Little mistakes or missed opportunities — either of these aspects could accurately describe the first 14 games of Texas men’s basketball season.
Ahead of tonight’s Southeastern Conference opener, the Longhorns were 1–4 against notable power opponents, their only win coming against North Carolina State in Maui.
Texas head coach Sean Miller, who is quickly approaching 700 career games coached, was direct in his post-game press conference when describing his team’s defense during Mississippi State junior guard Josh Hubbard’s three-pointer to make it a two-point game near the end of regulation as a “stupid basketball play.”
When asked if the defense’s struggles are a player’s basketball IQ or a coach’s teaching issue, his response can be left up to interpretation.
“If I tell you not to cross the street and I keep telling you, and I say ‘I swear, whatever you do, do not cross the street,’ and you do, and the bus hits you, I’m gonna take responsibility as your parent,” Miller said. “But damn it, how many times do I have to tell you not to cross the street? We got some of that going on.”
Hubbard’s three, coupled with Bulldogs senior forward Brandon Walker’s game-tying layup two possessions later, allowed the Bulldogs to sneak out a hard-fought victory over the Longhorns in overtime, 101-98, Saturday night at the Moody Center.
The Longhorns completely lost all momentum that they had garnered in the final five minutes of the game when Texas junior forward Dailyn Swain’s career-high night in points was ended short when he was called for his fifth foul of the night, a call that drew a negative reaction from the crowd.
Swain, who was on the floor for almost the entirety of tonight’s game with 37 minutes in total, put up 34 points and 14 rebounds, leading the Longhorn effort to grow a six-point lead and with a regulation victory in sight.
“When he fouled out, that certainly hurt us down the stretch,” Miller said. “We would not have been in a position to win, and when we were in a position to win, (it was) in large part due to just his outstanding play.”
With Swain out of the picture, Mississippi State began to take control of the game, coming back from the six-point deficit to pull the game into overtime in just 1:42. The Longhorns were only able to score 12 points in overtime without their biggest offensive option.
Still, graduate guard Tramon Mark was able to make things interesting in overtime, scoring seven points with under a minute to go in the extra period. The veteran guard was unable to make his second free throw after he was fouled with nine seconds left on the clock, leaving Texas down by one.
“Obviously, very disappointing,” Swain said. “We wanted to come in here, start the SEC season off right, and we didn’t. We’re not going to dwell on it for too long, we’ll bounce back, and it’s a long season.”
The loss certainly damages an already shaky tournament resume, and with three ranked opponents ahead on the Longhorns’ schedule, the road only gets tougher.
Texas faces No. 19 Tennessee at Thompson–Boling Arena at Food City Center in Knoxville, Tennessee, on Tuesday at 8 p.m CT.
