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March Madness scores, winners, losers: North Carolina, Wisconsin collapse

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There are losses, and then there are meltdowns, and then there is this. North Carolina blew a 19-point lead in the second half and collapsed to No. 11 seed VCU, 82-78, in overtime. It’s the sixth-worst collapse in Round of 64 history and a cursed last month for UNC has somehow descended into a finish from the depths of hell.

There is no coming back from this moment. North Carolina used its powerful transition attack to dominate for the first 30 minutes. Henri Veesaar’s 3-pointer extended the lead to 15 with less than 10 minutes left.

And then defense became utterly optional, and somehow, the plan and execution on offense were even worse.

VCU guard Terrence Hill Jr. scored 14 of his game-high 34 points in the final nine minutes of regulation to force overtime, and North Carolina’s offense also had 11 empty possessions in 13 opportunities to end regulation. 

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Two missed front ends, including one by senior Seth Trimble with 29 seconds to go, were brutal. The last play of regulation was doomed from the start, and UNC fumbled it out of bounds. It didn’t score a single bucket in overtime, and yet had a chance to force double-overtime when Veesaar toed the line for a pair of free throws down 80-78.

Brick, unintentionally.

Brick, intentionally.

Ballgame.

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Caleb Wilson could only bury his face in his hands. The same hands that betrayed him and kept him sidelined with a broken thumb on an innocuous dunk in practice on the eve of the regular-season finale against Duke.

It’s a fitting bow on a disastrous season for North Carolina that started with loads of promise as Wilson exceeded all expectations on his way to All-American honors, but also included Trimble breaking his arm in a wild weight-room accident and Wilson somehow breaking both his left hand and his right thumb in stunning ways. Now it has to swallow one of the worst postseason losses in North Carolina history and kickstart a load of questions surrounding Hubert Davis’ future after he couldn’t steer the Tar Heels away from disaster. A 26-42 record in Quad 1 games isn’t acceptable. Blowing a 19-point lead to VCU ain’t it, either.

Let’s dive into the winners and losers from Thursday’s electric opening slate of March Madness. No one had it worse than North Carolina, although Wisconsin fans might argue otherwise.

Loser: Wisconsin lets go of the rope at the worst time

Wisconsin’s ridiculously fun season is over far too early and in the most stunning fashion. High Point rocked the Badgers, 83-82, with a stunning rally in the nick of time. Nick Boyd looked … mortal if only for a moment. The all-everything point guard delivered 27 points, six assists and five boards in this one, but the audacious lefty didn’t have one more bucket in his bag down the stretch. Boyd’s final stat line is glitzy, but the senior will rue the missed layups in crunch time.

All season long, Wisconsin has walked teams down in the second half. This time, the script was flipped on the Badgers as High Point erased an eight-point deficit in closing time.

Wisconsin got 49 points combined from John Blackwell and Boyd. It shot 39% from 3-point. The team with the best collection of high-end wins will not advance to the Round of 32.

The opposite side of the coin in March Madness is BRUTAL. — Isaac Trotter

Winner: Siena’s special stuff

Yeah, Siena ended up losing to top-seeded Duke, 71-65. Sure, this injured team with no depth ran out of gas down the stretch. A couple of missed dunks and a 3-pointer that did everything but drop may stick in Gerry McNamara’s head forever.

But the feeling they brought back to this wonderful tournament is going to stick for a while. Cinderella was in our presence for all of 38 minutes. The Saints gave Duke the business deep into the second half. They led 43-32 at the break. They led 61-56 with 7:34 to go. McNamara’s boys were right there, frustrating eventual National Player of the Year, Cameron Boozer, along the way. — Trotter

Winner: High Point strikes late to stun Wisconsin

26-year-old, sixth-year senior Chase Johnston notched his One Shining Moment to help High Point rally from an eight-point deficit with four-and-change to go and stun Wisconsin, 83-82. Johnston drilled three triples from the parking lot and deposited the game-winning layup — the 3-point specialist’s first two-point bucket of the season — to send High Point into the second round. 

Big, bad Darius Acuff and Arkansas awaits. — Isaac Trotter

Winner: Nebraska gets its first-ever tournament victory

Nebraska was the only program within the high-major structure (ACC, Big 12, Big East, Big Ten and SEC) without an NCAA Tournament victory entering the day. That is no longer the case. At long last, the No. 4 seed Cornhuskers have won a game in the Big Dance after dispatching No. 13 seed Troy 76-47. No team has ever notched its first-ever NCAA Tournament win by a wider margin.

This was the first time since 2011 that two teams with a combined zero NCAA Tournament wins have met. But after a hot start from the Trojans, their upset bid fizzled in a barrage of Nebraska 3-pointers and second-chance points. Pryce Sandfort led the charge with 23 points and seven makes from beyond the arc for Nebraska, which will advance to face No. 5 seed Vanderbilt in the second round. Seventh-year coach Fred Hoiberg won just seven games in each of his first two seasons, but his slow build began to take hold over the past three seasons. Now, it has led to a historic breakthrough for one of the sport’s long-suffering programs. – Cobb

Loser: South Florida goes cold in upset bid

No. 11 seed South Florida staged an admirable late rally to turn a Louisville blowout into a tight game, but the Bulls couldn’t overcome a woeful shooting performance as their upset bid fell short in an 83-79 loss to the No. 6 seed Cardinals. South Florida’s 5 of 33 effort from beyond the arc (15.2%) marked its second-worst of the season by percentage. The five makes also tied for the second-fewest of the season from a USF team that became a trendy upset pick following the revelation that the Cardinals would be without star freshman Mikel Brown Jr

Even without Brown, who has been dealing with a nagging back injury, Louisville’s offense hummed as it opened up a 23-point lead in the second half. Isaac McKneely led the way with 23 points on 7 of 10 shooting from 3-point range as the Cardinals drilled 13 of 25 triples while advancing to face No. 3 seed Michigan State on Saturday. – David Cobb

Winner: TCU gets a crack at Duke

No. 9 seed TCU beat high-end opponents like Florida, Wisconsin and Texas Tech away from home this season and also toppled Iowa State at home. The Horned Frogs are proven giant slayers, and they’ll get a crack at Duke on Saturday after surviving to beat Ohio State 66-64 in the opening game of the first round.

TCU held on for dear life after leading by as much as 15 late in the first half. Ohio State’s Bruce Thornton missed a would-be game-winner from half court as time expired to send the Horned Frogs dancing into the second round for the third time in the past five years. Given how shaky Duke looked against Siena — and who TCU has already beaten this season — the Horned Frogs look more than capable of making a Sweet 16 push. — Cobb

Loser: Duke gets a reality check 

Duke forward Maliq Brown said the quiet part out loud after his team’s 71-65 win over No. 16 seed Siena. Brown admitted the Blue Devils expected a “cakewalk.” The game proved anything but. Duke trailed by as many as 13 before using a strong second half to avoid what would have been one of the biggest upsets in NCAA Tournament history.

The narrow escape should serve as a wake-up call heading into a matchup with No. 9 seed TCU on Saturday. If the Blue Devils deliver a similar performance, an early exit could be looming. — Salerno 

Winner: Mid-major schedulers

High Point did not play a single high-major team until today against Wisconsin. That’s no coincidence. The Panthers are one of the best-resourced mid-major teams in the country, and this deep, talented roster is proof of that.

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There’s a reason no high-major willingly signed up to play High Point or Miami (Ohio)Saint LouisBelmontBradley or Northern Iowa. Akron had to go to Purdue to get a game. Add UNC-Wilmington, the CAA regular-season champs, to the list of teams that couldn’t get a spot on a schedule.

Perhaps the emergence of Wins Above Bubble can help change the script. Stanford earned +0.52 WAB for beating Saint Louis on a neutral floor in the Acrisure Invitational. It ended up as the third-best win of the season for the Cardinal.

The idea that there isn’t any upside to playing good mid-major teams rings hollow. In fact, it looks more and more like fear. — Trotter

Winner: Cayden Boozer shows his moxie

Duke was dead to rights and Cayden Boozer just refused to let the Blue Devils go down. The freshman guard delivered 19 points, five assists and zero turnovers. It’s the second-straight game where Cayden, not Cameron, has been Duke’s best player. 

The poise and toughness is obvious, but the basketball IQ was on full display. Siena’s half-court defense was swarming a Duke team that is short-handed and doesn’t have enough shooting right now. What did Cayden Boozer do? Pedal to the floor in transition whenever an opportunity presented itself.

Duke doesn’t win this game without the lesser-hyped Boozer brother. — Trotter

Winner: Arkansas’ hyped freshmen make history

Hawaii‘s no-help defense looked like a bad idea on paper against these vroom-vroom Arkansas guards, and sure enough, Darius Acuff Jr. and Meleek Thomas passed the initial NCAA Tournament test with flying colors.

Acuff totaled 24 points and seven assists. Thomas was right on his heels with 21 points and five assists. It’s the first freshman duo in men’s NCAA Tournament history to notch at least 20 points and five assists in the same game.

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Special showing from a special duo. — Trotter

Loser: Saint Mary’s goes out with a whimper 

Saint Mary’s‘ bout with sickness came at the wrong time, as the No. 7 seed Gaels fell 63-50 to No. 10 seed Texas A&M while leading scorer Paulius Murauskas came off the bench due to illness. The Gaels wilted against A&M’s up-tempo style while committing an uncharacteristic 18 turnovers. Rashaun Agee led the way for Texas A&M with 22 points on 7 of 11 shooting. This marks nine NCAA Tournament appearances in a row in which Saint Mary’s has failed to advance beyond the first weekend. First-year Texas A&M coach Bucky McMillan has his first win in the Big Dance after leading Samford agonizingly close to a win over Kansas two years ago. — Cobb

Loser: Dybantsa shines, but can’t get help in BYU’s loss

Despite recording 35 points and 10 rebounds, BYU star AJ Dybantsa’s career is likely over after his team suffered an 79-71 loss to No. 11 seed Texas.

The Cougars had been without star guard Richie Saunders for the past month due to a season-ending ACL tear, and the loss underscored how far their ceiling dropped without him. Dybantsa and Robert Wright III combined to score 49 of BYU’s 71 points. Simply put, BYU did not have enough firepower beyond Dybantsa.

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After reaching the Sweet 16 in Year 1 under Kevin Young, BYU’s season ended before the close of the first day of the first round. – Salerno

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NBA roundup: Luka Doncic’s 60 points propel Lakers to 8th straight win

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NBA: Los Angeles Lakers at Miami HeatMar 19, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Los Angeles Lakers team celebrates Luka Doncic (77) after 60 point game against the Miami Heat at Kaseya Center. Mandatory Credit: Isabella Frias-Imagn Images

Luka Doncic scored 60 points — the most ever recorded against the Heat — as the Los Angeles Lakers won their eighth straight game, defeating host Miami 134-126 on Thursday night.

The Lakers also got a triple-double from LeBron James, who had 19 points, 15 rebounds and 10 assists. It was just James’ second triple-double of the season. Doncic, who entered the day leading the NBA with a 32.9 scoring average, made 18 of 30 shots from the floor, 9 of 17 on 3-pointers and 15 of 19 at the free throw line.

Bam Adebayo led Miami with 28 points and 10 rebounds. He appeared fully healthy after having missed the team’s previous game due to tightness in his right calf. However, the Heat are just 1-3 since Adebayo scored 83 points against Washington on March 10, the second-greatest scoring game in NBA history.

James Harden had the previous record against Miami with 58 points. He reached that mark while a member of the Houston Rockets on Feb. 28, 2019.

Spurs 101, Suns 100

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Victor Wembanyama hit the game-winning jumper with 1.1 seconds left, capping a 34-point, 12-rebound outing as San Antonio edged visiting Phoenix.

The Suns led by seven points at halftime, by six heading into the final period and by 10 when Khaman Maluach threw down a thunderous dunk off a Devin Booker assist with 4:50 to play. That seemed to wake up San Antonio, which responded with an 8-0 run.

After Phoenix’s Rasheer Fleming missed two free throws with 11.1 seconds to play, Wembanyama took an inbounds pass and held the ball before moving to his right and hitting a contested 17-foot jumper over Ighodaro for the victory.

Hornets 130, Magic 111

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Coby White had 27 points off the bench, Brandon Miller poured in 25 points and LaMelo Ball had 20 points as host Charlotte rolled on offense again in a victory against Orlando.

It was a masterful offensive performance for the Hornets, who racked up 22 3-pointers and went 24-for-27 from the free-throw line. Kon Knueppel had 17 points, Ryan Kalkbrenner provided 13 and Miles Bridges posted 11 for Charlotte, which won for the fourth time in its last five games.

The Magic received 24 points from Desmond Bane and 20 from Paolo Banchero, but they made just 33.3% (14-for-42) of their 3-point tries. Jamal Cain added 15 points and Jevon Carter had 11, with Orlando’s reserves playing a good chunk of the second half as the Magic’s deficit reached 35.

Pistons 117, Wizards 95

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Jalen Duren collected 24 points and 11 rebounds and Paul Reed added 17 points off the bench, fueling Detroit over host Washington.

Detroit, which reached the 50-win plateau for the first time since 2007-08, held a 66-26 advantage in points in the paint and a 56-35 edge in rebounds. Duncan Robinson highlighted his 14-point performance with four 3-pointers, while Caris LeVert and Kevin Huerter also scored 14 points.

Tristan Vukcevic scored 21 points off the bench and rookie Will Riley added 15 points for the Wizards, who have lost 14 in a row since sweeping Indiana in a two-game set on Feb. 19-20.

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Cavaliers 115, Bulls 110

James Harden knocked down seven 3-pointers on his way to 36 points, Evan Mobley added 26 points as Cleveland held off a furious second-half rally to beat host Chicago.

Mobley shot 12 of 19 from the floor (63.1%) and grabbed a game-high 14 rebounds. He was one of two Cavaliers to record a double-double, with Jaylon Tyson adding 18 points and 11 rebounds.

Tre Jones led the Bulls with 20 points, Nick Richards scored 16 and Josh Giddey dished a career-high 19 assists. Rob Dillingham led the Chicago bench unit with 17 points, as they outscored the Cavs’ bench, 43-22.

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Jazz 128, Bucks 96

Rookie Ace Bailey scored a season-best 33 points and matched his high of seven 3-pointers to lead Utah to a convincing victory over Milwaukee at Salt Lake City.

Elijah Harkless produced career bests of 23 points and 10 assists and Cody Williams also had 23 points as the Jazz broke a four-game losing streak. The win was just the third in the past 15 games for Utah.

Two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo sat out his second straight game due to a hyperextended left knee as the Bucks lost for the 10th time in their past 12 games. Ryan Rollins scored 15 points and Cam Thomas added 14 off the bench.

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76ers 139, Kings 118

VJ Edgecombe, Quentin Grimes and Justin Edwards combined for 97 points, Andre Drummond came off the bench to produce a double-double and visiting Philadelphia thumped Sacramento.

Edgecombe, taking over leadership of the team in the absence of Joel Embiid, Paul George and Tyrese Maxey, paced the win with 38 points, the top total of his rookie season. Edwards put up a career-high 32 and Grimes went for 27, propelling the 76ers (38-32) to a third win in the past four games. Edgecombe also found time for a game-high 11 assists while Drummond had 13 points, a team-high 11 rebounds and three blocks.

Kings rookie Maxime Raynaud missed his season best by two points on a 30-point night. Daeqwon Plowden had 20 points, DeMar DeRozan 13, Precious Achiuwa 12, and Russell Westbrook and Doug McDermott 11 apiece for the Kings (18-53), who lost their second in a row.

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–Field Level Media

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This Dallas Cowboys-themed practice range is outrageous in best possible way

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Arapaho retires in 2026 following Sydney Cup victory

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The “Giant Labrador” moniker fits Arapaho perfectly as he bows out of racing.

With two Group 1 successes to his name, the gelding Arapaho has been retired by Bjorn Baker, who attributed the move to “wear and tear” ending the horse’s track tenure.

Baker shared the update Thursday, praising Arapaho as “an outstanding ambassador for our stable” and a “tough and genuine” athlete.

“The decision to retire him has been made with his best interests firmly in mind,” Baker commented via social media platform X.

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“He is feeling a little wear and tear in his joints, and at nine years old, it’s the right call to step him away from racing rather than take any risk.”

From French origins, Arapaho joined Australian racing in 2021 and solidified his role in the stable over successive years.

His 2023 Tancred Stakes (2400m) win preceded another Group 1 at eight years old, dominating last year’s Sydney Cup (3200m).

Last seen midfield in the 2025 Melbourne Cup, Arapaho retires after 50 starts, 10 triumphs, 10 minor placings, and more than $4.3 million in prizemoney.

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The horse was cherished at the stable much like a “giant Labrador”.

Jockey Rachel King, whose husband Luke Hilton manages racing for Baker, will care for Arapaho alongside her partner post-racing.

View racing betting markets for upcoming classics in the Sydney Cup mould.

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Buy 3 dozen, get 1 dozen free

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As a four-year member of Columbia’s inaugural class of female varsity golfers, Jessica can out-birdie everyone on the masthead. She can out-hustle them in the office, too, where she’s primarily responsible for producing both print and online features, and overseeing major special projects, such as GOLF’s inaugural Style Is­sue, which debuted in February 2018. Her origi­nal interview series, “A Round With,” debuted in November of 2015, and appeared in both in the magazine and in video form on GOLF.com.

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Official: Former Man United coach Silvino Louro passes away

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Manchester United has said goodbye to one of its former staff members.

Silvino Louro, United’s former goalkeeping coach under Jose Mourinho, passed away yesterday.

Death

The club announced yesterday on their official website, “Manchester United is saddened to learn our former goalkeeping coach Silvino Louro has passed away at the age of 67.”

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They added, “our thoughts are with Silvino’s family and friends at this difficult time.”

One of his former clubs, Real Madrid also released a statement saying, “Real Madrid wishes to express its condolences and its love and affection to his family, his teammates, his clubs and all his loved ones.”

Former Manchester United goalkeeper David de Gea also posted a photo on Instagram which simply stated, “rest in peace”.

Career

Louro played for numerous clubs across Portugal, most notably for SL Benfica between 1984 and 1994 and FC Porto from 1995 to 1997. He also won 23 caps for his country.

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He began a successful career as a goalkeeping coach at illustrious clubs such as Porto, Chelsea, Inter Milan, Real Madrid and Manchester United, all while working closely with Jose Mourinho.

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Louro joined United in 2016 and stayed at the club until late 2018. He worked closely alongside David de Gea, Sergio Romero, Sam Johnstone and Joel Pereira.

The former goalkeeping coach was also part of the team that won the FA Community Shield, League Cup and Europa League during his first year at the club.

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He was instrumental in Vítor Baía, Petr Čech, and Júlio César winning the UEFA Best Goalkeeper award under his tutelage.

Portuguese newspaper A Bola, referred to him as “an unavoidable figure” in Portuguese football.

They reported that he finally “succumbed to a prolonged illness”.

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The Peoples Person has been one of the world’s leading Man United news sites for over a decade. Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

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2026 March Madness TV schedule: Channels, announcers, where to watch NCAA Tournament

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The 2026 NCAA Tournament is through its first 20 games with only 48 teams remaining now that the first round is onto its second day Friday. That’s right: 20 teams have already been eliminated from March Madness, leaving the remainder to continue competing for the 2025-26 national champion. Another 16 teams will see their postseason conclude by around 1 a.m. ET on Saturday as competition moves into the second round.

With 67 games set to be televised across CBS, TBS, TNT and truTV, fans will be able to keep up with all the action no matter when they tune in or how they choose to watch. There have already been multiple upsets and busted brackets, and No. 1 seeds Florida and Arizona enter Friday’s games attempting to ensure they remain in their respective driver’s seats with less pain than their conterparts experienced 24 hours earlier.

On the call for the NCAA Tournament this year are several notable voices, with Ian Eagle returning for the third straight year as lead play-by-play announcer and the voice of the Final Four alongside Bill Raftery, Grant Hill and reporter Tracy Wolfson.

Ernie Johnson hosts studio coverage for the Final Four with Nate Burleson, Adam Zucker and Adam Lefkoe also serving as hosts and Jamie Erdhal providing game updates throughout the NCAA Tournament. Studio analysts include Clark Kellogg, Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith and Renee Montgomery in New York, and Bruce Pearl, Jamal Mashburn, Jalen Rose and Seth Davis in Atlanta.

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Robbie Hummel is on site through the Regional Finals with Candace Parker and Wally Szczerbiak calling games for the first time as Brandon Gaudin and Jared Greenberg join the team.

CBS is leading the way, televising 21 games during the NCAA Tournament, including the Elite 8 and Sweet 16. TBS matches it by televising 21 games, including the Final Four, Elite 8 and Sweet 16, while truTV is airing or simulcasting 23 games and TNT is airing or simulcasting 15 games. In addition to the March Madness Live app, where you can watch every game, Paramount+ subscribers will be able to watch all the games televised by CBS, while HBO Max subscribers can catch the games on TBS, TNT and truTV.

From the Selection Show all the way until the playing of “One Shining Moment” after a champion is crowned, CBS Sports and TNT Sports will be bringing you the magic.

Let’s take a look at the 2026 March Madness announcing teams along with the complete schedule for the 2026 NCAA Tournament.

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2026 March Madness announcing teams

Play-by-Play | Analyst(s) || Reporter
* Regional Weekend announce teams | ~ Final Four team

  • Ian Eagle | Bill Raftery, Grant Hill || Tracy Wolfson*~
  • Brian Anderson | Jim Jackson || Allie LaForce*
  • Kevin Harlan | Robbie Hummel, Stan Van Gundy || Lauren Shehadi*
  • Andrew Catalon | Steve Lappas || Evan Washburn*
  • Brad Nessler | Wally Szczerbiak || Jared Greenberg
  • Spero Dedes | Jim Spanarkel || Jon Rothstein
  • Tom McCarthy | Candice Parker, Dan Bonner || AJ Ross
  • Brandon Gaudin | Chris Webber || Andy Katz
  • Rules analyst: Gene Steratore

2026 NCAA Tournament schedule, dates

First round

Friday, March 20
Benchmark International Arena (Tampa), Xfinity Mobile Arena (Philadelphia), Viejas Arena (San Diego), Enterprise Center (St. Louis)

Second round

Saturday, March 21
KeyBank Center (Buffalo), Bon Secours Wellness Arena (Greenville), Paycom Center (Oklahoma City), Moda Center (Portland)

Sunday, March 22 — 12:10 p.m. start (CBS, TBS, TNT, truTV)
Benchmark International Arena (Tampa), Xfinity Mobile Arena (Philadelphia), Viejas Arena (San Diego), Enterprise Center (St. Louis)

Sweet 16

Thursday, March 26 — 7:10 p.m. start (CBS, TBS)
Toyota Center (Houston), SAP Center (San Jose)

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Friday, March 27 — 7:10 p.m. start (CBS, TBS)
United Center (Chicago), Capital One Arena (Washington, D.C.)

Elite 8

Saturday, March 28 — 6:09 p.m. start (TBS)
Toyota Center (Houston), SAP Center (San Jose)

Sunday, March 29 — 2:15 p.m. start (CBS)
United Center (Chicago), Capital One Arena (Washington, D.C.)

Final Four

Saturday, April 4 — 6:09 p.m. start (TBS)
Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis)

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National Championship

Monday, April 6 — 8:50 p.m. (TBS)
Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis)

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Trio of home runs leads Brewers to 11-4 win over Rangers

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As Opening Day approaches, the Brewers are making their final tune ups before the start of the season. With Brandon Woodruff’s status still uncertain, he made a crucial start this evening. It ended up being the offense that dominated the game, as the Brewers defeated the Rangers 11-4.

The Brewers got on the board quickly. Sal Frelick led off the game with a walk, stole second, and scored on an Andrew Vaughn single. In the next inning, back-to-back home runs from Gary Sánchez and Luis Rengifo added two more runs. David Hamilton set up another run with a single and steal, and Joey Ortiz drove him in with a single. After two innings, the Brewers had a 4-0 lead.

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In the fourth inning, the Brewers unleashed a barrage of runs. Vaughn led off the inning with a single, then Garrett Mitchell reached on a fielding error. Sánchez drew a walk after that to load the bases. After Rengifo flew out to center, Brandon Lockridge continued his strong spring with an RBI double, driving in two. Hamilton followed that up with another RBI double to bring in another two runs. That chased Rangers starter Jacob Latz from the game, and Dane Acker entered in relief. After a Frelick groundout and Ortiz walk, Christian Yelich punctuated the inning with a three-run home run. After the first three innings, the Brewers had scored 11 runs.

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Meanwhile, Woodruff started the night with two 1-2-3 innings, striking out two. That started to unravel in the third inning. The Rangers got their first run from a Tyler Wade single and Alejandro Osuna RBI double. Woodruff recovered with strikeouts of Jonah Bride and Joc Pederson, but walked Evan Carter between them. Joe Corbett finished out the inning for Woodruff, striking out Danny Jansen to end the inning.

Woodruff returned for the fourth inning, but promptly allowed back-to-back home runs to Ezequiel Duran and Mark Canha. He got Sam Haggerty to line out, but that was it for his day. In total, he pitched a combination of three innings over the course of the first four innings. He allowed three runs and four hits, two of those going for home runs. He also struck out four and walked one while throwing 62 pitches. While he did get the four ups that he wanted in the game (his goal was to start four innings to get warmed up and pitch), his velocity was noticeably down at the end of his start. After the game, Woodruff said that despite the velocity, he felt great.

Curt Hogg (@CyrtHogg) on X

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After the fourth, both bullpens buckled down for the rest of the game. Trevor Megill pitched the fifth inning and struck out two, but recorded four outs after Canha reached on a wild pitch swinging strikeout. Abner Uribe made his first appearance after returning from the World Baseball Classic, allowed a leadoff single but retired the next three in order, striking out one.

Jared Koenig got into some trouble in the seventh by starting the inning with back-to-back singles. He got two outs thanks to a double play from the defense, then a fly out from Canha ended the inning. Grant Anderson walked one in the eighth inning, but that was it in a scoreless inning of work. Stiven Cruz finished out the game for the Brewers, walked two but held the Rangers scoreless to end the game.

Vaughn and Hamilton each had two-hit days for the Brewers’ offense. Yelich had three RBI from his second home run of the spring, and Lockridge and Hamilton added on two RBI each. Ortiz also reached base twice with a hit and a walk, and also drove a run in. As a team, the Brewers had nine hits — three of those home runs — and four walks.

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Tomorrow features a doubleheader of action for the Brewers. The day will start out with the first of two Spring Breakout games for the Brewers’ prospects, as the Mariners’ Prospects travel to face them in Phoenix. That game will take place at 4:10 p.m. and be broadcast on MLB Video. Then, at night the Brewers travel to face the Diamondbacks, with first pitch set for 8:10 p.m. That game will have an audio broadcast available on MLB.com.

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PSL In Trouble Amid Ongoing Conflict In Pakistan? PCB’s Big Statement

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The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) shared the training schedule with all the Pakistan Super League (PSL) teams despite the ongoing tensions in the region. Although the Pakistan-Afghanistan conflict has escalated massively in the past few days, a report in The Express Tribune stated that no foreign player, including the Australians, has informed their franchises about their unavailability. The opening match of PSL 2026 is scheduled to take place between defending champions Lahore Qalandars and Hyderabad Kingsmen at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. The report claimed that PCB officials have made it clear that the event will take place on time and the team practice sessions will take place on March 24 and 25.

In the past, the PCB has considered United Arab Emirates (UAE) as aa backup venue but according to the report, the PCB has not considered shifting the matches to another country. The players will reportedly be provided security equivalent to that of a head of state and the final of the competition is scheduled to take place on May 3.

Meanwhile, the participation of Bangladesh cricket team players in the upcoming Pakistan Super League (PSL) faced a major roadblock in light of the ongoing regional tensions.

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Six players, Mustafizur RahmanParvez Hossain Emon (Lahore Qalandars), Shoriful IslamNahid RanaTanzid Hasan Tamim (Peshawar Zalmi), and Rishad Hossain (Peshawar Zalmi), were granted No Objection Certificates (NOC) by the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) after they were picked in the auction. However, the board has now decided to seek government approval before allowing the players to travel, according to Cricbuzz.

“Of course, we will seek permission from the government before sending our cricketers for the PSL. Under normal circumstances, these things are not required. We provide clearance, they go, play, and return. But since the situation is not normal and there is a risk element concerning the players, obviously we will discuss it with the government,” BCB cricket operations chairman Nazmul Abedin told Cricbuzz.

“We will seek to know from the government whether it will be safe to travel or not, and based on that government decision, we will have to take the ultimate call on whether the players will go or not,” he said.

“Because it is not actually possible for us to understand the situation there. It is possible for the government to know. The government will know, and if the government tells us that it is safe to go and the players can travel, then the players will go. But, in principle, we have decided that we will give the NOC and they will go to play. But it depends on the situation at that time,” Nazmul added.

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“He has played international Test cricket”

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Former India all-rounder Irfan Pathan has raised concerns over Chennai Super Kings’ (CSK) death bowling options for IPL 2026, which begins on March 28. In a major development on Thursday, March 19, Sportstar reported that Nathan Ellis will miss the upcoming season due to a hamstring injury.

Speaking on his YouTube channel on Friday, March 20, Pathan questioned who would handle the death overs for the franchise. He noted that Anshul Kamboj is an option, having made his Test debut last year. However, Pathan pointed out that while Kamboj can bowl yorkers, the team needs a more reliable option in such situations. He also mentioned that Matheesha Pathirana, who used to perform this role for CSK, was released after the 2025 season. He said:

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“You have Anshul Kambhoj as an option, but he is still a bit new. He has played international Test cricket, and he has faced some criticism, but we have seen that he has good seam and can bowl very well with the new ball. He can also bowl yorkers. But under pressure, you need a solid bowler. Pathirana used to perform this role for many years, but when he went to the auction, due to injuries and inconsistent performance, you let him go. Now Chennai no longer has him. So who will fill that role? This is a very big question.”

The 41-year-old further pointed out that while Khaleel Ahmed is an excellent new-ball bowler, if he delivers three overs upfront and one at the death, it still leaves a gap. He questioned who would handle the remaining overs, noting that no clear specialist for the death overs comes to mind. He said:

“But when we look at the bowling, when you talk about a proper death bowler, that name doesn’t really come to mind. You have Khaleel Ahmed, a top-quality new-ball bowler. He performed very well last year, and you want to get three overs out of him there. But if he bowls one over, then who will bowl the remaining overs at the end?”

CSK will begin their campaign on March 30 when they face Rajasthan Royals (RR) in Guwahati.


“Nathan Ellis’s absence will be a big concern” – Irfan Pathan on Australia star missing IPL 2026 for CSK

In the same video, Irfan Pathan noted that Nathan Ellis’s absence will be a concern for CSK, as the right-arm seamer was a key option in the death overs, and without him, the bowling unit appears weaker. He said:

“Nathan Ellis’s absence will be a big concern because he was the kind of bowler I was watching who could comfortably bowl four overs, especially in the final parts when he would bowl during the death overs. Now, looking at their bowling unit, it seems there is a bit of weakness.”

Ellis has played 17 IPL matches, picking up 19 wickets at an average of 28.73, with a strike rate of 19.8 and an economy of 8.66, including best figures of 4/30.

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