Purdue Survives Texas Thriller on Kaufman-Renn’s Last-Second Heroics
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Matt Painter has a mantra he’s repeated to Trey Kaufman-Renn for four years while at Purdue: it isn’t always the first shot that wins the game; it’s the one that follows.
On Thursday night at the SAP Center, that coaching cliché transformed into a vivid, heart-pounding reality. With just 0.7 seconds remaining on the clock, Kaufman-Renn lunged toward the rim to meet a Braden Smith miss, tipping the ball home to lift No. 2 seed Purdue to a 79-77 victory over No. 11 Texas. The bucket didn’t just win a game; it punched the Boilermakers’ ticket to their second Elite Eight in three years and extinguished one of the most improbable runs in tournament history.
“I’ve heard Coach say that my entire career here,” Kaufman-Renn said, still catching his breath as teammates mobbed him on the court. “It’s kind of cool to finally experience it when it matters most.”
A Heavyweight Clash in San Jose
This wasn’t the clinical, methodical Purdue victory many expected against a double-digit seed. Instead, it was a 40-minute bar fight featuring 10 lead changes and 16 ties. Texas, which had clawed its way from the First Four to the Sweet 16 under first-year coach Sean Miller, played with a desperation that suggested they didn’t care about the numbers on the seeds.
The Longhorns were led by an Herculean effort from Tramon Mark. The graduate guard put on a clinic, scoring 29 points on 11-of-15 shooting. What made the performance legendary wasn’t just the efficiency, but the agony; Mark spent much of the second half grimacing and limping on a visibly injured ankle. Every time Purdue threatened to pull away, Mark would bury a contested three or drive into the teeth of the defense to keep Texas alive. His 29 points were the most by a Longhorn in the tournament since Kevin Durant dropped 30 in 2007.
The Tactical Gamble For Purdue
The game’s final sequence will be debated in Austin for years. With 11 seconds remaining and the score tied at 77 following a spectacular and-one layup by Texas’s Dailyn Swain, Sean Miller opted to sub out 7-foot center Matas Vokietaitis. The move was designed to give the Longhorns more mobility to guard Purdue’s perimeter threats, but it left the rim unprotected.
Purdue’s Braden Smith, who finished with 16 points and five assists, took the ball the length of the floor. He drove hard to the cup, his layup rolling off the rim. But without the Longhorns’ primary rim protector on the floor, Kaufman-Renn had a clear path. He rose above the fray to deliver the softest of touches, sending the Purdue faithful into a frenzy.
“We struggled to rebound on defense all night,” a somber Sean Miller said postgame. “In that last moment, we went for speed, and they went for the glass. Credit to them for finishing.”
By the Numbers: A Season of Milestones
Kaufman-Renn was the undisputed star for the Boilermakers, finishing with 20 points and eight rebounds. He was nearly perfect in the first half, hitting his first seven shots. With this victory, Purdue reached the 30-win mark for only the third time in school history (2018, 2024, 2026).
The win also highlights the incredible continuity Painter has built in West Lafayette. This senior class has now won 117 games, the most in a four-year span in program history. For a team that has faced its share of March heartbreak, this was a moment of pure, unadulterated resilience.
Looking Ahead: A Date With Destiny
Purdue (30-8) doesn’t have much time to celebrate. They advance to Saturday’s West Regional Final, where a familiar foe awaits: top-seeded Arizona. The Wildcats advanced later in the night with a dominant 109-88 win over Arkansas.
The matchup promises to be a clash of titans at the SAP Center, with a trip to the Final Four on the line. For Purdue, the goal remains the same—keep shooting, and keep crashing the boards. Because as Kaufman-Renn proved tonight, the second chance is often the only one that counts.
