The performance was exhilarating, something people will talk about many years from now, considering the size and scope of the moment.
That Tyus Jones elevated above the pack when the situation begged for it should surprise no one. That's always been his nature, here in Minnesota, in college and again in front of the nation Monday night.
"He's a closer," said Zach Goring, who coached Jones at Apple Valley High School for five years.
If coffee is for closers, Jones was guzzling Starbucks in college basketball's biggest game.
A freshman in rank only, Jones looked like a veteran of the big stage in hoisting the Duke Blue Devils in the second half and carrying them to a national championship.
In doing so, Jones reaffirmed to a wider audience what he so often showed in his prep days at Apple Valley.
He's fearless. And he's remarkably poised and self-assured with the ball in his hands.
If Jones felt the pressure of the biggest game of his basketball life, he revealed no signs of nerves against the gritty Wisconsin Badgers. Especially in the second half when Duke's star center, Jahlil Okafor, battled foul trouble and Duke needed someone else to carry the torch.