#9/10 Texas Longhorns (19-3 overall, 5-2 Big 12) at Oklahoma Sooners (12-9, 3-4)
Lloyd-Noble Center | Norman, OK | Tip: 3 P.M. | TV: ESPN

Just a week ago, all fingers were hovering above the panic button. Texas had lost three of four games, tumbling from the nation’s top ranking all the way to the bottom rungs of the top ten. With a pair of road games looming, there was definite cause for concern. Even a split of the Oklahoma road trips would give the Longhorns four losses in six games and kill any hopes for a Big 12 title.

Jeff Capel has watched his team sputter in Big 12 play
(Photo credit: Steve Sisney/The Oklahoman)

But Monday night, Texas stopped the bleeding. After falling behind early, the Horns were carried to a 12-point win by freshman Jordan Hamilton, who probably wouldn’t have missed a shot even if he were blindfolded. The victory kept Texas safely in the league’s second spot, and stymied talk of a season meltdown.

Unfortunately, the road swing is only half over. After a few days back in Austin, the Horns are making another trip across the border, this time to square off with the Oklahoma Sooners. Even fresh off a win, the concerns remain the same for Texas. A loss here, and the questions and criticisms will emerge once again.

By the numbers

While the Sooners are stumbling into conference play, they are feeling very fortunate to have this game on their home court. Oklahoma is just 3-4 in the Big 12, but have won all ten of their games played at the Lloyd-Noble Center this year.

The Sooners live and die by the three-pointer. They take more than 41% of their shots from behind the arc, the 23rd-highest percentage in the nation. And the all-out perimeter attack is not without reason — the Sooners make more than 35% of their attempts. That high success rate means OU is making more than eight triples a game, good for tops in the Big 12.

Unfortunately for the Sooners, their defense is atrocious. Oftentimes they seem to not even care about stopping their opponents, failing to get back in transition or to even rotate when help is needed. Oklahoma hardly ever forces turnovers, and their weak perimeter defense is allowing opponents to knock down 37% of their attempts from behind the arc.

Willie Warren isn’t living up to preseason expectations
(Photo credit: Steve Sisney/The Oklahoman)

The one thing OU does do right on the offensive side of the ball is that they rarely send their opponents to the line. Against Texas, that might actually be a negative, as many times one-and-one attempts for the Longhorns become invisible turnovers when they clang the front end off the rim.

It should also be noted that the Sooners are one of the best teams at the line, although they don’t get there all too often. Oklahoma has a team mark of 73.9% at the line, nearly twelve full percentage points better than the Longhorns. If this game ends up being decided by only a few points, this could be a huge factor in the outcome.

Meet the Sooners

Oklahoma’s top scorer is sophomore guard Willie Warren, a player that Texas fans remember all too well from last season’s epic battle at the Frank Erwin Center. Warren hit 6-of-12 behind the arc in the 73-68 Texas victory, scoring 27 points in the losing effort.

This year, Warren has faced his share of struggles. His three-point percentage has dipped all the way down to 28.4%, while an ankle injury has limited his playing time in conference games. Warren missed two consecutive games due to the injury, but returned on Saturday to score four points in a 17-point loss at Nebraska.

The heir apparent in the Oklahoma backcourt is freshman Tommy Mason-Griffin. Like Warren, TMG is a guard who is comfortable both scoring and dishing out assists. He is fourth in the Big 12 with 4.6 dimes per game, while his 12.7 points is second-most on the Sooner roster.

Tommy Mason-Griffin is having a stellar freshman year
(Photo credit: Sarah Phipps/The Oklahoman)

Mason-Griffin is very fast with the ball, and has a quick first step that allows him to blow by defenders and penetrate the lane for silky-smooth floaters or easy layups at the rim. At just 5’11”, TMG sometimes disappears among the trees in the lane, but he is very skilled at making acrobatic plays to finish.

The biggest threat from Mason-Griffin, though, comes behind the arc. He’s hitting 48.9% of his three-point attempts during Big 12 play, and 44.6% on the year. In fourteen of the team’s last 17 games, TMG has made at least two three-pointers.

The other freshman joining TMG in the starting lineup is 6’9″, 290-pound Tiny Gallon. Midway through his rookie campaign, Gallon is probably best known for shattering a backboard against Gonzaga on a botched alley-oop attempt.

What Gallon should be known for is his excellent skill set with the basketball down low. If Tiny catches the ball anywhere near the blocks and there isn’t a double team, you can typically count on the ball going in the basket. He has smooth spin moves, an excellent jump hook, and of course can make strong moves to the rack.

The big knock on Gallon is his conditioning, and it typically manifests itself in lazy defense and rebounding. When Tiny starts to wear down, opponents can exploit him for easy looks down low, and smaller defenders are able to snag hustle boards that he should corrall without a problem.

The steady senior leadership in the starting five comes from Tony Crocker, a long and lanky 6’6″ guard from San Antonio. He just barely cracks the top ten of the Big 12 rebounding charts with his 6.6 boards per game, and his long arms make him a great defender out on the perimeter. When the Sooners elect to run smaller, Crocker is able to fill in as the four, but he is most comfortable as the team’s small forward. The senior is also a very good three-point shooter, although his 38.8% success rate from behind the arc this season is deceptively low.

Cade Davis is tearing up Big 12 competition
(Photo credit: Steve Sisney/The Oklahoman)

The most surprising player this season has been junior Cade Davis. In previous years, Davis was mostly a role player who could spot up and hit threes, as the Griffin brothers ate up most of the minutes inside. On the current Sooner roster, Davis plays a vital inside-out role despite checking in at just 6’5″. He’s an in-your-face defender that leads the team in steals, and he is one of the scrappiest rebounders you will find.

Davis is also peaking at just the right time, as he’s scored 12.6 points per contest over the last five games. He’s also made seven of his last 15 attempts from behind the arc, and has earned a bunch of extra playing time with his workmanlike efforts.

The Sooners run nine deep, utilizing a pair of reserves for both the frontcourt and backcourt. Guard Steven Pledger is an excellent three-point shooter who has been slumping horribly over the last few weeks. After making 47.5% of his threes in the first six games, Pledger’s mark has dropped all the way to 30.5%, including an awful 4-of-25 line in Big 12 play.

While Pledger earns about 19 minutes off the bench, swingman Ray Willis plays roughly twelve per game. He’s an incredibly lanky 6’6″, but needs to add quite a bit of muscle if he’s going to earn quality PT in future seasons. For now, Willis is a reliable jump-shooter who is good for a few points per night.

In the frontcourt, UCLA transfer Ryan Wright handles most of the back-up duties for Gallon. He’s a very strong forward who can fight through contact to finish at the rim, and he has a nose for pulling down boards in traffic.

Freshman forward Andrew Fitzgerald also earns about twelve minutes a game. He has a jump shot that is accurate nearly to the three-point line, so he can add a wrinkle to the gameplan when he draws opposing forwards out of the paint.

Big man Tiny Gallon is a force in the paint
(Photo credit: Bryan Terry/The Oklahoman)

Keys to the game

First and foremost, the Longhorns must defend the perimeter. Texas is holding opponents to just 30% shooting behind the arc this year, but the Sooners are a squad that can easily skew those numbers. If OU is knocking down their threes, it’s definitely a recipe for an upset. If not, Texas should be able to muscle their way to a road win.

Since Oklahoma shoots so many three pointers, there are an awful lot of long caroms on missed shots. The Sooner guards are much taller than those of Texas, so this could lead to an abnormally high number of offensive rebounds for OU. If the Longhorns can grab the defensive rebounds, the lack of second chances will stifle the Sooner offense.

Finally, the Longhorn freshmen must play like seniors. This isn’t to say that Lloyd-Noble is going to be an incredibly intimidating place to play this afternoon. In fact, attendance numbers have been rather poor for OU this season.

What we do mean, though, is that as J’Covan Brown and Jordan Hamilton go, so go the Horns. When both have solid games like they did on Monday night, Texas seems unstoppable. When they make freshman mistakes — like Hamilton did against Baylor and Brown did against Kansas State — the Longhorns completely shut down. Intentionally left out of this discussion is Avery Bradley, a first-year player who has managed to avoid making freshman mistakes all year long.

The big finish

The Big 12 standings are quickly becoming stratified, with the top few teams stepping away from a bloated middle tier. But even within that top group of teams, Kansas is already pulling away from the competition. Heading into today’s action, the Jayhawks had a full two-game lead over Texas and a 2.5-game lead over Kansas State.

The Longhorns and Wildcats both have an opportunity to make up ground in head-to-head meetings with KU. But if Texas drops another conference game at this point, you can essentially give the trophy to the ‘Hawks. That means it’s absolute imperative for the Longhorns to overcome OU’s perfect 10-0 mark at the Lloyd-Noble Center and earn another road win before Monday’s super-sized showdown with KU.