Texas and NC State meet in the First Four at UD Arena on Tuesday, March 17, at 9:15 p.m. EDT with the winner advancing to face BYU in Portland. The Longhorns and Wolfpack already played once this season, a 102-98 Texas win at the Maui Invitational that produced 200 combined points. Both offenses carry scoring averages into a rematch where defensive resistance has been absent all season for both programs.
| Metric | NC State Wolfpack | Texas Longhorns |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Conf) | 20-13 (10-8) | 18-14 (9-9) |
| Points Per Game | 83.7 (27th) | 83.8 (26th) |
| Points Allowed | 76.5 (252nd) | 76.8 (260th) |
| Offensive Rating | 119.0 (28th) | 120.1 (18th) |
| Defensive Rating | 108.8 (226th) | 110.1 (257th) |
| 3-Point % | 38.8% (11th) | 35.3% (101st) |
| Assists/G | 15.6 (83rd) | 12.3 (291st) |
| Steals/G | 8.1 (47th) | 5.8 (283rd) |
| Offensive Rebounds/G | 9.8 (272nd) | 12.0 (85th) |
| Turnovers/G | 9.2 (14th) | 11.0 (137th) |
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Key Advantage
Perimeter Firepower: NC State’s 38.8% three-point shooting is top and creates spacing against Texas’s permissive perimeter defense that allows 36.0% from three. Watch whether Texas’s backcourt can limit the Wolfpack’s catch-and-shoot opportunities or if NC State’s volume from deep forces Texas into a shootout pace.
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Market Analysis
The total sits at 158.5 with NC State listed as a -1.5 (-112) favorite following a late line move from earlier pricing; the moneyline implies roughly 50-50 win probability with minimal separation between the 11-seeds. The pick-and-roll efficiency of both offenses, NC State at 119.0 and Texas at 120.1 in offensive production, prices this as a virtual coin flip, with the Wolfpack’s superior ball security (9.2 TOs per game vs. Texas’s 11.0) providing the narrow technical edge. The 158.5 total reflects neither team’s defensive limitations; both units rank outside the top 225 in points allowed per 100 possessions, and the first meeting already demonstrated what happens when two permissive defenses collide.
Maui Rematch and Historical Scoring Precedent
The 102-98 result from November establishes a relevant baseline: these teams have already demonstrated they can combine for 200 points without overtime. Texas’s Dailyn Swain scored efficiently in that meeting and comes in averaging 17.8 points per game this season. The Longhorns’ interior creation relies on Swain and Matas Vokietaitis, who combine for 34.3 points per game and exploit NC State’s weak defensive rebounding; the Wolfpack in opponent defensive rebound rate, meaning Texas’s 12.0 offensive rebounds per game should generate second-chance possessions.
NC State’s response comes through perimeter volume. Paul McNeil’s 42.9% three-point shooting and Ven-Allen Lubin’s interior presence create a balanced attack that spreads Texas’s defense, which allows 36.0% from three. The Wolfpack’s 10.4 made three-pointers per game, and Texas’s 213th-ranked three-point defense lacks the personnel to contest effectively across 40 minutes. Both teams want to run; neither has shown the defensive discipline to stop transition opportunities. The UD Arena environment, neutral for both programs, removes any home-court advantage in tempo.
NC State’s Steals vs. Texas Turnovers: The Decisive Mismatch
NC State’s 8.1 steals per game feed directly into transition scoring against a Texas team that commits 11.0 turnovers per game. Conversely, Texas generates just 5.8 steals per game and cannot rely on defensive playmaking to disrupt NC State’s rhythm. The Wolfpack’s 9.2 turnovers per game represent top ball security, preserving offensive possessions that extend scoring opportunities.
This possession-quality differential tilts the shot-volume math toward NC State, though Texas compensates through free-throw generation. The Longhorns attempt 26.3 free throws per game, eighth nationally, converting at 75.2%. NC State’s 18.2 fouls per game suggest Texas will find its way to the line repeatedly, adding points without game-clock consumption. The total prices defensive competence that has not appeared in either team’s profile this season; both programs have operated as offense-first, defense-optional units all year, and a single-elimination tournament spot creates no incentive to reinvent that identity now.
