Losing the Big 12 Player of the Year was supposed to crater Texas Tech; instead it has unlocked a three-game sprint that vaulted the Red Raiders to No. 10. TCU’s tournament life now depends on proving Tech’s resurgence is a mirage.
How Texas Tech flipped catastrophe into momentum
When JT Toppin’s ACL snapped in Tempe on Feb. 17, bracketologists penciled Texas Tech for a late-season fade. The league’s reigning Player of the Year was averaging 17.8 PPG and 9.2 RPG on 62 % shooting—production nobody on the roster could replicate.
Instead, Grant McCasland turned injury luck into depth leverage. Returning front-court pieces Josiah Moseley, Luke Bamgboye, and Marial Akuentok—all previously nursing dings—were cleared the same week Toppin went down. The trio combines for 6-11, 6-9, and 7-0 length, giving Tech the rare ability to play bigger after losing their star big.
Results:
- 76-64 vs. BYU—Held the Cougs to 29 % second-half shooting
- 86-77 at Cincinnati—Forced 19 turnovers, most by any Bearcat opponent this year
- 82-73 at No. 4 Iowa State—Cyclones’ first home loss, vaulting Tech six AP poll spots to No. 10
Donovan Atwell is why guards win in March
While the frontcourt stabilized, Donovan Atwell detonated in Ames: 18 pts, 6-of-10 from deep. The senior is now second nationally at 3.8 threes per game and ranks top-10 in 46.2 % accuracy among high-volume shooters (ESPN.com).
Spacing has ballooned. In three post-Toppin games Tech is hitting 42.6 % on 28 triples a night, up from 35 % prior. The added size keeps drivers clean, Atwell gets freer looks, and the offense is humming at 1.19 PPP—elite terrain this late in the season.
TCU’s resume is one signature win away from lock status
Jamie Dixon’s Horned Frogs sit 44th in NET and 7-7 in Quad 1/2 games—classic bubble math. They’ve already clipped No. 5 Iowa State in Fort Worth and own a neutral win over Utah. What they lack is a true road triumph against a ranked foe.
Opportunity knocks Tuesday. A win at United Supermarkets Arena would:
- Become TCU’s second Quad-1 victory away from home
- Push the Frogs to 10-7 in conference, likely inside the top-35 of NET by morning
- Drop Tech’s seed line and tighten the Big 12 title race, creating headline collateral that committee members remember
Matchup lever: whose frontcourt actually owns the paint?
TCU’s interior offense is 43rd nationally in 2-pt % but has cratered to 46 % in its last five—directly correlating with Ernest Udeh Jr.’s ankle sprain. Udeh is probable Tuesday, yet fitness limits his burst.
Tech, meanwhile, has three ready-to-foul 7-footers to pair with 6-8 microwave forward Christian Winborne. Even without Toppin’s shot-blocking, the Red Raiders’ defensive rebound rate spiked +4.2 % in the win streak, per KenPom.
Prediction line and March implications
Oddsmakers opened Tech –6.5, money pushing toward –7.5 as public buyers back guard play and home court.
History sides with the favorites: McCasland is 12-2 straight-up after a ranked win, and Tuesday’s crowd will be the loudest of the year—students attend after spring-break week.
Still, if TCU slows tempo (Frogs are 319th in possessions) and forces Tech’s new bigs into late-shot-clock twos, the spread shrinks to a coin-flip. A TCU upset doesn’t just burst Tech’s Big 12 title balloon; it likely vaults the Frogs past the cut-line for good.
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