Oklahoma defeated Kansas, 85-80, on Tuesday night behind 26 points and eight assists from freshman sensation Trae Young. A Brady Manek 3-pointer with under 30 seconds left was the dagger for the Sooners.
Manek and Christian James combined for 29 points for Oklahoma -- the Sooners went 9-of-22 from 3. Svi Mykhailiuk led the way for the Jayhawks, scoring 24 points.
Box score | Scoreboard | Trae Young vs. Devonte Graham
Check out our play-by-play recap from the Soonersā triumphant win below.
College basketball tale of the tape: Trae Young vs. Devonte' Graham
Joe Boozell | krikya18.com
Letās break down two of the top point guards in the country who will square off on Tuesday night.
Stats:
Here are Graham and Youngās per-40 numbers. Weāre using per-40 to mitigate the difference in minutes.
Player | Points | Rebounds | Assists | Turnovers | FG% | 3FG% |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Young | 35.9 | 4.9 | 11.4 | 6.2 | 44.3 | 39.6 |
Graham | 20.1 | 4.0 | 8.0 | 3.1 | 42.7 | 43.5 |
Obviously, Youngās numbers are superior. Itās fair to point out that Oklahoma plays at a turbo pace ā the Sooners rank fifth in tempo, which boosts Youngās counting stats. Kansas ranks 96th.
Either way, Youngās numbers are otherworldly. He turns the ball over more often than Graham (though that figure is also inflated due to Oklahomaās fast pace), and surprisingly shoots a lower percentage from 3. But as weāll get into, degree of difficulty matters when talking about a playerās shooting ability. And nobody takes tougher shots than Young.
Edge: Young
Outside shooting
Before we get to Young, letās acknowledge that Graham is a terrific shooter. Heās making 44 percent of his 3s this year on 7.3 attempts per game. Graham is a 42 percent 3-point shooter for his career and has elite range.
Graham has all of the tricks in his bag. His signature move: jacking a triple whenever his defender loses focus for a split second and ducks under a pick. Too late, TCU:
Graham busts zones by himself. Syracuseās standard defense is a 2-3, which is part of the reason why the senior hung 35 points on the Orange in December. Grahamās range must be respected -- he shoots the NBA 3 with ease. So when he pulls up like heās going to heave a long-range bomb, he spooks Cuseās back line. Graham was just toying with them ā watch as he uses his shooting prowess to create an easy bucket for a teammate:
Now that thatās out of the way, here is near four-minute video of Youngās ridiculous outside shots this season.
The fact that you can compile 3:38 worth of insane Young shots tells you everything you need to know. Graham is an elite shooter in, like, a way that is conceivable. Young looks like heās playing a different sport than the other nine dudes on the floor.
Edge: Young
Attacking the rim
This is Grahamās biggest weakness, and the main reason why he hasnāt been quite as effective as Frank Mason was for the Jayhawks last year.
Graham is shooting 44 percent from 3 but 43 percent overall ā which tells you heās not very efficient near the rim. His issue: Graham lacks next-level burst. He dribbles to set up a stepback jumper or a 3; not a floater or a strong finish near the cup.
Here against TCU, Graham pulls off a beautiful shimmy and hits his defender with a devastating stepback. But it was a super difficult shot, and a player with more explosiveness would have blown by his defender for a more efficient look. Notice the all of the empty space behind his man:
Graham gets to the free-throw line 5.1 times per game ā which is fine, but considering Young shoots 10 foul shots per game, he wonāt get the edge here. Graham is a career 46 percent shooter from 2 and a career 42 percent shooter from 3. The craziest stat: heās attempted 149 more 3s in his career than 2s.
Playing alongside Mason, his role was to space the floor and attack closeouts when necessary. Now that heās the lead ball-handler, Graham is being asked to create more ā with varying results. That said, he remains an elite sniper. But speed isnāt his strength.
Young gets to the free-throw line a ton and has an exquisite floater game. He struggles to finish over length, though ā often hunting foul calls when he could simply go up strong and take his chances. Hereās an example against Oklahoma State:
Admittedly, this is nitpicky. Young is a good attacker for his size, but size doesnāt bode in his favor. That said, heās a better penetrator than Graham.
Edge: Young
Passing
Grahamās playmaking has improved drastically as a senior. Heās averaging nearly twice as many assists as he did as a junior and is the only true ball-handler for the No. 12 offense in the country. That sums up Grahamās passing chops: heās the primary creator for a good offense. Sweet passes similar to the earlier clip against Syracuse are regular for the senior.
This facet of the argument is similar to the outside shooting section. Graham is a really good distributor who is perfectly competent. But some of the stuff Young does will make you rewind the DVR.This is a snippet from an earlier film study we did breaking down Young vs. Collin Sexton, and it holds up now:
Ever seen Aaron Rodgers throw a back-shoulder fade to a seemingly covered receiver, only to see him break open at the last second? Young does the same kind of stuff.
Watch as Wichita State tries to hedge and recover on a Young ball screen. Most point guards wouldnāt see anything open here, and reverse the ball to the other side.
Not Young. Manek doesnāt seem to be open at first glance ā Darral Willis is on him, and Landy Shamet is in full help mode. But Young anticipates Willis leaving to bump the roll man, and Young catches Shamet sleeping. Then, he fires a bullet in the perfect spot for Manek to hoist:
Thatās next-level stuff. Youngās exquisite court vision is also on display in transition. In this clip against USC, the Trojans lollygag back on defense ā against 95 percent of opponents, theyād have time to retreat and get set. Not against Oklahoma, because Young advances the ball to an open shooter:
The assist numbers jump off the page, but passes like that make Young a joy to play with. James is shooting 14 percent better than he did last year, and Youngās chemistry with Manek is evident. His passing unlocks so many possibilities for the Sooner offense.
Edge: Young
Ball security
If you were wondering if Young would sweep this film study ā the answer is no, because Graham is significantly more careful with the ball than Young.
The freshman is averaging 5.3 turnovers and has coughed it up a whopping 40 times in his last five games. Some of this is explainable: as mentioned before, Oklahoma plays very fast. So if his scoring and assist numbers are a bit inflated, the same idea applies to his turnovers. No team relies more on one guy than the Sooners do on Young, so of course heās going to turn the ball over a lot.
But you canāt be giving the ball away eight times per game, no matter the caveats -- as he has been since the West Virginia loss. Part of the reason why Young is so beloved is because of the spectacular plays he makes. He opens himself up for risk there; for instance, a pass that barely threads the needle is just an inch away from being intercepted for an easy 2 on the other end. Stephen Curry turns the ball over a lot for the Golden State Warriors. It's just part of the experience.Graham, meanwhile, is as reliable as they come. Heās averaging fewer than three turnovers per game, and while he isnāt asked to do as much as Young, he has the ball in his hands a lot. Graham had never averaged more than 1.8 turnovers coming into this year. The fact that heās a senior who has seen these Big 12 defenses several times helps.
Big edge: Graham
Defense
Both guys are feisty for their size ā they each average at least two steals. But Graham is generally better on the defensive end.
Experience is part of the reason for that. Graham is three years older; so much of defense is mental, so he should be better on that side. Oklahomaās defense has been slightly better with Young is on the bench ā he has a defensive rating of 104.3; the Soonersā team mark is 102.7. The Jayhawks, on the other hand, are 2.1 points per 100 possessions stingier with Graham on the floor than when he rests.
Since both players carry such a heavy offensive burden, they canāt be expected to use just as much energy on defense. Thereās not a huge difference, but it comes down to this: Graham is as much of a menace in the passing lanes as Young without veering out of scheme nearly as often. Young may become the better defender in time, but for now, itās Graham.
Edge: Graham
Overall
Young is simply more dynamic, so heāll obviously get the overall nod. But Graham is an awesome player ā and as weāll likely see tonight, a worthy adversary to Young (for example: Young is better than Jevon Carter, but Carter bested him in their head-to-head matchup. Graham is good enough to do the same).
The Big 12 is a joy to watch this year, and these are two of the biggest reasons why.
Edge: Young