Kaufman-Renn’s Last-Second Heroics Send Purdue to Elite Eight in Heart-Stopping Thriller
SAN JOSE, Calif. — In the crucible of March, where seasons are defined by inches and tenths of a second, Purdue’s Trey Kaufman-Renn reached into the chaos and delivered salvation. With 0.7 seconds showing on the clock, the junior forward tipped in a missed shot to catapult the No. 2 seed Boilermakers to a breathtaking 79-77 victory over the No. 11 seed Texas Longhorns in the NCAA Tournament West Region semifinals. The play, a perfect storm of design, desperation, and destiny, exorcised the demons of last year’s historic first-round exit and sent Purdue to the Elite Eight for the first time since 2019.
A Final Possession Forged in Resilience
The stage was set after Texas guard Max Abmas, the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer, coolly drained a step-back jumper to tie the game at 77-77 with just 8.8 seconds remaining. The arena, pulsating with the energy of an instant classic, braced for overtime. Purdue coach Matt Painter, with no timeouts, entrusted the game to his sophomore point guard, Braden Smith.
Smith, who had battled turnover issues early, drove hard to his right into the heart of the Texas defense. As the Longhorn defenders collapsed, he elevated for a contested, floating jumper. The ball caromed off the front rim, and in the scrum beneath the basket, a Purdue hand emerged. Kaufman-Renn, having sealed his man, leapt, secured the ball mid-air, and in one fluid motion, guided it back toward the cylinder. The ball kissed off the glass and through the net. The Purdue bench erupted; Texas, in stunned silence, could only watch as their valiant comeback effort was rendered heartbreakingly short.
“That’s just will,” Painter said after the game. “We drew up the action for Braden to make a play, but after that, it’s about effort and positioning. Trey never quit on the play. That’s a program win, a toughness win.”
More Than Just a Tip: Purdue’s Veteran Core Delivers
While the final play will dominate highlight reels, Purdue’s victory was built on the broad shoulders of its experienced core—players who lived through the humiliation of the Fairleigh Dickinson loss a year ago. Kaufman-Renn wasn’t just a last-second hero; he was the game’s most consistent force, finishing with a team-high 20 points on 8-of-10 shooting and grabbing eight rebounds. His physicality inside provided a crucial counterpoint to Texas’s athleticism.
He was ably supported by the backcourt duo of Fletcher Loyer (18 points) and Braden Smith (16 points). Loyer’s clutch shooting, including several critical second-half threes, kept Purdue afloat during Texas runs. Smith, despite six turnovers, orchestrated the offense with nine assists and hit big shots when needed. This trio, part of the team that fell in the 2024 national final, displayed a poise that only such scarring experience can provide.
- Trey Kaufman-Renn: 20 PTS, 8 REB, GW tip-in at 0.7 seconds.
- Fletcher Loyer: 18 PTS, 4 3PM, key second-half shooting.
- Braden Smith: 16 PTS, 9 AST, orchestrated final play.
Texas, the plucky underdog, was magnificent in defeat. Dylan Disu was phenomenal, scoring 21 points and battling foul trouble, while Abmas added 19, including the seemingly game-tying dagger. Their switch-heavy defense forced 13 Purdue turnovers and nearly pulled off another March surprise.
Strategic Breakdown: The Paint Tells the Story
The analytical battle was won decisively in the painted area. Purdue’s offensive strategy was clear: attack the interior. Even without dominating from three-point range, the Boilermakers outscored Texas 42-28 in the paint and shot a blistering 56% from two-point range. This inside dominance, led by Kaufman-Renn and the gravitational pull of Zach Edey’s presence (despite a quieter night), created the high-percentage looks and offensive rebounds that ultimately decided the game.
Texas’s strategy to harass Purdue’s guards and live with contested shots almost worked to perfection. They won the turnover battle and stayed even on the glass. However, Purdue’s sheer efficiency on possessions where they secured the ball proved to be the difference-maker. The final play was a microcosm: a missed shot, yes, but it came from a drive into the lane, followed by an offensive rebound and a put-back from point-blank range.
Elite Eight Outlook: What’s Next for Purdue?
Purdue now advances to face the winner of No. 1 Arizona and No. 4 Arkansas in the West Region final on Saturday. The victory does more than just extend their season; it fundamentally alters the narrative surrounding this program. The “March woes” tag, while not fully erased, has been challenged by a win defined by grit and last-second execution.
Moving forward, key factors will determine their Final Four fate:
- Guard Poise: Smith and Loyer must manage pressure even better against elite athletic defenses.
- Secondary Scoring: Kaufman-Renn’s emergence as a reliable 20-point threat is a game-changer for their offensive balance.
- Closing Power: Surviving a last-possession game injects immense confidence. They have now proven they can win a rock fight in the tournament’s second weekend.
For Texas, the season ends in agonizing fashion, but their resilience in making a Sweet 16 run as a double-digit seed speaks volumes about the culture under interim coach Rodney Terry. They pushed a national title contender to the absolute brink.
Conclusion: A Moment of Redemption
In the end, March Madness is a tapestry woven from threads of agony and ecstasy. For Purdue, the 0.7 seconds between Braden Smith’s miss and Trey Kaufman-Renn’s tip-in represented the distance between another year of questions and a long-awaited return to the precipice of the Final Four. This was not a pretty, dominant victory. It was a bloody-knuckled, survive-and-advance classic that required every ounce of veteran mettle this Purdue team possesses.
The shot heard around the college basketball world wasn’t a thunderous dunk or a deep three; it was a follow-up, a second effort, a testament to the fundamental basketball tenet of “playing to the whistle.” In doing so, Trey Kaufman-Renn didn’t just tip in a basketball. He tipped the scales of Purdue’s tournament destiny, lifting a program—and its burdened history—one relentless inch at a time.
Source: Based on news from Deadspin.
