Texas Tech Red Raiders Handle BYU, Stay Perfect At Home
In a game that felt more like a heavyweight prize fight than a mid-January conference tilt, No. 15 Texas Tech absorbed every punch No. 11 BYU threw before delivering a knockout blow late in the second half, securing an 84-71 victory. The win keeps the Red Raiders perfect at home (10-0) and sends a pretty clear message to the rest of the Big 12: Good luck coming into our house.
Toppin and the “Big Three” Take Over
Letโs talk about JT Toppin for a second. The man was a force of nature. He didn’t just play basketball; he owned the paint. Toppin finished with a monster double-doubleโ27 points and 12 rebounds. But it was when he scored that mattered. When Texas Tech needed a bucket to stop the bleeding, Toppin was there. When they needed a board to kill a BYU run? Toppin was there. It was his seventh straight double-double.
But this wasn’t a solo act. Christian Anderson dropped 22 points and dished out 7 assists, playing with the kind of poise that makes coaches sleep well at night. And then there was LeJuan Watts, who quietly added 20 points and 8 boards. When you have three guys combining for 69 points, you’re going to win a lot of ball games.
Weathering the Storm
This game wasn’t a wire-to-wire cakewalk, though for Texas Tech. BYU is ranked No. 11 for a reason. Theyโre tough, theyโre disciplined, and they have guys who can fill it up.
Midway through the second half, things got a little dicey. BYUโs Robert Wright III decided he wasn’t going down without a fight, scoring eight points during a 16-2 run that flipped the script and put the Cougars up 61-52 with just under 10 minutes left. The crowd got a little tense. The momentum had clearly shifted. It felt like one of those moments where a lesser team folds.
The Run That Changed Everything
But Texas Tech isn’t a lesser team. Instead of panicking, they got mad. The Red Raiders responded with a furious 30-6 run over the final stretch that completely buried the Cougars. It started with defense, but the offense caught fire quickly. Toppin banked in a three, Watts hit from deep, and Anderson knocked down big shots.
Suddenly, a nine-point deficit turned into a comfortable lead. The defense clamped down on BYU freshman phenom AJ Dybantsa, holding him to just two points in the second half after he looked dangerous early on. Techโs ability to completely shut down BYU’s perimeter shooting made the difference.
What This Means For Texas Tech
This wasn’t just another win. This was a statement. Beating a top-15 team by double digits after trailing midway through the second half shows resilience. It shows maturity.
The Texas Tech Red Raiders are now 14-4 overall and 4-1 in the Big 12. Theyโve got a tough road test coming up against Baylor on Tuesday, but for now, Lubbock can celebrate. The “Big Three” of Toppin, Anderson, and Watts are clicking, the defense is suffocating when it matters, and the home-court advantage is as real as it gets.
