Fatal shooting near Sawgrass delays opening of gates at Players Championship

  • Police find suspect after incident near course

  • Third round began on time despite delays

Police have captured a man who they say killed two people on Friday night about a mile from TPC Sawgrass. The incident led the Players Championship to delay opening the gates to the public for the third round by a couple of hours.

The St Johns County sheriff, Rob Hardwick, said the suspect, whom he identified as Christian Barrios, shot two people multiple times about 10:30pm on Friday in the parking lot of Walgreens in a domestic violence situation. The store is located about a mile away from the course.

This report will update

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Police search for suspect in fatal shooting leads to delay in opening gates at Players Championship

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Authorities were searching for a man who shot and killed two people in a drug store parking lot near the TPC Sawgrass, leading The Players Championship to delay opening gates for the third round Saturday morning.

St. Johns County Sheriff Rob Hardwick said the suspect, whom he identified as Christian Barrios, shot two people multiple times about 10:30 p.m. Friday in the parking lot of Walgreens in a domestic violence situation. The store is located about a mile away from the course.

He said canine units pursued Barrios onto TPC Sawgrass property. Hardwick said Barrios, who turned 32 on Saturday, at one point picked up a PGA Tour radio and later dropped it. He then stole a black BMW, and Nassau County authorities in the far northeastern tip of Florida pursued the car and forced a crash into the woods.

The suspect fled on foot and was still at large.

The PGA cited “operational considerations” in deciding not to open the gates until 9 a.m. The first round bean at 8:15 a.m. and was not delayed. Hospitality areas were delayed opening until 11 a.m.

Hardwick said Barrios had a long criminal history and knew the victims, both of whom were shot multiple times and taken to the hospital where they died.

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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Leonard equals franchise record in Clippers win

Kawhi Leonard jumps towards the basket
Kawhi Leonard averages 28.3 points per game this season [Getty Images]

Kawhi Leonard scored 28 points to equal a franchise record as the Los Angeles Clippers beat the Chicago Bulls 119-108 in the NBA.

Leonard scored at least 20 points for the 44th consecutive game to match Bob McAdoo's single-season mark in 1974-75, when the Clippers were based in Buffalo.

Bennedict Mathurin contributed 26 points at Intuit Dome as the Clippers improved to 7-1 in March and took their season record to 34-32.

They are eighth in the Western Conference, while the Bulls, who suffered a second defeat in two nights in LA after losing to the Lakers on Thursday, are 12th in the East.

Kevin Durant scored 32 points as the Houston Rockets survived a late scare to beat the New Orleans Pelicans 107-105 at home.

Houston, without All-Star center Alperen Sengun because of a back injury, led throughout but a 12-1 run from the Pelicans helped them take a 104-100 lead with 31 seconds remaining.

Forward Jabari Smith Jr hit a three-pointer to swing the tide back in the Rockets' favour before two critical turnovers in the final stages secured victory.

Anthony Edwards scored 42 points to help the Minnesota Timberwolves end a three-game losing streak with a 127-117 win over the Golden State Warriors in San Francisco.

Jrue Holiday recorded 25 points and eight assists as the Portland Trail Blazers completed a four-game series sweep of the Utah Jazz with a 124-114 win at home.

‘Every lap is survival’: Max Verstappen reflects on F1 Chinese GP qualifying woe

  • Four-time world champion eighth in qualifying

  • Failed to finish in the points in sprint race

Max Verstappen condemned his Red Bull’s performance as having reduced his efforts to a matter of “survival” in merely trying to complete a lap in Shanghai.

From the off the four-time champion had not been happy in the buildup to Sunday’s Chinese Grand Prix, dismissing his car on Friday as undriveable and saying: “We have never had anything this bad.”

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Open Thread: If the Spurs chose a teammate as their coach

In this Instagram installment of the behind-the-scenes Spurs interviews, they pull the curtain back on which teammate they’d choose to be their coach. The results are telling about their game and personality.

Victor Wembanyama chose Luke Kornet. As an elder statesman, Kornet has earned the respect of the next great face of the NBA.

Devin Vassell chose Victor because of how intensely Wembanyama takes the game, even considering how young the burgeoning superstar is.

Carter Bryant stated that Harrison Barnes “makes the game sound so simple” by dissecting it. A young mind gaining knowledge from seasoned vet is a definite win.

Julian Champagnie went with Jordan McLaughlin sharing that his choice is “underrated.” As fans, we don’t witness much of McLaughlin’s game. Curious to see what stands out for Champagnie and how he has been influenced thus far.

Speaking of McLaughlin, he also went with Harrison Barnes becaise he understands how the game “is supposed to be played.”

For Bismack Biyombo, the “obvious” choise is D’Aaron Fox. As a point guard, Fox perceives the game from a different vantage point and the Congolese center believes that knowledge is important.

In my opinion, Luke Kornet gave the most introspective response. He went with Devin Vassell as the coach he’d “want,” but then added that Stephon Castle is the coach he’d “need.” There is an important distinction when considering one’s growth and development.

What do you think, Pounders? Who’d make a good Spurs coach? Any surprises in the responses? Anyone not acknowledged that you believe should be listed?


Welcome to the Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.

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Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ Utah Mammoth 3/14/2026

Who: Pittsburgh Penguins (32-18-15, 79 points, 2nd place Metropolitan Division) @ Utah Mammoth (34-26-6, 74 points, 4th place Central Division)

When: 9 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Locally broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh and Utah16, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: The Pens’ road trip continues with two more tough matchups against the Colorado Avalanche on Monday night and the Carolina Hurricanes on Wednesday evening.

Opponent Track: The Mammoth are still sitting in the first Wild Card spot in the West with a six-point advantage over the San Jose Sharks, but they’re heading into Saturday’s matchup on a three-game losing streak after two overtime losses to the Chicago Blackhawks on either side of a 5-0 shutout by the Minnesota Wild.

Season Series: The Pens gave up four straight goals in six-minute span of the third period during their Dec. 14 matchup against the Mammoth, during which Justin Brazeau forced overtime before Dylan Guenther scored 42 seconds in to win it for Utah.

Hidden Stat: Ben Kindel recorded the only three-point outing of his NHL career so far against the Mammoth back, racking up a goal and two assists in that overtime loss back in December.

Getting to know the Mammoth

Projected lines

FORWARDS

Clayton Keller – Nick Schmaltz – Lawson Crouse

JJ Peterka – Logan Cooley – Dylan Guenther

Jack McBain – Barrett Hayton – Michael Carcone

Alex Kerfoot – Kevin Stenlund – Kailer Yamamoto

DEFENSEMEN

Mikhail Sergachev / Mackenzie Weegar

Nate Schmidt / John Marino

Ian Cole / Sean Durzi

Goalies: Karel Vejmelka, Vitek Vanecek

Potential scratches: Brandon Tanev, Liam O’Brien, Maksymilian Szuber, Nick Desimone

Injured Reserve: None

  • The Mammoth locked in their top center last week by signing Nick Schmaltz to an eight-year, $64 million extension ahead of his pending free agency.
  • Former Penguin Brandon Tanev signed a three-year, $2.5 million AAV deal with Utah this offseason, but he has already fallen completely out of the Mammoth lineup. He hasn’t played since Feb. 25, and he had been held without a goal and registered just two assists and a minus-14 rating through his first 45 games of the season.

Season stats
via hockeydb

  • Mammoth goaltender Karel Vejmelka has taken on the largest workload in the NHL so far this season. He went into Friday having appeared in an NHL-high 51 games while playing more than 3,009 minutes, more than 130 more than the next most-played goaltender.
  • He’s also tied with the Tampa Bay Lightning’s Andrei Vasilevskiy for the most wins this season (30), although he’s had a rough stretch since returning from the Olympic break, during which he’s gone 3-3-1 with a .871 save percentage and 3.4 goals against average. He’s been in net for the entirety of Utah’s recent three-game losing streak, and he got lost a rebound on the Connor Bedard game-winner that sealed the Mammoth’s overtime loss on Thursday.
  • The Mammoth are hoping to make the playoffs for the first time after missing out on the postseason during the franchise’s inaugural 2024-25 season. They’re being helped in that pursuit by the complete collapse of the bottom of the Western Conference, where every other team below the Mammoth (74 points) has 68 points or fewer.

And now for the Pens

Projected lines 

FORWARDS

Egor Chinakhov – Rickard Rakell – Bryan Rust

Anthony Mantha – Tommy Novak – Ville Koivunen

Elmer Soderblom – Ben Kindel – Avery Hayes

Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Ryan Shea / Kris Letang

Ilya Solovyov / Connor Clifton

Goalies: Arturs Silovs and Stuart Skinner

Potential Scratches: Sam Girard (injured), Evgeni Malkin (suspended), Ryan Graves, Kevin Hayes, Justin Brazeau (injured, week to week)

IR: Sidney Crosby, Filip Hallander, Jack St. Ivany

  • This marks the final game of Evgeni Malkin’s suspension before he is eligible to return during Monday’s matchup against the Avs.
  • The Los Angeles Kings helped the Penguins out by defeating the New York Islanders in regulation on Friday night. The Pens, now tied in points with the Isles with a game in hand, could gain some breathing room in the top of the Metro with a win tonight. Here’s a look at the standings after Friday night, courtesy of NHL.com.

Guardians News and Notes: Bo, Tugboat and Bazzana

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 13: Bo Naylor #23 of Team Canada swings bat against Team United States during the second inning at Daikin Park on March 13, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Bo Naylor and Tugboat Wilkinson shone for the Canadian World Baseball Classic team in a losing effort, and Bazaana returned to the Guardians in Cactus League play.

The Canadians lost to the USA 5-3, but Bo Naylor went 2-for-4 with this two-run homer:

Bo Canada, that’s an excellent nickname. Can I write a baseball-themed parody of O Canada or is that considered sacreligious?

Meanwhile, Matt “Tugboat” Wilkinson made some pretty great hitters look silly in two scoreless innings, with two walks and two strikeouts.

I suspect we will see Tugboat in the bigs for someone someday… perhaps as a reliever. The Dominican Republic destroyed Korea and will face the USA team next. Puerto Rico plays Italy at 3PM ET today, and Venezuela plays Japan at 9PM ET.

The Guardians lost a Cactus League game yesterday with Nolan Jones, Stuart Fairchild and Dayan Frias hitting doubles. Joey Cantillo struck out six in four and two-thirds but surrendered a homer and gave up three runs. Colin Holderman and Peyton Pallette both had clean innings, but Koby Allard did not. Travis Bazzana returned but went 0 for 2 with a strikeout.

Make sure to check out our fellow CtC user jeffguards82’s interview with Travis Hafner, here. Jeff did nice work. The Guardians play the Padres at 4:10PM ET today. Daniel Schneemann was a late scratch yesterday with a sprained ankle, but it’s not expected to be a very lengthy time away, as it’s apparently not a serious sprain.

March Madness bubble watch one day before bracket is unveiled

We are one day from the 2026 NCAA Tournamentbeing revealed, and there is still uncertainty when it comes to the bubble.

Conference tournament week is the final chance for teams to prove they belong in March Madness, and for the most part, squads weren't taking advantage of the opportunities. But everything got flipped upside down when Miami (Ohio) suffered its first loss of the season so it won't get an automatic bid. Now the bubble picture has a new member, making it a much more complicated race for the final spots in the brackets.

Most teams are done and will have to wait until the bracket announcement, but there are a few still playing looking to strengthen their case − and possibly secure automatic spots to make it an even crazier race. Here is a look at the March Madness bubble in the latest USA TODAY Sports Bracketology.

Texas

  • Record: 18-14 (9-9)
  • NET Ranking: 42
  • Quad 1 record: 6-9
  • Projected seed: No. 11
  • Quality wins: at Alabama, vs. Vanderbilt
  • Bad losses: vs. Arizona State (neutral), Mississippi State, vs. Mississippi (neutral)

You never want to go into Selection Sunday on a losing streak, and Texas is learning how uncomfortable it can make the situation. Losing the last two games of the regular season wasn't the worst thing in the world, but falling to conference cellar dweller Mississippi in your first conference tournament game is. Texas has the best chance to make the field out of the rest of the bubble, but that doesn't mean it will avoid playing in the First Four.

Santa Clara

  • Record: 26-8 (15-3)
  • NET Ranking: 40
  • Quad 1 record: 2-6
  • Projected seed: No. 11 (first four)
  • Quality wins: vs. Saint Mary's (twice)
  • Bad losses: vs. Loyola Chicago (neutral), vs. Arizona State (neutral)

The West Coast Conference is looking like a three-bid league thanks to Santa Clara doing as much as it could without winning the tournament title. The Broncos needed to make the championship game to feel confident about moving up and they did that with a second win over Saint Mary's. Santa Clara had a chance to beat Gonzaga but it was an impressive showing that put it in a comfortable spot as the most of the conference tournaments began.

VCU

  • Record: 25-7 (15-3)
  • NET Ranking: 44
  • Quad 1 record: 2-5
  • Projected seed: No. 11 (first four)
  • Quality wins: vs. South Florida (neutral)
  • Bad losses: at George Mason

A team that has a chance to flip the bubble around, VCU is still in the hunt for an automatic bid by advancing to the Atlantic 10 semifinal. Given the resume doesn't have any real strong wins, the Rams are far from done and will want to at least make the conference title game to position themselves in a not-so dangerous position. There will be lots of squads tuning in to this team.

SMU

  • Record: 20-13 (8-10)
  • NET Ranking: 37
  • Quad 1 record: 4-10
  • Projected seed: No. 11 (first four)
  • Quality wins: vs. North Carolina, vs. Louisville
  • Bad losses: vs. LSU (neutral), at California, at Syracuse, at Florida State

No team may have played its way out of the tournament like SMU. After looking like they were safe all season, the Mustangs ended the regular season on a rather ugly four-game losing streak. SMU needed a few wins in the ACC tournament to wash out that bad taste, but it only beat Syracuse before a dismal ending resulted in a loss to Louisville. It not only has 13 losses but there are some tough defeats sprinkled in, making for a much more stressful Selection Sunday than what was thought a few weeks ago.

Miami Ohio

  • Record: 31-1 (18-0)
  • NET Ranking: 64
  • Quad 1 record: 0-0
  • Projected seed: No. 11 (first four)
  • Quality wins: vs. Akron
  • Bad losses: vs. Massachusetts (neutral)

Everything changed when Miami (Ohio) lost its first game. Not only was it a defeat, it came in the first game of the MAC tournament against eighth-place Massachusetts, barely qualifying as a Quad 3 loss. The record speaks for itself but the resume leaves plenty to be desired, especially with the NET ranking dropping 10 spots after the loss. There are plenty of arguments for why this team should or shouldn't be in and they're all valid. The entire bubble hinges on whether the RedHawks make it in or not.

Miami RedHawks guard Peter Suder (5) reacts to a turnover in the second half of Mid-American Conference Tournament first round game between the Miami RedHawks and the UMass Minutemen at Rocket Arena in Cleveland on Thursday, March 12, 2026.

New Mexico

  • Record: 23-10 (13-7)
  • NET Ranking: 45
  • Quad 1 record: 2-7
  • Projected seed: First four out
  • Quality wins: at Virginia Commonwealth, vs. Santa Clara
  • Bad losses: at New Mexico State, vs. Colorado State

If you're going to get a second chance at life, better not waste it. New Mexico was gifted another shot thanks to some other teams faltering, but it needed to make some real noise at the Mountain West tournament to really take advantage of it. Unfortunately, the Lobos couldn’t capitalize, losing to San Diego State on a heart-breaking last second shot in the semifinals. It makes the path to a bid tough, and New Mexico will root for Utah State in the title game so the Aztecs don’t steal a bid.

Oklahoma

  • Record: 19-15 (7-11)
  • NET Ranking: 47
  • Quad 1 record: 4-9
  • Projected seed: First four out
  • Quality wins: at Vanderbilt, at Texas
  • Bad losses: vs. Arizona State (neutral), at Mississippi State, at South Carolina

When bubble teams struggled, Oklahoma took advantage by winning the last four of the regular season. It kept the momentum going in the SEC tournament with two major wins to advance to the quarterfinals, where it fell to Arkansas. While it was a valiant effort, a win was really needed to move up the bubble, so it's looking like it will be a tough Sunday for the Sooners.

Auburn

  • Record: 17-16 (7-11)
  • NET Ranking: 39
  • Quad 1 record: 4-13
  • Projected seed: First four out
  • Quality wins: vs. St John's (neutral), vs. Arkansas, at Florida
  • Bad losses: vs. Mississippi, at Mississippi State

The most perplexing record in the conversation. Auburn only beat Mississippi State in the SEC tournament, unable to get another signature win to help its case. The Tigers have great wins, but 16 losses would be the most for an at-large team and it's hard to justify, no matter the schedule. This will be the team everyone will be wondering about when the bracket comes out.

Indiana

  • Record: 18-14 (9-11)
  • NET Ranking: 41
  • Quad 1 record: 3-10
  • Projected seed: First four out
  • Quality wins: vs. Purdue, at UCLA, vs. Wisconsin
  • Bad losses: at Minnesota, at USC, vs. Northwestern (twice)

After ending the season with 1-5 mark in the last six games, the Hoosiers needed a strong showing in the Big Ten tournament to make a case. Instead, they were one-and-done, suffering another excruciating defeat to Northwestern. That will extend the tournament drought to three years.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness bubble watch one day before tournament bracket is set

March Madness bracket tracker: Who's in, out and on NCAA Tournament bubble

There will soon be a March Madness bracket.

It's something at this part of the college basketball calendar that the avid and casual fan is anxiously awaiting, as they build out their March Madness TV schedule and begin to think about how they will fill out their NCAA Tournament bracket challenges.

But as this time of the year also proves on an annual basis, the bracket looks different than it did March 13, two days before, or even a week before. It's the results of top-seeded teamslike Miami (Ohio) having lost early in their respective conference tournaments, and teams that entered championship week on the bubble sustained a loss that knocked them off.

The last two spots on the bubble have been interchangeable in the 48 hours since the Redhawks lost in the MAC tournament. It created some bad news for teams like Auburn, which was hanging onto a potential trip to the First Four despite their late-season slide. There have also been other teams that are in the "Next Four Out" trying to get in because of this, and the fact that they've been able to get some wins in their respective tournaments themselves.

The known factor for tomorrow's selection show is that it will include 31 teams who earned their respective conferences' automatic bid. The other likely known factor will be that Duke, Arizona and Michigan will see their names on the 1-seed line.

Ten different conference tournaments will crown a champion on Saturday around the country. There will be six teams crowned on Sunday in the lead-up to the bracket reveal on CBS at 6 p.m. ET, or after the Big Ten championship concludes, as it has a 3:30 p.m. ET tip-off.

Here's an updated look at the NCAA Tournament bubble, with which teams are locks and which are likely going dancing as conference tournaments continue and Selection Sunday inches closer:

March Madness bracket bubble watch tracker

Tracker based on games through Friday, March 13

NCAA Tournament automatic qualifiers

Here's a look at the list of teams that have already secured a bid to the NCAA Tournament by winning their conference's respective automatic qualifier ticket:

  • America East: March 14 at 11 a.m. ET
  • American: March 15 at 3:15 p.m. ET
  • ACC: March 14 at 8:30 p.m. ET
  • ASUN: Queens (N.C.)
  • Atlantic 10: March 15 at 1 p.m. ET
  • Big 12: March 14 at 6 p.m. ET
  • Big East: March 14 at 6:30 p.m. ET
  • Big Sky: Idaho
  • Big South: High Point
  • Big Ten: March 15 at 3:30 p.m. ET
  • Big West: March 14 at 10 p.m. ET
  • CAA: Hofstra
  • Conference USA: March 14 at 8:30 p.m. ET
  • Horizon League: Wright State
  • Ivy League: March 15 at Noon ET
  • MAAC: Siena
  • MAC: March 14 at 8 p.m. ET
  • MEAC: March 14 at 1 p.m. ET
  • Missouri Valley: Northern Iowa
  • Mountain West: March 14 at 6 p.m. ET
  • Northeast: Long Island
  • Ohio Valley: Tennessee State
  • Patriot League: Lehigh
  • SEC: March 15 at 1 p.m. ET
  • SoCon: Furman
  • Southland: McNeese
  • SWAC: March 14 at 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Summit League: North Dakota State
  • Sun Belt: Troy
  • WAC: March 15 at Noon ET
  • West Coast: Gonzaga

NCAA Tournament locks

  • Big Ten (8): Michigan, Illinois, Michigan State, Purdue, Nebraska, Wisconsin, UCLA and Iowa
  • Big 12 (6): Arizona, Houston, Iowa State, Kansas, Texas Tech and BYU
  • ACC (6): Duke, Virginia, North Carolina, Louisville, Miami and Clemson
  • SEC (7): Florida, Alabama, Vanderbilt, Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky and Georgia
  • Big East (3): UConn, St. John's and Villanova
  • Other (4): Gonzaga, Saint Louis, Saint Mary's and Santa Clara

Using Bart Torvik's T-Ranketology as a statistical database, the Big Ten leads the way with eight teams as "locks" for the upcoming NCAA Tournament. 35 teams have a "100%" chance of being included in the 68-team bracket per Bart Torvik's T-Ranketology.

It's also time to start talking about the West Coast Conference being a three-bid league after Santa Clara knocked off Saint Mary's in the conference tournament semifinals. Perhaps this is a high sell on the Broncos, but at 25-8 overall and a NET ranking of 40, they should be in the dance.

NCAA Tournament likely ins

  • ACC (1): North Carolina State
  • Big Ten: Ohio State
  • Big 12 (2): TCU and UCF
  • Big East: N/A
  • SEC (1): Texas A&M
  • Other (2): Miami (Ohio) and Utah State

Ohio State is close to being a "lock" for the NCAA Tournament, but remains in the "likely in" category for now. The wins that stand out on the Buckeyes' resume for the selection committee are their wins over Wisconsin (then-No. 24 team in the country, No. 27 in NET ranking) and Purdue (then-No. 8 team in the country, No. 10 in NET ranking).

Miami (Ohio) dropped down to this category following its loss to UMass in the quarterfinals of the MAC tournament. The Redhawks metrics suggest that they should be a lock for the NCAA Tournament, in addition to the fact that they went undefeated in the regular season, but it will come down to the selection committee. Could we be in for one of the more polarizing Selection Sunday snubs/conversations??

NCAA Tournament bubble teams

  • ACC (1): SMU
  • Big Ten (1): Indiana
  • Big 12 (1): Cincinnati
  • Big East (1): Seton Hall
  • SEC (3): Texas, Oklahoma and Auburn
  • Other (3): San Diego State, VCU and New Mexico

The bubble remains very fluid. Though they are separated by one less win, Oklahoma should top Auburn for one of the "last four in" spots as the Sooners made it one round further than the Tigers in the SEC tournament. Oklahoma has also won six of its last seven, while Auburn has lost four of its last seven, and nine of its last 12 since Jan. 31.

The Atlantic 10 is an intriguing conference for the bubble. Until it loses in Pittsburgh at PPG Paint Arena, Saint Louis is the conference's automatic bid. VCU remains firmly on the bubble after a quarterfinal win over Duquesne and could continue to solidify its spot in the NCAA Tournament with a semifinal win over St. Joseph's, but if the Rams — or Billikens — don't win the A10 or make the championship game, the conference could have three teams.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness bracket tracker: Who's in, out and on NCAA bubble

When does March Madness start? 2026 Men's NCAA Tournament schedule, dates

In just one more sleep, there will be finally be a bracket.

The 2026 men's NCAA Tournament selection show is scheduled to start at 6 p.m. ET on Sunday, March 15 when the NCAA selection committee unveils the entire field, one seed after another, from No. 1 through 16 and everything in between.

Some teams have already secured their spot in the field by winning their respective conference tournaments. There are a handful of automatic berths up for grabs on Selection Sunday, as the Ivy League, SEC, Atlantic 10, American Conference and Big Ten all still have to play their conference championship games.

Following First Four games on Tuesday, March 17 and Wednesday, March 18, first-round action will begin on Thursday, March 19 at various locations throughout the country. The Final Four will start on Saturday, April 4 in Indianapolis at Lucas Oil Stadium, with the national championship game two nights later.

Here's what to know about the key dates for March Madness:

When does March Madness start?

March Madness gets underway on Sunday, March 15 at 6 p.m. ET with the unveiling of the 68-team bracket. The bracket will be revealed on CBS once every conference tournament championship game has been completed.

Games get going on Tuesday, March 17 in Dayton, Ohio, at UD Arena with the First Four. The final 64-team bracket will then officially get underway with first-round games two days later on Thursday, March 19.

Complete March Madness 2026 schedule

Here’s a rundown of the schedule for the 2026 NCAA men's tournament:

  • First Four: March 17-18
  • First round: March 19-20
  • Second round: March 21-22
  • Sweet 16: March 26-27
  • Elite Eight: March 28-29
  • Final Four: Saturday, April 4 (at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis)
  • National championship game: Monday, April 6 (at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: When does March Madness start? NCAA Tournament schedule, dates

Can shorthanded Sixers beat tanking Nets?

PHILADELPHIA, PA - FEBRUARY 26: VJ Edgecombe #77 of the Philadelphia 76ers looks on during the game against the Miami Heat on February 26, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Well, the vibes just seem to keep finding new ways to get worse. Now with Tyrese Maxey sidelined for a few weeks, on top of Joel Embiid and Paul George’s absences and lingering frustrations from the Jared McCain trade (avoid watching Thunder games if you aren’t already), it pretty much feels like we’re waiting for the Play-In Tournament at this point. The Sixers have tumbled all the way down to ninth in the Eastern Conference at 35-31.

Fortunately for them on Saturday, though, they are at least facing off a team even further down the rankings. In an early 1-pm tip-off, they’re up against the 17-49 Nets, down at 13th in the East.

And not just a tanking Nets squad — a very shorthanded tanking Nets squad. Nic Claxton (rest), Drake Powell (left knee injury management), Day’Ron Sharpe (left thumb UCL tear), and Egor Demin (left plantar fascia injury management) are all out. Michael Porter Jr. — the offense’s best hope to make something happen — is doubtful with a right ankle sprain.

The Sixers won’t be getting more firepower back either, though. Embiid remains out with his oblique strain and we’ve received no further update from the team, after Nick Nurse had told reporters in Detroit that Embiid would be reevaluated on Friday (Mar. 13). Along with Maxey and George, Kelly Oubre Jr. (left elbow sprain) and Johni Broome (right knee surgery recovery) are also out, with the main center rotation potentially being completely absent too as Adem Bona and Andre Drummond are both questionable with back issues.

The Nets rank 27th in both offensive and defensive rating and are happily tanking, going 2-12 in their last 14 games. They should be highly beatable at both ends, but that just can’t be said about any opponent right now given the state of the Sixers. No result can be taken for granted.

Nevertheless, there hasn’t exactly been lots to get excited about with the Nets this year. Porter Jr. has been efficient as the team’s new leading scorer if he’s available (24.5 points per game on a 59.5 true shooting percentage), and there are some other role players like Sharpe who could be sound contributors to better teams. As Brooklyn has experimented with a range of young players while pursuing higher lottery odds, there are at least candidates to randomly pop on any given night, like Josh Minott who had the game of his career against the Hawks on Thursday.

We’ll see if anyone can do the same in Philly on Saturday, but overall their offense has been poor and this simply isn’t a team trying to win.

As for the Sixers, credit to Cam Payne for stepping up to do what he can in the winning department. His career-high 32 points and 10 dimes with a perfect 8-of-8 mark from three led the Sixers to a win against the Grizzlies this week, and he was solid against vs. the Pistons with 15 points on 5-of-10 shooting. If Payne brings it again on Saturday, that could be key in moving past these Nets.

The burden will really be on the shoulders of VJ Edgecombe to lead the Sixers to a win on Saturday, though, even against an opponent trying to lose. The rookie’s only coming off a 3-of-14 shooting night against the Pistons, but was far more well rounded earlier in the week against Memphis with 21 points, five rebounds, five assists, and three steals. We’ll see if he can be more like the latter this weekend.

It’ll also be interesting to look out for any more strong flashes from Dalen Terry. The 6-foot-6 guard didn’t have the ball too much against Detroit but showed off his footwork and touch around the basket with a few quality drives.

Ultimately, the Sixers can’t be competitive in the playoff picture now. And while some fans will debate whether the team should tank at this point, that may happen unintentionally while they’re this stuck with injuries. Losing Maxey for a while was the All-NBA-sized straw that broke the camel’s back in this case.

But for this weekend at least, the tanking Nets may be one of the team’s the Sixers are facing in the next couple of weeks that is actually beatable.

Game Details

When: Saturday, March 14, 1:00 p.m. ET
Where: Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, PA
Watch: NBC Sports Philadelphia
Radio: 97.5 The Fanatic
Follow: @LibertyBallers

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 3/14/26

Mar 3, 2026; Tampa, FL, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Max Fried (54) leaves the game against Panama in the fourth inning during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Good morning everyone, just for the weekend, we’ll be returning to our traditional Today on PSA open thread format. It’s sure to be a busy weekend, with the World Baseball Classic in its knockout rounds, and spring training starting to head towards its end. It’s a funny piece of dissonance, switching from watching high-stakes, high-level games in a major international tournament to monitoring low-key preseason matchups. It’s like watching two storylines at once, with one at the climax and the other still working through the opening exposition. That twin experience will continue today, with a pair of big quarterfinal matchups in the WBC, as well as some spring training action, which in Yankees camp features Max Fried making a tuneup start.

This morning on the site, Kento will recap last night’s WBC action, which featured one fairly tense match and one romp. Peter will write up an interesting entry in our Yankees Birthday series on Butch Wynegar, and Andres will continue our MLB Preview series with a rundown on the Tigers, before Josh provides the coverage of today’s game, which will see Fried take on the Phillies.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Philadelphia Phillies

Time: 1:05 p.m. EST

Video: Gotham Sports App, NBCSP+

Venue: George M. Steinbrenner Field, Tampa, FL

Questions/Prompts:

1. Who do you favor in today’s WBC matchups, between Italy and Puerto Rico, and Japan and Venezuela?

2. Do you want to see Gerrit Cole make an appearance in Grapefruit League play, or would you rather see him be more conservative and wait for a rehab stint before making appearances in games?

'Bigger than baseball.' Why being in Puerto Rico for WBC meant so much to Kiké Hernández

Puerto Rican rapper Young Miko, left, and Puerto Rico's Kike Hernandez pose for a photo before Miko tossed the ceremonial first pitch before a World Baseball Classic game between Panama and Puerto Rico in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
Puerto Rican rapper Young Miko, left, and Kiké Hernández pose for a photo before Miko tossed the ceremonial first pitch before a WBC game between Panama and Puerto Rico in San Juan, Puerto Rico on March 7. Team Puerto Rico won in 10 innings on a walk-off homer. (Fernando Llano / Associated Press)

A three-time World Series champion, Dodgers utilityman Kiké Hernández has had his fair share of clutch hits, home runs and game-saving, series-defining moments that will forever be etched in baseball lore.

Earlier this month, however, he witnessed something new.

On March 7, hours after Atlanta Braves second baseman Ozzie Albies hit the first walk-off home run in World Baseball Classic history to power Team Netherlands past Nicaragua in Miami, Athletics prospect Darell Hernaiz delivered a game-winning blast of his own to lift Team Puerto Rico over Panama in extra innings in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Hernández stormed out of the dugout at Hiram Bithorn Stadium alongside his teammates to greet Hernaiz at home plate and celebrate the monumental moon shot.

Read more:Blake Snell throws first bullpen session of spring training, taking key step forward

“There had never been a walk-off homer in the history of the WBC, and we [got] to see two in the same day, which was pretty cool,” Hernández said at his clubhouse stall at Camelback Ranch. “For me personally, I was running to home plate, conscious that I wasn’t necessarily part of the team so I couldn’t run laps around home plate, like I did on Freddie [Freeman’s] walk-off homers [in the World Series], but it’s still up there as one of those really cool moments that I’ll always remember.”

Unable to participate in this year’s WBC as he recovers from offseason left elbow surgery, Hernández left Dodgers camp to spend the first leg of the tournament with Team Puerto Rico.

“I got to experience it in a different way this year,” said Hernández, who has played twice in the WBC. “I was just kind of there as a fan, almost in like a coaching role. I get a lot more nervous when I’m not playing, because I really don’t have any power over it. I don’t have any control over what’s going on, so it was pretty nerve-wracking.”

He added: “Obviously, seeing that stadium packed out was pretty special. And of course, I’m still bummed that I don’t get to be a part of it, but I still support my people, and I’m still hoping they can win.”

During a Team Puerto Rico news conference last week, Hernández told reporters in Spanish that the WBC rates above the World Series. Hernández, who's played in five World Series, elaborated on his statement.

“I said it feels bigger,” Hernández said. “I didn’t say it’s bigger. Atmosphere, crowd, you’re representing your country. You’re not representing a city. You don’t always choose who you play for. Sometimes that’s out of your control and you know, when you’re representing your country, you’re playing along with your homies. Sometimes you’re playing along with people that you grew up with. Your people back home are rooting for you, at times.

"You’re playing in the United States, you’re playing for different teams, and sometimes they’re rooting against you. And for us, coming from our little island, the things that we can do for our island while the tournament is going on, it becomes a lot bigger than baseball, to where, it does not always feel that way when you’re playing for an organization in Major League Baseball.”

Hernández will be in Houston for Puerto Rico’s quarterfinal game against Italy on Saturday, and he said he doesn’t know if he would go to Miami if Puerto Rico reached the semifinals.

"I haven't had the conversation yet with Andrew," Hernández said, referring to Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman. "I only asked permission to go to Houston. We win in Houston, he might get another text message if I can go along for the ride, but haven't decided yet."

Read more:Dodgers prospect James Tibbs III attempts to show staying power after multiple trades

As for his rehab from surgery, Hernández said he's progressing rapidly and hopes to return in late May, when his 60-day IL stint expires.

“I’m not surprised that it’s going well,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “End of May, beginning of June is probably a safe bet. Something like that.”

Kyle Tucker hits first home run in Cactus League play

Dodgers left fielder Kyle Tucker hit his first home run of spring training to lead off the sixth inning of Friday's 10-7 win over the Seattle Mariners in Peoria, Ariz. Tucker also walked twice and scored twice as the Dodgers also got homers from Teoscar Hernández and James Tibbs III, his third of the spring.

"Man, it's just fun to watch him compete in the batter's box," Roberts said of Tucker.

Evan Phillips, Brusdar Graterol continue build-up

Injured relief pitchers Evan Phillips and Brusdar Graterol are progressing in their respective rehabs, Roberts said before Friday's game. Phillips is recovering from Tommy John surgery, while Graterol is working his way back from right shoulder surgery. Graterol hasn’t pitched in a game since the 2024 World Series.

“It’s going,” Roberts said. “I think [Phillips had] a pen today. It’s a short ten to fifteen-pitch pen, but it’s good effort, and he’s trending in the right direction. I think that with Evan, with some other guys that are continuing to build up, Graterol is another one, just continuing to build up, so they’re in their progression, but they’re still a ways away.”

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Payton Pritchard, master of the buzzer-beater

When the clock is winding down, Payton Pritchard has a knack for rising up.
Payton Pritchard hit a shot for the ages in Game 5 of the NBA Finals against the Dallas Mavericks in 2024. | NBAE via Getty Images

There’s a moment in every championship season where you realize, “Oh, wow. They’re actually going to do it.”

Up until that point, you convince yourself that everything that can go wrong will and nothing is solidified, even if your team is dominating.

But once that clarity hits you, it yields an indescribable feeling of euphoria and pure bliss like no other for diehard fans.

In the Celtics’ 2024 title run, the legendary knockout blow belonged to Payton Pritchard. It’s the kind of shot you remember exactly where you were when it happened, and the one you reminisce about decades from now and describe vividly to your grandkids.

It was fitting that Pritchard was the one who hit the heave from beyond half court at the end of the first half of Game 5. it extended the lead to 21, and you knew at that point that the rest was simply a formality. The Celtics were back on top.

As ESPN announcer Mike Breen put it: “He loves these.” It probably should have elicited a double-bang, but we’ll let it slide. The shot speaks for itself.

Pritchard does love these. It’s such a legendary trait for a player to have: Master of buzzer-beaters. Like, how sick is that? Master screen setter, master offensive rebounder and master energizer are all nice, don’t get me wrong, but being so money on buzzer-beaters is pretty electric.

When Pritchard has the ball at the end of a quarter, you genuinely believe it’s going in every time and are surprised when it doesn’t. How does he do it?

Well, it’s a combination of awareness (timing is everything), an endless bag of tricks (just ask the kids at the park) and a fearlessness that defines his aura (he genuinely believes it’s going in every time, too).

Oh, and you have to be one heck of a shooter, which he most certainly is.

Look at this one from Thursday night at the end of the half. Look closely at where he starts, what he does and when he releases the shot. There are three Thunder defenders closing in, including Cason Wallace right in front of him, but it doesn’t matter. The timing is impeccable, and that comes from hours and hours of repetition and being a total gym rat. He earned the right to talk a little smack after that one.

Thinking a little bigger picture here, it’s interesting how Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown are often the ones to take shots at the end of games. Logically, it makes sense. Give the ball to your two best players and let them create. But one could argue Pritchard should take a higher percentage of those shots than he does.

This season, Pritchard is shooting 45.5 percent from the floor, 50 percent from 3 and 100 percent from the line in the clutch. But he only attempts 0.8 shots per game in clutch situations, whereas Brown is up at 2.5 attempts. This is in no way a criticism of Brown, so don’t get it twisted; Pritchard has just earned the right to create for himself at the end of games.

Next time the game is on the line, look for Pritchard. There’s a good chance he’s going to hit it. They don’t call him Mr. Buzzer Beater for nothing.

Knicks’ Mitchell Robinson has career rebounding night in first 30-minute night of season

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Mitchell Robinson, who grabbed 22 rebounds, drives on Ivica Zubac during the Knicks' 101-92 win over the Pacers on March 13, 2026 in Indianapolis

INDIANAPOLIS — It’s hard to be surprised by Mitchell Robinson’s rebounding prowess at this point. It’s a recurring theme. 

But even for him, this was a special performance. 

He recorded a career-high 22 rebounds in the Knicks’ 101-92 win over the Pacers Friday night at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Nine of them were on the offensive glass. 

Mitchell Robinson, who grabbed 22 rebounds, drives on Ivica Zubac during the Knicks’ 101-92 win over the Pacers on March 13, 2026 in Indianapolis. AP

Perhaps just as important, though, he played 31 minutes, his biggest workload of the season. 

“It definitely feels good,” Robinson told The Post. “First time playing 30 minutes. Just getting out there and playing like that, to see the buildup, all the hard work I put in with this plan.” 

Robinson has already played more games than either of the past two seasons. The Knicks’ load management plan for him — not playing both legs of back-to-backs, and at times sitting non back-to-back games — has clearly worked, even it’s been frustrating at times. 



His workloads are only increasing. That’s a good development for the Knicks heading into the playoffs. 

“It’s obviously shown that it’s paid off,” coach Mike Brown told The Post, “because of his ability to, knock on wood, stay on the floor and play in games and play the minutes he played tonight.” 


Beyond Josh Hart and Karl-Anthony Towns both missing Friday’s game due to knee soreness, Jeremy Sochan was out due to illness. 

Pacome Dadiet, with the Knicks shorthanded, got very rare non-blowout minutes. In fact, Dadiet, along with Ariel Hukporti, came in together as Brown’s first subs of the game in the first quarter.

Dadiet promptly drilled a 30-foot 3-pointer from the logo as the shot clock expired in the first quarter. He also got a brief stretch of action in the third quarter.