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India cricket put together a historic performance in the 2026 T20 World Cup championship match vs. New Zealand.

After New Zealand won the toss and elected to field first, India’s bats made the Kiwis instantly regret the decision. The ‘Men in Blue’ scored a blistering 255 runs in the 20 over match. That is the third-highest score ever for a T20 match and the highest score in a final.

India, which is the defending T20 World Cup champions, bested its own previous record of 176 in the 2024 World Cup Final vs. South Africa. Now England must break tie the second-highest score ever to chase down India to win its first T20 World Cup.

Sanju Samson scored 89 off 46 balls with five 4s and eight 6s to open the batting for the Men in Blue, while fellow opener Abhishek Sharma added 52 runs off 21 balls and Ishan Kishan had 54 runs off 25 balls.

Here’s a look at the records for most runs scores in a T20 Cricket World Cup match and final:

Most runs by single team in T20 Cricket World Cup final

India now owns three of the top scores in the T20 World Cup final. India set the previous record for most run scored in a T20 final with 176 vs. South Africa in 2024.

India, 255, (2026) vs. New Zealand
India, 176 (2024) vs. South Africa
Australia, 173 (2021) vs. New Zealand
New Zealand, 172 (2021) vs. Australia
South Africa, 169 (2024) vs. India
West Indies, 161 (2016) vs. England
India, 157 (2007) vs. Pakistan
England, 155 (2016) vs. West Indies
Pakistan, 152 (2007) vs. India
England, 148 (2010) vs. Australia

Most runs in T20 Cricket World Cup match

1. Sri Lanka, 260 vs. Kenya, Sept. 4, 2007
2. India, 256 vs. Zimbabwe, Feb. 26, 2026
3. India, 255 vs. New Zealand, March 8, 2026
4. West Indies, 254 vs. Zimbabwe, Feb. 23, 2026
5. India, 253 vs. England, March 5, 2026
6. England, 246 vs. India, March 5, 2026
7. Ireland, 235 vs. Oman, Feb. 14, 2026
8. England, 230 vs. South Africa, March 18, 2016
9. South Africa, 229 vs. England, March 18, 2016
10. Sri Lanka, 225 vs. Oman, Feb. 12, 2026

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Two-time Cy Young award winner Tarik Skubal planned to make just one start in the World Baseball Classic before returning to spring training with the Detroit Tigers.

But after getting a taste of what it’s like to represent Team USA, he’s not so sure he’s ready to leave.

‘When you get into these environments, when you get this team, it’s hard to walk away from that,’ Skubal said Saturday, March 7, after tossing three strong innings in the Americans’ 9-1 win over Great Britain.

‘I didn’t expect these types of emotions to run through my brain or my thoughts to differ. I was pretty committed to making a start and getting back to camp,’ Skubal said. ‘Things have changed, obviously, that’s why I’m going to have some conversations to try and figure out a plan for me.’

The Tigers left-hander, who is ticketed for free agency – and likely one of the largest contracts in baseball history – at the end of the 2026 season, said he’ll talk with the Tigers, his agent and his family before making what he calls ‘one of the tougher decisions I’ve made in my career.’

He said he’ll make the call ‘in the next couple days.’

Skubal allowed a leadoff home run to Great Britain’s Nate Eaton in the first inning, but he settled down and struck out five over his three-inning stint on Saturday in Houston. But he said he didn’t expect his emotions to take over the way they did after getting on the mound.

‘It just changes your perspective a little bit, you know?’ Skubal said. ‘And how proud I am to be an American and go out there and pitch and compete. (Thinking about) the people that make real sacrifices for me to play a kid’s game. So we’ll see.’

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Mexican drug cartels are increasingly calculated in their targeting decisions, often avoiding deliberately attacking American tourists and citizens out of concern it could prompt intensified U.S. retaliation, according to experts.

Following last month’s killing of Ruben ‘Nemesio’ Oseguera Cervantes, known as ‘El Mencho,’ the powerful leader of the Mexican Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt joined ‘Fox & Friends’ and had a warning for the drug gangs: ‘The Mexican drug cartels know not to lay a finger on a single American, or they will pay severe consequences under this president.’

Analysts say actions by President Donald Trump — including the designation of cartels as foreign terrorist organizations and high-profile operations abroad such as the capture of Nicolás Maduro and the killing of Ayatollah Khamenei in Iran — have reinforced cartel perceptions of heightened risk. 

Mexican drug cartels have long operated with a primary objective: protect revenue streams and avoid actions that could trigger an overwhelming government response. Security analysts and former U.S. officials say that calculus often includes avoiding the deliberate targeting of American tourists and citizens inside Mexico.

‘Of course, drug cartels are afraid of President Trump since he declared them terrorist organizations. That may be one of the reasons why they don’t attack American citizens or tourists,’ cartel expert and activist Elena Chávez told Fox News Digital.

She said the cartels ‘modernized and are well-informed about what is happening, especially because they know there are bounties on their heads. That’s why they fear the United States, even more so since Trump became president and declared the cartels terrorist organizations. Of course, they monitor all of this and have people who keep the leaders informed about how things are moving. The price on ‘El Mencho’s’ head in the United States was very high.’

Adding to the pressure, Trump spoke Saturday at the newly minted Shield of the Americas Summit in Florida — a coalition of 12 Latin American and Caribbean nations — coming together to take on the cartels, among other policies. 

‘We have to knock the hell out of them because they’re getting worse. They’re taking over their country. The cartels are running Mexico. We can’t have that. Too close to us,’ Trump warned.

‘Right now, there must be more than a million Americans coming to Mexico to spend their vacations in their homes. The drug cartels don’t mess with them or their homes. They know there’s no way to avoid a reaction from the United States if they mess with its citizens. There’s an unwritten rule that says you shouldn’t mess with American citizens; if you do, you’ll suffer retaliation from the United States. And even more so now with the Trump administration’ Samuel González, national security expert and former prosecutor of the specialized unit on organized crime, told Fox News Digital.

While high-profile killings of Americans in Mexico have occurred, experts describe them as isolated and liabilities to cartel interests rather than part of a strategic campaign.

‘There are several precedents that demonstrate why the cartels are particularly careful not to touch American citizens. One of the most important was the Camarena case: the kidnapping, torture, and murder of DEA agent Enrique ‘Kiki’ Camarena in 1985 in Mexico, perpetrated by leaders of the Guadalajara Cartel (Rafael Caro Quintero, Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo, and Ernesto Fonseca Carrillo) in retaliation for the destruction of ‘El Búfalo’ marijuana ranch.

‘This crime marked a turning point in the anti-drug relationship between Mexico and the U.S., prompting the DEA’s ‘Operation Leyenda’ to capture those responsible and revealing the complicity between drug traffickers and high-ranking Mexican officials.’

He added, ‘Another case is that of Agent Zapata. On Feb. 15, 2011, gunmen from ‘Los Zetas’ cartel killed Special Agent Jaime Zapata of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE/HSI) and shot Agent Victor Avila on a highway in San Luis Potosí, Mexico. The murder triggered intense pressure from the United States on Mexico to combat the cartels, resulting in the capture of several implicated Los Zetas members, including Julián Zapata Espinoza, alias ‘El Piolín.’

‘All these precedents are examples of why the cartels learned that it is not in their best interest to attack American citizens.’

Security experts say cartels closely monitor political rhetoric in Washington, particularly statements suggesting unilateral U.S. military action or expanded cross-border operations. Public debate over labeling cartels as terrorist groups has resurfaced in recent years, with some lawmakers arguing it would provide additional tools to disrupt financing and logistics networks.

According to former federal officials, cartels’ avoidance of deliberately targeting Americans is rooted less in ideology and more in risk management. High-profile attacks on U.S. citizens can generate intense media coverage, diplomatic strain and increased enforcement operations that disrupt trafficking routes.

Director General of the National Citizen Observatory, Francisco Rivas, told Fox News Digital: ‘Drug traffickers are much more afraid of attacking a foreigner than a Mexican because crimes against foreigners are prosecuted much more severely by the Mexican authorities. The greater media pressure when the victim is a foreigner creates more incentive for the police and prosecutors to investigate a kidnapping, extortion, disappearance or homicide.’

‘In Mexico, more than 90% of intentional homicides and disappearances are related to people who had specific contact with the cartels, primarily for business reasons. The problems tourists experience in Mexico are the same as they might encounter in Miami, London, Rome or Paris: robberies, fraud and even some extortion, but these are proportionally marginal. Most crimes suffered in Mexico are suffered by Mexicans, and most violent crimes involve Mexican victims linked to cartels,’ he said.

While millions of Americans travel to Mexico each year without incident, law enforcement officials emphasize that criminal violence remains widespread in regions where cartels operate.

Authorities on both sides of the border maintain that cartel decision-making is driven by financial incentives and survival calculations. Actions perceived as likely to trigger direct U.S. retaliation are widely viewed by analysts as counterproductive to those interests.

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Trump’s ‘total elimination’ strategy paved way for fall of cartel kingpin ‘El Mencho’
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President Donald Trump is vowing to reject signing any new bills into law until the SAVE America Act is passed by the Senate, a tall order with just 53 Republicans seated and the 60-vote filibuster threshold a high hurdle.

‘Great Job by hard working Scott Pressler on Fox & Friends talking about using the Filibuster, or Talking Filibuster, in order to pass THE SAVE AMERICA ACT, an 88% issue with ALL VOTERS,’ Trump wrote Sunday morning on Truth Social. ‘It must be done immediately.’

‘It supersedes everything else,’ Trump added. ‘MUST GO TO THE FRONT OF THE LINE.’

The vow to halt all new law signings is a new one coming from the White House and notable because of the Senate hesitation to follow the urgings of Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, to force the Senate to bring the bill forward through the talking filibuster.

‘I, as President, will not sign other Bills until this is passed,’ Trump’s post continued, ‘AND NOT THE WATERED DOWN VERSION – GO FOR THE GOLD: MUST SHOW VOTER I.D. & PROOF OF CITIZENSHIP: NO MAIL-IN BALLOTS EXCEPT FOR MILITARY – ILLNESS, DISABILITY, TRAVEL: NO MEN IN WOMEN’S SPORTS: NO TRANSGENDER MUTILIZATION FOR CHILDREN! DO NOT FAIL!!!’

While Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., has publicly acknowledged a willingness to bring a vote on the SAVE America Act before the upper chamber, there is hesitation within the Republican Party about forcing the talking filibuster under the current Senate rules.

The talking filibuster would force Democrats to speak on the Senate floor to argue against a voter identification position widely supported by Americans, as Trump noted, but it would also force Republicans to sit in attendance with a quorum. That has been rebuked by longtime Senate GOP veterans as something that would ‘waste time.’

Former Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has been publicly opposed to forcing a talking filibuster because of the time constraints it would force on the Senate GOP, and he remains one of the few Senate Republicans not signing on to support the SAVE America Act.

Another development that clouds the SAVE America Act filibuster is the recent appointment of Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., to serve as the next Department of Homeland Security secretary, perhaps resigning from the Senate by the end of March.

Fox News Digital reached out to Mullin’s office for comment. McConnell’s office declined to comment on Trump’s Truth Social vow to block all new law signings amid the standoff on the DHS funding that has the government in a partial shutdown and the Senate sitting on the House-passed SAVE America Act.

‘We’re going to have a vote on this, but in terms of what the president is willing to sign, Maria, we need to get the Department of Homeland Security funded,’ Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., told Maria Bartiromo on ‘Sunday Morning Futures.’

‘The Democrats have blocked that right now. And the greatest threat to the American people today is terrorism. So I want to make sure that the Democrats work with us to pass and fund the Department of Homeland Security, because I’m worried about the lone wolf, the sleeper cells and the cyber terrorism that’s coming our way because of what Iran is telling people around the world to do to continue this reign of terror,’ Barrasso said.

Getting to 60 votes in the Senate is unlikely with just Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., as the lone potential Democrat vote to side with the Senate GOP on the SAVE America Act.

‘The Democrats are against so many of the things that I think help this country,’ Barrasso added to Bartiromo. ‘They’d rather stand with illegal immigrant criminals than with the safety and security of the American people. I want to get the SAVE Act to the floor. I want to have a vote.’

‘That’s the next step on this need to get the Department of Homeland Security open and funded,’ he continued. ‘The Democrats are bowing to the liberal left: The people that want to eliminate ICE, the people that want open borders again, and the people that really aren’t looking out for the best interest of the American people.

‘As the president said in the State of the Union, it is the first duty of the American government to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens. But that’s what not one single Democrat stood up for that when every Republican stood and cheered loudly.’

Barrasso, the Senate GOP member whipping up support, considers the SAVE America Act ‘common sense.’

‘You want to make sure that only citizens can vote,’ he concluded to Bartiromo. ‘You want to make sure that when people show up, they have a photo ID to prove they are who they say they are. You need a photo ID to buy a beer, to board a plane, all of those things. And it’s 90% popular with the American people. The only people against this are the Democrats because they want to make it easier to cheat.’

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Three races to start the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season have seen a clean sweep of three victories by 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick.

He scored a thrilling win in the Daytona 500 on the final lap while missing part of his front bumper before taking care of business in Atlanta a week later. Last time out, Reddick put the No. 45 Toyota on pole position and kept road course ace Shane van Gisbergen at bay for his record third consecutive win to open the season.

He’s won on a superspeedway, intermediate speedway and a road course. Reddick looks unstoppable.

This week, NASCAR heads to Phoenix – the site of the most recent Cup Series race won by someone other than Reddick.

Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney won the NASCAR Cup Series championship race there last November. He and the rest of the field will be hoping there’s a break from Reddick’s dominance in the desert.

Who can break through to victory lane is the question on everyone’s mind. We’ll find out come Sunday afternoon in Avondale, Arizona. Here’s how to catch all the action of the Straight Talk Wireless 500:

What time does the NASCAR Cup race at Phoenix start?

The Straight Talk Wireless 500 starts at 3:30 p.m. ET (12:30 p.m. local) at Phoenix Raceway in Avondale, Arizona.

What TV channel is the NASCAR Cup race at Phoenix on?

The Straight Talk Wireless 500 marks the first race of the calendar not broadcast on Fox. Instead, it’ll be on FS1. The pre-race show begins at 3 p.m. ET. Fans can also tune in to the radio broadcast on the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

NASCAR Cup race at Phoenix live stream

The Straight Talk Wireless 500 can be live streamed on the Fox Sports website (by signing in with your TV or satellite provider), Fox One (free seven day trial) and the Fox Sports app. Viewers can also stream the race on Fubo, which is offering a free trial to new subscribers.

Watch NASCAR Cup Series races on Fubo

How many laps is the NASCAR Cup race at Phoenix?

The Straight Talk Wireless 500 returns the field to the typical format NASCAR fans are used to compared to a week ago. The field will take on 312 laps around the 1-mile oval for a total of 312 miles (502 kilometers). The race will still be broken up into three stages (laps per stage) — Stage 1: 60 laps; Stage 2: 125 laps; Stage 3: 127 laps.

What is the lineup for the Straight Talk Wireless 500 at Phoenix?

Car number in parentheses

(22) Joey Logano, Ford
(5) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet
(2) Austin Cindric, Ford
(7) Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet
(12) Ryan Blaney, Ford
(1) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet
(77) Carson Hocevar, Chevrolet
(45) Tyler Reddick, Toyota
(24) William Byron, Chevrolet
(21) Josh Berry, Ford
(11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota
(20) Christopher Bell, Toyota
(60) Ryan Preece, Ford
(54) Ty Gibbs, Toyota
(42) John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota
(71) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet
(17) Chris Buescher, Ford
(97) Shane Van Gisbergen, Chevrolet
(88) Connor Zilisch, Chevrolet
(19) Chase Briscoe, Toyota
(47) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet
(35) Riley Herbst, Toyota
(16) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet
(38) Zane Smith, Ford
(3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet
(9) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet
(33) Austin Hill, Chevrolet
(23) Bubba Wallace, Toyota
(8) Kyle Busch, Chevrolet
(34) Todd Gilliland, Ford
(48) Anthony Alfredo, Chevrolet
(43) Erik Jones, Toyota
(10) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet
(51) Cody Ware, Chevrolet
(4) Noah Gragson, Ford
(41) Cole Custer, Chevrolet
(6) Brad Keselowski, Ford

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This article discusses suicidal ideation. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org.

Anna Baker wanted validation.

It’s how she was programmed. In a way, it was how she survived.

“I was always kind of the awkward duckling,” Baker says. “Like friendly with everybody, but didn’t have a friend group, didn’t have close friends.”

But she had gymnastics, which she started at 4 or 5.

“When I think of my childhood,” she says, “all that I wanted, all that I thought kind of existed was the world of gymnastics. I thought that would be what my future would be guided by.”

Today, at 26, years removed from a series of injuries that forced her out of her sport, she still feels some of the pain. She trained or competed almost every day, with minimal breaks for an offseason.

“Your first love cuts the deepest,” she tells USA TODAY Sports. “And I think that for a lot of kids that is a sport, at least for a lot of kids that I grew up with, and it really is like a unique heartbreak and has an effect that has stuck with me for a really long time.”

Baker was not alone, as a teenager in this age of manic kids sports, and as a girl, who has a unique injury risk over a boy.

“Girls are at higher risk for overuse injuries in youth sports, period,” says Neeru Jayanthi, a sports medicine physician at the forefront of research on early sports specialization. “And probably serious overuse injuries as well, too.”

Jayanthi, the director of Emory Sports Medicine Research and Education in Atlanta, has a patient, Neva Talari, 14, an elite tennis player who came to him a little less than a year ago after back pain revealed stress fractures in her back.

“We went on a two-year spree without almost a break for her and she was actually taking off well with the results so she was motivated and we were motivated,” says her father, Suneel Talari. “We were thinking we should not hold back when the track is looking good.”

Still, Jayanthi has indicated Neva has a chance to make it back. Baker never could after her experience with specializing in gymnastics sent her down a slippery slope that is becoming more and more familiar as research continues on young female athletes.   

Jayanthi says we need to accept girls’ greater injury risks, which will help us reduce them. USA TODAY Sports spoke with him, as well as Suneel Talari and Baker, about how their experiences with overuse injuries can help athletes and their parents.

What’s at risk for female athletes with overuse injuries?

They comprise more than half of the injuries to young athletes, medical research has found.

However, in a 2024 study of injured athletes aged 10 to 23, Jayanthi and his associates found the odds of sustaining an overuse injury as compared with an acute injury (such as an ankle sprain or concussion) was almost 50% higher in female than male athletes.

Such data isn’t widely known among youth sports parents.

Neva Talari, who plays out of Vander Meer Academy in Hilton Head, South Carolina, once played tennis every day, and for four and a half hours on Monday through Thursday, and then even more (five to seven matches) on weekend in travel tournaments.

Talari, 14, started noticing back pain last May. After resting for two weeks, she tried to play again and her pain got so bad she had to forfeit a match after the first set. She hasn’t played competitively since then.

“It’s a bad lesson for me,” says Suneel Talari, 43. “I never got injured despite playing a physical contact sport. I was thinking like you have to be extremely unlucky to get an injury because somebody like me never trained, never had a coach, never knew about injury management, could go on to play college soccer for a big school in India, and then never get injured.’

Anna Baker is an only child who grew up in Maine. Her mother, Michele LaBotz, is a sports medicine physician, who, like all of us, also was figuring out how to manage her budding athlete’s career.

What happened next blindsided them.

“Just as a preface, when we talk about, kind of best practice in terms of developing athleticism, particularly young children, gymnastics is an amazing sport and activity that way,” LeBotz told USA TODAY Sports in an interview. “When you think about all the sport options that are out there for kids, it’s the one that most closely replicates free play as you’ve kind of gone through the literature, in terms of pediatric development for both mental and physical development. Particularly, huge recreational gymnastic programs are fabulous in terms of developing general athleticism.

‘And so I’m not in any way, shape or form throwing gymnastics under the bus. This has just been our experience with the specialization process.”

Sports specialization drives increased injury risks, especially for girls

Sports specialization, according to medical experts, is the intentional and focused participation in a single sport for a majority of the year that restricts opportunities for other sports and activities.

It’s directed by a pull toward a singular activity for which your child demonstrates ability and passion, which raises the potential of them getting hurt.

LaBotz says girls face an increased risk of overuse injuries, in part, because they have a higher prevalence of REDs, or a syndrome of impaired physiological and/or psychological functioning due to inadequate energy intake in relation to exercise energy expenditure. 

Girls also generally possess less strength and less muscle mass than boys, while their bone density is lower, leading to increased risk of stress fractures.

Her daughter developed them in both her feet and elbows.

“They were honestly really validating,” Anna Baker says. “I think growing up as athletes, we very much look for physical wins. It needs to be something that you can see, whether it’s like a scoreboard or a new skill or a performance. When I would get those injuries and I would just keep training on them, that is when I felt probably the best about myself, being like, ‘Look, here’s the proof that I’m working really hard, and here’s the proof that I’m really strong.’ ”

She developed mysterious hip pain at 14. It was eventually revealed to be avascular necrosis (AVN), which occurs when the ball and socket in the hip loses its blood supply and the bone starts to die.

She had an initial surgery for AVN at Boston Children’s Hospital, but her hip continued to collapse. Her second surgery at Duke University took a fibula out of her lower leg and placed it in her hip for stability.

Her career was over, underscoring the ultimate risk of an overuse injury: Attrition from a sport.

If you choose to specialize in a sport, work backward from your goal

Jayanthi says the risks for overuse injuries are higher for girls who do individual technical sports, such as swim, dive, dance, tennis and gymnastics.

But he doesn’t discourage girls from specializing in sports. If you do, though, he says you need to monitor yourself through vulnerable periods and understand your goals.

For one, are you setting your sights on making a high school team or a college one?

“I recognize that getting on (at) a high school, in some communities, is not easy at all,” Jayanthi says. “We are forced to do it. So figure out when you want to peak in your training. You need to peak at 14 or 15, which means that if you backtrack it four or five years, you actually have to start doing some intensity in training about four years prior to that to get to that point. If you do it, put the best environment around you.

“At the end of the year, each season, do neuromuscular training, and look at your competition/training ratio, and try to get some free play in there, and build the resilience.”

If the goal is college, he says, “just recognize that, ‘Hey, look, let’s not push this girl out of it. Let’s just let her get through a little more maturity, and then go all in (at) 13, 14 or something like that, when their skeletons mature.”

And scale back dramatically when you get hurt. Jayanthi prescribed complete rest to Neva Talari for a number of weeks to heal her stress fractures in her back. She then implemented a 12-week transition plan. The first week, her father says, she played only an hour a day, adding a half hour per week without serves until the fifth or sixth week.

“It took 12 weeks for us to slowly take off,” her father says. “My goal for her is to definitely play in a really top school, like something like Stanford because she’s academically also very good. And she is like a 7.1 UTR (Universal Tennis Rating) now, despite not playing for lost 8 months.

“And for us to get into something like Stanford along those lines, she needs to be close to 10 UTR at a minimum, on the lower end. So my challenge there is I do not have liberty and luxury to have her play two different sports on two different days and then give only two days a week for tennis and expect her to get to 10 UTR when she is 17.”

Realize the importance of rest, and ‘free play’

Suneel Talari speaks with a tinge of caution. He knows he can’t afford for Neva to suffer the injury again, when her chances at a full recovery will be greatly reduced, if not extinguished, like Anna Baker’s were a decade or so ago.

“I don’t remember the last time I watched gymnastics,” Baker says. “There’s still like so many feelings and emotions and like a deep sadness of missing something.”

She wound up getting a hip replacement at around 20, but the hip got infected and she went into septic shock.

“I don’t really remember much, I was in and out of consciousness,” she says, “but they pretty much told my parents to plan for me to not make it through the night. And at the time it was COVID and I was an adult so I was in a cardiac ICU and they were not allowed there. So my parents were sitting at home alone, just getting phone calls and updates on what was going on.”

Baker has since struggled with pain medication abuse and suicidal ideation. She had an extended stay in a psychiatric unit.

She finds solace today with Pilates, which she says, through movements and muscle activation, replicate many similarities of gymnastics.

Her experience with Pilates is in the spirit of what we can do with our young athletes if they decide to specialize.

“Do something that involves motor development outside of your sport,’ Jayanthi says. ‘So if it’s not free play, then play another sport. If it’s not playing another sport, then get in an injury prevention, strength-training program. Not the type that just add more [load] and try to make you faster, ones that actually focus on strength and developing your body.”

Monitor your child’s adolescent growth spurt, when athletes are more susceptible to overuse injuries, and minimize high competition-to-training ratios.

We are considered low-risk or “load tolerant” athletes if our competition to training ratio is less than 1:3. We become a moderate risk when the ratio increases to 1:1 and high-risk when it’s greater than 1-1.

Find the spirit of yourself

Suneel Talari has trimmed the tennis schedule for his younger daughter, Rhea, 11, to two tournaments a month.

Rhea is adopting a training workload adjusted from five days a week, four hours per day, to four days a week.

He observes his daughters’ states after they have been playing for a few hours. Are they fatigued? Are they dragging?

“My goal as a parent is I want to see my kids be happy,” he says. “I want them to be happy in the sport we chose right now. I’m always looking for that happiness aspect.”

The aspect, though, can be broadened within us if we find it outside of our sport. It’s something with which Baker struggled.

The gymnasts with whom she trained had a better handle on that part of their lives.

“When they were injured, they were like, ‘Oh, I can hang out with my friends more. At least I get to go to this school activity (or) hockey game,’ ‘ she says. ‘When I got injured and was out for a significant period of time, I didn’t have any real peers to do it with, not being involved in anything other than gymnastics.

“I would tell younger girls you don’t have to prove your commitment to your sport by dropping everything else. You don’t have to say no to everything else to prove that that is important to you.”  

And, she says, learn to give yourself breaks.

“Physical and mental breaks that are focused on recharging your body and your mind,” she says. “Whether that’s napping or a certain meal, a certain stretch, just figuring out how to have a good conversation within your mind, and then bringing it to others when necessary.”

Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

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The 2025-26 men’s college basketball is set to come to an end on Sunday, March 8.

That means with conference championship week picking up the following week, the 2026 version of the NCAA Tournament and March Madness is almost upon us. Of course, the last weekend of the regular season could not be without drama, too.

Marquette did the unthinkable and knocked off No. 4 Connecticut to likely push the Huskies to a No. 2 seed, while Florida’s convincing win over Kentucky on the road likely secured the final No. 1 seed for the the Gators heading into the conference tournaments.

Entering the conference tournaments, No. 1 Duke is the favorite to win the 2026 NCAA Tournament, with fellow projected 1-seeds Michigan, Arizona and Florida not far behind.

Here’s a look at the top 20 teams with the best odds of winning the national championship:

March Madness favorites: Ranking Top 20 college basketball teams based on odds

Odds courtesy of BetMGM as of 9:30 a.m. ET Sunday, March 8

Duke has emerged as the slight favorite over Michigan to win the 2026 national title. The Blue Devils picked up a major win over the Wolverines on Feb. 21, which likely secured themselves the No. 1 overall seed in the tournament.

Fellow No. 1 projected seeds in Arizona and Florida, round out the top four for most likely cutting down the nets in Indianapolis. The Gators are seeking to join UCLA as the only program to ever win back-to-back championships twice, and will enter the tournament as the defending champs.

1. Duke, +320
2. Michigan, +325
3. Arizona, +475
4. Florida, +575
5. Houston, +1000
6. Connecticut, +1300
7. Illinois, +1800
8. Iowa State, +2200
9. Kansas, +3500
10. Michigan State, +4000
11. Purdue, +5000
12. Gonzaga, +5500
T-13. Arkansas, +6600
T-13. Virginia, +6600
T-15. Alabama, +8000
T-15. Nebraska, +8000
17. Louisville, +9000
T-18. St. John’s, +10000
T-18. Tennessee, +10000
T-18. Vanderbilt, +10000

When does March Madness start?

The NCAA tournament First Four on the men’s side begins on Tuesday, March 17 and continues on Wednesday, March 18. 

The four men’s games, which are held in Dayton, Ohio, feature the final four at-large selections to the field, as well as the four lowest-rated No. 16 seeds. The winner of each matchup advances to the first round. First-round games will take place on March 19 and March 20.

When is March Madness Selection Sunday?

Date: Sunday, March 15

Selection Sunday for the 2025-26 college basketball season will take place on Sunday, March 15, with both the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournament brackets being revealed.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

That’s what several members of the gold medal winning USA women’s national hockey will attempt to achieve a few weeks after their gold win over Canada. Selection Sunday for the 2026 women’s NCAA hockey tournament is set for today, Sunday, March 8 at 11:30 a.m. ET.

Wisconsin – which had four players on Team USA – will look to defend its 2025 national championship as the tournament is scheduled to get underway Thursday, March 12, with the regional semifinals. The Badgers have made 12 consecutive NCAA tournaments.

However, fellow Big Ten foe Ohio State is expected to be the No. 1 overall seed when the brackets are revealed on Sunday. The Badgers and Buckeyes have met in the national championship game in three straight years.

USA TODAY will provide live updates during the women’s NCAA hockey bracket reveal. Keep up here:

NCAA women’s hockey tournament 2026 schedule, scores

Regional semifinals

Thursday, March 12:

Yale (25-9) vs. Minnesota Duluth (20-14-3), 6 p.m. ET (ESPN+)
UConn (27-8-2) vs. Princeton (23-10), 7 p.m. ET (ESPN+)
Quinnipiac (28-8-3) vs. Franklin Pierce (22-11-2), 8 p.m. ET (ESPN+)

Regional finals

Friday, March 13

No. 2 Wisconsin vs. Quinnipiac/Franklin Pierce, 2 p.m. (ESPN+)
No. 3 Penn State vs. UConn/Princeton, 2 p.m. (ESPN+)
No. 4 Minnesota vs. No. 5 Northeastern, 3 p.m. (ESPN+)
No. 1 Ohio State vs. Yale/Minnesota-Duluth, 6 p.m. (ESPN+)

Semifinals

Friday, March 20

At University Park, Pennsylvania

TBD vs. TBD, 4 p.m. (ESPN+)
TBD vs. TBD, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Championship

At University Park, Pennsylvania

Sunday, March 22

TBD vs. TBD, 4 p.m. (ESPNU, ESPN+, Fubo)

First round matchups

Here’s a look at the first round matchups on Thursday, March 12:

Yale (25-9) vs. Minnesota Duluth (20-14-3), 6 p.m. ET
UConn (27-8-2) vs. Princeton (23-10), 7 p.m. ET
Quinnipiac (28-8-3) vs. Franklin Pierce (22-11-2), 8 p.m. ET

Overall seeds for women’s NCAA hockey bracket

No. 1 Ohio State
No. 2 Wisconsin
No. 3 Penn State (hosts)
No. 4 Minnesota
No. 5 Northeastern
Yale
Minnesota Duluth
UConn
Princeton
Quinnipiac

Wisconsin earns No. 2 seed

Defending national champion Wisconsin earns the No. 2 seed. The Badgers are the No. 1 team in scoring this season and have multiple players who played for the USA women’s national hockey team.

Ohio State earns No. 1 overall seed

Ohio State earns the No. 1 overall seed with a 34-4 record, including a recent win over Wisconsin. The Buckeyes won the 2022 and 2024 national championships. They were the No. 1 seed in 2024.

Wisconsin defeated Ohio State in 2025 NCAA Championship game

Wisconsin earned a 4-3 win over Ohio State in overtime in the 2025 NCAA Championship game at Ridder Arena in Minneapolis on March 23, 2025. It was the eight title for the Badgers. Edwards Simms scored the game-winner in overtime for Wisconsin.

What channel is women’s hockey bracket reveal?

TV channel: ESPNU

The women’s NCAA hockey backet reveal will air live on ESPNU.

How to stream women’s hockey bracket reveal

Streaming: ESPN app | Fubo (free trial)

The women’s NCAA hockey bracket reveal will air on ESPNU, and can be streamed on the ESPN app (with a cable login) and Fubo, which offers a free trial. The official bracket will be posted to NCAA.com.

What time is women’s NCAA women’s hockey selection show?

Start time: 11:30 a.m. ET

The selection show for the 2026 women’s Frozen Four bracket reveal will begin at 11:30 a.m. ET.

What day does women’s NCAA hockey tournament start?

Date: Thursday, March 12

The first day of the 2026 women’s NCAA hockey tournament begins on Thursday, March 12 with the regional semifinals.

When is the women’s Frozen Four?

Date: March 20, 22

The 2026 women’s Frozen Four will take place on March 20 (national semifinals) and March 22 (national championship game).

Where is Frozen Four 2026?

Location: Pegula Ice Arena (University Park, Pennsylvania)

The 2026 women’s Frozen Four will take place at the Pegula Ice Arena on the campus of Penn State University in University Park, Pennsylvania.

2026 women’s NCAA hockey tournament schedule

Here’s a look at the 2026 women’s NCAA hockey tournament schedule:

Regional semifinals: March 12-13
Regional finals: March 14-15
Frozen Four: March 20, 22

2025 women’s Frozen Four winner

Wisconsin is coming off winning the 2025 women’s Frozen Four. Here’s a look at the last 10 winners:

2025: Wisconsin
2024: Ohio State
2023: Wisconsin
2022: Ohio State
2021: Wisconsin
2020: N/A
2019: Wisconsin
2018: Clarkson
2017: Clarkson
2016: Minnesota
2015: Minnesota

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The confetti from the Super Bowl has settled, and the celebrations in Seattle are complete. The 2026 NFL Scouting Combine is also in the books. Now, attention shifts to the start of NFL free agency, as 32 teams seek to build rosters capable of reaching the mountaintop in 2026.

The legal tampering period begins on March 9, and the new league year starts at 4 p.m. ET on March 11.

Veteran wide receivers such as Mike Evans, Alec Pierce, and Rashid Shaheed could don different jerseys in 2026. On the defensive side, standout players like Trey Hendrickson, Khalil Mack, and Devin Lloyd may serve as game-changers. Additionally, Aaron Rodgers is set to hit free agency, joining a group of quarterbacks that includes Malik Willis, Russell Wilson, and possibly several other veteran signal-callers. Kyler Murray recently joined this list that could also include Tua Tagovailoa, Kirk Cousins and Geno Smith.

Here are the top 200 NFL free agents for all 32 teams set to hit the market.

Top 200 NFL free agents available

New England Patriots

WR Stefon Diggs
TE Austin Hooper
EDGE K’Lavon Chaisson
DL Khyiris Tonga
S Jaylinn Hawkins

Buffalo Bills

EDGE Joey Bosa
C Connor McGovern
G David Edwards
DL Larry Ojunjobi
LB Matt Milano
EDGE A.J. Epenesa
CB Tre’Davious White
QB Mitchell Trubisky
WR Brandin Cooks
S Darnell Savage
LB Shaq Thompson
S Damar Hamlin

Miami Dolphins

WR Tyreek Hill
EDGE Bradley Chubb
G James Daniels
CB Jack Jones
CB Rasul Douglas
TE Darren Waller
CB Kader Kohou

New York Jets

S Andre Cisco
LB Quincy Williams
QB Tyrod Taylor
G John Simpson
T Alijah Vera-Tucker
FS Tony Adams
WR John Metchie III

Pittsburgh Steelers

QB Aaron Rodgers
G Isaac Seumalo
S Kyle Duggar
WR Calvin Austin
RB Kenneth Gainwell
LB Cole Holcomb
TE Jonnu Smith

Baltimore Ravens

C Tyler Linderbaum
G Daniel Faalele
EDGE Dre’Mont Jones
TE Isaiah Likely
S Alohi Gilman
EDGE Kyle Van Noy
WR DeAndre Hopkins

Cincinnati Bengals

Edge Trey Hendrickson
Edge Joseph Ossai
CB Cam Taylor-Britt
S Geno Stone
QB Joe Flacco
TE Noah Fant

Cleveland Browns

LT Cam Robinson
G Joel Bitonio
C Ethan Pocic
G Wyatt Teller
TE David Njoku
LB Devin Bush
G Teven Jenkins
RB Jerome Ford

Jacksonville Jaguars

LB Devin Lloyd
RB Travis Etienne
CB Montaric Brown
CB Greg Newsome
WR Tim Patrick
Edge Dennis Gardeck

Houston Texans

G Ed Ingram
DL Sheldon Rankins
WR Christian Kirk
LB E.J. Speed
Edge Derek Barnett
Edge Denico Autry
RB Nick Chubb

Indianapolis Colts

WR Alec Pierce
Edge Kwity Paye
RT Braden Smith
S Nick Cross

Tennessee Titans

G Kevin Zeitler
TE Chig Okonkwo
C Lloyd Cushenberry
DL Sebastian Joseph-Day
Edge Arden Key
S Xavier Woods

Denver Broncos

DL John Franklin-Myers
LB Alex Singleton
LB Justin Strnad
S P.J. Locke
RB JK Dobbins

Los Angeles Chargers

Edge Odefe Oweh
Edge Khalil Mack
G Zion Johnson
G Trevor Penning
G Mekhi Becton
WR Keenan Allen
RT Trey Pipkins
RB Najee Harris

Kansas City Chiefs

RT Jawaan Taylor
S Bryan Cook
CB Jaylen Watson
TE Travis Kelce
WR Marquise ‘Hollywood’ Brown
LB Leo Chenal
RB Isiah Pacheco
RB Kareem Hunt
Edge Charles Omenihu
WR Tyquan Thornton
WR JuJu Smith-Schuster

Las Vegas Raiders

G Dylan Parham
Edge Malcolm Koonce
CB Eric Stokes
LB Elandon Roberts
QB Kenny Pickett
LB Devin White

Philadelphia Eagles

Edge Jaelan Phillips
LB Nakobe Dean
TE Dallas Goedert
S Reed Blankenship
G Brett Toth
S Marcus Epps
WR Jahan Dotson

Dallas Cowboys

RB Miles Sanders
WR Jalen Tolbert
Edge Dante Fowler Jr.
Edge Jadeveon Clowney
LB Kenneth Murray
S Donovan Wilson
G Robert Jones
LB Logan Wilson

Washington Commanders

WR Deebo Samuel
CB Marshon Lattimore
C Tyler Biadasz
LB Bobby Wagner
Edge Von Miller
CB Jonathan Jones
QB Marcus Mariota
G Chris Paul
WR Treylon Burks
RB Austin Ekeler
TE Zach Ertz

New York Giants

QB Russell Wilson
WR Wan’dale Robinson
CB Cordale Flott
RT Jermaine Eluemunor
LB Bobby Okereke
S Dane Belton
G Greg Van Roten
G Evan Neal
DL Rakeem Nunez-Roches

Chicago Bears

LB Tremaine Edmunds
CB Nashon Wright
S Jaquan Brisker
S Kevin Byard
T Braxton Jones
WR Olamide Zacheaus
S Jonathan Owens

Green Bay Packers

LT Rasheed Walker
WR Romeo Doubs
QB Malik Willis
LB Quay Walker
CB Trevon Diggs

Detroit Lions

Edge Al-Quadin Muhammad
LB Alex Anzalone
DL Roy Lopez
C Graham Glasgow
CB Amik Robertson
DL D.J. Reader
WR Kalif Raymond

Minnesota Vikings

DL Jonathan Allen
WR Jalen Nailor
LB Eric Wilson
QB Carson Wentz

Carolina Panthers

C Cade Mays
RB Rico Dowdle
Edge D.J. Wonnum
G Brady Christensen
S Nick Scott

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

WR Mike Evans
CB Jamel Dean
DL Logan Hall
TE Cade Otton
LB Lavonte David
Edge Hasson Reddick
WR Sterling Shepard
RB Rachaad White
RB Sean Tucker

Atlanta Falcons

Edge Arnold Ebiketie
LB Kaden Elliss
Edge Leonard Floyd
DL David Onyemata
WR Darnell Mooney
CB Dee Alford
RB Tyler Allgeier

New Orleans Saints

CB Alontae Taylor
LB Demario Davis
Edge Cam Jordan
C Luke Fortner
TE Taysom Hill

Seattle Seahawks

S Coby Bryant
WR Rashid Shaheed
Edge Boye Mafe
CB Josh Jobe
RB Kenneth Walker III
CB Tariq Woolen

Los Angeles Rams

S Kam Curl
CB Roger McCreary
TE Tyler Higbee
WR TuTu Atwell
QB Jimmy Garoppolo

San Francisco 49ers

WR Jauan Jennings
Edge Clelin Ferrell
Edge Yetur Gross-Matos
WR Kendrick Bourne
RB Brian Robinson

Arizona Cardinals

QB Kyler Murray
DL Calais Campbell
RT Jonah Williams
S Jalen Thompson
RB Michael Carter
G Will Hernandez

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The No. 1 team in NCAA wrestling flexed its muscles at Day 1 of the 2026 Big Ten wrestling tournament Saturday, March 7.

In front of a home crowd at the Bryce Jordan Center, Penn State placed eight wrestlers in finals matches for Day 2 of the tournament while taking a commanding lead in the team standings. The Nittany Lions claimed 146.5 points in Day 1, far ahead of second-place Ohio State and Nebraska (112 points apiece).

Stream Big Ten wrestling tournament with Fubo (free trial)

Cael Sanderson’s squad looks well on its way to claiming a fourth straight Big Ten title, matching a program record. The Big Ten Conference will also need to fill out its remaining allocations for the 2026 NCAA wrestling tournament, with the conference claiming a nation-leading 87 allotments, 24 more than the Big 12 in second place (63).

Follow along as USA TODAY Sports provides live updates to the team standings, brackets and NCAA qualifiers from Day 2 of the Big Ten wrestling championship:

Big Ten wrestling championships standings

This section will be updated.

1. Penn State (146.5)
T-2. Nebraska (112)
T-2. Ohio State (112)
4. Iowa (70)
T-5. Illinois (69.5)
T-5. Minnesota (69.5)
7. Michigan (68.5)
8. Rutgers (56.5)
9. Wisconsin (43.5)
10. Indiana (33)
11. Maryland (28)
12. Purdue (23)
13. Northwestern (14.5)
14. Michigan State (10.5)

Big Ten wrestling championships bracket

Here is the official bracket for the 2026 Big Ten wrestling tournament, courtesy of the Big Ten.

Big 10 wrestling tournament results

This section will be updated.

NCAA qualifiers from Big 10 wrestling championships

Here are the wrestlers who have qualified for the 2026 wrestling tournament, as stipulated by the NCAA Division I Wrestling Committee’s pre-placement allotments.

Number of NCAA qualifiers listed in parentheses

125 pounds (9): Luke Lilledahl (PSU); Jore Volk (Minnesota); Jacob Moran (Indiana); Nic Bouzakis (OSU); Diego Sotelo (Michigan); Dean Peterson (Iowa); Ayden Smith (Rutgers); Kael Lauridsen (Nebraska)
133 pounds (8): Marcus Blaze (PSU); Ben Davino (Ohio State); Drake Ayala (Iowa); Blake Boarman (Purdue); Lucas Byrd (Illinois); Zan Fugitt (Wisconsin); Jacob Van Dee Nebraska 10; Sean Spidle (Northwestern)
141 pounds (7): Jesse Mendez (OSU); Brock Hardy (Nebraska); Nasir Bailey (Iowa); Vance VomBaur (Minnesota); Joey Olivieri (Rutgers); Dario Lemus (Maryland)
149 pounds (9): Shayne Van Ness (PSU); Ethan Stiles (OSU); Joseph Zargo (Wisconsin); Lachlan McNeil (Michigan); Michael Gioffre (Illinois); Carter Young (Maryland); Clayton Jones (Michigan State); Andrew Clark (Rutgers)
157 pounds (8): Antrell Taylor (Nebraska); PJ Duke (PSU); Cameron Catrabone (Michigan); Kannon Webster (Illinois); Brandon Cannon (OSU); Bryce Lowery (Indiana); Luke Mechler (Wisconsin); Charlie Millard (Minnesota)
165 pounds (9): Mitchell Mesenbrink (PSU); Michael Caliendo (Iowa); Andrew Sparks (Minnesota); Andrew Barbosa (Rutgers); Araujo (Nebraska); Joey Blaze (Purdue); Paddy Gallagher (OSU); Braeden Scoles (Illinois)
174 pounds (10): Levi Haines (PSU); Christopher Minto (Nebraska); Carson Kharchla (OSU); Patrick Kennedy (Iowa); Beau Mantanona (Michigan); Lenny Pinto (Rutgers); Brody Baumann (Purdue); Colin Kelly (Illinois)
184 pounds (8): Rocco Welsh (PSU); Max McEnelly (Minnesota); Brock Mantanona (Michigan); Silas Allred (Nebraska); Chris Moore (Illinois); Shane Cartagena-Walsh (Rutgers); Dylan Fishback (OSU); Angelo Ferrari (Iowa)
197 pounds (10): Josh Barr (PSU); Camden McDanel (Nebraska); Luke Geog (OSU); Wyatt Ingham (Wisconsin); Remy Cotton (Rutgers); Gabe Sollars (Indiana); Ben Vanadia (Purdue); Branson John (Maryland)
Heavyweight (9): Taye Ghadiali (Michigan); AJ Ferrari (Nebraska); Cole Mirasola (PSU); Nick Feldman (OSU); Braxton Amos (Wisconsin); Ben Kueter (Iowa); Luke Luffman (Illinois); Koy Hopke (Minnesota)

What channel is Big 10 wrestling championships on today?

TV channel: Big Ten Network
Streaming: BIG+ | Fubo (free trial)

Session III will air exclusively on BIG+, the Big Ten Network’s dedicated streaming platform. Session IV will air on the Big Ten Network. Streaming options for that session also include Fubo, which offers a free trial to potential subscribers.

Big Ten wrestling championships start time today

Date: Sunday, March 8
Time: Noon ET (Session III) | 4:30 p.m. ET (Session IV)
Location: Bryce Jordan Center (University Park, Pennsylvania)

Day 2 of the Big Ten wrestling tournament will begin at noon ET (11 a.m. CT) from the Bryce Jordan Center in University Park on March 8. Session III will comprise consolation semifinals and seventh-place matches, while Session IV (beginning 4:30 p.m. ET) will comprise first-, third- and fifth-place matches.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY