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NCAA championship: UConn wins fifth national title capping dominant March Madness with rout of San Diego State

What seemed inevitable became reality Monday night at NRG Stadium as UConn completed its dominant march to the top of college basketball with a 76-59 win over San Diego State in the national championship game. The No. 4 seed Huskies earned their fifth title in program history by suffocating the No. 5 seed Aztecs' offense and systematically finding good looks against SDSU's typically strong defense. 

In the end, they were required to hold off a vigorous San Diego State rally in the second half in what amounted to the toughest challenge the Huskies faced in the Big Dance.

The win draws UConn even with Duke and Indiana in a tie for fourth place in the race for most titles in men's college basketball history. All of the Huskies' championships have come in the past 25 years, extending UConn's edge as the most-decorated program of the past quarter-century.

Over that span, the Huskies have now won titles with three different coaches as Dan Hurley joined predecessors Kevin Ollie and Jim Calhoun in taking UConn to the sport's zenith. Eight players from the roster he constructed following last season's first-round exit from the NCAA Tournament were part of Monday's rotation, and each of them scored in the first half alone as the Huskies built an early 16-point lead.

San Diego State used several big runs late in the second half to cut UConn's lead down to as little as five points. But UConn responded at every turn and flipped a switch when its lead fell to 60-55, rattling off a 9-0 run to put the game out of reach.

Here are three takeaways as UConn is back atop the college basketball mountain. 

1. UConn shows its mettle

San Diego State came out of the gates hot on Monday and immediately put UConn on its heels, but UConn responded to go up 12 at halftime. The Aztecs mounted a big run late to cut the lead to five points, but each time UConn was seemingly cornered and facing the heat, it responded with resounding excellency, including an impressive 9-0 run fueled by a Jordan Hawkins 3-pointer after SDSU chopped its deficit to five points.

"Coach drew something up for me, so I knew he trusted me to take that shot," said Hawkins. "I had the easy part. All credit to my teammates for getting me open and for coach in trusting me."

2. SDSU fights to the end

Championship-level resiliency would not have been required of UConn on Monday if San Diego State did not demand it. SDSU trailed big for much of the second half and could not consistently string together good-enough offense to pull off the upset, but it had big stretches where it made the Huskies work for it. UConn's length and size disrupted the Aztecs' rhythm in a big way -- they finished 3-of-10 shooting on layups -- but to close the deficit to five late despite all its struggles speaks to the fortitude this team has played with all season.

"They were great offensively," said SDSU coach Brian Dutcher. "Eventually, they made a timely basket or two, we didn't. Their length bothered us around the rim. They had their way with the entire field this tournament. ... We don't give in, though. I like the grit of my team."

3. Elite territory for the Huskies

How's this for a stat? UConn finishes the season with a 17-point win, giving it 17 wins on the season against non-Big East foes -- all of which came by double figures. In the process, it became the first team of the modern era to win all six NCAA Tournament games by at least a 13-point margin.

The win also gave UConn its fifth men's basketball national championship and improved it to 5-0 (!) in national championship game appearances. It helps the Huskies draw even with Duke and Indiana for the fourth-most all-time national championships with five and gives them the most this century, with four of their five coming since 2004.

"Dream come true for all of us," said Hurley after the game. "This was our vision, this was our dream. It feels great to come through on promises made to players and the university."

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Live updates
 
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UConn does it

Final: UConn 76, San Diego State 59

For the fifth time in the past 25 years, UConn is college basketball's national champion. The Huskies got a scare from San Diego State, which cut the deficit to six points in the second half after facing a 36-24 halftime deficit. But in the end, UConn was just too dominant to fail in this NCAA Tournament. With the win, the Huskies won all six games in the Big Dance by double-digits. Jordan Hawkins, Tristen Newton and Adama Sanogo were each in double figures for UConn tonight.

 
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UConn goes up double digits

After a sluggish start in which it fell behind by four points in the early going, UConn has raced out to a 22-12 lead -- its largest of the game -- as SDSU struggles to generate offense. UConn doing a really good job of forcing the Aztecs out of rhythm, and SDSU misses some pretty easy looks has exacerbated things. Could get into dangerous territory in a hurry here if SDSU doesn't pick it up. 

 
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SDSU ice cold

UConn's defense has stepped up in a big way after a sluggish start. SDSU hasn't scored since it made a jumper at the 16:32 mark. That's a drought of more than six minutes and counting, happening while UConn makes a 10-0 run.

 
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Fast start from San Diego State

This was what we were keeping a close eye on tonight. Can SDSU start hot and put UConn on its heels? The Aztecs have been notoriously slow starters but famously brilliant in clutch time. So far, so good for SDSU on that front in the early going.

 
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Jim Nantz's final pregame introduction

The backdrop to tonight's season finale: CBS legend Jim Nantz is calling his last Final Four game with the network. He signed on with his legendary, "Hello, friends," introduction, as expected.

Can't wait to see what he has in store tonight.

 
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National Championship game on deck

Just minutes away from tipoff now. It will be No. 4 seed UConn squaring off against No. 5 seed San Diego State on Monday night in Houston with one of those teams cutting down the nets. There's a lot at play here for both teams, coaches and programs. UConn is looking for its fifth national championship since 1999 but first since 2014, while San Diego State is playing for the school's first men's basketball national championship and had not even made the Final Four prior to this season. 

 
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Charles Barkley picking underdog

In a nod to Lee Corso, Charles Barkley puts on some SDSU gear and picks the Aztecs on the CBS set to take down UConn tonight. He says he thinks UConn is the better team but feels like there's something special about SDSU.

 
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How San Diego State got here

Brian Dutcher has been a college basketball coach since before the sport had a 3-point line. He won a national title as an assistant at Michigan, has coached players who became NBA All-Stars and has won nearly 77% of his games in six seasons as SDSU's coach. But when it came down to arguably the most critical coaching decision of the Aztecs' 72-71 win over FAU in the Final Four on Saturday, there were no decades-old coaching philosophies going through his mind. When Dutcher opted not to use his team's last timeouts in the final seconds before Lamont Butler's game-winning buzzer-beater, the reasoning was really quite simple.

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