Inside UConn's stunning win over Duke in Sunday's Elite Eight - ESPN
UConn will join Arizona, Illinois and Michigan in Indianapolis after the Huskies punched their ticket to the Final Four in dramatic fashion.
ESPN's college basketball analysts Jeff Borzello and Myron Medcalf break down the instant NCAA tournament classic.
How UConn won: Thirty-six years after Christian Laettner hit a buzzer-beater to defeat UConn in the Elite Eight and send Duke to the Final Four, the Huskies got their revenge.
UConn freshman Braylon Mullins stole the ball and buried a 3-pointer from 35 feet to cap a remarkable 19-point comeback. The Huskies, after trailing by double digits, advance to the Final Four for the third time in four years. Tarris Reed Jr.'s 26 points kept the Huskies close, and a flurry of 3-pointers in the final four minutes pushed them over the top. National Player of the Year front-runner Cameron Boozer's final college game ended with 27 points, eight rebounds and four assists. — Jeff Borzello
Medcalf: UConn happened. The Huskies were a much better defensive team in the second half than they were in the first; the Blue Devils' offensive efficiency in the second half was two-thirds of what it was in the first. UConn also matched Duke's paint production overall (36-34 advantage for the Huskies) and turned the Blue Devils' 13 turnovers into 20 points. The final minutes showcased Duke's limitations and its reliance on Cameron Boozer. The star freshman has carried the Blue Devils through plenty of moments of adversity this season — and he nearly did it again. But Cayden Boozer's turnover set up Mullins' game winner. Cam Boozer wasn't in a position to save his team with the game on the line this time.
Borzello: The second half was much more UConn comeback than Duke collapse, but the Blue Devils


