Texas Longhorns’ 100-58 rout of Oregon in the NCAA Tournament second round was more than a win—it was a defensive masterclass designed to atone for a pick-and-roll failure that cost Vic Schaefer a championship in 2019. With Madison Booker‘s 40-point explosion and a suffocating defense, Schaefer’s team is finally ready to slay its tournament demons.
The anxiety was palpable. Hours before Texas took the court against Oregon, head coach Vic Schaefer was in the practice gym installing a new defensive strategy, specifically targeting the pick-and-roll. This wasn’t a routine adjustment—it was a direct response to a ghost from his past USA TODAY.
That worry translated into perfection. Texas held Oregon to just 30% shooting after the first quarter, forcing 13 steals and converting 23 points off turnovers in a 100-58 demolition that announced the Longhorns as true national title contenders USA TODAY.
The root of Schaefer’s concern traced back to 2019, when his Mississippi State Bulldogs, fresh off consecutive national runner-up finishes, fell to Oregon in the Elite Eight. Point guard Sabrina Ionescu dismantled the Bulldogs’ defense with her pick-and-roll mastery, a 88-84 loss that Schaefer still calls the one that got away USA TODAY.
“That was my best team,” Schaefer admitted. “If we’d have beat them, we’d have won the national championship, no question. But we got unlucky, we got sent to Oregon, we had to play in front of 13,000 Ducks and we got beat because we couldn’t guard the pick-and-roll. Ionescu crushed me with pick-and-roll.”
That memory has defined Schaefer’s career. Across 21 seasons as a head coach, including stops at Sam Houston State, Mississippi State, and now Texas, he has amassed a 398-101 record and taken two different programs to the Final Four—an achievement matched only by Kim Mulkey Texas Longhorns. Yet, a national championship remains the lone missing piece.
Now in his sixth season at Texas, Schaefer has built one of his most complete teams. The Longhorns captured the SEC Tournament championship in their inaugural conference season, earned a No. 1 NCAA Tournament seed for the third straight year, and advanced to the Final Four in 2025 USA TODAY.
The roster is headlined by junior Madison Booker, whom Schaefer labeled a “generational talent” after her 40-point performance against Oregon. Booker averages double figures and creates her own shot with ease, a weapon that makes Texas‘s offense nearly unstoppable USA TODAY.
Supporting Booker is a formidable core: senior point guard Rori Harmon, the defensive quarterback; sophomore Jordan Lee; and center Kyla Oldacre, part of a dominant interior duo with Breya Cunningham. This team’s balance and depth are unprecedented in Schaefer’s Texas tenure Yahoo Sports.
Schaefer’s system remains rooted in suffocating pressure defense—a staple since his Mississippi State days—but he has evolved offensively. “At Mississippi State, we were primarily dribble drive,” said associate head coach Elena Lovato, who joined Schaefer in Austin. “Here, we’ve really evolved and grown our playbook to utilize our five-star talent Texas Longhorns.”
That evolution includes a deeper playbook and overpreparation. Schaefer carries two play cards with 50 different plays, and he’s known to install secondary defenses hours before games. His attention to detail is legendary, and it’s trickling down to players like Harmon, who calls Schaefer “a mini Vic” in their shared competitiveness Yahoo Sports.
The coaching tree runs deep at Texas. Schaefer’s daughter, Blair Schaefer, serves as an assistant, as does Sydney Carter, a former player from his Texas A&M days when he won a national title as an assistant under Gary Blair. This generational knowledge transfer embeds lessons from past triumphs and failures into every practice Texas Longhorns.
With a 33-3 record, Texas has navigated a challenging season, including integrating three new starters. Their path to the championship has been cleared by a defense that no longer fears the pick-and-roll—a direct repudiation of the 2019 ghost that once haunted Schaefer. “This team, offensively, when they go out there and make shots… it just makes for a really special team,” Schaefer said USA TODAY.
The players are acutely aware of what a title would mean. “I think he wants it, too,” Harmon said of Schaefer. “To get one while we’re both here would mean a lot… doing it for him is another reason why we go so hard.” The weight of history—Texas‘s last championship in 1986—and Schaefer’s personal quest converge in this team Yahoo Sports.
Exorcising ghosts isn’t about one defensive stop; it’s about the cumulative weight of preparation, talent, and timing. For Vic Schaefer and Texas, the stars have aligned. The Longhorns aren’t just chasing a title—they’re restoring a legacy.
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