14 BIG 12 TEXAS LONGHORNS Demon Deacons exploit Longhorns' late mistakes By Laken Litman Daily Texan — Monday, March 22 NEW ORLEANS — The Longhorns' final loss of the season, an 81-80 overtime heartbreaker to Wake Forest in the first round of the NCAA Tournament Thursday, was indicative of their entire year, complete with missed free throws and missed lawups. Rebounds were an issue as well. Wake Forest outrebounded Texas 59-34, which was uncharacteristic of a team that prides itself on defense and has the Big 12's career-leading rebounder, Damion James (350 this season, 1,318 career). James only had six total rebounds in his final game as a Longhorn — zero coming in the first half. "We just got pounded on the glass," Texas coach Rick Barnes said. "I don't remember us getting outrebounded ever like this. I really don't." The Longhorns came back from an 11-point deficit in the first half to take a 38-37 halftime lead, but in the first five minutes of the second half, the Demon Deacons made a 17-4 run, giving them a 54-42 lead. After scoring 16 points in the first half, freshman Jordan Hamilton was on the bench as Wake Forest went on their run. Barnes said Wake Forest had adjusted its defense accordingly at halftime, which affected Hamilton emotionally. "You know, he just broke down a little, mentally," Barnes said. "We had to get him calmed down before he went back in." Hamilton only took three shots in the second half and finished with 19 points. With about nine minutes remaining in the game, James and Dexter Pittman came up with pivotal free throws to bring Texas within four points. 56-52. At that point, Texas got into a groove. James responded to every Wake Forest basket with one of his own, J'Covan Brown — who only played three minutes in the first half but led his team in scoring with 20 points — made crucial shots and free throws and Avery Bradley caused Demon Deacon turnovers and made them pay with fast-break layups. "We just got pounded on the glass. I don't remember us getting outrebounded ever like this. I really don't." With 49.3 seconds left in regulation, Brown hit a tying three to tie the score at 67. At the nine-second mark, Wake Forest was up by one point and James was sent to the free-throw line. He made the first, tying the game at 68, then missed the second — a shot that might have secured a Texas win. Wake got the rebound and sprinted down the court. James hustled back on defense, got the ball back and attempted a half-court shot for the win, but it went wide right. In overtime, Brown and Hamilton hit huge three-pointers to give Texas an eight-point lead of 76-68 with three minutes left. But Wake remained poised. Coach Dino Guadio reminded his players of the four other times this season — against Xavier, Richmond, Maryland and Virginia — where they won in overtime. "When you watch overtime games, when a team gets down by four or more, they start looking at the clock, feeling sorry for themselves," Wake Forest guard Ishmael Smith said. "Coach [Guardio] told us to keep getting stops, keep getting stops like we did in overtime games earlier this season. We did and got a big win." Ultimately, missed free throws down the stretch were the Longhorns' demise. Brown RICK BARNES Texas coach missed two that would have given Texas an 80-74 edge with 49.6 seconds left, and Gary Johnson missed two that would have put Texas up 82-79 with nine seconds left. Wake Forest took advantage of the Longhorns' mistakes by making its free throws during overtime. A huge three-pointer by Ari Stewart, which put Wake Forest within one point before Johnson missed his free throws, helped too. That created an ideal situation for Smith, who almost had a triple-double with 19 points, 12 rebounds and seven assists. He got the ball with 1.3 seconds left and made an 18-foot pull-up jumper to win it, 81-80. "I couldn't believe that I missed them," Brown said. "There was no one else I'd rather take that shot," Guadio said. "If you look at Ishmael's stats, look at his ACC three-point shooting stats — oh, they're not very good. When you look at his free throws, not very good. If I took him out there right now, he wouldn't make three straight threes if we shot 100 of them. But that kid makes big shots." THE WAVE MARCH 24,2010 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN