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A beautiful mind for basketball: Todd Golden's winning formula carries Florida to Final Four

Edgar Thompson, Orlando Sentinel on

Published in Basketball

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — An early breakfast the day of the Sweet 16 in San Francisco gave Florida’s Alijah Martin something more to chew on.

The main course was another glimpse into the beautiful basketball mind of Todd Golden.

While he quietly ate, the veteran guard received a rare peek behind the curtain as his coach broke it down with Gators assistant John Andrzejek.

“I was just sitting there listening,” Martin told the Orlando Sentinel. “I was at the table, but I was ear hustling. I was like, ‘I agree, we should do it that way.' ”

The plan worked to perfection during UF’s resounding win against Maryland. The fly-on-the-wall moment reminded Martin why.

Sometimes, Golden’s genius is easy to overlook, but at the same time is hard to miss.

“He’s super smart,” Martin said. “His journey just speaks for itself. The trajectory of this program speaks for itself.

“I think it’s only up from here.”

Golden’s star continues to rise entering Saturday’s Final Four matchup with Auburn.

The success is no surprise for those who play for the 39-year-old with boyish good looks, a computer for a brain and an insatiable passion for his sport.

“Even when I was talking to him early on, you could tell he was different,” said veteran guard Will Richard, Golden’s first transfer signing three years ago. “He has a mind for basketball.”

Golden’s approach is unto himself.

Golden is hip — witness his ball cap turned around as he addressed reporters after Saturday’s Elite Eight win against Texas Tech. The third-year coach by way of stints as a player and later a coach on the West Coast also is different, evidenced by his reliance on analytics at a level matched by few other coaches currently in the game.

“Everything we do in our program is viewed from and kind of decided within an analytical lens, whether it’s scheduling, recruiting, roster management, playing time,” he said. “Whatever it is, very few of those decisions are off of human feel. We’re trying to gather as much data as we possibly can on every decision that we’re trying to make, and then make the best decision we can based off that information.”

Consider the comeback against Texas Tech, seemingly in command while leading by nine points with 3:52 remaining.

After UF cut the Red Raiders’ advantage to six on a Thomas Haugh 3-pointer, Golden decided to foul with 2:43 to go.

“They’re killing clock. They’re starting to score on us in the post where they really hadn’t bothered us for the first 25 minutes of the game,” Golden told the Sentinel. “Making a football analogy, we were down two scores and they’re just dominating us at the line of scrimmage.”

 

When All-Big 12 forward Darrion William missed the front end of a one-and-one, Haugh answered with another 3 to cut the lead to three. Another Florida foul followed as did another missed Texas Tech free throw, this time by Big 12 Player of the Year JT Toppin with 2:08 to go.

“We go from being down nine to being down three,” Golden said. “Just like that, we’re right back in the ballgame.”

A 3 by All-American Walter Clayton Jr. tied the score. From there, the Gators would not be denied.

“Things like that don’t always guarantee success,” Golden said of his analytics-based strategy, “but they give you a better chance.”

College basketball’s rapidly changing landscape with the transfer portal and NIL drove many old-school coaches — Roy Williams, Mike Krzyzewski, Jay Wright, Jim Boeheim — into retirement a few years ago. Virginia’s Tony Bennett stepped away from the game before this season at age 55. FSU’s Leonard Hamlton and Miami’s Jim Larrañaga joined him before the season ended.

The ever-shifting calculus toward roster-building requires a coach to continually adapt and adjust, but also be able to quickly connect with players who arrive from another school.

“When I was in the portal, I was looking for a coach that provided that energy, that relationship, that I could talk to about anything on and off the court,” said Richard, who played as a freshman at Belmont. “I feel like he’s been that since I’ve gotten here, just in terms of putting me in the best situation to succeed and just being there for me and being a coach that I can talk to whenever.”

Golden relates to athletes in the late teens and early 20s and gets the best out of them without the the need for the histrionics or decibel levels of many of his peers.

“He just laid back,” Martin said. “A coach like him that’s so good, you would think they’d be strict. You’d think they’d be not to be played with. I’m not saying that you just play with Coach Golden, because he can get there if you want him to.

“But he’s all about laughing, positive vibes. I think that’s what makes us like jell with him more. He’s a player coach.”

Clayton was exposed to old school at its best during two seasons at Iona under Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino, now 72.

While their approach to handling players might differ, a shared love and respect for the game is unmistakable. So is their success.

Clayton would not be surprised to see Golden one day soon viewed as a superstar in his own right.

“Coach P was a basketball junkie. Coach Golden is the same way,” Clayton told the Sentinel. “Obviously, Coach P’s got 30 more years of experience, but I definitely see Coach Golden, how much he watches film, how much he’s paying attention to the game.

“It’s about basketball.”


©2025 Orlando Sentinel. Visit orlandosentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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