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The showdown has finally arrived.

After the shocking events of the 2025 Elimination Chamber − when John Cena turned heel and joined forces with The Rock to go on a brutal assault of Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes − the two stars in the main event WrestleMania 41 will meet for the first time since the unforgettable night.

Rhodes and Cena will come face-to-face on Monday Night Raw in what will a must-see event. Will any more punches be thrown? Will The Rock appear again? There’s no doubt the heat is rising ahead of their title match next month.

The face-off won’t be the only thing happening on Monday with the Intercontinental Championship on the line and a no holds barred match taking place. It’s set up to be another big night for WWE fans, but it will be happening at a different time than normal since the company is currently on its European tour. To make sure you don’t miss anything, here’s how to ensure you don’t miss a thing on Monday:

When time is Monday Night Raw today?

Monday Night Raw on March 17 begins at 3 p.m. ET.

Where is Monday Night Raw today?

Monday Night Raw will be taking place at Forest National in Brussels, Belgium.

How to watch Monday Night Raw

Monday Night Raw is available only on Netflix. Viewers will need a Netflix subscription to watch the event, and it’s available at no additional cost. Fans with any Netflix subscription tier will be able to watch.

Monday Night Raw match card, scheduled events

Cody Rhodes and John Cena meet face-to-face
Intercontinental Championship match: Bron Breakker (c) vs. Finn Balor
No holds barred match: Penta vs. Ludwig Kaiser

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Bengals general manager Duke Tobin vowed he would make Ja’Marr Chase the league’s highest-paid non-quarterback. And on Sunday, he did.

Chase and the Bengals have agreed to terms on a four-year, $161 million contract extension that will keep the star receiver in Cincinnati through the 2029 season, according to reports. The deal also gives him $112 million guaranteed.

The former LSU Tiger was set to enter the final year of his rookie contract in 2025 prior to signing the extension since the Bengals exercised Chase’s fifth-year option before last season.

Reports emerged Friday that the two sides were close to agreeing on a contract extension. Many analysts expected Chase to secure an average annual value above the $40 million per year mark that Browns defensive end Myles Garrett set as the new highest-paid non-quarterback in the NFL with his extension on March 9.

In late February, Tobin told reporters at the NFL Scouting Combine that he wanted to make Chase the highest-paid non-quarterback in the NFL with his contract extension.

‘Ja’Marr is always going to be our priority,’ he said. ‘He’s a fantastic football player. He’s going to end up being the No. 1 paid non-quarterback in the league. We’re there. Let’s get it done.’

The wideout joins Tee Higgins in signing a massive extension before the 2025 season, who was also part of Friday’s report that the Bengals were approaching deals with both receivers.

Chase has recorded 395 catches in four seasons with Cincinnati for 5,425 yards and 46 touchdowns. In 2024, Chase won the receiving triple crown by leading the league in receptions (127), receiving yards (1,708) and receiving touchdowns (17).

Cincinnati now has $26.8 million in available cap space for the 2025 league year, according to Overthecap.com.

The Bengals hold the No. 17 pick in the 2025 NFL draft after a 9-8 season that saw them narrowly miss the playoffs in 2024.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

According to reports, the Bengals agreed to terms on a four-year, $115 million contract extension with the wide receiver Sunday night. The deal will make Higgins the eighth-highest-paid wideout in the NFL per year in 2025.

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported Friday that the two sides were making progress on a massive extension. Fellow Bengals wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase was part of the same report, with Rapoport indicating both deals would get done soon after the news broke Friday.

After failing to agree to terms on a contract extension ahead of the franchise tag deadline earlier this month, Higgins was set to play on the franchise tag for a second straight year in 2025. He’s now due to make $28.75 million in 2025, a $2.55 million difference from the value of the franchise tag, and he’ll stick around in Cincinnati for four more years. The first two years are fully guaranteed for Higgins and his deal could be worth over $30 million per year with incentives, per reports.

In five seasons with the Bengals, Higgins has 330 catches for 4,595 receiving yards and 34 touchdowns in his career. The wideout missed five games in 2024 with hamstring, quad and ankle injuries, but he still compiled 911 yards and 10 touchdowns on 73 receptions.

According to Overthecap.com, the Bengals now have $26.8 million in available cap space for the 2025 league year.

Cincinnati is coming off a 9-8 season in which it narrowly missed the playoffs. It holds the No. 17 pick in the 2025 NFL draft.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

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 36% — though it is still up by some 54% over the past 12 months.

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.

Donald Trump accompanied by Elon Musk speaks Tuesday next to a Tesla Model S on the South Lawn of the White House.Andrew Harnik / Getty Images

Tesla is now facing intense competition from other Chinese EV makers, including BYD.

Yet even there, a Chinese official also warned about the impact of Musk’s high-profile politicking.

“As a successful businessman, one should be embracing 100% of the market: Treat everyone nicely, and everyone will be nice in return,” the secretary of China’s Passenger Car Association, said in a briefing Monday, Bloomberg reported. “But if you look at it in terms of voting, then half of voters will be friendly to you and half of them won’t be.”

“This is the unavoidable risk that’s come after he got his personal glory,” the secretary, Cui Dongshu, said Monday, referring to Musk.

On Friday, Reuters reported Tesla was planning to sell a Model Y costing at least 20% less to produce to defend its China share.

And in the U.S., Tesla’s January sales were down about 11%, according to data from the S&P Global analytics group — an outlier at a time when EV sales for all other brands are trending higher in America.

Though he has long worn multiple proverbial hats, Musk’s role in the White House as nominal head of the Department of Government Efficiency may be his most consequential. And having influence with the Trump administration could be critical to Tesla’s fortunes. This week, Trump promised he would purchase a Tesla in a showy presentation on the White House lawn, seemingly further cementing the Trump-Musk alliance.

On X — the social media platform he owns — Musk’s frenetic posting is increasingly focused on politics and America’s culture wars, with an occasional nod to SpaceX launches.

His apparently undiminished role in the Trump administration — he was seen leaving the White House last weekend alongside Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick — has sparked boycotts in Europe, as well as protests and even acts of vandalism against auto owners in the U.S.

“When people’s cars are in jeopardy of being keyed or set on fire out there, even people who support Musk or are indifferent to Musk might think twice about buying a Tesla,” Ben Kallo, an analyst at Baird, told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” on Monday.

In a note to clients this week downgrading its estimate of deliveries, analysts with JPMorgan said the damage to Tesla’s brand has been serious.

“We struggle to think of anything analogous in the history of the automotive industry, in which a brand has lost so much value so quickly,” they wrote.

Tesla itself is warning about the fallout from retaliatory measures taken by countries targeted by Trump’s tariffs, saying in a letter to the U.S. trade representative this week that the company may be “exposed to disproportionate impacts when other countries respond to US trade actions.”

Already, the Canadian province of British Columbia has announced it was ending subsidies for Tesla’s products.

For all the oxygen Musk has taken up with his political activities, concerns about Tesla products themselves are equally keeping investors and analysts up at night.

Musk has “neglect[ed] the rest of Tesla’s automotive business as he thought that by the end of every year for the last 6 years, Tesla would be able to flip a switch and make all its vehicles self-driving — automatically increasing their value and making them infinitely more competitive than other vehicles,” Fred Lambert, who covers the company for the Electrek electric vehicle blog, wrote in a recent post.

Meanwhile, Musk decided to kill Tesla’s cheaper, $25,000 model while going all-in on the Cybertruck, whose sales have yet to take off, Lambert said.

“Tesla’s core business remains selling cars and batteries,” he wrote. “There’s no doubt that the business of selling cars is not going well for Tesla right now, and under Musk, there’s no clear path to improvement.”

By contrast, many analysts continue to take a much longer view of Tesla’s outlook. In his most recent note to clients about the company, Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas, one of the most closely watched observers of Tesla, summarized the long-term outlook that he says continues to justify the company’s eye-watering valuation.

“Tesla’s softer auto deliveries are emblematic of a company in the transition from an automotive ‘pure play’ to a highly diversified play on AI and robotics,” he wrote in a note March 2.

While that was before the most recent sell-off intensified, Jonas said he was already discounting market gyrations.

“While the journey may be volatile and non-linear, we believe 2025 will be a year where investors will continue to appreciate and value these existing and nascent industries of embodied AI where we believe Tesla has established a material competitive advantage,” he wrote.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

This is unfamiliar territory for Stanford.

For the first time since 1987, the Cardinal will miss the NCAA tournament, ending a streak of 36 consecutive appearances. Only Tennessee, which has made every tournament since it began in 1982, has had a longer run.

Stanford won five of its last six regular-season games to give it a shot of sneaking into the tournament. But at 16-13, the Cardinal needed to make a run in the ACC tournament and that didn’t happen. Stanford bowed out in the first round, losing to Clemson.

‘We’re not going to let this one game define us or who we are,” first-year coach Kate Paye said after the loss.

Stanford is likely to get an invite to the WNIT, and Paye has indicated the Cardinal will accept. But the NCAA streak is over.

SURVIVOR POOL: Free to enter. $2,500 to win. Can you survive the madness?

Stanford wasn’t just a staple of the NCAA tournament, it had become one of its cornerstones. The Cardinal played in the national championship game five times, winning three of them, and reached the Final Four an additional 10 times. The team was a No. 1 or 2 seed each of the past five years.

Yet Stanford’s absence isn’t a total surprise, either.

In addition to longtime coach Tara VanDerveer retiring, Stanford lost its top three scorers and two leading rebounders from last year’s team. Cameron Brink was the No. 2 pick in the WNBA draft, Hannah Jump graduated and Kiki Iriafen transferred to USC.

Together, the three combined for an average of 47.4 points and 24.8 rebounds a game.

Stanford has just two seniors on its roster this year, and its regular starters included two sophomores and a freshman. Stanford also moved to the ACC, which meant entirely new opponents and a much heavier travel schedule.

Stanford isn’t the only notable name to miss out on the NCAA tournament. Here’s a look at some of the other snubs:

Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech lost games it shouldn’t have. The bigger problem, however, was other teams lost games they shouldn’t have.

Richmond, for example, was a lock for the tournament, ranked 33rd in the NET. But when the Spiders got bounced in the semifinals of the Atlantic 10 tournament, that left one less at-large bid. And teams like Virginia Tech were on the outside looking in.

James Madison

The Dukes were phenomenal during the regular season, winning 28 games and going unbeaten in the Sun Belt conference. But an overtime loss to Arkansas State in the Sun Belt tournament final killed their chances.

Minnesota

Minnesota’s season began spiraling at the end of January and it could never get it back on track. A loss to Washington in the first round of the Big Ten tournament just made it official.

Arizona

The losses to Grand Canyon and even Northern Arizona look better than they initially did. But Arizona just didn’t have that signature win.

Iowa State/Princeton

It’s hard to call this a true snub, since both Iowa State and Princeton made the tournament. But … woof. They have to play each other in the First Four, with the winner getting Michigan in the Wolverines’ backyard with that first-round game being played at Notre Dame.

Again, it’s great to make the tournament. But for two teams that were living on the bubble the last few weeks, hard not to wonder if making the NIT and doing some damage there would have been better.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MEDLEY, Fla. — Napheesa Collier sat down for her final Unrivaled press conference, disappointed but not dejected.

After all, look at all she’s accomplished.

Collier co-founded the fast-paced, 3-on-3 women’s basketball league with fellow UConn great Breanna Stewart.

She won the Unrivaled 1-on-1 tournament and the grand prize of $200,000 last month. She even split $100,000 of the winnings with the training and performance staff and coaches on her team, while her four Lunar Owls teammates won $10,000 each after her big win.

She accepted the Unrivaled Most Valuable Player award before Sunday’s semifinal round of playoff games, after leading the league in several statistical categories and fueling the Lunar Owls to a league-best 13-1 record.

However, Unrivaled’s inaugural season won’t end with Collier capping the perfect season by hoisting the championship trophy.

Collier scored 36 points with eight rebounds, three assists and two blocks despite being questionable with a left ankle injury, but the No. 1 seed Lunar Owls fell 73-70 to the No. 4 seed Vinyl in the second of two semifinal games on Sunday.

The Vinyl will meet the No. 2 Rose in the Unrivaled championship game on Monday night at 8:30 p.m. ET, after Chelsea Gray scored a league-record 39 points to help the Rose advance past the No. 3 Laces 63-57 in the other semifinal.

“Just being with this team was a high. Our chemistry was great from the beginning. The way that we approached every day, so professional, how locked in we were. It was just a pleasure to be with this team,” Collier said after her Unrivaled season came to an end.

“Obviously, we want to take that into next year, but kind of just thinking about this for tonight.”

After winning gold with the U.S. Olympic women’s basketball team in Paris last summer, the 28-year-old Minnesota Lynx star won WNBA Defensive Player of the Year, before falling to Stewart and the New York Liberty in the WNBA Finals last October.

It would be too easy to add the Unrivaled playoff loss as another coming-up-short moment for Collier’s career recently.

The Lunar Owls led 62-52 after the third quarter of Sunday’s semifinal, needing to reach 73 points first to secure a rematch against the Rose – the only team to beat them at Unrivaled before Sunday’s loss to the Vinyl.

Lunar Owls standout Skylar Diggins-Smith, second behind Gray with five game-winning shots at Unrivaled, forced a three-point shot while trailing 71-70 on the club’s final offensive possession of the game.

Collier, Diggins-Smith and backup Courtney Williams were deadlocked behind the three-point line, trying to go for the win, while starter Allisha Gray left the game after suffering an injury.

Dearica Hamby scored the game-winning layup past Collier to end the game, Rhyne Howard finished with 23 points, and Jordin Canada scored 10 of her 21 points as the Vinyl outscored the Lunar Owls 21-8 in the final quarter.

“We should have never been in that position,” Unrivaled Coach of the Year DJ Sackmann said. “It’s really the whole quarter, not just that one opportunity.”

Added Collier: “Yeah, it’s a tough ending for us.”

Still, it’s not difficult to see what Collier has truly accomplished for the sport and what will set her apart from her peers when her career eventually ends.

Unrivaled has become an offseason alternative for women’s basketball players during the WNBA offseason. The Unrivaled players are partners and not employees, sharing ownership equity in the league. There’s no need for players to go overseas anymore to supplement their incomes.

Unrivaled also has pushed the envelope when it comes to improving the player experience, providing players with adequate facilities like a fully equipped weight room and training rooms – some of which they are not privy to in the WNBA.

Unrivaled is bullish on being sustainable operation, already shifting some focus to Year 2 from its centralized location at Mediapro Miami, a production studio about seven miles away from Miami International Airport.  

“What we’ve provided the players, and we want to do even more in Year 2. We want to raise salaries, offer even more services, things like that,” Collier told USA TODAY Sports before the postseason.

Unrivaled commissioner Micky Lawler, the former president of the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA), praised Collier for her work co-founding the league while presenting her with the MVP trophy before Sunday’s semifinal games.

“Phee, you are the queen of the highest court in the land. That’s not only because for your remarkable achievements as a world-class top athlete, but also what you’ve co-created with Breanna Stewart,” Lawler said.

“What you’ve co-created has changed the trajectory for your fellow players, for every stakeholder in basketball, and every lover in basketball. Unrivaled is going to be a very important chapter in sports history. Congrats on being our amazing first MVP of Unrivaled.”

Collier, who was also named to the All-Unrivaled First Team earlier this week, believes she’s in the prime of her career. And her Unrivaled numbers prove she’s right.

Collier led Unrivaled with 25.7 points per game, a 61.3 shooting percent from the floor, 2.0 steals per game and shared the league-lead with Brittney Griner with 1.4 blocks per game. She was one of four players to average a double-double – joined by Stewart, Alyssa Thomas and Angel Reese – as her 10.6 rebounds ranked fourth in the league.

“I just have to say I wouldn’t be here without my team and my coaches,” Collier said as she accepted her MVP trophy.

“They pushed me every day to be my best … This is not a solo award. This is a team award, and I want to say, ‘Thank you’ to them.”

Instead of boasting about herself, Collier was quick to thank her teammates for their role in helping her win MVP.

Thinking about her peers is what fueled Collier to start Unrivaled.

And furthering the game of women’s basketball will be Collier’s everlasting mark – more than any win or loss – during her standout career.

“She’d be the first person to tell you she’s more focused for her team, but her team is also the league. She wants all the players to come out of here with a level of success. She wants all the players to get their shine and get their glory,” Unrivaled president Alex Bazzell, and Collier’s husband, told USA TODAY Sports.

“There’s nothing she’s going to do moving forward that’s going to make me more proud of what she’s already accomplished. She’s put her name on the line to build something that’s never been done before in the name of giving more resources and more compensation to her peers.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Geno Auriemma becomes thoughtful when asked why he’s still coaching UConn, at age 70. Left unsaid: He can win his 12th national championship.
Led by Paige Bueckers, UConn Huskies take 10-game win streak into March Madness.
UConn’s ‘Big Three’ present matchup problems for opponents in NCAA Tournament.

What keeps you going?

It couldn’t have been the first time someone asked Geno Auriemma this question, but my query still triggered a moment of contemplation from UConn’s legendary coach when we spoke last month.

Auriemma almost always has answers – to reporters’ questions, to roster building, to coaching situations.

This particular question, though, stumped him.

‘That’s a great question,” Auriemma told me, ‘because I can’t answer it.”

Auriemma will turn 71 years old during March Madness. He owns 11 national championship rings, three Olympic gold medals, and he’s a central figure alongside Pat Summitt on the Mount Rushmore of women’s basketball coaches. He’s college basketball’s all-time winningest coach. He’s got nothing left to prove, but he’s still proving hard to beat.

SURVIVOR POOL: Can your picks survive March Madness? Join our Survivor Pool to find out

UConn (31-3) earned a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament, into which it brings a 10-game win streak. Auriemma is six wins shy of 1,250 for his career. It takes six victories to win the NCAA Tournament. Just saying.

‘I’ve tried to look at all the reasons why people do step away. It’s certainly past my prime, to be honest with you,” Auriemma told me in February.

“I never set out to be doing this, period, and certainly never set out to be here for 40 years. To answer that question: I don’t know. I don’t know. I enjoy what I’m doing, to a point. I enjoy the competition. I enjoy the preparation that goes into it. I don’t enjoy a lot of what’s going on right now, and I think a lot of my contemporaries have seen where it’s going and don’t want any part of it. I’m sure I’ll get there at some point – just not right now.”

Interpret Auriemma’s answer however you like, but I didn’t take it as a hint toward retirement. More as a thoughtful musing from a veteran coach who’s watched most of his contemporaries retire, while he keeps going, for whatever reason, and keeps piling victories.

UConn announced last summer a contract extension for Auriemma that runs through the 2028-29 season.

‘I would say the things that keep me going are that I still find some satisfaction in what I’m doing. That’s probably the biggest thing for me,” Auriemma said. ‘It’s not like I need to do it or have to do it. I just still find some satisfaction. It’s a challenge, though.’

The Huskies don’t run the sport like they did at the zenith of Auriemma’s dynastic run, but they retain a place among the nation’s elite.

Paige Bueckers not a solo act for No. 2 seed UConn Huskies

Auriemma steered UConn on a surprise run to the Final Four last season, as a No. 3 seed, with a squad saddled by injuries. Those Huskies finished one bucket short of a national championship game appearance.

This team, led by superstar guard Paige Bueckers, has the goods to make it back to that stage — or beyond. There are, perhaps, more complete teams, and standouts like Southern California’s JuJu Watkins, Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo and UCLA’s Lauren Betts rival Bueckers for the distinction of nation’s best player.

The Huskies enjoy an easier go of it in the Big East than No. 1 seeds UCLA, South Carolina, USC or Texas from the SEC and Big Ten. UConn won every conference game by double digits. Also mixed into its win streak was an eye-opening 29-point smashing of South Carolina. Among UConn’s three losses is a two-point defeat to USC, the No. 1 seed in UConn’s region.

The Huskies can play with anyone when they’re right. They’ve been right this past month.

When Bueckers scores and distributes, when Azzi Fudd’s 3-pointers are falling, when Sarah Strong controls the paint, they form a ‘Big Three’ that inspires belief UConn could capture its first national championship since 2016, the final year of a four-peat.

‘I believe in this team so much,” Fudd said after UConn won the Big East Tournament.

Geno Auriemma pursues 12th national title as wins keep coming

Any coach would like another piece, and if you handed Auriemma a magic wand, he’d probably conjure a veteran post player.

Two freshmen, Strong and Jana El Alfy, form UConn’s starting frontcourt. You won’t find a better freshman anywhere than Strong, who signed as the nation’s No. 1-rated recruit.

As Auriemma searched for an answer as to why he’s still coaching, I offered him this thought: A dozen national championships sure would have a nice ring to it. He chuckled in response, making no bold proclamations, nor denying the possibility of another title.

“I think you always believe that you have a chance,” Auriemma said.

Blake Toppmeyer is a columnist for the USA TODAY Network. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Selection Sunday revealed one of the least controversial NCAA men’s tournament brackets in recent history thanks to a bubble-bursting final stretch of the regular season.

The list of teams left out of the 68-team field include Indiana, Boise State and West Virginia. This group might have a bone to pick with the selection committee, which instead gave the last at-large spot to North Carolina despite the Tar Heels’ miserable performance in games against Quad 1 competition.

But things generally went according to plan for the selection committee, which avoided a late dose of chaos after Memphis topped Alabama-Birmingham in the American Athletic championship game. That leaves Mountain West champion Colorado State as the only bid-stealing team in this year’s bracket.

The No. 1 line has Duke, Auburn, Florida and Houston. On the No. 2 line are Michigan State, Tennessee, St. John’s and Alabama. Among the teams joining the Tar Heels on the back end of the at-large picture are Texas, Xavier and Utah State.

Tournament action begins Tuesday with play-in games in Dayton, Ohio, pitting North Carolina against San Diego State and No. 16 seeds St. Francis and Alabama State.

Here are the winners and losers from Selection Sunday:

Winners

North Carolina

UNC made the field as a No. 11 seed in the South region despite winning all of one game against Quad 1 competition, which can be seen as both a damning indictment of the Tar Heels’ mediocrity and a statement about the dearth of qualified options on the back end of the at-large picture. While the tournament berth puts a positive spin on what has been an often miserable season – and helps coach Hubert Davis avoid a second tournament absence in three years — how far the Tar Heels advance in March depends on how quickly they can reboot, refocus and embrace this opportunity.

Duke

Duke were locked onto the No. 1 line after beating the Cardinals 73-62 despite missing star freshman Cooper Flagg, who injured his ankle in the ACC semifinals. This performance on Saturday night speaks to the Blue Devils’ depth beyond Flagg’s brilliance as perhaps the most well-rounded player in this year’s tournament. The East region is also kind to Duke, which is projected to face No. 8 Baylor or No. 9 Mississippi State in the second round before potentially facing off with No. 4 Arizona or No. 5 Oregon to decide the Elite Eight. But to get back to the Final Four, the Blue Devils might have to handle a matchup with No. 2 Alabama and the Crimson Tide’s high-potency offense.

LEFT OUT: Six teams snubbed by the NCAA men’s tournament

Memphis

Memphis was one of the toughest teams to predict in our bracketology, with the potential to land anywhere from the No. 5 line to a No. 7 seed after beating UAB. The Tigers landed as the No. 5 in the West, drawing an opening-round matchup with No. 12 Colorado State and then No. 4 Maryland or No. 13 Grand Canyon for a trip to the Sweet 16. Looking at the resume, it’s clear the committee valued the Tigers’ convincing run through the AAC and impressive 6-1 mark against Quad 1 teams, including non-conference wins against Missouri, Connecticut, Michigan State and Clemson.

The SEC

The SEC set a tournament record for a single conference with 14 teams in this year’s field: No. 1 Auburn, No. 4 Texas A&M and No. 6 Mississippi in the South; No. 2 Alabama and No. 8 Mississippi State in the East region; No. 1 Florida, No. 6 Missouri, No. 8 Oklahoma and No. 10 Arkansas in the West; and No. 2 Tennessee, No. 3 Kentucky, No. 9 Georgia and No. 11 Texas in the Midwest. After a banner regular season, the onus is on the SEC to deliver on this well-deserved respect by sending multiple teams to the second weekend and potentially two or more all the way to the Final Four.

Losers

Michigan

Several factors combine to make Michigan perhaps the biggest loser in this year’s field. For one, the Wolverines are a No. 5 seed in the South despite beating Wisconsin for the Big Ten championship; the Badgers, meanwhile, are the No. 3 seed in the East. Michigan also plays on Thursday in Denver, giving them a shortened turnaround time to recover from the grind of the Big Ten tournament. Lastly, the Wolverines will take on No. 12 UC San Diego, which ended the regular season No. 35 in the NET rankings after going 30-4 overall and 4-2 against Quad 1 and Quad 2 competition. In Michigan’s favor is the postseason track record of first-year coach Dusty May, who led Florida Atlantic to the Final Four two years ago.

Louisville

That dismal perception of the ACC clearly had a major influence on Louisville, which scaled the conference standings under new coach Pat Kelsey before falling to Duke in yesterday’s championship game. Despite winning 27 games during the regular season, including a combined 15 wins against Quad 1 and Quad 2 competition, the Cardinals drew the No. 8 seed in the South and a first-round matchup with No. 9 Creighton. With a win there, Louisville would face SEC regular-season champion Auburn, which spent most the year as the unquestioned top-ranked team in the country. That’s a very rough draw for one of the biggest major-conference success stories of this season. But Louisville does get to play the first weekend in Lexington, Kentucky, which might be enemy territory but will provide a very friendly crowd.

St. John’s

There’s good news and bad news for the Big East champions, which on Saturday cut down the nets after the Big East tournament at Madison Square Garden for the first time in 25 years. (Turns out that Rick Pitino was a good idea.) The good news: St. John’s lands as the No. 2 seed opposite No. 15 Nebraska-Omaha in the West region, the program’s highest NCAA tournament seeding since that 2000 season. That sets up the potential for a second-round matchup with John Calipari and No. 10 Arkansas, should the Razorbacks get past No. 7 Kansas. The bad news can be found in that West region landing spot. Had they been placed in the East, the Red Storm could’ve played for a Final Four appearance in nearby Newark, New Jersey.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The road to the Final Four in the Midwest Regional of the men’s NCAA Tournament once again goes through Houston. But in order to get to San Antonio, the Cougars, who have claimed the Big 12 crown in each of their first two years in the conference, will likely have to get through at least one SEC squad.

The loaded region also includes a couple of other squads that made Elite Eight appearances a year ago, including a national finalist, and a perennial power from the west coast hoping to extend an impressive streak.

If the seeds hold and it is No. 2 Tennessee taking on the Cougars in the regional final, we could be in for a 40-minute defensive clinic. But the path won’t be easy for either of the top seeds. Here’s a quick look at some of the possible highlights.

Midwest Region best first-round matchup: Gonzaga vs. Georgia

Picking the 8-9 game might seem like a copout, but there’s plenty of intrigue with this one. Gonzaga always seems to round into form at this time of year, as evidenced by its nine consecutive Sweet 16 appearances. Extending that streak from this part of the bracket will be a challenge to say the least, starting with its opening contest against another group of Bulldogs. Georgia finished with a sub-.500 record in SEC play but picked up wins against eventual champ Florida and Kentucky along the way, so the team will be more than ready for the level of competition in this tournament. It’s true that Georgia’s best results came on their home court, and that Gonzaga did not fare as well in non-conference play as some of its past teams. As such whichever bunch of Bulldogs prevails will be underdogs against Houston in the next round. But the battle to earn the right to take on that challenge should be fun.

REGIONAL PREDICTIONS:East | West | Midwest | South

LEFT OUT: Six teams snubbed by the NCAA men’s tournament

Midwest Region potential upset in first round: No. 12 McNeese over No. 5 Clemson.

The Cowboys were a popular upset pick from the No. 12 line a year ago as well but weren’t quite ready for prime time as they bowed out quickly against Gonzaga. This year’s group might have a better idea of what to expect in the March Madness spotlight, and the matchup with a possibly short-handed Tigers’ team might be more to their liking. Yes, Clemson still has some key pieces from the team that made a deep run to the Elite Eight a year ago, and the Tigers should still enjoy an advantage in overall athleticism that could prove decisive on the defensive end. But McNeese has some depth as well and could be a tougher out this time.

Midwest Region sleeper: Purdue

One might argue that a No. 4 seed, not to mention a team that played for all the marbles just a season ago, shouldn’t be considered a sleeper. But without Zach Edey dominating the middle, This year’s version of the Boilermakers did not exactly run roughshod through the Big Ten. Yes, they won their share of games, and they once again can boast having the league player of the year in the person of point guard Braden Smith. Purdue will not be favored to make it back to championship weekend, and just getting through the first couple of rounds will be difficult. But they have plenty of experienced hands including a couple other starters who are familiar with the pressures of March.

Midwest Region winner: Houston

The Cougars enter the Big Dance riding a 13-game winning streak. Furthermore, they’re healthier than they were at this juncture a year ago. Their fans couldn’t join them for their last Final Four trip in 2021, so things will be a lot more festive this time. Look for Houston to grind teams down and eventually find its way to San Antonio.

NCAA Tournament Midwest Region schedule

First round

Thursday, March 20

At Intrust Bank Arena, Wichita, Kan.

Houston vs. Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, 2 p.m., TBS

Gonzaga vs. Georgia, 4:35 p.m., TBS

At Amica Mutual Pavilion, Providence, R.I.

Purdue vs. High Point, 12:40 p.m., truTV

Clemson vs. McNeese State, 3:15 p.m., truTV

At Rupp Arena, Lexington, Ky.

Tennessee vs. Wofford, 6:50 p.m., TNT

UCLA vs. Utah State, 9:25 p.m., TNT

Friday, March 21

At Fiserv Forum, Milwaukee, Wis.

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

Illinois vs. Texas or Xavier, 9:25 p.m., CBS

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To hear Jay Bilas tell it, an SEC team winning the national championship shouldn’t be all that hard.
The SEC impressed all season with its depth, but conference also has national championship contenders in Auburn, Florida, Alabama and Tennessee.
A No. 1 or No. 2 seed normally wins March Madness. That’s good news for the SEC.

Jay Bilas, normally one of ESPN’s most rational college basketball minds, jumped the shark earlier this season. Bilas, while praising the SEC’s uprising, brazenly claimed during an appearance on a Birmingham radio station that “winning the SEC Tournament is going to be harder than winning the national championship.”

The math doesn’t add up. Florida won three games to win the SEC Tournament. Winning the NCAA Tournament requires six victories. Landmines like Duke, Houston, St. John’s, Michigan State and Texas Tech join the SEC’s record-breaking 14 tournament qualifiers to create a March Madness gauntlet.

This tournament will amount to a final exam for the conference that aced every test so far.

SEC’s basketball prowess starts with four headliners

Florida can win the NCAA Tournament, for the same reasons it won three games in three days in Nashville. The Gators excel at both ends of the court, and they can put five or more players in double-figure scoring in a single game. Senior guard Walter Clayton Jr. serves as a sufficient tip of the spear.

Or the SEC’s Auburn, Tennessee or Alabama could win the title, because, to Bilas’ larger point, the conference has been excellent. It’s not just the league’s impressive depth. It’s the four-deep crème de la crème.

SURVIVOR POOL: Can your picks survive March Madness? Join Survivor Pool to find out

Auburn has been ranked within the top three of the USA TODAY Sports coaches’ poll every week since mid-November. Tennessee and Alabama ascended to the No. 1 ranking earlier this season, and Florida climbed as high as No. 2.

Some say the SEC supplied the best single-season performance by a conference, but that claim seems premature before the NCAA Tournament unfolds.

We tend to remember two elements of a college basketball season: We remember the upsets, and we remember the champions. For the SEC to cement this idea of best-ever conference performance, its teams must perform these next three weeks.

No banners are raised based on results achieved during the thick of football season, but the selection committee clearly noticed that the SEC smashed the ACC to the tune of a 14-2 record in the ACC/SEC challenge in November. In fact, the SEC dazzled throughout its nonconference scheduling.

The only opposition that could slow the SEC was the conference itself. The league’s cumulative .500 conference record became a running joke within SEC circles. Rhode Island coach Archie Miller and ESPN’s Karl Ravech weren’t in on the joke. They became bewildered by how such a strong conference couldn’t break the .500 mark in conference play.

(Hint: When one SEC team wins a conference game, the other team loses.)

We’ve never seen anything like this SEC basketball season. The conference accounts for more than 20% of the NCAA bracket. The Big East previously set the record for most NCAA bids, with 11 in 2011, and UConn capped that season with a national championship.

The 1985 Big East remains the other standard for conference dominance. The Big East qualified six of its nine teams for the NCAA Tournament that season. That six-pack of qualifiers combined for an 18-5 March Madness record. Three Big East teams reached the Final Four, and eighth-seeded Villanova won the national championship.

Auburn, Florida, Tennessee and Alabama are positioned in four different regions. Just pointing that out. No conference has ever occupied all four spots in the Final Four.

SEC’s March Madness seeding ups chance for title

This bid haul marks a zenith of SEC commissioner Greg Sankey’s years-long efforts for a basketball revolution. That push began in earnest in 2016 after the SEC qualified just three teams for the NCAA Tournament.

You could point to smarter scheduling, good facilities and strong financial commitment to explain the SEC’s uprising – all of that matters – but the starting point to explain what happened to this conference begins with coaching.

The SEC became home to the best collection of college basketball coaches.

Case in point: Auburn went from Tony Barbee to Bruce Pearl.

And still, a national championship has eluded the SEC, because despite Bilas’ assertion, winning the NCAA Tournament is a more treacherous journey than capturing a conference tournament crown. The SEC qualified eight teams for March Madness last season, and although Alabama reached the Final Four, the conference underwhelmed overall. Kentucky and Auburn suffered shocking first-round upsets, and the SEC finished the tournament with an 8-8 record.

The league is stronger – and deeper – this season. The SEC’s sheer volume of qualifiers affords the conference a great opportunity to produce a national champion for the first time since 2012 Kentucky. Plus, Auburn and Florida earning No. 1 seeds and Tennessee and Alabama grabbing No. 2 seeds buoys the SEC’s odds.

Seven of the last nine national champions were a No. 1 seed, and in the 39 tournaments since the bracket included at least 64 teams, a No. 1 or No. 2 seed won the national championship 77% of the time.

In a show of recognition for the SEC’s dominance, ESPN assigned Bilas to call SEC Tournament games instead of his typical ACC assignment. During one broadcast, Bilas proclaimed that the SEC Tournament semifinals might be more robust than the Final Four.

Alternatively, the SEC’s semifinals could have previewed the Final Four.

Blake Toppmeyer is a columnist for the USA TODAY Network. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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