#7 Texas Longhorns 62, Oklahoma Sooners 45

For much of the season, the Texas Longhorns have been one of the most efficient teams in the country on offense, with their guards knocking down long-range shots at an alarming rate. But against Oklahoma on Saturday, Texas was a paltry 2-of-19 from behind the arc and still managed to blow out rival Oklahoma, 62-45. It was truly a culmination of improvements that have been building over the last few weeks, as areas of the Texas game which had been incredibly weak in December and January were suddenly spectacular.

The change in M.O. for the Longhorns meant that there were a lot of new things for Texas fans to get excited about. From the improved defense to freshmen stepping up, there seemed to be a different flash of brilliance in each minute of the ballgame. As we march towards the best post-season in sports, here are just a few of the things that Longhorn fans can take away from the solid victory…

Gary Johnson is a beast – The hard-working freshman fought on the glass all day and showcased his great moves on the block before re-injuring his nose in the second half. But after Fred Burnett and Rob Lazare stopped the blood from dripping onto the sidelines, Johnson was back in the game with a plugged nostril and a fiery demeanor. On one particular bucket, he attacked the rim, was fouled on the head, lost his mask, and still finished the play. Texas is finally a team with both an inside and outside threat, and G.J. has been the catalyst for that evolution.

D.J. Augustin got some rest – Texas controlled the game for the entire second half, and Rick Barnes finally gave Augustin some much needed bench time. D.J. sat for five minutes in this one, which may not seem like much until you realize that the nine total minutes of rest he earned against A&M and OU were more than he had in the ten previous games combined, which even included an overtime contest. If Rick can steal some more minutes for D.J. to catch a breath against Tech, Nebraska, or Oklahoma State, the odds improve for a lengthy Longhorn run in the post-season.

Alexis Wangmene can D up – Wangmene did an excellent job against Longar Longar in the paint, standing his ground, forcing bad shots, and even swatting two away. Lex also hit the glass hard, grabbing seven boards in only sixteen minutes of play. The emergence of Wangmene and Johnson in the post provide Barnes with so much more flexibility, and it makes the prospect of playing a tournament team with a solid front line much less intimidating.

Texas can rebound – Although Oklahoma seemed to grab 100 offensive boards on their first possession, they were only ahead in the rebounding war by a 6-1 count after a minute and a half of play. For the other 38-plus minutes, the Longhorns controlled the glass. Texas outboarded the visiting Sooners 43-34 the rest of the way, limiting OU to only eight second-chance points for the game.

This is finally a Rick Barnes team – Barnes is an incredible teacher on the defensive end, and this Texas team finally looks like one of the old Barnes squads that could lock down opponents. The Longhorns held A&M and OU to 30% and 26% shooting respectively, and opponents are averaging only 61 points per game during the seven-game win streak. And considering that this Texas team averages over 75 points per contest, that’s not giving Longhorn opponents much of a chance.

Tip-off for the K-State showdown is just five and a half hours away, so check back later this afternoon for a game preview. For now, we’re heading out to see a bit of Manhattan and grab some grub.