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No. 7 Texas gets hot in the second half behind Marcus Carr, eases past West Virginia

Texas guard Marcus Carr celebrates a basket during the Longhorns' 69-61 win over West Virginia in Morgantown on Saturday. Carr scored 23 points, 19 of them in the second half.
Texas guard Marcus Carr celebrates a basket during the Longhorns' 69-61 win over West Virginia in Morgantown on Saturday. Carr scored 23 points, 19 of them in the second half.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Marcus Carr waited for his chance to score Saturday night. Those opportunities came rushing to the Texas guard in the second half.

Carr scored 19 of his 23 points in the second half to lead No. 7 Texas to a 69-61 victory over West Virginia. The Longhorns (16-3, 5-2 Big 12) bounced back from a double-digit loss at No. 12 Iowa State on Wednesday. Without Carr taking over Saturday, Texas could have been staring at its first losing streak since last January.

Although he couldn’t get into much of a rhythm in the first half, missing all three 3-point attempts, Carr went 6-for-8 from the floor and sank 5 of 6 free throws after halftime. He finished 8-for-14, the first time in five games that he’s made more than half of his field-goal tries.

“Marcus all year long has let the game come to him,” Texas interim coach Rodney Terry said. “He doesn’t come out and force it. He got a couple of really good looks. Once he sees that basketball go through the basket, it opens up a lot for him. It really creates a whole different way of carrying himself on that end of the floor.”

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West Virginia coach Bob Huggins believed his team had something to do with Carr’s better fortunes late in the game.

“We just did a bad job,” Huggins said. “He’s a right-handed guy who loves to go right. We let him go right. He’s a guy who you want to force to the baseline so that you can kind of swallow him up with size. We let him go where he wanted. We did everything pretty much opposite of what we planned to do.”

Texas forward Timmy Allen grabs a rebound over West Virginia forward Jimmy Bell Jr. during the second half Saturday night. The win improved the Longhorns to 5-2 in the Big 12 race.
Texas forward Timmy Allen grabs a rebound over West Virginia forward Jimmy Bell Jr. during the second half Saturday night. The win improved the Longhorns to 5-2 in the Big 12 race.

Dylan Disu added 13 points before fouling out, and Christian Bishop and Tyrese Hunter scored 11 apiece for Texas.

The Mountaineers (11-8, 1-6) had several players in early foul trouble and couldn’t match the energy they had in a win over No. 14 TCU on Wednesday. Kedrian Johnson had a career-high 22 points after scoring 20 against the Horned Frogs. But his teammates fell flat in the second half against the Longhorns.

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West Virginia finished with 20 turnovers, “and not against pressure,” Huggins said. “We just threw the ball to the wrong team. If you want to make a recipe for losing, just go back and look at our last 10 minutes, because we dropped balls. They didn’t take them from us. We dropped them.”

Disu put Texas ahead to stay on a baseline jumper, and Bishop’s dunk extended the lead to 58-52 with 5:15 remaining. Johnson, who went 7-for-11 from the line over the final eight minutes, made three after getting fouled on a 3-point try, pulling the Mountaineers within 63-61 with 2:39 left. But West Virginia didn’t score again.

Texas made 12 of its final 15 free throws, including five by Carr.

The game brought a reunion for West Virginia’s Tre Mitchell, who started 17 games last year for the Longhorns but took a leave of absence in February and didn’t play again. He finished with 12 points but had just three after halftime. He also had five turnovers and went 4-for-11 from the floor.

“I just wanted to do what I could do to help us win, and clearly I didn’t do too well at that,” Mitchell said.

The Longhorns limited their turnovers after halftime after committing nine in the first half. They’ve now won eight of the teams’ last 10 meetings.

The Mountaineers have lost six of seven games, and getting to the NCAA Tournament won’t be easy. West Virginia is scheduled to play ranked opponents in eight of its 12 remaining regular-season games.

“I thought that we were on that road to fixing it, and obviously we’re not,” Huggins said.

Texas will host Oklahoma State on Tuesday.

This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Texas men's basketball eases past West Virginia behind Carr's big game