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New York Times
08-04-2025
- Sport
- New York Times
The latest Houston Heartbreak? An ‘incomprehensible' finish in final possession vs. Florida
SAN ANTONIO — How much can one program take? How can Houston stomach another one of these? Another portrait of coming so close, only to see it all recede from view, covered instead by the wrong colored confetti? On this Monday night in April, it was Emanuel Sharp crouching deep, his hands atop his head, seeing the court around him turn orange and blue. Ja'Vier Francis knelt next to him, refusing to leave his teammate's side. Kelvin Sampson, the coach, stared from across the floor, hands at his sides. Florida's Walter Clayton Jr. leaned down, offering Sharp a hug from behind. Advertisement Houston's trip to the national championship game was going to end either as the best night in school history or as another chapter in this cruel epic. The antagonist in Jim Valvano's hero's quest. The shadow in Fred Brown's redemption. Even before Monday, the school held a tormenting place in this sport's history — the record for all-time Final Four appearances without a national championship win. It was six. Now, after what somehow happened here — a gutting, what-just-happened 65-63 loss to a Florida team that trailed the Cougars by 12 early in the second half — the number is now seven. For a school that plays the part with unenviable periodicity, this one might be the hardest. This ending was supposed to be the one that erased all the others. 'Incomprehensible,' Sampson said later, 'in that situation, (that) we couldn't get a shot, couldn't get a shot.' The sequence will live in the depths of the Coogs' minds for a generation or two. Down two, 19 seconds left. A timeout called. How did Houston win 35 games this year? Because in these moments, Sampson talks and the Coogs listen. Then they execute. Then they win. Normal teams don't go undefeated in road conference games. This one did. Certain things were made clear in the huddle. The Coogs didn't need a 3. But they did need to get a shot off with enough time left to have a chance at an offensive rebound. Sampson drew up a play for L.J. Cryer, Houston's all-everything guard. If the initial action didn't spring him, Sampson wanted the possession to pivot to an elevator screen for Sharp. It all developed a little too slowly. Cryer's look wasn't there. Now 7.3 seconds remained, and here came Sharp, running from the baseline to the top of the key, rubbing past screener J'Wan Roberts, trying to get free. That screen? Clayton cared not for it. The 6-foot-2 guard darted by and, seeing Sharp rise for what very well could've been a game-winning shot and carved a whole damn chapter in the annals of college basketball, leapt into the sky and blocked out the sun. Advertisement This, apparently, was when Sharp thought of a potential wrinkle in the play call. If he saw a closeout, he was told to put the ball on the deck and dash to the basket. Go tie the game. Go win in overtime. As associate head coach Kellen Sampson, Kelvin's son, said later, 'Emanuel's as good a decision maker in closeouts as there is. And he needs little space to get one off.' Sharp thought the shot was there, but then it wasn't, and it was all too late. The shooting window closed, and Sharp dropped the ball instead of having it stuffed. There it bounced and bounded. With it, all 75 years of program history. And there stood Sharp, utterly powerless. If he picked up the ball, a double dribble would be whistled. Under the basket, Roberts turned his back when Sharp rose to shoot, waiting for that possible offensive rebound. It would've been the Coogs' 16th of the night, double what Florida pulled down. But the shot never came. 'I turned back around and it was just bouncing on the floor,' Roberts said. Florida's Alex Condon dove to the floor with two seconds on the clock, crashing shoulder-to-shoulder with Francis. The ball squirted away, the final horn sounded and the impossible pain ensued. Roberts, originally from the U.S. Virgin Islands, went to high school in Killeen, Texas, in order to play college basketball. He committed to Houston as a three-star recruit in September 2018. That was six years, seven months, five days ago. Houston, at the time, was coming off that first NCAA Tournament appearance under Sampson. Since then, Roberts has seen every step of a journey that was seemingly all leading to a final destination at the Alamodome this week. There was a loss to Kentucky in the 2019 Sweet 16. A canceled NCAA Tournament in 2020. A national semifinal loss to Baylor in the 2021 Final Four. A loss to Villanova in the 2022 Elite Eight. A Sweet 16 loss to Miami as a No. 1 seed in 2023. Another Sweet 16 loss as a 1-seed in 2024, this time to Duke. Advertisement When this year's national semifinal ended with Houston roaring back from 14 points down with eight minutes left to beat those same Blue Devils, it sure seemed like this was it. Monday was to be the last of Roberts' program-record 173 career games. It was going to be Sampson's 300th win at the school and 800th win of his career. Instead, Florida, with its 39-year-old coach, won its third national championship. The others came in 2006 and '07, when Kelvin Sampson, now 70, was in the midst of moving from Oklahoma to Indiana. What all feels like a millennium ago. Monday night's final horn sounded just before 10:15 p.m. local time. 'One Shining Moment' played at 10:38. At 10:54, the Houston locker room opened its doors, revealing the aftermath. Roberts said it had taken awhile for Sampson to collect himself and address the team. The old coach told this team it would never have gone so far without each player. He pointed specifically to Sharp, a junior with 106 games played at Houston. Then Sampson invited each assistant coach to address the room. Then each senior spoke. Sharp, according to Roberts, got up and apologized to the team. In reality, the night wasn't lost on any singular possession. This was a 40-minute rock fight, one filled with moments Houston will want back. 'We ain't finna blame (Sharp) for that,' Roberts said. 'He did a lot of great things. We know how special Emanuel is. I'm going to comfort him as much as possible, and I'm gonna defend his name if anybody tries to make it worse than what it is.' Sharp never emerged in the postgame locker room. A phone was discarded in his locker. Outside, the Alamodome emptied and midnight approached. 'What's today's date?' Roberts asked, slumped in his locker. It was April 7. 'June to April, man. A long journey,' Roberts said, thinking back to the 2024-25 Coogs' first practice. 'It's just crushing. You get to this point and you lose by two points. We had a chance to tie it or win the game. I just …' Robert paused, conjuring all the voices of Houston's past. 'I just wish we could run that play again.'


Axios
03-04-2025
- Sport
- Axios
Houston Cougars aim for history in Final Four
The Houston Cougars men's basketball team faces a tough challenge against the Duke Blue Devils in the Final Four Saturday night at San Antonio's Alamodome. Why it matters: A win advances the Coogs to their first national championship game since 1984 when Phi Slama Jama fell to Georgetown. Driving the news: The Houston-Duke game will follow the Florida- Auburn matchup. This is only the second time in the modern March Madness era that all four teams in the Final Four are No. 1 seeds. Flashback: The Coogs, under the direction of head coach Kelvin Sampson, have made tournament runs each season since 2018 but only landed in the Final Four twice. Catch up quick: Houston (34-4) cruised through its first four tournament games, topping SIU Edwardsville, Gonzaga, Purdue and Tennessee. They're entering Saturday's showdown with a 17-game win streak. Duke features the projected No. 1 overall pick in this year's NBA draft, Cooper Flagg, and is favored by 5.5 points. What they're saying: On "The Herd" this week, Sampson acknowledged the challenge his team faces against a well-funded opponent with a stacked lineup. "We played in the Big 12 the last two years, and … there's a lot of really good teams," Sampson said. "Will it be good enough? I don't know. Maybe it will, maybe it won't." "At the end of the day, every team has to focus on what they do good and try to be the best version of themselves for that 40 minutes," Sampson said. My thought bubble: Having fallen to Duke in the Sweet 16 last year, a win Saturday would not only give Houston a historic return to championship hardwood but also a bit of sweet revenge. With the stakes this high, I can't wait to find a place to watch with some friends.


Axios
27-03-2025
- Sport
- Axios
Houston Cougars face Purdue in Sweet 16
The No. 1 Houston Cougars men's basketball team is as ready as ever for Friday night's Sweet 16 NCAA Tournament matchup with the No. 4 Purdue Boilermakers. Why it matters: A win advances the Coogs to their first Elite Eight appearance since 2022 and continues the road to their first national championship contention since the Phi Slama Jama era of the 1980s. Catch up quick: The Cougars (32-4) fought their way through the first two rounds of this year's tournament, beating Gonzaga and SIU Edwardsville to extend their win streak to 15 games heading into Friday's contest. Flashback: The team has played in March Madness since 2018 and secured its third-straight No. 1-seed berth this year. They made it to the Final Four in 2021, the Elite Eight in 2022, and Sweet 16 in both 2023 and 2024. Friction point: Purdue's promising offense will be quite the test for the Cougars' stellar defense. The game is at Indianapolis' Lucas Oil Stadium, a quick 80-mile trip for Purdue and their fans. While the stadium is technically a neutral site, the setting essentially hands a home-court advantage to Purdue. The Boilermakers have won eight of 11 games played in Indianapolis. What they're saying:"They'd be tough to beat no matter where we play them," Coogs head coach Kelvin Sampson said Thursday. "We've got a tremendous challenge in front of us."