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The presence of absence is a powerful thing, and in Israel today it is the coin of the realm. The hostages, including Americans, sit captive in the tunnels of Gaza, enduring a pain we scarcely fathom. They were stolen on October 7. But in the Jewish homeland, the one place where Jews are supposed to feel safe, it is still October 7. That sunset has not fallen. 

This is something that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and the Democrats don’t seem to understand. If he has harsh words for terrorist Hamas holding hostages, including Americans, they are quiet, next to his criticism of Israel and his unprecedented call for regime change. But honestly, Israelis are not interested in America’s domestic politics, though America’s domestic politics are interested in them. 

At a kibbutz, not a half mile from the Gaza border, I walked into the house of two shockingly beautiful 23-year-olds murdered by Hamas. The dishes were still drying by the sink, and the pockmarks of bullets painted a palpable terror. I like to think that they died in each other’s arms. Crazy kids, like I was then, except I wasn’t helpless in the face of inhumanity.  

I don’t know how to handle what I saw, as the husband of the only family who has moved back since the attack walked me through the horrorscape. It’s a beautiful little village of winding paths and lemon trees, the primary colors of fruit dotting the green of its background. 

Not far is the big city. 

In Tel Aviv, I met Gill. His cousin is still held by Hamas. He is an eloquent advocate, but in his eyes, on his face, was the kind of remembered and still lived terror that reminded me of my own parents’ deaths. It’s real, but unlike me, for him, it isn’t over. 

In the north, where GPS stops working in an effort to thwart Hezbollah drone attacks, lies Kibbutz Hanita, where soldiers make barracks of a kindergarten, the town abandoned. In fact, 60,000 Israelis have been evacuated from the north. I smoke cigarettes with some of them staying in my Tel Aviv hotel. They don’t know when they’ll go home.  

And how can they? Hezbollah, which makes Hamas look like a street gang, has 65,000 precision-guided missiles ready to rain the kind of destruction I witnessed there from a mortar attack on a quiet home. In Hanita, the fresh-faced commander of Israeli Defense Forces there was born and raised in New York. A new recruit, a lovely blonde woman from Sweden, has only been in for six months.  

This unlikely duo is there for one reason alone, the same reason why I had to wear a flak jacket and helmet, the same reason that rockets are fired at them. They are Jews and for that, Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran want to kill them. That’s it. Somebody needs to explain that to Schumer. 

In Hostage Square in Tel Aviv, Israelis refuse to forget, or put away the terror they still live under. The long symbolic Shabbat dinner table still waits for the hostages to take their places. 

Public art has sprung up, an installation mimicking the tunnels in Gaza where the innocents are held captive, a makeshift hourglass counting the time. Atop a piano where songs, generally but not always sad, are played reads, ‘You Are Not Alone.’ And they are not, nor are we. 

The square, the city, and the nation are awash in the presence of absence. But it is beautiful, it is so deeply human to create art even in the face of, perhaps in defiance of, a cult of death and evil where murderers gleefully take selfies with dead civilians, congratulating themselves for the slaughter. 

And why shouldn’t they? They won. They achieved their goal not just of killing Jews, but of making Democrats in America side with their horror and terror. Now they await their reward, a state of their own, from which they can finally destroy Israel. To this notion, with a loud and single voice, Israelis say no. And so must we in America. 

Make no mistake, this battle in which cowardly Schumer is bowing to terrorists and the domestic far left, is not about the destruction of Israel. It is about the destruction of the Jews everywhere, and more, the destruction of America and the West. But that will not happen.  

History is littered with those who sought to end Judaism, from Egypt to Rome, now Islamic terror, but they always lose, they always fade away. Israel is a hard and painful place to be today, and by today I mean the lingering day of October 7, but it is also an inspiration for those who side with the Israelis. Let us stand with them. With light, with life, with a tear and a smile, knowing that freedom will always win.  

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White House national security communications adviser John Kirby brushed off questioning Sunday regarding whether President Biden believes Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is an ‘impediment to peace,’ saying the two world leaders have ‘known each other a long time’ and have an open line of communication. 

‘Does the president think that Benjamin Netanyahu is a bigot? That he’s an impediment to peace? That he should be lumped in with Hamas?’ Fox News’ Shannon Bream asked Kirby on ‘Fox News Sunday.’

Kirby did not explicitly answer, instead highlighting that the two world leaders have long known each other and that the U.S. respects Israel’s sovereignty. 

‘These are two men, leaders that have known each other a long time, Shannon, and they don’t agree on everything – haven’t over 40 years. And there are certain aspects to the prosecution of operations in Gaza, where we obviously don’t agree with everything that Israel has done. But they have a relationship where they can talk to one another, and they do, and they will again. He is the prime minister of Israel. We respect the sovereignty of the Israeli people,’ he responded.

The question comes after Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who is Jewish, delivered a speech last week calling for Netanyahu’s ouster and labeling him an ‘obstacle to peace’ as war rages in Israel and Gaza since October. 

Along with Netanyahu, Schumer added that ‘Hamas and the Palestinians who support and tolerate their evil ways; the radical right-wing Israelis in government and society; [and] Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ are the other obstacles preventing peace. 

Biden later described Schumer’s remarks as a ‘good speech.’

‘He made a good speech, and I think he expressed serious concern shared not only by him, but by many Americans,’ Biden said Friday. 

Bream pressed Kirby on whether Biden agrees with Schumer that there needs to be an election in Israel and that Netanyahu should no longer serve as prime minister. 

‘The president believes it’s up to the Israeli people and the Israeli government to determine if and when there’s going to be new elections. But he does, as he said shortly after Leader Schumer’s very passionate speech, he recognizes that the leader was speaking for a lot of Americans who feel the same way about the way the war is going. We also have concerns about some of the operations and how they’re being conducted. We need to make sure that civilians are protected and secure, that civilian casualties come down, that more trucks and assistance get in and, of course, we’re still working on that temporary cease-fire to get all those hostages out,’ Kirby responded. 

Kirby’s remarks follow another interview last week on MSNBC, where host Andrea Mitchell repeatedly asked the White House official if Biden believes Netanyahu is an ‘obstacle to peace.’ Kirby dodged the question three times, which Mitchell pointed out on air before moving on with the interview. 

‘The president knows that the Israeli people get to determine who their elected government representatives are. That’s what democracy is all about, and he respects that,’ Kirby responded after one of Mitchell’s questions regarding if Netanyahu is an ‘obstacle to peace.’ ‘And he has been nothing but candid and forthright with the prime minister about ways in which we think things can be done differently, things can be done better, things can be done a little bit more stridently to get more assistance into the people of Gaza to and to reduce the number of civilian casualties. I mean, my goodness, these are two guys that have no problem being honest with one another, and I can assure you that the president has done that.’

‘Let me just say that answer – that question was not answered three times. That’s all right. That was your answer,’ Mitchell ultimately said. 

Netanyahu responded to Schumer’s speech this weekend, calling it ‘inappropriate’ and detailing that a potential election is up to Israel and its voters.

‘I think what he said is totally inappropriate. It’s inappropriate to go to a sister democracy and try to replace the elected leadership there,’ Netanyahu said in a CNN interview.

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Speaker of the House Mike Johnson is telling Republicans who are going after sitting GOP lawmakers in contentious primaries to ‘knock it off,’ in order to tamp down on divisions within the party, according to a report. 

Johnson, R-La., attended the House Republicans’ annual member retreat at the Greenbrier Resort in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, last week to unify the often-fractious conference as at least four sitting Republicans in South Carolina, Illinois, Texas and Virginia are going to battle against Republican challengers.

‘I’ve asked them all to cool it,’ Johnson told CNN during the retreat. ‘I am vehemently opposed to member-on-member action in primaries because it’s not productive. And it causes division for obvious reasons, and we should not be engaging in that.’

Johnson is trying to figure out how to guide his razor-thin majority through a series of legislative hurdles that divide Republicans, including how to provide military aid for Ukraine, finish government funding and reauthorize a federal surveillance program – all while trying to make a case that voters should re-elect a GOP House majority.

‘So I’m telling everyone who’s doing that to knock it off,’ Johnson told the outlet, referring to challenging incumbents within the GOP. ‘And both sides, they’ll say, ‘Well, we didn’t start it, they started it.’’

Johnson took the speaker’s gavel late last year after former Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted from office in a historic move that left Republicans deeply divided and mired in dysfunction.

Johnson told Fox News Digital last week that he is aiming to stay at the helm of the House GOP next year regardless of whether they keep the House majority.

‘I have not given a lot of thought about the next Congress, because I’m so busy with my responsibility right now,’ Johnson said. ‘My intention is to stay as speaker, stay in leadership, because we’re laying a lot of important groundwork right now for the big work that we’ll be doing.’

Fox News’ Elizabeth Elkind and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

If the seeds were to hold form, the Midwest Region final would match Purdue, which hasn’t been to the Final Four since 1980, against Tennessee, which hasn’t been to the Final Four ever.

Now, the question is whether either of those teams will get to the region final.

Tennessee, coach Rick Barnes’ current school, would have to get through — among others — Texas, one of Barnes’ former schools.

Purdue stands to get two virtual home games to start, with its first-round game and presumptive second-round game in Indianapolis, which is about an hour by car from West Lafayette. But as a No. 1 seed last year, the Boilermakers showed nothing is a given. Facing a No. 16-seed play-in winner, Fairleigh Dickinson, they lost. They again start with play-in winner, Montana State or Grambling.

USA TODAY Sports breaks down the NCAA Tournament Midwest Region:

IT’S BRACKET MADNESS: Enter USA TODAY’s NCAA tournament bracket contest for a chance at $1 million prize.

Best first-round matchup: Gonzaga vs. McNeese State

This has not been a vintage year for Gonzaga, and it’s ending up facing a McNeese team that went 30-3, averages 80 points a game and shoots nearly 40% from three-point range as a team. McNeese is led by grad student guard Shahada Wells, who averages 17.8 points, 4.8 assists and 4.5 rebounds per game. And could there be any greater contrast between Gonzaga and a team that styles itself as “the Bayou Bandits” (they force 16.5 turnovers per game, including just over 10 steals) or between the coaches – staid Mark Few, in his 25th season with the Zags, vs. Will Wade, in his first season with McNeese after working at LSU (Google the term “strong-ass offer”).

Elsewhere in the first round, the current South Carolina team will know nothing of it — but Gamecocks fans of a certain age had to wince when they saw where their sixth-seeded team will be playing No. 11 seed Oregon: Pittsburgh, where the then-No. 2 seed Gamecocks suffered a first-round upset by No. 15 Coppin State in 1997.

BREAKDOWNS:East Region | Midwest Region | South Region | West Region

Potential upset in first round: Samford vs. Kansas

Aside from McNeese State’s ability to take down Gonzaga, look out for this one. The tournament selection committee did the Jayhawks no favors here. Their two best players, center Hunter Dickinson (dislocated shoulder) and Kevin McCullar (bone bruise in knee), could have used every hour of healing time they could get.

Instead, KU is playing on Thursday, although it will play in the last game of the day in Salt Lake City. The Jayhawks also lack depth, even with Dickinson and McCullar able to play. So, now they will have to contend with altitude in Salt Lake City and a Samford team that has 10 players averaging 12 minutes to 26 minutes a game and two other players averaging more than seven minutes. But one thing sticks out on Samford’s resume: Just one game this season against a Power Five opponent — the season-opener at Purdue, in which the Bulldogs got crushed, 98-45.

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers among the teams in the tournament

The sleeper: Creighton

Having just explained how Kansas could get upset by Samford in the first round, keep in mind that when Dickinson and McCullar are reasonably healthy, KU can beat anybody.

But the pick is the Bluejays. They advanced to the regional finals last year, losing by one point to San Diego State on a free throw with 1.2 seconds to play. Baylor Scheierman, a 6-7 guard; Ryan Kalkbrenner, a 7-1 center, and Trey Alexander, a 6-4 guard, are back from that team and each averaging more than 17 points per game.

Creighton has taken some tough losses this season, but it also has beaten Connecticut — albeit in Omaha in what was UConn’s third game in seven days.

The winner: Purdue

Given that the other team in NCAA Tournament history to lose in the first round as a No. 1 seed — Virginia — came back to win the national championship the following year, also as a No. 1 seed, how can you resist this one?

After spending much of this season ranked No. 1 in the nation, the Boilermakers showed their fallibility in losing to Wisconsin in the Big Ten tournament semifinals. But guess what? That Virginia team that won the national championship did so after losing in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament semifinals. Oh, and by the way, en route to the NCAA tournament title, Virginia beat Purdue in the regional semifinals in overtime.

To get to the regional final this year, Purdue’s toughest test may come in the second round against TCU, if the Horned Frogs can get past Utah State. TCU has the kind of team speed that can cause problems for Purdue and potentially minimize the influence of its 7-4 senior center Zach Edey.

But karma is what it is.

NCAA Tournament Midwest region schedule

First round

Thursday, March 21

At PPG Paints Arena, Pittsburgh

Creighton vs. Akron, 1:30 p.m., TNT

South Carolina vs. Oregon, 4 p.m., TNT

At Spectrum Center, Charlotte, N.C.

Texas vs. Virginia-Colorado State winner, 6:50 p.m., TNT

Tennessee vs. Saint Peter’s, 9:20 p.m., TNT

At Delta Center, Salt Lake City

Gonzaga vs. McNeese State, 7:25 p.m., TBS

Kansas vs. Samford, 9:55 p.m., TBS

Friday, March 22

At Gainbridge Fieldhouse, Indianapolis

Purdue vs. Montana State-Grambling winner, 7:25, TBS

Utah State vs. TCU, 9:55 p.m., TBS

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

There’s a whole lot of history in the South Region of the NCAA men’s tournament, which features six teams with NCAA championship banners hanging in their home arenas and a couple more with recent Final Four visits.

The schools seeded second through fifth are all past champs, although it’s been a while winning the whole thing for Marquette (1977) and even longer for Wisconsin (1941). Kentucky and Duke, of course, have more than a dozen titles between them, and incidentally have staged some epic head-to-head showdowns in this event. Then there’s Florida, the last program to go back-to-back when it achieve the feat earlier this century.

Then all the way down at No. 11, where past champs rarely hide, we find one of this year’s most unlikely bid thieves. We’ll get to them in a bit. But first we’ll take a look at some other potential intrigue in this historically significant regional on the road to Dallas.

Best first-round matchup: Wisconsin vs. James Madison

That 5-12 pairing between Wisconsin and James Madison is the easy choice here. The Badgers did well to make a run to the Big Ten championship game, including an overtime triumph against Purdue. But they’ll be at something of a disadvantage in terms of recovery time, and the Dukes won’t in any way be intimidated by taking on a power conference program. JMU, you might recall, made one of the season’s early splashes with an upset at Michigan State. They went on to win 31 games, although none of those made quite as much noise. Fortunately for the Dukes given how tight things turned out to be on the bubble, they secured the automatic berth as the Sun Belt champs.

IT’S BRACKET MADNESS: Enter USA TODAY’s NCAA tournament bracket contest for a chance at $1 million prize.

JMU can score a bit, to the tune of 84.4 points a game. Wisconsin is historically known for defense, although this year’s version of the Badgers has surrendered some high point totals. Suffice to say there will be a lot of shot makers on the floor in this one, usually a formula for entertaining basketball in March.

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers from the NCAA men’s tournament field

Potential upset in first round: Vermont defeats Duke

Vermont is no stranger to the Big Dance. The Catamounts are making their 10th NCAA appearance in all and third in a row. Thus far, their 2005 upset of Syracuse has been their only victory in the round of 64. Its draw against fourth-seeded Duke might not look favorable to springing another March surprise. The Catamounts will be at a considerable size disadvantage, even though the Blue Devils’ bigs don’t always play at the rim. But Vermont takes excellent care of the ball, committing just 9.1 turnovers a game. Duke has made its share of Final Four trips but has also been bitten by the upset bug a time or two, even when Coach K was still in charge (Lehigh, anyone?). Will it happen? Perhaps not, but it’s one to keep an eye on.

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers among the teams in the tournament

The sleeper: North Carolina State

As we all know, North Carolina State had to win five games in five days in the ACC tournament just to get here, a feat previously accomplished by Connecticut in the 2011 Big East tourney. Hmmm…anyone remember how that UConn team fared in the Big Dance? Oh yeah, thanks to a dude named Kemba Walker, those Huskies just kept rolling all the way to the title.

The Wolfpack face long odds of making a similar run. Their opening contest against Texas Tech will be challenging enough. But with the team’s leading DJ’s, D.J. Horne and D.J. Burns, spinning all the right tunes, a little belief can go a long way.

The winner: Houston

One at least has to consider Kentucky in the No. 3 position. When their many talented scorers get going, the Wildcats are capable of beating anyone. But in the end we can’t go against top-seeded Houston. Despite the Cougars getting outmuscled in the Big 12 finale, they’ve been remarkably consistent all season in the nation’s deepest conference, and their defense-first approach should serve them well in the pressure-packed environment of March Madness.

NCAA Tournament South region schedule

Thursday, March 21

At PPG Paints Arena, Pittsburgh

Kentucky vs. Oakland, 7:10 p.m., CBS

Texas Tech vs. North Carolina State, 9:40 p.m., CBS

Friday, March 22

At Gainbridge Fieldhouse, Indianapolis

Marquette vs. Western Kentucky, 2 p.m., CBS

Florida vs. Boise State-Colorado winner, 4:30 p.m., CBS

At Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y.

Duke vs. Vermont, 6:50, CBS

Wisconsin vs. James Madison, 9:40 p.m., CBS

At FedEx Forum, Memphis, Tenn.

Nebraska vs. Texas A&M, 7:50 p.m., TNT

Houston vs. Longwood, 9:20 p.m., TNT

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The top-overall seed in the men’s NCAA Tournament is looking to become the eighth program in Division I and first since Florida in 2006-7 to go back-to-back in the tournament era. The others are Oklahoma State (1945-46), Kentucky (1948-49), San Francisco (1955-56), Cincinnati (1961-62), UCLA (1964-65, 1967-73) and Duke (1991-92).

The Huskies will try to do so coming out of the East Region, where the stiffest competition should come from No. 2 Iowa State, the Big 12 tournament champion; No. 3 Illinois, the second-place team from the Big Ten; and No. 4 Auburn, winners of the SEC tournament.

It’s a strong region. But no team in the country has looked as strong as UConn, the prohibitive favorites to repeat.

USA TODAY Sports breaks down the men’s NCAA Tournament East Region:

IT’S BRACKET MADNESS: Enter USA TODAY’s NCAA tournament bracket contest for a chance at $1 million prize.

Best first-round matchup: Washington State vs. Drake

No. 7 Washington State is back in the tournament for the first since 2008 after going 24-9 and finishing second in the Pac-12 under coach Kyle Smith. Drake had another outstanding regular season — the Bulldogs have won at least 25 games in each of the past four years — but won the Missouri Valley tournament championship to land the No. 10 seed. Drake’s offense is one of the highest-scoring in program history but will be challenged by a WSU defense that hasn’t given up 80 points since a win against Washington on Feb. 3.

BREAKDOWNS:East Region | Midwest Region | South Region | West Region

Potential upset in first round: Auburn vs. Yale

No. 12 Alabama-Birmingham is hot enough to take down No. 5 San Diego State, though the Blazers’ play for the vast majority of the regular season doesn’t speak too well to their chances. Let’s go instead with No. 13 Yale finding a hot hand and taking down No. 4 Auburn, which had one of the cruelest tournament landing spots of any Power Six team. The Tigers were placed behind No. 3 Kentucky despite winning the SEC, for one, and worse yet will very likely have to tussle with one of the Huskies and Iowa State to get back to the Final Four behind coach Bruce Pearl.

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers among the teams in the tournament

The sleeper: Florida Atlantic

If for no other reason than the fact that FAU doesn’t lose NCAA Tournament games in New York. (If we’re counting all five boroughs, that is.) A year ago, the Owls punched their ticket to the Final Four out of Madison Square Garden in Manhattan. This time, the No. 8 Owls will get started at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center against No. 9 Northwestern before — gulp — taking on UConn. FAU struggled at times during the regular season as first-year members of the American but have the experienced roster and depth of production to make another March run in the Big Apple.

The winner: Connecticut

OK, so let’s get real: Anyone other than UConn winning the region and going to the Final Four would be a big surprise. (Anyone other than UConn winning the whole thing might be a big surprise, actually.) The Huskies are long, deep, explosive, dripping with athleticism and loaded with the sort of confidence you’d expect from the defending champs. The Huskies are built to handle the intensity of tournament play and will benefit from the depth developed while battling some injuries during the regular season.

NCAA Tournament East Region schedule

First round

Thursday, March 21

At CHI Health Center, Omaha, Neb.

Brigham Young vs. Duquesne, 12:40 p.m., truTV

Illinois vs. Morehead State, 3:10 p.m., truTV

Iowa State vs. South Dakota State, 7:35 p.m., truTV

Washington State vs. Drake, 10:05 p.m., truTV

Friday, March 22

At Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y.

Florida Atlantic vs. Northwestern, 12:15, CBS

Connecticut vs. Stetson, 2:45 p.m. CBS

At Spokane Arena, Spokane, Wash.

San Diego State vs. Alabama-Birmingham, 1:45 p.m., TNT

Auburn vs. Yale, 4:15 p.m., TNT

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Selection Sunday isn’t exactly a joyful affair for every men’s college basketball team.

Missing out on the NCAA Tournament can be gut-wrenching for a program that grinded out the four-month season only to have their dreams of the Big Dance dashed.

Not all is lost for 32 teams because they will have a chance to compete in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT).

Last year, North Carolina turned down an invitation to the NIT after missing the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2010 — besides the 2020 competition, which was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The North Texas Mean Green were happy to accept a bid and ended up winning their first NIT title.

IT’S BRACKET MADNESS: Enter USA TODAY’s NCAA tournament bracket contest for a chance at $1 million prize.

Here is everything you need to know for the 2024 National Invitation Tournament:

Who is playing in the 2024 NIT?

Top left bracket:

Seton Hall (1) vs. Saint Joseph’s
LSU (4) vs. North Texas
Providence (3) vs. Boston College
Princeton (2) vs. UNLV

Bottom left bracket:

Wake Forest (1) vs. Appalachian State
Georgia (4) vs. Xavier
Virginia Tech (3) vs. Richmond
Ohio State (2) vs. Cornell

Top right bracket:

Indiana State (1) vs. SMU
Butler (4) vs. Minnesota
Bradley (3) vs. Loyola Chicago
Cincinnati (2) vs. San Francisco

Bottom right bracket:

Villanova (1) vs. VCU
UCF (4) vs. South Florida
Iowa (3) vs. Kansas State
Utah (2) vs. UC Irvine

Who declined an invite to the 2024 NIT?

After being snubbed by the NCAA selection committee for the Big Dance, a handful of teams followed North Carolina’s example from last season and declined an invitation to the NIT.

The schools that have declined to play in the NIT are: Indiana, Memphis, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Pittsburgh, St. John’s and Washington.

When is the NIT and championship game?

The first round of the NIT tournament tips off on Tuesday.

The competition features two initial rounds before the quarterfinals take place on March 26 and 27.

The NIT championship will be played at 7 p.m. ET on April 4.

Where is the NIT championship?

The NIT semifinals and championship will be played at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. The historic venue is the home of the Butler Bulldogs basketball teams. After it was built in 1928, it was the largest basketball arena in the country until 1950 and hosted many landmark events, including the 1954 IHSAA championship, which inspired the movie ‘Hoosiers.’

How to watch the 2024 NIT tournament?

The NIT tournament will be broadcast on television on ESPN and its family of channels.

The NIT championship game will air on TV on ESPN and be live streamed on ESPN+.

Is there a women’s NIT?

The National Invitation Tournament is for men’s college basketball.

The women’s equivalent is the Women’s Basketball Invitation Tournament (WBIT).

The tournament also features 32 teams that didn’t make the NCAA tournament.

The WBIT tips off on Thursday with the championship at 7 p.m. ET on April 3.

The tournament championship will be held at the historic Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana, along with the men’s title game.

The WBIT will be broadcast on ESPN’s family of channels with the championship game on ESPN2 and live streamed on ESPN+.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

For the Connecticut Huskies, this has already been a history-making season in a number of respects. But while some history is with them, some is going against them as they embark on their bid for a rare repeat as men’s college basketball champions.

For what it’s worth, they’ll enter the NCAA tournament as the No. 1 team in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll. UConn was the unanimous first choice by the 32 voters after being the lone projected top regional seed to claim its conference tournament title.

So should this be a welcome development if you’re a Huskies’ fan? Recent trends say no, as the last team to be ranked No. 1 heading into March Madness and actually bring home the title was Kentucky in 2012. But there’s also no disputing that the Big East champs are performing at an extremely high level on the eve of the Big Dance.

Houston slips just one spot to No. 2 after losing in the Big 12 title game to Iowa State. That result also boosted the Cyclones two notches to No. 4, their highest ranking since being ranked second in December of 2015. Purdue stays put at No. 3 despite its overtime loss to Wisconsin in the Big Ten semifinals.

IT’S BRACKET MADNESS: Enter USA TODAY’s NCAA tournament bracket contest for a chance at $1 million prize.

North Carolina and Tennessee each fall a spot to No. 5 and 6, respectively. Auburn vaults five places to No. 7 after winning the SEC tournament. Marquette, Arizona and Illinois round out the top 10.

In other significant moves, Saint Mary’s climbs five positions to No. 15 after its convincing triumph in the West Coast Conference finale over No. 16 Gonzaga. Kansas, short-handed in an early exit from the Big 12 tourney, falls to No. 20, its lowest position since a brief absence from the top 25 in 2021.

No. 23 Florida, No. 24 Wisconsin and No. 25 San Diego State join the poll, replacing Nevada, Dayton and Washington State.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It’s a lucky day for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

Jerome Bettis’ son, Jerome Bettis Jr., verbally committed to play college football at Notre Dame on Sunday. The younger Bettis posted a video tribute posted on X, formerly Twitter, reflecting on his father’s impact and forging his own path. Bettis Jr. said he wore his father’s No. 36 and played running back growing up until he switched to wide receiver in seventh grade and then took No. 32 in eighth grade.

‘Some say it’s legacy to follow my father’s footsteps. Some say I should create my own destiny,’ he said over a montage of family videos and highlights with Future’s ‘Temptation’ in the background. ‘Growing up as a Bettis, I’ve heard all about the ways Notre Dame can change your life academically and athletically. …

‘I’ve always been inspired by my dad’s career in college and the NFL, but it’s time to start my own journey and I’m excited for the next chapter. … So, is it legacy? Or am I changing my destiny? It’s both and my story is only beginning. I’m blessed to announce my commitment to the University of Notre Dame.’

Bettis Jr.’s sister, Jada, also attended Notre Dame where their father played under head coach Lou Holtz. She appears in the video in a letterman jacket.

‘When I made my decision on a school, I knew it would impact my life for the better,’ the elder Bettis, an NFL Hall of Famer who spent a decade with the Pittsburgh Steelers, said in the video. ‘Now, all I ask is that you make your decision based on what school would change your life, not for a season, but for a lifetime.’

Bettis Jr., a three-star wide receiver per Rivals.com in the Class of 2025, made the announcement on St. Patrick’s Day, which the Fighting Irish football program calls ‘Pot of Gold’ day where up to 100 offers for the Class of 2026 are extended. The 6’2′ Woodward Academy player received his offer from his father’s alma mater on the day last year. Last season, he had 30 catches for 369 yards and four touchdowns.

He expressed his confidence in current Fighting Irish head coach Marcus Freeman, who has been at the helm of the program since 2021 and led the team to back-to-back bowl wins.

“I’m sure everybody’s heard this a lot, but he’s such a great coach and he’s so personable,” he said, according to the recruiting website. “For him to be the leader of Notre Dame football, it makes it so much more enticing almost for me to want to go there and want to play under him. Just because of how great of a person he is. Then obviously he’s an outstanding coach.”

Bettis Jr. also had offers from Arkansas, Boston College, California, Duke, Georgia Tech, Kansas, Mississippi, Missouri and others.

Bettis, nicknamed ‘The Bus,’ played football at Notre Dame for three seasons, starting his college career as a fullback. He rushed for 1,912 yards before the Los Angeles Rams selected him as the No. 10 overall pick in the 1993 NFL draft.

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As the 2024 men’s NCAA Tournament kicks off, a familiar face in March Madness coverage will be missing.

CBS studio host Greg Gumbel will not be part of this year’s coverage because of ‘family health issues,’ the network announced Sunday, just before the bracket reveal. Taking over his duties will be Adam Zucker. The rest of the crew − Clark Kellogg, Jay Wright and Seth Davis − all wished Gumbel and his family well before the bracket was announced.

Gumbel, 77, has been a tournament staple for CBS for decades, first hosting the network’s coverage in 1998, and has been at the Final Four during his tenure. Last season, CBS celebrated Gumbel’s 25th anniversary of tournament coverage. He also made history in 2001, when he was the first Black play-by-play announcer to call a U.S major championship sporting event, calling the Baltimore Ravens’ win over the New York Giants in Super Bowl 35.

Zucker said CBS plans to have Gumbel back for the men’s NCAA tournament next season.

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