NCAA, Madness
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USA TODAY |
The NCAA men's Final Four is at hand with all eyes on San Antonio.
USA Today |
We are down to the Final Four teams remaining in the 2025 NCAA Tournament after Auburn beat Michigan State, Houston defeated Tennessee, Duke topped Alabama and Florida ousted Texas Tech in the Elite ...
Yahoo! Sports |
Meanwhile, the women’s Final Four will be decided Monday night, where South Carolina is awaiting its next opponent.
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If Duke wins it all, one bettor could turn a $5, five-leg parlay into a huge payday, complementing the $20k they've already made. Patrick Everson has the scoop.
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Southern California basketball star JuJu Watkins spoke for the first time since her season was cut short by a brutal knee injury in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
The Houston Cougars like mixing it up — and turning things ugly. Their hard-nosed defense has been a staple throughout coach Kelvin Sampson's 11-year tenure, and it served them well again in Indianapolis against two teams with much larger fan bases,
Recreational bettors have cashed in on the favorites during March Madness, but it hasn't been all bad news for the books. Patrick Everson breaks it down.
For the first time since 2008, the Final Four will feature all No. 1 seeds. Florida vs. Auburn starts the day in San Antonio next weekend, and the nightcap will see Duke face Houston in a rematch of last year's Sweet 16 game.
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There are no real edges for any of these teams as the matchups fit their playing styles. Duke and Houston have the two best defenses in the country and play slower, so fitting they meet, while Auburn and Florida both play at quicker tempos and rank as the second and third-best offenses behind Duke.
“That is just madness, that you can build refugee centres in a country as peaceful as South Africa, and claim that people are subjected to genocide,” ANC secretary-general Fikile Mbalula said at a media briefing. “The real genocide is happening there in the Middle East, that is what needs to be curtailed.”
Coach after coach, from Miami’s Jim Larrañaga to Virginia’s Tony Bennett to Villanova’s Jay Wright, have walked away from college basketball, saying it no longer holds the appeal it once did.