Final Nov 21
JMU 99 -3.0 o146.0
UIC 81 3.0 u146.0
Final Nov 21
MIA 69 -9.0 o143.0
DRKE 80 9.0 u143.0
Final OT Nov 21
OHIO 81 -2.0 o146.5
MTU 83 2.0 u146.5
Final Nov 21
LAS 67 -1.5 o144.0
UCSD 72 1.5 u144.0
Final Nov 21
OKST 78 2.0 o163.0
FAU 86 -2.0 u163.0
Final Nov 21
USF 74 -6.5 o145.5
PORT 68 6.5 u145.5
Final Nov 21
ECU 78 -4.0 o135.0
JVST 86 4.0 u135.0
Final Nov 21
MONM 62 4.5 o146.5
YSU 72 -4.5 u146.5
Final OT Nov 21
HALL 69 7.0 o126.0
VCU 66 -7.0 u126.0
Final Nov 21
BRAD 82 -7.0 o135.5
TXST 68 7.0 u135.5
Final Nov 21
TOL 103 -13.0 o154.5
STET 78 13.0 u154.5
Final Nov 21
RMU 86 9.5 o151.5
COR 76 -9.5 u151.5
Final Nov 21
UNCG 58 17.5 o146.5
IND 69 -17.5 u146.5
Final Nov 21
RAD 51 22.0 o144.5
CLEM 79 -22.0 u144.5
Final Nov 21
SYR 66 11.0 o155.0
TEX 70 -11.0 u155.0
Final Nov 21
NIAG 73 14.0 o136.5
KENT 76 -14.0 u136.5
Final 0OT Nov 21
BAY 99 -2.5 o150.5
SJU 98 2.5 u150.5
Final Nov 21
EMU 68 7.0 o134.5
OAK 64 -7.0 u134.5
Final Nov 21
EDW 59 -0.0 o0.0
UNF 108 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
JOHNSU 52 -0.0 o0.0
CHAT 72 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
BRY 66 -12.5 o153.0
STONE 67 12.5 u153.0
Final Nov 21
NJIT 64 12.5 o135.0
BUCK 81 -12.5 u135.0
Final Nov 21
MER 72 18.5 o150.0
SCAR 84 -18.5 u150.0
Final OT Nov 21
SEMO 77 1.5 o149.5
CARK 73 -1.5 u149.5
Final OT Nov 21
PRE 58 8.5 o135.0
SFA 55 -8.5 u135.0
Final Nov 21
VAN 73 2.5 o150.5
NEV 71 -2.5 u150.5
Final Nov 21
TRN 78 -0.0 o0.0
SHSU 105 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
MINCR 60 -0.0 o0.0
NDSU 67 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
46 -0.0 o0.0
WIU 73 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
TXWES 66 -0.0 o0.0
UNT 73 0.0 u0.0
Final Nov 21
ORU 68 21.5 o149.5
MISS 100 -21.5 u149.5
Final Nov 21
LNDNWD 64 9.5 o145.0
VALP 77 -9.5 u145.0
Final Nov 21
CCSU 54 -2.0 o142.0
SH 67 2.0 u142.0
Final Nov 21
PRIN 62 -7.5 o152.5
WRST 80 7.5 u152.5
Final Nov 21
UTM 77 11.5 o155.5
AMCC 81 -11.5 u155.5
Final Nov 21
TAMCOM 56 24.5 o144.5
OKLA 84 -24.5 u144.5
Final Nov 21
TST 49 31.0 o147.0
MICH 72 -31.0 u147.0
Final Nov 21
TTU 77 -10.5 o149.5
STJOE 78 10.5 u149.5
Final Nov 21
GRAM 58 23.5 o152.5
UNM 80 -23.5 u152.5
Final Nov 21
TENN 64 -12.5 o126.5
UVA 42 12.5 u126.5
Final Nov 21
EWU 81 14.0 o158.5
WSU 96 -14.0 u158.5
Final Nov 21
AFA 69 16.0 o136.0
CAL 78 -16.0 u136.0
Final Nov 21
ORE 78 -6.5 o139.5
ORST 75 6.5 u139.5
Final Nov 21
MEM 68 2.0 o154.5
SF 64 -2.0 u154.5
Texas 4th Big 1221-10
Oklahoma 8th Big 1217-14

Texas @ Oklahoma preview

Lloyd Noble Center

Last Meeting ( Jan 11, 2022 ) Oklahoma 52, Texas 66

No. 20 Texas and Oklahoma will look to get back in the win column when they square off on Tuesday in Norman, Okla., to finish off their Big 12 Conference regular-season series.

Both the Longhorns and Sooners come into the key league game off road defeats, but the way they lost couldn't be more different.

Texas (18-7, 7-5 Big 12) was walloped by No. 10 Baylor 80-63 on Saturday in a game that the Longhorns trailed by 13 points at halftime and by 21 less than eight minutes into the second half. Texas shot just 32.8 percent in the loss and were just 10 for 34 from the floor after halftime.

After the setback, Longhorns' coach Chris Beard questioned his team's toughness, especially in the wake of a workmanlike win at home against No. 8 Kansas earlier in the week.

"From where I stand, we're a team that hasn't proven that we can handle some success," Beard said. "Baylor basically beat us with seven players -- we tried 12 or 13 to find a spark, and their seven beat our 12. The way we played basketball today was not Texas basketball. It was soft."

Andrew Jones paced Texas in the loss to Baylor with 11 points off the bench while Timmy Allen, Courtney Ramey, Christian Bishop, Marcus Carr and Jase Febres added eight points apiece for the Longhorns.

"We let the Kansas game be our championship," Ramey said. "(Baylor) wanted it more. All 13 players can say we played soft today."

Conversely, the Sooners went to the mat with Kansas on Saturday. They fell 71-69 when the Jayhawks forged a 15-2 run late in the game and only after OU's Jordan Goldwire's step-back jumper in the final seconds to tie the game bounced off the front of the rim.

Goldwire scored a career-high 20 points -- including a wild 3-pointer from near midcourt with 24 seconds left -- to lead the Sooners (14-11, 4-8 Big 12) in the loss.

Tanner Groves added 19 points, Elijah Harkless hit for 12 and Jalen Hill tallied 10 for Oklahoma, which has dropped eight of its past 10 games and lost 21 straight games on the road against Kansas.

The Sooners went on a 7-2 run down the stretch to give themselves a chance.

"I thought our guys played their tails off to put them in a position to win against one of the top teams in the country and in one of the top atmospheres in the country," Oklahoma coach Porter Moser said.

"I don't want the bar to be everyone telling our guys it's good to come close. We have to keep chasing and getting better. That's what February is about -- getting better, getting better, getting better."

The Sooners were looking to build on their home upset of No. 9 Texas Tech on Wednesday with a monumental road win but instead have to take some consolation from a loss in an arena where they haven't tasted victory since 1993.

"We've just got to keep this in our gut," Hill said afterward. "Keep this feeling going into this Texas game with the will to win. If we can just play great on offense and great on defense, we can beat any team that we want to."

Texas beat the Sooners 66-52 in Austin on Jan. 11, recording its largest margin of victory against Oklahoma since a 74-54 win in a Big 12 tournament quarterfinal contest in 2011.

--Field Level Media

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