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Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., is asking President Biden and his administration to clarify their stance on Hamas, following Biden’s State of the Union address. 

In a conversation with NBC’s Kristen Welker on ‘Meet the Press’ that aired Sunday, Graham pointed to a line in the speech when Biden said about Hamas, ‘If you release the hostages, the war will be over.’

‘I literally about fell out of my seat,’ Graham said. ‘Is the president saying that if the hostages are released by Hamas, they can stay in power? That ends the conflict?’ Graham noted that former President Trump, who will likely be Biden’s opponent in November’s election, ‘believes it’s non-negotiable when it comes to Hamas: they have to be destroyed militarily, they can’t be in charge.’

‘I’m challenging the Biden administration today to clear this up,’ Graham said. ‘You cannot allow Hamas to stay in power. You can’t allow them to have six brigades to do October 7th again.’

Welker said Biden has stated in the past that he stands behind this position as well.

Graham also criticized Biden for ‘missing the boat’ by focusing on what Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should be doing, and not Hamas or their backer Iran. 

‘Israel is not killing American soldiers,’ Graham said. ‘Iran is through their proxies. So I would urge President Biden to hold the Great Satan, Iran, accountable for killing soldiers in Jordan and attacking shipping. So yeah, I think he’s got it backwards.’

Graham says the United States should be ‘all in and helping Israel’ while not saying or doing anything that would ’empower our enemy.’

President Biden on Saturday said the U.S. does not have a ‘red line’ with Israel over its actions in the war with Hamas that would leave the Middle Eastern country unprotected. 

‘I am never going to leave Israel,’ the president told MSNBC’s Jonathan Capehart in a wide-ranging interview. ‘The defense of Israel is still critical. There’s no red line [where] I’m going to cut off all weapons, so they don’t have the Iron Dome to protect them.’

Biden was clarifying a hot mic comment from Thursday night after delivering the State of the Union address in which he was caught saying he planned a ‘come-to-Jesus’ talk with Netanyahu over his handling of the war. 

Fox News’ Brie Stimson contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The markets continued to trade on expected lines. The trading week was short as Friday was a trading holiday on account of Mahashivratri. In the four trading sessions, the markets stayed choppy and failed to make any definite and convincing moves while they continued to modestly advance on a weekly basis. The trading range also stayed narrow; the Index oscillated in a defined 301.30-point trading range while staying devoid of directional bias on most occasions. The volatility also dipped; the India VIX declined by 10.65% to 13.61. By and large, while not showing any meaningful upsides, the headline index closed with a net weekly gain of 154.80 points (+0.69%).

As we head into a fresh week, the markets remain prone to consolidation at higher levels. The Options data continue to show a buildup of resistance just above the current levels. There are strong possibilities that the markets may show incremental advances, but at the same time, also stay prone to profit-taking bouts at higher levels. A sustained upmove is unlikely and that would happen only if Nifty is able to take out 22600 levels and higher. This warrants a strong vigil at higher levels; it would be important to not only identify opportunities with strong relative strength but also keep protecting profits at higher levels.

Chasing the trend should be done very mindfully and with strict protective stops in place. The coming week is likely to once again see a quiet start to the trade. The levels of 22600 and 22750 are likely to act as resistance levels; supports come in lower at 22230 and 22050 levels.

The weekly RSI stands at 74.52; it stays in a mildly overbought zone. It also stays neutral and does not show any divergence against the price. The weekly MACD stays bullish and remains above the signal line.

A candle with a small real body emerged; this denotes the lack of conviction and indecisiveness of the market participants at current levels.

The pattern analysis of the weekly charts shows that the Nifty continues well while advancing the breakout that it achieved as it crossed above 20800 levels. Following a breakout from the rising channel, the Index has continued to advance while forming incremental highs. The bands have gotten wider; there are possibilities that this bulge may kill the trend and push the markets under some consolidation.

There are no signs though on the charts that suggest any corrective move to happen. However, that being said, the technical structure of the charts makes it evident that the markets are at the point of taking a breather. The current uptrend may stay intact or may not immediately reverse, but the Nifty certainly looks prone to some consolidation at higher levels. While we keep following the trend and look for stocks that show improved or strong relative strength, equal importance should be laid on the protection of profits at higher levels. It is strongly recommended that while one may continue to follow the trend, effectively trailed stops may be followed while keeping overall leveraged positions at modest levels. A cautious outlook is advised for the week.

Sector Analysis for the coming week

In our look at Relative Rotation Graphs®, we compared various sectors against CNX500 (NIFTY 500 Index), which represents over 95% of the free float market cap of all the stocks listed.

Relative Rotation Graphs (RRG) show that while staying inside the leading quadrant, Nifty IT, Commodities, and the PSE groups are showing a slowdown in their relative momentum against the broader markets. Besides this, PSU Banks, Pharma, Infrastructure, and Auto indices are inside the leading quadrant and may continue to relatively outperform the broader markets.

The Realty Index is back inside the weakening quadrant and so is the Metal Index. These two sectors along with the Nifty Midcap 100 index which is also in the weakening quadrant may see their relative performance slowing down while they may continue to perform on an individual basis.

Nifty FMCG, Financial Services, Service Sector Index, Banknifty, and Media continue to languish inside the lagging quadrant. The Consumption Index is also inside the lagging quadrant but appears to be improving on its relative momentum.

No sectors are present inside the improving quadrant.

Important Note: RRG™ charts show the relative strength and momentum of a group of stocks. In the above Chart, they show relative performance against NIFTY500 Index (Broader Markets) and should not be used directly as buy or sell signals.  

Milan Vaishnav, CMT, MSTA

Consulting Technical Analyst

www.EquityResearch.asia | www.ChartWizard.ae

Buying now and paying later is still a popular way to splurge on airfare to Cabo. It’s an increasingly common way to buy groceries and lawn furniture, too.

Consumers ages 35 and under comprise 53% of “buy now, pay later” users but just 35% of traditional credit card holders, according to LexisNexis Risk Solutions. Many of those core “BNPL” borrowers have grown so comfortable using the installment loans for just-out-of-reach luxuries that they’re putting more everyday purchases on them as well.

Apparel and accessories were the most popular product category among millennial (ages 30-44) and Gen Z (18-29) users of the BNPL provider Afterpay in 2021 and 2022. But last year it fell to fourth place behind “arts, travel and entertainment,” “home and garden” and “hardware,” according to data the company provided to NBC News.

The shift adds to signs that fast-growing BNPL services, which let users break up transactions into several payments with little or no interest, are becoming a routine tool in young adults’ wallets as they adapt to higher prices.

Afterpay’s youngest users’ spending on many staples has surged by double and triple digits, with contact lenses soaring 465% from 2022 to 2023, garbage bags jumping 182% and first-aid antiseptics rising 98%. Their spending growth for lighter fluid, laptop parts and snoring and sleep apnea aids all surpassed 300%.

Young borrowers are making similar moves on rival services, too. Benjamin Espinoza, 27, recently stocked his fridge using a discount promotion from Instacart and selected Klarna at checkout, using the BNPL provider to spread out his roughly $40 bill.

It sucks that these are the avenues that I have to go through.

Klarna user Benjamin Espinoza, 27

“It sucks that these are the avenues that I have to go through,” said the San Antonio, Texas, video editor, who lives with three roommates.

Espinoza said he made less than $7,000 last year after earning his bachelor’s degree in history two years ago. He acknowledged most BNPL services don’t help consumers build credit for timely repayment but said, “It’s good that it’s here in the moment.”

Jasmine Parker, 30, also uses Klarna for groceries, including when she’s waiting for a paycheck. It allows her to buy everything she wants rather than forgo a few items, but she said she usually pays her full balance after the second installment comes due “so I don’t have to worry about it.”

“I don’t like owing a bunch of money,” said Parker, who works in customer service and lives in the Raleigh-Durham area of North Carolina, adding that the thought of her student loans stresses her out.

It isn’t just BNPL borrowers in their 20s and 30s making the shift toward essentials. Grocery purchases by shoppers of all ages have expanded their slice of online BNPL loans by 40% since this time last year, according to Adobe — a bigger jump than any other product category — while electronics’ share shrunk by 14%.

Some users on TikTok and X, formerly Twitter, have been trading BNPL-based grocery hacks to cope with higher costs.

“Being able to use afterpay for groceries is a finesse,” one X user posted in December. “Just buy an e giftcard to the grocery store and send it to yourself.” Afterpay said gift cards and certificates are the second-fastest-growing purchase in its arts and entertainment category by millennial and Gen Z customers.

Many borrowers have flocked to BNPL to avoid credit cards with interest rates of 20% or higher. But younger users’ opting to pay for more necessities in installments also reflects the mini-loans’ growing ubiquity in an economy where many consumer prices have swelled.

BNPL providers “got integrated really well and really quickly” into mobile shopping during the pandemic recovery, said Vivek Pandya, lead analyst at Adobe Digital Insights. The services now “have consumers who are very plugged in. So that convenience factor, the ease with which they can kind of move through the BNPL payment process, through their online transaction, has really kept the growth persistent.”

Most BNPL services make money by charging commission fees from merchants when customers apply one of their instant loans at checkout. Afterpay’s retail partners include sellers of household staples such as 1-800-Contacts and PetSmart. In December, rival provider Affirm announced it was expanding to self-checkout kiosks at Walmart’s 4,500 U.S. stores, bringing the option within closer reach of shoppers stocking up on basics.

Nonessentials are still growing fast on BNPL services, too.

Afterpay said travel ticket spending surged 1,430% from the previous year among its youngest users. Affirm told NBC News those purchases are taking off on its platform as well: Travel and ticketing was Gen Zers’ fastest-growing category last year and nearly doubled in volume overall. It was among the fastest-growing purchases for millennials as well, but their top category by volume was “general merchandise, as they increasingly utilized flexible pay-over-time options for everyday purchases,” the company said.

A Klarna spokesperson said, “While it’s not our place to tell people how to shop or where to buy, we do think it’s our role to give people choice, convenience and flexibility when it comes to paying for everyday purchases like groceries and household goods.”

Some analysts worry the growth and popularity of BNPL services could spur more risky spending.

Researchers at the New York Federal Reserve recently found BNPL customers use the services differently depending on their finances. Those on shakier footing tend to use them like credit cards “to make medium-size, out-of-budget purchases frequently,” they wrote. More financially stable users turn to BNPL less regularly but do so largely to avoid credit-card interest for big purchases.

It has been a great way to help me with money management.

Afterpay user Deijanae Duncan, 36

Deijanae Duncan, 36, said she first started using Afterpay for beauty and fashion purchases, and then for cruise tickets. More recently, she’s used it to buy glasses for herself and sports equipment for her three sons.

“It wasn’t like I was experiencing any financial hardship,” said Duncan, who lives in Los Angeles and works as a project manager for a federal agency. “It has been a great way to help me with money management.”

The New York Fed researchers said purchases under $250 were among the most common for both types of borrowers they examined. While financially stable customers were far more likely to use BNPL services for pricier purchases around the $2,000 mark, even low-dollar installment loans can add up, especially for users with many open at once.

Still, BNPL can be a responsible option, said Kevin King, vice president of credit risk and marketing strategy at LexisNexis Risk Solutions.

“In a lot of ways, we’d rather have people who are in a tough financial position financing essential goods with this than financing a $400 Nordstrom purchase, which has its time,” he said.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Three years ago, the U.S. economy went through an unprecedented upheaval as millions of workers left low-paying jobs for more promising ones. At the same time, many white-collar workers cemented themselves into remote, or at least hybrid, positions that gave them more flexibility.

It was called the ‘great resignation.’

Fast-forward to today, and the situation looks like a mirror image, economists say. Specifically, on average, few workers are leaving their jobs, though they still do not face the prospect of imminent layoffs.

At the same time, the rate of hiring has dropped significantly. Some economists have begun calling it the ‘great stay.’

On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the U.S. economy added 275,000 jobs in February, up from a revised 229,000 in January and above the 198,000 expected by economists.

The solid job growth data, combined with an unemployment rate that, at 3.9%, is usually a sign of a healthy labor market, is colliding with other, more worrisome trends.

“We’re seeing that the job market is getting cooler,” said Guy Berger, director of economic research at the Burning Glass Institute, a labor research group. “It’s still not a bad one, but it’s looking more like what we saw in the mid 2010s — which was not a terrible job market but still a worse one than what we saw later that decade or what we had in the post-pandemic period.” 

The labor market faces an unusual set of crosscurrents that makes it hard to predict whether the economy can maintain its strength in the medium term and beyond, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.

In addition to quits being down, he noted that hours worked have, in some instances, been cut back to recessionary levels. On Thursday, the agency reported a 3.3% decrease in hours worked for manufacturing — the largest such decline since the historic drop-off in the second quarter of 2020.

Cuts among temporary jobs have also picked up, Zandi said, which can often signal that cuts to full-time positions are in the offing.

‘It feels fragile,’ he said.

At the same time — and despite some high-profile headlines reflecting thousands of roles eliminated over the past year — actual layoff rates remain below pre-pandemic levels.

Yet here, too, there are worsening signs. The job placement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas on Thursday reported the highest level of layoff announcements for any February since the global financial crisis.

“As we navigate the start of 2024, we’re witnessing a persistent wave of layoffs,” Andrew Challenger, the firm’s labor and workplace expert, said in a statement. “Businesses are aggressively slashing costs and embracing technological innovations, actions that are significantly reshaping staffing needs.”

Zandi noted that firms’ profit margins are starting to decline amid higher interest-rate costs, which could put further pressure on their payrolls.

In general, he said, ‘the market just feels like it’s all over the place.’

Unfortunately, if you’re looking for a job, it appears to be taking longer to find a new one. Bureau of Labor Statistics data shows the number of people experiencing unemployment for 15 to 26 weeks has climbed 53% since it hit a low in March 2022.

“If someone needs to find a new job or wants to find a better job, the opportunities right now are more limited, aside from a few fairly narrow sectors,” Berger said.

The industries doing the most hiring include health care and social services, which are expanding thanks to the aging population, and government services, whose offers of lower salaries, on average, are increasingly seen as competitive given the relative lack of other new opportunities elsewhere in the private sector, Berger said.

Given the still low rate of layoffs in the broader economy, Berger is optimistic that the ‘great stay’ can be sustained. An example of a firm holding its headcount steady is Amazon, which has trimmed payrolls from post-pandemic highs, but which remain significantly above pre-pandemic levels.

“We are investing, and we are adding in some areas,” Brian Olsavsky, Amazon’s chief financial officer, said on a conference call with reporters following the company’s quarterly results. “But there’s a general feeling in most teams that we’re looking to hold the line on headcount, perhaps go down as we can drive efficiencies.”

There remains reason for some optimism. Job openings remain well above pre-pandemic levels. In a follow-up interview, Andrew Challenger pointed out that the U.S. has had three consecutive months of net new job growth, including a 12-month high of 353,000 jobs added in January. The January number was revised downward to 229,000.

‘It’s still a very good labor market,’ he said. ‘There are certainly companies that want to keep people; people are staying. But there’s also increased layoff activity. They don’t have to be correlated — sometimes it’s just volatility.’

Yet, in February, employers announced plans to hire just 10,317 workers, for a total of 15,693 so far in 2024, the lowest year-to-date total for announced hiring plans since Challenger, Gray & Christmas began its tracking in 2009, the company found.

The broader picture remains an unusual one, Berger said.

‘There are relatively few new people coming in, but relatively few people are leaving,’ he said. ‘It’s a weird environment.’

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Who has punched a ticket to the men’s NCAA Tournament?

Over the next week, bubble teams will try to make their final cases to the tournament selection committee, but 32 conference tournament champions won’t have to worry about hearing their names called on Selection Sunday. From March 9 up until hours before the bracket is revealed on March 17, teams across the country will battle to secure an automatic bid to the 68-team tournament by winning their conference tournaments.

Here are the teams who have clinched a spot in the 2024 edition of March Madness, and the last time they made an appearance in the tournament:

Ohio Valley Conference: Morehead State

Last appearance in NCAA Tournament: 2021.

Morehead State became the first team to secure a spot in the NCAA Tournament after defeating Little Rock in the Ohio Valley Conference title game 69-55. The Eagles have secured the conference’s automatic selection for the second time in four years. This will be their ninth NCAA Tournament appearance overall.

This post will be updated as more teams secure bids.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The initial reaction of many longtime boxing fans to the news of Mike Tyson fighting Jake Paul on Netflix in July was likely: he’s doing what?

This is Mike Tyson. He’s a boxing immortal. There are few fighters in history who inspired more fear among his fellow boxers, and infatuation among the public, than Tyson. He also wasn’t just a brute which is a common misconception. Tyson was studious and a diligent worker. He was, in many ways, extraordinarily old school. The bobbing and weaving side to side was something from the 1950s but it provided additional leverage and another dimension to his brutality.

He’s on the Mount Rushmore of boxing. If you don’t know or remember him, you missed out on some of the greatest boxing experiences of all time. For an older boxing generation, Tyson is a boxing god.

So why in the hell is he fighting Paul? This is the boxing equivalent of Barry Sanders, who is 55, playing now against Kansas City.

The easy answer to why Tyson is doing this has to do with a bag of cash. A gigantic bag of cash that is so cash-y and gigantic he could bankroll Hangover 4. There’s definitely, and obviously, a money component to this.

I came here originally to blast Tyson for not showing the kind of respect for the sport he helped build. Then an incredibly smart USA TODAY Sports colleague said something that resonated: ‘It would be easy to write a ‘get off my boxing lawn’ column and how this is a mockery. Don’t take the bait!’

You know what? He was right. In fact, the more you think about it, the more this is actually a good move for Tyson. In many ways, Tyson has already won this fight. Here’s why.

The biggest reason has to do with boxing itself. I covered a number of Tyson’s fights, and watched many others, and while boxing has always had issues with controversies and sometimes just flat out corruption, those days of the sport were genuinely lively and entertaining. There were definitely problems but the 1980s and 1990s, when Tyson dominated, were some of boxing’s best days.

Those days are long gone and have been for some time. Boxing, as a great sport, died decades ago. It’s now a patchwork that includes good fighters, carnival barkers, and internet goofs.

In the ring, however, Tyson’s fight against Paul will provide an opportunity to remind people of both the great past of boxing, and the great past of Tyson himself. People who aren’t as familiar with Tyson will Google and YouTube his past fights, see the footage, the highs and lows, the training, the historic wins, like when he knocked out Michael Spinks in the first round, and was on the losing end of one of the greatest upsets in the history of sports when he lost to Buster Douglas.

If Tyson wins, you’d have someone in their late 50s beating a fighter decades younger. If Tyson gets blasted, it wouldn’t change what he was, which was a staggeringly talented fighter. Again, win-win.

In the end, people who don’t know about Tyson will learn about him as a fighter, and that’s a good thing.

“My sights are set on becoming a world champion, and now I have a chance to prove myself against the greatest heavyweight champion ever, the baddest man on the planet and the most dangerous boxer of all time,” Paul said. “This will be the fight of a lifetime.”

“He’s grown significantly as a boxer over the years, so it will be a lot of fun to see what the will and ambition of a kid can do with the experience and aptitude of a GOAT,” Tyson said. “It’s a full circle moment that will be beyond thrilling to watch; as I started him on his boxing journey on the undercard of my fight with Roy Jones and now I plan to finish him.”

How will this fight go? Tyson might surprise people but no matter what happens, he’s already won.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The worst-kept secret in the Cactus League was that the Los Angeles Dodgers could no longer trust having Gavin Lux as their everyday shortstop, and just five days before leaving for South Korea, they pulled the plug. 

They are now moving All-Star Mookie Betts to shortstop despite not having played the position on an everyday basis since he was a senior at Overton High School in Nashville, Tenn. Lux is moving to second base. 

It’ll be fascinating to see how long the experiment lasts without the Dodgers going out to find another shortstop. They have expressed strong interest in Willy Adames of the Milwaukee Brewers. 

You don’t spend $1.1 billion in free agency and go into the season simply hoping you’re best all-around athletic player can suddenly learn a new position in the course of a big-league season. 

Betts saw action at shortstop in 16 games with the Dodgers last season. He played 13 games in 2012 at shortstop at Class A Lowell with the Boston Red Sox. 

All things Dodgers: Latest Los Angeles Dodgers news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

And this was the first year the six-time Gold Glove right fielder was going to be the Dodgers’ everyday second baseman. 

Can he do it? 

“Never done it,’’ he told reporters, “so I don’t know. We’re about to find out together …. 

“Everything is tough about playing shortstop, but somebody’s got to do it.’’ 

Betts has played 1,176 career games in the outfield, 100 at second base, and 16 at shortstop. Nobody in MLB history has ever played 1,000 games in the outfield and 100 games each at shortstop and second base, per MLB researcher Sarah Langs. 

The Dodgers now have to find out whether Lux can even play second base with his defensive deficiencies. He has struggled this spring after missing all of last season after undergoing knee surgery. 

The Dodgers can always play Miguel Rojas, Kiké Hernandez or Chris Taylor at shortstop, and moving Betts to second base, but the Dodgers want Lux’s bat in the lineup. 

“He’s just such a threat offensively,” Dodgers manager Roberts told reporters. “So, for us as an organization to do anything we can to find a way to get him in the lineup I think is a smart thing to do.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Inter Miami stars Lionel Messi and Luis Suárez participated in recovery workouts inside the team’s facility, but were not seen working out with teammates during a practice session open to media Saturday, ahead of Sunday’s home game against CF Montreal.

Messi, who was kicked in his legendary left leg but played to the end of Wednesday’s Champions Cup match in Nashville, is considered healthy after the injury scare and only came away with a leg bruise, Inter Miami assistant coach Javi Morales said Saturday.

Inter Miami had a day off Friday, and the entire team will be evaluated after Saturday’s training before a lineup is set for the Montreal game. It’s unclear whether Messi will play when Inter Miami hosts Montreal at Chase Stadium on Sunday at 5 p.m. ET, as Major League Soccer saves it best for last in its third week of the 2024 MLS season.

“Leo is a player that wants to play all the matches,” Morales said before practice. “I think it’s going to be a conversation with him to see how he feels, how he’s doing and decide what’s best for him because he’s been playing in all the matches 90 minutes. We’ll make the best decision ahead of [Sunday].”

How to watch Inter Miami vs. CF Montreal live stream

Inter Miami hosts CF Montreal at Chase Stadium on Sunday at 5 p.m. ET, and available to live stream via MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

WATCH: Messi and Inter Miami vs. CF Montreal on Apple TV
TICKETS: See Messi and Inter Miami in person vs. CF Montreal
SHOP: Get the latest Messi and Inter Miami gear from the MLS Store

Inter Miami vs. Montreal practice report

Messi and Suárez have accounted for six goals in the last two matches Inter Miami has played. Messi has also played the full 90 in each of Inter Miami’s four matches in 2024.

Inter Miami’s Sergio Busquets, Julian Gressel, Noah Allen, Federico Redondo, Diego Gomez and Nicolas Friere were seen working separately from the team, taking a jog around the practice fields to begin Saturday’s practice.

Inter Miami’s Jordi Alba, who missed the Nashville game with an illness, and Leo Campana, who missed the Nashville game woth a foot injury, practiced with other players who did not play in the Nashville game.

Messi scored a goal in the 52nd minute before going down briefly with his leg injury in the 77th minute. Suárez scored in the 95th minute to help Inter Miami settle to a 2-2 draw against Nashville SC in the first leg of their Champions Cup Round-of-16 matchup. The second leg is Wednesday night.

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

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Caitlin Clark and the Iowa Hawkeyes will go for their third straight Big Ten tournament title when they face Nebraska in the conference championship game Sunday.

Second-seeded Iowa advanced to the title game after beating Michigan in the semifinals Saturday, and will face a Cornhuskers team that has won three games in three days.

If the Hawkeyes win, it’ll mark their third conference tournament title in a row, and Clark has the chance to become the first player since Ohio State’s Jantel Lavender between 2009-11 to win the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player award three consecutive seasons. In Iowa’s quarterfinal win against Penn State, Clark scored 24 points with 10 rebounds and seven assists, and in the semifinal victory against Michigan, the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer dropped 28 points and tied a season high in assists with 15.

What time does Iowa women’s basketball game vs. Nebraska start today?

The Big Ten tournament championship game is set to tip at noon ET Sunday.

How to watch Iowa vs. Nebraska in Big Ten tournament final

The Hawkeyes vs. Cornhuskers matchup will air on CBS. The game can be streamed on Fubo and Paramount+.

Where is Iowa vs. Nebraska being played?

The Big Ten tournament is taking place at the Target Center in Minneapolis.

Caitlin Clark and Iowa vs. Nebraska this season

This will be the third meeting between the Hawkeyes and Cornhuskers this season, and Nebraska knows how to beat them.

In the first matchup in Iowa City on Jan. 27, Clark had 38 points, 10 rebounds and six assists in a dominant 92-73 win. In the victory, Clark knocked down eight 3-pointers, one of six times this season she’s done that. In the second matchup of the season in Lincoln, the Cornhuskers limited the Hawkeyes to just 10 fourth-quarter points to pull off the 82-79 upset. Clark had 31 points — but none in the fourth quarter — 10 assists and eight rebounds in the defeat. It was the game before she broke the NCAA women’s scoring record.

Women’s Big Ten tournament bracket

First round

Purdue 78, Northwestern 72
Minnesota 77, Rutgers 69

Second round

Maryland 75, Illinois 65
Nebraska 64, Purdue 56
Penn State 80, Wisconsin 56
Michigan 76, Minnesota 57

Quarterfinals

Maryland 82, Ohio State 61
Nebraska 73, Michigan State 61
Iowa 95, Penn State 62
Michigan 69, Indiana 56

Semifinals

Nebraska 78, Maryland 68
Iowa 95, Michigan 68

Championship

Sunday, March 10: Nebraska vs. Iowa, noon ET

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Francis Ngannou elicited laughter after getting knocked out by Anthony Joshua Friday in their heavyweight bout when a reporter asked if that was the hardest he’s been hit.

“In fact, I didn’t feel the punch,’’ Ngannou said at the post-fight press conference. “I think that’s what the knockout is about. I don’t feel any pain. That’s how I know I was knocked out.’’

The powerful right hand from Joshua left Ngannou, the former UFC champion, flat on his back and unconscious in the boxing ring. He was given oxygen before getting back onto his feet, according to the DAZN broadcast.

Joshua knocked down Ngannou in the first round and again in the second round before finishing him off at 2:38 of the second round.

“He did what Tyson Fury couldn’t,’’ Ngannou said, referring to his pro debut in October when he knocked down Fury in a fight he lost in a controversial split decision. “It wasn’t my day and (Joshua) was just way better than me today.”

Ngannou, 37, said he needs to process what happened Friday before deciding what’s next. The fighter from Cameroon said he might take an MMA fight.

“But you can be sure that I’m not done here,’’ he said of boxing. “Absolutely not. I’m not done.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY