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No. 2 West Virginia Upset by No. 8 Texas Tech in Narrow 72-71 Loss

Alec Nathan@@AlecBNathanX.com LogoFeatured ColumnistJanuary 13, 2018

LUBBOCK, TX - JANUARY 13: Zhaire Smith #2 of the Texas Tech Red Raiders shoots the ball over Esa Ahmad #23 of the West Virginia Mountaineers during the first half of the game on January 13, 2018 at United Supermarket Arena in Lubbock, Texas. (Photo by John Weast/Getty Images)
John Weast/Getty Images

The No. 8 Texas Tech Red Raiders upset No. 2 West Virginia 72-71 on Saturday at United Supermarkets Arena in Lubbock, Texas, to snap the Mountaineers' 15-game winning streak. 

The loss, which dropped West Virginia to 15-2 on the season, was the program's first since it suffered a season-opening defeat Nov. 10 against Texas A&M.        

Texas Tech Basketball @TexasTechMBB

The scene as #TexasTech protects home court once again and moves back into a tie atop the Big 12 standings! #WreckEm #4To1 https://t.co/7fyAJcMh50

Texas Tech, meanwhile, improved to 15-2 and responded with a statement win after falling to Trae Young and the No. 9 Oklahoma Sooners on Tuesday. 

It was an especially fruitful day for the Red Raiders offense, which figured to have its hands full with a swarming West Virginia defense that ranks ninth in KenPom.com's adjusted efficiency. 

While Texas Tech only boasted a pair of double-figure scorers in Keenan Evans (20 points) and Brandone Francis (17 points), it shot 50 percent from the field and attempted 28 free throws to erase a seven-point halftime deficit. 

ESPN.com's Jeff Goodman noted Evans was especially clutch in the game's waning minutes, including a jumper that put the Red Raiders up four points with 39 seconds to play: 

Jeff Goodman @GoodmanESPN

Texas Tech beat Kansas in Lawrence 10 days ago — and the Red Raiders came back and took down West Virginia just now in Lubbock. Keenan Evans made a couple of huge shots in final minutes.

The Mountaineers countered with a game-high 28 points from Jevon Carter and Esa Ahmad's big 18-point effort off the bench, but they shot 39 percent from the field and couldn't mount the turnover edge they often do (both teams committed 13). 

West Virginia won't have much time to dwell on that performance, with a home showdown against the Kansas Jayhawks looming Monday. 

The Red Raiders, though, will be off until Wednesday, when they travel to Austin to take on the Texas Longhorns.