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Texas' season is over, so it's back to the portal, drawing board for Rodney Terry | Bohls

Texas played its final game of the basketball season in Charlotte, N.C., on Saturday night pretty much as it played almost all of them this year.

With lots of heart.

With too little scoring.

With sporadic but energized defense.

With an up and down backcourt.

With wildly inconsistent performances.

Texas guard Chendall Weaver and Tennessee forward Tobe Awaka battle for the ball during Saturday night's second-round game in the NCAA Tournament. The second-seeded Volunteers won 62-58. Texas will need to replace a handful of key players next season.
Texas guard Chendall Weaver and Tennessee forward Tobe Awaka battle for the ball during Saturday night's second-round game in the NCAA Tournament. The second-seeded Volunteers won 62-58. Texas will need to replace a handful of key players next season.

Now, after dropping a heartbreaking 62-58 loss to No. 2-seeded Tennessee and mentor Rick Barnes, Texas coach Rodney Terry can embark on the offseason preparations for next season knowing he faces a major rebuild.

Here’s a suggestion.

Find a shooter, Rodney. Then go find another one. A third wouldn’t hurt while you’re at it.

Time for Texas to go back to the drawing board

We’re not saying the second-year head coach should go all-John Calipari and scour the landscape for every talented freshman he can find. But it sure would help if Terry could lure a Dalton Knecht to Austin as he tried instead of seeing him go to Knoxville for a chance to be coached up by Barnes. Rumor was he was making $125,000 in NIL money at Tennessee.

If that’s true, he’s vastly underpaid because even though the Volunteers shot the ball even worse than the Longhorns, Knecht was the biggest portal prize of them all.

He became the SEC player of the year and, on a very sluggish night, still wound up with 18 points and four critical free throws in the last nine seconds to hold off Texas in the second-round Midwest Regional game. The Volunteers made their last seven free throws.

More: Texas' Shaylee Gonzales buries 3-pointers and Dragons in NCAA first round | Bohls

There’s no shame in falling to a No. 2 seed like Tennessee and scrapping valiantly to overcome a near-comical stat line of 17 mind-boggling turnovers — 10 by the starting backcourt of Max Abmas and the mercurial Tyrese Hunter — that almost sent the seventh-seeded Longhorns (21-13) to the Sweet 16 for the second year in a row.

But the hill was too steep to climb.

Texas scored 56 points in Thursday's win over Colorado State in the opening round and then 58 in the loss to Tennessee. Those were the Longhorns' two worst scoring outputs of the season. Hitting eight threes in 37 tries in two NCAA Tournament games won't get it done.

Texas guard Tyrese Hunter applies defensive pressure on Tennessee guard Zakai Zeigler during Saturday night's NCAA Tournament loss in Charlotte, N.C. Hunter said he intends to get an NBA draft evaluation before he decides whether or not to return for next season, just like he did last year.
Texas guard Tyrese Hunter applies defensive pressure on Tennessee guard Zakai Zeigler during Saturday night's NCAA Tournament loss in Charlotte, N.C. Hunter said he intends to get an NBA draft evaluation before he decides whether or not to return for next season, just like he did last year.

Rodney Terry has his work cut out for him

Terry deserved — and got — a ton of credit for keeping Texas from unraveling during the Chris Beard saga last season. And he deserves credit for reaching the tourney and winning a game against Colorado State this year.

But he also deserves some blame for not building a more cohesive lineup and deeper bench. While the Longhorns’ ball-handling and decision-making were hideous Saturday night, their defense was spot on, limiting the Vols to just 3-of-25 shooting from deep range.

And Chendall Weaver once more was the life of the party. No Longhorn brings more energy and spirit or plays harder than the UT-Arlington transfer on springs. He’s got a couple of more seasons of eligibility and could well be the heart and soul of next year’s team once he works like crazy on his jump shot.

Lord knows someone will have to be because it’ll take a village to replace the crowd that's departing.

More: Why Xavier Worthy, Adonai Mitchell, Jordan Whittington can top Texas ancestors | Golden

Dylan Disu leaves after a spectacular season-and-a-half. He improved by the minute and was a joy to watch despite injuries that shortened his first year after transferring from Vanderbilt and the first nine games of this season.

Texas is saying goodbye to three starters and its biggest role player in history in the feisty Brock Cunningham and maybe even more. Junior-to-be Dillon Mitchell could leave (he drastically needs another year to work on his shooting range outside of dunks as well as his ball-handling) and Hunter might leave, too, after this erratic junior season.

When I asked Hunter after he put up 30 in the regular-season finale against Oklahoma, he said he was only concerned about the next game and the one after that. On Saturday night, he said he intends to test the NBA waters just as he did last year.

Head to the portal, Texas

Terry needs to hit the portal and hit it hard. No, harder than that. Heck, before the first NCAA Tournament game tipped off this past week, 555 players already enrolled in the portal. Surely a few of those wouldn’t mind playing in Austin and eating Tex-Mex at Matt’s.

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We assume general manager Chris Ogden has done his homework and Texas will put on the full-court press for some shooters. The portal opened last Monday in the most asinine timing of all since 68 coaches were busy preparing scouting reports and practices for, uh, rather meaningful games.

Yeah, like the actual NCAA Tournament.

But Terry needs to do a much better job than he did last offseason.

After inheriting the reins from the deposed Beard at midseason and taking Texas to the Final Four doorstep, he and his staff lost his entire recruiting class in two high-profile players. And while he didn’t whiff in the transfer portal, he didn’t exactly hit a home run, either. Call it a ground-rule double because he landed an elite scorer and volume shooter in the streaky Max Abmas — who tried that ill-advised fall-away jumper from the corner in the closing seconds Saturday to end his highly thrilling one Texas season — and Weaver, the hyperactive guard whose batteries never run low.

More: Texas basketball falls short of Tennessee, Rick Barnes in hard-fought March Madness loss

The rest? Not so much.

Virginia transfer Kadin Shedrick was game enough inside, but he wasn't a big-time rebounder or rim protector. In addition, he had chronic shoulder and back pain and never seemed to cut it loose for entire games although he did have some flashes. He said he'll return.

Texas forward Kadin Shedrick dunks during Saturday night's second-round loss to Tennesse in the NCAA Tournament. Shedrick said after the loss that he intends to come back next season.
Texas forward Kadin Shedrick dunks during Saturday night's second-round loss to Tennesse in the NCAA Tournament. Shedrick said after the loss that he intends to come back next season.

Guard Ithiel Horton, at his fourth school, was supposed to be Jabari Rice with his decent defense and 3-point stroke. Texas got little return on that investment.

Ze’Rik Onyema was supposed to be a banger inside if not a rim protector. Can’t remember the last time he even got on the court.

As a result, the Longhorns were a .500 team in Big 12 play, finished seventh in the league and since Feb. 26 had a 7-8 record. They beat some very good teams like Baylor, Texas Tech and TCU, but they had trouble winning at home and could never find that reliable third scoring option beyond Disu and Abmas.

So Texas’ window has closed with this group carried over from last year’s Elite Eight run. But that does’t mean another can’t open.

Terry had his share of detractors these last few months, but he’s more than capable and just needs more talent to play on even playing fields.

He’s got some coming in with three recruits, none more high-profile than Tre Johnson, the 6-foot-6 guard from Dallas and a McDonald’s All-American. He’s been Mr. Basketball in the state, led his high school team to a Class 6A state championship and scored more than 2,000 career points.

Texas could use points like that. And a few more out of the portal as well.

This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Texas basketball must start over by finding scorers in transfer portal