Buffs KJ Simpson Eddie Lampkin Jr. make CU America’s team in NCAA tourney

US

INDIANAPOLIS — One question, Eddie Lampkin Jr.: Can you play tight end? Even a little?

“I can,” the Buffs’ cult hero of a center told me as he settled into his locker stall and put down a phone buzzing like a hornet’s nest after the lunacy that was CU 102, Florida 100.

“I used to play tight end. That’s the crazy thing, yeah. (But) they don’t want to let me, man.”

Who needs the portal when you could have Eddie for six? Come on, Deion. Make it so. I mean, can you imagine the fear in some poor Nebraska safety’s eyes when they see a 6-foot-11, 265-pound dude lining up across from them? Can you picture the jump balls in the end zone?

“I think so,” said teammate KJ Simpson, who sank the Gators on one of the greatest shots in CU hoops history, a game-winner from the baseline with two seconds left on the clock. “Sometimes I mix him (up) with some of the football players.”

A few blocks from the home of the NFL scouting combine, Lampkin conducted his own personal shuttle run. As the nation gasped and the Buffs danced, the CU big man zipped from the middle of the floor, around a security barrier, up some steps and into a phalanx of fans, friends and family members. He slapped a few of them five, pointed to the grill in his mouth, then beamed like a Cheshire cat.

“He’s brought unbelievable toughness, a spirit, a competitive spirit, energy — he’s brought so much to this team,” offered CU coach Tad Boyle, whose 26-10 squad will face Marquette in the second round of the NCAA Tournament on Sunday at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. “He’s brought so much to this team … our guys believe in him. He believes in them.”

The rest of the country believes, too, after the magic trick Simpson just pulled off on college hoops’ center stage.

Keep in mind: The Gators had just wiped out a 10-point deficit in about three minutes and change. In a see-saw, bonkers tilt tied at 100-100 with four seconds left, Simpson, the Buffs’ gallant point guard, curled just right of the lane, parallel with the baseline, took a pass from Cody Williams and got ready to fire.

Now that’s a tough shot when nobody’s guarding you. Zyon Pullin put up a right hand in his mug, rocketing the degree of difficulty to the moon. Simpson never blinked, using his left forearm as a shield, extending with his right, and letting the rock fly.

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