2024–25 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team

2024–25 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball
NCAA tournament, Elite Eight
ConferenceBig 12 Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 8
APNo. 8
Record28–9 (15–5 Big 12)
Head coach
Assistant coaches
  • Matt Braeuer (2nd season)
  • Achoki Moikobu (2nd season)
  • Luke Barnwell (2nd season)
  • Jeff Linder (1st season)
Home arenaUnited Supermarkets Arena
2024–25 Big 12 men's basketball standings
Conf. Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 2 Houston 19 1   .950 35 5   .875
No. 8 Texas Tech 15 5   .750 28 9   .757
No. 15 Arizona 14 6   .700 24 13   .649
No. 13 BYU 14 6   .700 26 10   .722
No. 17 Iowa State 13 7   .650 25 10   .714
Kansas 11 9   .550 21 13   .618
Baylor 10 10   .500 20 15   .571
West Virginia 10 10   .500 19 13   .594
TCU 9 11   .450 16 16   .500
Kansas State 9 11   .450 16 17   .485
Utah 8 12   .400 16 17   .485
Oklahoma State 7 13   .350 17 18   .486
Cincinnati 7 13   .350 19 16   .543
UCF 7 13   .350 20 17   .541
Arizona State 4 16   .200 13 20   .394
Colorado 3 17   .150 14 21   .400
2025 Big 12 tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll

The 2024–25 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team represented Texas Tech University during the 2024–25 NCAA Division I men's basketball season as a member of the Big 12 Conference. The Red Raiders were led by second-year coach Grant McCasland, and played their home games at the United Supermarkets Arena located in Lubbock, Texas.

Texas Tech entered as the No. 2 seed of the Big 12 tournament, held at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri, finishing the regular season with a strong conference record. In the quarterfinals, they narrowly defeated No. 7 seed Baylor, 76–74, thanks to a dominant performance by JT Toppin. However, their run ended in the semifinals, where they fell to No. 3 seed Arizona, 86–80.

Texas Tech earned an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament as the No. 3 seed in the West Region. In the first round, they defeated No. 14 seed UNC Wilmington, 82–72. They followed that with a solid 77–64 victory over No. 11 seed Drake in the second round. In the Sweet Sixteen, the Red Raiders edged No. 10 seed Arkansas, 85–83 in overtime, advancing to the Elite Eight for the third time in program history.

In the Elite Eight, Texas Tech faced No. 1 seed Florida. Despite a strong effort, the Red Raiders were eliminated with an 84–79 loss to the eventual national champions, ending their season.