Kansas didn’t just survive a road trap game without its Hall-of-Fame coach—it revealed a resilient, veteran roster that can close ugly games when March is on the line.
Why the Jayhawks’ 75-69 escape matters more than the box score
Bill Self watching from a hospital bed in Lawrence felt like the plot twist that could derail Kansas’ January surge. Instead, Jacque Vaughn—the former Jayhawk point guard turned NBA head coach—grabbed the whiteboard and the locker room followed his calm lead.
The result: a road win that keeps Kansas (14-5, 4-2 Big 12) within striking distance of first-place Houston and reinforces a growing belief that this roster has the leadership to survive the grind of a 18-game Big 12 slate.
How Kansas flipped a one-point nail-biter into a double-digit cushion
Colorado (12-7, 2-4) trimmed the deficit to 60-59 with 5:50 left after Alon Michaeli sandwiched a layup and corner three on back-to-back possessions. The CU Events Center shook, momentum tilting toward the Buffs and former Jayhawk Tad Boyle on the sideline.
Melvin Council Jr. answered the run himself:
- Pick-six steal and layup in transition
- Another layup off a second straight live-ball turnover
- Two clutch free throws to cap an 11-0 blitz
Colorado’s next 11 field-goal attempts clanged out. Game over.
Stat sheet that tells the story beyond the final score
- Melvin Council Jr.: 18 pts, 7 reb, 2 stl—8 of his points came inside the final 1:15
- Tre White: 17 pts, 15 reb, 4 ast—his fourth double-double of the season
- Dajuan Harris Jr.: 0-for-4 FG but 6 ast / 1 TO—steady hand when offense wobbled
- KU bench: 22 points, out-scoring CU reserves by 13
- Colorado: 4-game losing streak, 1-5 vs. Power-6 foes
Self’s absence reframes the Big 12 arms race
Self was admitted Monday for IV fluids after flu-like symptoms; no timeline has been given for his return. ESPN lists Kansas as a projected 4-seed in its latest NCAA bracketology, but seeding formulas weigh road wins heavily—exactly the kind of victory Self’s staff collected Tuesday night.
Vaughn’s one-game audition also flashed a potential contingency plan. His NBA pedigree (Nets head coach, 2021-23) calmed late-game sets, and the team ran its usual “55” flare action to free Peterson for back-to-back threes that built the early 13-5 cushion.
What’s next for both programs
Kansas returns to Allen Fieldhouse Saturday vs. Oklahoma, a matchup that could vault the Jayhawks into the league’s top four if Self returns. Colorado, meanwhile, treks to Texas Tech desperately needing a quadrant-1 victory to keep its fading at-large profile alive.
The Buffs entered January 10-2 and receiving AP votes; they now sit outside the projected field in every reputable mock bracket.
Bottom line for Jayhawk fans
Winning ugly on the road without the Hall-of-Fame coach is the type of résumé line Selection Sunday remembers. Council’s closing stretch, White’s glass dominance and Vaughn’s composed bench presence give Kansas tangible proof its leadership core extends well beyond Self’s rollicking voice.
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