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Inside College Basketball Posted: Wednesday February 05, 2003 9:42 AMDeep and relentless, Texas has emerged as a national title contender By Seth Davis
All of which is raising hope that the Longhorns, who have no seniors in their regular starting lineup and have never won a national title in basketball, can make it to their first Final Four since 1947. Asked last week if Texas had proved itself to be championship caliber by taking Kansas down to the wire, sophomore point guard T.J. Ford said, "We went there to win, not to prove a point. The way I see it, we didn't get the job done." The reliable Ford, who at week's end led the team in scoring (14.8 points a game) and was seventh in the nation in assists (7.1), is one of 10 Longhorns who average at least 13 minutes a game, making Texas the only team in the country with as much quality depth as No. 2 Arizona. Opposing defenses can't focus on only one threat, as eight players have led the Longhorns in scoring this season. Against Kansas, for instance, Ford scored 25 points, and 6'8" junior forward Brian Boddicker scored a career-high 20; Royal Ivey, a 6'3" junior guard, went for 17 points, a season high, in the win over Oklahoma State. Still, as Texas coach Rick Barnes points out, depth is worthless if a team doesn't have good chemistry. "I can honestly say our guys pull for each other," he says. "They all want to play, but they also realize that if you don't have it one night, you have to let someone else have a shot at it." Issue date: February 10, 2003
For more Inside College Basketball see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, February 5. Click here to subscribe to SI.
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