WATCH: Todd Golden locker room interview after UF wins national title

SAN ANTONIO — The Florida Gators are national champions for the first time in 18 years after their 65-63 comeback win over Houston on Monday night in the NCAA Tournament Final. At 39, UF’s Todd Golden is the youngest head coach to win the title since Jim Valvano in 1983.
The Gators rallied from a 12-point second-half deficit to claim their third national championship (2006, 2007). Florida’s 36 wins match the program record set in 2013-14. Here’s everything Golden said after the game and his postgame interview from the team locker room.
Todd Golden Q&A
Opening statement
TODD GOLDEN: It’s a heck of an accomplishment. I’m super proud of everybody in my program, top to bottom. My staff, been together for three years, worked incredibly hard to help get our players to this point. Our players, they’ve been the difference all the way along. Been incredibly consistent all year. Have worked with a great work ethic. Obviously, we have an incredibly talented group, one of the most talented groups individually in America. I do think what separates us and has separated us all season long is our team talent, how our guys have played together and for each other all year. Because of that, we can call each other national champions for the rest of our lives.
On being only national champion in the last 20 years to come back from a nine-point deficit or more:
TODD GOLDEN: Our guys have been really good all year staying the course. In this tournament, especially after the first round, every team you play is going to be really, really, really good. You have to have the mental toughness to be able to withstand a little adversity. We played an incredible UConn team that was used to winning in the second round. Had to get through that one. Obviously Texas Tech, great program. Had to find a way to come back and beat them. Obviously Auburn. The best team in America most of the year in the semifinal. There’s going to be times of adversity trying to fight back in those games. Those are all great teams.
Obviously, Houston is a class act, amazing program, Hall of Fame head coach, super, super tough student-athletes. Our guys knew that it wasn’t going to be easy. Didn’t panic when it got tough. As Will talked about, they did a great job of never getting too high, never getting too low. When we went down 12 in the second half, we stayed the course. We didn’t point fingers, didn’t start to try to make hero plays, gambling defensively. We got rewarded because of that toughness that we displayed.
On the toughness UF showed throughout the game and down the stretch:
TODD GOLDEN: We’ve gotten a lot of credit for our offense because we’ve been so explosive all year, been one of if not the top two offenses in America all year. We’ve been a top 10 defense all year also. We’ve been able to stand up against really good offensive teams and find a way to get stops. I thought Houston got the better of us in the first half. It was really just a disparity in the turnover count. We had nine, I think they had two in the first half. As I look here, we had four in the second, they had seven. Our defense won us the game tonight. We got nine straight stops in the middle of the second half. We held them scoreless the last 2:20. Walter, great closeout, and Condo, great hustle play to win the game. That’s what made this team special all year, that we can win different ways, and we showed that again tonight.
On being the youngest coach to win a national title since the tournament expanded to 64 teams:
TODD GOLDEN: I mean, I’m super proud obviously. But I’m just a piece of this puzzle. I’ve been able to put together an incredible staff and recruit great student-athletes over these last three years. We’ve stayed the course all year and worked really hard. My best answer is I’m just really proud. I’m proud to be the head coach of Florida. I’m proud of the way our players performed. I’m proud of the way our staff prepared our guys to become national champions.
On if he could’ve imagined Houston committing four turnovers in the last minute and 20 seconds:
TODD GOLDEN: No.
On Florida’s late-game execution and the last play of the game:
TODD GOLDEN: Down the stretch, we just made some big-time winning plays defensively. It’s all kind of cloudy and a blur, but the one that sticks out is when I believe it was Sharp drove right off the right lane line, and Will was guarding somebody in the corner, ripped and stripped right off his leg with a minute 10 or a minute to go. That was a huge play for us. Then the last play was just absolutely an amazing play. Walter recovered, closed out, as he said, flew by his right side to not allow himself to foul. Sharp made a heady — he understood he couldn’t touch the ball or else it would have been a turnover.
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Then Condo did what he does a lot, which is get physical, dive on the floor, make a winning play, getting on that loose ball. I think there was 18 seconds or so on that last possession. We guarded ’em hard. I saw the ball loose. I was just hoping that we beat them to the ball. When Condo got on the floor, I figured it was either going to be a jump ball or we were going to come away with it. Next thing I knew, game was over. Just an incredible moment and something I won’t forget.
On Alijah Martin and Walter Clayton Jr. making plays late after a tough start for both:
TODD GOLDEN: It’s our team’s resolve, DNA. We don’t have to give those guys confidence. You know what I mean? Walter Clayton, confident. Alijah Martin, confident. Houston is a great team. We knew it wasn’t going to be easy. The message at halftime was we have to take better care of the basketball, but we have to continue to stay aggressive and attack. For the first five or six minutes, the first eight minutes of the second half, they still made life really hard on Walter. When he came out, I thought Zel stepped up, gave us great minutes, gave Walter some rest so we could finish.
We didn’t have to pump those guys up. Let’s get back to being ourselves and do what we do. At this point in the season, they don’t need those words of encouragement. It’s kind of embedded in our DNA. They did what they always do. They stepped up. Alijah hit those big free throws. I thought he guarded really well all night. I thought Walter’s defense in the second half was great. They just found a way to win the ballgame.
On if he was concerned about Houston dictating the pace for most of the game:
TODD GOLDEN: I was definitely concerned. They were dictating the tempo. We want to get out in transition. We were not able to, especially in the first half. I don’t think we have any fast-break points. When we’re at our best, we’re getting stops, clean rebounds, getting out and running in transition, finding baskets. That was concerning. But at halftime just looking at the numbers, the only thing that really stood out that was a big issue was our turnovers. I thought we had such uncharacteristic turnovers. I thought some of those, majority of those nine turnovers were not forced. They were just either poor decisions or being sped up offensively. We just needed to kind of calm down. Obviously Houston is the best defensive team in America by the numbers. We knew it wasn’t going to be easy to score on them. We weren’t able to get up and down much in the second half. We were able to knock down our free throws and we just took much better care of the basketball.
On the Gators’ mentality when they were down by 12 points in the second half:
TODD GOLDEN: The biggest thing from my perspective is I just didn’t feel like we had much control of the game. I thought Houston was controlling tempo, I thought they were controlling with their physicality. There was an interesting technical call on our bench that I thought was an issue we had to battle through. It was our defense. It was stops. It was finding a way to be able to get some run-outs. As we talked about, we didn’t get a lot of transition, but we were able to break and get a couple. Walt saw the ball go through the net with some free throws and the and-one layup. I thought that loosened him up a little bit. After that we were starting to get some good stuff, hit some shots, get downhill and get to the foul line. We were able to flip the game and the momentum a little bit. Obviously incredibly challenging to do against an opponent like Houston. But we’re pretty dang good also and we found a way to do it.