11.30.11
Posted by Ryan Clark at 12:42PM

Texas Longhorns 73, North Texas Mean Green 57

After blowing two second-half leads in New Jersey and sleepwalking to a win over Sam Houston State, the Longhorns needed a solid, convincing win heading into this weekend’s road trip to UCLA. Texas got exactly that against North Texas last night, cruising to a 16-point win in front of a paltry crowd of just 5,415.

What looked good

It was clear from the start that Myck Kabongo was going to have a solid game. Right out of the gate, he was attacking the paint off the dribble, but more importantly, he was getting to the line. In the first two weeks of the season, Kabongo had oftentimes thrown himself into the midst of the defense and was unable to finish inside. Against North Texas, he found the defender’s body and drew the whistle, resulting in ten tries from the stripe. Only one time did Kabongo fail to go up strong towards the basket, taking an awkward running jumper early in the game as he cut directly across the lane. That would be his only missed field goal all night.

Julien Lewis bounced back against North Texas
(Photo credit: Eric Gay/Associated Press)

Kabongo also looked more confident shooting the basketball. In these last two games, Sam Houston State and North Texas often gave him space on defense, neutralizing his speed on the drive and forcing him to beat them with a shot. On one occasion in last night’s game, he simply drove to the top of the lane and dropped a jumper as the defense converged. Behind the arc, he drilled both open looks that the defense gave him.

Julien Lewis also had a sound game after struggling against Sam Houston State. Not only did he score 11 points, including two three-pointers, but he had incredibly active hands on defense and made some excellent passes to find open teammates. Lewis was credited with two steals and two assists on the night.

Fellow freshman Jonathan Holmes also turned in a solid effort, leading the team in rebounds on a night where they were very hard to come by. He also continued to shoot the three when it presented itself, something that is going to keep opponents honest and help to spread the floor. He only knocked down one of his three looks from behind the arc, but confidently stepped right into the open jumpers when he received the pass. On one of the three attempts he did hesitate before shooting it, and it messed with his rhythm. As expected, that attempt clanged off of the iron.

As a team, the Longhorns not only spaced out the floor with their big men, but also utilized excellent ball movement. The team ended up with 13 assists on 24 buckets, and sometimes might have even been too unselfish. J’Covan Brown only ended up with six points, and could have had more if not for a few plays where he passed up a short jumper for an interior pass that ended up being tipped by the defense.

All told, being too unselfish is a good problem to have. Coach Barnes took a few players aside when they passed up shots that they shouldn’t have, so there’s little doubt that they will learn throughout the season when to pull the trigger. After seeing a few stretches this year where the guards became ball-dominant and the offense stalled around the perimeter, it’s great to see the team making a clear commitment to spacing and ball movement.

The Longhorns also seem to have made improvements on the defensive end. In New Jersey, the team piled up the fouls, not only sending their opponents to the line, but also causing issues with their limited bench. The team was whistled for just 17 personal fouls against North Texas, leading to just 19 free throw attempts. As a point of comparison, the Horns were whistled 28 times against N.C. State, resulting in 44 free throws.

It’s also worth noting that Sterling Gibbs showed a little bit of scoring punch, adding five points in his 11 minutes on the floor. He drained a three when the defense sagged off of him and scored on another mid-range jumper after an aggressive drive. Unfortunately, he still has major issues when the defense puts pressure on him, and it resulted in two turnovers. As teams get more film on him, it’s almost certain that the book will be to trap him on the wings in the halfcourt and to press when he brings it up the floor.

Clint Chapman and Texas struggled to control the boards
(Photo credit: Eric Gay/Associated Press)

What needed work

Just as rebounding will likely be one of our “Keys to the Game” in every single preview this year, it will also likely lead our “What needed work” section in every game wrap. Texas was soundly beaten on the boards in this one, as the Mean Green dominated with a 46-30 rebounding edge. The Horns gave up 16 offensive boards in the second half, including eight in the final three minutes. There is no doubt that the game was in hand by that point, but a team that struggles this much on the glass can’t afford to mentally check out when there is still game-speed practice to be had.

In terms of tempo-free numbers, it was the worst defensive rebounding performance yet for Texas. They allowed North Texas to reclaim 49.4% of their offensive rebounding opportunities, the third time this year they’ve allowed a mark of at least 43%. Offensively, it was also the team’s worst performance, as Texas grabbed just 26.8% of its own missed shots. While the Longhorns have had a tough time on the glass, their own offensive rebounding percentage had yet to dip below 30% this season.

The Longhorns also only made 33% of their three-point attempts against North Texas, a performance that comes on the heels of their 23.5% night against Sam Houston State. While the team’s season average is still hovering just above 36%, it is beginning to look like the insane 42.6% start in the first two games was built on outlier performances and that the numbers are regressing to the mean.

Up next: at UCLA (2-4); Saturday, 3:30 P.M. CT

11.29.11
Posted by Ryan Clark at 4:49PM

North Texas Mean Green (1-3) at Texas Longhorns (3-2)
Frank Erwin Center | Austin, TX | Tip: 7 P.M. | TV: Longhorn Network
LRT Consecutive Game #192

For Texas fans looking for a bounce-back performance after the team’s tough road trip to New Jersey, Saturday night’s ugly win over Sam Houston State provided little reassurance. The Longhorns struggled from the floor all night long, looking as if the tryptophan from their Thanksgiving turkeys still had them in a haze. While Texas earned the all-important W, the unimpressive manner in which they earned it was slightly worrisome.

Fortunately, Texas will get a second chance to log a convincing win tonight, as they host the North Texas Mean Green for the first time since 2007. Coach Johnny Jones is testing his team early, as they are in the midst of a seven-game road trip and have a disappointing 1-3 mark so far. The Mean Green has yet to notch a victory against a D-I opponent, with their only win coming against St. Gregory of the NAIA.

By the numbers

For a Texas team that shot less than 32% from the field against Sam Houston State, the North Texas defense is a welcome sight. The Mean Green has an adjusted defensive efficiency of 1.091 points per possession, the 21st-worst in D-I hoops according to Ken Pomeroy. In a loss to Mississippi State on Sunday, North Texas allowed the Bulldogs to shoot nearly 52% from the field, including a 47.4% mark from three-point range.

The one thing that North Texas does do well on the defensive end is steal the basketball. They force opponents into miscues on 25.6% of their possessions, and have a steal rate that is in the Top 25 nationally. The team is averaging more than 10 steals and 22 points off of turnovers per game.

Offensively, the Mean Green isn’t much more successful. Their adjusted offensive efficiency is a scant 0.965 points per possession, and their effective field goal percentage is among the 20 worst teams in D-I hoops. Against Mississippi State, North Texas made just 32.3% of their shots and struggled to a 25% mark behind the arc.

The most important stats for Texas fans, however, are the rebounding numbers. North Texas has managed to do a fair job on the offensive glass, but is downright abysmal on the defensive end, where the Mean Green has allowed its three D-I opponents to reclaim more than 42% of their missed shots. With the Longhorns having mixed results on the glass so far this season, it’s a refreshing change to expect quite a few second-chance points for the home team tonight.

Freshman Chris Jones is already a team leader
(Photo credit: Kalani Gordon/North Texas Daily)

Meet the Mean Green

While there are a lot of troubling statistics for Coach Jones and his young team, they are actually far more talented than their results have shown so far. The problem could lie in the fact that all of that talent is fairly young and that the team lacks experienced senior leaders. The Mean Green lost four starters from last year, most notably their own Tristan Thompson, who starts his professional career with the D-League’s Austin Toros on Friday night.

Even without Thompson, North Texas has the pieces in place to make some noise in the Sun Belt Conference this year. In December, superstar Tony Mitchell will finally become eligible after a long, difficult journey to college hoops. Ranked as the No. 12 overall recruit in the 2010 class, Mitchell committed to Missouri but failed to qualify academically. The Tigers’ loss was Coach Jones’ gain, as the Dallas native decided to bring his talents to Denton.

Although the Longhorns won’t have to deal with the versatile Mitchell tonight, they will have to handle freshman phenom Chris Jones. The 6’2″ guard from Garland took his high school team to back-to-back 5A state finals, and it’s clear that leadership has carried to the college ranks. In his first road game, Jones scored nearly half of his team’s points, dropping 31 on Texas Tech in a narrow 69-64 loss.

Jones can score in a variety of ways, as his team-leading 16.8-point scoring average attests. He can get to the rack in a hurry, and he’s able to finish inside thanks to excellent body control and an impressive ability to put the right english on his shot. The Longhorns have had issues containing aggressive players so far this season, so Jones could be primed for another big game.

Although Jones has been the alpha so far this season, 6’6″ swingman Jordan Williams was the top recruit of 2011 for North Texas. He was ranked No. 71 nationally by Rivals, making him a huge score for a school that typically never garners interest from such highly-ranked players. Williams is currently second on the team in scoring with 12.3 points per game and has made 35% of his threes so far.

With Jones and Jordan Williams combining for more than 29 points per game, the rest of the offense is truly a team effort. North Texas has a roster full of guys ranging from 6’6″ to 6’9″, and they have ten players averaging at least 15 minutes per game, with eight of them averaging between 2.5 and 6.5 points. That interchangeability is reminiscent of the Missouri Tigers under Mike Anderson, although the Mean Green isn’t quite giving opponents “the fastest 40 minutes in basketball.”

One of those interchangeable parts is 6’7″ senior Kedrick Hogans, who was already the 4th-best shot blocker in school history before the season had even begun. This year, he’s logged five in his four games as he continues his attack on the school record books. While the Longhorns are in the top third of D-I hoops at avoiding blocked shots, they’ll still have to be careful when Hogans is in the area.

The Mean Green also gets some upperclassman leadership from Jacob Holmen, who had started all three games before missing Sunday’s contest against Mississippi State. The 6’8″ junior forward averaged nearly 25 minutes in his three games and scored 17 total points.

In Holmen’s absence, Niko Stojiljkovic joined the starting five and led the team with eight rebounds against the Bulldogs. The 6’9″ junior has a varied background, with international experience for his native country of France and minutes at the college level with both San Francisco and Lon Morris College. He’s averaging five points and four boards at North Texas this season, but will certainly see those numbers increase if Holmen’s injury is a long-term issue.

Sophomore Alzee Williams knows what it’s like to have a long-term injury, as he missed all of last year thanks to knee problems. Known as a defensive specialist, he’s actually surprised folks by leading the team in field-goal percentage this year. Although he hasn’t taken many shots, Alzee’s 56.3% mark has helped him log the team’s third-highest scoring average with 6.5 per game.

North Texas also has a pair of players coming off the bench who have experience against the Longhorns. Junior Roger Franklin played at Oklahoma State his first two seasons, but transferred to UNT to be closer to an ill family member. In two games against the Longhorns last year, Franklin grabbed 10 rebounds and scored two points.

Unlike Franklin, Alonzo Edwards‘ time against Texas is essentially just a historical footnote. The 6’8″ senior spent his first two years at Nebraska, and he logged less than a minute in the Cornhuskers’ upset victory against Texas back in 2009. This year, he’s started three times for North Texas and has done solid work on the glass, but is only averaging about 15 minutes per game.

Trey Norris is still adjusting to the college game
(Photo credit: Kalani Gordon/North Texas Daily)

Another transfer on the North Texas bench is Brandan Walton, a product of Compton, California who made his way to Denton via Casper College in Wyoming. The 6’2″ guard is speedy, but played a little out of control against Texas Tech and seemed to be pressing at times. With another chance to play against Big 12 competition tonight, Walton will have to settle down if he wants to make an impact.

Freshman guard Trey Norris rounds out the ten-man rotation. He is another quick guard for Coach Jones, and like Walton, he needs to settle down. Norris has turned it over 10 times despite playing just 64 minutes this season. With Chris Jones already locking down the starting role, Norris will have to improve his ballhandling if he wants to see many minutes off the bench.

Keys to the game

1) Hang on to the ball – The North Texas defense is porous, but the one way they manage to stop opponents is by forcing turnovers. If the Longhorns can avoid the frustrating mistakes they had early against Sam Houston State, they should find it very easy to score against the Mean Green.

2) Limit second-chance scoring – We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again — rebounding is going to be the constant storyline for this Longhorn team. Fortunately, North Texas struggles on the defensive glass, so it looks like Texas’ main concern will be keeping the Mean Green from getting offensive boards. If the Longhorns can cut down on second-chance points, North Texas should have a hard time keeping up tonight.

3) Get the guards going – It’s been a rough couple of games for Myck Kabongo, and even J’Covan Brown found tough sledding against Sam Houston State on Saturday night. With a tough UCLA squad next on the docket after North Texas, it would be nice to see the Longhorn guards regain some confidence tonight. Texas ball screens and dribble penetration resulted in fewer open looks during the last two games, so we’ll be watching to see what the Longhorn guards can create tonight.

11.27.11
Posted by Ryan Clark at 5:00AM

Texas Longhorns 56, Sam Houston State Bearkats 40

It certainly wasn’t pretty, but the Texas Longhorns put a stop to their losing streak on Saturday night, grinding out a 56-40 win over Sam Houston State at the Erwin Center. Despite taking nearly six minutes to make their first bucket and shooting less than 32% from the field, the Longhorns were able to pull away in the final minutes to push their record back above the .500 mark.

What looked good

There was hardly anything that looked good in this one, but there were some bright spots for Texas. Most importantly, the Longhorns were able to come out on top of the rebounding battle, something they have struggled with all season. It should be noted that Sam Houston State went with a small lineup all night, oftentimes running four guards at a time. But when winning the battle on the glass is as tough as it has been for Texas this season, you have to take the victories when you can get them.

Alexis Wangmene scored a career-high 13 points
(Photo credit: Michael Thomas/Associated Press)

The Longhorns were able to reclaim more than 40% of their missed shots, only the second time they’ve done so this season. They also reached that mark in the loss to Oregon State, with their numbers in the three other games all mired in the mid-30 percent range. Defensively, they held the Bearkats to just a 30.6% offensive rebounding mark, but allowed those second chances to turn into 10 extra points.

Individually, the biggest breakthrough came from Alexis Wangmene, who scored seven of his 13 points in the final 7:28 to help Texas stretch their lead. Alexis was able to capitalize on his good looks inside, something that had proved difficult for the big man in the past, and he held onto rebounds and loose balls instead of fumbling them away. He logged eight boards in his 27 minutes.

The only player to outscore Wangmene was Jonathan Holmes, who also fought hard for his points inside and even tested his three-point range. Although the freshman was just one of three from behind the arc, getting that long-range shot on tape will give opposing defenses one more thing to consider while game-planning for the Horns. Holmes was just one rebound shy of a double-double, and could have had even more points if not for some point-blank misses.

It was also nice to see Wangmene and Clint Chapman getting extended minutes at the same time, and actually being successful while doing so. They certainly got some help from facing a the smaller Bearkat lineup, but when the pair was faced with defensive situations in the post, they performed admirably. On one particular occasion, Wangmene went to the floor trying to draw a charge, leaving his man isolated on a Texas guard. Chapman slid across the lane and blocked the shot, saving an easy bucket.

What needed work

Other than those bright spots, there wasn’t much else to get excited about for Texas. Although J’Covan Brown cracked double-digits in scoring, he did so by shooting just 26% from the field. He also continued to drive baseline against a Bearkat defense that had shown it would double along the boundary and cut off both driving and passing lanes. Julien Lewis also had a tough day at the office, missing all three of his three-point attempts and going just 1-for-7 from the field in his 26 minutes of work.

Texas struggled the most in the early stages of the game, allowing Sam Houston State to build a lead as large as 12 just eight minutes into it. While the Longhorns missed a few good looks early, they clearly started to press on the offensive end, taking quick shots instead of being patient with their possessions. Late in the first half, the team made a brief commitment to scoring in transition and working the ball in low, and that is when they found the most success.

Myck Kabongo had a rough night for Texas
(Photo credit: Michael Thomas/Associated Press)

It was also troubling to see the Longhorns struggle at the line late in the game. Texas was 8-for-9 from the stripe in the first half, but made just 8-of-17 in the second. Myck Kabongo missed three of four in the final 15 seconds, while Wangmene missed two opportunities to complete three-point plays down the stretch. When Texas finds itself in close games later this season, a repeat of this charity-stripe performance will surely end in defeat.

Not only did Kabongo struggle at the line in the final minutes, but he once again had a rough day from the floor. McClellan mentioned in the post-game interview that the Longhorns were overthinking on the offensive end, passing up good looks for fear of repeating their poor shot selection from earlier in the game. Kabongo certainly looked like he lacked confidence in this one, and he missed his first five shots before finally draining a last-minute three.

The freshman has had trouble finishing inside this season, so adding in these problems with the jump shot only makes him easier to defend. Without a shot to keep opponents honest, it’s going to be hard for Kabongo to find cracks, create, and dish out the assists.

Up next: vs. North Texas (1-2); Tuesday, 7 P.M. CT

11.26.11
Posted by Ryan Clark at 12:22PM

Sam Houston State Bearkats (1-4) at Texas Longhorns (2-2)
Frank Erwin Center | Austin, TX | Tip: 7 P.M. CT | TV: Longhorn Network
LRT Consecutive Game #191

The Texas Longhorns return to action at the Erwin Center tonight after a tough weekend in New Jersey. Despite holding second-half leads of eight and 18 at the IZOD Center, Texas stumbled down the stretch against both Oregon State and N.C. State, leaving East Rutherford with a pair of frustrating losses.

Fortunately, the Longhorns now have a pair of winnable games at the Erwin Center to rebuild their confidence before taking on UCLA next weekend. The team opens its short homestand tonight against Sam Houston State, a school that is winless in its four Division I games this season.

By the numbers

No matter how you slice it, the numbers aren’t pretty this year for Coach Jason Hooten and the Bearkats. According to stats guru Ken Pomeroy, Sam Houston State’s adjusted offensive efficiency is one of the 30 worst in all of Division I hoops.

The reasons behind the team’s struggle to put the ball in the basket are numerous. The Bearkats turn it over on 26.7% of their possessions, and are 32nd-worst in the nation when it comes to getting to the free-throw line. For a Texas team that sent Oregon State and N.C. State to the free throw line repeatedly in New Jersey, this statistic is a welcome one.

Sam Houston State is also struggling from long range, where they have made just 22.9% of their threes, the 14th-worst mark in Divison I. The Longhorns experimented with zone defense when they ran into foul trouble in New Jersey, and there’s no doubt that a team struggling this much from long range provides the perfect opportunity for the Horns to work on their zone at game speeds.

The three-point line has also been unkind to Sam Houston State on the defensive end. The Bearkats have faced four D-I opponents so far, and those teams knocked down more than 41% of their looks from behind the arc. Marksmen J’Covan Brown and Julien Lewis should be licking their chops.

Meet the Bearkats

To say that Sam Houston State is rebuilding this season would probably be a tad bit generous. The Bearkats lost four starters from last year’s team and return just three scholarship players. On a team filled with freshmen and junior college transfers, the returning players have accounted for just 23.3% of the team’s minutes so far this year.

The already-thin lineup took a major hit when Antuan Bootle, the team’s lone returning starter, was sidelined by a broken foot during the first week of the season and will be out of action for at least another four weeks. Last season, he led all Bearkat scorers when they faced Texas, just missing a double-double with his 16-point, nine-rebound line.

Big man Steven Werner will also likely miss tonight’s game after injuring his foot on Monday against Mercer. Werner was the team’s second-leading rebounder, averaging 6.7 boards per game. He was also third on the team in scoring, chalking up an average of 8.7 points.

While injuries have forced the Bearkats to get creative with the lineup, the team has received steady leadership from newcomer Konner Tucker. A transfer who played six games for Wake Forest, Tucker was also a juco stud at Lon Morris in Jacksonville, Texas. Averaging 34 minutes per game so far, Tucker leads the team with just under 11 points per game. Although the junior guard is “sneaky quick” in the words of his head coach, his paltry 22% success rate behind the arc means that opposing defenses can sag off and make it tougher for Tucker to blow by them.

Marcus James is second in scoring for the Bearkats
(Photo credit: D.J. Shafer/The Huntsville Item)

The player most impacted by the injury shuffle is senior Marcus James, who has had to slide from the wing to the post in Werner’s absence. The 6’7″ Connecticut native had his own injury issues in the offseason, breaking a wrist playing pickup games back home. Fully healed, he’s now second on the team in scoring with 10.2 points per game and is averaging more than five rebounds.

At the point, junior Darius Gatson has stepped right into the role of floor leader. A juco transfer from Trinity Valley, the 5’11” guard is the only player on the team with more than 10 assists so far this season. Unfortunately, he has had some growing pains since jumping to D-I basketball, shooting less than 30% from the field while turning it over 13 times.

The Bearkats are also getting some immediate contributions from freshman Michael Holyfield and sophomore transfer Demarcus Gatlin. Out of New Mexico, Holyfield checks in at 6’11” and is unsurprisingly the team’s best rebounder, grabbing more than seven per game. Gatlin, who played his first season at Navarro, has started all five games and is averaging more than 27 minutes. He’s still working to find his footing, though, as he’s shooting just 24% from the field — 11% from behind the arc — and has 17 turnovers.

Off the bench, 6’9″ Aaron Thompson is chipping in valuable frontcourt minutes. One of the three returning scholarship players for Coach Hooten, Thompson is averaging more than 17 minutes per game but has scored only 14 points to date. Against Texas last season, the big man hardly saw the floor, logging just a turnover and rebound in his two minutes of action.

Coach Hooten also has a pair of backcourt reserves in Aaron Harwell and walk-on Marquel McKinney. Both have come off the bench in all five games, combining to average 2.9 points in roughly 25 minutes per game. Harwell arrives in Huntsville from Centenary College in Louisiana, a school that just transitioned from Division I to Division III, allowing the sophomore to be immediately eligible for Sam Houston State.

Keys to the game

Although Texas is going to have its struggles this season, there’s simply no reason why the Horns should lose this game. Instead, tonight’s match-up provides good opportunity to work on the issues that cropped up in New Jersey and get the team ready for big tests in the coming weeks from UCLA, Temple, and North Carolina. With that in mind, here are three things we’ll be watching.

1) How does J’Covan Brown respond? – Brown’s exit from the Legends Classic was an abrupt and unceremonious one, as his personal foul and nearly-immediate technical foul were the catalysts for a Texas meltdown against N.C. State. Before that, he was dominant, scoring 17 points while, in the words of Wolfpack coach Mark Gottfried, “slic[ing] us up like a side of fries.”

The words from Coach Barnes in the post-game presser weren’t that kind to Brown. He questioned the junior guard’s maturity and put him on notice in a very public setting. Against an overmatched Sam Houston State squad, Brown will need to pick up where he left off and also show poise when he feels foul calls are unwarranted.

2) Can Myck Kabongo regroup? – With Brown out of the game against the Wolfpack, it looked like Kabongo had suddenly misplaced his superhero cape. While Myck has struggled all season with finishing at the rim, he was suddenly unable to create any offense with the dribble and the Longhorns stalled out. Not only will we be watching to see how Kabongo looks with Brown back on the floor, but we’ll also be keeping an eye on how the offense works when the reigns are solely his to hold.

3) Can the Longhorns play defense without fouling? – As mentioned previously, the Bearkats are a perfect matchup for a Texas team that piled up the fouls in New Jersey. Rick Barnes is always a defense-first coach, and there’s no doubt he’s frustrated with his team’s inability to stop its opponents so far this year. Against a struggling Bearkat team, can Texas get back to the kind of defensive dominance it showed against Boston U in the season opener?

11.22.11
Posted by Ryan Clark at 8:05AM

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

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