HOUSTON — UCF coach Johnny Dawkins is hoping to turn the Knights into a perennial winner in much the same way as Houston coach Kelvin Sampson has elevated the Cougars.
- UCF defeated No. 8 Houston, the highest ranked team the Knights have ever beaten on the road
- Collin Smith scored 21 points and Tacko Fall added 13 points and 10 rebounds
- The win was UCF's first Quadrant One win for the team's NCAA Tournament resume
This will help.
Collin Smith scored 21 points, and UCF beat No. 8 Houston 69-64 on Saturday for its third consecutive victory.
“It’s a huge win for our program,” Dawkins said. “What Sampson has done here at Houston over the course of the past few years has been amazing. We want to represent our conference well, too, and we’re in the process of trying to build towards that. A game like this helps because you can see that it’s possible.”
UCF (22-6, 12-4 American Athletic) outscored Houston 41-31 in the second half to snap a seven-game losing streak against ranked opponents. The Knights also stopped Houston’s 33-game home winning streak, which was the longest in the nation.
The Cougars (27-2, 14-2) lost for the first time since Jan. 9 at Temple. It was their first home loss since March 15, 2017.
“We did a lot of things that were uncharacteristic for us tonight, but let’s give [UCF] some credit,” Sampson said. “Let’s not sit here and, ‘Woe is us,’ and feel sorry for ourselves. Central Florida came in here with a good plan and they beat us.”
Corey Davis Jr. led Houston with 19 points, and reserve DeJon Jarreau finished with 15.
UCF's 7-foot-6 center Tacko Fall had 13 points and 10 rebounds, and his defensive presence proved especially disruptive for Houston’s offense.
“When you’ve got a 7-6 guy sitting in the paint, it takes away a lot of what you want to do,” Davis said. “They made everything difficult for us.”
Sampson added that Fall “takes away half your playbook.”
Houston devoted extra attention to Fall on the defensive end, and Smith took advantage, making 8 of 15 shots and 4 of 5 free throws. Fall said rebounding and taking away Houston’s second-chance opportunities was a point of emphasis.
“We’re just trying to be aggressive as a group,” Fall said. “We knew we had to get it done on the defensive end. We battled, and the guys did a good job tonight.”
Houston led for much of the first half, but costly turnovers and strong defense from UCF kept the game close. The Cougars carried a 33-28 lead into halftime.
Houston was held scoreless for the first five minutes after the break, and an 11-0 run put the Knights in front.
The Cougars rallied to a 60-58 lead with less than two minutes remaining before UCF pulled away.
“We knew they were going to respond,” Dawkins said. “They’re too good of a team. We just had to make sure that when they went on that run, that we stayed poised and I thought we were able to slow down that momentum and were able to hang on.”