BYU’s First-Round Test: Can the Cougars Solve Texas’s Imposing Center After TV Doubters Fuel the Fire?
The NCAA Tournament is a pressure cooker of drama, where every shot, stop, and sideline decision is magnified. For the sixth-seeded BYU Cougars, the pressure began not on the Moda Center floor in Portland, but from the broadcast booth during Tuesday night’s First Four game. As they prepare to face the No. 11 seed Texas Longhorns in Thursday’s first-round clash (5:25 p.m. MDT), the Cougars carry an unexpected piece of baggage: the public dismissal of two of basketball’s most iconic voices. But to prove Dick Vitale and Charles Barkley wrong, BYU must first solve a massive problem in the paint—Texas’s imposing center, Kadin Shedrick.
The Barkley & Vitale Bulletin Board Material
Before Tramon Mark’s game-winning floater with one second left sealed Texas’s 68-66 victory over NC State, the television analysts made their predictions clear. Both Vitale and Barkley confidently stated that the winner of the First Four game would “handle” the BYU Cougars in the next round. Their reasoning centered on the absence of BYU’s second-leading scorer, guard Richie Saunders, who suffered a season-ending ACL injury in February. While they heaped praise on BYU’s freshman sensation AJ Dybantsa, even suggesting he should be the No. 1 NBA draft pick, the overarching message was one of doubt about BYU’s depth and toughness without Saunders.
For a proud BYU program making back-to-back tournament appearances, this public skepticism is potent fuel. Head coach Mark Pope, known for his motivational prowess, won’t need to dig deep for a pre-game speech. The comments have already framed this game as a classic tournament narrative: the doubted high seed versus the battle-tested, talked-about lower seed. However, motivation only goes so far. The Cougars must execute against a Texas team that, despite its seed, possesses a physical profile that can exploit a known BYU vulnerability.
The Kadin Shedrick Conundrum: Texas’s Towering Advantage
At 6-foot-11 and 245 pounds, Texas center Kadin Shedrick represents the exact type of player that has given BYU trouble this season. The graduate transfer from Virginia is a classic rim-protecting, lane-clogging big man who is playing his best basketball of the year. In the win over NC State, Shedrick was a defensive anchor and an efficient offensive contributor, a trend he’s maintained down the stretch.
BYU’s system under Pope is predicated on pace, space, and three-point shooting. They often play with a more mobile, perimeter-oriented center in Aly Khalifa or Fousseyni Traore. This presents a critical strategic clash:
- Defensive Rebounding: Shedrick’s size and wingspan could severely limit BYU’s second-chance opportunities, a key component of their offensive success.
- Rim Protection: Drivers like Spencer Johnson and Jaxson Robinson will find the lane more congested, potentially disrupting BYU’s drive-and-kick rhythm.
- Foul Trouble: If Shedrick can establish deep post position, he could put BYU’s primary interior players in early foul trouble, forcing the Cougars to go small.
Texas coach Rodney Terry will undoubtedly look to establish Shedrick early, testing BYU’s interior resolve and trying to control the game’s tempo. How BYU adjusts—whether through double-teams, fronting the post, or trying to pull Shedrick away from the basket with a shooting big—will be the game’s defining tactical battle.
BYU’s Counterpunches: Dybantsa’s Star Power and the Three-Ball
While Texas has the interior edge, BYU holds significant advantages elsewhere. The first is the transcendent talent of AJ Dybantsa. The 6-foot-9 freshman is a matchup nightmare, possessing a guard’s handle and shooting range with forward size. Texas, likely to start with smaller, athletic wings like Dillon Mitchell, will have to contend with Dybantsa’s unique skill set. If he gets going, he can single-handedly swing the game and make analysts like Vitale look prophetic for their draft praise.
The second, and perhaps most critical, counter is the three-point line. BYU is one of the nation’s most prolific and efficient three-point shooting teams. They live by the mantra that the three-pointer is the great equalizer. Players like Robinson, Johnson, and even Khalifa from the center position can stretch the floor. If BYU is hitting from deep, it forces Shedrick to defend in space, negating his shot-blocking presence and opening driving lanes. This is the Cougars’ primary path to victory: render Texas’s size disadvantageous by making it a game of speed and skill.
The absence of Richie Saunders is real, but BYU has adapted in the weeks since his injury. The emergence of Trevin Knell as a consistent scoring threat and the steady play of Dallin Hall have helped fill the void. This game will test the depth of that adaptation under the bright lights of March.
Prediction and X-Factors
This matchup is a fascinating contrast in styles and strengths. Texas brings physicality, tournament experience from a run to the Elite Eight last year, and the confidence of a nail-biting win. BYU brings offensive firepower, a chip on their shoulder, and a system designed to dismantle traditional post play.
Key X-Factors:
- BYU’s Defensive Glass: Can they limit Texas to one shot? If Shedrick and Mitchell get multiple offensive rebounds, BYU is in trouble.
- Texas’s Guard Play: Can Max Abmas and Tyrese Hunter handle BYU’s defensive pressure and avoid live-ball turnovers that fuel the Cougars’ transition game?
- The “Us Against the World” Mentality: How much will the Vitale/Barkley comments genuinely impact BYU’s energy and focus?
Prediction: Expect a high-intensity, back-and-forth affair. BYU’s shooting will keep them in it, and Dybantsa will have his moments of brilliance. However, Texas’s physicality and the late-game poise they showed against NC State give them a slight edge in a rock fight. In a game that comes down to the final possessions, Texas’s ability to get a critical stop or a bucket inside through Shedrick will be the difference.
Final Score Prediction: Texas 74, BYU 71.
Conclusion: More Than Just a Game
Thursday’s first-round contest is more than a simple 6 vs. 11 matchup. It’s a clash of identity. For Texas, it’s about proving their lower seed is a mirage and that old-school, physical basketball still wins in March. For BYU, it’s about proving their system and their resilience can overcome a significant injury and the doubts of national pundits. The narrative was set by a television broadcast, but the outcome will be decided on the hardwood, in the battle between Texas’s imposing center and BYU’s galaxy of shooters. One team’s strength will cancel out the other’s. In the unpredictable theater of the NCAA Tournament, that’s the only certainty we have.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
