Thursday, April 10, 2025

Cougars fall short of national title

I was hoping that, in terms of making it to the national championship game, the third time would be a charm for the Houston Cougars and they would claim their first national title. Unfortunately, it wasn't meant to be.

Nearly an hour after Houston coach Kelvin Sampson walked off the court amid flurries of Florida-colored orange and blue confetti, he stood in front of a black curtain in a hallway at the Alamodome.

Sampson, 69, faced a phalanx of television lights that illuminated him at his most crushing professional low. The lights shined on his close-cropped hair, which is more salt than pepper, as midnight quickly approached.

With his arms folded across his chest and an NCAA National Final pin adjacent to the UH logo on his gray polo, Sampson distilled the disappointment of Houston squandering a 12-point lead in the second half and ending the national title game with four consecutive turnovers in a 65-63 loss to Florida.

"There's a lot of teams that are not built for six straight wins," Sampson said, referring to the number needed to win the NCAA tournament. "This team was, this team was built, this team had the character and the toughness and the leadership. This team was built to win this tournament, and that's why it's so disappointing. We got here and had a chance and just didn't get it done."

The Cougars led for most of the game but faded down the stretch and lost in a manner eerily reminiscent of their stunning upset at the hands of North Carolina State in the 1983 national championship game. Houston's last shot attempt of the game occurred with 1:25 left up 63-62, and they turned it over four times on their last four possessions, including the ill-fated final possession:

After Florida's Denzel Aberdeen made one of two free throws, Houston had the ball down two with 19 seconds left. Florida's defense stymied Houston's early offensive action, then [UH guard Emanuel] Sharp caught the ball nearly 6 feet behind the 3-point line with five seconds remaining.

Sharp went straight up to attempt a long 3-pointer, but what would have been a 28-footer never got off. Walter Clayton Jr. sniffed out his desperation and lunged at him midair with an outstretched left hand, and it put Sharp in the unenviable position of getting his shot blocked or letting the ball drop.

Sharp shielded Clayton as the ball hit the floor, and Florida's Alex Condon made the hustle play to seal the game by snagging his fourth steal of the night. Sharp slumped down a few feet from his final turnover, his elbows perched atop his knees and fists covering his face as he looked toward the floor.

To be fair to Emanuel, the game should not have come down to him. The Cougars missed easy shots all evening, hitting less than 35% of their field goals and going a lousy 6-25 from beyond the three-point line. They also missed 5 out of 14 free throws. The officiating didn't help either, with the referees missing a obvious Florida goaltending late in the first half and piling up ticky-tack fouls on the Coogs in the second half. But that's no excuse. The Cougars were up by 12 at one point in the second half. They should have won. 

They didn't.

I have to keep my perspective. The fact that the Cougars made the championship game at all is amazing, given their miraculous comeback win over Duke in the semifinal. There are hundreds of college basketball programs out there who would love to be able to claim seven final four appearances and three national championship game appearances, like Houston can. I also need to appreciate the fact that the University of Houston basketball program is nationally prominent today, after spending three decades after the Phi Slama Jama era in utter irrelevance. This game was by no means the end of the road for the Cougars under Kelvin Sampson.

But that doesn't make this loss feel any better. "Best men's basketball program to never have won a championship" isn't a particularly comforting title. This is going to sting for awhile. Assistant coach Kellen Sampson said it best:

"It's a brutal, cruel guillotine," he said, "and when you get here, every team is so good and you don't get here without a team that's connected, resilient, tough. The margins are so razor-thin. We certainly did enough tonight to win. Florida did, as well, and they won."

Let's just hope it's not another 42 years before the Houston Cougars get another bite at the national championship apple.

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