While his colleagues sat at a desk and prepared for the postgame show that was minutes away from starting, Charles Barkley stood transfixed while watching the end of the first NCAA men's basketball semifinal at U.S. Bank Stadium on Saturday.
Auburn's most famous basketball alum arrived had arrived in Minneapolis, after all, with a dual mission: Contribute to an entertaining CBS pre-game and halftime show … and enjoy the ride his team is on.
After Auburn erased a 10-point deficit with five minutes to play, Barkley watched in horror — along with Tigers fans everywhere — as Virginia's Kyle Guy was awarded three free throws after contact was made on his three-point attempt in the corner with 0.6 seconds remaining. He made all three, giving Virginia a 63-62 victory over Auburn in an ending as dramatic as it was controversial.
Barkley stood stunned for at least 30 seconds, then sat down on the CBS sports set — located directly behind the Virginia student section — and presumably sorted through his emotions and what he would say on the air.
"Brother, I'm sorry," Ernie Johnson said as the segment began. "I know how much it hurt."
And guess what? Barkley agreed with the call.
"It might have been a good call. You can't put yourself in that situation," he said postgame. "The kid from Virginia, great courage to make all three of those free throws. But I think it was a foul. … My guys played as hard as they could. … It's just a tough loss. It hurt. It really hurt."
That earned him a tip of the cap from plenty of Cavaliers fans — even perhaps the Virginia student wearing a banana costume who I talked to pregame and insisted, without a hint of irony, that Barkley "doesn't give Virginia any respect."