Houston clamps down on Tennessee, clinching return to Final Four

INDIANAPOLIS — LJ Cryer delivered 17 points, seven rebounds and four assists as No. 1 seed Houston dominated early and pulled away late for a 69-50 victory over No. 2 Tennessee in the Midwest Region final Sunday.

The Cougars (34-4) claimed their first Final Four berth since 2021 by throttling the Vols with the nation’s best defense. Houston’s man-to-man harassed Tennessee into missing its first 14 3-point attempts — and 22 of its first 27 shots overall — to build a 22-point lead that never got smaller than 10.

Houston’s quest for its first NCAA title-game appearance since 1984 will continue Saturday in San Antonio against Duke. The only other meeting between the Blue Devils and Cougars came in last year’s Sweet Sixteen — when Duke claimed a 54-51 win in Dallas.

Emanuel Sharp scored 11 of his 16 points in the final 10 minutes for Houston, which never trailed. The Cougars won the boards by a 42-35 margin while forcing Tennessee into 28.8 percent shooting from the field and 5 of 29 from 3-point range.

Jordan Gainey produced 17 points off the bench and Chaz Lanier added 17 to pace Tennessee (30-8), which came one step shy of its first Final Four appearance for the second year in a row.

When Zakai Zeigler finally cashed a 3-pointer with 39 seconds left in the first half — ending their 0-for-14 start from long range — the pro-Tennessee crowd issued a muted mixture of roars, exhales and Bronx cheers.

Houston carried a 34-15 lead into halftime, which inspired Tennessee to start pressing full-court to force the action.

Gainey did his best to get the Vols back into it — drilling a 3-pointer, a putback, a driving scoop and another 3-pointer in a 2:23 stretch — to slice Houston’s lead to 44-30 with 13:19 to go.

The Vols got as close as 50-40 on Darlinstone Dubar’s free throw with 5:42 left. Sharp answered 13 seconds later with a triple.

Gainey slashed to the hoop, but rimmed his lefty layup. Sharp and Mylik Wilson responded with 3-pointers to boost the lead to 59-42 with 4:04 to play and send some Tennessee fans to the exits — ignoring the reminder by the public address announcer about the severe weather and tornado watch blanketing the Indianapolis area like the Houston defense.