College Basketball
Texas Tech Stunned in Fort Worth, 62-61
College Basketball

Texas Tech Stunned in Fort Worth, 62-61

Updated Mar. 4, 2020 7:15 p.m. ET

Texas Tech came out guns blazing, but faded late in the first half.

The Battle for West Texas started out great for the visiting Red Raiders as Texas Tech sped off to a 21-9 lead early in the first half. With the offense aided in part by a TCU squad keen on turning the ball over, and a suffocating defensive effort, it seemed as though Chris Beard’s men would run away with their first Big XII victory.

It was not to be.

The Red Raiders fell into an offensive lull after jumping out to an early 21-9 lead, but would close out the first half by allowing the Horned Frogs to go on a 21-8 run.

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At the half TCU lead Texas Tech 30-29.

However, it wasn’t just a poor shooting night that allowed the Horned Frogs to come back into the game. A series of turnovers, poor free throw attempts, and defensive miscues, combined with a sneaky-tough TCU team to spell trouble for the Red Raiders at the half.

First half struggles were compounded in the second.

Texas Tech’s second half opened the same as the first; with the Horned Frogs and Red Raiders trading blow for blow. The game was tightly contested, with Texas Tech leaning heavily on Keenan Evans for offensive production. In his third game back from injury, Evans accounted for 20 points off of 7 of 13 shooting, and went 3 of 4 from the three-point line as well.

However, Evans’ firepower wouldn’t be enough as the Red Raiders seemed unable to distance themselves late in the second half. Texas Tech’s bench never factored into the game; Aaron Ross accounted for more fouls than points at the end of the night. Similarly, Justin Gray was neutralized by the TCU defense; accounting for a mere 2 points on twenty minutes played.

Defensively, Texas Tech’s plan centered around keying-in on the Horned Frogs’ Vladimir Brodzniansky. The Red Raiders were successful in limiting Brodzniansky on the pick-and-roll, but seemed to lose track on the periphery as the Horned Frogs shot 9 of 22 (40%) from the three-point mark.

Ultimately, a close game in which Texas Tech never managed to distance themselves from the Horned Frogs devolved into a painful one-point loss via TCU free throw. The Red Raiders current situation doesn’t bode well for an invitation to the NCAA Tournament; Texas Tech stands at 16-8 (4-7 in conference), and have not managed any  Big XII road victories, and with upcoming games against Kansas, Baylor, and West Virginia things won’t be getting easier.

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