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Illinois vs UConn, Michigan vs Arizona

Illinois vs UConn, Michigan vs Arizona

Final Four predictions 2026

The Final Four is finally here, and this year’s field feels less like a bracket surprise and more like a collision of heavyweights. UConn vs. Illinois. Michigan vs. Arizona. Four teams, four different paths, and two tickets to Monday night.

There is no Cinderella left standing. What remains is size, shot-making, coaching pedigree, and a whole lot of pressure.

So who gets through?

Here is our prediction for both national semifinals, along with the two teams we believe will be playing for the title.

Game 1 Prediction: Illinois over UConn

This feels like the hardest game on the board to call, which is exactly what makes it such a great Final Four matchup.

UConn arrives with championship DNA and the confidence that comes from surviving big moments. Dan Hurley’s program has now reached the Final Four for the third time in four years, and the Huskies got here by pulling off one of the most dramatic wins of the tournament when Braylon Mullins buried a last-second shot to stun Duke in the Elite Eight. Tarris Reed Jr. has been a monster throughout March, giving UConn a bruising interior presence and the kind of toughness that tends to travel well this time of year.

But Illinois may have the exact profile needed to knock them out.

The Illini have been the best defensive team of the four remaining teams during this NCAA Tournament, and they have paired that defense with overwhelming size and elite rebounding. Illinois is not just tall. It is disruptive. The Illini can crowd the paint, challenge shots at the rim, and still have enough length on the perimeter to make passing angles uncomfortable. That matters against a UConn team that thrives when it can establish rhythm and physical control.

Illinois also has not looked fluky getting here. This team has defended, rebounded, and played with the kind of poise that usually shows up in teams built for one more weekend. In a game that is likely to turn ugly for stretches, that extra defensive reliability feels like the difference.

Prediction: Illinois 74, UConn 70

Expect a physical, tense game with long possessions and huge swings in momentum. UConn will absolutely have chances to win it, but Illinois looks slightly better built for this specific matchup.

Game 2 Prediction: Michigan over Arizona

If the first semifinal looks like a grinder, the second has the feel of a prizefight.

Michigan has stormed into Indianapolis looking like the most explosive team left in the field. The Wolverines have won all four of their tournament games by double digits, and they scored at least 90 points in each of those wins. That is not a hot streak anymore. That is an identity.

Dusty May’s team has played with pace, balance, and confidence, and it has done it without feeling dependent on one single player to rescue every possession. Yaxel Lendeborg has been terrific, Elliot Cadeau has kept the offense humming, and Michigan’s combination of size and scoring punch has overwhelmed opponents so far.

Arizona is good enough to win the whole thing. The Wildcats own a 36-2 record, they won both the Big 12 regular-season and tournament titles, and they just reached their first Final Four since 2001. Koa Peat gives them a real star, and Tommy Lloyd has built a team that can punish opponents without needing to live from three-point range.

Still, Michigan has looked like the sharper attacking team throughout this tournament.

That matters in a one-game setting. Arizona is absolutely capable of dictating terms with its physicality and half-court execution, but Michigan has been the most consistently overwhelming offense in the bracket. At some point, that kind of pressure forces even elite teams into mistakes they do not usually make.

Prediction: Michigan 82, Arizona 77

This one should feel like a championship game before the championship game. In the end, Michigan’s current form is just too hard to ignore.

Our Predicted National Championship Matchup: Illinois vs. Michigan

That gives us an all-Big Ten title game, which would be a fitting ending to a tournament dominated by power programs and mature, physically imposing rosters.

Illinois would get there with defense, rebounding, and size that can wear down almost anybody. Michigan would arrive with the hottest offense left in the tournament and the confidence of a team that has bulldozed every March opponent in front of it.

It would also be a fascinating stylistic contrast. Illinois wants to make you uncomfortable for 40 minutes. Michigan wants to make you feel like you are losing the game in waves.

That is exactly the kind of title-game tension college basketball needs.

Why Illinois and Michigan Make the Most Sense

Prediction pieces are always part analysis and part nerve, but the factual case for these two teams is strong.

Illinois has the tournament’s best defensive efficiency among the four remaining teams and has dominated the glass during this run. That is not just useful in April. It is often decisive. When possessions get tighter and nerves get heavier, rebounding and rim protection usually age better than pure shot-making.

Michigan, meanwhile, has not merely survived its path. It has crushed it. Four straight double-digit wins. Four straight 90-point performances. That kind of offensive rhythm is rare this deep into the tournament, especially against quality competition.

None of that guarantees a result, of course. UConn has the championship scars and shot-making to win another tight semifinal. Arizona has the pedigree, size, and talent to beat anyone in the country. But if you are making the call based on what these teams have been in this tournament, Illinois and Michigan are the picks that line up best with the evidence.

Final Thoughts

The beauty of this Final Four is that none of these picks feel safe.

UConn knows how to live in the biggest moments. Illinois looks built to turn those moments into wrestling matches. Arizona has spent all year proving it belongs back on this stage. Michigan has looked like a freight train.

That is what makes Saturday so compelling. There are no passengers left. Only contenders.

Our call: Illinois gets past UConn, Michigan gets past Arizona, and Monday night belongs to a championship game between two Big Ten powers with completely different ways of breaking opponents down.

And if that is how it plays out, the title game should be an absolute monster.

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