LSU Shocks No. 2 Texas in PMAC Win | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Upset at the PMAC: LSU Topples No. 2 Texas, 70–65

The Pete Maravich Assembly Center was electric — sold out, loud and pulsing with that particular kind of belief that only a packed college arena can generate. On January 11, 2026, LSU’s women’s basketball team fed off that energy and delivered a signature victory: a 70–65 win over No. 2 Texas. It wasn’t a blowout highlight reel, but a gritty, full-team performance that felt like the kind of game that can define a season.

Why this mattered

  • Beating a top-two team at home changes perception. LSU’s 70–65 victory over an 18–0 Texas squad isn’t just one in the win column — it’s a statement that LSU can compete with the nation’s elite.
  • Momentum and confidence are contagious. LSU had stumbled recently; this win provides a reset and shows resilience under Kim Mulkey’s leadership.
  • The SEC shook a little bit. Texas remains a program to respect, but conference standings and March narratives are subtly different after a home upset like this.

The game in moments

  • Slow first quarter, competitive first half: The teams traded baskets early and the first quarter ended tied 11–11. LSU closed the half with a buzzer-beater by Jada Richard to carry a five-point lead (30–25) into halftime. (LSU finished the half shooting 12-of-31.)
  • Second-half toughness: LSU stretched its lead in the third and managed the Longhorns’ late rally in the fourth. Texas chipped away — including a 13–3 run that put the pressure on — but LSU hit the critical plays down the stretch to hold on.
  • Paint and boards won it: LSU’s ability to rebound and convert inside proved decisive. The Tigers won the rebounding battle and limited Texas’s second-chance opportunities at key moments.
  • Standouts: Mikaylah Williams led LSU with 20 points on 7-of-13 shooting and two 3s. For Texas, Madison Booker poured in 24 points (10-of-16), and Kyla Oldacre posted a 16/16 double-double in a losing effort.

Takeaways for fans and followers

  • This was a full-team effort, not a one-player miracle. Multiple Tigers contributed double-figure scoring and timely defense.
  • LSU’s home-court energy is real. A sold-out PMAC was a tangible advantage and the Tigers used it to control momentum at crucial stretches.
  • Texas remains a top program — their late surge showed why they’re ranked — but LSU exposed vulnerabilities and earned a resume-boosting win that will matter on selection Sunday and in the polls.

Impact on both teams

  • LSU: The win moves the Tigers to 16–2 and restores confidence after a couple of SEC stumbles. It validates Kim Mulkey’s message about toughness and should galvanize the roster for the stretch run.
  • Texas: Falling to 18–1 halts an undefeated run and answers some questions about how the Longhorns respond to adversity away from home. They still have depth, star scoring and an elite resume, but this loss will give opponents hope and scouting material.

My take

Upsets like this boil down to more than X’s and O’s — they’re about identity and belief. LSU didn’t just outscore Texas; they played with a renewed edge and grabbed extra possessions when it mattered. That kind of win can be transformative, especially in a league as deep and competitive as the SEC. If LSU builds on this and tightens a few loose moments, they’ve shown they can be a dangerous team in March. And for Texas, the loss is a reminder that dominant records bring targets — and the best teams respond by learning fast.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Manning’s Return Sparks Texas Rally | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Arch Manning’s comeback and a 75-yard first-play reminder that momentum loves drama

AUSTIN — If you like theater, Saturday’s Texas-Vanderbilt tilt wrote itself with bold strokes: Arch Manning, fresh off concussion protocol, steps back under center and uncorks a 75-yard touchdown to Ryan Wingo on the very first play. The Longhorns raced to a seemingly comfortable 34-10 lead, only to watch the Commodores stage a furious fourth-quarter push that made the closing minutes feel like a playoff game — and an onside kick bounce that decided everything.

This wasn’t just a win. It was a mood swing, a test of Texas’ resilience, and a reminder that college football flips faster than you can blink. Manning finished with 328 yards and three touchdown passes, but the story is as much about recovery, momentum, and the thin margin between confident control and late-game chaos.

Key takeaways

  • Arch Manning returned from concussion protocol and delivered a high-impact performance: 328 passing yards and three touchdown passes, including a 75-yard bomb to Ryan Wingo on the first play.
  • Texas built a big fourth-quarter cushion (34-10) but nearly squandered it as Vanderbilt rallied behind dynamic plays from Diego Pavia and Eli Stowers.
  • The Commodores’ comeback fell short after an onside kick rolled out of bounds — a reminder that even the best surges need a little luck.
  • The win keeps Texas’ résumé intact as they chase postseason positioning, but the late wobble exposes areas (closing out games, defensive consistency) that still need work.

The hook play: why one throw changed the day

That first-play 75-yard touchdown felt like a message. Not just to Vanderbilt, but to anyone still wondering whether Manning’s concussion layover had left him rusty. He didn’t just return — he ripped the game open. There’s psychological power in an opening-play score: it forces the opponent to answer immediately, energizes your crowd, and lets your offense operate with a bit more swagger.

But football isn’t a movie with a tidy first-act triumph. The middle act left Texas with a 24-point lead and all the veneer of control — and the final act nearly turned it into a horror show. Vanderbilt’s late barrage showed why teams don’t celebrate until the clock reads zero. Momentum can be contagious, and Pavia’s arm and legs sparked a late life that made Royal-Memorial Stadium sweat.

Arch Manning, recovery, and the quarterback narrative

Manning’s season has been a roller coaster: preseason hype, flashes of elite play, inconsistency, and now a concussion scare. Returning and playing well immediately is a positive sign for Texas and for Manning’s draft-season narrative. It also underscores how teams manage injury risk and the thin line coaches walk between caution and competitiveness.

That said, a single game shouldn’t erase the season’s ups and downs. What Texas got Sunday was a blend of encouraging poise and a reminder of the team’s vulnerability when an opponent refuses to quit.

What the late Vanderbilt rally says about both teams

  • Vanderbilt: The Commodores proved they can strike quickly and hang around against top opponents. Diego Pavia’s ability to create big plays (long TD runs and throws) makes Vanderbilt dangerous in every comeback scenario. A resilient team that doesn’t panic is a team to watch down the stretch.
  • Texas: Offensively potent and able to build blowout leads, but the defense’s late surrender of big plays is worrisome. Coaches will love the win but cringe at the scoreboard’s wobble. Closing games cleanly is as much a coaching and discipline issue as it is talent-based.

Bigger-picture implications

  • Polls and postseason hopes: A top-25 Texas win over a top-10 Vanderbilt matters in November. It keeps momentum in the Longhorns’ favor for conference positioning and resume-building.
  • Player stock-watch: Arch Manning regained some narrative shine; a timely performance after an injury boosts his profile. Ryan Wingo’s explosive playmaking also reaffirms him as a go-to vertical threat.
  • Coaching adjustments: Sarkisian’s team showed offensive firepower but will need to tighten late-game execution and defensive containment to avoid future scares.

Short reflection

There’s something poetic about sports’ unpredictability: two plays can feel like seasons. For Texas, this was a small but meaningful test passed — mostly. For neutral fans, it was the kind of roller-coaster that keeps college football intoxicating. Manning’s performance today is a plot twist, not the final chapter. The Longhorns won a high-stakes November game, but the way the lead evaporated is a useful nudge toward humility for a team with bigger goals.

Sources