Sunday, April 5, 2026
Fittingly, Karaban’s grand finale comes on the stage it was meant for
Saturday, April 4, 2026
Demary uses his sword to extend UConn’s season another night with another clutch play late
UConn one step away from immortality after outlasting Illinois to reach national title game
Friday, April 3, 2026
UConn needed a warrior, but has received all that and more from Demary as Huskies return to Final Four
Thursday, April 2, 2026
Reloaded Illinois has earned UConn’s respect as Huskies and Illini prepare to face off again
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Two iconic shots for one iconic program: Bob Heussler relives Tate George and shares perspective on Braylon Mullins
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
This UConn Final Four run is particularly validating for Hurley and Karaban after last season’s disappointment
Monday, March 30, 2026
Tarris Reed’s legend grows with 26-point performance to send UConn to Final Four
By Sam Federman (@Sam_Federman)
WASHINGTON — It has become somewhat of a bit between Dan Hurley, Tarris Reed, Jr., and the UConn fanbase to refer to the big man as different types of bears based on how he plays.
Hurley famously implored the fanbase to send Reed pictures of Kodiak bears last season, looking to inspire a level of play and spirit only rivaled by that of the vicious beast.
This NCAA Tournament has brought out the best in Reed, and he capped it off Sunday night with another masterpiece, amassing 26 points, nine rebounds, four blocks, three assists to pace the Huskies. He kept UConn within reason during the first half, when nothing else was going the team’s way, and was a steady presence throughout the comeback in the second.
Braylon Mullins’ ridiculous game-winning three-pointer stole the headlines, but it doesn’t happen without Reed’s day. And the Huskies aren’t in position to play the game that ended with a 73-72 win over top-seeded Duke if not for Reed’s performances in the previous three games as well.
“It could be my last college basketball game,” Reed said. “And they were just like, ‘go for it all.’ Coach told us before the game, ‘you've got to swing for the fences, go as hard as you can.’”
And on a hope and a prayer, Reed’s 134th college basketball game, played across four years between two at Michigan and two at UConn, will not be his last. He earned the right to lace up the sneakers and put on the Husky uniform one more time, when UConn takes on Illinois in the Final Four on Saturday in Indianapolis.
In the opening minutes of the game, Reed was the one who got the UConn offense going. He backed down Maliq Brown on the first possession of the game, drawing a quick foul and getting to the line. When Duke scored seven points in a row, Reed calmed the Huskies down by getting to his right-hand hook shot.
Reed showed off how deep his post-scoring bag is. His footwork and spin moves, which have given him greater post versatility this season, continued to create opportunities for the Huskies. Regardless of whether Duke put Brown, Cameron Boozer, or Patrick Ngongba on him, if UConn found a way to get Reed the ball in the post, he would find a way to score. He was the only one who did for much of the first half, scoring 12 of UConn’s first 16 points after receiving a pass on a cut, and cut the Duke lead to six points at the second media timeout.
It’s been like this all tournament long. Reed had 31 points and 27 rebounds in the opener against Furman, and another double-double against UCLA in the second round. He dominated Michigan State’s vaunted frontcourt duo of Jaxon Kohler and Carson Cooper with 20 points, also dishing out four assists.
But UConn’s defense demanded changes late in the first half, as doubling Boozer kept leading to open Duke threes. So Dan Hurley put Reed on Boozer, and he picked up his second foul. He sat much of the last 5:27 of the half.
The Huskies didn’t lay down and die, but needed Reed back in the game. And he delivered when he returned. He kept destroying one-on-ones and got multiple layups and dunks off of slips, but it alone wouldn’t be enough to bring the Huskies back.
They needed more. And when Duke started sending doubles, it came.
“Being able to take my time and see the whole floor,” Reed said. “Knowing I had a high production in the first half, knowing they were going to collapse on me in the post, and like I said, trust my shooters and trust the guys around me. Eventually, guys were going to knock down shots.”
And they did. Reed dished to a cutting Alex Karaban off the double for his first points of the game, then hit Silas Demary, Jr. on the weak side to break the seal for the first three of the second half, cutting Duke’s lead to seven with seven minutes to play.
But Reed’s two biggest plays came on the defensive end. He turned Duke over with a steal, deflecting a pass with about 12 minutes left, a run-out to cut the lead to ten. Then, with a minute left, down by four, he changed the math again.
One-on-one with Boozer at the top of the key, and the Blue Devils trying to run their patented 4-2 ball screen that won them games against Florida, St. John’s, and others throughout the year, Reed didn’t bite. He fought through the screen and poked the ball free from Boozer’s hands, setting up Karaban’s huge three to cut the lead to one.
“I think maybe just a guy like Tarris Reed just elevating his game for this tournament and changing his legacy,” Hurley said. “Changing his trajectory put himself, I think, in position now to walk away from this tournament. It looks like he's playing himself into the first round (of the NBA Draft).”
Boozer and Reed each had big games, but it was Reed coming out on top. And it was Reed standing front and center on the podium, leading the Huskies team in saluting its band and fans, chanting “Welcome to the Doghouse.”
The doghouse is going to the Final Four. With two more chances to build an immortal legacy.