Sports

Texas ends NC State basketball’s season with clutch jumper at First Four

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom.

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  • N.C. State fell 68-66 after Tramon Mark's 1.1-second game-winner.
  • Wolfpack battled late and McNeil hit two clutch 3s.
  • Rebounding, foul trouble and second-chance points sank N.C. State.

Paul McNeil sat in the N.C. State men’s basketball locker room Monday night during the team’s pregame media availability. He said some guys around the country would have to figure out the rest of their lives starting on March 17.

A number of N.C. State players are now in that group.

N.C. State made several clutch plays down the stretch, including a pair of 3s from McNeil and one free throw from senior guard Tre Holloman in the final 90 seconds. Unfortunately for the Pack, Texas guard Tramon Mark hit four straight baskets, including the game-winner with 1.1 seconds remaining, sending the Wolfpack home with a 68-66 loss to the Longhorns in the NCAA Tournament First Four on Tuesday night.

Texas’ Tramon Mark shoots over N.C. State’s Tre Holloman with seconds remaining in the Wolfpack’s 68-66 loss in the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio.
Texas’ Tramon Mark shoots over N.C. State’s Tre Holloman with seconds remaining in the Wolfpack’s 68-66 loss in the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

“We gave ourselves a chance at the end,” N.C. State head coach Will Wade said, “but we don’t do enough of the good stuff in the wash of the game to make it to where we can be playing from ahead at the end and making them chase us down.”

Tuesday’s victory was the Longhorns’ second win over the Pack this season, and allows Texas (19-14) to advance to the NCAA Tournament’s round of 64 to play BYU on Thursday in Portland, Oregon.

N.C. State (20-14) closed the year losing six of its last seven and only winning two games since the first week of February.

“A lot of times, when you get to March, it comes down to, sounds crazy, but really making tough shots and the little things,” said senior captain Jordan Snell. “I think the guys played hard as hell. And, credit to Mark, he had two really tough mid-range shots. Sometimes that’s just how the cookie crumbles.”

Senior forward Darrion Williams led all players with 21 points and was the only scorer for the first seven minutes. He recorded the first seven points and 10 of the team’s first 12.

N.C. State’s Quadir Copeland drives to the basket past Texas’ Matas Vokietaitis during the second half of the Wolfpack’s 68-66 loss in the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, at the  in Dayton, Ohio.
N.C. State’s Quadir Copeland drives to the basket past Texas’ Matas Vokietaitis during the second half of the Wolfpack’s 68-66 loss in the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, at the in Dayton, Ohio. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

Quadir Copeland, a senior guard, followed his teammate with 16 points and a team-high eight rebounds.

McNeil added 11 points and three 3-pointers, tying the program’s single-season 3-point record. He joins DJ Horne atop the list.

“Shout out to DJ Horne for setting the standard. He set the standard,” McNeil said. “It’s a blessing to even have a chance to tie it.”

It’s not very often N.C. State can say its defense kept the game within reach all night, but it can after its performance in the First Four. It was a much different game than the matchup during the Maui Invitational, when the two teams combined for 199 points.

“We defended well. We gave ourselves a chance to win,” freshman guard Matt Able said. “Little things throughout the game [added] up, and we ended up where we are.”

The Wolfpack opened the game by forcing three straight stops, including a pair of turnovers. Texas responded with a 9-0 run and scored nine points at the free throw line, building a 10-point lead.

The Pack, however, did not let up. It held the Longhorns to one of its next eight shots. N.C. State followed that up by holding Texas without a field goal from the 8:40 mark until halftime and three 2-point field goals in the opening 20 minutes.

N.C. State head coach Will Wade looks at the scoreboard during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game against Texas during the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio.
N.C. State head coach Will Wade looks at the scoreboard during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game against Texas during the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

Additionally, N.C. State held Texas without a fastbreak point. That was a major point of emphasis for the team, which gave up 24 points in transition, and finished minus-17 in the metric, when the two squads faced off in the Maui Invitational.

“I thought we scored the ball well, but our transition defense was terrible,” Snell said prior to the game. “I thought we showed some fight (in Game 1) … but definitely didn’t execute the way we needed to. I think we know that, and we know we’re a better team than we were when we played them in Maui.”

The Longhorns finished with eight points in transition. The offense, however, struggled to get going, especially at the rim. N.C. State went 6 of 16 on layup opportunities in the first half. It shot just 35.5% from the field in the opening period.

N.C. State’s second-half offense wasn’t much better. It was actually worse for most of the night. The Wolfpack shot 39% from the field, including 6-16 (37.5%) from 3-point range. Until McNeil’s late 3s, the Pack made 1 of 7 baskets from the perimeter in the second half.

N.C. State’s Quadir Copeland drives to the basket past Texas’ Simeon Wilcher during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game during the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio.
N.C. State’s Quadir Copeland drives to the basket past Texas’ Simeon Wilcher during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game during the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

Foul trouble became a big issue early into the game and continued to be a problem into the second half. Four N.C. State players were called for two fouls in the first half. Will Wade actually petitioned the officials for more foul calls during the under-4 media timeout. At the time, his team — which is undersized compared to Texas and was getting beat on the boards by more than 13 rebounds — had been called for nine fouls to Texas’ four.

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The number of foul calls evened out following his pleas, but the foul trouble didn’t go away. Ven-Allen Lubin went to the bench with more than 12 minutes to play after officials handed him his fourth foul. He returned with 5:41 on the clock until he fouled out four minutes later.

Musa Sagnia was hit with his third, fourth and fifth fouls in the span of two seconds. He went to the bench with more than nine minutes remaining.

“It’s heartbreaking for me, because I just have this feeling right now that just let my team down, not being out there in the battlefield for their last stretch in these moments like this,” Lubin said. “I know they fought hard, and I want to fight with them.”

N.C. State’s Darrion Williams sits in an empty University of Dayton Arena following the Wolfpack’s 68-66 loss to Texas in the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, in Dayton, Ohio.
N.C. State’s Darrion Williams sits in an empty University of Dayton Arena following the Wolfpack’s 68-66 loss to Texas in the NCAA First Four on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, in Dayton, Ohio. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

The rebounding effort didn’t help the Wolfpack very much. Texas out-rebounded N.C. State, 45-33, including 15 on the offensive end. The Longhorns scored 13 on second-chance opportunities.

The Wolfpack has not outrebounded an opponent in 12 games, with its last positive rebounding margin taking place on Jan. 31 at Wake Forest.

“It just came as a who wanted more and who could be more disciplined,” Lubin added. “We knew it hurt us, pretty much most of the season of guys being a bit undisciplined and not playing hard. I think that really hurt us. If that’s something we had learned, in moments like these, maybe we would have come out on top if you were able to adjust and changer early on in this season.”

This story was originally published March 18, 2026 at 12:12 AM with the headline "Texas ends NC State basketball’s season with clutch jumper at First Four."

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