North Carolina State Wolfpack 77, Texas Longhorns 74

The consistent storyline this season has been the youth of the Texas Longhorns. How quickly would this young team produce, and how soon would the freshmen mature? On Monday night in New Jersey, it turned out to be the team’s junior leader who had a costly moment of immaturity.

The Longhorns built a lead as large as 18 points against N.C. State in the second half. The Wolfpack had clawed back to within 13 points with just 8:25 to play. That’s when J’Covan Brown and the Longhorns unraveled. Whistled for his fourth foul, Brown said it was “bullshit” on his way to the bench and was tagged with a technical foul, which was also his fifth personal. His night was over, and so were the hopes for a Longhorn victory.

J’Covan Brown’s technical had Rick Barnes seeing red
(Photo credit: Bill Kostroun/Associated Press)

North Carolina State seized the momentum and stormed back, turning the remaining 13-point deficit into an eight-point lead in less than six minutes. The Texas offense stalled out, earning just two points during the meltdown, with both coming at the free throw line.

The Longhorns managed to wake up and stay competitive in the final minutes, but it was too late. A potential game-tying three pointer from Julien Lewis was slapped away as time expired. Although the ball was on its downward flight when it was blocked, it was well short and already below the iron, sending Texas home with an 0-2 record in New Jersey.

What looked good

For the first thirty minutes, the Longhorn offense was clicking. Early on, the freshmen were the ones lighting up the scoreboard, as Brown took more than 12 minutes to log his first bucket. Jonathan Holmes was aggressive from the start, scoring the team’s first seven points. He was confident with the ball and tenacious on the glass, finishing the night with 16 points and eight boards.

Texas’ early success was built on smart basketball, with the first five buckets all coming after an assist. The Longhorns moved the ball well, kept N.C. State on its heels, and looked for the open teammates for easy finishes. Although Brown’s early exit limited him to just 28 minutes on the floor, the junior was again the major facilitator, dishing out seven dimes to go with his 17 points.

Sheldon McClellan also had another solid game for Texas, consistently putting the ball on the floor and driving to the paint. His aggressive play earned him seven trips to the line, and he knocked down five freebies, finishing with 16 points. The freshman logged 28 points and eight rebounds in his two games in East Rutherford and was named to the All-Tournament Team.

Perhaps the biggest thing for the Longhorns was that they won the rebounding battle for a second straight game. Even more importantly, they did their best job on the defensive glass all season, allowing a very talented N.C. State frontcourt to win just 27.6% of their offensive rebounding chances. In the first three games, Texas had not held an opponent below 41% on the offensive glass.

The Longhorns also continued their success at the free-throw line, knocking down 76% of their attempts. Unfortunately, the team missed three out of five in the minutes following Brown’s foul-out, including the front end of a one-and-one. With the offense struggling so much during the N.C. State run, missing the freebies only made things worse.

It was also encouraging to see solid defensive efforts from the Texas big men early on. Alexis Wangmene and Clint Chapman both blocked a shot in the first few minutes of the game, and Wangmene frustrated the Wolfpack’s Richard Howell, setting the tone early with sound post defense.

What needed work

Obviously the most glaring issue in this one was a lack of maturity by Brown. He claimed after the game that his words weren’t directed at the referee and were said when he was almost to the bench. Regardless of the where or why, he cannot even put himself in a situation where he could be misunderstood. The simple fact of the matter is that he has to know better.

His coach said as much in his post-game comments. “That’s where he’s gotta grow up,” Barnes told the media. “This happens too much. Sooner or later he’s going to have to figure it out. It’s a team game. It’s not about him.”

Unfortunately, Myck Kabongo and the rest of the Longhorns went into their turtle shells after Brown left the game. The Texas offense deteriorated into weak attempts at dribble penetration, followed by taking the air out of the ball at the perimeter when those drives were turned away. Earlier in the season, Kabongo was able to put the ball on the floor and create offense. After Brown’s departure, it looked like the freshman point guard had completely forgotten how.

That disappearing act by the Kabongo coupled with the frightened play of Sterling Gibbs against Oregon State is huge cause for concern. If Texas has no other guards to step up in Brown’s absence, any foul trouble for the junior will spell disaster for the Longhorns. It wouldn’t even be that surprising to see future opponents get a little chirpy in Brown’s ear in an effort to set him off and eliminate Texas’ leadership.

In addition to Brown’s maturity issues, the Longhorns have to be concerned with how careless the team was with the ball early. Texas turned it over seven times in the first 12 minutes of play, but still managed to hold a five-point lead. Most frustrating was the fact that many of the turnovers were simple miscommunications or lazy passes when the Wolfpack had little or no pressure on the ball. Fortunately, Texas was able to calm down and only turn it over six more times the rest of the game, but their miscues still led to 21 points for the opposition.

Texas also continued to have difficulties with foul trouble. Every Longhorn outside of Gibbs picked up at least three fouls, and the team drew 28 whistles in total. The team’s defensive free throw rate was an improbable 100%, meaning that the Wolfpack took as many shots at the line as it did from the field.

The Texas defense has Rick Barnes looking for answers
(Photo credit: Bill Kostroun/Associated Press)

There’s something to be said about the fact that N.C. State was in the bonus before the first media timeout of the second half. But at the same time, the Longhorns have to be cognizant of the fact that they have a short bench and they must play defense with their feet rather than their hands. We saw quite a bit of zone from Texas in New Jersey when foul trouble began to build, and there might be a lot more of that in the future if the Horns cannot play man-to-man defense without drawing whistles.

The big picture

While losing two second half leads to drop two consecutive games is annoying in its own right, these defeats are even more frustrating when considered in a larger context. The Longhorns have a tough round-robin schedule awaiting them in conference play, and precede that with road trips to UCLA and UNC. Quality wins are going to be tough to come by, and for a team that is likely going to be on bubble watch all season long, these two losses are squandered opportunities.

N.C. State and Oregon State are both teams that will likely surprise people in their conferences. The Pac-12 appears to be wide open outside of a strong Cal squad, while the ACC is top heavy with North Carolina, Duke, and Florida State leading the charge. A win in either game this weekend would have looked very good come March. Now, Texas will have to wait to build its résumé.

Next up: vs. Sam Houston State (1-2); Saturday, 7 P.M. CT