logo
In a title-winning turnabout, Florida does to Houston what Houston did to Duke

In a title-winning turnabout, Florida does to Houston what Houston did to Duke

Yahoo08-04-2025

Florida, unlike a notable local team, is capable of inbounding the ball against Houston with the game on the line. That's not the only reason why the Gators were celebrating Monday night, but it is a big reason why they were and Duke wasn't.
The four No. 1 seeds in the Final Four delivered three games worthy of their stature, decided by a total of 11 points, the last a Florida comeback as remarkable as Houston's to beat Duke. Or, from the reverse angle, a late Houston collapse as remarkable as Duke's against the Cougars.
And after almost six months of basketball, more than 6,000 games, the national title was decided on a potential double-dribble, when Houston's Emanuel Sharp went up for a potential game-winner, lost the ball as Walter Clayton Jr. closed him out, then couldn't reclaim it without being whistled. The clock essentially ran out during the scramble for the ball, as Sharp watched helplessly.
Clayton, scoreless in the first half, had 11 points in the second, but that defensive play was bigger than any of them in a 65-63 win.
'We work on it in practice, closing out, jumping to the side so you don't foul the shooter,' Clayton said. 'He pump faked, threw the ball down, (Alex) Condon got on it, ended up being a good play. We won the game. The feeling, just surreal. It's a surreal feeling. I can't even explain it. But it feels good, though.'
It was a strange way to end the season, but it was eerily familiar of how Houston ended Duke's season Saturday. Houston led Florida by 12 in the second half — as Carl Lewis and Hakeem Olajuwon exulted in the stands — and two with two minutes to go, only to turn the ball over four times without making a shot the rest of the way. What the Cougars did to the Blue Devils in the final moments, the Gators did to the Cougars.
'We held that team to 65 points,' Houston coach Kelvin Sampson said. '(Walter) Clayton and (Alijah) Martin combined to go 5 for 20. If you would have told me we would hold those two guys 5 for 20? We had a good plan. We just didn't score it well enough to win. Scored it well enough to be in a position to win. At the end you've got to get a shot. Got to do better than that.'
That's how Todd Golden became the youngest coach, at 39, to win a national championship since Jim Valvano beat Houston in 1983 thanks to a slightly more dramatic finish, the first of now three title-game losses and seven Final Fours without a title. As the Cougars' wait for a championship goes on, Florida's title means that 17 of the past 21 national titles have been won by six schools: Connecticut, Duke, Florida, Kansas, North Carolina and Villanova.
These Gators are different than Billy Donovan's Gators that won back-to-back titles in 2006 and 2007, with Golden an offshoot of the analytics-focused Kyle Smith tree, a bunch of number-crunching whiz kids instead of grizzled basketball veterans like Sampson — whose team was no less innovative in its own way, beating teams with shot volume by crashing the offensive glass and taking care of the basketball.
The next branch of that tree is headed to Harnett County, imminently. Florida assistant John Andrzejek has been double-dipping throughout the NCAA tournament as Campbell's next head coach, using the team rental car to visit Buies Creek when Florida started the tournament in Raleigh, recruiting for the Camels while going the distance with the Gators.
Now he has to go back to Gainesville with the team on Tuesday before a group of Campbell boosters is coming to pick him up on a private jet to bring him to campus for his no-longer-indefinitely delayed introductory press conference. (As Mark Gottfried might say, there's a plane waiting to take you to Buies Creek.)
But these are good problems to have for a first-time head coach, who will never have a stronger case to make to potential recruits and transfers.
'It's unbelievable. It's the best, that explosion of emotion,' Andrzejek said on the floor, amid piles of blue and orange confetti. 'You're in it, you're competing, you're thinking about the situation, what do you do next, how do you guard the next thing? It's so sudden. It just goes to zero. And I'm just running, running on the court, looking for somebody to hug.'
He can keep the orange confetti and leave the blue. One season is over. For everybody, it's on to the next.
Never miss a Luke DeCock column. Sign up at www.newsobserver.com/newsletters to have them delivered directly to your email inbox as soon as they post.
Luke DeCock's Latest: Never miss a column on the Canes, ACC or other Triangle sports

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

After 2 overtime games, Panthers and Oilers relish days off as Stanley Cup Final shifts to Florida
After 2 overtime games, Panthers and Oilers relish days off as Stanley Cup Final shifts to Florida

Associated Press

time41 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

After 2 overtime games, Panthers and Oilers relish days off as Stanley Cup Final shifts to Florida

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — After Brad Marchand scored the winning goal in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final, he and Florida Panthers teammate Sam Bennett were asked how they kept their bodies going during another long and intense matchup against the Edmonton Oilers. 'I think (Marchand) grabbed a Blizzard … I think it was Oreo today,' Bennett quipped, referring to a viral moment during the Eastern Conference finals when Marchand joked that he enjoyed a chocolate chip cookie dough treat from Dairy Queen between periods — which was later revealed as a spoonful of honey. 'Nice plug,' Marchand responded with a chuckle. 'I like that.' They were joking, of course, but there was a point in Friday night's double-overtime game that Marchand spent time between periods pedaling on an exercise bike to stay loose — as players from both teams shuffled their tired bodies on and off the ice for hours. The first two games of the Stanley Cup Final have gone to overtime, only the sixth time in NHL history that's happened and first since 2014. Game 1 went on until Leon Draisaitl's power-play goal 19:29 into the extra period. Marchand put Game 2 to an end with a breakaway goal 8:07 into the second overtime. With the series tied 1-1, both teams will embark on a cross-continent trip from Canada to Florida, enjoying an extra day's rest between games to recover after an intense start to their championship series. Game 3 is Monday night in Sunrise, Florida. 'Obviously a long game, a lot of back and forth,' said Florida defenseman Seth Jones, who led the Panthers in ice time at 34 minutes, 35 seconds on Friday. Jones, who is averaging a team-high 25:45 on the ice in the postseason, played more than 30 minutes in both of the first two games of the series. He scored in the first period on Friday — his fourth goal of the postseason — and assisted on Dmitry Kulikov's goal in the second. 'We came here for a split and got it,' Jones added, 'and just going to recover now.' Panthers coach Paul Maurice said heading back to Florida with the series tied — instead of being down 0-2 — does make a minor mental difference, but one of his team's strengths is its tunnel vision approach. 'It's mathematically significant,' Maurice said. 'I'd like to think that we'd be dragging here today, this morning, if we had lost that game having had the lead for so long. But I think we're really good at cutting it off. 'It's the same morning this morning at the meal room as it was two days ago (after the Game 1 loss). It's just on to the next day. We understand how to leave our days — the good ones and the bad ones — in the past and handle the day we have right now.' The Oilers are moving forward in the series with an equally short memory after missed chances in Game 2. Corey Perry, whose goal with 17.8 seconds left in the third period forced overtime, said the back-and-forth nature of the series was to be expected from the two teams, but there's no use in getting hung up on 'what-ifs.' 'What's it going to do?' Perry said. 'It's not going to do anything for you now. Get on the plane tomorrow and get some rest and be ready for Game 3.' Few players have spent more time on the ice in the series than Connor McDavid. The Edmonton star played 31:12 in Game 1, and just over 35 minutes in Game 2 — more than anyone else in the game. That's nearly 10 minutes more than his postseason average of 24:22. McDavid's impact was certainly felt on Friday. He had three assists, including one in which he zipped through Florida's penalty kill to set up Draisaitl's power play goal in the first. Draisaitl noted after the game there's only one player in the world that can make such a highlight-reel play, but stressed the importance of using the two days off to recalibrate. 'At this time of year, you've got to move on,' he said, 'There's not time thinking about it too long. Obviously it stings right now, but we have to move on.' ___ AP NHL playoffs: and

Report: Mavericks schedule visit with Cooper Flagg ahead of 2025 NBA draft
Report: Mavericks schedule visit with Cooper Flagg ahead of 2025 NBA draft

USA Today

time42 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Report: Mavericks schedule visit with Cooper Flagg ahead of 2025 NBA draft

Report: Mavericks schedule visit with Cooper Flagg ahead of 2025 NBA draft The Mavericks have Cooper Flagg scheduled for a pre-draft visit to Dallas, @TheSteinLine has learned. Flagg, Knicks, Suns and more from the NBA grapevine ... all here in my latest around-the-league notes: — Marc Stein (@TheSteinLine) June 7, 2025 Projected No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg is reportedly scheduled to meet with the Dallas Mavericks ahead of the 2025 NBA draft, according to Marc Stein of The Stein Line on Substack. Flagg led Duke to the Final Four, averaging 19.2 points, 7.5 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.4 steals and 1.4 blocks on 38.5% shooting from 3-point range. He became the 22nd player in program history to be named a consensus first-team All-American. The Player of the Year is set to visit the Mavericks later this month to get to know team personnel before the organization selects him with the first pick on June 25. Jason Kidd said last month that he believes the Mavericks are a great situation for Flagg, with their mixture of established veterans and up-and-coming players. He believes Flagg will be able to step in and make an immediate contribution. The 6-foot-8 forward has drawn comparisons to former Duke legend and Hall of Famer Grant Hill because of his size, athleticism and ability to affect games in various ways. Former coach Mike Krzyzewski even called him the best freshman to ever play with the Blue Devils. The Mavericks have the first pick in the draft for only the second time in franchise history. After previously trading franchise cornerstone Luka Dončić, the Mavericks will soon meet with their next once-in-a-generation player in Flagg.

Kyle Johnson drives in 5 in Duke's 7-4 win over Murray State; Blue Devils seek first CWS since 1961

timean hour ago

Kyle Johnson drives in 5 in Duke's 7-4 win over Murray State; Blue Devils seek first CWS since 1961

DURHAM, N.C. -- Kyle Johnson drove in five runs to power Duke's 7-4 victory over Murray State on Saturday in the first game of the Durham Super Regional. The Blue Devils are one win from reaching the College World Series for the first time since 1961. Game 2 is Sunday. Johnson, a .228 hitter in 57 at-bats coming in, had two doubles and a home run among his four hits and scored twice. Trailing 2-0 in the third inning, Duke tied it when Jake Berger drew a leadoff walk and scored on Johnson's two-run home run to center field. Johnson and Berger figured in the Blue Devils' three-run fourth inning. Johnson drove in two with a bases-loaded double that sent Berger to third base. Berger then scored on a wild pitch by Nic Schutte (8-4). In the sixth, Johnson doubled to drive in one run and later scored on a double by Ben Rounds. Duke managed only six hits — four by Johnson — but the Blue Devils benefited from eight walks. Dom Decker had four of Murray State's nine hits and drove in two runs. Duke starter Owen Proksch (4-3) went 5 2/3 innings, allowing two runs on six hits with seven strikeouts. Reid Easterly pitched three scoreless innings for his fifth save. Duke (42-19) is playing in the super regionals for the fourth time. The Racers (42-15) are making their fourth NCAA Tournament appearance and first in the super regionals. ___

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store