Sports

Three takeaways from KU Jayhawks’ Big 12 basketball road win at Oklahoma State

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom.

Read our AI Policy.


  • Peterson erupted for 23 points in 18 minutes, snapping his shooting slump.
  • Kansas led 43-29 at halftime after shooting 46.2% from beyond the arc.
  • Bench and guards contributed: Jackson had 14 off bench; White scored 16.

Freshman Kansas Jayhawks men’s basketball star Darryn Peterson needed just five minutes of game time to assert his will against Oklahoma State.

Peterson scored 13 of KU’s first 17 points on Wednesday at Gallagher-Iba Arena to give Kansas a 17-6 lead. And that provided the Jayhawks the opening burst they needed to take complete control and never look back en route to an 81-69 victory.

The craziest part?

It never felt like Peterson, or KU, tried very hard ... and it didn’t matter.

No. 8 Kansas (20-6, 10-3 Big 12) extended its winning streak against the Cowboys to nine games. Peterson led KU with 23 points in just 18 minutes.

Jayhawks guard Tre White added 16 points and freshman Bryson Tiller finished with 10 points, 11 rebounds and seven assists.

Peterson, who’s dealt with cramping issues throughout the season, played a total of 18 minutes. He did most of his scoring in the first half and was on the court for just three minutes in the second.

The Jayhawks led 43-29 at halftime, shooting 46.2% from beyond the arc. The score didn’t get much closer than that the rest of the way, even with OSU outscoring KU 40-38 after the intermission.

Up next for KU: The Jayhawks play host to Cincinnati at Allen Fieldhouse on Saturday.

Until then, here are three takeaways from Wednesday’s game:

Darryn Peterson is back on track

Peterson entered Wednesday’s game in the midst of a shooting slump. Over his last three games, he had shot just 36% from the field.

The slump ended against Oklahoma State. Peterson scored 13 points in the first five minutes of game time and made it look easy: He had 20 points on 6-for-11 shooting and was 5-for-9 on 3-pointers.

He added another three points early in the second half before taking a seat on the bench. At one point, he was seen working out on the stationary bike. He didn’t return to the game.

Tre White starts slow, keeps building

After an excellent start to the season, KU guard Tre White has struggled in recent games.

In his most recent two, he had failed to score five points. The bigger issue, however, was turnovers. Before KU’s matchup against the Cowboys, he was averaging 2.8 per game in his last five games.

White struggled early against Oklahoma State, too. He couldn’t seem to buy a bucket, even at the rim. He missed a number of layup opportunities.

Then he hit a couple of 3-pointers in the second half and that seemed to get him in a groove. He finished with 16 points on 6-for-13 shooting from the field with five rebounds.

Elmarko Jackson was the x-factor

KU guard Elmarko Jackson has shown growth this season.

After missing all of last year due to a torn patellar tendon, it wasn’t clear if the guard would have a role in the Jayhawks’ rotation for 2025-26.

He does, and he’s become a key bench contributor. When scoring seemed hard to come by for everybody besides Peterson Wednesday night, Jackson provided valuable points off the bench. He scored 14 points on 3-for-5 shooting from the floor.

On top of that, Jackson seems to have mastered the art of dribble-penetration. That’s given the Jayhawks another ball-handler to go with Peterson and Melvin Council. Jackson had four assists Wednesday.

This story was originally published February 18, 2026 at 10:22 PM with the headline "Three takeaways from KU Jayhawks’ Big 12 basketball road win at Oklahoma State."

Related Stories from Wichita Eagle
Shreyas Laddha
The Kansas City Star
Shreyas Laddha covers KU hoops and football for The Star. He’s a Georgia native and graduated from the University of Georgia.
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER