March Madness earned its name all over again on Sunday night. In what will be remembered as one of the greatest games in NCAA Tournament history, the No. 2 seed UConn Huskies erased a 19-point deficit and stunned the No. 1 overall seed Duke Blue Devils 73-72 on a breathtaking buzzer-beating 3-pointer from freshman Braylon Mullins.

With 0.4 seconds left on the clock and the basketball world watching, Mullins launched a 35-foot prayer that swished through the net, sending UConn to the Final Four and ending Duke’s magical season in the most heartbreaking fashion imaginable.

How It Happened: From 19 Down to Final Four Bound

Duke looked absolutely dominant in the first half. Led by National Player of the Year front-runner Cameron Boozer, the Blue Devils built a commanding 44-25 lead and appeared to be cruising toward a Final Four berth. UConn’s offense was ice cold, and Duke’s defense was suffocating every Huskies possession.

But college basketball has a way of humbling even the most dominant teams.

UConn stormed back in the second half, outscoring Duke 44-28 behind the relentless energy of center Tarris Reed Jr., who finished with a team-high 26 points. The Huskies chipped away possession by possession, cutting the lead from 19 to 11 with just under eight minutes remaining. Then came a flurry of clutch 3-pointers in the final four minutes that brought the Connecticut faithful to their feet.

The Shot Heard Around the World

Even with the momentum firmly on UConn’s side, Duke still held a 72-70 lead with 10 seconds left and the ball. The Blue Devils were seconds away from advancing. Then chaos struck.

On the inbounds play, Cayden Boozer’s pass was tipped and stolen by none other than Braylon Mullins — the same freshman who had been 0-for-4 from beyond the arc all night. After a quick hit-ahead pass and return, Mullins caught the ball near the half-court logo, took one dribble, and let it fly from 35 feet.

Nothing but net. UConn 73, Duke 72. Pandemonium.

Mullins’ shot landed fittingly just to the right of the “Madness” lettering on the court — because that is exactly what this was. Pure, unadulterated March Madness at its finest.

A Historic Collapse for Duke

The loss is devastating for Duke and Cameron Boozer, who finished his final college game with 27 points, eight rebounds, and four assists. Before Sunday night, No. 1 seeds held an all-time record of 134-0 in the NCAA Tournament when leading by 15 or more points at halftime. UConn shattered that perfect record.

The 19-point comeback is now tied for the third largest in Elite Eight history or later in the tournament, cementing this game as an instant classic.

The 2026 Final Four Is Set

With UConn’s dramatic victory, the men’s Final Four field in Indianapolis is now complete. Here are the four teams heading to the national semifinals on Saturday, April 5:

This marks UConn’s third Final Four appearance in the last four seasons, continuing their dynasty-level run under head coach Dan Hurley.

The FixItWhy Take

We have watched a lot of March Madness basketball over the years, and this UConn-Duke game belongs in the conversation for the greatest tournament game ever played. Braylon Mullins went from an 0-for-4 shooting night to hitting the biggest shot of the 2026 tournament — and possibly of the entire decade.

What makes this moment truly special is that it was not supposed to happen. Duke had control, the stats were in their favor, and 134 teams before UConn had failed in that exact same position. Sometimes sports give us moments that defy logic, and Mullins’ 35-footer was exactly that.

Keep your eyes on UConn in the Final Four. A team that can come back from 19 down against the best team in the country is a team that believes it can beat anyone. And right now, that belief might just be enough.

Stay locked in with FixItWhy for all your March Madness coverage, scores, and analysis as we head into Final Four weekend.