First half
Georgia opens as the home favorite on the consensus moneyline at -285 while Ole Miss opens at +230, and that opener has moved to a current consensus of Georgia -238 and Rebels +188.
MGM mirrors that tightening early with Georgia moving from -250 to -225 while Ole Miss moves from +200 to +185, and that shift matches a market that has made the home side less expensive to back.
FanDuel shows a similar direction on the home price from -285 to -230 while the Rebels drift from +230 to +188, and that split across books highlights how pricing pressure hasn’t been uniform.
Bet365 posts Georgia from -250 to -240 and Ole Miss from +205 to +195, and PointsBet sits steady at -225 and +185, which keeps a clear snapshot of where the market has stabilized.
BetRivers lists Georgia -263 after opening -270 while Ole Miss holds at +205, and those numbers reinforce that the favorite is still being respected even as the juice has eased in spots.
At halftime, BetRivers prices Georgia at -204, the Rebels at +180, and the draw at +1000, which sets a defined mid-game wagering menu that’s separate from the full-game line.
Consensus tickets show 78 percent on the Rebels moneyline and 22 percent on Georgia, and that imbalance sits next to Georgia still holding the better price, a classic sign of public underdog interest.
The total has fallen from a consensus opener of 159.5 to a current 156.5 with -111 on both over and under, and MGM and DraftKings both post 156.5 after opening 159.5 at -110/-110.
FanDuel keeps its total higher at 158.5 after opening 159.5, and BetRivers tracks a move from 158.5 to 157.5, which still supports the broader downshift in expected points.
With the Rebels’ guard group featuring
AJ Storr, the early-game angle most tied to pricing is whether Ole Miss can play efficient offense while the market is shaving points off the total.

Second half
The consensus spread opens Georgia -6.5 and has moved to -5.5, and that half-point move aligns with the moneyline tightening from -285 to -238 on the home side.
MGM shifts from Georgia -6.5 to -5.5 with odds moving from -105 to -110, while Ole Miss moves from +6.5 to +5.5 with odds from -115 to -110, and that’s a clean indicator of the number compressing.
FanDuel shows the biggest spread adjustment from Georgia -7.5 to -5.5 while pricing Georgia -120 and Ole Miss -102, which suggests the book is charging extra to lay the shorter number.
DraftKings keeps Georgia at -6.5 but prices Ole Miss +6.5 at -127, and that heavier tax on the Rebels side signals the book’s liability shaping around that specific spread.
PointsBet holds a flat -6 on both sides at -110, and William Hill and Bet365 sit at Georgia -5.5 with Ole Miss +5.5, which keeps multiple ways to shop the number.
Consensus spread tickets show 93 percent on Georgia and 7 percent on Ole Miss, and that contrasts sharply with the moneyline ticket share that favors the Rebels at 78 percent.
That split between spread tickets and moneyline tickets is a key piece of
Ole Miss Rebels vs
Georgia Bulldogs betting insights because it shows bettors are treating the underdog and the points as two very different bets.
If you’re mapping a betting strategy for Ole Miss Rebels vs Georgia Bulldogs, the current consensus spread at Georgia -5.5 and Ole Miss +5.5 is the core decision point, and the Ole Miss Rebels vs Georgia Bulldogs spread has clearly tightened from the -6.5 opener.
The full board of Ole Miss Rebels vs Georgia Bulldogs odds also reflects the total drop to 156.5, which pairs with a narrower spread to hint at a game path where every possession late carries heavier value.
In the final minutes, the schedule lists Ole Miss vs Georgia on March 12, 2026 at 7:00 PM ET at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee, and the broadcast is on SEC Network.
Ride with the Landsharks if you like the tightened number, keep your eyes on line movement across books before tip, and share this article with the Rebels fans in your group chat.
