For about 11 minutes, one of the biggest games of the year just… paused.
In the middle of a tight Elite Eight battle at Toyota Center, everything came to a stop with 7:43 left in the first half. Iowa Hawkeyes led 22-20, the crowd was fully into it, and the game felt like it was just starting to build.
Then the horn got stuck.
Not a quick buzz. A constant, blaring sound that made it impossible to play through.
Very glad Kevin Harlan is on the call for the horn issue.
— David Korn (@david_korn4) March 28, 2026Eleven minutes that felt strange
At first, it was confusion.
Players looked at the officials. Officials looked toward the scorer’s table. The noise just kept going. And once it became clear this wasn’t getting fixed right away, everyone kind of had the same reaction.
Alright… now what?
The delay stretched to 11 minutes, which is forever in a game like this.
The energy in the building didn’t disappear, but it changed. The urgency faded. The moment loosened up.
From Elite 8 intensity to open gym vibes
That’s when it turned into something you almost never see this time of year.
"Surely there's a way to unplug this -- surely there's a horn expert somewhere in this building!"
Kevin Harlan on the call as an issue with the horn gets worked on. pic.twitter.com/dnI0W9HOWT
Players sat down on the court. Some grabbed balls and started getting shots up. Others went through light warmups, just trying to stay ready without overthinking it.
For a few minutes, it didn’t feel like the Elite Eight. It felt like a break at practice. Like a pickup run waiting to start again. And maybe that was the weirdest part. With a Final Four spot on the line, everyone just had to slow down and wait.
Eventually, the horn issue was fixed and the game picked back up. But those 11 minutes in Houston were a reminder of something simple. Even in March, even in the biggest moments, the game can still surprise you.

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