Desperate Texas gets big 87-79 win over No. 20 West Virginia by @NaK-iDo - Post Details

Desperate Texas gets big 87-79 win over No. 20 West Virginia

AUSTIN, Texas -- Matt Coleman and Kerwin Roach II each scored 22 points and Texas used an 11-0 run early in overtime to pull away from No. 20 West Virginia for an 87-79 win Saturday that was critical for the Longhorns' NCAA Tournament hopes. The Longhorns (18-13, 8-10) were in desperate need of a big late-season victory to shore up an inconsistent resume and got it in their seventh overtime game of the season. The Big 12's worst offensive team made 11 3-pointers, including two in the overtime by Coleman and Jacob Young, and shot 57 percent from the field. West Virginia led 48-42 early in the second half before Texas ripped off a 15-2 run keyed by a pair of 3-pointers from Dylan Osetkowski, who made five in the game. The Mountaineers forced overtime on Jevon Carter's driving reverse layup with 1.6 seconds left in regulation. Coleman put Texas up 76-74 with a 3-pointer from the right corner and made a short jumper before Young's 3 pointer stretched the lead to seven and the Longhorns held on the rest of the way. Freshman Jericho Sims scored 17 points and had eight rebounds for Texas, which lost by 35 to West Virginia in January. Lamont West scored 15 points for West Virginia (22-9, 11-7), which had five players score in double figures. BIG PICTURE West Virginia: The Mountaineers had already clinched second place in the Big 12. West Virginia's press defense was effective in the first half, but did little to disrupt Texas in the second half and overtime. The Mountaineers' inability to cover the 3-pointer kept Texas in the game early and proved especially costly in overtime. Texas: The Longhorns are seeing a late-season emergence from Sims, who will be critical to offset the loss of forward Mo Bamba, who missed his second consecutive game with a sprained left toe. Sims was 6 of 7 and that kind of production will be needed in the Big 12 tournament. The Longhorns are still without shooting guard Eric Davis Jr., who has been held out for three games after his name surfaced in a report that suggested he received payments from an agent representative.

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LOS ANGELES -- For a short flash, it almost appeared as if the play was dead. Deked by James Harden's patented, left-to-right crossover "hop-back" on the left wing, LA Clippers forward Wesley Johnson slipped on a banana peel and fell backward to the hardwood on his tuchus with just over a minute remaining in the first quarter. As Johnson recovered a full 10 feet in front of Harden with 15 seconds left on the shot clock, the Houston Rockets' guard paused. He wasn't checking the placement of his toes or scanning the floor for a cutter -- it was obvious where the Rockets' shot would materialize. EDITOR'S PICKS Clips' Rivers jokes of building wall vs. Rockets Clippers coach Doc Rivers jokingly said Wednesday the team "barricaded all of the secret passageways" at Staples Center in order to keep his players and the Rockets apart and prevent an incident similar to last month's contentious matchup. How to talk trash in the NBA while avoiding a locker room fiasco The Rockets-Clippers locker room standoff was a case of trash talk gone too far, but players mostly stick to three unwritten rules to keep on-court and social media talk from crossing the line. Harden then actually took his shooting hand off the ball as he stood stationary, as if to casually admire the humiliation that had ensued. "I was just trying to figure out what he was doing," Harden said. "I was going to shoot it, but I was waiting to see, to figure out what was going on. I was confused. Like did the ref call side out of bounds?" Still surrounded by open space, Harden toggled back to the task at hand. He placed his left hand back on the ball as Clippers guard Milos Teodosic scampered toward him for a half-hearted close-out attempt, then Hadren launched a silky jumper that put the Rockets up 31-7. "It was a great move," Rockets teammate Eric Gordon said. "Of course, it was crazy. You don't see things like that all the time. I definitely laughed. Everybody is going to be talking about that for a while." The lead would narrow to as little as eight points, but the Rockets held off a scrappy Clippers squad to prevail 105-92 at Staples Center and notch their 14th consecutive win. In the process, Houston, now 48-13, maintained its half-game lead over the Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference standings. Wednesday night wasn't a flawless exhibition of Rockets basketball. About an hour after Harden's conquest, coach Mike D'Antoni marched onto the floor and lit into his team, which had coughed up a 15-3 run during a string of four possessions featuring three careless turnovers. The Rockets have been playing at the league's slowest pace over the course of their month-long winning streak, an almost unthinkable statistic for a team coached by D'Antoni and assembled by general manager Daryl Morey. But this improbable feature underscores how dangerous the Rockets are as currently constituted. James Harden outscored the Clippers 17-12 in the first quarter as the Rockets ran away with the win. AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill "We're not just winning one way," Harden said. "We're winning a variety of ways. That's what it's going to take in the postseason." For most NBA teams, a brisk pace against a backpedaling defense that isn't set helps players find quality shots. The Rockets' offensive ingenuity is their uncanny ability, demonstrated over the past month, that they can rely on the more deliberate pick-you-apart inclinations of Chris Paul and Harden, and still find their sensible diet of 3-pointers, point-range shots at the rim and regular trips to the foul line. During the streak, Houston has ranked third in quantified shot probability, a metric by Second Spectrum that measures the likelihood of a shot going down when taking into account both the shot quality and the shooter. And though isolation basketball traditionally has been anathema to teams coached by D'Antoni, whose coaching mantra is "the ball finds energy," the Rockets are far and away the most iso-reliant team in the NBA -- and by far the most efficient with 1.12 points per direct isolation play. (No other team in the league has scored even better than 1.00 per direct iso during the streak.) True to form, the Rockets attempted only four field goal attempts outside the key but inside the arc on Wednesday, with Harden attempting zero. He finished with an efficient, workmanlike 25 points on 7-for-14 shooting from the field (including 3-of-10 from deep), going 8-for-9 from the stripe.



With little help for Dean Wade and Barry Brown, Kansas State falls short at TCU
With little help for Dean Wade and Barry Brown, Kansas State falls short at TCU

FORT WORTH As good as Barry Brown and Dean Wade have been this season, they aren’t dominant enough to win basketball games without significant help from their teammates. That’s one of the main lessons Kansas State will take away from a 66-59 loss to TCU on Tuesday at Schollmaier Arena. Wade led all scorers with 24 points, displaying excellent touch and awareness on his way to a 10-for-14 shooting night that also featured five rebounds and four assists. His campaign for a spot on the All-Big 12 team continued. Brown also had a big game, scoring 17 points on 10 shots while sending out six assists. But there were few positives to report from the rest of the team. Cartier Diarra played his worst game since taking over as K-State’s starting point guard, scoring three points with no assists and five turnovers in 25 minutes of action. His backup, Kamau Stokes, was no better. The junior point guard went scoreless with two assists and a turnover. The Wildcats also got little inside. Makol Mawien had a solid effort with nine points and seven rebounds, but Levi Stockard and James Love were quiet off the bench. Xavier Sneed snared seven rebounds, but only made one of six shots. Compare that to TCU, which had eight players score at least three points, and it’s easy to see why the Horned Frogs (21-9, 9-8 Big 12) pulled away late for an important victory that ties them with the Wildcats (20-10, 9-8) for fourth place in the Big 12 standings. Kenrich Williams led the way with 16 points and 11 rebounds, continually causing problems for K-State inside and out. Desmond Bane was right behind him with 15 points and five rebounds. K-State led by as much as 44-39 early in the second half, and the game was back and forth until the final minutes. But TCU made more plays late, including a three-pointer from Vlad Brodziansky that clinched the game in the last minute. It will go down as an opportunity missed for the Wildcats. Though they remain in decent shape to lock up a NCAA Tournament bid with a home victory over Baylor on Saturday or a nice run at the Big 12 Tournament, they are still on the bubble. They would have felt much better about their chances had they won this game. Beating TCU would have gone down as a signature victory of sorts. The Horned Frogs entered the day with an impressive RPI of 19, and beating a team ranked that high would have boosted the Wildcats’ stock with the selection committee. It didn’t happen.