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Driver Alex Bowman won’t race during this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series event in Phoenix.

Hendricks Motorsports announced on Thursday, March 5 that Bowman had been diagnosed with vertigo earlier this week and hasn’t been medically cleared to compete in Sunday’s Straight Talk Wireless 500 at Phoenix Raceway. He will be replaced in the No. 48 Chevrolet by driver Anthony Alfredo.

Bowman, 32, began experiencing symptoms during last Sunday’s NASCAR road coarse race at Circuit of the Americas and eventually exited the car at lap 71 due to illness. Hendrick Motorsports said the Tucson, Arizona, native underwent two days of medical evaluation this week and drove laps on Thursday in a streetcar at the Ten Tenths Motor Club road course in Concord, North Carolina before being ruled out of the Phoenix race.

There is not yet a timetable for Bowman’s return. He currently sits in 36th in the NASCAR Cup Series standings after a slow start to the 2026 season. He missed NASCAR races while dealing with health issues related to a concussion and fractured vertebra in his back in previous seasons.

“Alex has worked very hard over the last several days,” Hendrick Motorsports president Jeff Andrews said in a statement on Thursday. “We’re encouraged by the progress he’s making, but we have to prioritize his health above all else. It’s obviously frustrating for him because he’s a competitor and wants to be in the race car, especially at his home track. We’ll continue to support Alex and look forward to his return as soon as he’s medically cleared.”

Hendrick Motorsports added that it will request a medical waiver to allow Bowman to remain eligible for the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series championship.

Alfredo, 26, performs extensive simulator testing for Hendrick Motorsports and Chevrolet and has 210 NASCAR national series starts, including 43 at the Cup level.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NHL trade deadline is at 3 p.m. ET on Friday, March 6, but teams also like to get deals done early.

Already this season, the Minnesota Wild have acquired defenseman Quinn Hughes from the Vancouver Canucks, the Los Angeles Kings have traded for high-scoring New York Rangers forward Artemi Panarin and the Utah Mammoth acquired defenseman MacKenzie Weegar from the Calgary Flames. 

In the latest moves, the Colorado Avalanche acquired center Nicolas Roy from the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Vegas Golden Knights acquired center Nic Dowd from the Washington Capitals, and the Wild acquired Florida Panthers defenseman Jeff Petry on Thursday, March 5.

Plenty of players remain, and the Rangers, Canucks, St. Louis Blues, Flames, Maple Leafs and Philadelphia Flyers could be sellers.

Here are some of the more notable trades this season. Follow along for analysis on deals as the NHL trade deadline approaches:

March 5: Sharks, Canucks pull off deal

The trade: The San Jose Sharks acquire defenseman Jett Woo from the Vancouver Canucks for defenseman Jack Thompson. Both players have spent their professional careers in the American Hockey League.

March 5: Wild acquire Jeff Petry from Panthers

The trade: The Minnesota Wild acquire defenseman Jeff Petry from the Florida Panthers for a 2026 seventh-round pick.

Analysis: Defensive depth for the Wild. Maybe a sign for the two-time defending champion Panthers that their run is over as they sit 10 points out of a playoff spot. Petry is a pending unrestricted free agent. The other UFAs on the team are forwards A.J. Greer and Tomas Nosek and goalies Sergei Bobrovsky and Daniil Tarasov.

The draft pick becomes a fifth-rounder if Minnesota wins two playoff rounds and Petry plays in 50 percent or more of games during those rounds.

March 5: Devils place three players on waivers

The Devils placed forwards Evgenii Dadonov, Luke Glendening and Maxim Tsyplakov on waivers. Tsyplakov was acquired last month in the Ondrej Palat trade and has no points in nine games in New Jersey. They can be sent to the American Hockey League if they clear, saving some cap space before the deadline.

All told, eight players went on the waiver wire on Thursday:

March 5: Mathieu Joseph’s contract to be terminated

The Blues placed forward Mathieu Joseph on unconditional waivers for purposes of terminating his contract. That would allow him to become a free agent, and if he signs with another team by 3 p.m. ET Friday, he would be eligible for the playoffs.

March 5: Wild’s pursuit of Vincent Trocheck fading, per report

The Athletic’s Michael Russo and Joe Smith report that the Rangers’ price for Trocheck appears to be too high, and the Wild might look elsewhere for a center.

March 5: Blues’ Colton Parayko turns down trade to Sabres

From NHL insider Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet:

March 5: Avalanche acquire Nicolas Roy

The trade: The Colorado Avalanche acquire forward Nicolas Roy from the Toronto Maple Leafs for a conditional first-round draft pick in 2027 and a conditional 2026 fifth-round draft pick.

Analysis: Roy gives the Avalanche playoff experience and depth down the middle. He won a Stanley Cup with the Golden Knights in 2023 and has won 52.9 percent of his faceoffs this season. Roy was in his first season in Toronto after being part of the Mitch Marner sign-and-trade. He has a year left on his contract. If Colorado’s 2027 first-round selection is in the top 10, Colorado will send its unprotected 2028 first-round pick to Toronto. The fifth-round pick will be the lowest of the three that the Avalanche currently hold.

March 5: Golden Knights acquire Nic Dowd

The trade: The Vegas Golden Knights acquire forward Nic Dowd from the Washington Capitals for goaltender Jesper Vikman, a 2027 third-round pick and a 2029 second-rounder.

Analysis: Dowd has been with the Capitals since 2018-19 and is a solid bottom six forward who kills penalties. He has another year left on his contract. Vikman plays in the American Hockey League.

After acquiring Dowd, the Golden Knights placed Mark Stone on the injured list.

March 4: Oilers acquire Jason Dickinson, Colton Dach

The trade: The Edmonton Oilers acquire forwards Jason Dickinson and Colton Dach from the Chicago Blackhawks for forward Andrew Mangiapane and a conditional 2027 first-round pick.

Analysis: Edmonton continues to go all in after falling just short in the Stanley Cup Final two consecutive years, sending out another future first-round pick. Dickinson and Dach are hardly needle-movers (the veteran Dickinson has 13 points in 47 games and Dach, 23, has 9 points in 53 games) but they add to the Oilers’ depth. Plus, Dickinson comes at a bit of a discount, the Blackhawks retaining half of his $4.25 million salary.

It also creates some future cap room, with Mangiapane’s 2026-27 cap hit of $3.6 million off the books and Dickinson set to be a free agent this summer (Dach is an RFA). While that seems like a decent bit of business, it solves a problem the Oilers created themselves by giving Mangiapane, who has just 14 points in 52 games, a two-year deal. And it comes at the cost of a first-round pick and removes all protections from their 2026 first-round pick, which they had previously traded to the San Jose Sharks.

March 4: Avalanche acquire Nick Blankenburg

The trade: The Colorado Avalanche acquire defenseman Nick Blankenburg from the Nashville Predators for a 2027 fifth-round pick.

Analysis: You can never have enough defensive depth, and Blankenburg provides a left shot on a Colorado team heavy on right shots. Blankenburg, who ranked second among Nashville defensemen with 21 points, is the third Predators player to be dealt in two days. Nashville now has 12 picks in the 2027 draft and added two in 2028 from the Michael McCarron and Cole Smith trades. The Avalanche earlier changed up their blue line by trading Samuel Girard for Brett Kulak.

March 4: Mammoth acquire MacKenzie Weegar

The trade: The Utah Mammoth acquire defenseman MacKenzie Weegar from the Calgary Flames for defenseman Olli Maatta, Cornell center Jonathan Castagna and three second-round picks.

Analysis: The Mammoth have upgraded their defense since moving to Utah in 2024. Weegar is the latest in a list that includes Mikhail Sergachev. Weegar is a right-shot defenseman who scored 20 goals two seasons ago, though he has only three this season. That (and his minus-35 rating) should improve on a Utah team that sits in a wild-card position. He is signed through 2031 while Maatta is a pending unrestricted free agent.

The 6-foot-2, 200-pound Castagna is in his third year at Cornell and has 32 points in 29 games.

March 4: Colton Parayko, MacKenzie Weegar deals in works?

TSN’s Darren Dreger reports that the Blues and Sabres are working on a deal to send defenseman Colton Parayko to Buffalo. Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports that defenseman MacKenzie Weegar could be traded to the Utah Mammoth. Both would have to approve the moves.

March 4: Maple Leafs sit out Oliver Ekman-Larsson, 2 others

Analysis: Defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larsson and forwards Bobby McMann and Scott Laughton won’t play for roster management reasons, the team said. All three players have been mentioned in trade rumors. Laughton and McMann are pending unrestricted free agents and Ekman-Larsson is signed through 2028.

March 4: Sharks re-sign Kiefer Sherwood

The details: He gets a five-year, $28.75 million contract extension, a cap hit of $5.75 million.

Analysis: The Sharks dealt two draft picks and a minor leaguer to land Sherwood, who has 18 goals and is second in the league in hits. The extension means they won’t have to flip him. He said he’s ‘just fired up’ about the extension.

March 4: Stars acquire Tyler Myers

The trade: The Dallas Stars acquire defenseman Tyler Myers from the Vancouver Canucks for a 2027 second-round pick and a 2029 fourth-rounder.

Analysis: The Stars have won 10 in a row and Houston native Myers gives them veteran depth on their blue line. The right shot defenseman has another year left on his contract, and the Canucks are retaining 50% of his salary. The Stars have the 6-foot-8 Myers and 6-foot-7 Liam Bischel on their defense corps.

March 3: Golden Knights acquire Cole Smith

The trade: The Vegas Golden Knights acquire forward Cole Smith from the Nashville Predators for defenseman Christoffer Sedoff and a third-round pick in the 2028 draft.

Analysis: That’s two trades in one day for the Predators. Just like Michael McCarron, who was dealt to the Wild, Smith kills penalties. He was tied for second in hits in Nashville (behind McCarron) with 119. Sedoff has spent the last three seasons in the American Hockey League.

March 3: Wild acquire Michael McCarron

The trade: The Minnesota Wild acquire forward Michael McCarron from the Nashville Predators for a second-round pick in the 2028 draft.

Analysis: Minnesota adds to its depth as it eyes a deep playoff run, importing the hulking McCarron, who stands 6-foot-6. He has 12 points, 73 penalty minutes and 165 hits in 59 games this season for Nashville, kills penalties and has a 52.8 faceoff winning percentage.

March 2: Oilers acquire Connor Murphy

The trade: The Edmonton Oilers acquire defenseman Connor Murphy from the Chicago Blackhawks for a 2028 second-round pick.

Analysis: The Blackhawks retain 50 percent of the $4.4 million cap hit for the pending unrestricted free agent. The Oilers have been leaking goals, and the 6-foot-4 Murphy is a solid defensive defenseman. He played on the No. 1 unit of the league’s best penalty kill, led the Blackhawks in blocked shots and was third in hits.

Feb. 24: Penguins, Avalanche swap defensemen

The trade: The Pittsburgh Penguins acquire defenseman Samuel Girard and a 2028 second-round pick from the Avalanche for defenseman Brett Kulak.

Analysis: The Avalanche pick up salary cap space and add a defenseman who has been to the Stanley Cup Final the past two seasons. The Penguins had acquired pending unrestricted free agent Kulak in the Stuart Skinner trade, Girard is also a pending UFA, and Pittsburgh gets a draft pick in the deal by flipping Kulak.

Feb. 4: Kings acquire Artemi Panarin

The trade: The Los Angeles Kings acquire forward Artemi Panarin from the New York Rangers for forward Liam Greentree and conditional third-round (2026) and fourth-round (2028) picks.

Analysis: The Kings are hurting for offense and Panarin can provide plenty. He also signed a two-year extension with an $11 million cap hit, ensuring he’ll be around after Anze Kopitar retires at season’s end. It didn’t help the team, though, that Kevin Fiala broke his leg at the Olympics before Panarin suited up. Panarin had a full no-movement clause, so the Rangers were limited in their return, but Greentree was the Kings’ top prospect and the third-round pick could become a second-rounder.

Feb. 4: Devils acquire Nick Bjugstad

The trade: The New Jersey Devils acquire forward Nick Bjugstad from the St. Louis Blues for forward Thomas Bordeleau and a conditional fourth-round pick.

Analysis: This is the third time Bjugstad has been moved near the trade deadline because the 6-6 forward is a good fit in the bottom six. He has another year left on his contract.

Jan. 27: Islanders acquire Ondrej Palat

The trade: The New York Islanders acquire left wing Ondrej Palat, a 2026 third-round pick and a 2027 sixth-round pick from the New Jersey Devils for forward Maxim Tsyplakov.

Analysis: That’s two trades in two days with a division rival. Palat is a two-time Stanley Cup winner (with the Lightning) and kills penalties. Tsyplakov didn’t get a lot of ice time with the Islanders but has potential.

Jan. 26: Islanders acquire Carson Soucy

The trade: The New York Islanders acquire defenseman Carson Soucy from the New York Rangers for a third-round pick in the 2026 NHL Draft.

Analysis: Soucy was the first player moved after the Rangers informed fans that the team would retool. It’s a rare deal completed between the Islanders and Rangers.

Jan. 20: Sharks acquire Kiefer Sherwood

The trade: The San Jose Sharks acquire forward Kiefer Sherwood from the Vancouver Canucks for second-round picks in 2026 and 2027, plus defenseman Cole Clayton.

Analysis: Sherwood had been mentioned as a trade candidate since the Canucks started slowly. The pending free agent is among the leader in hits and had 17 goals at the time of the deal. The Sharks are playing better than expected and this deal shows they are trying to push for a playoff spot.

Jan. 19: Golden Knights acquire Rasmus Andersson

The trade: The Vegas Golden Knights acquire defenseman Rasmus Andersson from the Calgary Flames for defenseman Zach Whitecloud, defense prospect Abram Wiebe, a conditional first-round pick in the 2027 NHL Draft and a conditional second-rounder in 2028.

Analysis: The Golden Knights had been without Alex Pietrangelo all season and Andersson gives Vegas another puck-moving defenseman. The Flames get a good return for a pending unrestricted free agent. Andersson is the second defenseman Vegas had acquired from Calgary recently after the 2024 trade for Noah Hanifin. Hanifin eventually signed an extension and the Golden Knights will seek the same from Andersson.

Dec. 29: Penguins acquire Yegor Chinakhov

The trade: The Pittsburgh Penguins acquire forward Yegor Chinakhov from the Columbus Blue Jackets for forward Danton Heinen, a 2026 second-round draft pick and a 2027 third-rounder.

Analysis: Chinakhov had requested a trade last season. He’s a pending restricted free agent so the Penguins have control over his future. Heinen is a pending UFA.

Dec. 19: Canadiens acquire Phillip Danault

The trade: The Montreal Canadiens acquire center Phillip Danault from the Los Angeles Kings for a 2026 second-round pick.

Analysis: Danault is coming back to Montreal. He was a key shutdown player during the Canadiens’ 2021 run to the Stanley Cup Final.

Dec. 19: Blue Jackets acquire Mason Marchment

The trade: The Columbus Blue Jackets acquire forward Mason Marchment from the Seattle Kraken for a 2026 fourth-round pick and a 2027 second-round pick.

Analysis: Marchment had been off to a slow start after an offseason trade in which Seattle gave up a third- and a fourth-round pick. But he scored 22 goals in each of his last two seasons in Dallas.

Dec. 12: Wild acquire Quinn Hughes

The trade: The Minnesota Wild acquire Quinn Hughes from the Vancouver Canucks for Marco Rossi, Zeev Buium, Liam Ohgren and a 2026 first-round pick.

Analysis: This is a sign that the Wild are going for it and it gives them a dynamic former Norris Trophy winner to match Cale Makar if they face the Avalanche in the playoffs. The Wild gave up a lot – Buium was great at Denver and for the USA at the world junior championships – and Hughes acknowledged that and appreciated it. That could help sway Hughes when he’s eligible to sign a contract extension in July.

Dec. 12: Oilers, Penguins swap goalies

The trade: The Edmonton Oilers acquire Tristan Jarry and forward Samuel Poulin from the Pittsburgh Penguins for Stuart Skinner, defenseman Brett Kulak and a 2029 second-round pick.

Analysis: The Oilers pull the plug on Skinner, who was either spectacular or bad during back-to-back runs to the Stanley Cup Final. But they land another inconsistent goalie in Jarry, who has had injury troubles. Skinner and Kulak are pending free agents, so the Penguins could flip them at the deadline. If Skinner works out, it would allow the Penguins to continue developing goalie Sergei Murashov in the American Hockey League.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The House of Representatives narrowly voted to allow President Donald Trump to continue Operation Epic Fury in Iran on Thursday.

A bipartisan resolution led by Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif., failed to pass after several Democrats joined most Republicans in sinking it. 

The legislation was aimed at blocking Trump from using the Armed Forces in the joint U.S.-Israeli operation in Iran, which would likely force the strikes to grind to a halt.

The Trump administration, as well as the majority of Republicans in Congress, have insisted that the president has acted within his authority so far and are hopeful he will continue to do so.

But Democrats, along with Massie and Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, are largely skeptical.

‘The Ayatollah was not a president. He was a religious leader from a region notorious for radical Islamists and the United States and Israel turned him into a martyr,’ Massie said during debate on the resolution. ‘If Congress wants war, then the speaker should hold a vote to declare it.’

Davidson said Wednesday, ‘The moral hazard posed by a government no longer constrained by our Constitution is a grave threat.’

Other Republican lawmakers said they were concerned that handicapping the operation now could do more harm than good.

‘I think the president is well within his legal authorities to conduct this operation,’ Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., told Fox News Digital on Tuesday. ‘I think any effort to stymie that would actually jeopardize our national security and jeopardize our troops.’ 

Rep. Ryan Mackenzie, R-Pa., told Fox News Digital, ‘I’ll be voting no, against the War Powers Act, because once the president has taken that action, that first action, if we were to pull back, it would actually leave us more vulnerable and less safe by leaving all of their capabilities in place, but having started a conflict like this.’

U.S. officials have said their targets remain Iran’s military assets, senior leadership, and nuclear capabilities. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth told reporters this week that the operation will have a finite timeline.

But Democrats are accusing Trump of plunging the U.S. into a seemingly endless conflict while running roughshod over Congress’ Article I authority.

‘Donald Trump has taken America to war without authorization, without explanation, without a strategy or an exit plan. Six brave service members have already given the ultimate sacrifice,’ House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., said on Wednesday.

The Thursday vote comes a day after the Senate shot down a resolution from Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., aimed at limiting Trump’s military actions in Iran following days of speculation about whether Republicans would cross the aisle — as they have done before — to reprimand the president.

Only Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., voted in favor of the resolution among Republicans, while Sen. Jon Fetterman, D-Pa., was the lone Democrat to cross the aisle in support.

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Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., will have at least one Democratic ‘yes’ vote in support of his nomination to become President Donald Trump’s next Department of Homeland Security (DHS) secretary. 

Trump announced Thursday afternoon that he tapped Mullin to replace outgoing DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, who will leave the agency March 31. Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., immediately threw his support behind Mullin’s nomination, dubbing the Oklahoma lawmaker a ‘nice upgrade’ compared to Noem. 

Fetterman repeatedly called for Noem’s ouster and said Thursday he was pleased with Trump’s decision. 

‘We’re in a different party, but this is the choice. I want to work together for making our America more secure,’ he said. 

Fetterman also said that he strongly believes Mullin already has the votes to win confirmation. Senate Republicans are widely expected to back Mullin’s nomination, and the jovial Oklahoma lawmaker could win over some Democrats. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, who has voted against some Trump nominees, said she has a ‘great deal of respect’ for Mullin and is ‘OK’ with his nomination.

Under Senate rules, cabinet nominations are set at a 51-vote threshold. 

However, many of Fetterman’s Democratic colleagues were either noncommittal about Mullin’s nomination or suggested they would not support him.

‘Whoever follows Kristi Noem is going to have to be totally and radically different in their approach to running this agency,’ Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said Thursday. ‘Changing the person at the top is no substitute for changing the practices and the power structure of a department that is out of control.’

Blumenthal added that Mullin would have to commit to Democrats’ various reforms seeking to rein in immigration enforcement in order to win his vote. 

Mullin has repeatedly criticized Democrats’ proposal to prohibit federal immigration officers from wearing masks and requiring judicial warrants during enforcement operations.

‘I like him personally,’ Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, a member of Senate Democratic leadership, said of Mullin before adding that it was too early to debate his nomination.

Sens. Jack Reed, D-R.I., and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., told Fox News Digital that they would not yet weigh in on Mullin’s nomination. Slotkin notably voted for Noem’s confirmation despite later souring on the secretary.

Mullin appeared somewhat taken aback by the news of his nomination when talking with reporters outside the U.S. Capitol on Thursday afternoon.

‘No, the president and I still have to communicate, so we’ll talk about it moving forward,’ Mullin said. ‘The president and I have already talked … I’ll talk to you all [later].’

Fetterman has been the lone Democrat to advance a DHS spending measure amid a funding standoff over the agency’s appropriations that has no clear end in sight.

He poured cold water on the prospect of his Democratic colleagues reversing course to support funding DHS in response to Mullin’s nomination, telling reporters he expected ‘no change’ with the partial shutdown.

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MLS Cup champion Inter Miami will visit President Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday, March 5 to commemorate their 2025 title.

Lionel Messi – the two-time MLS MVP, eight-time Ballon d’Or winner and Argentine World Cup champion – is expected to attend. It’s unclear whether co-owner and former soccer star David Beckham will also attend.

Inter Miami is taking part in what has become a customary event for professional and college sports champions in the United States to be congratulated by the president.

The ceremony is expected to begin around 4 p.m. ET in the East Room of the White House.

Inter Miami traveled to Washington D.C. on Thursday morning – two days before a match against D.C. United in Baltimore on Saturday, March 7 ahead of the visit.

‘We are going because we are champions from last season,’ Inter Miami midfielder Telasco Segovia said earlier this week. ‘I don’t get involved with politics, but I know it’s an important occasion.’

How to watch Inter Miami’s White House visit?

The visit can be live streamed from the White House’s YouTube channel.

Messi makes the trip with Inter Miami

Messi is included in a pre-flight video before Inter Miami’s trip to D.C. on Thursday morning.

Inter Miami takes off for White House trip

Inter Miami departed from South Florida early Thursday, sharing social media posts – which did not include Messi in the photos.

Has Messi visited the White House before?

Not yet – this would be Messi’s first visit to the White House.

Messi was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Joe Biden in January 2025, but he did not attend the ceremony due to a scheduling issue during Inter Miami’s offseason.

What does Messi’s visit mean for World Cup?

If Messi visits the White House, Trump will have met two of soccer’s greatest players in the past five months before the 2026 FIFA World Cup co-hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico.

Soccer’s all-time leading goal scorer Cristiano Ronaldo attended a black-tie dinner at the White House when Trump hosted Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman last November.

Trump and FIFA president Gianni Infantino have become good friends in the past few years, highlighted by several White House visits. Infantino also awarded Trump with FIFA’s Peace Prize during the World Cup draw in December.

Messi, who plays for reigning World Cup champion Argentina, has yet to declare he will play in the tournament. But it’s a safe bet he will.

Why is the visit to the White House controversial?

The United States and Israel began strikes on Iran early on Saturday, Feb. 28, in a campaign that killed the nation’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and several top officials, among others. Iran is a participating nation in the World Cup, though Trump recently said ‘I really don’t care’ if the country takes part in the tournament.

Also in late February, Trump invited the U.S. men’s and women’s hockey teams after both winning gold medals at the Milan Cortina Olympics. However, Trump made what was seen as a sexist remark on a phone call with the men’s team after their win, joking that he would also have to invite the women’s team to the White House. While the men’s team visited, the women’s team declined their invitation.

Trump’s widespread immigration crackdown with U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) is also an ongoing controversy. ICE officials could be present at World Cup games this summer, acting director Todd Lyons said last month.

Have MLS Cup-winning teams visited the White House before?

Inter Miami will be the first MLS Cup winner to visit the White House during either of Trump’s presidencies.

David Beckham, an Inter Miami co-owner, attended a White House ceremony with the LA Galaxy in 2012 after winning the 2011 MLS Cup. The Galaxy also visited for titles won in 2012 and 2014 with President Barack Obama. Obama also welcomed the Columbus Crew (2008), Real Salt Lake (2009), Colorado Rapids (2010) and Sporting Kansas City (2013) to the White House.

The last MLS club to visit the White House was the Columbus Crew, who visited Biden in 2024 to celebrate their 2023 title.

D.C. United was the first MLS winner to visit the White House in 1998 when President Bill Clinton was in office.

How did Messi, Inter Miami win MLS Cup?

Inter Miami beat the Vancouver Whitecaps 3-1 to win the 2025 MLS Cup on Dec. 6, 2025.

When is Messi’s next game?

Messi is expected to play when Inter Miami faces D.C. United at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore on Saturday, March 7 at 4:30 p.m. ET. The match will be streamed by Apple TV.

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NEW YORK — It’s no secret that Oklahoma City Thunder All-Star guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has a reputation for baiting opposing players into contact to get to the line. Add Knicks coach Mike Brown to the list of opposing coaches who bemoan it.

After New York’s 103-100 loss against the Thunder Wednesday, March 4, Brown expressed his displeasure with officiating during the game, and in particular the crew’s management of Gilgeous-Alexander’s play.

“SGA, he’s a tough cover,” Brown told reporters after the game. “And he does a great job of convincing the referees — probably better than anybody in the league — that he’s getting hit.”

Brown’s criticism, in part, stemmed from a controversial no-call that prompted Brown to be called for his first technical foul since he joined the Knicks in July.

The play came with 2:02 left in the first quarter, when Gilgeous-Alexander cut to the basket and crashed into Knicks guard Jalen Brunson, before gathering his dribble and putting in an uncontested layup.

Brunson appeared to have a clear, established position, but officials did not call any foul — offensive or defensive — on the play. Gilgeous-Alexander, at the time, had already picked up his second foul and the no-call would’ve been his third, possibly prompting him to sit extended minutes on the bench.

Immediately after the play, Brown gestured emphatically and berated the closest official, Brian Forte. Play continued and Brown didn’t relent with his arguing, eventually drawing the technical foul with 1:40 left to play. Brown appeared to make light contact with Forte during the interaction, but he remained in the game.

“You guys saw the play,” Brown said. “SGA had two fouls, and Jalen was there. And he ran him over … I just don’t understand why that wasn’t a no-call. But that should’ve been his third, the bucket shouldn’t have counted, and we should’ve gone the other way with the basketball.

“To see that, knowing that Jalen is standing there, and he’s putting his body on the line, and our guys are fighting their asses off to try to win the ball game — it didn’t sit well with me, obviously.”

The non-call drew a sharp reaction from social media, with actor and comedian Ben Stiller, a notable Knicks fan, leading the charge.

“This is abhorrent,” Stiller wrote in a message posted shortly after the no-call.

Gilgeous-Alexander would convert the technical free throw and finished the game with 26 points on 9-of-16 shooting, including a perfect 7-of-7 from the line.

Last year’s Most Valuable Player, Gilgeous-Alexander is tied for third this season in free throw attempts per game, with 9.2.

“That early in the game, I trust Coach, just because there’s still so much time to decide the game, so if I need to come out, I’d come out,” Gilgeous-Alexander said when asked about playing with the two early fouls. “Nothing’s worse than having three fouls in the first quarter, so usually, they’ll take me out if I get two quick ones.

“But, yeah, I was able to control my foul count the rest of the game.”

He finished the game with three personal fouls.

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March Madness is ramping up with women’s college basketball conference tournaments.

The 2026 NCAA Tournament begins on March 18 and the conference tournaments will go a long way in figuring who is in and who is out. Conference tournament winners get an automatic an bid. Every other team will have to sweat it out on Selection Sunday on March 15 to see if they received at-large bid.

South Carolina (SEC), UCLA (Big Ten), Duke (ACC) and TCU (Big 12) each earned No. 1 seeds and double-byes in their respective conferences and start play on Friday. All four teams won their conference tournament last season and are looking to repeat.

USA TODAY Sports is following along with the Power Four conference tournaments. Follow along for live updates, highlights and results here:

No. 9 BYU vs. No. 8 Utah | 2:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

BYU Cougars starting lineup

Head coach: Lee Cummard

2 Sydney Benally | G 5-9 – Freshman
11 Delaney Gibb | G 5-10 – Sophomore
13 Lara Rohkohl | F 6-3 – Senior
14 Kambree Barber | G 6-0 – Sophomore
24 Brinley Cannon | G/F 6-1 -Sophomore

Utah Utes starting lineup

Head coach: Gavin Petersen

0 Lani White | G 6-0 – Senior
2 LA Sneed | G 5-6 – Freshman
12 Chyra Evans | F 6-3 – Junior
20 Reese Ross | F 6-1 – Junior
23 Maty Wilke | G 5-10 -Senior

Halftime: Oklahoma 40, Florida 38

Liv McGill has already piled up 19 points for the Gators as their NCAA Tournament hopes are on the line in this second-round matchup in the SEC Tournament in Greenville, South Carolina.

Aaliyah Chavez has 13 points for the Sooners.

The winner will face No. 4 LSU on Friday on ESPN.

Halftime: Notre Dame 37, Miami 23

Miami is playing with a ton of pace, but Notre Dame is matching it and causing a lot of problems defensively. Notre Dame has 12 points off 11 Miami turnovers. The Fighting Irish have switched between zone and man-to-man looks, and both have been successful. At the half, the Hurricanes are shooting 38% overall, after they shot just 18% in the second.

Notre Dame, which is shooting 50% from the field, is led by Hannah Hidalgo’s non-stop energy. The junior guard leads all scorers with 14 points, five rebounds and three steals. Cassandre Prosper is right behind Hildago with nine points and one block.

No. 13 Indiana vs. No. 5 Ohio State | 2:30 p.m. Big Ten Network

Indiana starting lineup

Head coach: Teri Moren

Shay Ciezki | G 5-7 Senior
Nevaeh Caffey G 5-10 Freshman
Lenee Beaumont | G 6-1 Sophomore
Maya Makalusky | F 6-3 Freshman
Edessa Noyan | F 6-3 Junior

Ohio State starting lineup

Head coach: Kevin McGuff

Jaloni Cambridge | G 5-7 Sophomore
Ava Watson | G 5-8 Sophomore
Chance Gray | G 5-9 Senior
Kennedy Cambridge | G 5-8 Junior
Elsa Lemmila | C 6-6 Sophomore

Final: Kansas State 58, Texas Tech 51

Texas Tech led by as many as 14 points in the fourth quarter, but Kansas State went on a 21-0 run to not only take their first lead of the game with 2:39 remaining, but defeat the Red Raiders 58-51 in the second round.

The Lady Raiders’ nearly eight-minute scoring drought and the Wildcats’ subsequent run was fueled by Texas Tech turnovers. Texas Tech finished with 16 turnovers, with three coming in the fourth quarter. Texas Tech was held to four points in the fourth quarter and finished the game shooting 29% from the field and 6-of-23 from the 3-point line.

Junior forward Nastja Claessens led the way for Kansas State with 14 points. Tess Heal scored eight of her 10 points in the second half, including a pair of clutch free throws to ice the game.

It marked Kansas States fifth straight victory over Texas Tech.

Texas Tech’s Snudda Collins finished with 14 points in the loss. She was the only Red Raider to reach double digits. Gemma Nuñez had nine points and Bailey Maupin had eight points.

Final: Washington 76, USC 64

Elle Ladine scored a game-high 25 points on 10-of-13 shooting to lead Washington over USC in the second round of the Big Ten Tournament.

Washington controlled the entire game, shooting 50% from the field as a team and finishing with four players in double figures.

USC shot 31% from the field (18-of-58).

Big Ten Freshman of the Year Jazzy Davidson scored eight points on 2-of-13 shooting for USC, but she was seemingly hampered by a right arm injury. She briefly went to the locker room holding her shoulder early in the first quarter and returned to the court, but she was shaking out her right arm after shots for the rest of the game.

Washington will advance to play top-seeded UCLA on Friday at noon.

Hannah Hidalgo is cashing in early against Miami

Notre Dame guard Hannah Hidalgo is the first player in the game to score in double figures. At the 4:46 mark of the second quarter, she has 11 points on 50% shooting, four rebounds and two steals.

ACC teams make NCAA Tournament cases

Following Clemson’s 63-50 win over Virginia, both head coaches made cases for their teams to make the NCAA Tournament.

‘Super, super proud of this group. I thought that was a gritty, hard-fought, tough win. In my opinion, that’s an NCAA Tournament game with two NCAA Tournament teams,’ Clemson coach Shawn Poppie said.

‘We kind of took this as our season is on the line. We felt like a win today would get us in the NCAA Tournament no matter what happens the rest of the way out. That’s how they focused and fought and competed. But ultimately that’s just basketball. How you start and how you finish quarters.’

Before Thursday’s win, Clemson was on the bubble, but still needed help to get in the Big Dance. Now, the victory over Virginia all but guarantees the Tigers will go dancing.

For Virginia, the loss to Clemson makes their NCAA Tournament bid a bit more unclear. The Cavaliers will likely be nervous come Selection Sunday, now all but assuredly on the bubble. Virginia head coach Amaka Agugua-Hamilton also made a case for the NCAA tournament.

‘We’ve got to take ownership of our part today. We didn’t compete. We weren’t urgent for 40 minutes. We didn’t stick to the gameplan. We didn’t do the things we could do to control the outcome of that game,’ Agugua-Hamilton said.

‘But if you’re talking about the course of the season, there’s been a lot of ups and downs due to some adversity. I do think that we’ll be ready to go, come NCAA Tournament. We’ve got a little bit of a break where we can get better and get more connected and be on the same page.’

Agugua-Hamilton also added she wasn’t ready to throw in the towel on the season, given all that Virginia has accomplished, including 11 wins in the ACC regular season for the first time in 26 years.

‘There’s so many highlights of the season, but to me, it can’t be done yet,’ Agugua-Hamilton said. −Meghan L. Hall

Kansas State goes on 11-0 run vs. Texas Tech

Not so fast. After trailing by as many as 14 points in the fourth quarter, Kansas State went on a 11-0 run to cut their deficit to three points with 5:22 remaining. Texas Tech has not scored in over two minutes.

Texas Tech takes double-digit lead vs. Kansas State

Texas Tech women’s basketball took a commanding 14-point lead over Kansas State with 7:42 remaining in the game after Snudda Collins made a wide-open layup. Collins leads all scorers with 14 points off the bench. Can Kansas State muster a comeback? The Wildcats have struggled to find any offensive rhythm and are shooting 31% from the field and 5-of-24 from the 3-point line, one day removed from setting a Big 12 Tournament record with 17 made 3-pointers in their win over Cincinnati on Wednesday.

No. 12 Florida vs. No. 5 Oklahoma, 1:30 p.m. ET | SEC Network

Florida Gators starting lineup

Head coach: Kelly Rae Finley

13 Laila Reynolds | G 6-1 – Junior
23 Liv McGill | G 5-9 – Sophomore
8 Me’Arah O’Neal | F 6-4 – Sophomore
9 Alexa Dizeko | F 5-111- Senior
14 Caterina Piatti | F 6-4 – Freshman

Oklahoma Sooners starting lineup

Head coach: Jennie Baranczyk

2 Aaliyah Chavez | G 5-10 – Freshman
3 Zya Vann | G 5-9 – Sophomore
6 Sahara Williams | F 5-11 – Junior
12 Payton Verhulst | G 6-1 –  Senior
15 Raegan Beers | C 6-4 – Senior

Halftime: Washington 32, USC 20

USC survived an injury scare when Big Ten Freshman Jazzy Davidson briefly went back to the locker room with an apparent shoulder injury, but returned to the court just a minute of game time later.

The Trojans still have some work to do if they want to extend their stay in Indianapolis.

USC shot just 25% (6-of-24) from the field and 20% (2-of-10) from 3-point range in the first half.

Washington is dominating the boards, pulling down 24 compared to USC’s nine. The Huskies have 10 offensive rebounds alone, with six second-chance points. 

Elle Ladine is leading Washington with 13 points on 5-of-8 shooting, while Avery Howell has 10 points on 4-of-5 shooting. Davidson and Kennedy Smith are leading the Trojans with five points each.

Miami vs. No. 5 Notre Dame, 1:30 p.m. | ACC Network

Notre Dame Fighting Irish starting lineup

Head coach: Niele Ivey

3 Hannah Hidalgo | G 5-6 – Junior
2 Vanessa De Jesus | G 5-8 – Senior
23 Iyana Moore | G 5-8 – Senior
8 Cassandre Prosper | G 6-3 – Senior
5 Malaya Cowles | F 6-3- Senior

Miami Hurricanes starting lineup

Head coach: Tricia Cullop

0 Ra Shaya Kyle | C 6-5 – Senior
33 Amarachi Kimpson | G 5-8 – Junior
12 Natalie Wetzel | F 6-3 – Freshman
5 Ahnay Adams | G 5-6 – Sophomore
14 Gal Raviv | G 5-9 – Sophomore

Final: Kentucky 76, Georgia 61

Clara Strack scored a career-high-tying 33 points to power the Wildcats to a second straight victory at the SEC Tournament in Greenville, South Carolina, on Thursday afternoon.

Strack, a 6-foot-5 junior, made a career-best five 3-pointers in the victory for Kentucky (23-9) and collected eight rebounds, three blocks and two assists. The Wildcats also got 14 points and 12 boards from Teonni Key, and 14 points and seven assists from Tonie Morgan.

Morgan’s final assist came on a 3-pointer to Amelia Hassett, which highlighted a 14-2 fourth quarter run for the Wildcats.

Dani Carnegie led Georgia (22-9) with 18 points in the loss.

Kentucky will face top-seeded South Carolina on Friday at 12 p.m. ET on ESPN. The Wildcats and Gamecocks met in the regular season finale for both teams last Sunday, with South Carolina winning by four points. −Mitchell Northam

Final: Clemson 63, Virginia 50

After a grind-it-out matchup, the Clemson Tigers move on to the third round of the ACC Tournament. Clemson will play No. 1 seed Duke on Friday. Tigers guard Mia Moore had a game-high 20 points on 87.5% shooting in 22 minutes of play. Unsurprisingly, the Tigers also finished the matchup shooting 50% from deep with 10 triples.Paris Clark led the Cavaliers with 15 points, while Kymora Johnson added 12. Clemson’s defense overwhelmed Virginia down the stretch, holding the Cavaliers to 33% shooting as the game wound down. Additionally, Virginia finished with 11 bench points to Clemson’s 25. −Meghan L. Hall

Halftime: Texas Tech 34, Kansas State 29

Texas Tech scored 11 points off eight Kansas State turnovers in the first half of a defensive battle. The Red Raiders are also leading the battle of the boards, outrebounding the Wildcats, 14-11.

Snudda Collins is leading Texas Tech with 10 points off the bench. Gemma Nuñez has nine points and five rebounds.

Clemson extends lead over Virginia

In the third quarter, Virginia scored 10 straight points to bring a bit closer to the Tigers, but since the 2:15 mark of the third, it’s been all Clemson. The Tigers built their lead to as high as 12 with 3:38 to go in the fourth. With the lead at 12, the Clemson faithful cheered even louder.

Jazzy Davidson leaves game briefly with apparent shoulder injury

Big Ten Freshman of the Year Jazzy Davidson briefly went back to the locker room holding her right shoulder in the first quarter of No. 9 USC’s game against No. 8 Washington, but quickly checked back in after one minute of game time and two reviews.

Davidson was running up the court on offense when she was hit in the backcourt. The play was reviewed for a potential upgrade, but officials deemed the contact incidental.

Davidson, who looked to be in pain, was surrounded by coaches and medical staff on the USC bench. She briefly went back to the locker room with a trainer, but returned to the bench then checked back in after a quick chat with USC coach Lindsay Gottlieb.

Officials reviewed a separate play off of a USC challenge while Davidson was in the locker room. USC lost that challenge. −Chloe Peterson

No. 12 Kansas State vs. No. 5 Texas Tech, 12 p.m. | ESPN+

Kansas State starting lineup

Head coach: Krista Gerlich

4 Nastja Claessens | G 5-8 Sophomore
6 Gina Garcia | G 5-10 Freshman
3 Brandie Harrod | G 6-1 Freshman
11 Taryn Sides | G 5-7 Junior
34 Tess Heal | G 5-10 Senior

Texas Tech starting lineup

Head coach: Jeff Mittie

11 Sarengbe Sanogo | F 6-3 Senior
1 Jalynn Bristow | G 6-2 Junior
2 Gemma Nuñez | G 5-7 Senior
20 Bailey Maupin | G 5-10 Senior
5 Denae Fritz | G 5-11 Senior

Clemson hot from the 3-point line vs. Virginia

The Clemson Tigers are red hot from beyond the arc. As a team, the Tigers are shooting 44% from deep and have seven triples.

Halftime: Georgia 36, Kentucky 35

Trinity Turner has 12 points and Dani Carnegie has scored 10 as the Bulldogs lead Wildcats at the break in the second round of the SEC Tournament on Thursday in Greenville, South Carolina.

Clara Strack is powering Kentucky with 18 points, but Georgia is winning the rebounding margin by three and has made one more free throw.

The two teams are even in many statistical categories at halftime, which could make for a closely contested second half and an exciting finish. There have been six lead changes so far. The winner will face top-seeded South Carolina on Friday morning. − Mitchell Northam

Halftime: Clemson 28, Virginia 26

Thursday’s matchup between the Tigers and Cavaliers is a defensive battle at halftime. Clemson has three steals, but Virginia has three blocks in a virtual tug-of-war that left both teams shooting under 30% in the first quarter. During the second quarter, Clemson found itself in a slump, shooting as low as 16%, but its defense helped the Tigers stay in it, and scoring from seven players has them out in front.

On Virginia’s side, the Cavaliers are shooting 33% and have given up the ball eight times. Still, their shooting keeps them within an arm’s length of Clemson. The Cavaliers have 10 points in the paint and scoring from seven players.Virginia’s Paris Clark leads all scorers with seven points.  Rusne Augustinaite leads Clemson with six points. −Meghan L. Hall

No. 8 Washington vs. No. 9 USC, 12 p.m. ET | BTN

Washington Huskies starting lineup

Head coach: Tina Langley

0 Sayvia Sellers | G 5-7 Junior
1 Hannah Stines | G 5-11 Senior
2 Avery Howell | G 6-0 Sophomore
24 Elle Ladine | G 5-11 Senior
21 Brynn McGaughy | 6-3 F Freshman

USC Trojans starting lineup

Head coach: Lindsay Gottlieb

6 Laura Williams | F 6-1 Freshamn
9 Jazzy Davidson | G 6-1 Freshman
11 Kennedy Smith | G 6-1 Sophomore
25 Kara Dunn | G 5-11 Senior
3 Londynn Jones | G 5-4 Senior

Wake Forest expected to retain head coach Megan Gebbia

Wake Forest’s regular season came to an end on Wednesday in Duluth, Georgia, when it lost 75-52 to Cal in the opening round of the ACC Tournament.

Despite this being the third consecutive losing season for the Demon Deacons under coach Megan Gebbia, multiple sources told USA Today Sports that Wake is expected to retain its head coach for at least one more season. Gebbia is 47-79 in four seasons in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Formerly the coach at American where she won five Patriot League titles and went to three NCAA Tournaments, Gebbia was hired in May 2022 after athletic director John Currie fired longtime head coach — and Wake alum — Jennifer Hoover at the ACC’s spring meetings. Wake has only been to the NCAA Tournament twice, and Hoover was a player on one of those teams and head coach for the other. Hoover is now an assistant coach at Virginia Tech.

Wake had an up-and-down season, opening it with a nine-game win streak, but also suffering eight straight losses in ACC play between January and February. Because Wake Forest is a private school, it’s unclear what Gebbia’s contract length is. She signed an extension after a 17-17 season in 2023. − Mitchell Northam

Clemon’s leading scorer in foul trouble

Clemson’s leading scorer, Mia Moore, already has two fouls at the 5:49 mark of the first quarter. Moore has played just four minutes. Head coach Shawn Poppie was not happy over the second foul and gave a nearby official an earful. −Meghan L. Hall

UConn sweep Big East awards

UConn sophomore forward Sarah Strong was named the 2025-26 Big East Player and Defensive Player of the Year. Strong leads the top-ranked Huskies in points, rebounds, blocks and steals this season. She ranks seventh nationally in steals (97), 15th in assist-turnover ratio (2.37) and 15th in field goal percentage (59.5). Strong is averaging 18.6 points per game on a .595/.407/.881 shooting split.

Forward Blanca Quiñonez was named the conference’s Freshman and Sixth Woman of the Year. Strong and graduate student guard Azzi Fudd were unanimously selected first-team All-Big East. Junior guard KK Arnold joined thema on the first team. 

Head coach Geno Auriemma was selected as the Big East Coach of the Year. −Heather Burns

No. 9 Kentucky vs No. 8 Georgia, 11 a.m. ET | SEC Network

Kentucky Wildcats starting lineup

Head coach: Kenny Brooks

5 Tonie Morgan | G 5-9 Senior
8 Asia Boone | G 5-8 Junior
7 Teonni Key | F 6-5 Senior
32 Amelia Hassett | F 6-4 Senior
13 Clara Strack | F 6-5 Junior

Georgia Bulldogs starting lineup

Head coach: Katie Abrahamson-Henderson

0 Trinity Turner | G 5-6 Sophomore
2 Savannah Henderson | G 6-3 Junior
3 Dani Carnegie | G 5-9 Sophomore
14 Rylie Theuerkauf | G 5-9 Junior
33 Mia Woolfolk | F 6-3 Sophomore

Texas A&M has NCAA Tournament hopes, but would play in WBIT

Despite losing to Auburn in the first round of the SEC Tournament on Wednesday night, Texas A&M still believes it is a team worthy of inclusion in the NCAA Tournament. Before losing to the Tigers, the Aggies had won five games in a row.

“I think we have done everything that we can do to put ourselves in this position to be a NCAA Tournament team, considering the conference that we’re playing in,” Texas A&M coach Joni Taylor said. “There should be 12 teams in the NCAA Tournament from the SEC.”

The Aggies are 33rd in WAB, a perfect 5-0 in Quad 2 games and have the fourth-best strength-of-schedule in the country, based on the average NET ranking of their opponents. But Texas A&M is also just 2-9 in Quad 1 games and has a NET ranking of 61. The reality is that getting into the field of 68 this year is a longshot for Taylor’s team.

However, should Texas A&M be excluded from the NCAA Tournament field, Taylor says they would still entertain an invitation from a lower-tier tournament, like the WBIT.

“Absolutely, we’re going to play postseason basketball,” Taylor said. “This team deserves that. They’ve earned the right to do that.” − Mitchell Northam

No. 8 Clemson vs. No. 9 Virginia, 11:00 a.m. | ACC Network

Clemson Tigers starting lineup

Head coach: Shawn Poppie

12 Mia Moore | G 5-6 – Senior
11 Rusne Augustinaite | G 6-0 – Junior
14 Rachel Rose | G 5-7 – Senior
25 Demeara Hinds | F 6-2- Senior
32 Raven Thompson | F 5-10 – Senior

Virginia Cavaliers starting lineup

Head coach: Amaka Agugua-Hamilton

21 Kymora Johnson | G 5-7 – Junior
1 Paris Clark | G 5-8 – Senior
23 Romi Levy | G 6-3 – Senior
12 Caitlin Weimar | F 6-4- Senior
7 Tabitha Amanze | F 6-4 – Senior

SEC Tournament schedule, bracket, scores

Wednesday, March 4 – First round

#9 Kentucky 94, #16 Arkansas 64
#12 Florida 86, #13 Mississippi State 68
#15 Auburn 50, #10 Texas A&M 49
#11 Alabama 65, #14 Missouri 48

Thursday, March 5 – Second round

Game 5 | #9 Kentucky vs. #8 Georgia | 11 a.m. ET | SEC Network
Game 6 | #12 Florida vs. #5 Oklahoma | 1:30 p.m. ET | SEC Network
Game 7 | #15 Auburn vs. #7 Ole Miss | 6 p.m. ET | SEC Network
Game 8 | #11 Alabama vs. #6 Tennessee | 8:30 p.m. ET | SEC Network

Friday, March 6 – Quarterfinals

Game 9 | G5 winner vs. #1 South Carolina | 12 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 10 | G6 winner vs. #4 LSU | 2:30 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 11 | G7 winner vs. #2 Vanderbilt| 6 p.m. ET | SEC Network
Game 12 | G8 winner vs. #3 Texas | 8:30 p.m. ET | SEC Network

Saturday, March 7 – Semifinals

Game 13 | G9 winner vs. G10 winner | 4:30 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 14 | G11 winner vs. G12 winner | 7 p.m. ET | ESPN2

Sunday, March 8 – Championship

Game 15 | G13 winner vs. G14 winner | 3 p.m. ET | ESPN

ACC Tournament schedule, bracket, scores

March 4

First round

Game 1: No. 12 Miami 83 vs. No. 13 Stanford 76
Game 2: No. 10 Cal 75 vs. No. 15 Wake Forest 52
Game 3: No. 11 Georgia Tech 72 vs. No. 14 Florida State 60

March 5

Second round

Game 4 No. 9 Clemson vs. No. 8 Virginia (11:00 a.m.; ACCN)
Game 5: Miami vs. No. 5 Notre Dame (1:30 p.m.; ACCN)
Game 6: Cal vs. No. 7 Syracuse (5:00 p.m.; ACCN)
Game 7: Georgia Tech vs. No. 6 Virginia Tech (7:30 p.m.; ACCN)

March 6

Quarterfinals

Game 8: Winner Game 4 vs. No. 1 Duke (11:00 a.m.; ESPN2)
Game 9: Winner Game 5 vs. No. 4 NC State (1:30 p.m.; ACCN)
Game 10: Winner Game 6 vs. No. 2 Louisville (5:00 p.m.; ESPN2)
Game 11: Winner Game 7 vs. No. 3 UNC (7:30 p.m.; ACCN)

March 7

Semifinals

Game 12: Winner Game 9 vs. Winner Game 8 (Noon ET; ESPN2)
Game 13: Winner Game 11 vs. Winner Game 10 (2:30 p.m. ET; ESPN2)

March 8

Championship: Winner Game 12 vs. Winner Game 13 (1:00 p.m. ET; ESPN)

Big Ten Tournament schedule, bracket, scores

The 2026 Big Ten women’s basketball tournament unfolds over five days during March, with all games played in Indianapolis.

Here’s the daily schedule:

Wednesday, March 4 – First round

#13 Indiana 72, #12 Nebraska 69
#10 Illinois 82, #15 Wisconsin 70
#11 Oregon 71, #14 Purdue 65

Thursday, March 5 – Second round

Game 4 | #8 Washington vs. #9 USC | 12 p.m. ET | BTN
Game 5 | #5 Ohio State vs. #13 Indiana | 25 minutes following Game 4 | BTN
Game 6 | #7 Michigan State vs. #10 Illinois | 6:30 p.m. ET | BTN
Game 7 | #6 Maryland vs. #11 Oregon | 25 minutes following Game 6 | BTN

Friday, March 6 – Quarterfinals

Game 8 | #1 UCLA vs. G4 winner | 12 p.m. ET | BTN
Game 9 | #4 Minnesota vs. G5 winner | 25 minutes following Game 8 | BTN
Game 10 | #2 Iowa vs. G6 winner | 6:30 p.m. ET | BTN
Game 11 | #3 Michigan vs. G7 winner | 25 minutes following Game 10 | BTN

Saturday, March 7 – Semifinals

Game 12 | G8 winner vs. G9 winner | 2 p.m. ET | BTN
Game 13 | G10 winner vs. G11 winner | 4:30 p.m. ET | BTN

Sunday, March 8 – Championship

Game 14 | G12 winner vs. G13 winner | 2:15 p.m. ET | CBS

Big 12 Tournament schedule, bracket, scores

All times Eastern

March 4

First Round

Game 1: No. 12 Kansas State 91, No. 13 Cincinnati 66
Game 2:No. 9 BYU 76, No. 16 Houston 66
Game 3: No. 10 Arizona State 54, No. 15 Arizona 51
Game 4: No. 11 Kansas 56, No. 14 UCF 35

March 5

Second Round

Game 5: No. 12 Kansas State vs. No. 5 Texas Tech | noon (ESPN+)
Game 6: No. 9 BYU vs. No. 8 Utah | 2:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
Game 7: No. 10 Arizona State vs. No. 7 Iowa State | 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
Game 8: No. 11 Kansas vs. No. 6 Colorado | 9 p.m. (ESPN+)

March 6

Quarterfinals

Game 9: Winner of Game 5 vs. No. 4 Oklahoma State | noon (ESPNU)
Game 10: Winner of Game 6 vs. No. 1 TCU | 2:30 p.m. (ESPNU)
Game 11: Winner of Game 7 vs. No. 2 West Virginia | 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
Game 12: Winner of Game 8 vs. No. 3 Baylor | 9 p.m. (ESPN+)

March 7

Semifinals

Game 13: Winner of Game 9 vs. Winner of Game 10 | 4:00 p.m. (ESPN+)
Game 14: Winner of Game 11 vs. Winner of Game 12 | 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

March 8

Championship: Winner of Game 13 vs. Winner of Game 14 | 5:00 p.m. (ESPN+)

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Pentagon policy chief Elbridge Colby faced tough questions Thursday about President Donald Trump’s previous statements about war with Iran. 

While Colby was testifying before the House Armed Services Committee, the Democratic ranking member said that the president broke his campaign promise.

Colby appeared before the House Armed Services Committee on Thursday to testify about the recently-released 2026 National Defense Strategy (NDS). Several lawmakers focused on the U.S.’s Operation Epic Fury, as U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran continue.

‘When President Trump was running for office, he said over and over and over again, ‘I’m not going to do wars.’ In fact, he very specifically said, ‘If I’m president, we will not go to war with Iran.’ And here we are. So I’m genuinely curious what changed? What changed from when he was a candidate to when he was in office?’ Ranking Member Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., said.

Smith later asked Colby the question, saying that Trump had routinely implied that ‘his mere presence and his policies’ could prevent wars as part of his ‘America First agenda.’ The lawmaker then wondered how that agenda allegedly failed in Iran.

‘I think the president sincerely meant that. He sincerely meant, ‘you put me in office, I’m going to do things to make sure that we don’t go to war with Iran.’ He failed. We’re at war with Iran,’ Smith said.

Colby pushed back, saying he did not think that the agenda had failed in Iran, noting Trump’s consistency in opposing Iran’s development of nuclear weapons. However, the ranking member would not accept that answer and retorted, once again bringing up the president’s statements about not going to war.

The Pentagon policy chief later brought up the president’s commitment to ‘peace through strength,’ citing the peace deals Trump has struck, such as the one in Gaza, as examples of ‘peace’ and saying that what was happening in Iran was the ‘strength’ part.

The lawmaker accepted Colby’s answer as ‘solid enough’ before saying that there was ‘no question that he failed’ in light of the launch of Operation Epic Fury.

Colby was not the only one to refute the argument that Trump broke promises by acting in Iran. Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., said that under Trump’s leadership, ‘we’re preventing endless wars.’ 

Another lawmaker, Rep. Richard McCormick, R-Ga., asked Colby whether he would consider what is happening in Iran to be ‘a forever war,’ to which the Pentagon official said, ‘No, sir.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment on Thursday.

Throughout his presidential campaign, Trump said that he would not drag the U.S. into endless wars and also spoke against Iran having a nuclear weapon. 

On Wednesday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt refuted what she described as ‘fake news headlines’ suggesting U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran were unjustifiable. She told reporters at the first White House press briefing since Operation Epic Fury began that Iran ‘is a rogue terrorist regime that has been threatening the United States, our allies and our people for 47 years.’

‘The American people are smart enough to know that. And they’ve also been smart enough to listen to the president himself, not just over the past year in this second term, but during his first term as president, and also for the past 40 years of his life,’ Leavitt said. ‘This is a president who has been remarkably consistent on this issue, that Iran can never obtain a nuclear weapon. And the president tried peace through diplomacy exhaustively and extensively.’

‘He and his team gave it their best go, and the president ultimately came to the determination of that peace was not a suitable path,’ she said. ‘The Iranian regime, they want death. They want destruction. They want to kill Americans. And that’s unacceptable to this president. It’s intolerable to him as commander in chief.’

Related Article

Beyond the Iran Deal: Why Trump’s refusal to ‘kick the can’ just saved generations
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Minnesota Republican Senate candidate Michele Tafoya slammed Gov. Tim Walz’s testimony on the massive fraud scandal roiling Minnesota during a contentious House hearing on Wednesday and outlined her plan to combat fraud, which she says voters have been clamoring about on the campaign trial. 

House Oversight Committee Republicans grilled Walz over allegations he knowingly permitted the sprawling fraud scheme to continue under his watch despite repeated warnings from whistleblowers. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison also testified under oath at the hearing. 

‘Seeing Tim Walz testify today on fraud was everything I expected it to be: dodging, giving answers that were incomplete, not having information at his disposal, simply kind of passing the buck and taking credit for people behind bars that really he had nothing to do with,’ Tafoya told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview Wednesday.

‘This is par for the course for Tim Walz,’ Tafoya said. ‘This is why he is no longer running for governor for a third term. It was more of the same. Same with A.G. Keith Ellison.’

Tafoya, a longtime former NFL sideline reporter, recently launched a campaign for Minnesota’s open Democratic-held Senate seat. She is vowing to crack down on the fraud scheme involving the state’s welfare programs, which unfolded during the tenure of Walz and his deputy, Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan. Tafoya could face Flanagan, a progressive Democrat running for the state’s open Senate seat, in the November general election.

Federal prosecutors allege fraudsters stole as much as $9 billion in taxpayer money and have charged nearly 100 individuals in various Minnesota fraud-related cases, mostly of whom are of Somali descent.

Fox News Digital exclusively obtained a three-part anti-fraud plan from Tafoya’s campaign, which she is promising to enact if elected to the Senate in November.

Tafoya said she would cosponsor the Deporting Fraudsters Act, which would allow for noncitizens who are convicted of fraud to be deported and barred from entering the United States. Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, R-Tex., and Mike Lee, R-Utah, introduced the legislation in 2025, but the bill has since stalled in the Senate.

 ‘If you are an immigrant in this country, you are a guest of this country, and you are convicted of defrauding the American people, you will be deported,’ Tafoya said. 

Tafoya is also pledging to crack down on Americans convicted of stealing taxpayer money. She told Fox News Digital that she would work to enact new mandatory minimum sentences for those involved in fraud schemes. 

‘This is not a second-class crime anymore,’ the Minnesota Republican added. ‘This deserves the full weight of the law.’

Thirdly, Tafoya voiced support for the Trump administration’s recent moves to temporarily halt hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to states that fail to implement anti-fraud controls. 

The Trump administration recently announced it would withhold roughly $260 million in Medicaid funding to Minnesota until the state government puts guardrails in place to eliminate fraud. Federal officials have said the state could see more than $1 billion in deferred payments if Walz fails to comply with the president’s ‘war on fraud.’

Though Minnesota voters tend to favor Democrats at the federal level, Tafoya argued the fraud scandal gives Republicans an opening to flip the seat. Senate Republicans are also targeting Democratic-held seats in Georgia, Michigan and New Hampshire during the midterms. 

‘When I go and talk to people around the state of Minnesota and the word fraud comes up, there is an audible sort of hum or roar of disapproval,’ Tafoya said. ‘People are sick to their stomach over it, and I think it really is driving people to the polls this November.’

Tafoya, who is backed by Senate Republicans’ campaign arm, is expected to cruise to the general election despite facing a crowded field of candidates. On the Democratic side, Flanagan and Rep. Angie Craig are engaged in a bitter fight for the party’s nomination ahead of the August primary.

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Kristi Noem, the former South Dakota congresswoman and governor who has led President Donald Trump’s Department of Homeland Security in his second term, was ousted from her position on Thursday.

President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that he will nominate Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., to replace Noem, effective March 31.

‘The current Secretary, Kristi Noem, who has served us well, and has had numerous and spectacular results (especially on the Border!), will be moving to be Special Envoy for The Shield of the Americas, our new Security Initiative in the Western Hemisphere we are announcing on Saturday in Doral, Florida. I thank Kristi for her service at ‘Homeland.’’

Trump said Mullin has done a ‘tremendous job’ in Congress and cited his resume as a former undefeated MMA fighter.

‘As the only Native American in the Senate, Markwayne is a fantastic advocate for our incredible Tribal Communities. Markwayne will work tirelessly to Keep our Border Secure, Stop Migrant Crime, Murderers, and other Criminals from illegally entering our Country, End the Scourge of Illegal Drugs and, MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN,’ Trump said.

Mullin is the first Native American senator in decades, following Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell of Colorado.

Noem, 54, will likely be at least temporarily replaced by Deputy Secretary Troy Edgar, a Navy veteran and former mayor of Los Alamitos, California, in the line of succession for the agency.

Noem’s tenure marked a distinct reversal of the open-border policies permitted by predecessor Alejandro Mayorkas during the Biden administration, and DHS has notched record drug interdictions totaling more than half a million pounds of illegal drugs in her first year.

Her management of Trump’s mass deportation agenda has also led to more than 2 million reported self-deportations in 2025 and about 670,000 removals of illegal immigrants, a figure supporters have hailed as the most successful immigration enforcement operation in history.

Her agency has also been unafraid to hit back at high-profile critics, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom; Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif.; Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz; and 2026 midterm candidate David Trone of Maryland, who accused DHS of ‘executing people in the streets’ as he filmed a protest ad outside a Williamsport compound recently purchased for use as a detention facility.

Such criticisms of her mass deportation operations, particularly in Minneapolis, appeared to somewhat sour public sentiment on the administration’s handling of the immigration issue, as U.S. Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino — a DHS subordinate — was replaced in the Twin Cities by border czar Tom Homan amid the firestorm.

Meanwhile, reports surfaced Thursday that Trump is ‘furious’ with Noem over her performance in bicameral Judiciary Committee hearings this week, particularly over a contract for an advertisement that Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., and others grilled her on.

Trump reportedly took issue with her suggesting to Kennedy that he approved a taxpayer-funded ad subcontracted to a firm connected with her inner circle, according to National Review, which also reported that Mullin was being considered a top candidate for her replacement.

A White House official confirmed to Fox News that Trump did not know about the ad and did not approve it, despite her claims to the contrary at the hearings.

‘It was a combination of her many unfortunate leadership failures. From [Minnesota] to the ad campaign to the allegations of an affair,’ a source familiar with the situation told Fox News.

When confronted by reporters on the Capitol steps, Mullin indicated he had only short notice of Trump’s decision to pick him as Noem’s successor.

‘No, the president and I still have to communicate so we’ll talk about it moving forward,’ Mullin said. ‘The president and I have already talked – We have to talk to the president and get on the same page… I’ll talk to you all [later].’

In Wednesday’s House hearing, Noem was questioned by Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove, D-Calif., over rumors of an affair with DHS ‘special government employee’ Corey Lewandowski, a top figure in Trump’s 2016 campaign.

Noem criticized Kamlager-Dove in response, as her husband, insurance company owner and former South Dakota first gentleman Bryon Noem, sat just feet behind her.

Kamlager-Dove asked Noem if at any time during her tenure she had ‘sexual relations with Corey Lewandowski,’ before slamming the longtime Trump aide as a ‘failed campaign manager’ and someone lacking military experience.

Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., followed up, pressing Noem on Lewandowski while wearing a Justice for Cricket pin, referencing the dog Noem once wrote she had to euthanize on her farm.

‘I really think you need to say the word ‘no’ into the record so that you can clear that up,’ Moskowitz said.

Noem pushed back hard on both Democrats, saying what they were implying is ‘offensive’ and telling Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, that she was ‘shocked that we’re going down and peddling this tabloid garbage in this committee today.’

‘The socialist, liberal left: you go off and you attack conservative women and you say that we’re either stupid or we’re sluts. That’s what you do. And I will tell you sir… I am neither of those,’ Noem fumed at Moskowitz.

Through the recent turmoil, many Republicans remained highly complimentary of Noem’s tenure.

Rep. Clay Higgins, R-La., a former law enforcement officer himself, said during the hearing that he was ’embarrassed by the antics of my colleagues across the aisle.’

‘Madam Secretary, you inherited a disaster, and you turned it around. An astonishing 97% decrease in illegal crossings isn’t a coincidence; it’s leadership. Know that this committee has your back,’ Higgins said.

When Swalwell pressed her on the ad campaign and contract, Noem shot back that while the Alameda Democrat was ‘focusing on photo-ops and luxury jets, I’m focused on the fact that the Coast Guard might not get paid because your party is choosing not to fund them.’

Fox News’ Jacqui Heinrich contributed to this report.

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