Texas and South Carolina walked off with a draw on February 4, 2026, in an NCAA game that, as logged, did not include a final score, quarter scores, or overtime detail. What’s clear: neither side separated, and the night ends as a deadlock on the schedule sheet.
Game result
Result: Draw
Texas record: 13-9 (entering the game)
South Carolina record: 11-11 (entering the game)
Venue: TBD
What the draw says about where both teams are
This was a meeting of two teams trying to stabilize. Texas came in with a WLWLL form line — flashes of quality, followed by slippage. South Carolina arrived at LLLWL, a stretch that suggests the margin for error has been thin and confidence hard-earned. A draw doesn’t resolve those questions; it amplifies them.
Turning points and key performances
With no official scoring log or quarter-by-quarter data available from the game record, there’s no verified way to pinpoint decisive runs, late-game swings, or individual stat lines. The only firm takeaway from the context provided is the outcome: neither team produced the separation required to claim a win.
What it means going forward
For Texas, the draw keeps the season’s theme intact: competitive enough to avoid a slide, but still searching for consistent, bankable results. For South Carolina, it functions as a stopgap after a rougher recent run — not the jolt of a win, but not another step backward either.
Until a final score and game details are recorded, the bigger picture remains about trajectory: Texas trying to turn mixed form into a steadier climb, South Carolina trying to convert survival games into momentum.

