NCAA Final Four: Connecticut beats Miami to make title game - Los Angeles Times
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NCAA Final Four: Connecticut rolls past Miami to advance to title game

Connecticut's Andre Jackson Jr. dunks over Miami's Norchad Omier on April 1, 2023.
Connecticut’s Andre Jackson Jr. dunks over Miami’s Norchad Omier. The Huskies won 72-59 and will face San Diego State in the NCAA title game Monday night.
(David J. Phillip / Associated Press)
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Connecticut doled out another drama-free basketball beatdown Saturday night, getting 21 points and 10 rebounds from Adama Sanogo to dispatch Miami 72-59 and move one win from the school’s fifth national title.

Jordan Hawkins overcame his stomach bug and scored 13 points for the Huskies, who came into this most unexpected Final Four as the only team with any experience on college basketball’s final weekend and with the best seeding of the four teams in Houston — at No. 4.

Against fifth-seeded Miami, they were the best team on the court from beginning to end. Starting with three consecutive three-pointers — one jumper from Hawkins and two set shots from Sanogo — UConn took a quick 9-0 lead and never trailed.

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San Diego State puts together 14-0 run early in half, then loses it — and the lead — before rallying to a 72-71 victory over Florida Atlantic in the Final Four.

On Monday in the title game, the Huskies will face San Diego State, which became the first team to hit a buzzer-beater while trailing in a Final Four game for a 72-71 victory over Florida Atlantic.

That was an all-timer. This one was more of the same from the Huskies (30-8). The double-digit victory over Miami was UConn’s closest win in five tournament games.

Some believed Miami (29-8), with four players who have scored 20 points at least three times this season, might be the team to challenge the Huskies. Not to be.

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Connecticut's Adama Sanogo, who had 21 points and 10 rebounds, scores against Miami.
(Brynn Anderson / Associated Press)

Isaiah Wong led the Hurricanes with 15 points on four-for-10 shooting. Harassed constantly by Sanogo, 7-foot-2 Donovan Clingan and the rest of Connecticut’s long-armed, rangy perimeter players, Miami, which came in with the nation’s fifth-best offense, shot 25% in the first half and 33.3% for the game.

UConn had its own sort of buzzer-beater. It was a three-pointer from Alex Karaban that sent the Huskies and coach Dan Hurley jogging into the locker room with a 13-point halftime lead.

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The Huskies built the lead to 20 points before the first TV timeout of the second half. By then, Jim Nantz, calling his last Final Four, could start saving his voice for Monday.

Going into his last March Madness weekend the announcer shares some of his fondest memories of his colleagues and who and what he misses and will miss.

Miami did get its deficit under double digits a few times, but this never got interesting. Not helping: Hurricanes guard Nijel Pack missed about five minutes after managers had trouble locating a substitute for a malfunctioning shoe. Pack finished with eight points in this one, and Jordan Miller, who hit all 20 shots he took from the field and the foul line in Miami’s Elite Eight win, went four for 10 for 11 points. Only one Miami player made more than half his shots.

UConn had five blocks, including two from Sanogo, and 19 assists, led by eight from Tristen Newton — both signs of the sort of all-around effort the Huskies have been putting in since the start of February, after a six-losses-in-eight-games stretch halted their momentum.

That cold stretch is a big reason they were seeded only fourth for March. Now it’s April and the number UConn is thinking about is “5†— as in a fifth title that will come if it can keep this up for one more game.

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