Sooners beat 'Horns on Hield's late 3

NORMAN, Okla. -- Buddy Hield had done just about everything this season. He did the ultimate Monday night.

Hield's three-pointer from the corner with 1.3 seconds remaining lifted No. 3 Oklahoma to a 63-60 victory over No. 24 Texas.

Hield scored 12 of his 27 points in the final 3:11, including two three-pointers.

"I had been struggling all night trying to get a shot off," he said. "I finally made the last two, which is more important, so thank God for the win."

Hield was given the option to drive or shoot.

"It wasn't a special play, it was a special shot," Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger said. "I thought their defender did a really good job, had a hand up, and Buddy still made a tough shot."

Texas coach Shaka Smart gave Hield credit for the way he closed the game.

"He's a terrific player," Smart said. "Best player in the country. For most of the game, we did a really good job on him, considering how good a player he is. Down the stretch, he really was aggressive. He got to the foul line, and obviously, hit that big shot."

Isaiah Cousins added 17 points for the Sooners (20-3, 8-3 Big 12), who trailed for most of the game. Oklahoma bounced back from a loss at Kansas State on Saturday that cost it the No. 1 ranking. The Sooners beat the Longhorns for the sixth-straight time and increased their home winning streak to 19 games.

Isaiah Taylor scored 19 points and Kendal Yancy added a season-high 13 for Texas (16-8, 7-4), which had won four straight and seven of eight. The Longhorns entered the Top 25 for the first time this season earlier Monday.

"I don't think you come out of any loss feeling good if you're a competitor, and we came here to win," Smart said.

Both teams shot 40 percent from the field, but the Sooners outscored the Longhorns 14-6 from the free-throw line.

Hield made two free throws with 1:19 remaining to put the Sooners up 60-58.

Taylor made two free throws with 57.1 seconds to go to tie it at 60. Hield missed a short jumper, but Taylor committed an offensive foul on the other end, giving Oklahoma the chance to set up Hield for the final shot. Hield intercepted Texas' inbounds pass and ran out the clock.

"It wasn't a thing of beauty by any means, but we kept battling and kept working at it," Kruger said.

Sports on 02/10/2016

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