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Tennessee closes late to oust Virginia, 79-72

Tennessee outlasted Virginia 79-72 on March 22, 2026, leaning on late-game execution to finish the job in a tight, physical NCAA matchup. The Volunteers’ closing stretch separated two teams that were otherwise locked together for long stretches.

James O'Brien
2 min read

Tennessee had answers when the game tightened — and that was the difference. The Volunteers beat Virginia 79-72 on March 22, 2026, pulling away in the closing minutes to secure a seven-point win in an NCAA showdown.

How it happened

With no period-by-period scoring available, the story lives in the margin: Tennessee won the game with control of the final stretch, turning a competitive 40 minutes into a two-possession-plus finish. Virginia stayed within striking distance, but Tennessee’s ability to generate enough offense to reach 79 points ultimately created separation.

Turning point: execution in the final stretch

In a game that finished 79-72, the decisive sequence came late, when Tennessee consistently converted possessions and protected its lead. Virginia’s path back required clean stops and efficient offense; Tennessee’s steadier finishing turned those leverage possessions into a win.

What it means

Tennessee: A seven-point road-style win — regardless of venue — is a marker of maturity this time of year. Reaching 79 points against Virginia is the headline, and the Volunteers’ late-game poise is the subtext going forward.

Virginia: The Cavaliers did enough to keep the game close, but the final score reflects how thin the margin becomes when late possessions don’t swing your way. In March, “close” isn’t a result — and Virginia ends this one on the wrong side of it.

Game details

League: NCAA
Season: 2025-26
Date: March 22, 2026
Final: Tennessee 79, Virginia 72
Venue: TBD

Source: API-Sports Basketball

Expert Analysis

"Tennessee dropped a 79–72 decision, and the seven-point gap tells the story: close enough to threaten late, not clean enough to flip it. In a game where every empty trip mattered, the Vols couldn’t generate the extra stops or second-chance swings needed to turn a one- or two-possession finish into a win."