Tulsa walked into Florida Atlantic’s gym on Feb. 5 and walked out with the only thing that mattered: a 78-76 win that reinforced just how stable the Golden Hurricane have been all season.
In a game that never got the cushion of overtime, Tulsa (19-3) executed just enough down the stretch to hold off FAU (14-9), turning a two-point final into another notch in a run that’s now extended to six straight wins when you combine this result with the Golden Hurricane’s five-game form entering the night.
Result and context
Final: Tulsa 78, Florida Atlantic 76
Season: NCAA, 2025-26
Date: February 5, 2026
Venue: TBD
How the game tilted
With no quarter-by-quarter scoring available, the story is best told through the margins: Tulsa won a one-possession game on the road, the type of result that typically comes down to late-game shot quality, defensive rebounding, and composure in the final minute.
Florida Atlantic had a chance to flip the script at home, but the Owls couldn’t find the extra possession or final stop needed to turn a tight finish into a win. Tulsa’s ability to close—without the safety net of overtime—was the separator.
What it means going forward
Tulsa: a contender’s profile in close games
At 19-3 with a five-game winning streak entering the night, Tulsa arrived with momentum and left with more of it. Winning 78-76 on the road is a statement of reliability: even when the game compresses into a late-possession grind, the Golden Hurricane are getting the result.
Florida Atlantic: narrow loss, familiar frustration
Florida Atlantic’s 14-9 record and recent form (LLLWW entering the game) has reflected volatility, and this one fit the pattern—competitive enough to be within a basket, but not clean enough to finish. The Owls didn’t get blown out; they got edged. The next step is turning these two-point endings into wins, especially at home.
Bottom line
Tulsa’s 78-76 win was less about style and more about substance: a road victory in a one-possession game that keeps the Golden Hurricane’s season trajectory pointed up. For Florida Atlantic, the margin shows they can play with a high-level opponent—but also how thin the line is between “close” and “closed out.”

