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Sports

Arizona Shatters UConn’s Fortress: Wildcats End Huskies’ 36-Game Nonconference Home Win Streak

Last updated: November 20, 2025 1:56 am
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Arizona Shatters UConn’s Fortress: Wildcats End Huskies’ 36-Game Nonconference Home Win Streak
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Arizona Wildcats broke the spell in Storrs, toppling No. 3 UConn and ending the Huskies’ 36-game nonconference home winning streak with a gutsy 71-67 win—instantly reshaping the narrative of this NCAA season and igniting debate about who really owns the national title path.

Wednesday night in Storrs, Connecticut, wasn’t just another early-season battle between two top-5 powers. It was the collision of a rising heavyweight with a champion’s legacy on the line. The No. 4 Arizona Wildcats handed No. 3 UConn Huskies a gut-wrenching 71-67 defeat, halting the nation’s longest nonconference home winning streak at 36 games and igniting seismic ripples across college basketball’s landscape.

How Arizona Seized the Moment

Trailing late to a battle-hardened Huskies squad, Jaden Bradley delivered a signature performance, pouring in 21 points—including a crucial layup with just 16 seconds remaining to cement Arizona’s upset. The Wildcats pieced together a relentless 7-0 run in the closing minutes, overturning a two-point deficit and asserting a champion’s poise against a UConn program accustomed to home dominance.

Big man Motiejus Krivas made his presence felt at both ends, logging 9 points and a punishing 14 rebounds. His jumper in the lane with just over a minute to go proved to be the death blow—and the centerpiece of a 43-23 rebounding landslide that gave Arizona control of the game’s tempo and emotional stakes.

  • Koa Peat stood tall in his national spotlight debut with a 16-point, 12-rebound double-double.
  • Arizona shot a blistering 51.9% in the second half—showcasing a balanced, multi-pronged attack that never wilted under UConn’s pressure.
  • Defensive execution and poise at the free-throw line (especially by Tobe Akawa in the clutch) closed the door on any last-gasp UConn surge.

UConn’s Streak Ends—Why It Matters

For nearly four full seasons, the Huskies’ home gym was an impenetrable fortress for nonconference visitors. The 36-game streak—among the nation’s best—served as a badge of honor, and a warning to both blue bloods and upstarts alike.

The significance of Arizona’s win extends far beyond a spot in the victory column. It’s a proof of concept for Coach Tommy Lloyd’s squad and raises the ceiling for a program that already boasted two previous wins against ranked opponents this year.

  • Shattering the nation’s longest nonconference home streak signals that Arizona’s roster is not just elite on paper—it’s battle tested under hostile conditions.
  • For UConn, the loss spotlights lineup vulnerabilities (notably the absence of starting center Tarris Reed Jr.), inconsistent late-game execution, and a need to recalibrate before conference play heats up.
  • Fans and analysts will now debate whether UConn’s early-season rankings truly reflect their depth—or if Arizona has leapfrogged into the Tier 1 national title debate.

Inside the Game: Key Swings and Tactical Turning Points

The contest was a see-saw from the jump, featuring five ties and eight lead changes in a tense first half. UConn erased an early Arizona run with a 6-0 barrage and briefly seized momentum behind Solo Ball (14 points), but perimeter shooting woes (1-of-8 from three) kept the Huskies from building separation.

Arizona’s 18-7 burst to open the second half flipped the script: the Wildcats pressed the glass, forced fouls, and rebuilt a double-digit cushion. While UConn’s Eric Reibe (team-high 15 points) and Silas Demary Jr. (13 points) clawed back to reclaim a late lead, clutch shotmaking from Krivas and steady free-throw shooting sealed Arizona’s upset.

A New National Narrative—And What Comes Next

Arizona’s hallmark under Lloyd—efficient offense, relentless rebounding, and cold-blooded finishes—was on full display. Looking ahead:

  • With three ranked wins before December, Arizona is fast building a tournament résumé that could land them a No. 1 seed if they continue this trajectory.
  • UConn must regroup and get healthy; their depth will be tested as the target on their backs grows ever larger.
  • The national conversation shifts: Is this Arizona’s year to return to the Final Four, or is UConn still the team to beat once at full strength?

Even the Fans Are Buzzing—And the Stakes Just Got Higher

Across social networks, debate is raging. Was this merely an early-season stumble for UConn, or has Arizona thrown down the gauntlet as college basketball’s new standard-bearer? The performance of freshmen like Peat and the defensive glass dominance points to greater upside for the Wildcats, while Huskies fans now question if their streak masked deeper issues.

As injuries, shooting slumps, and roster rotations take center stage in the coming months, this result is sure to be a talking point when Selection Sunday arrives—and in every fan forum and group chat until then.

For round-the-clock, passionate, and authoritative analysis of every game that shapes the championship race, keep your screen locked to onlytrustedinfo.com—your definitive source for college basketball’s biggest stories and sharpest insights.

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