Men's Final Four
- Florida defeated Auburn 79-73 to advance to the national title game. It will be the Gators' fourth appearance in the final and their first since 2007.
- Walter Clayton Jr. finished with 33 points on 11 of 18 shooting from the field, including five 3-pointers.
- No. 1 seeds Duke and Houston square off next on CBS.
Florida will play for the national championship
The Gators defeat top overall seed Auburn, 79-73, to advance to Monday's NCAA championship, where they will play either Houston or Duke. The Gators trailed by eight at halftime before forcing Auburn into 12 second-half turnovers and watching guard Walter Clayton Jr. produce yet another memorable March performance. Clayton Jr. scored 34 points, making 11 of his 18 shots and five of his eight 3-pointers.
Walter Clayton Jr. is having a historic run
Gators guard Walter Clayton Jr. finished Saturday’s semifinal against Auburn with 34 points, putting on another incredible shooting display, hitting 5-of-8 from 3-point range.
Clayton Jr. has back-to-back 30-point games, and has scored at least 20 in every round except one this tournament.
His back-to-back 30 balls in the Elite Eight and Final Four are the first since Larry Bird in 1979.
Free throws a regret for each team
In a game between such evenly matched opponents, free throws were critical. Florida shot just 21-of-30 from the line, while Auburn made 16 of its 23.
Turnovers hurting Auburn
Auburn had just two turnovers at halftime but in the second half it has been a very different story, with 12 Tigers turnovers, for 14 total. The most recent was a damaging turnover by otherwise solid Auburn guard Chad Baker-Mazara when he traveled while pump-faking a 3-pointer while down 74-68 with 53 seconds left.
Auburn has attempted two more field goals overall in this game, and that would have been a much bigger advantage — and thus, more opportunities to score — had they been able to trim those mistakes.
Is it too late for the Tigers?
Auburn trails 76-71 with 31 seconds to go. The Tigers just scored their first points in over three minutes thanks to a 3-pointer from Chad Baker-Mazara, but the Gators will have the ball when play resumes.
Walter Clayton willing Florida to the title game
Auburn went cold at the worst time
The Tigers went scoreless for over three minutes after cutting the score to 69-68.
In that time, the Gators have scored five points to take a 74-68 lead with 53.5 seconds to go.
Big swing of momentum for Florida
With less than three minutes to play, the Gators have maintained the resolve that has allowed them to pull ahead despite trailing at the half. The latest example was when Thomas Condon badly missed a free throw, but got back on defense in time to draw an offensive foul on Auburn star Johni Broome. The play led to a Gators basket on the other end by — who else? — Walter Clayton Jr., and a 71-68 lead with 2:24 to play.
Florida leads 69-68 with 3:28 to go
Big man alley oop!
Florida has taken the lead, 60-58
With 7:47 to play in the second half, Florida has come all the way back from its eight-point halftime deficit to take the lead behind Walter Clayton Jr.'s 24 points. He has been electric during this second half and has as many 3-pointers (four) as the entire Auburn roster.
It could be a worrisome sign for Auburn that they had the comeback-loving Gators on the ropes and couldn't put them away.
Auburn trying to summon its offense
Nearly nine minutes in, Auburn has scored only four field goals during this second half, which has allowed its lead to dwindle to 57-56 with 11:12 remaining. The Tigers are 4-of-11 from the field after halftime. To put their scoring issues in perspective, they've produced 11 points in the second half while Florida's Walter Clayton Jr. has 10 this half alone.
Walter Clayton Jr. is heating up
Florida guard Walter Clayton Jr., coming off a 30-point game in the Elite Eight, is up to 22 points on 8-of-12 shooting with 11:12 to go.
Clayton Jr. is shooting 4-of-6 from 3-point range and has been huge in the second half as the Gators have battled back from a nine-point deficit. Against Texas Tech one round ago, Clayton Jr. led a comeback with a barrage of late 3s.
Can he do it again against the Tigers?
Here come the Gators!
After Auburn pulled ahead late in the first half, the Gators have come storming back.
Florida has uncorked an 11-0 run in the first four minutes and change of the second half, taking a 51-49 lead with 15:30 to go in the second half.
The second half is under way
Florida comes out and scores immediately to begin the second half, trailing 46-40, before Auburn added a basket to regain its eight-point halftime lead. If this tournament has shown us anything it's not to underestimate Florida's ability to rally, so even though Auburn has held control of this game really since halfway through the first half, don't count out the Gators.
Halftime!
After a half of play Auburn leads Florida 46-38 and has led by as many as nine points. Each time the Tigers appeared to have opportunities to break the game open by even more, it seemed Florida star guard Walter Clayton Jr. answered with a critical basket to keep the Gators close.
Clayton scored a game-high 14 points, while Auburn star Johni Broome has 12 points. Auburn is shooting 51.5% to Florida's 44.4% shooting. Florida has work to do defensively, with zero steals.
Florida’s offense is cooling off
The Tigers have opened up a bit of a lead as the Gators’ offense is starting to struggle.
Florida missed six threes in a row before a Thomas Haugh make with a little over two minutes to go. As a team, the Gators’ shooting has fallen under 45% after hovering around 55% to start the game.
Up by six, Auburn has largest lead
Auburn took its biggest lead of the game so far when Denver Jones scored a layup with 4:25 before halftime to take a 33-27 lead. Florida came right back and scored on a secondary break when Walter Clayton Jr. made a nifty Eurostep for a layup to make the deficit a more manageable four points.
Florida's offense is sputtering
Four out of the Gators' last five possessions have failed to produce points and now they find themselves down 29-25 with 7:34 to play in the first half. I've been continually impressed by how Auburn big man Johni Broome influences plays defensively; he was everywhere from pressure on the perimeter to a block in the paint on a recent possession that led to a layup on the other end for Auburn.
The stars are pacing themselves so far
Florida guard Walter Clayton Jr. and Auburn big man Johni Broome have been two of the best players in the country this season. So far tonight, they’ve been steady but not yet spectacular.
Both Clayton Jr. and Broome have 6 points, and neither are the leading scorer on their team with about 10 minutes to go in the first half.
Clayton has hit two 3s, while Broome has also added two rebounds and a block.
At next timeout, Auburn leads 20-18
Chad Baker-Mazara of Auburn has a game-high eight points so far, with teammate Johni Broome, the SEC player of the year, also impactful from the outset with six points, a block and two rebounds. Since making their first three three-pointers, the Gators are 0-3 from deep.
So far, a back-and-forth matchup
With six lead changes less than six minutes into the game, Florida-Auburn has seen a fun start with both teams landing punches and Auburn leading, 16-14, at a timeout with 14:31 to go before halftime.
The teams have already combined to shoot 5-for-10 on 3-pointers, and that's pretty remarkable given the unique factor of playing inside such a large, domed stadium. As someone who got on the Final Four court in 2017 and got some shots up during media day, I can attest to how strange it is to initially shoot with such a deep background behind the basket.
Both teams are hot early
At the under-15 timeout, both Auburn and Florida are looking comfortable offensively.
The Gators are shooting 55.6% from the field compared to 54.5% for the Tigers. The teams have also combined to hit 5-of-10 shots from 3-point range. And on top of the hot shooting, there’s also been only one turnover between the two clubs.
The result has been some pretty satisfying back-and-forth action.
Florida-Auburn has tipped off
The first tournament meeting between these SEC rivals has begun. Both are veteran, both supported by stars. Who wins?
We're moments away from Florida-Auburn
The national anthem was just sung and starting lineups are minutes away.
Duke has arrived
These two standout centers started together in Africa before reuniting at the Final Four
Duke’s Khaman Maluach and Florida’s Rueben Chinyelu met at NBA Academy Africa, a hub for talented athletes throughout the continent. They used to dream of playing in the NCAA Tournament.
Florida has two reasons to celebrate Saturday
Not only are the Gators playing in the Final Four, but legendary coach Billy Donovan was announced as a member of the 2025 Basketball Hall of Fame class.
Houston's X factor
L.J. Cryer has already won a national championship with Baylor and his nearly 42 percent shooting on 3-pointers has injected badly needed offense into a Cougars team that has struggled to score in big moments under coach Kelvin Sampson. Cryer isn’t the biggest name left in the tournament, but he knows like few others left what it takes to win.
Why I'm worried about the Gators
With just one loss since Feb. 1, the Gators might be the most talented team left. They also might be the one most likely to drive up its fans’ blood pressure, having flirted with disaster already twice in the tournament while trailing Connecticut late in the Sweet 16 and Texas Tech by double digits in the final minutes of the Elite Eight. That they emerged victorious is a credit to their resiliency and the playmaking under pressure of stars like star guard Clayton Jr., but it’s a worry they were in that position to begin with.
Keep an eye on Florida's Walter Clayton Jr.
Clayton Jr. has been on an absolute heater so far this postseason. He scored 23 points in each of the Gators’ first two tournament games before dropping 30 in the Elite Eight. Clayton Jr.’s performance in Florida’s comeback win over Texas Tech was breathtaking, especially his late barrage of 3-pointers to seal it for the Gators.
When it comes to this time of year, I want to watch a player who can catch fire and shoot the lights out of the ball. Clayton Jr. fits the bill, and Auburn will have its hands full trying to slow him down.
Is it good or bad we got four No. 1 seeds?
For the past decade there hasn’t exactly been a dearth of lower-seed Cinderellas to make the Final Four, and college basketball’s best attribute is its parity. Now, I’ll step down from my soapbox to say this: That hasn’t always led to compelling games once in the Final Four, however. And this season, with Florida, Duke, Auburn and Houston all looking a cut above during various stretches, the best basketball outcome fans could have received was watching these strength-on-strength semifinals.
Who doesn’t want to watch Duke’s historically efficient offense try to solve Houston’s top-ranked defense, or Auburn’s veteran-laden roster (led by player of the year candidate Johni Broome) attempt to derail Florida’s special season?