Dan Hurley downplays headbutting ref after UConn's win vs. Duke: 'Thought he was coming over to chest-bump me'
· Yahoo Sports
On the court, UConn coach Dan Hurley is an emotional and animated guy. But some fans thought Hurley took things too far following UConn’s last-second win over Duke in the Elite Eight.
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Following Braylon Mullins’ buzzer-beat to put UConn up 73-72 with just 0.3 seconds left, cameras captured a weird exchange between Hurley and official Roger Ayers. In the clip, Hurley appeared to get in Ayers’ face, with both men butting heads on the sideline.
this angle is crazy. Hurley is a physcopath lmaooo pic.twitter.com/6MOrv4Akp1
— E.A.🤴🏾 (@crashoutking1) March 30, 2026
After seeing the exchange, some wondered why Hurley was not charged with a technical foul, as making contact with an official can lead to both a penalty and ejection for coaches. Hurley, who was ejected from a loss vs. Marquette earlier in the season after making contact with an official, was certainly aware that was the case.
But Hurley said everyone who has seen the clip has it all wrong. As the coach explained during an appearance on “The Triple Option” podcast, he believed Ayers was going in for a chest-bump, which resulted in the strange interaction.
Hurley’s full comments read:
"Really, at that point in the game we had it won, and he’s such an easy guy to work with during the game, I thought he was coming over to chest-bump me and celebrate the shot. It’s not like that for me with him. My experience with him has been, we haven’t won every game. I haven’t agreed with every call. So that was in no way me going at a ref like I’ve been at their throat the whole game. There were other points in the game where I had my arm around him walking out of a timeout. We were cracking jokes and laughing.”
At that point, Hurley said it wasn’t like the situation at Marquette, where he implied he deserved to be penalized for his actions. He then turned the conversation back to the Duke game, saying he was being carried by the “emotion of the shot” during his moment with Ayers. When asked if they were sharing that moment, Hurley clarified that Ayers was coming up to inform Hurley that there was still some time left on the clock.
Given the narrow margin of victory, a technical foul on Hurley in that moment could have been catastrophic for UConn. That, obviously, didn’t happen and UConn advanced to the Final Four, where it will take on Illinois on Saturday.
While Hurley will move on to the Final Four, Ayers won’t be able to say the same. Despite being a veteran official with multiple years of Final Four experience under his belt, Ayers was not chosen to work during the Final Four. It’s unclear whether his interaction with Hurley played a role in that decision.