Moss Point’s Devin Booker scores 18, No. 1 Kentucky survives double OT scare at Texas A&M

Kentucky's Devin Booker (1) and Dakari Johnson (44) defend Texas A&M's Danuel House during overtime of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, Jan. 10, 2015, in College Station, Texas. Kentucky defeated Texas A&M 70-64. (AP Photo/Patric Schneider)
Kentucky's Devin Booker (1) and Dakari Johnson (44) defend Texas A&M's Danuel House during overtime of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, Jan. 10, 2015, in College Station, Texas. Kentucky defeated Texas A&M 70-64. (AP Photo/Patric Schneider)
Kentucky’s Devin Booker (1) and Dakari Johnson (44) defend Texas A&M’s Danuel House during overtime of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, Jan. 10, 2015, in College Station, Texas. Kentucky defeated Texas A&M 70-64. (AP Photo/Patric Schneider)

COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Tyler Ulis put No. 1 Kentucky ahead with a 3-pointer deep in double overtime and the Wildcats stayed unbeaten, holding off Texas A&M 70-64 on Saturday.

The game was tied at 63 when Ulis hit the shot with 1:26 left for his first points of the game.

Kentucky (15-0, 2-0 SEC) was coming off an overtime win against Mississippi on Tuesday.

The Aggies rallied in the final minutes to tie it in regulation. Trey Lyles made two foul shots with six seconds left in the first overtime for Kentucky, and Texas A&M took its time before missing a long 3 at the buzzer.

Down 66-63, Kourtney Roberson made one of two free throws for A&M (9-5, 0-2 SEC) before a turnover by Lyles gave the Aggies the ball back with 26.9 seconds left.

Danuel House missed a 3-pointer with 16 seconds left and Dakari Johnson made two free throws forKentucky. House finished with 25 points.

Devin Booker, a freshman from Moss Point, led Kentucky with 18 points, hitting 4 of 7 3-point shots. Aaron Harrison added 12 and Andrew Harrison had nine. Three players fouled out for Kentucky and one for the Aggies.

Kentucky trailed by as many as 11 in the first half before a big run just before halftime and at the beginning of the second half put the Wildcats on top.

The Aggies didn’t score a basket in the first overtime, but made four of six free throws to stay in it. The Wildcats got a bucket from Booker and missed three free throws before Lyles’ tying foul shots.

House made a pair of free throws to tie it with 18.4 seconds left in regulation. The Wildcats had a chance to win it in regulation, but a long 3-pointer by Aaron Harrison bounced off the rim.

The Aggies used a 5-2 run to cut the lead to 53-51 with 1 1/2 minutes left. They got the ball back and missed three shots on one possession before Kentucky grabbed a rebound and Andrew Harrison’s layup on the other end rolled in and out of the basket before the free throws by House.

Texas A&M scored five straight points, with two layups by House, to get within 48-46 with five minutes left. But Aaron Harrison sunk a 3 to extend Kentucky’s lead to 5.

The Aggies played without leading scorer Jalen Jones (12.1 points a game) who missed his second straight game with a sprained ankle.

Booker scored five straight points for the Wildcats before Alex Robinson made A&M’s first field goal in 6 1/2 minutes on a layup about a minute later to cut the lead to 39-35.

The Wildcats scored the first four points of the second half to cap a 12-0 run that started before halftime and take their first lead of the game 29-28.

Texas A&M jumped out to a 9-0 lead as Kentucky missed its first seven shots thanks in part to two blocks. The Wildcats finally got on the board on a 3-pointer by Booker with 14:40 left in the first half.

TIP-INS

Kentucky: The Harrison twins are from Richmond, Texas, which is about 95 miles from College Station. … There was a large contingent of Kentucky fans at the game that loudly chanted: ‘Go big blue’ each time A&M attempted free throws.

Texas A&M: This was the second time the Aggies have hosted a top-ranked team. The first game came when Kansas got a 59-54 win on Feb. 15, 2010. … The loss is A&M’s first at home this season and it drops the Aggies to 0-7 all-time against No. 1 teams.