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For Duke, stunned silence as title run collapses

Duke’s Heartbreaking Collapse in Final Four: A Night to Forget

Heartbreak in San Antonio: Duke’s Final Four Collapse

SAN ANTONIO — The atmosphere inside the Duke locker room was one of stunned silence, a quiet so profound that the sound of a door slamming shut echoed like a siren in the night. Each time a player or staff member entered the adjacent coaches’ locker room, the door’s bang reverberated, a stark reminder of the emotional spiral the team was experiencing.

How does a team prepare for the emotional turmoil of losing a six-point lead in the final 35 seconds? It’s a question the Blue Devils were forced to confront after Houston scored the game’s final nine points in just 33 seconds, stunning Duke with a 70-67 victory on Saturday night in the Final Four. The Blue Devils were left in a hush, trying to process the sudden turn of events.

Players moved quietly, grabbing slices of pizza from the ten boxes stacked high across a Powerade cooler. They avoided eye contact with the lingering media, their eyes glued to their phones. One walk-on returned from the shower with tears in his eyes, while another wrote in a journal with a pencil, perhaps trying to make sense of the chaos.

They replayed the sequence of events that led to their downfall, wondering how a six-point lead could vanish in less than 20 seconds. Despite a series of inbounds failures, missed shots, and mental errors, two key moments in the final 20 seconds from star freshman Cooper Flagg — a foul and a missed shot — capped the stunning meltdown.

Flagg’s missed 12-foot jumper, with Duke trailing by one point, will be the play that lives on in replays. With 17 seconds left, Duke had a chance to regain control and stop the bleeding. The Blue Devils called a timeout and cleared out for Flagg, who found himself in an isolation matchup with Houston’s sixth-year senior J’Wan Roberts. Flagg pulled up from inside the lane, fading away from Roberts’ outstretched arms, but the shot clanged off the front rim.

“It’s the play Coach drew up,” Flagg said. “Took it into the paint. Thought I got my feet set, rose up. Left it short, obviously. A shot I’m willing to live with in the scenario.”

There was no second-guessing the play or the look. It simply didn’t go in.

“Cooper is the best player in the country, and when you get the best player in the country in the spot he likes, it’s really as simple as that. We got exactly what we wanted,” Duke senior Sion James said. “Sometimes shots go down; sometimes they don’t. That one didn’t.”

More difficult to explain was Flagg’s over-the-back foul on Roberts when Duke’s Tyrese Proctor missed the front end of a one-and-one with 20 seconds remaining. Duke led 67-66 at the time, and Flagg was whistled for a foul on Roberts, who had clearly boxed him out.

The validity of the call will be debated for years, but Flagg put himself and Duke in a vulnerable position by appearing to hold down Roberts’ left arm, resulting in the foul.

Roberts, a 63% free throw shooter, changed the game by making both ends of the one-and-one, giving Houston a 68-67 lead and setting the stage for Flagg’s final attempt.

For a program known for its grit and toughness, it’s fitting that Houston’s trip to the national title game featured a game-changing boxout. Kellen Sampson, the Houston assistant and son of Cougars coach Kelvin Sampson, summed up the moment with one of his father’s folksy basketball sayings.

“Discipline gets you beat more than great helps you win,” Kellen Sampson said. “I’ve probably heard it a hundred million times growing up. Look, the more disciplined you are, the more that you can find yourself doing little tiny things that’s going to win.”

“A big-time free throw blockout was exactly what was needed,” he added.

Regardless of any debate over the call, Flagg’s foul put Duke in a suddenly unthinkable position. The Blue Devils went from a six-point lead with 35 seconds left to trailing by one at the 19-second mark. The foul was the final swing: up one to down one.

The key for Houston came from leaving Roberts alone on Flagg, something it didn’t do early in the game. Flagg had been picking the Cougars apart with his passing, so they adjusted to let Roberts handle the matchup solo.

“We said here at halftime we’re going to trust J’Wan,” Sampson said. “He’s doing a heck of a job in his one-on-ones against Cooper. We’re probably over-helping.

“You have the No. 1 defense in America for a reason. Trust him.”

Houston’s defenders were relentless all night, with the most jarring statistic being Duke center Khaman Maluach failing to grab a rebound in more than 21 minutes of play, ending the night with a plus-minus of -20.

Roberts’ final act was contesting Flagg’s potential game-winner.

“I thought he did an awesome job of getting his hands up high enough that it wasn’t an easy look,” Sampson said of Roberts. “Some tough shots all night.”

Flagg finished the contest with 27 points, shooting 8-for-19 from the field. He received little help, as Duke managed just one field goal over the game’s last 10:30.

He rode back to the Duke locker room in a golf cart at 11:54 p.m., staring into space with a towel wrapped around his neck. Flagg entered the cone of silence, suddenly facing the end of a season and likely a college career.

Three minutes later, Duke coach Jon Scheyer rode past with his wife next to him and athletic director Nina King sitting in the back. After leading by as much as 14, Duke had just coughed up the fifth-biggest lead in Final Four history. The loss will echo, just like that slamming door, long into the offseason.

“I keep going back, we’re up six with under a minute to go,” Scheyer said.

“We just have to finish the deal.”

Original source article rewritten by our AI can be read here.
Originally Written by: Pete Thamel

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