Sports·MEN'S MARCH MADNESS

Defending champion UConn returns to Final 4 with rout of Illinois, will face Alabama

Defending national champion UConn powered its way back into the men's Final Four behind a 30-0 run led by Donovan Clingan, who finished with 22 points and 10 rebounds as the Huskies crushed Illinois 77-52 on Saturday night in Boston.

Crimson Tide beat Clemson to reach men's Final 4 for 1st time

A male basketball player wearing number 35 dunks the ball as a defender wearing number 33 looks on during a game inside an arena filled with fans.
UConn forward Samson Johnson dunks as Illinois forward Coleman Hawkins looks on during the first half of UConn's 77-52 win in the Elite Eight round of the NCAA men's tournament in Boston. (Steven Senne/The Associate Press)

Thirty points in a row — that's quite a run.

The NCAA men's tournament streak UConn is putting together is pretty, pretty impressive, too.

The defending national champions scored 30 straight points to power their way back to the Final Four on Saturday night in Boston, steamrolling Illinois 77-52 — a March Madness record 10th straight double-digit victory for the top-seeded Huskies.

Donovan Clingan had 22 points, 10 rebounds and five blocked shots, and UConn scored the first 25 points of the second half to turn a five-point lead into a blowout. The Huskies, who cruised to their fifth national title last year, seem inexorably headed for a sixth: Their NCAA Tournament wins this year have come by 39, 17, 30 and 25 points.

"We're going to be tough to beat," UConn coach Dan Hurley said. "It was a special level of basketball that we were playing."

Actor Bill Murray, whose son, Luke, is a Huskies assistant coach, watched the game from a courtside seat and took video of the post-game celebration, where his grandchildren were showered with confetti. "Curb Your Enthusiasm" star Larry David was also part of a heavily partisan crowd the Huskies (35-3) called "Storrs North" for the East Region games that were played about 90 miles from campus.

UConn, which won the Big East Tournament at Madison Square Garden and advanced to the Sweet 16 in Brooklyn, will now get on an airplane for the first time in almost a month and head to the Final Four outside of Phoenix. It will face West Region champion Alabama, which advanced with an 89-82 victory over Clemson later Saturday night.

The Huskies, who set a school record for victories in a season, are the first defending champs to make it back to the national semifinals since Florida won back-to-back titles in 2006 and '07.

That's still a possibility for UConn, too.

"It's not about really trying to win No. 6 or go back-to back," Hurley said. "It's this time of year, you love your team and you can't imagine what it would be like to not get up the next day and still coach your team. It's what you learn when you win the way we've won: It really is about the work, the journey, the process."

Marcus Domask scored 17 points — 15 in the first half — for Illinois (29-9), and star Terrence Shannon Jr. was held to eight points on 2-of-12 shooting. Shannon, who scored 29 points in Thursday night's Sweet 16 victory over Iowa State and played much of the season while facing a rape charge in Kansas, snapped a string of 41 straight games scoring in double digits.

Montreal's Quincy Guerrier added seven points and four rebounds for Illinois.

Illinois, which had the most efficient offence in the country this season, shot 25 per cent (17 of 67) and scored a season-low 52 points.

Cam Spencer had his first career double-double, scoring 11 points with 12 rebounds for UConn, which reached the Elite Eight with a 30-point win over San Diego State on Thursday night. Hassan Diarra scored 11 and Alex Karaban had 10 points for the Huskies.

Clingan's dominance

But the big problem for third-seeded Illinois was the seven-foot-two Clingan.

The Fighting Illini (29-9) managed just four points in the first half when Clingan was in the game, with the Connecticut native recording nine points, six rebounds and three blocks before the break. Overall, they were 0 for 19 on shots challenged by Clingan.

"We were getting the same shots we've always gotten, and Clingan erased a few of them," Illinois coach Brad Underwood said. "He's good. I mean, doesn't everybody have him projected in the (NBA) lottery or close to it? He does a great job of protecting the rim."

The Illini had several lengthy scoring droughts, falling behind 9-0 and failing to score before the first media timeout; they was shut out again between the under-12 minute break and the one that came under 8 minutes, missing 11 shots in a row. Still, they trailed only 28-23 at the half.

That's when things really fell apart.

Illinois missed its first 14 shots of the second — 17 misses in a row, in all. The 30-0 UConn run lasted for the last 1:49 of the first half and the first 7:19 of the second.

"I didn't expect that. But tons of credit to UConn," Underwood said. "I thought we were in a good spot at half, especially after the slow start. ... We obviously came out in the second half and got blitzed."

By the time Clingan took a break with 14:35 to play, the Huskies led by 23. On the next Illinois possession, Samson Johnson — who subbed in for Clingan — blocked Shannon under the basket and finished the fast break at the other end with a layup that gave UConn a 48-23 lead.

"It felt like no shots were going in. And it felt like they were getting out in transition and scoring every single time," Illinois forward Coleman Hawkins said. "You look up, and you're still at 23."

With files from CBC Sports

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