Iowa Stuns Defending Champ Florida on Folgueiras’ Last-Second Three, Punches Ticket to Sweet 16
In the crucible of March, where legacies are forged and dreams are so often dashed, a wide-open look is a gift. For Iowa’s Alvaro Folgueiras, standing alone in the right corner of Amalie Arena with 4.5 seconds separating his team from euphoria or heartbreak, it was an offering he received with calm, collected hands. The shot splashed through the net, a sonic boom of nylon that silenced a pro-Florida crowd and ignited a Hawkeye celebration a quarter-century in the making. Ninth-seeded Iowa, under first-year coach Ben McCollum, had slain Goliath, toppling the defending national champion and top-seeded Florida Gators, 73-72, in a South Region second-round thriller that will be etched into NCAA Tournament lore.
The Final Sequence: A Masterstroke and a Miscue
The final ten seconds were a microcosm of March Madness: a brilliant tactical adjustment met by a desperate, crumbling response. Down one, Iowa ran a sideline out-of-bounds play that was pure deception. The action flowed to the top, drawing the Florida defense inward. Meanwhile, Folgueiras, a 42% three-point shooter, drifted unnoticed to the corner. The pass from Tavian Banks was perfect, and the release was pure. “We’ve repped that look a thousand times,” McCollum said postgame. “Alvaro is the guy we want in that spot. His feet were set, and he didn’t think. He just shot.”
Florida’s ensuing attempt was chaos. Star guard Xaivian Lee, who had 17 points, took the inbound and raced upcourt. With time expiring, he attempted a difficult pass to a cutting Thomas Haugh in the lane, but the connection failed. The ball skittered away as the buzzer sounded. “We wanted to attack the rim, maybe get a foul, but they clogged the lane,” a dejected Lee said. “I saw Tom, but the pass just… wasn’t there.” It was a stunning end for a Florida team that had dominated the glass all season but couldn’t secure the one possession that mattered most.
Key Performances and the Statistical Anomaly
Beyond the last shot, this game was a battle of wills and unexpected heroes. For Iowa, the victory was a testament to resilience, especially from their stars who struggled with their typical strengths.
- Tavian Banks was a powerhouse, leading all scorers with 20 points and six rebounds, attacking the rim against Florida’s formidable front line.
- Alvaro Folgueiras provided the iconic moment with his 14 points, but his clutch gene was the true difference.
- In a bizarre twist, sharpshooter Bennett Stirtz went 0-for-9 from deep yet still contributed 13 points by relentlessly driving to the basket.
- Forward Cooper Koch picked up the long-range slack, hitting four critical three-pointers for his 12 points.
For Florida, the loss highlighted a shocking failure in their identity. The Gators, who led the nation in rebounding, were only even with Iowa on the boards, 27-27. While Alex Condon was brilliant with 21 points and seven assists, and Thomas Haugh added 19 points, their interior dominance was neutralized. “That was the game,” Florida coach Todd Golden stated bluntly. “We didn’t own the glass. We didn’t get extra possessions. Against a team that skilled, you have to.”
McCollum’s Instant Impact and the Road Ahead
The architect of this upset, Ben McCollum, has performed a near-instantaneous culture shift in Iowa City. Taking the Hawkeyes to their first Sweet 16 since 1999, he has validated the program’s faith in him with a masterful tournament performance. His game plan—to muck up the game, limit Florida’s second chances, and trust his veterans in big moments—was executed flawlessly. “This group never flinches,” McCollum said, his voice hoarse from celebration. “We talk about being comfortable in the uncomfortable. That corner three with the season on the line? That’s as uncomfortable as it gets.”
The reward is a tantalizing intra-Big Ten showdown in Houston. The Hawkeyes will face No. 4 seed Nebraska, a familiar foe they split the regular-season series with. This adds a compelling layer of narrative: a conference battle on the sport’s biggest stage. Nebraska, known for its defensive physicality, will present a vastly different challenge than the athletic Gators. Iowa’s ability to adapt, and whether Stirtz can rediscover his shooting stroke, will be the central questions.
South Region Shakeup and Tournament Implications
Iowa’s upset has completely blown open the South Region. With the No. 1 seed gone, the path to the Final Four is suddenly viable for a host of teams, including No. 2 Marquette, No. 3 Kentucky, and now, a surging Iowa squad. The Hawkeyes have demonstrated they possess the two most critical elements for a March run: a go-to scorer in Banks and the ability to win a close, low-possession game against an elite opponent. Their confidence will be sky-high.
For Florida, the loss marks a bitter end to a title defense that fell just short. It also raises questions about their late-game execution, a flaw that will haunt them throughout the offseason. The Gators’ reign is over, dethroned by a team that simply made one more play.
Elsewhere in the Tournament: In other second-round action, No. 1 seed Arizona avoided the upset bug, dispatching a gritty No. 9 Utah State team, 78-66. The Wildcats used their superior size and athleticism to pull away in the second half, reminding everyone why they are a national championship contender. Their steady performance provided a stark contrast to the drama unfolding in Tampa.
Conclusion: The Beauty of a Single Shot
March is not always about the best team. It is about the team that is best in the moment. For 39 minutes and 55.5 seconds, Iowa and Florida waged a war of attrition, trading blows in a game featuring 14 lead changes. But history will remember the one shot that found Folgueiras alone. It will remember the poise of a team that refused to be intimidated by the defending champs’ pedigree. Ben McCollum’s Hawkeyes have not just reached the Sweet 16; they have announced their arrival as a legitimate threat in a region ripe for the taking. In Houston, they carry with them the belief that in March, one shot can change everything, and one game can make a season immortal.
Source: Based on news from Deadspin.
Image: CC licensed via obamawhitehouse.archives.gov
