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Women’s Bracketology Bubble Watch: Clemson takes down Virginia for crucial win

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Conference tournaments are underway in women’s college basketball this week, and some teams’ bubbles are already beginning to burst. In total, six of the 12 bubble teams listed in CBS Sports bracketologist Connor Groel’s latest bracket played on Wednesday. Three of those teams lost: Stanford, Texas A&M and Mississippi State. 

Due to those losses, Stanford and Texas A&M went from being among the First Four Out into the Next Four Out, while Mississippi State remained in the Next Four Out. Stanford’s overtime loss to Miami in the ACC tournament was the biggest story of Wednesday, as it all but guaranteed the Cardinal will miss the NCAA tournament for the second consecutive year. 

Meanwhile, Arizona State, BYU and Utah all moved up slightly on the bubble after winning first-round games on Wednesday, but all three teams likely still have work to do to secure an invitation. Notably, this was the first Big 12 tournament win for the BYU Cougars since they joined the conference in 2023.

What does Thursday have in store? Eight bubble teams will be in action in conference tournaments today, and then Richmond joining the action on Friday. Notably, Clemson and Virginia — the top two teams on the Last Four In group — faced off in the ACC Tournament. Clemson pulled away for a 13-point win, a result that should make the Tigers feel comfortable about making the NCAA Tournament. Virginia, meanwhile, might be sweating it out on Selection Sunday.

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Here is Groel’s updated bubble after Wednesday’s games and when to catch each team in action.

Last Four In

  • Clemson (beat Virginia, 63-50, in ACC Tournament)
  • Virginia (lost to Clemson, 63-50, in ACC Tournament)
  • Colorado (vs. Kansas, R2 of Big 12 tournament; Thursday at 9:00 p.m.)
  • South Dakota State (vs. Kansas City in QF of Summit League tournament; Thursday at 1:00 p.m.)

First Four Out

  • Richmond (vs. TBD in QF of A10 tournament; Friday at 7:30 p.m.)
  • Arizona State (vs. Iowa State in R2 of Big 12 tournament, Thursday at 6:30 p.m.)
  • BYU (vs. Utah in R2 of Big 12 tournament, Thursday at 2:30 p.m.)
  • Utah  (vs. BYU in R2 of Big 12 tournament, Thursday at 2:30 p.m.)

Next Four Out

  • Stanford (lost to Miami 83-76 in R1 of ACC tournament)
  • Texas A&M (lost to Auburn 50-49 in R1 of SEC tournament)
  • Mississippi State (lost to Florida 86-68, R1 of SEC tournament)
  • Kansas (vs. Colorado in R2 of Big 12 tournament, Thursday at 9:00 p.m.)

Before 2025, Stanford had appeared in the Big Dance for 36 consecutive years, dating back to 1987 under Tara VanDerveer. The Cardinal won three national championships during the VanDerveer era, with the most recent one happening just five years ago. Long-time associate head coach Kate Paye took over after VanDerveer retired, but the former Pac-12 powerhouse has not yet found success as a member of the ACC conference.

Similarly, the Mississippi State Bulldogs are likely done after a loss to Florida, especially since they have gone 4-12 in their last 16 games and only have three wins against Quad 1 and 2 opponents. Texas A&M was one of the most intriguing bubble teams heading into conference play after a late-season surge that saw the team finish the regular season with five consecutive wins, including victories over Tennessee and Ole Miss. But the one-point loss to Auburn in Greenville will leave the Aggies on the outside of the madness looking in.

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Gunther breaks WWE character for Cody Rhodes

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WWE Superstar Gunther recently broke his on-screen heel persona to appreciate Cody Rhodes’ work ethic. The Ring General also mentioned why he didn’t want to be like The American Nightmare.

Since retiring Goldberg, John Cena, and AJ Styles, Gunther has become one of the biggest heels in World Wrestling Entertainment. Many believe the former WWE World Heavyweight Champion could retire another legend this year, possibly Brock Lesnar.

During a recent edition of Cody Rhodes’ What Do You Wanna Talk About? podcast, Gunther mentioned that he wanted to get to a spot in WWE where he can elevate young stars like Oba Femi, Bron Breakker, and Ilja Dragunov.

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The Ring General then added that he liked his current role in the company and didn’t want to become a guy who is “at the very mountaintop” where everybody looks up to him.

“I like my role and how I do it. I don’t have it in me to be wanting to be the guy that is at the very mountaintop, and everybody looks up to him,” he said.

The former Imperium leader then broke his on-screen character to praise Cody Rhodes for his work ethic. He mentioned that he admired Rhodes and believed he wouldn’t be able to do as many media and fan interactions as The American Nightmare.

“I admire you [Cody Rhodes] sometimes for what you do, because I couldn’t. I would not be able to have that much fan interaction, to have that much media interaction, and all of that. And you do it really good. That’s not for me… I wanna be at the top, but in a different role and contribute that way,” he added.

Check out his interview below:

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Gunther opened up about losing to Jey Uso at WWE WrestleMania 41

During the same interview on Cody Rhodes’ What Do You Wanna Talk About? podcast, Gunther talked about tapping out to Jey Uso in his WWE World Heavyweight Championship loss at WrestleMania 41.

The Ring General said that he had no issues with tapping out to The Yeet Master, and he didn’t care if the fans saw it as a weakness.

“With Jey, at that moment, that’s the thing, I can swallow my pride. When it’s over, it’s over. I have no issue with that. If the audience views that as weakness, let them be. It’s alright,” Gunther said.

It remains to be seen what the Triple H-led creative team has planned for Gunther ahead of WWE WrestleMania 42.


Please credit Cody Rhodes’ What Do You Wanna Talk About? podcast and give an H/T to Sportskeeda Wrestling if you use quotes from the first half of this article.