A Texas-sized Final Four of the tournament’s top seeds is set to tip off in San Antonio

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A Texas-sized Final Four of the tournament’s top seeds is set to tip off in San Antonio

Clockwise from top left: Florida, Houston, Duke and Auburn celebrate making it to the Final Four. Getty Images San Antonio CNN  — 

They say everything is bigger in Texas, so it’s only fitting that Saturday’s men’s Final Four in San Antonio is super-sized.

For the first time since 2008 – also played in San Antonio – and only the second time ever, the four No. 1 seeds have made it all the way to the season’s final weekend. In front of more than 60,000 fans in the Alamodome, two teams from the nation’s best conference, the sport’s best player and one of the best college coaches of his generation will all collide looking for the ultimate prize: A national championship.

The first game is an all-Southeastern Conference affair as Auburn and Florida face off at 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, their second matchup of the season. The winner of that game will face Duke or Houston, who face off at 8:50 p.m. ET Saturday. Both games will air on CBS.

The winners of the showdowns in the Alamo City will lead to one last showdown at 8:50 p.m. ET on Monday in the national championship game.

Auburn and Florida show off SEC’s college basketball dominance

It’s certainly been a campaign to remember for the SEC.

Traditionally, the southern sports world orbits around football but the 2024-25 season saw the SEC take over the mantle of best basketball conference in the nation. The two teams that can claim championships this year – Auburn in the regular season, Florida in the conference tournament – are the last two teams standing and will guarantee that a SEC team will be playing for a national title on Monday.

“It is clear that the SEC has had the best efficiency margin over any league the past 20 years, I believe,” said Todd Golden, Florida’s head coach. “The success that the league has had in the tournament has been pretty amazing. To your point, whether it’s us or Auburn, one of us is going to be playing for a national championship on Monday night. I think that speaks enough for itself.”


A Texas-sized Final Four of the tournament’s top seeds is set to tip off in San Antonio

Florida guard Walter Clayton Jr. drives the ball while being guarded by Texas Tech forward Darrion Williams on March 29. Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

The two top teams from that conference have taken very different routes to get to this point. Auburn had comfortable victories over Alabama State, Creighton, Michigan before a tougher Elite Eight test from Michigan State to get to San Antonio. Florida, meanwhile, has almost become the first top seed to be knocked out of the tournament on a couple different occasions – after rolling against Norfolk State, the Gators only just survived UConn in the round of 32 and faced another stern test in the Elite Eight with a survive-and-advance win over Texas Tech in which they trailed by double-digits at one point.

Florida’s recent run of success – winners of 10 straight games dating back to February 25 and 34-4 on the year – have Bruce Pearl feeling like his Auburn Tigers are the underdog, even if they’re the top overall seed in the tournament.

“We’re probably considered the fourth best team here right now,” Pearl said Thursday. “There is nothing new. I prefer the underdog role rather than having to prove that we’re as good as we say we are. So, we’re going to take that underdog role into the Final Four and see if we can capitalize on it.”

The only other time these two intraconference foes faced each other this season was on February 8 when the Gators went into Auburn’s home arena and ended the Tigers’ 14-game winning streak.

Led by Walter Clayton Jr. and Alijah Martin, who played in the Final Four with Florida Atlantic University two years ago, the Gators will look to use their high-flying offense that averages 85 points per game to outrun the Tigers. But Auburn has the SEC player of the year in Johni Broome and an offense that can hang with the Gators.


A Texas-sized Final Four of the tournament’s top seeds is set to tip off in San Antonio

Auburn forward Johni Broome celebrates against Michigan State on March 30. Alex Slitz/Getty Images

Usually late-season tournament matchups between conference foes lead to coaches having a quiet confidence. The level of familiarity that teams build with each other during the conference season usually gives coaches or players enough of an insight on how to beat each other.

Golden told reporters that he’s feeling good about the Gators’ chance to get by the Tigers one more time.

“Our teams know each other really well at this point. We are going to show these guys what we call our keys in personnel probably three more times before the ball goes in the air,” Golden said. “I would venture to guess Will (Richard, senior guard) could tell you player by player right now the tendencies that each of these Auburn players have, what they like to run, whether it is out of bounds, halfcourt, on the sidelines. That’s more of us as coaches covering our butts saying you were prepared to do these things.

“We have to play hard, defend well, be physical, rebound well, we have to be strong with the ball and take care of it, just do the things we’ve done all year to make us really, really consistent. The great thing is we have shot-makers on the team, and you have to make shots to win the game.”

Pearl said he’s not exactly feeling that way, saying he feels like Florida is playing the best basketball of the teams left in the tournament.

“I’ve seen enough Florida tape to make me sick,” he said Friday with a smile. “They’re really good.”

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