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UH tennis swept in first Big 12 matches

UH was unable to grab a point in either of its matches against Texas Tech and BYU. | Oscar Herrera/The Cougar

Houston tennis lost its sixth and seventh straight matches over the weekend after it fell 6-0 to No. 26 Texas Tech on Thursday and 4-0 to BYU on Saturday in the team’s first-ever Big 12 matches.

Game 1

In doubles play, Texas Tech won the first two matches soundly despite sophomore duo Sophie Schouten and Sonya Kovalenko taking an early lead in their match.

Schouten would end up as the only Cougar to win a set in singles play, but her match would go unfinished due to the win having already been clinched for Texas Tech. Junior Maria Dzemeshkevich lost her match by a score of 6-1, 6-1 while senior Blanca Cortijo Parreno fared somewhat better in a 6-4, 6-1 loss.

Sophomore Gabriela Cortes put together a much improved second set but ultimately lost her match 6-1, 7-5 to clinch the win for Texas Tech.

Game 2

The Cougars dropped to 1-7 on the year in their 4-0 loss to BYU on Saturday.

Schouten and Kovalenko started things right and won their match 6-2, but the doubles point slipped away after Dsemeshkevich and senior Laura Slisane lost 6-0 and the duo of Cortijo Parreno and junior Elena Trencheva squandered a 4-3 lead to give the doubles point to BYU.

UH fought in some close singles matches before BYU ran away with the victory. Slisane lost in straight sets while Schouten was unable to come back from a 7-1 tiebreaker loss in her first set to give BYU a 3-0 lead.

Dzemeshkevich and freshman Nina Skoric each won a set in their matches, but Skoric’s eventual loss sealed the victory for BYU and ended the match.

UH will travel to Fort Worth to face TCU in its first Big 12 road matchup on Friday.

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UH women’s golf hosts Chevron Collegiate, finishes sixth

UH women’s golf placed sixth while hosting the Chevron Collegiate. | Graphic by The Cougar

The Houston women’s golf team placed sixth at the Chevron Collegiate Tuesday afternoon. Both senior Nicole Abelar and junior Hyeonji Kang finished in the top 20, tying for 13th and 17th respectively. 

On Monday morning, Kang led the Cougars scoring eight-under par, earning six birdies and an eagle on hole No. 8 while Abelar finished the first round two-under with three birdies. Sophomore Alexa Saldana had shot an even-par 72 with two birdies. Playing as an individual, freshman Ellen Yates finished round one three strokes under par with three birdies.

Later that Monday afternoon into the second round, Abelar ended the day with four-under, landing a hole-in-one on hole No. 7. Saldana scored even-par with four birdies while Kang finished Monday at two-over. Both freshman Maelynn Kim and sophomore Moa Svendenskiold ended their Monday at three strokes over par.

Finishing the tournament on Tuesday morning, Svedenskiold finished three-under, and Abelar ended with a two-under-par round. Both Kang and Kim ended their run with one-under. Kim holed six birdies, including four straight on holes 10-13.

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Oklahoma trip a homecoming for UH basketball program

Kelvin Sampson (left) coached at Oklahoma from 1994 to 2006. Four members of the program, including his daughter Karen and son Kellen (right), went to or played under Kelvin at OU. | Sean Thomas/The Cougar

On Saturday, head coach Kelvin Sampson and the No. 1 Cougars will travel to Norman, Okla. to play the Oklahoma Sooners in the team’s penultimate road game and first game in March.

It’ll be a tough game for a Houston team that looks to further tighten its grip on a potential Big 12 regular season title against an equally tough opponent inside Lloyd Noble Arena. But for Sampson, it’ll be the first time back in the gym he coached in for 12 years and won four Big 12 titles.

“I probably grew more as a coach there than anywhere I’ve been,” Sampson said. “I learned a lot about coaching and life.”

Two decades before, Kelvin Sampson was hired in 2014 and built Houston into the bona fide, perenially-title-contending men’s basketball program that it is today, a then-38-year-old coach did the same thing in Norman.

The hires were made almost exactly 20 years apart — April 2, 2014, at UH and April 25, 1994, at OU — and have yielded similarly successful results.

In 12 years at OU, Sampson’s Sooners made 11 NCAA Tournament appearances, including Final Four and Elite Eight berths in 2002 and 2003. They battled in a notoriously tough Big 12 conference against plenty of bitter rivals.

Sampson has led the Cougars to six conference titles, five straight tournaments, four consecutive Sweet 16 appearances and consecutive Final Four and Elite Eights in 2021 and 2022. Currently, he is navigating UH through the gauntlet that is the Big 12 in his 10th year.

I’ve always had a deep appreciation for Oklahoma athletics,” Sampson said. “The Oklahoma-Oklahoma State rivalry is unlike anything I’ve ever been involved in, and we had a lot of success.”

Kelvin’s son Kellen and his daughter Lauren largely grew up in Norman, having been kids when their father took the job, and both eventually graduated from OU towards the end of his tenure. Kellen rarely missed his dad’s practices when he wasn’t playing basketball himself for middle and high school teams, eventually playing under his father for two years from 2004-06. Even after Kelvin and Lauren had long left Norman, Kellen returned in 2009 to spend two years as a graduate assistant.

“Everybody deserves a hometown. It was my hometown,” Kellen said. “I fell in love with basketball in that community… I didn’t just go to OU, I was an Oklahoman.”

When Kelvin came to Houston years later, his family wasn’t just along for the ride. This time, they’ve built the foundation with him.

Kellen joined Kelvin as an assistant coach and is after to become head coach once his father retires while Lauren heads the operations side of the program. Also, special assistant to the head coach Hollis Price — OU’s all-time winningest player — and associate head coach Quannas White headed the backcourt of OU’s Final Four and Elite Eight teams under Sampson in ’02 and ’03.

“It’s the best job I’ve ever had. And I’ve stated that as stand by it because I get to work with my kids,” Kelvin said. “Back then they used to think I was smart and they’d ask questions. Now they’re the boss and they try to tell me what to do.”

The combined experience of all those former Sooners has greatly informed how Houston was built when Kelvin arrived. Oklahoma served as a proof of concept that rebounding and toughness can bring massive success as pillars of a college basketball team. Roadblocks and wrong turns made in Norman were recognized and avoided in Houston, and crucial pieces such as the “50/50 Club,” the program’s fundraising branch, and night-before-game film sessions were inspired or taken from the time at OU.

“We didn’t make a lot of mistakes when we were putting infrastructure of this place in,” Kellen said. “There’s so many program-foundational things (from OU) that have translated to here and we’ve been able to inject additional fresh ideas and create this thing to what it is.”

Meanwhile, former players turned coaches like White have been able to use their experience playing for Kelvin to help recruit and guide players into fitting into a tough, rigid culture.

“Being able to help these guys navigate through some of the hard times. The experiences, things that I went through — it’s a huge reason why these guys come in and they buy in,” White said. “I’m able to relay those messages because of my experiences at Oklahoma with Coach.”

Saturday’s game will be Kelvin’s first time coaching in Norman since his departure in 2006. It will be a chance to revisit old friendships and acquaintances, remember those that have since passed and relive countless memories that are 20-plus years old. Still, Kelvin is adamant that the focus remains on the game itself.

“I still have so many dear friends in Oklahoma now. I look forward to seeing them. I’ve had some dear friends pass away,” Kelvin said. “So it’ll be some bittersweet memories, but it’s still a basketball game, and the focus will be on our kids on the court.”

For Price and White, it will also be a chance to wash away a bitter taste in their mouths that has lasted nearly 21 years.

Between 2001 and 2003, Price and White lost just two games at Lloyd Noble in his two seasons with the team, helping make the arena a hellscape for any Big 12 opponent. However, on the pair’s Senior Night on March 8, 2003, the Sooners lost a tough game to bitter-rival Texas, leaving their final memory at Lloyd Noble as one of defeat. On Saturday, Price and White can finally make things right in their old stomping grounds.

“It would be good to get that win,” Price said. “That can be the closing of that chapter — that I finally got another win in Lloyd Noble.”

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No. 2 UH pulls out 82-76 overtime win at No. 11 Baylor

L.J. Cryer scored 15 points including some clutch free throws against his former team Saturday afternoon. | Anh Le/The Cougar

WACO, Texas — The No. 2 Houston Cougars pulled out a massive 82-76 overtime win and survived a furious 16-point comeback on the road against No. 11 Baylor Saturday afternoon. The win marked UH’s first win over Baylor in 28 years and gave UH at least a full-game lead in the standings over the rest of the Big 12.

“I don’t care how the game went,” said head coach Kelvin Sampson after the game. “This was a great road win for us.”

After a missed go-ahead free throw from Baylor and a would-be buzzer-beater from senior guard Jamal Shead was waved off, the two teams headed into overtime knotted at 68.

Overtime saw the Cougars cling to a one-possession lead thanks to a pair of free throws from senior guard L.J. Cryer. The Bears had several chances to cut the lead or tie the game but interior defense from UH and some costly Baylor mistakes, including a turnover on a would-be dunk and an offensive goaltending call, left them bare-handed. Cryer, who finished with 15 points in his return to Baylor, nailed two more clutch free throws to put UH up five and effectively seal the game.

“Coming back, I had mixed emotions,” Cryer, who was booed by fans throughout the game, said. “I expected the boos and stuff like that. It was everything I expected.”

After roaring back from a 16-point halftime deficit, Baylor brought the game to within one point on three different occasions down the stretch. In response, junior center Ja’Vier Francis tipped in a missed shot and later slammed a crucial alley-oop before redshirt sophomore guard Emanuel Sharp nailed two clutch free throws. With under a minute left, UH led 68-65.

A goaltend from Francis put Baylor within one point again before graduate guard Damian Dunn missed one of his two free throws. On the other end, Dunn fouled Baylor center Yves Missi on a made layup. Missi missed the go-ahead foul shot, with 4.4 seconds remaining before  Shead hit a three that was waved off for being just after the buzzer.

Baylor cut the halftime deficit to the Cougars down to just three in short order as UH missed its first seven shots to begin the half. A lay-in from redshirt senior J’Wan Roberts ended a five-minute scoring drought to end the run.

With the Cougars up 50-46 and Baylor threatening to close the gap,  Sharp hit back-to-back tough shots and made another layup to crucially keep Baylor at arm’s reach midway through the second half. Sharp finished with a team-high 18 points on 5-12 shooting.

“Everybody contributed,” Shead said. “It was a great team win.”

Baylor’s RayJ Dennis, Jalen Bridges and Ja’Kobe Walter made big shots throughout the game to keep Baylor in it, combining for 61 of Baylor’s 76 points.

Houston came out firing on all cylinders to begin the game and took a 27-10 lead. The Cougars forced eight turnovers in the first 11 minutes of action and cashed in for 13 points off of them. Offensively, the ball was spread around efficiently as five different UH players made at least two buckets in the first half.

Roberts scored 11 points, dished out three assists and grabbed a career-high five steals in the half to lead a dominant effort on both sides of the ball. Houston entered the locker room with a 41-25 advantage at halftime before Baylor made its run.

Shead recorded a double-double with 12 points and 10 assists while Roberts finished with 17 points, eight boards and six steals.

Houston improved to 24-3 overall and 11-3 in Big 12 play and will return home to play Cincinnati on Tuesday.

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No. 3 Cougars wallop Texas in front of record crowd at Fertitta Center

Jamal Shead’s all-around effort guided Houston past Texas at home. | Anh Le/The Cougar

No. 3 Houston used a dominant end to the first half and second half to soundly beat the Texas Longhorns 82-61 Saturday afternoon in front of a record 7,904-strong crowd in the Fertitta Center.

After building a 13-point lead in the half, the Cougars picked up right where they left off, starting the second half with a dominant 12-2 run that sent an already rowdy Fertitta Center crowd into a frenzy. Senior guard L.J. Cryer — who finished as the game’s leading scorer with 26 points, his most as a Houston Cougar — hit four of his first five three-pointers to begin the half, extending the lead to as much as 24.

“When we come home, we’re so proud of our crowds,” said head coach Kelvin Sampson of the crowd. “Now that we’re in the Big 12, our crowds are matching (other team’s) crowds. I wouldn’t trade our Fertitta Center crowd for any of them.”

The sold-out Fertitta was packed and deafeningly loud at tip-off and didn’t let up for the entire game. With about eight minutes left in the first half, senior guard Jamal Shead put together an impressive sequence of a basket, a steal and a transition dish to Cryer for a massive three to put UH up 27-20 and force a Texas timeout.

Shead made his presence known on both sides of the floor, finishing with 16 points, six assists, a season-high six steals and a career-high 11 boards. He also primarily guarded Texas’ leading scorer Max Abmas, who finished 2-14 from the floor with just seven points. Shead became the first player in UH history to record 1,100 points, 200 steals, 600 assists and win 100 games in his career.

“He (Shead) was doing what he wanted to do out there,” said Texas head coach Rodney Terry.

In the first half, stifling defense from the Cougars forced the Longhorns to go nearly six minutes without scoring a point, allowing UH to build its lead past double digits. Meanwhile, Houston dominated the boards, grabbing 26 total rebounds — 10 of which were offensive — to Texas’ 18. Houston entered the half with a 40-27 lead over the Longhorns. Texas was held to just 38.6% shooting from the floor and was thoroughly outrebounded 45-34 by the Cougars for the game.

That’s how we practice,” Cryer said. “We go out there expecting to be the tougher team.”

Sophomore guard Emanuel Sharp added 15 points and four steals, tying his career-high.

Houston improved to 22-3 on the season and 9-3 in Big 12 play. Up next, UH will stay home to play No. 10 Iowa State on Monday night for sole possession of first place in the conference.

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UH head baseball coach signs new contract ahead of first Big 12 season

Todd Whitting signed a new contract prior to his 14th year as head baseball coach at UH. | Oscar Herrera/The Cougar

Less than a month before UH baseball’s season-opener in the team’s first Big 12 season, head coach Todd Whitting signed a new three-year deal with a base annual salary of $325,000.

Whitting’s previous contract — a five-year extension that was signed prior to the 2019 season — expired following the coach’s 13th season at the helm in July of 2023 after the Cougars were bounced in the AAC tournament by 7-seed Tulane. It marked the fourth straight season that UH baseball failed to reach an NCAA Regional since 2018.

The contract, which was obtained using Texas’ Public Information Act, largely retains the same terms as Whitting’s previous contract — including the $325,000 annual salary — but presents new buyout terms.

If Whitting is terminated before Aug. 1 2024, he will be owed 40% of his remaining base salary and 33% before the same date in 2025, paid monthly. In the final year of his contract, Whitting will be paid $100,000 or “an amount equal to the prorated Base Salary amount remaining,” whichever is less if terminated before Aug. 1, 2026. The head coach will also receive an incentive of $40,000 for every year he is retained.

Whitting’s base annual salary of $325,000 and all but one of his incentives are the same as the previous contract. The incentives include $5,000 for every Regular Season Conference Championship, $7,500 for every Conference Tournament Championship, $7,500 for every NCAA Super Regional appearance and $50,000 should UH win the NCAA College World Series. Whitting will also receive 10% of annual ticket sales revenue over $150,000, up from the previous contract’s threshold of $125,000.

Back in June, UH Athletic Director Chris Pezman gave Whitting a vote of confidence following the 2023 season.

“I truly believe we’re a lot closer to being really, really good with Todd than the opposite,” Pezman said. “I’d much rather invest in Todd than go invest in starting all over with a new program, and new coaching staff.”

The contract was signed by Whitting, Pezman and UH President Dr. Renu Khator Jan. 30.

UH will begin its season with a three-game series against Binghamton starting on Friday, and will play its first Big 12 game against Baylor on March 8.

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What makes Jamal Shead college basketball’s most valuable player

Cougars point guard Jamal Shead is making a strong case for being the nation’s top guard. | Anh Le/The Cougar

Three-quarters of the way into the regular season, senior point guard Jamal Shead is making a strong case for the most valuable player in all of college basketball.

The No. 3 Houston Cougars find themselves at 22-3 and atop the Big 12 standings with eight conference wins, and Shead has been the driving force in all of it. Throughout the gauntlet that is Big 12 basketball, Shead has put UH on his shoulders on the way to victory time and time again.

After suffering their first two losses of the season in back-to-back road games, he played the best game of his career, scoring a career-high 29 points and adding 10 assists in the Cougars’ bounce-back win over No. 25 Texas Tech.

Then, in his hometown of Austin on the road against the Longhorns, Shead dragged UH back from a six-point second-half deficit to an eventual overtime victory, dropping 25 points and playing an astounding 42 minutes. Following another loss, this time to No. 8 Kansas, he went off for 17 first-half points en route to a blowout win over Oklahoma State.

In his less statistically gaudy games, Shead is routinely making crucial plays — like his back-to-back blocks and subsequent four points to tie it up with Iowa State in the second half (a game they would eventually lose) — running the offense and guarding the other team’s best scorer. Game-in and game-out, Shead is the steadying force that keeps the Cougars on the right track.

“He’s got an unbelievable feel for kind of what needs to happen in every moment,” said assistant coach Kellen Sampson. “He’s kind of the equilibrium. As long as he’s out there, we’re going to stay pretty balanced.”

According to the advanced stats, Shead’s worth to his team is arguably the largest in the entire country, especially among guards. According to the college basketball stats website EvanMiya.com, the 21-year-old guard is fourth in the website’s “Indispensability” ranking, and second among Power-5 players. Shead’s total BPR of 9.87 — a metric that quantifies ” a player’s overall value to his team when he is on the floor” — is second in the country behind only Purdue big man Zach Edey.

Defensively, Shead’s numbers are prohibitively tops in college hoops. His defensive BPR of 4.6 is comfortably first in the country with only one other guard logging a number above 4.0. In defensive efficiency — a stat that measures how many points per 100 possessions a team allows when a player is in the game —  Shead’s mark of 74.7 is second only to his teammate Ja’Vier Francis, and his total efficiency margin is again the best in the nation, and 7.9 points better than the next best guard.

In late January, Shead was named by the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame as a candidate for the 2024 Bob Cousy Award, an honor that goes to the best point guard in Division I each year. Whether or not he wins the award remains to be seen, but looking at Bob Cousy Award winners of the last decade, Shead’s resume certainly qualifies.

Points guards, of course, are tasked with distributing and taking care of the ball, and in that department, Shead once again holds his own with recent Bob Cousy winners.

Where Shead may lack statistically among the best point guards over the years is raw offensive stats. His current season average of 12.7 points per game would rank last among the list above and is 561st among D-I players this season, and his offensive rating of 115.8 would tie for ninth among Bob Cousy Award winners.

But with all those numbers, perhaps the most important parts of Shead’s value for the Cougars may lie in the unquantifiable. Since becoming a full-time starter midway through the 2021-22 season, Shead has grown into his role as the Cougars’ floor general. Now, as a senior, he’s Houston’s unquestioned “culture leader”, as Kelvin Sampson put it.

These guys follow Jamal. He just has such great control of the game with the ball in his hands, or when the ball’s not in his hands,” said head coach Kelvin Sampson. “We’ve had some great leaders here. Jamal is the best leader we’ve had.”

In practices and games, Shead can often be seen talking to teammates, communicating what needs to be done, who needs to go where and injecting confidence into players when needed all the while setting the tone for the Cougars’ hard-nosed, high-effort style of play.

They look to me, so I try to hold our culture up,” Shead said. “It’s never anything specific. It’s just about little things and going hard all the time.”

Kellen Sampson and the Cougars’ coaching staff first spotted Shead’s leadership when he was just 14 years old at Connally High School in Austin. Before he transferred to Manor High School where he earned Third Team All-State honors, the small yet athletic point guard doubted whether or not he would play Division-I basketball.

But what caught Sampson’s eye was his ability as a distributor and a penchant for being vocal where many other high school point guards would go silent.

“We ask our point guard to do too much for him to be a mute,” Kellen said. “And you got to want to see yourself as a table setter, and somebody that genuinely enjoys playing for others with others. It’s a lot but when it’s obvious as Jamal, it wasn’t hard.”

When he came to Houston in 2020, Kelvin began holding private film sessions with the young guard to help create good habits and mold Shead into the player-coach that Kelvin requires his point guards to be. After four years of those weekly-ish meetings, Shead has gained an extreme understanding of what his head coach wants and what the team needs to win.

I gotta be his eyes and ears out here. And I’m really grateful for that relationship,” Shead said. “And just being able to talk to your coach like that. Not a lot of people can do that.”

With that knowledge, Shead serves as the guiding light for freshmen and veteran transfers who aren’t used to the intensity that playing at UH demands, often answering any questions they may have. For players like redshirt sophomore guard Emanuel Sharp — a player who has blossomed into a key starter for Houston — Shead has been critical to their improvement as much as anyone else.

“Throughout practice, I’m always asking him questions. It’s like he’s another coach,” Sharp said. “Since I got it here, he’s really helped with my development as much as any of the coaches.”

There may not be another player in the country who impacts winning the way Shead does and as the final weeks of the regular season approach, his value will become even greater as the Cougars look to make their mark in their first Big 12 season.

“He really brings all of us together,” Sharp said. “He’s a real general and real leader on the court and he just brings it all together.”

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School records broken as UH track & field competes around the country

Three Cougar athletes broke school records and seven captured first-place finishes over the weekend. | Courtesy of UH Athletics

Houston track and field had a successful weekend competing at the Howie Ryan, Don Kirby and David Hemery Valentine Invitationals, breaking three school records and grabbing six first-place finishes.

At home in Houston, five Cougars finished in first place in their events in the Howie Ryan Invitational, headlined by junior runner Dillon Leacock setting a Yeoman Fieldhouse record with a time of 1:10.49 in the 600-yard race.

Graduate Halena Rahmaan and freshman Michaela Mouton recorded top finishes and personal bests in the 800- and 200-meter races. Freshman Cordell Nwokeji also earned his second first-place finish in the shot put with a 17.12-meter heave.

Junior runner Daniela Castillo, redshirt freshman hurdler Tairah Johnson, senior jumper Caleb Malbrough, graduate runner MiKenna Robinson and junior runner Adam Mason all recorded personal bests.

At the Don Kirby Invitational in Albuquerque, senior hurdler De’Vion Wilson won his third straight 60-meter hurdle with a time of 7.74 seconds, while junior Miracle Thompson finished sixth in the same event. Graduate pole vaulter Christyan Sampy broke the indoor school record with a 5.62-meter pole vault, finishing fourth behind three professional athletes.

Finally, graduate sprinters Sydni Townsend and Claire Meyer set school records in the 400-meter dash and 5,000-meter run, respectively, in Boston.

UH will split the team up again at the Air Force Last Chance and the LSU Twilight meet next weekend for the final meets before the Big 12 Indoor Championships.

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UH tennis narrowly falls to North Texas for first loss

UH lost its first match of the season against North Texas Sunday. | Oscar Herrera/The Cougar

The UH tennis team dropped its first match of the season Sunday, falling in the final match to North Texas.

North Texas earned a sweep in doubles play to go up 1-0 after sophomore duo Sonya Kovalenko and Sophie Schouten lost a close tiebreaker.

In singles play, the two teams went back and forth exchanging blows before North Texas won the final match to seal the victory.

Schouten got the Cougars on the board with a 6-1, 6-3 win before another Mean Green win put UH behind again 2-1. Senior Laura Sliane battled through a close first set to tie things back up with a straight-set victory before freshman Nina Skoric bounced back from losing her first set to win her match and force a decisive final match.

Junior Maria Dzemeshkevich pulled ahead in the first set but would fall in the final two frames, giving North Texas the 4-3 victory.

UH dropped to 1-1 and will return home to face UT-Rio Grande Valley and Louisiana Tech on Friday and Saturday.

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No. 4 Houston fail to stop No. 8 Jayhawks on the road, lose 78-65

Houston could not put it together in a tough road environment against No. 8 Kansas. | Anh Le/The Cougar

The No. 4 Houston Cougars’ top-ranked defense could not stop the bleeding agaisnt the No. 8 Kansas Jayhawks Saturday afternoon, suffering its biggest loss of the season on the road, 78-63. Kansas shot 68.9% form the floor for the game compared to Houston’s 36.2%.

Kansas diced up Houston’s defense early, hitting nine of its first 10 shots, with seven of those buckets coming off of assists. After a dunk put Kansas up 23-11, head coach Kelvin Sampson was forced to call timeout. Houston went brutally cold for a stretch, hitting just one of 12 shots in seven-minute stretch.

After going down 30-15, UH brought it back to within single digits, but were unable to get stops to sustain a run as Jayhawks guard Johnny Furphy scored seven straight points to bring Kansas back up 16 — the Cougars’ largest defcitit of the season.

Kansas held a commanding 43-28 lead at the half. 43 points is the most points UH has allowed in the first half all season, with the previous season-high being 34 points. The Jayhawks shot an astonishing 17 of 25 from the floor in the first half and outrebounded Houston 24-10. The Cougars shot 31.3% from the field in the half.

Senior guard L.J. Cryer’s 21 second-half points kept Kansas from running away with the game, but UH just could not put together enough stops to bring the deficit within single digits. The Jayhawks went up 15 points in the finals minutes to effectively seal the game.

Cryer led all scorers with 24 points on 9-of-20 shooting. All of Kansas’ starters shot at least 60% from the floor, and every player that attempted more than one field goal shot 50% or better. It was the most points UH has allowed since its 89-75 loss in the Sweet 16 to Miami last season.

Houston dropped to 19-3 on the season and 6-3 in conference play. UH will return home to play Oklahoma State Tuesday night.

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