The UCF Knights suffered an 81-57 defeat to top-seeded Arizona in the Big 12 tournament quarterfinals on March 12, ending their conference run with a 21-11 record. Despite the loss, the team strengthened its NCAA Tournament resume through key wins and strong metrics. Selection Sunday will determine if UCF secures an at-large bid.
The UCF Knights entered the Big 12 tournament with momentum from a late comeback victory over Cincinnati but faced a formidable challenge against Arizona at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. Arizona quickly established dominance, building a 27-point lead in the first half en route to an 81-57 win. Fifth-year point guard Themus Fulks led UCF with 14 points but struggled with six turnovers. Senior guard Riley Kugel was limited to 14 minutes due to foul trouble, while sophomore center John Bol left with a chest injury.
UCF's overall performance this season provides a solid case for an NCAA Tournament at-large bid. The Knights secured five Quadrant 1 victories per NCAA NET rankings, including a neutral-site win over Cincinnati and triumphs against ranked teams Kansas, Texas Tech, and BYU during Big 12 play. They also defeated Texas A&M in November as part of an 11-1 non-conference start, tying a program record with three ranked wins in a season.
In Quadrant 2 games, UCF posted a 6-3 record, highlighted by home wins over TCU and Cincinnati. The team avoided losses in the bottom quadrants but was swept by Oklahoma State and West Virginia in the regular season. ESPN ranks UCF 37th in strength of record.
Offensively, UCF ranks 38th nationally in adjusted efficiency at 121.3 points per 100 possessions, according to KenPom. They average 81.5 points per game (sixth in the Big 12), shoot 46.9% from the field (seventh), and 37.1% from three (third). However, three-point shooting faltered in the tournament, with only 6 of 45 attempts made. Anchored by senior Jamichael Stillwell and John Bol, UCF grabs 12.2 offensive rebounds per game for second-chance opportunities.
Projections vary: ESPN's Joe Lunardi lists UCF among the last four byes, USA Today as a 10-seed, and CBS Sports as an 11-seed. CBS insider Jon Rothstein called this the worst bubble in his experience, noting that potential competitors like Stanford, California, SMU, Virginia Tech, Texas, Oklahoma State, and Indiana exited their tournaments early.