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You’re just recovering from the madness of Selection Sunday and the reveal of the 68 teams in the NCAA men’s tournament bracket. Now comes the hard part: Trying to make your picks on which teams will advance, which teams will be upset and which teams will reach the Final Four in San Antonio, Texas.

If you’re a veteran of filling out a bracket, you might feel like advice is beneath you, but even the strongest players can benefit from tips for this year’s NCAA field or a historical look at how the seeds have performed in the tournament.

Want more in-depth analysis of the region? Here are our breakdowns of the East, West,  Midwest and South.

And do you want some expert brackets to help guide you? Here are our best from the USA TODAY Sports staff as they predict every game through the Final Four and national championship.

Jordan Mendoza

Full bracket

Final Four: Michigan State, Florida, Duke, Houston
Final: Florida vs. Houston
National champion: Houston

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Paul Myerberg

Full bracket

Final Four: Auburn, St. John’s, Duke, Tennessee
Final: Auburn vs. Duke
National champion: Duke

Erick Smith

Full bracket

Final Four: Michigan State, Texas Tech, Duke, Tennessee
Final: Michigan State vs. Duke
National champion: Duke

Eddie Timanus

Full bracket

Final Four: Auburn, Florida, Duke, Houston
Final: Florida vs. Duke
National champion: Florida

Dan Wolken

Full bracket

Final Four: Michigan State, Florida, Duke, Houston
Final: Florida vs. Duke
National champion: Duke

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy replaced his military’s top official ahead of a call Tuesday between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin about ending the war in Ukraine. 

Andrii Hnatov, whom Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov said has ‘over 27 years of military experience,’ was appointed the new chief of the general staff of Ukraine’s armed forces. Anatoliy Barhylevych, who has held the position since February 2024, will now serve as the general inspector of Ukraine’s Defense Ministry. 

‘We are consistently changing the Armed Forces to make them even more efficient. To do this, we are changing the management system and implementing clear standards,’ Umerov said in a statement. 

‘Grateful to Lieutenant General Anatoliy Barhylevych for his service as Chief of the General Staff. In the most difficult times, his experience and professionalism were important to the organization of defense of Ukraine,’ Umerov added. ‘Changes are in process. Strengthening the army for victory.’ 

The personnel change comes as Trump and Putin are set to speak by phone Tuesday about the final points of a deal to end the war in Ukraine. 

In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump said many ‘elements of a Final Agreement’ have been agreed to ‘but much remains.’ 

‘Thousands of young soldiers, and others, are being killed. Each week brings 2,500 soldier deaths, from both sides, and it must end NOW,’ Trump wrote. ‘I look very much forward to the call with President Putin.’ 

In preparation for the Trump-Putin call, White House special envoy Steve Witkoff met last week with Putin in Moscow to discuss the proposal. Secretary of State Marco Rubio persuaded senior Ukrainian officials during talks in Saudi Arabia to agree to the ceasefire framework. 

Trump said Washington and Moscow have already begun discussing ‘dividing up certain assets’ between Ukraine and Russia as part of a deal to end the conflict. 

‘It’s a bad situation in Russia, and it’s a bad situation in Ukraine,’ Trump told reporters on Monday. ‘What’s happening in Ukraine is not good, but we’re going to see if we can work a peace agreement, a ceasefire and peace. And I think we’ll be able to do it.’ 

Fox News’ Louis Casiano and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The men’s March Madness bracket is set and a pecking order has quickly emerged as the picks and predictions start to roll in for NCAA Tournament pools and betting sites across the country. The SEC is well-represented among the top contenders to get to the Final Four, as to be expected after receiving a record 14 bids into the 2025 field. But Duke opened as the national championship favorite and every major conference is represented among teams with the top 10 odds to win the title after the Selection Sunday bracket reveal.

The odds, now that they’re starting to settle, can also offer clues to help identify potential Cinderellas and teams that could be poised to pull off upsets and make a run to the Sweet 16 and beyond. Gonzaga, Kansas, UConn and BYU are among the teams oddsmakers view favorably compared to their seed line counterparts. UC San Diego, Drake, VCU and most of the Mountain West Conference contingent in the field are trendy underdogs to surface thus far.

Here’s a breakdown of how all 68 teams in the 2025 NCAA Tournament rank based on their BetMGM odds to win the national championship:

March Madness 2025 power rankings by NCAA championship odds

BetMGM odds as of Monday, March 17

Longshot Cinderella teams

Alabama State (+200,000)
Mount St. Mary’s (+200,000)
SIU-Edwardsville (+200,000)
American (+200,000)
Norfolk State (+200,000)
St. Francis (+200,000)
Akron (+100,000)
Bryant (+100,000)
Montana (+100,000)
Omaha (+100,000)
Lipscomb (+100,000)
High Point (+100,000)
UNC-Wilmington (+100,000)
Robert Morris (+100,000)
Wofford (+100,000)
Troy (+100,000)
Liberty (+100,000)
Yale (+100,000)
McNeese State (+100,000)
Grand Canyon (+100,000)

Potential sleepers

UC San Diego (+50,000)
Drake (+50,000)
Colorado State (+50,000)
Oklahoma (+50,000)
Xavier (+50,000)
San Diego State (+50,000)
Texas (+50,000)
Utah State (+50,000)
Georgia (+35,000)
Memphis (+30,000)
Arkansas (+30,000)
North Carolina (+30,000)
New Mexico (+30,000)
Vanderbilt (+30,000)
VCU (+25,000)
Mississippi State (+20,000)
Baylor (+20,000)

Dark horse teams

Oregon (+15,000)
Creighton (+15,000)
Louisville (+12,500)
Marquette (+12,500)
Ole Miss (+12,500)
Saint Mary’s (+12,500)
UCLA (+12,500)
Missouri (+8,000)
Michigan (+8,000)
Illinois (+8,000)
Purdue (+8,000)
Kansas (+8,000)
UConn (+8,000)
Texas A&M (+6,600)
BYU (+6,600)
Clemson (+6,000)
Maryland (+5,000)
Wisconsin (+5,000)
Gonzaga (+5,000)
Arizona (+5000)
Kentucky (+5,000)

The top contenders

Iowa State (+3,500)
Texas Tech (+3,500)
Michigan State (+2,500)
St. John’s (+2,500)
Tennessee (+1,800)
Alabama (+1,600)
Houston (+625)
Auburn (+425)

The favorites

Duke (+350)
Florida (+350)

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President Donald Trump has signed more than 80 executive orders since returning to the White House in January — prompting more than 100 lawsuits against his administration. 

While Democratic lawmakers have accused the Trump administration of launching a ‘constitutional crisis’ within the U.S. as a result of these orders, the White House has claimed that ‘low-level’ judges have issued unconstitutional injunctions barring Trump from implementing his agenda and that it will appeal adverse rulings. 

‘You cannot have a low-level district court judge filing an injunction to usurp the executive authority of the President of the United States,’ White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Friday. ‘That is completely absurd. … It’s very clear that there are judicial activists throughout our judicial branch who are trying to block this president’s executive authority.’ 

Here are some of the judges, appointed under the Obama and Biden administrations, who’ve pushed back against Trump’s orders: 

James Boasberg

Boasberg has served as the chief judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia since March 2023, and was first appointed as a judge to the District Court in March 2011 under the Obama administration. 

Boasberg issued several key rulings on various cases during Trump’s first administration. For example, he blocked Arkansas, Kentucky and New Hampshire from implementing work requirement waivers for Medicaid recipients, after the Trump administration’s Department of Health and Human Services unveiled a policy permitting states to enforce the waivers for Medicaid recipients. 

Ultimately, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit issued a ruling in February 2020 upholding Boasberg’s previous decision in the Kentucky and Arkansas case. In the ruling, the appeals court said that former Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar ‘failed to analyze whether the demonstrations would promote the primary objective of Medicaid — to furnish medical assistance.’

The Supreme Court then dismissed all pending cases related to the Medicaid work requirements in April 2022. 

On Saturday, Boasberg issued an order halting the Trump administration from deporting migrants under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, which permits deportation of natives and citizens of an enemy nation without a hearing. 

However, the flight continued to drop off the migrants in El Salvador, and Leavitt said Sunday the order had ‘no lawful basis’ since Boasberg issued it after the flight’s departure from U.S. airspace. 

Boasberg graduated from Yale College in 1985 and Yale Law School in 1990. He also served a seven-year term from 2014 to 2021 on the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which handles surveillance requests for foreign intelligence gathering. 

Leo Sorokin

Sorokin, an Obama appointee, joined the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts in 2014, after previously serving as magistrate judge on the same court. 

Sorokin spearheaded a delayed-sentencing program in Massachusetts known as the Repair, Invest, Succeed, Emerge, or RISE, program. The program offers some criminal offenders a yearlong delay in sentencing for some criminal offenders who qualify for pretrial release as they undergo an intensive supervision program.

‘I’m thrilled with how the restorative justice part of RISE has gone, so we’re expanding,’ Sorokin said at an event at Columbia Law School in 2020. ‘I think it’s lawful. I think it’s correct. I think it’s what we ought to be doing.’

Sorokin said his motivation to launch the RISE program stemmed from a conversation he had with a man convicted of bank robbery who explained he wanted to apologize to the bank teller and to his sisters for committing the crime. 

Sorokin blocked the Trump administration from implementing an executive order to ban birthright citizenship in February — joining other judges from Maryland and Washington state in issuing nationwide injunctions against the ban. The Trump administration requested the Supreme Court step in Friday and allow it to execute the order, and the Supreme Court requested responses from challengers by April 4. 

Sorokin attended Columbia Law School and has worked as a professor for Boston University School of Law. 

Amir Ali

Ali, a Biden appointee, is one of the newest judges to the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, joining the court in December 2024. Ali also helped launch the MacArthur Justice Center’s Washington, D.C., branch in 2017, a nonprofit law firm that specializes in criminal justice reform and civil rights issues. 

Ali, who eventually led the firm as the executive director, argued and won two cases before the Supreme Court on behalf of the MacArthur Justice Center. 

Ali’s ties to the firm came under scrutiny during his confirmation hearing in February 2024 before the Senate, where lawmakers asked him about remarks his MacArthur Justice Center colleague, Cliff Johnson, made in 2020 asserting that defunding the police paves the way for a ‘movement toward making police departments obsolete.’

 

However, Ali told lawmakers that he didn’t espouse those views, nor did the MacArthur Justice Center. 

‘Let me be very clear about this,’ Ali said. ‘I have never advocated for taking away police funding. I would not take that position, and the MacArthur Justice Center has not taken that position.’

On March 11, Ali issued a ruling that determined the Trump administration likely exceeded its constitutional authority when it sought to halt payments the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) owed to contractors amounting to $2 billion in funding Congress had approved.

Ali has also taught classes on civil, criminal and appellate litigation at schools, including Harvard Law School and the Georgetown University Law Center. 

Beryl Howell

Howell, an Obama appointee, joined the United States District Court for the District of Columbia in 2010. She previously served as staff and as general counsel of the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary from 1993 to 2003. 

Howell ruled against the Trump administration March 6, and wrote in her ruling that Trump did not have the authority to fire members of the National Labor Relations Board at will. The Trump administration dismissed National Labor Relations Board chair Gwynne Wilcox in January, prompting Wilcox to file a lawsuit against the Trump administration for violating the National Labor Relations Act, which states negligence and misconduct are the only causes to fire a member of the board. 

‘A president who touts an image of himself as a ‘king’ or a ‘dictator,’ perhaps as his vision of effective leadership, fundamentally misapprehends the role under Article II of the U.S. Constitution,’ Howell wrote in the ruling — a reference to a White House social media post in February depicting Trump wearing a crown with the caption ‘Long Live the King.’ 

Howell also ordered that Wilcox be reinstated to her position. 

Howell attended Columbia University School of Law, and served as the deputy chief of the narcotics section and an assistant U.S. attorney in the U.S. Attorney’s office for the Eastern District of New York from 1987 until 1993. 

Her work at the U.S. Attorney’s office for the Eastern District of New York earned her the Attorney General’s Director’s Award for Superior Performance and other commendations for her work focusing on international narcotics, money laundering and public corruption cases.

She’s also worked as a professor of legal ethics at American University’s Washington College of Law. 

Ana Reyes 

Reyes, a Biden appointee, joined the United States District Court for the District of Columbia in February 2023 following a career as a litigation attorney with Williams & Connolly LLP focusing on international litigation, representing foreign governments, foreign government officials and multinational companies. 

Previous pro bono work also includes representing refugees for groups like the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and Human Rights First. She also received the Hispanic National Bar Foundation’s ‘Judicial Leadership Award’ in 2023. 

Reyes is overseeing a case that LGBTQ legal rights advocacy group GLAD Law and the National Center for Lesbian Rights filed in February against the Trump administration for its executive order barring transgender individuals from serving in the military. 

The groups are seeking a preliminary injunction pausing the ban while litigation is pending, and Reyes is expected to issue a final decision on the preliminary injunction by March 25.

Reyes attended Harvard Law School, and has co-taught classes at Yale Law School and Georgetown University Law Center on trial practice and advocacy in international arbitration. 

Loren AliKhan

AliKhan, a Biden appointee, joined the United States District Court for the District of Columbia in December 2023, after previously serving as an associate judge for the D.C. Court of Appeals. 

AliKhan ruled against the Trump administration in February, indefinitely blocking the Trump administration from freezing federal grants and loans. The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit a group of nonprofit organizations filed in January after the Trump administration’s Office of Management announced a pause in loans and grants. Although the administration rescinded the memo, the White House clarified that the order still remained to freeze funds. 

‘In the simplest terms, the freeze was ill-conceived from the beginning,’ AliKhan wrote in a ruling in February. ‘Defendants either wanted to pause up to $3 trillion in federal spending practically overnight, or they expected each federal agency to review every single one of its grants, loans, and funds for compliance in less than twenty-four hours. The breadth of that command is almost unfathomable. Either way, defendants’ actions were irrational, imprudent and precipitated a nationwide crisis.’

AliKhan attended Georgetown University Law Center, and supported O’Melveny & Myers, LLP’s Supreme Court and Appellate Practice Clinic at Harvard Law School, as well as the legal writing program at Yale Law School.

She received the National Association of Attorneys General’s ‘Senior Staff of the Year’ award in 2020. 

Fox News Breanne Deppisch, Jake Gibson, Andrea Margolis, Lucas Y. Tomlinson and Bill Melugin contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago Cubs kick off the 2025 MLB season Tuesday with a two-game series in Japan.

While the traditional Opening Day is still more than a week away, now is the time to put your money where your mouth is. If you think you know who is going to win the World Series this year, there isn’t a better time to make a wager.

For those of you unsure who to pick, though, we’ve got you covered. No one knows who to bet on quite like the oddsmakers in Las Vegas. Their entire job is to make sure the house wins, so going with their trends can sometimes be a better strategy than going with your gut.

Here’s a ranking of every MLB team based on their 2025 World Series odds:

2025 World Series odds

All odds via BetMGM.

The favorites

1. Los Angeles Dodgers (+240)

2. Atlanta Braves (+900)

3. New York Yankees (+900)

4. Philadelphia Phillies (+1100)

5. New York Mets (+1200)

You can’t go wrong with any of these teams, but for your money, the Dodgers probably aren’t worth it at their current odds. Given everything that can go wrong in a playoff series, taking them when their odds are nearly four times better than the next-closest team probably isn’t a winning move.

However, there is an obvious choice among these top-five teams. See, four of them play in the National League. Those four teams will be beating each other up all season long, and it’s anyone’s guess who could come out on top. But the New York Yankees are the only American League representative with odds this good. They’re the clear favorites to come out of the AL. They may not be as talented as a team like the Dodgers, but anything can happen in a seven-game series.

The dark horses

6. Baltimore Orioles (+1600)

7. Boston Red Sox (+1800)

8. Houston Astros (+1800)

9. Seattle Mariners (+2500)

10. Texas Rangers (+2500)

11. Arizona Diamondbacks (+3000)

12. Chicago Cubs (+3000)

13. Detroit Tigers (+3000)

14. San Diego Padres (+3000)

The Chicago Cubs are a team running on potential right now. The addition of Kyle Tucker fills the void left by Cody Bellinger. In fact, it’s an upgrade in the outfield. Now, if other players like Justin Steele, Shota Imanaga, Seiya Suzuki, Nico Hoerner and Dansby Swanson can all improve as well, the Cubs will have a decent shot to come out on top in a weak NL Central. In fact, the reigning NL Central champs, the Milwaukee Brewers, just lost arguably the best reliever in baseball, while the Cubs added a solid closer option in Ryan Pressly this offseason.

Given the stout competition in the other divisions represented in this tier, the Cubs could be the best bet if you’re looking for a dark horse World Series champ.

The underdogs

15. Cleveland Guardians (+3500)

16. Minnesota Twins (+3500)

17. Kansas City Royals (+4000)

18. Milwaukee Brewers (+4000)

19. Tampa Bay Rays (+5000)

20. Toronto Blue Jays (+6000)

21. Cincinnati Reds (+8000)

22. San Francisco Giants (+8000)

Do the San Francisco Giants possess high-end talent? Not really. Are they going to contend for an NL West title with the Dodgers? Almost certainly no. That said, they don’t really have any incredible weaknesses.

The addition of Willy Adames secured their most questionable position from a year ago, and the return of Jung Hoo Lee to the outfield also helps tremendously. Outside of them, the Giants boast a potentially elite starting rotation with Logan Webb, Robbie Ray, Justin Verlander, Jordan Hicks and Kyle Harrison. Their bullpen is obviously solid and could improve if Camilo Doval regains his 2023 form. Their lineup, while unproven at the DH position, is not bad anywhere else, with catcher Patrick Bailey and right fielder Mike Yastrzemski being arguably the weakest hitters — and they’re not bad by any means.

The long shots

23. St. Louis Cardinals (+10000)

24. Pittsburgh Pirates (+12500)

25. Athletics (+20000)

26. Washington Nationals (+20000)

27. Los Angeles Angels (+25000)

28. Chicago White Sox (+50000)

29. Colorado Rockies (+50000)

30. Miami Marlins (+50000)

The Pittsburgh Pirates and Athletics have opportunities to shock people this year. In fact, in a recent MLB player survey, the Athletics were selected as the most likely team to surprise fans this year. With bats like Brent Rooker, Lawrence Butler, Zack Gelof, Tyler Soderstrom and Shea Langeliers, as well as a potential breakout in rookie Jacob Wilson, the A’s offense is nothing to be trifled with — especially in that smaller Sacramento ballpark. Their bullpen is obviously strong, and they made some sneaky good additions to their rotation, signing both Luis Severino and Jeffrey Springs this offseason.

As for the Pirates, they are a little unproven on the offensive end, and their bullpen is a huge question mark with likely closer David Bednar struggling in his spring training outings. That said, they could have one of the best rotations in baseball. Paul Skenes is a favorite for National League Cy Young. Mitch Keller and Jared Jones aren’t spectacular, but have tools that could propel them to mid-3 ERAs, which would be great as third or fourth options in the rotation. Meanwhile, prospect Bubba Chandler has been lights-out his entire minor league career and could be a major addition to the rotation when he is called up.

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MEDLEY, Fla. — Since Unrivaled began two months ago, the Rose basketball club has stewed over a square piece of paper, clipped by a magnet, on their whiteboard.

It was a social media post of ESPN’s preseason rankings for the inaugural season of the 3-on-3 women’s basketball league. The Rose were predicted to finish in last place behind the Lunar Owls, Phantom, Vinyl, Mist and Laces.

Rose standout Kahleah Copper sent the post to coach Nola Henry before the season, knowing it would add fuel to the team’s fire. Rose stars Angel Reese and Brittney Sykes even discussed the sore subject in postgame interviews during Turner Sports broadcasts.

Two months later, the first Unrivaled season ended with the Rose having the last laugh.

Chelsea Gray scored 18 points with eight assists to win Unrivaled Playoff MVP, Sykes scored a driving layup and the game-winning free throw, and the Rose beat the Vinyl 62-54 to win the first Unrivaled championship on Monday night.

The Rose players – led by Sykes’ 21 points and Azurá Stevens’ 19 points and 18 rebounds – each won $50,000 in bonus money for their championship win.

“Everybody in our locker room knew what we were capable of, and what did we do?” Copper said while she was “off the champagne” during the Rose’s postgame press conference.

The Rose players strolled onto the Unrivaled practice court to speak after the game, wearing Unrivaled champion T-shirts and snowboarding goggles and holding bottles of Veuve Clicquot Brut Yellow Label as the celebration continued into the Miami night.

Gray wore a black T-shirt with the ESPN rankings.

“They counted us as six coming into this thing,” Gray said. ‘It’s a testament to my team, and I couldn’t win MVP without them.”

Gray set the Unrivaled record with 39 points in the Rose’s semifinal win over the Laces on Sunday night to help them advance to the title game, while the No. 4 seed Vinyl eliminated the top-seeded Lunar Owls.

She helped the Rose overcome a 1-4 start to win the league’s first title. And she’s been fully healthy again, after struggling at times last season after returning from a broken foot she suffered during the 2023 WNBA Finals.

“Hell yeah, there was motivation,” said Gray, a two-time Olympic gold medalist and three-time WNBA champion.

“Last year was hard. It was rough. When I came back, I still wasn’t 100 percent. Some people thought I was,” Gray added. “I just put the work in, do my job, and talk after winning.”

Reese, the Unrivaled Defensive Player of the Year and All-Unrivaled second-team standout, did not play for the Rose in the two-game playoffs. She re-injured her surgically repaired left hand during the regular-season finale last Monday. It’s unclear the severity of her injury and how it could affect her upcoming season with the WNBA’s Chicago Sky.

Reese cheered from the Rose bench one day earlier, but was not in attendance for Monday’s title game – until she joined the Rose title celebration via FaceTime call.

Copper also did not play due to a right leg injury, while Stevens missed some time with a leg injury after the Unrivaled 1-on-1 tournament last month.

The Rose player injuries were also a source of motivation during the championship run.

“Angel is not here, but we knew we had to step up. I knew I had to bring my ‘A’ game, and I’m so happy and proud of my team. They’ve just meant everything to me,” Stevens said.

“Obviously, I had a little injury during the season, and it was a little tough. But every day, I had encouragement from everyone, from the coaches, my teammates, just to keep going and stay locked in. We were all locked in today, and I’m just so proud of us.”

The Vinyl were led by Rhyne Howard’s 22 points, while Dearica Hamby and Aliyah Boston each scored 10 points in the loss. Howard scored a midrange jumper to help the Vinyl take a 49-48 lead with three seconds left in the third quarter, before Gray sank a shot from beyond halfcourt as the buzzer sounded.

The Vinyl – which entered the postseason with a 5-9 record and via a tiebreaker with the Mist on the final day of the regular season – never led again after that point.

“As hard as you work and you don’t want it to end like this, so of course, you can only imagine how they feel,” Vinyl coach Teresa Weatherspoon said. “I feel for them. They’ve been absolutely outstanding.”

Added Vinyl guard Jordin Canada: “Nobody thought we could get here, and so we’re just proud of that.”

The first Unrivaled season saw more than 40 of the best WNBA players in the world compete in a 3-on-3 format over the course of two months. They’ve created an offseason alternative in which they earn equity, not paychecks. They’ve strived to make improvements to their games they believe will translate into the next WNBA season.

And they may have changed the landscape of women’s basketball.

“Oh, what a night, and what a few months this has been,” Unrivaled commissioner Micky Lawler said before the trophy presentation.

“Thank you to the best fans in the world, night in and night out, for being so loud and so supportive. Thank you to the best players in the world. Thank you to the best partners, and thank you to the Unrivaled staff. This is not easy, but it sure as hell has been extremely fulfilling. We just collectively made history,” Lawler said.

Unrivaled highlights: Rose vs. Vinyl

Watch: Rose celebrate championship

Unrivaled third quarter score: Rose 51, Vinyl 49

Target winning score: 62

It’s a race to 62 points for the first Unrivaled championship, heading into the fourth quarter.

Chelsea Gray scored a buzzer-beating three beyond half court, and the Rose lead 51-49 over the Vinyl after the third quarter.

Gray has 12 points and eight assists, while Azurá Stevens leads the Rose with 19 points. Rhyne Howard leads the Vinyl with 19 points.

Unrivaled halftime score: Vinyl 37, Rose 32

Rhyne Howard scored a three-pointer to close out the second quarter, and the Vinyl rebounded from a first-quarter deficit to take a 37-32 lead over the Rose at halftime.

Howard leads the Vinyl with 13 points, while Dearica Hamby has eight points and five rebounds in the first half.

Chelsea Gray, who scored an Unrivaled record 39 points in Sunday’s semifinal against the Laces, has just three points in the first half. But she is fueling the Rose with six assists.

Brittney Sykes has 14 points, while Azurá Stevens has 13 points and nine rebounds for the Rose.

Unrivaled first quarter score: Rose 19, Vinyl 16

Chelsea Gray showed some flair with a no-look pass to Azurá Stevens as the Rose jumped out to a 19-16 lead over the Vinyl at the end of the first quarter.

Stevens leads the Rose with eight points and five rebounds, while Gray has three points and three assists.

Dearica Hamby has six points, a rebound and two steals in the first quarter for the Vinyl.

What time does Unrivaled playoff game begin Monday?

The Rose and Vinyl will begin at 7:30 p.m ET.

How to watch Unrivaled championship game?

The Unrivaled title game is available on TNT and TruTV on cable television, and to live stream on Max in the United States.

Angel Reese unlikely to play in Unrivaled championship due to injury

Reese, of the WNBA’s Chicago Sky, is unlikely to play in Monday’s game for the Rose club after injuring her surgically repaired left hand during the Unrivaled regular-season finale last week. Reese watched from the sidelines as the Rose beat the Lunar Owls on Sunday, wearing a brace on her left hand.

How the Rose reached Unrivaled final game

Chelsea Gray scored an Unrivaled high 39 points, including a game-winning three pointer, to help the Rose beat the No. 3 Laces 73-67 in the first semifinal Sunday. The Rose used a 23-12 third quarter to overcome a 40-27 at halftime, and outscored the Vinyl 13-5 in the fourth quarter to win despite having no other player score in double figures.

How the Vinyl reached Unrivaled final game

Dearica Hamby scored a driving layup over league MVP Napheesa Collier to help the Vinyl upset the No. 1 seed Lunar Owls 73-70 during the second semifinal game Sunday. Rhyne Howard led the Vinyl with 23 points, while Jordin Canada scored 10 of her 21 points in the fourth quarter to overcome a 62-52 deficit after the third quarter. Hamby finished with 16 points and 15 rebounds in the win. Collier scored 36 points with eight rebounds, three assists and two blocks in the loss.

Rose-Vinyl final features Unrivaled women coaches

It’s almost fitting Unrivaled’s first final will feature Rose coach Nola Henry and Vinyl coach Teresa Witherspoon — the only two women coaches in the league. Henry led the Rose to the No. 2 seed after a 1-4 start, while Witherspoon led the Vinyl to the title game as the lowest playoff seed in the four-team field.

Rose-Vinyl season series

The Rose leads the season-series over the Vinyl 2-1, heading into the Unrivaled championship game.  

The Vinyl beat the Rose 79-73 on opening night (Jan. 18) behind Rhyne Howard’s 33 points with Dearica Hamby’s 17 points and 13 rebounds.

The Rose beat the Vinyl 61-55 behind Chelsea Gray’s 26 points on Feb. 18. And in the March 10 regular season finale, the Rose dominated the Vinyl 74-46.

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Philadelphia 76ers forward Paul George will be out at least six weeks after receiving injections in his left adductor muscle and left knee, the team announced Monday.

George’s campaign is effectively over with just four weeks remaining in the regular season.

George, 34, signed with the 76ers last offseason and was expected to make a big impact for a team that had underperformed in recent years. However, George has battled through injuries all season long, including reportedly taking painkillers for five straight games leading up to the All-Star break in February.

George finishes the 2024-25 season having played his fewest games since 2021-22. He has played less than 60 games five times in the last six seasons.

Could Paul George return for the playoffs?

Yes, technically. George is expected to miss six weeks, which will keep him out for the rest of the regular season, but could see him return to the court if the Sixers make the play-in tournament and then go on a run.

As it stands, though, Philadelphia is five games out of the final play-in spot, currently held by the Chicago Bulls. Even if the Sixers reach the play-in tournament and win, the first round of the postseason begins on April 19. At the absolute earliest, George could be back around April 28, meaning he’d likely miss the first few games of any first-round matchup.

Paul George stats:

PPG: 16.2
RPG: 5.3
APG: 4.3
FG%: 43.0%
3PT%: 35.8%
STL: 1.8

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John Cena has been one of wrestling’s most beloved babyfaces for more than two decades now. Ever since he did away with his ‘Doctor of Thuganomics’ persona in 2003, he has never looked back. He has never turned heel, always playing the role of the good guy, even helping arguably the biggest star in WWE at the moment, Cody Rhodes, defeat Roman Reigns for the Universal title at WrestleMania XL.

However, Cena’s run as a face came to an end recently, when he aligned himself with The Rock and turned against his former ally Rhodes.

Cena had been such a big face that the turn came as a complete shock to everyone watching. Furthermore, Cena had claimed that 2025 would be his final year with WWE, so nobody was expecting such a massive shift for his character. Thusly, Cena’s first entrance as a heel on WWE Raw March 17 was met with a flurry of boos as the crowd in Brussels, Belgium erupted upon hearing his iconic ‘The Time is Now’ theme song.

WATCH: Cena’s first heel entrance at WWE Raw

In a moment, the crowd went from dead silent to absolutely bananas at the sound of Cena’s music.

What did Cena say?

Cena took the mic shortly after his entrance, but the crowd still needed several minutes to calm down before Cena could speak. Every time he’d try to start his segment, he was met with a flurry of boos.

Once Cena finally got going, he took aim at the fans, claiming that he’d been a puppet his entire career, only ever serving to entertain his fans, while none of them ever gave back to him.

‘No matter what I do, it’s never enough and you should all be ashamed of yourself. All you ever do is take,’ Cena said. ‘Not one of you sons of (expletive) asked how I feel.’

Even Cena’s supporters weren’t safe. Cena claimed they were just as bad as the people booing him, because when he started his farewell tour, he wanted to give back to the fans, but nobody bothered to give him the respect or attention he thought he deserved.

‘I don’t care about you. You don’t matter to me,’ said Cena.

Cody Rhodes responds at WWE Raw

After interrupting Cena’s rant, Rhodes gave Cena an opportunity to explain himself, but Cena’s reasoning wasn’t very persuasive. Fans were strongly in support of Cody Rhodes.

Rhodes finished the segment by challenging Cena to find himself, claiming that if this version of Cena challenged him at WrestleMania, Rhodes would make him ‘retire early.’ Rhodes then called Cena a ‘whiny (expletive),’ and walked off stage while Cena looked on.

When is WrestleMania 41?

WrestleMania 41 is set for Saturday, April 19 – Sunday, April 20. The two-night event will take place at Allegiant Stadium near Las Vegas, Nevada.

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Flagging global sales and Elon Musk’s increasingly outspoken political activities are combining to rock the value of Tesla.

Shares in the once-trillion-dollar company saw their worst day in five years this week. Year to date, Tesla’s stock has plunged 41% — though it is still up by about 36% over the past 12 months.

On Monday, the stock was down another 5%.

For Musk, Tesla’s shares remain his primary source of paper wealth, though he has also turned his stake in SpaceX into a personal lending tool. But it was proceeds from selling Tesla shares that helped Musk complete his acquisition of Twitter, now known as X.

Musk’s wealth also allowed him to help vault Donald Trump into a second presidential term. Even as Musk’s net worth has diminished as a result of Tesla’s recent share-price declines, data suggests he is in no danger of losing his title as the world’s wealthiest person.

Musk has said on X that he is not concerned about Tesla’s recent drop in value. Still, evidence suggests the company is entering a period of transition.

A spokesperson for Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.

Musk’s wealth has propelled him to a global presence that lacks precedent — and has polarized world opinion about the tech entrepreneur in the process. Any weakening of his financial position, therefore, could undercut his influence in the political and tech spaces where he now commands outsize attention.According to Bank of America, Tesla’s European sales plummeted by about 50% in January compared with the same month a year prior.

Some say this is attributable to a growing distaste for Musk, who has begun dabbling in the continent’s politics in the wake of his successful support of Trump’s candidacy last year.

Others note Tesla’s European market is facing increased competition from the Chinese electric-vehicle maker BYD, which has telegraphed ambitious plans for expansion on the continent.  

A more decisive blow to Tesla’s near-term fortunes may be emanating from China itself. There, Tesla’s shipments plunged 49% in February from a year earlier, to just 30,688 vehicles, according to official data cited by Bloomberg News. That’s the lowest monthly figure registered since July 2022 — amid the throes of Covid-19 — when it shipped just 28,217 EVs, Bloomberg said.

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MEDLEY, Fla. — Since Unrivaled began two months ago, the Rose basketball club has stewed over a square piece of paper, clipped by a magnet, on their whiteboard.

The paper listed ESPN’s preseason rankings for the inaugural season of the 3-on-3 women’s basketball league. The Rose were predicted to finish in last place behind the Lunar Owls, Phantom, Vinyl, Mist and Laces. It’s been a sore subject Rose stars Angel Reese and Brittney Sykes discussed in postgame interviews – even with the games broadcast by Turner Sports.

The first Unrivaled season will end with the Rose having the last laugh.

Sykes scored a driving layup and the game-winning free throw to finish with 21 points, and the Rose beat the Vinyl 62-54 to win Unrivaled’s first championship on Monday night.

Azurá Stevens had 19 points and 18 rebounds, while Chelsea Gray scored 18 points with eight assists for the Rose.

Gray was voted Unrivaled Playoff MVP after helping the Rose overcome a 1-4 start to win the league’s first title. Gray set the Unrivaled record with 39 points in the Rose’s semifinal win over the Laces to help them advance to the title game. 

Reese, the Unrivaled Defensive Player of the Year and All-Unrivaled second-team standout, did not play for the Rose in the two-game playoffs. She was not in attendance for Monday’s title game, but cheered from the sidelines one day earlier.

Each player on the championship club will earn a $50,000 bonus.

The Vinyl were led by Rhyne Howard’s 22 points, while Dearica Hamby and Aliyah Boston each scored 10 points in the loss.

Follow along here for live updates from the Unrivaled championship game on Monday night:

Unrivaled third quarter score: Rose 51, Vinyl 49

Target winning score: 62

It’s a race to 62 points for the first Unrivaled championship, heading into the fourth quarter.

Chelsea Gray scored a buzzer-beating three beyond half court, and the Rose lead 51-49 over the Vinyl after the third quarter.

Gray has 12 points and eight assists, while Azurá Stevens leads the Rose with 19 points. Rhyne Howard leads the Vinyl with 19 points.

Unrivaled halftime score: Vinyl 37, Rose 32

Rhyne Howard scored a three-pointer to close out the second quarter, and the Vinyl rebounded from a first-quarter deficit to take a 37-32 lead over the Rose at halftime.

Howard leads the Vinyl with 13 points, while Dearica Hamby has eight points and five rebounds in the first half.

Chelsea Gray, who scored an Unrivaled record 39 points in Sunday’s semifinal against the Laces, has just three points in the first half. But she is fueling the Rose with six assists.

Brittney Sykes has 14 points, while Azurá Stevens has 13 points and nine rebounds for the Rose.

Unrivaled first quarter score: Rose 19, Vinyl 16

Chelsea Gray showed some flair with a no-look pass to Azurá Stevens as the Rose jumped out to a 19-16 lead over the Vinyl at the end of the first quarter.

Stevens leads the Rose with eight points and five rebounds, while Gray has three points and three assists.

Dearica Hamby has six points, a rebound and two steals in the first quarter for the Vinyl.

What time does Unrivaled playoff game begin Monday?

The Rose and Vinyl will begin at 7:30 p.m ET.

How to watch Unrivaled championship game?

The Unrivaled title game is available on TNT and TruTV on cable television, and to live stream on Max in the United States.

Angel Reese unlikely to play in Unrivaled championship due to injury

Reese, of the WNBA’s Chicago Sky, is unlikely to play in Monday’s game for the Rose club after injuring her surgically repaired left hand during the Unrivaled regular-season finale last week. Reese watched from the sidelines as the Rose beat the Lunar Owls on Sunday, wearing a brace on her left hand.

How the Rose reached Unrivaled final game

Chelsea Gray scored an Unrivaled high 39 points, including a game-winning three pointer, to help the Rose beat the No. 3 Laces 73-67 in the first semifinal Sunday. The Rose used a 23-12 third quarter to overcome a 40-27 at halftime, and outscored the Vinyl 13-5 in the fourth quarter to win despite having no other player score in double figures.

How the Vinyl reached Unrivaled final game

Dearica Hamby scored a driving layup over league MVP Napheesa Collier to help the Vinyl upset the No. 1 seed Lunar Owls 73-70 during the second semifinal game Sunday. Rhyne Howard led the Vinyl with 23 points, while Jordin Canada scored 10 of her 21 points in the fourth quarter to overcome a 62-52 deficit after the third quarter. Hamby finished with 16 points and 15 rebounds in the win. Collier scored 36 points with eight rebounds, three assists and two blocks in the loss.

Rose-Vinyl final features Unrivaled women coaches

It’s almost fitting Unrivaled’s first final will feature Rose coach Nola Henry and Vinyl coach Teresa Witherspoon — the only two women coaches in the league. Henry led the Rose to the No. 2 seed after a 1-4 start, while Witherspoon led the Vinyl to the title game as the lowest playoff seed in the four-team field.

Rose-Vinyl season series

The Rose leads the season-series over the Vinyl 2-1, heading into the Unrivaled championship game.  

The Vinyl beat the Rose 79-73 on opening night (Jan. 18) behind Rhyne Howard’s 33 points with Dearica Hamby’s 17 points and 13 rebounds.

The Rose beat the Vinyl 61-55 behind Chelsea Gray’s 26 points on Feb. 18. And in the March 10 regular season finale, the Rose dominated the Vinyl 74-46.

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