AUSTIN, Texas -- Kansas State is surging at the right time.    
Texas, the team that two weeks ago looked unstoppable in the Big 12, is       slipping at precisely the wrong one.    
Rodney McGruder scored 22 points, Jacob Pullen scored 20 and Kansas       State muscled past No. 7 Texas 75-70       on Monday night, the Wildcats' fifth consecutive victory and first on       the road against a Top 10 team since 1994.    
Pullen exemplified the tough, physical nature of the game, scoring 16       points in the second half despite falling hard on his right wrist as       Kansas State (21-9, 9-6 Big 12) sent the Longhorns to their second       straight loss and third in four games.    
"Everybody wrote us off. They cast our season down the drain," Pullen       said of the Wildcats' 1-4 start in the conference. "People say we're a       good team again but we can't let things like that get into our locker       room and we can't let down our guard. Our morale is to the sky."    
Texas is heading in the opposite direction.    
An 11-0 start in conference play had the Longhorns among the top       contenders for a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. Now they're trying       to regroup and not worry about how far they might fall.    
"We're better than what we're playing and that's the concern," Texas       coach Rick Barnes said. "You've got to stay disciplined with what you       do. Kansas State did exactly what we thought they'd do and that was try       to push us out of our offense."    
Texas (24-6, 12-3) met its defensive match against the Wildcats, who       held the Longhorns to 34 percent shooting. Freshman Tristan Thompson       scored 26 points for the Longhorns but his teammates shot only 14 for 54       from the field. Kansas State shot 50 percent two days after Texas gave       up a 22-point lead and let Colorado shoot 53 percent in a road loss.    
Curtis Kelly scored 15 points for Kansas State, doing much of his damage       in the first half when Pullen was struggling to score. McGruder was 4       for 6 on 3-pointers.    
Thompson was the only Longhorn who could match Kansas State's physical       play. He grabbed 10 rebounds and had several dunks but got little help       on offense. Jordan Hamilton scored 14 points on 5-of-18 shooting and was       a non-factor for most of the game. J'Covan Brown scored 11 points but       didn't make a field goal until hitting two long 3-pointers in the final       minute.    
"They pressured us as well, but we just missed our shots," Texas guard       Cory Joseph said.    
Texas, which was used to blowing out teams at home, knew it was in for a       fight when Kansas State's Jamar Samuels, who is 6-foot-7, decked 5-10       Texas guard Jai Lucas in a collision near midcourt in the early going.    
But Thompson was the only one who really responded with three early       dunks and tough rebounding. He scored 12 of Texas' first 20 points and       Kansas State's best counterpunch was the inside scoring of Kelly and       7-footer Jordan Henriquez-Roberts.    
Thompson's fourth dunk of the first half put Texas up 29-24. At that       point, his six field goals were more than the rest of his team.       Thompson's tough shot over Kelly put Texas up by five before a 3-pointer       by McGruder pulled Kansas State within 33-31 at halftime.    
Kelly made back-to-back baskets over Thompson to start the second, then       blocked Hamilton as Kansas State quickly grabbed the lead. Hamilton also       rimmed out a 3-pointer, his 10th miss in 11 shots.    
"I try to be aggressive," Kelly said. "They're big and aggressive and       try to attack me and I go back at them."    
Pullen then made three consecutive baskets that put Kansas State ahead       50-42 with 12:06 to play.    
Kansas State managed to maintain that lead for the next five minutes,       but started piling up critical fouls. Samuels and Henriquez-Roberts both       picked up their fourth, sending much of the Wildcats' interior strength       to the bench.    
The Wildcats simply went outside for points. McGruder slipped away from       Hamilton for his fourth 3-pointer and a 60-51 lead.    
Kansas State seemed to have the game wrapped up when McGruder dunked on       a fast break with 47 seconds left. Brown's two long 3-pointers from the       right wing gave Texas some life before Pullen and the Wildcats put the       game away from the free throw line.    
"Some of the breakdowns are baffling to be honest with you," Barnes       said. "I can't tell you why because we've proven we can be really good       defensively and offensively."    
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Texas vs. Kansas State - Kansas State stays hot, wins at No. 7 Texas
 9:39 a.m.
9:39 a.m.


 







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