yahoo - 3/30/2026 5:01:26 PM - GMT (+2 )
UConn coach Dan Hurley is known for his high-energy antics on the sideline. That unsurprisingly didn't change after true freshman Braylon Mullins buried a game-winning 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left in the Huskies' 73-72 win over top-seeded Duke in the Elite Eight.
Hurley, a two-time national champion at UConn, came face-to-face with the referee after Mullins' shot, despite there still being 0.4 seconds left on the clock. He wasn't given a technical foul despite coming in contact with the referee, resulting in UConn moving onto the Final Four.
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Former Wisconsin star Sam Dekker, who played in the Final Four in 2014 and 2015, was one of many that said Hurley should've been given a technical foul in the moment.
"I have no bias here," Dekker wrote on X. "This is a tech 10/10 times. For multiple reasons… it would have lost the game for his team and he would have tried to fight the officials like he did nothing wrong. I just don’t understand it at all. Also, referees need to grow a spine in instances like this."
Hurley went wild in the aftermath of the shot, just like any personnel would given the intensity of the moment. He threw his arms up in celebration and even had his suit jacket fall halfway off after multiple other staff members swarmed him.
Duke's radio play-by-play announcer also noticed UConn guard Malachi Smith allegedly running off the bench onto the court after Mullins's shot.
“Malachi Smith ran off the bench! That should be a technical!" David Shumate said on the broadcast.
It's all nothing new for one of college basketball's most successful coaches of the past few years. Hurley was fined $25,000 by the Big East after UConn's final loss of the regular season to Marquette after he appeared to come in contact with the referee. He was called for a double-technical ejection in the moment, which sealed the win for the Golden Eagles on March 7.
Hurley even offered his glasses to an official during UConn's eventual 67-63 win over No. 3 Michigan State in the Sweet 16, due to UConn winning a challenge.
Prior to the Sweet 16 against Michigan State, Hurley told Pat McAfee he'd done a decent job this year with his behavior. Apparently, all bets were off come UConn's biggest two games of the season, though.
"For the most part, I think I've been a pretty good boy this year," Hurley said. "My behavior's been pretty good. Even in that situation, I didn't touch him. I never made contact with the official. There was actually never contact made, the official said that. Again, that was quite a long time ago."
UConn trailed by as many as 19 points late in the first half and faced its largest halftime deficit of the season when behind 44-29 at the break. It started 1-of-18 from 3-point range, before ending the game 4-of-5 from distance, all of which makes came in the final few minutes of regulation.
Hurley and UConn are still alive, looking for their third national championship of the last four seasons. And UConn and college basketball fans alike won't have to worry about Hurley not bringing the energy down the stretch as he reaches another Final Four.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dan Hurley comes face-to-face with official in UConn's historic win
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