Dan Hurley confused as fans at Final Four start booing him during postgame interview after leading UConn past Illinois
Dan Hurley and the Huskies are headed back to the national championship game. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)Michael Reaves via Getty ImagesWith a win already secured, Dan Hurley stepped up to talk with Tracy Wolfson on the court at Lucas Oil Stadium on Saturday night. Quickly, a loud wave of boos filled the stadium in Indianapolis. The UConn head coach looked incredibly confused.Are they booing I dont know what theyre booing, Hurley said, breaking from his answer and looking around briefly.Hurley, somehow, didnt realize the boos were from him."Are they booing? ... I don't know what they're booing." Dan Hurley speaks with @tracywolfson after the Huskies advance to a third National Championship Game in four seasons pic.twitter.com/9ZhMqjUhKm CBS Sports College Basketball (@CBSSportsCBB) April 5, 2026Now, theres a couple reasons for the harsh reaction.For starters, the crowd during the first game at the Final Four was overwhelmingly favoring Illinois. Not only is Champaign a roughly two hour drive away from Indianapolis, but the Illini were playing in their first Final Four since 2005. Illinois fans showed out, and it was very noticeable throughout the broadcast. So with Illinois losing, it makes sense that Illini fans werent too happy to have to listen to Hurley give his postgame interview.But also, Hurley is not the most likeable coach in college basketball. Hes an emotional coach who frequently screams at officials or players throughout games, is incredibly animated and at times out on the court trying to make his point which is something he did repeatedly during UConns 71-62 win over Illinois on Saturday night. Even during their wild comeback win against Duke in the Elite Eight, there was a moment where Hurley actually went head-to-head with referee Roger Ayres and didnt receive a technical foul.Dan Hurley went face-to-face with the ref after UConn beat Duke pic.twitter.com/FrDGBQZI2q Fullcourtpass (@Fullcourtpass) March 30, 2026Hurley is very aware of the backlash he receives for his behavior, too, and hes not looking for anything.Im not a victim, Hurley said on Friday before UConns Final Four game, via ESPN. Ive done everything. I did what I did. We dont allow victims in our program, and Im not a 53-year-old man sitting up here like Im some victim.I don't want to waste a lot of time with it because it takes away from the team. But for me, the way I view what we're going into, in the game, when some people, again, view it as a game, just my family, how I was raised in the sport, where I'm from in Jersey, we look at it more like a battle."Regardless of how hes perceived, Hurley has gotten the Huskies back to the national championship game for the third time in the past four seasons. Theyll take on either Michigan or Arizona in the title game next on Monday night. If he can pick up one more win, itll mark the third championship Hurley has won over that span.While the boos and harsh fan reactions are likely continue for Hurley, whether thats on Monday night or beyond, he keeps winning. Clearly, his coaching style is working out just fine.