Former Oklahoma assistant coach Kevin Kruger, son of Lon Kruger, named head coach at UNLV

Former Oklahoma assistant coach Kevin Kruger, son of current head coach Lon Kruger, named head coach at UNLV.

Oklahoma basketball knocked off Missouri on Saturday to punch their ticket to the second round of the NCAA Tournament and set a date with the No. 1 team in the country Gonzaga. While preparing for the mighty Bulldogs might cause a coach some stress, some good news could certainly help their overall mood.

That will undoubtedly be the case for Sooners head coach Lon Kruger, who received the news from his son Kevin that he will be the new head coach at UNLV after being promoted up from assistant. Lon was the coach of the Runnin’ Rebels himself from 2004-2011.

Kevin was an assistant under his father at Oklahoma from 2016-2019 before heading west to be a part of the staff with UNLV, and now will get his chance to lead his own program for the first time. As one could probably guess, Lon Kruger was very excited about the news.

The official Twitter account for the Oklahoma men’s team made sure to offer their congratulations to their former assistant as well:

Kevin Kruger takes over a UNLV program he was a player at under his father in 2006-2007 and is now being handed over by T.J. Otzelberger, who left Las Vegas after two seasons to become the new head coach at Iowa State.

Former Oklahoma assistant coach Kevin Kruger, son of Lon Kruger, named head coach at UNLV

Former Oklahoma assistant coach Kevin Kruger, son of current head coach Lon Kruger, named head coach at UNLV.

Oklahoma basketball knocked off Missouri on Saturday to punch their ticket to the second round of the NCAA Tournament and set a date with the No. 1 team in the country Gonzaga. While preparing for the mighty Bulldogs might cause a coach some stress, some good news could certainly help their overall mood.

That will undoubtedly be the case for Sooners head coach Lon Kruger, who received the news from his son Kevin that he will be the new head coach at UNLV after being promoted up from assistant. Lon was the coach of the Runnin’ Rebels himself from 2004-2011.

Kevin was an assistant under his father at Oklahoma from 2016-2019 before heading west to be a part of the staff with UNLV, and now will get his chance to lead his own program for the first time. As one could probably guess, Lon Kruger was very excited about the news.

The official Twitter account for the Oklahoma men’s team made sure to offer their congratulations to their former assistant as well:

Kevin Kruger takes over a UNLV program he was a player at under his father in 2006-2007 and is now being handed over by T.J. Otzelberger, who left Las Vegas after two seasons to become the new head coach at Iowa State.

Three takeaways from Oklahoma’s 72-68 win over Missouri in the first round of the NCAA Tournament

Three takeaways from Oklahoma’s 72-68 win over Missouri in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Saturday night.

The No. 8 seed Oklahoma Sooners will live to fight another day as they knocked off the No. 9 seed Missouri Tigers 72-68 on Saturday night in Indianapolis. Despite not having second-leading scorer De’Vion Harmon, the Sooners had multiple guys step up in a major way to help make the plays necessary down the stretch to pull out the close win.

Leading the way was, of course, senior Austin Reaves who has always been the key piece to Oklahoma winning games in the late moments – as they have done numerous times throughout the year. He had 23 huge points along with six assists.

Brady Manek and Elijah Harkless completed the three-headed monster as the trio stepped massively in the absence of Harmon. The game ball really needs to be cut into thirds for those three guys’ efforts on Saturday night.

The win moves the Sooners into the second round for a date with the goliath that is No. 1 Gonzaga on Monday.

Here are three takeaways from the game:

Oklahoma knocks off Missouri 72-68 in first round of NCAA Tournament

Oklahoma knocked off Missouri 72-68 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Saturday night in Indianapolis.

No. 8 seed Oklahoma and No. 9 seed Missouri rekindled an old-school Big 12 rivalry on Saturday night in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. While the Sooners were the higher seed, the fact they were playing without second-leading scorer De’Vion Harmon due to a positive COVID-19 test made many question if they could topple a solid Tigers team.

But, if there is any team prepared to play without one of their key players due to COVID protocols, it would be Lon Kruger’s club. Some of their best wins of the year came when they were under-manned in the regular season. Once again, the guys stepped up for their teammate who was unable to take the floor.

“Yeah, the big-time performance, performances from everybody, ” Austin Reaves said postgame. “Vic (Iwuakor) came in, gave us really good minutes, Alondes (Williams) played really good minutes, E.J. (Harkless), Brady (Manek) really stepped their game up a lot. That’s what they’re capable of. We’ve known they’re capable of that for a long time and it just shown today. I can’t be more proud of those guys and everybody else on the team.”

As they often are, Oklahoma was led by all-Big 12 guard Austin Reaves who was superb for significant stretches in the game putting up 23 points along with six assists. As he as has been numerous times this year, he was the leader down the stretch the team needed him to be.

“Yeah, Austin battled all night,” Lon Kruger said postgame. “When you’re the guy that the ball’s in your hands late, you can’t be shy, you can’t be timid, and sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t. But our guys know that he’s going to have the ball late and I thought other guys stepped in and made plays to get to us that point where Austin then made some plays to get to the free-throw line, quite frankly, and that was a big part of creating a little bit of a spread there late.”

Also stepping up a big way was senior Brady Manek, who has had a bit of a tough year for the Sooners. He has been better as of late, though, working his way back into the starting lineup in the last month. In this game, when his team desperately needed him to be on, he stepped up with 19 huge points.

“Yeah, it was huge,” Kruger said of Manek’s performance. “It was really big. Making those threes early and then that one late to take it to four, I think it was, it was a huge shot. And again, he battled, Tilmon’s big and he’s tough down there in the post, I thought he and Kur (Kuath) battled him all night on the defensive end too.”

One of the most pivotal moments of the game came with Missouri bringing the ball down the floor late with Oklahoma holding a three-point lead. After a disjointed possession had the clock running down, Elijah Harkless made the extremely heads-up play to intentionally foul Drew Buggs to force him to shoot two free throws, essentially forcing the Tigers’ only hope to be a offensive put back on a missed free throw. The savvy play helped the Sooners put the game on ice.

“Teams practice that, of course, a lot, and we do,” Kruger said. “We kind of do that, we use that six-second mark, we talk about it huddle, and regardless of what happens on the free throws, anytime the clock gets under six — it’s one thing to talk about it — Jalen Hill did that once in a game earlier this year and real nice heads-up play and Elijah made a very good heads-up play right there.”

The bottom line of the night for the Sooners is that they stayed incredibly composed in the games biggest moments, often making the smart play. Along with Harkless’ decision to foul, the team made high-IQ plays throughout the game – highlighted by Manek giving up an open three-point shot to pass the ball off and use more clock. An underrated play that was one of many key ones that won’t necessarily show up in the box score.

“It’s something that you talk about, you refer to it, but still it’s to Brady’s credit, the decision-making at the time,” Kruger said. “Because when you’re wide open as a shooter you’re tempted to shoot it, but Brady made the right play and he’s a smart guy, smart basketball guy as well and glad to see that.”

Oklahoma has now punched their ticket to the second round and a date with the No. 1 team in the country Gonzaga Bulldogs. At time of writing, the Bulldogs hold a massive second-half lead over Norfolk State.

The task is tall, but this team has never cared much about the odds being stacked against them. One thing that is guaranteed is that Kruger will have the team prepared to give the tournament’s top dog their best shot.

The Sooners will face Gonzaga on Monday, the tip time is to be announced.

When, where, how to watch Oklahoma basketball take on Missouri in the NCAA Tournament

Everything you need to know before Oklahoma takes on Missouri in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Saturday night.

The 2021 NCAA Tournament is off and running as one of the greatest events in sports has finally returned after its one-year hiatus with the 2020 edition being canceled at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. The first full day of action is already in the books and it provided loads of great finishes and stunning upsets that the event always manages to provide.

Day two will feature the No. 9 seed Oklahoma Sooners (15-10, 9-8) beginning their attempt at a national title run on Saturday against the No. 8 seed Missouri Tigers (16-9, 8-8) out of the SEC. Of course, while the two are in different leagues now, they have loads of history against one another from Missouri’s days in the Big 12. It will be an old rivalry rekindled on the biggest stage in the sport.

This will be the 212th all-time meeting between the two programs, with the Sooners having taken 114 of the first 211 for the series advantage. The two teams actually met early last season, with Lon Kruger’s club getting the win in Kansas City by a final of 77-66.

Oklahoma comes into March Madness not playing their best ball of the season by any stretch, having dropped five of their last six games of the season. Things won’t be any easier in this game either, as the Sooners will be without second-leading scorer De’Vion Harmon after he tested positive for COVID-19 earlier this week.

The Tigers enter the tournament on a somewhat similar note having dropped three of their last five before entering the bubble. These two teams have largely followed a similar script all season with both achieving a top-15 ranking earlier in the season before slipping down the stretch to a middle of the pack team in their conferences and in the seeding for the NCAA Tournament. Even without Harmon, this game feels mostly like a toss up.

For the this first round Big 12/SEC clash, here is everything you need to know:

WHEN:   6:25 p.m. CT (Approximately)

WHERE:   Indianapolis, Indiana (Lucas Oil Stadium)

HOW TO WATCH:   TNT (Tom McCarthy, Avery Johnson & Lauren Shehadi)

HOW TO LISTEN:   Sooner Radio Network – KRXO 107.7 FM The Franchise in Oklahoma City; KTBZ 1430 AM in Tulsa; Tune In Radio App (Toby Rowland & Kevin Henry)

Oklahoma selected as No. 8 seed against No. 9 Missouri in the NCAA Tournament

Oklahoma comes in as a No. 8 seed and will see No. 9 Missouri in the first round of the 2021 NCAA Tournament.

Selection Sunday has finally arrived as the 2021 NCAA Tournament bracket as been revealed with all 68 teams now knowing the day they will begin their quest for a title and who it will be against.

For Oklahoma, they come in as No. 8 seed in the West Region and will be matched up against No. 9 seed Missouri in the first round on Saturday. Should they manage to knock off the Tigers, they would have to deal with the No. 1 team in the country in Gonzaga – barring the Bulldogs falling in a historic upset in their first round game.

The Sooners last saw Missouri just a over a year ago when the two linked up in Kansas City in the early parts of last season. So, Lon Kruger will have at least some level of familiarity with the Tigers going into this week’s game. For what it’s worth, Oklahoma won that contest 77-66 behind 19 points from Austin Reaves.

All in all, this is a pretty tough draw for the Sooners. They have to deal with a tough No. 9 in Missouri before potentially dealing with the undefeated No. 1 Gonzaga Bulldogs. And that is just to get to the Sweet 16.

But, this is March Madness. The tournament where anything can happen. One of the only things that is for certain with it, is that everyone can’t wait to get this thing started.

Oklahoma will have a wait a bit as they don’t play until Saturday (time and location still TBA), but the 2021 NCAA Tournament will tip off on Thursday evening with the First Four.

Oklahoma selected as No. 8 seed against No. 9 Missouri in the NCAA Tournament

Oklahoma comes in as a No. 8 seed and will see No. 9 Missouri in the first round of the 2021 NCAA Tournament.

Selection Sunday has finally arrived as the 2021 NCAA Tournament bracket as been revealed with all 68 teams now knowing the day they will begin their quest for a title and who it will be against.

For Oklahoma, they come in as No. 8 seed in the West Region and will be matched up against No. 9 seed Missouri in the first round on Saturday. Should they manage to knock off the Tigers, they would have to deal with the No. 1 team in the country in Gonzaga – barring the Bulldogs falling in a historic upset in their first round game.

The Sooners last saw Missouri just a over a year ago when the two linked up in Kansas City in the early parts of last season. So, Lon Kruger will have at least some level of familiarity with the Tigers going into this week’s game. For what it’s worth, Oklahoma won that contest 77-66 behind 19 points from Austin Reaves.

All in all, this is a pretty tough draw for the Sooners. They have to deal with a tough No. 9 in Missouri before potentially dealing with the undefeated No. 1 Gonzaga Bulldogs. And that is just to get to the Sweet 16.

But, this is March Madness. The tournament where anything can happen. One of the only things that is for certain with it, is that everyone can’t wait to get this thing started.

Oklahoma will have a wait a bit as they don’t play until Saturday (time and location still TBA), but the 2021 NCAA Tournament will tip off on Thursday evening with the First Four.

Postgame wrap-up and quotes from Oklahoma’s 79-73 win over Iowa State in Kansas City

Postgame wrap-up and quotes from Oklahoma’s 79-73 win over Iowa State in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament on Wednesday night.

No. 25 Oklahoma closed the regular season in the midst of their toughest stretch of the entire year to this point. After being one of the surprise teams in the country all year long and climbing their ranking all the way up to No. 7, the Sooners plummeted down the rankings and Big 12 standings after four straight losses.

Needless to say, they really needed to get back in the win column before the NCAA Tournament begins next week. And that much-needed win came on Wednesday night against Iowa State in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament.

“Really, really happy for the guys,” head coach Lon Kruger said postgame. “When you’ve dropped a few in a row that go right down to the wire, you got to get that feeling of winning again and happy for the guys. They did a good job to get it in the right column.”

The game unfolded somewhat similarly to the second meeting against the Cyclones, with a big second half lead suddenly shrinking down into a competitive game. After trailing by 18 points, Iowa State came battling back to work the lead all the way down to six with just over three minutes to play.

It was at this point that the man who often comes up big late for Oklahoma would step up yet again, with All-Big 12 guard Austin Reaves coming through with multiple key buckets to keep the Cyclones at bay and help keep his team in the lead.

“It was huge,” Kruger said of Reaves’ shots to keep the Sooners’ lead intact. “Huge plays at a time where we needed to kind of stem their run. He’s done that for us on many occasions and certainly he was great at that time tonight.”

Elijah Harkless was certainly huge again as he was the definition of a stat sheet stuffer in this game picking up 12 points, nine rebounds, six assists and five steals. He was everywhere on Wednesday night.

“All I can say about that is that’s big time,” De’Vion Harmon said of teammate’s stat line. “We feed off him on the defensive end. When he’s doing that, man, we’re a very hard team to beat.”

Harkless was a huge part of the Sooners defense having an uptick back to more like what it was earlier in the season when Oklahoma was racking top-15 wins seemingly every other day. Getting out in transition for easy scores is a must for them to be at their best, and they did that much more often against Iowa State than they had in the losing skid.

Also big in helping the defense jump back up in production was Kur Kuath off the bench. He was a constant disruption in the painted area picking up three blocks along the way. He was one of the more unsung heroes of the win for the Sooners.

“Kur’s done great, that’s back-to-back games where he’s had a big impact,” Kruger said. “Around the rim especially. He’s doing a good job, doing what he’s best at doing and that’s great for everyone. Everyone gets a little security from him at the rim. He does a good job of not only blocking shots but changing some others.”

Now the challenge of the conference tournament setting starts to take place as Oklahoma will have to turn around and play Kansas tomorrow roughly just 19 hours after this game ended. This is really the only time of the year where teams are asked to play in consecutive days, which provides a unique obstacle that only this week provides.

“It’s like AAU all over again,” Harmon said. “Usually you got two games in one day. But we got one game. Give it everything you got, get some rest, and move on to the next one and that’s what we’re going to do.”

The Sooners will take on the Jayhawks for the third time this season tomorrow night at 5:30 p.m. CT in Kansas City.

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When, where, how to watch Oklahoma basketball take on Kansas

Everything you need to know before Oklahoma takes on Kansas in the quarterfinals of the 2021 Big 12 Tournament on Thursday.

No. 25 Oklahoma (15-9, 10-8) made it through the first round of the Big 12 Tournament on Wednesday night with a 79-73 defeat of Iowa State. Their reward is a matchup with No. 11 Kansas roughly just 19 hours after their opening round game ended.

The Jayhawks, meanwhile, will be nice and rested after having the first round bye. But, they will be without one of the very key pieces of their team in starting center David McCormack due to COVID-19 protocols. So, while it is still incredibly challenging to play a hot Kansas team that is rested, that should give the Sooners some help in the third collision of the year with Bill Self’s group.

The two teams split the first two matchups with both winning on their home floor. The game in Lawrence back on Jan. 9 came with Oklahoma down a couple of key players of their own due to COVID-19 protocols in Brady Manek and Jalen Hill. Despite that, the Sooners battled hard in a 63-59 loss.

The second meeting came in the midst of Oklahoma’s huge stretch of wins that really burst them onto the national scene. They toppled the then-No. 9 Jayhawks 75-68 at the Lloyd Noble Center behind a big day from De’Vion Harmon who scored 22 points.

For this Big 12 Tournament quarterfinal matchup, here is everything you need to know:

WHEN:   5:30 p.m. CT (approximate)

WHERE:   Kansas City, Missouri (T-Mobile Center)

HOW TO WATCH:   ESPN2 (Bob Wischusen, Fran Fraschilla & Holly Rowe)

HOW TO LISTEN:   Sooner Sports Radio Network – 107.7 FM The Franchise in Oklahoma City; KTBZ 1430 AM in Tulsa; Tune In Radio App (Toby Rowland & Kevin Henry)

Three takeaways from Oklahoma’s 79-73 win against Iowa State in Kansas City

Three takeaways from Oklahoma’s 79-73 win over Iowa State in Kansas City in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament on Wednesday night.

After nearly a week without game action, Oklahoma returned to action on Wednesday night in the first round of the 2021 Big 12 Tournament in Kansas City against Iowa State. It was the third meeting of the year between the Sooners and the Cyclones, with Lon Kruger’s group taking each of the first two in mostly competitive games.

Oklahoma entered the matchup on a four-game losing streak and needing a win as bad as any non-bubble team in the country, and they delivered the performance they were desperate for. Nearly every aspect of the game was much better than what we have seen in recent weeks as the Sooners got back in the win column 79-73.

De’Vion Harmon and Austin Reaves were the two leading scorers as per usual putting up 18 and 21 points in the opening round victory. As a whole, it was really a solid all-around team win.

The win gets Oklahoma up to the 15-win mark at 15-9 and gets them a date with Kansas tomorrow in the quarterfinals. Here are three immediate takeaways from the game:

Balanced Attack

When Oklahoma was at their best this season, it was when they were moving the ball around and getting lots of guys involved. Obviously Austin Reaves is your go-to guy with De’Vion Harmon right behind him, but spreading the love and showcasing their depth is how the Sooners toppled so many good teams earlier this season.

On Wednesday night, they did that really well having eight different guys score – all of which got involved in the first half. None of those guys even scored more than seven points, as it was an overall group effort to get them a halftime advantage.

That mostly continued throughout the rest of the game although Harmon and Reaves did assume their place as the leading scorers by game’s end. As a whole though, the offense was mostly balanced out very nicely.

For the Sooners to keep winning in Kansas City this week and to try and win some NCAA Tournament games next week, this needs to be much closer to what they do offensively. The last few weeks the offense has felt so Reaves-reliant that the ball movement has really suffered. While he is certainly their best player and a fantastic one, it isn’t the best recipe for winning. It needs to be more than just him.