AUBURN 112,
JACKSON STATE 66
AUBURN, Ala. -- KeShawn Murphy had 19 points and seven rebounds, Filip Jovic added a career-high 18 points off the bench and No. 22 Auburn dominated Jackson State.
Elyjah Freeman chipped in 14 points, 6 rebounds and 5 assists for Auburn (4-1), which bounced back from its first loss of the season and improved to 41-0 against teams from the Southwest Athletic Conference.
Coming off a one-point loss to then-No. 1 Houston in Birmingham, Auburn was the better team inside and out. Coach Steven Pearl's team closed the first half with a 28-8 run that turned a tight game into a lopsided affair.
Jayme Mitchell led the visiting Tigers (0-4) with 24 points, and Dorian McMillian and Daeshun Ruffin added 16 each. Jackson State finished with 22 turnovers and hit just 6 of 18 from behind the arc.
TOP 25 WOMEN
NO. 2 SOUTH CAROLINA 106,
WINTHROP 56
COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Ta'Niya Latson scored 24 points, Madina Okot had 23 and Joyce Edwards 22 as No. 2 South Carolina started 5-0 for the fifth consecutive season with a victory over Winthrop.
Okot, the Mississippi State transfer, also had 11 rebounds and had three of South Carolina's seven blocked shots.
The Gamecocks were coming off their best win of the season, a 69-52 beat down of No. 11 Southern Cal in Los Angeles this past Saturday and never let up against the Eagles (2-3) of the Big South Conference.
After Madison Ruff's basket put Winthrop up 2-0, the Gamecocks took off on a 16-2 run that essentially put the game on ice.
NO. 4 TEXAS 95,
JAMES MADISON 56
AUSTIN, Texas -- Madison Booker scored 18 points, Jordan Lee had 16, and No. 4 Texas beat James Madison for its 29th consecutive win at home.
Booker, an All-American junior, also made six of the Longhorns' 21 steals. Lee also had a big game in a 93-62 win at James Madison last season, making six three-point baskets without missing while scoring 20.
Rori Harmon had 11 points and 12 assists -- to one turnover -- and five steals for Texas (5-0). The senior point guard needs 14 assists to surpass the school record of 776 set by Kamie Ethridge in 1986. Texas assisted on 29 of 39 baskets.
Peyton McDaniel, the Sun Belt Conference player of the year last season, led James Madison with 20 points but didn't heat up until the fourth quarter, when she scored 13.
The Dukes (3-3) shot just 33% from the floor while committing 29 turnovers, which the Longhorns turned into 31 points.
NO. 8 OKLAHOMA 112,
EAST TEXAS A&M 59
NORMAN, Okla. -- Raegan Beers had 23 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 8 Oklahoma took control early to beat East Texas A&M.
Sahara Williams had 22 points and 11 rebounds, and Payton Verhulst added 17 points and 10 rebounds for Oklahoma (5-1), which owned a 65-29 rebounding advantage.
Beers made 11 of 14 shots for the Sooners, who outscored the Lions 66-16 in the paint.
Reza Po scored 15 points and Tiani Ellison added 14 for East Texas A&M (2-2). Oklahoma limited the Lions to 18 of 70 shooting (26%).
Oklahoma pulled away early. After East Texas cut the lead to 14-12, the Sooners went on a 13-0 run that included a pair of three-pointers by Verhulst to make it 27-12.
NO. 16 NC STATE 71,
COASTAL CAROLINA 58
RALEIGH, N.C. -- Zoe Brooks and Zamareya Jones each had 13 points, 6 rebounds and 8 assists, and No. 16 NC State beat Coastal Carolina.
NC State (3-2) bounced back after a 69-59 loss to then-No. 17 TCU on Sunday in a matchup between teams that reached the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament last season.
NC State was outscored by Coastal Carolina in the third and fourth quarters, but it was not enough for the Chanticleers to overcome scoring 13 first-half points.
CCU led 7-4 with 7:38 left in the first quarter but did not make another field goal until the 3:20 mark of the second to trail 26-11. The Chanticleers made just 5 of 31 shots (16.1%) in the first half to trail 34-13 at the break.
Tessa Grady scored 22 points and made five three-pointers for Coastal Carolina (2-4). Tracey Hueston had 13 points and 11 rebounds. The Chanticleers finished 23-9 last year to earn a postseason WNIT appearance.
NO. 17 VANDERBILT 87,
WESTERN KENTUCKY 49
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. -- Mikayla Blakes scored 28 points and made five three-pointers for No. 17 Vanderbilt in a rout of Western Kentucky.
Blakes, who was 10-of-16 shooting, also had 9 rebounds, 6 steals and 3 assists. Her six-steal tally is the second most in her career.
It was the 23rd consecutive game that Blakes has scored 10 or more points. She entered the game averaging 22.7 points per game, 14th in the nation.
Sacha Washington added 15 for the Commodores (4-0) on 7-of-9 shooting to go with six rebounds. Justine Pissott had 12 points and Ndjakalenga Mwenentanda added 11.
ST. JOHN'S 74,
NO. 18 OKLAHOMA STATE 67
NEW YORK -- Brooke Moore scored 13 points, Kylie Lavelle and Sa'Mya Wyatt added 12 each, and St. John's defeated No. 18 Oklahoma State.
Oklahoma State shot 30% from the floor in the first half but buried 6 of 9 in an early stretch of the third quarter, erasing a 10-point halftime deficit to take a 41-40 lead with about 3 minutes left in the period.
After that opening run by the Cowgirls, neither team led by more than four points until a three-pointer by Janeya Grant gave the Red Storm (4-1) a 58-51 lead with six minutes left in the game. A three-point play by Beautiful Waheed followed by Moore's layup made it 63-52 with 3 1/2 minutes left.
The Cowgirls (5-1) averaged 105.6 points in winning their first five games, all at home. They led the country with 34.8 three-point attempts per game and 14.4 three-point makes. In cozy Carnesecca Arena, St. John's held them to 16 attempts and four makes.
Stailee Heard had 15 points and Achol Akot 13 for Oklahoma State. Lena Girardi and Jadyn Wooten each scored 10.
NO. 25 WASHINGTON 61,
FRESNO STATE 43
SEATTLE -- Sayvia Sellers and Avery Howell each scored 14 points and No. 25 Washington outlasted Fresno State.
The Huskies (4-0) scored 25 points in the second quarter on 63% shooting and led 37-20 at halftime. The 25 points were one more than Washington scored in the second half.
Washington forced 28 turnovers, scored 20 points after those takeaways, and held Fresno State to 35% from the field.
The Huskies had 20 turnovers and shot 39% for the game.
Danae Powell led Fresno State (3-2) with 10 points.