Watch Dell Curry get his No. 30 retired by Hornets while sons Stephen, Seth look on

Forever a Hornet.

Dell Curry is that, and Thursday night the Charlotte Hornets legend — on and off the court — watched his No. 30 be raised to the rafters of the Spectrum Center.

"I want to thank all of you fans," Curry told the crowd to loud cheers. "You wrapped your arms around me when I was a 24-year-old kid. And you've supported me and my family ever since."

Curry watched his jersey go to the rafters flanked by his sons, Stephen and Seth, both members of the Golden State Warriors.

"Last night at a quiet, intimate family dinner is when it really hit me," Dell Curry said at a pregame ceremony, via the Associated Press. "I got a little emotional thinking about it.... This is a big deal. I understand how big of a deal this is."

There were video tributes from some of his former Hornets teammates and others, including Larry Johnson, Muggsy Bogues, Glen Rice, Kenny Gattison, and Rex Chapman.

"Dell Curry is synonymous with the Charlotte Hornets, he truly epitomizes what it means to have Hornets DNA," Hornets owners and co-chairmen Rick Schnall and Gabe Plotkin said in a statement. "Dell's impact extends far beyond basketball. His excellence on the court, his continued leadership, and his deep connection to this community make him a foundational figure in our franchise's history.

"Retiring his jersey is a tribute to everything he has meant — and continues to mean — to this city, this team and to the Carolinas."

The Hornets current players lived up to their part of the bargain on the night, beating the Orlando Magic 130-111 behind 27 points off the bench from Coby White and 25 from Brandon Miller.

Hubert Davis buyout at North Carolina: Contract details for Tar Heels coach

March Madness has struck again, hard.

Hubert Davis and No. 6 seed North Carolina not only were upset by No. 11 seed Virginia Commonwealth on Thursday, March 19 — ending the Tar Heels' hopes for a Men's NCAA Tournament run in the first round — but they also let the Rams claw back from a 19-point deficit to win 82-78 in overtime.

North Carolina did not score a single basket in the extra period.

The Tar Heels were already short-handed in the postseason after an injury to Caleb Wilson, who led the team in nearly every major category before a broken right thumb ended his season. But the way the Tar Heels lost, coupled with a second first-round exit in as many years, has raised questions as to the future of the program under Davis.

Davis opened his tenure at North Carolina in 2021-22 replacing the legendary Roy Williams with a run to the national championship game, where the Tar Heels gave up a 22-point lead and eventually fell 72-69 to Kansas. Since then, the Tar Heels have declined an NIT invitation in 2023 and made the Sweet 16 in 2024 before their recent stumbles.

Here's what to know of Davis' buyout and contract information at UNC following the Tar Heels' upset loss to VCU:

Hubert Davis buyout at North Carolina

According to Davis' contract, obtained by the USA TODAY Network, North Carolina would owe the coach $5.312 million if he were to be fired on April 1.

Hubert Davis contract details at North Carolina

  • Length: Contract is six-year deal through June 30, 2030.
  • Base salary remaining: $5.3 million.
  • Supplemental compensation remaining: $11.7 million.

According to North Carolina's contract with Davis obtained by the USA TODAY Network, the deal runs through June 30, 2030. In addition to his $1,250,000 annual base salary, he is earning $1,800,00 in supplemental pay for the 2026 contract year. The supplemental part of his compensation increases by $100,000 in each of the remaining four years left on the contract. Davis also earns $50,000 in annual expenses from the university and has separate yearly payments from Nike ($200,000) and Learfield Sports ($500,000).

His total pay for the 2026 contract year is $3,850,000. The compensation will increase by $100,000 in each of the remaining four years.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Hubert Davis buyout, contract details for UNC basketball coach

Tkachuk scores with 11.1 seconds left to lift the Senators past the Islanders, 3-2

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Brady Tkachuk scored with 11.1 seconds left to give the Ottawa Senators a 3-2 victory over the New York Islanders on Thursday night.

Tkachuk controlled the loose puck in the crease and squeezed it past goalie Ilya Sorokin for the comeback victory.

New York dropped out of a playoff position in the tight Eastern Conference, while Ottawa closed within four points of the Islanders.

Tkachuk and Anders Lee dropped the gloves on the opening faceoff in a fight between captains. Five minutes later, Ottawa’s Ridly Greig and Brayden Schenn also exchanged punches.

Shane Pinto had a short-handed goal to tie it at 1 for the Senators in the second period, and Warren Foegele sent a backhander past Sorokin 5:12 into the third to even it at 2. James Reimer made 19 saves for the victory.

Rookie Matthew Schaefer opened the scoring for the Islanders early in the second period, and Schenn made it 2-1 at 2:02 of the third.

Schaefer is the second 18-year-old defenseman in NHL history to have 50 points in a season, joining Phil Housley (57 in 1982-83).

Sorokin stopped 23 shots.

Up next

Islanders: At Montreal on Saturday night.

Senators: Host Toronto on Saturday night.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

One day in and March Madness already it's usual marvelous self

This is why we can never quit you, March Madness.

The Men's NCAA Tournament isn’t even through the first day of the first round and already we’ve had little High Point getting its first win in school history. Same for Nebraska, which did it in made-for-TV fashion with a coach whose grandfather once had the same job and whose son now plays for him.

VCU clawed itself out of a 19-point hole — 19 points! — to force OT against North Carolina and then won. Yes, you read that right. From a 19-point deficit to the round of 32, the largest comeback ever in the first round.

If all that wasn’t enough to warm the hearts of fans who’ve been turned off by all the greed and opportunism in college athletics of late, Siena comes along and puts top-seeded Duke on the ropes. Alas, the historic upset didn’t happen, but it at least gives Duke haters (read: everyone who didn’t go there) hope that the Blue Devils’ road to the Final Four might wind up being a dead end.

“It sucks that we came up short,” said Gavin Doty, who led Siena with 21 points, “but I'm proud of the fight we had.”

We know college athletics is gross and the people who are supposed to be shepherding it aren’t much better. Traditional rivalries have been blown up for TV money. Athletic directors and conference commissioners spent money with reckless abandon for decades but, now that players are getting some, are crying for Congress to come in and clean up the mess.

Even the NCAA Tournament isn’t safe, with The Devil, sorry, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, pushing for it, too, to be supersized.

It’s enough to make you want to turn off the TV or put away your phone unless your alma mater is playing. But then the NCAA Tournament rolls around and we get sucked right back in.

It isn’t perfect; it’s almost as big an offense as the ones Bruce Pearl committed that one-loss Miami (Ohio) was relegated to the First Four because it’s not from a power conference. But the games! The passion! The energy!

Fourth-seeded Nebraska played Troy in Oklahoma City, but you’d swear it was Lincoln by how loud and red the crowd was. They were breaking noise ordinances from the moment the Cornhuskers took the court for warm ups and they never lowered the volume.

“It was unbelievable. I’ve never been at a neutral site where it’s been louder,” coach Fred Hoiberg said.

Even late in the second half, when Nebraska was assured of snapping an oh-for-8 streak in the NCAA Tournament, Cornhuskers fans were cheering every possession.

“This is emotional, no doubt about it. My family history here — this means the world,” said Hoiberg, whose grandfather Jerry Bush was Nebraska’s coach from 1954-63 and whose son Sam starts for the Cornhuskers.

High Point’s drought wasn’t quite as long, given this is only the Panthers’ second appearance in the tournament. But the Big South champions came in looking to prove a point for the little guy and, boy, did they.

A team that can’t even get a return phone call about playing bigger schools during the nonconference season took down Wisconsin. That would be the same Wisconsin that handed Michigan its only loss during the Big Ten regular season, as well as Purdue, Illinois (twice) and Michigan State.

High Point also got shipped clear across the country to play in Portland, Oregon, rather than any of the six sites east of the Mississippi.

“High Point and Miami (Ohio) are 2-1 in Quad-1 games. We couldn't get games. They couldn't get games. Akron, UNC Wilmington, Belmont couldn't get games,” Panthers coach Flynn Clayman said, deservedly salty.

“That team (Wisconsin) right there is a fantastic team that beat five top-10 teams,” Clayman said. “If we can get games like this on neutral courts and some home games, I think we'd know who's really the best teams.”

Duke is supposed to be the best of the best in this tournament, the overall No. 1 seed with three projected first-round picks in the NBA Draft. But going back to Christian Laettner’s days, there’s something about the Blue Devils that makes them really easy to hate.

Maybe it’s all their success, with five NCAA titles and 18 Final Fours. Or the arrogance coach Mike Krzyzewski and players like Laettner, J.J. Redick and Grayson Allen oozed. Whatever. It makes you want to root against them.

Hard.  

Had Siena pulled the upset off, people across the country would have been partying for days. They’d be taking off work. Calling their friends. Meeting up at bars to celebrate. OK, they’re doing that, anyway. It’s March Madness. Still, for the better part of two hours, Siena gave us hope.

And that’s March Madness' secret sauce.

There are so many things in life we know are impossible. So many dreams we don’t have the guts to pursue or get kicked in the teeth trying to make reality. But in the NCAA Tournament, anything really can happen and there is a purity that remains in the pursuit of that.

It's Madness. And it's marvelous.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness delivers, year after year. Just enjoy it

No. 11 VCU stuns No. 6 North Carolina with 19-point rally, overtime victory

Terrence Hill Jr. led No. 11 VCU to an 82-78 upset victory in overtime over No. 6 seed North Carolina in the first round of the Men's NCAA Tournament on March 19.

Hill produced 34 points, five rebounds and five assists in 40 minutes of play for the Rams. He shot 13-of-23 from the field and was 7-of-10 from the three-point line.

The guard made a 3-pointer to give VCU an 80-78 lead with 15 seconds remaining in overtime. Nyk Lewis sealed the game with a pair of successful free throws.

The Tar Heels led by as many as 19 points during the game, but the Rams fought back for the sixth-largest comeback in March Madness history.

Hill also produced a 3-pointer for VCU off an assist from Lewis that cut into the Tar Heels' lead at 70-68 with 3:56 left in the second half. VCU was on a 12-0 scoring run and provided the Rams with some momentum to crawl back into the game.

The score was tied at 75 with 8.7 seconds in the second half.

Henri Veesaar had the ball for UNC but lost control of it and went out of bounds. VCU received the ball with 2.9 seconds but had the ball stolen by Seth Trimble. His shot was no good, sending the game to overtime.

Veesaar had a double-double with 26 points and 10 rebounds for the Tar Heels. Trimble added 15 points, eight rebounds and six assists.

Veesaar missed a pair of free throws with four seconds remaining in overtime. He also missed a 16-foot turnaround jumpshot as time expired at the end of the game.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: No. 11 VCU upsets No. 6 UNC in with historic March Madness comeback

Where VCU's epic March Madness comeback vs. UNC ranks in NCAA Tournament history

Not only did No. 11 seed Virginia Commonwealth upset No. 6 North Carolina in the first round of the 2026 NCAA Tournament, but it did it with an impressive comeback.

The Rams took down the Tar Heels 82-78 in overtime on Thursday, March 19, a result that didn't seem possible early in the game. North Carolina was up 56-37 early in the second half, primed to advance to the second round in the March Madness bracket, but the Rams went on a run to close the gap and forced overtime after a bucket in the final seconds. VCU held North Carolina without a field goal in overtime to pull off the victory.

It was among the largest comebacks in NCAA Tournament history, but where does it rank?

How large was VCU comeback over North Carolina?

VCU pulled off a 19-point comeback to beat UNC in overtime.

Where does VCU comeback rank in NCAA Tournament history?

The 19-point comeback is the largest in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Overall, it's the sixth-largest.

VCU Rams guard Terrence Hill Jr. (6) celebrates after defeating the North Carolina Tar Heels in overtime of a first round game of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Bon Secours Wellness Arena.

Largest comebacks in NCAA Tournament history

  • 1. 25: No. 14 seed BYU over No. 14 seed Iona (2012 First Four)
  • T-2. 22: No. 1 seed Duke over No. 3 seed Maryland (2001 Final Four)
  • T-2. 22: No. 7 seed Nevada over No. 2 seed Cincinnati (2018 second round)
  • T-3. 20: No. 4 seed Louisville over No. 7 seed West Virginia (2005 Elite Eight)
  • T-3. 20: No. 1 seed Ohio State over No. 5 seed Tennessee (2007 Sweet 16)
  • 6. 19: No. 11 seed VCU over No. 6 North Carolina (2026 first round)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness largest comebacks: Where VCU vs. North Carolina ranks

Moesch wins her 1st NCAA individual title as Virginia adds to team lead at swimming championships

ATLANTA (AP) — Anna Moesch won the first NCAA individual title of her career in the 200-yard freestyle on Thursday night at the women’s swimming and diving championships to help Virginia add to its team lead.

Moesch’s time of 1:39.23 marked the second fastest performance in the event, just shy of Missy Franklin’s 11-year-old record.

Moesch also helped Virginia claim a third relay title in the competition with a 1:24.11 in the 200 freestyle. It was the fifth straight year Virginia won the event.

Virginia sits in first place with 249 points heading into the third day of the four-day competition. Texas is second with 183 points and Stanford third with 173.

Olympic gold medalist Torri Huske clocked a 48.49 to win the 100 butterfly for her third career national title. Huske edged Virginia's Claire Curzan after finishing second last season. The top three swimmers finished under 50 seconds, with Huske's Stanford teammate, Gigi Johnson, coming in fourth.

Bella Sims led wire-to-wire in the 400 IM for Michigan's first individual NCAA title since Maggie MacNeil in 2021. It was also the first gold in the event by a Wolverine since Mindy Gehrs in 1993.

N.C. State's Eneli Jefimova took the 100 breaststroke with the fastest time in program history.

Senior diver Chiara Pellacani defended her one-meter national title for Miami. Pellacani became the first diver to win multiple national titles in a Miami career since Brittany Viola (2008, 2011).

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AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

Victoire beat Torrent 4-1 to tie Minnesota and Boston atop PWHL standings

LAVAL, Quebec (AP) — Laura Stacey scored twice and had an assist and the Montreal Victoire beat the Seattle Torrent 4-1 on Thursday night to tie Minnesota and Boston atop the PWHL standings.

Catherine Dubois — with her first of the season — and Skylar Irving also scored for Montreal (10-4-1-5), The Victoire rebounded after blowing a three-goal, third-period lead Sunday in a 4-3 overtime loss to Boston.

Victoire captain Marie-Philip Poulin missed the game because of a lower-body injury after leaving Sunday following a hit from forward Shay Maloney. Poulin favored her right leg, the same one the Canadian captain hurt during preliminary-round play against Czechia at the Milan Cortina Olympics.

Ann-Renée Desbiens stopped 24 shots, and Kati Tabin added two assists.

Alex Carpenter scored for last-place Seattle (5-1-2-12). Hannah Murphy made 19 saves. The Torrent have lost seven in a row on the road.

Up next

Torrent: At Boston on Saturday.

Victoire: Vs. Ottawa on Sunday night in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Hyo Joo Kim holes out for eagle and a 63 to lead Founders Cup at Sharon Heights

MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) — Hyo Joo Kim capped off a flawless round at Sharon Heights by holing out for eagle on the par-5 18th hole for a 9-under 63 that gave her a two-shot lead in the Fortinet Founders Cup.

The best scoring came in the morning at the course hosting an LPGA event for the first time, before the greens began to get firm and fast and made it difficult to get shots close.

Kim was more impressed with keeping bogeys off her card on the tree-lined course than she was with the eagle on the final hole.

“I am just so satisfied I had no bogeys,” Kim said. “I had some mistakes in the beginning, but I was able to save them. I ended with an eagle, so I ended pretty happily.”

As for that eagle?

“I couldn't see the hole from where I was, but people started cheering and then I heard a ”Yeah!" So I figured it went in," Kim said.

LPGA rookie Dongeun Lee also had an eagle on the par-5 closing hole, posting a 65. Polly Mack of Germany overcame a double bogey on the par-5 10th on her way to a 66, tied with Jim Hee Im.

Mack missed only two fairways and three greens and let her length and her wedges do the work in making eight birdies to offset the double bogey.

“Hit a lot of fairways and greens and left myself with a lot of birdie chances. Had a lot of wedges into greens, and that’s what I’ve been working on the most this offseason,” said Mack, who finished her college career at Alabama. “It’s good to see that coming into play and really coming along and seeing that progress. Just had a lot of short birdie putts. Used most of them to my advantage.”

Gaby Lopez, Gemma Dryburgh and Nastasia Nadaud were in the group at 68, all of them with the lowest score in the tougher afternoon conditions.

Nelly Korda, who skipped the Asia swing after winning the season opener in 54 holes because of cold weather, had a 70. Jeeno Thitikul, the No. 1 player in women's golf, shot 72.

The tournament began as a tribute to the 13 founders of the LPGA. It began in Arizona in 2011 and last year was the second event of the season and played in Florida. It has attracted eight of the top 10 players in the women's world ranking and kicks off a four-tournament stretch in the West ahead of the first major of the year.

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

Reichel has goal an assist in Boston debut to help the Bruins beat the Jets 6-1

BOSTON (AP) — Lukas Reichel had a goal and an assist in his Boston debut, Jeremy Swayman made 22 saves and the Bruins beat the Winnipeg Jets 6-1 on Thursday night to end a two-game losing streak.

David Pastrnak scored his 27th goal of the season and had an assist. Viktor Arvidsson and Pavel Vacha also each had a goal and assist, and Fraser Minten and Jonathan Aspirot added late goals.

Fighting for one of the final Eastern Conference playoff spots, the Bruins finished in regulation for only the second time in seven games. They were coming off overtime losses at New Jersey on Monday night and Montreal on Tuesday night.

Jonathan Toews ended Swayman's shutout bid on a tip-in at 5:38 of the third. Connor Hellebuyck stopped 22 shots for Winnipeg.

Reichel came over from Vancouver at the trade deadline and was recalled from Providence of the American Hockey League on Wednesday.

The 23-year-old German winger Reichel made it 2-0 at 6:23 of the second period. Hellebuyck misplayed the puck behind the net on a wraparound, inadvertently knocking it out front for Reichel to swat in.

Pastrnak opened the scoring with 5:08 left in the first. He got the puck back off his own rebound, moved to the front and fired in a wrister.

Arvidsson knocked in a backhander off a scramble with 1:44 remaining in the second, and Zacha scored at 3:15 of the third.

After Toews put Winnipeg on the board, Minten had a tip-in with 4:08 left and Aspirot capped the scoring with 1:42 to go.

The Jets opened a three-game trip after an eight-game homestand.

Up next

Jets: At Pittsburgh on Saturday.

Bruins: At Detroit on Saturday night.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

North Carolina collapses: 'This would be inexcusable for Hubert Davis'

VCU basketball completed a 19-point comeback against No. 6 seed North Carolina in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Thursday, March 19, winning its first March Madness game since 2016 in thrilling fashion.

The Rams, one of the stingiest mid-major teams of the 2010s, secured the sixth-largest comeback and biggest of the first round ever, in their upset of the Tar Heels, who were playing without star true freshman Caleb Wilson, a projected top-five pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.

VCU defeated North Carolina 82-78 in overtime behind Terrence Hill Jr.'s 34-point performance off the bench. He played 40 minutes in the game and also poured in five rebounds and five assists in the win, including a game-tying layup with 11 seconds left in the second half.

It's an impressive feat for VCU, who won the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament to earn an automatic bid before taking down North Carolina, all while being led by first-year coach Phil Martelli Jr., the son of former longtime St. Joe's coach Phil Martelli. VCU's former coach, Ryan Odom, left the program for Virginia last offseason.

VCU might not reach the Final Four in 2026 like it did in 2011, but the Rams did make first-round history nonetheless. Here's how social media reacted to VCU's comeback win:

VCU beats North Carolina in comeback win: Social media reacts

Here are the best reactions to VCU's 82-78 win over North Carolina on March 19:

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: North Carolina collapses in first-round upset vs VCU in March Madness

Southern closes on a 14-2 run to beat Samford 65-53 in the women's First Four

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Jaylia Reed scored 16 points, DeMya Porter had 15 points and 12 rebounds and Southern closed the game on a 14-2 run to beat fellow No. 16 seed Samford 65-53 on Thursday night in the NCAA Tournament.

Southern (20-13) won a game in the First Four for the second straight season, earning a chance to play top-seeded South Carolina on Saturday in the Round of 64. It's the Jaguars’ third appearance in the NCAA Tournament in the last four years.

D’Shantae Edwards began the fourth quarter by converting a three-point play to give Southern a 47-44 lead. Samford tied it twice in the next three minutes, but could not get any closer.

Reed put Southern ahead for good with 6:47 remaining on a 3-pointer to begin the game-closing run. Six different Jaguars scored during the run.

Samford missed eight of its last nine field goals.

Jocelyn Tate added 10 points and seven rebounds off the bench for Southern, which had nine of its 13 steals in the first half. The Jaguars finished with 20 points off turnovers.

Briana Rivera led Samford (16-19) with 16 points and freshman Kaylee Yarbrough added 11 off the bench. The Bulldogs were making their third appearance in the NCAA Tournament.

Both teams shot 31% from the floor in the first half, with 17 combined turnovers and Southern leading 27-24. No player had more than six points at the break.

Up next

Samford faces the high-octane Gamecock offense ranked fourth in the nation at 86.3 points per game. South Carolina enters its 22nd NCAA Tournament with its 14th-consecutive appearance at the event.

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AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-womens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Flynn Clayman is a March Madness star. Learn more about the High Point coach

Among its many wonderful traits, the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament has a way of creating indelible moments and making heroes of the people at the center of them.

It took only the fourth game of the first full day of the 2026 NCAA Tournament for such a moment to arise.

High Point pulled off the first upset of the tournament, with the No. 12 seed Panthers getting a bucket from Chase Johnston with 11.2 seconds remaining to earn an 83-82 victory against No. 5 seed Wisconsin on Thursday, March 19.

As impressive as High Point’s players were in earning the win, it was the team’s coach who stole the show in the minutes after the victory.

In a postgame interview with TBS, Panthers coach Flynn Clayman used the opportunity to talk up not only his own team, but other talented mid-major programs who struggle to get non-conference games against squads from the sport’s Power Five (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Big East and SEC) that don’t want to risk a loss to a team from one of college basketball’s smaller conferences.

"It looks pretty obvious to me that high-majors need to play mid-majors during the season," Clayman said. "Because they said we ain't played nobody? We played somebody now."

When later asked about how the win felt, he added that "It feels unreal, because nobody would play us, just like they wouldn't play Miami (Ohio). But they got to play us in this tournament."

The soundbites earned widespread attention and acclaim on social media, with college basketball fans won over by Clayman’s passion and the points he made.

As High Point moves on to face Arkansas in the second round of the NCAA tournament on Saturday, here’s a closer look at Clayman:

Who is High Point basketball coach?

Clayman is in his first season as High Point’s case, having assumed the role after Alan Huss left after last season to become the associate head coach and head-coach-in-waiting at Creighton, his alma mater.

Clayman had been Huss’ top assistant for the previous two seasons, a time in which the Panthers went 56-15 and made one NCAA tournament appearance. When Huss left, Clayman was promoted.

“As associate head coach, Flynn Clayman has played a pivotal role in HPU's recruiting and offensive success during the past two seasons," High Point president Nido Qubein said when Clayman was hired. "Players appreciate his leadership, and his values align with the values of our university. We are excited to have him lead the men's basketball program as head coach."

Clayman has made the most of the opportunity, improving to 30-4 this season after the win over Wisconsin. The 30 wins are a single-season program record and the NCAA tournament victory was the first in High Point’s history.

Flynn Clayman coaching career

Before arriving at High Point ahead of the 2023 season, Clayman had spent the entirety of his Division I coaching career at Southern Utah, where he was an assistant from 2017-23, before serving as the interim head coach for the final three games of the 2022-23 season. He went 2-1 in those contests.

In his two seasons as the associate head coach at High Point, he served as the team’s offensive coordinator. In each of those seasons, the Panthers finished among the top 40 teams nationally in adjusted offensive efficiency, according to KenPom, a remarkable feat for a program from a mid-major conference like the Big South.

Prior to getting into coaching, Clayman played college basketball, first at Colorado State before transferring to Troy, where he played from 2009-11. He played one final college season at the University of the Cumberlands, an NAIA school in Kentucky where his team won the Mid-South Conference Championship and reached the NAIA national tournament. That season, he led the NAIA in 3-point field goal percentage, at 48.1%.

Flynn Clayman record

After Thursday’s upset win over Wisconsin, Clayman has a career record of 32-5 as a Division I head coach, which includes a 2-1 mark as the interim head coach at Southern Utah in 2023.

This season, his first as High Point’s head coach, he was named the Big South Coach of the Year.

When it came to his team’s schedule this season, Clayman wasn’t lying in his post-game interview. The first-round NCAA Tournament game against Wisconsin marked the first time this season the Panthers have played against an opponent from one of the sport’s five major conferences.

Flynn Clayman age

Born Sept. 27, 1988, Clayman is 37 years old.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness: Who is High Point basketball coach Flynn Clayman?

AJ Dybantsa points tonight: How many points did BYU star score in upset loss to Texas?

BYU freshman star AJ Dybantsa showed why he's one of the top college basketball players in the country and a surefire lottery pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.

Dybantsa scored 35 points in a 79-71 upset loss to No. 11 seed Texas in the first round of the 2026 Men's NCAA Tournament at Moda Center in Portland, Oregon. His BYU squad was a No. 6 seed going into the game.

Texas was led by sophomore Matas Vokietaitis, who scored 23 points and pulled down a career-high 16 rebounds and added a block. Three other players scored in double figures for the Longhorns: Tramon Mark with 19 points, Dailyn Swain with 14 and Jordan Pope with 11.

Dybantsa led all of college basketball players in scoring with 25.3 points per game during the 2025-26 season.

Here's how he did in the first round of the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament:

AJ Dybantsa: Second half performance

BYU opened the second half on a 7-1 run, thanks to their ball-hawking perimeter defense on guys sliding over in help. The lead was cut to four, 48-44, with 17:31 left in the game. 

Texas responded and built their lead up to 12, leading 63-51 with 12:15 remaining. Dybantsa was held scoreless in the second half until a baseline reverse, two-hand slam in transition with about 13 minutes left in the game. He scored 15 second half points.

How Rick Pitino experimented with transfer portal at St. John's — and won

SAN DIEGO – Much like Deion Sanders in football, Rick Pitino has developed a bit of a reputation for himself in this new era of men’s college basketball.

He’s a Hall of Famer who pioneered the art of flipping a team roster and becoming king of the transfer portal, following a blueprint similar to the one used by Sanders, the football coach at Colorado.

The big difference so far is sustained results. Pitino has revived St. John’s with three straight winning seasons, including a second straight NCAA Tournament appearance, this time as a No. 5 seed here against Northern Iowa on Friday, March 20.

“We don’t build through the high school ranks,” Pitino said Thursday. “We build through the portal. And we keep the ones we want coming back, and the ones that want to leave should leave.”

If that sounds familiar, Sanders said something like it when he was hired at Colorado in December 2022. He told his inherited players to “go ahead and jump in that portal” to make way for change.  

Pitino effectively did the same when hired at St. John’s in March 2023. He brought in 10 transfer players and two freshmen on a roster of 14 that finished with a 20-13 record but fell short of the NCAA Tournament.

Check him out now. He revived a dormant program and could make a run in the tournament at age 73, largely due to this peculiar roster-building strategy.

How Rick Pitino built his St. John's roster

Pitino has landed one of the nation’s top-five transfer classes the past two years, including the nation’s No. 1 transfer class with seven players in 2025-26, according to 247Sports. One of them was Ian Jackson, a guard who ranked second in the team in scoring at North Carolina (11.9 points per game) before transferring to St. John’s.

“I came here to learn,” Jackson told USA TODAY.

That’s a common refrain among transfer recruits. Pitino has won more than 900 games in college, in addition to having coached in the NBA.

“When I came on my visit, I was star-struck, like I was meeting a celebrity, which I pretty much was, 100%,” said senior forward Dillon Mitchell, a transfer from Cincinnati.

The end result is a 15-player roster this season that lists nine transfers, four freshmen and two returning sophomores from Portugal and Greece. The team is led by Big East Conference player of the year Zuby Ejiofor, a senior who transferred from Kansas in Pitino’s first class in 2023 and now leads the team in four categories: 16.3 points per game, 7.1 rebounds per game, 119 assists and 73 blocks.

“I don't think I've enjoyed coaching a player as much since 1987, when I coached Billy Donovan (at Providence),” Pitino said of Ejiofor. “And I'm going to miss him terribly. And I'm just going to appreciate him while I have him."

Rick Pitino interviews each transfer recruit

Pitino’s success has reignited the college basketball scene in New York, where the Red Storm play in Madison Square Garden.

Before Pitino, St. John’s had sunk to as low as an 8-24 finish in 2016 and hadn’t been to the NCAA Tournament since 2019. Pitino’s first-round NCAA tournament victory last year against Omaha was the school’s first since 2000, which also helped erase memories of his own scandal-plagued past at Louisville before he moved on to Iona.

Such a quick turn of events is easier these days with the transfer portal, where new coaches can remake a roster overnight, unlike before 2021, when transfer players were required to sit out a year before playing at their new schools.

But few have been as good at it as Pitino. Sanders, a Pro Football Hall of Famer, took over a football team that was 1-11 at Colorado in 2022 before he flipped the roster in 2023. He brought in more than 45 transfer players out of a roster limit of 85 and finished 4-8 in Year 1. He then finished 9-4 in 2024 and 3-9 in 2025.

In Pitino’s case, he’s changed his portal strategy a bit and got a big return on his investment this year.

“This year we just went after culture guys, guys that we felt were really going to play for the name on the front, not worried about stats or making it somewhere else,” Pitino told USA TODAY Sports Thursday. “Just totally bought in. And we spent so much time interviewing and researching every individual from Dillon Mitchell, to (forward) Bryce Hopkins, to (guard) Dylan Darling, to (guard) Oziyah Sellers. Every single guy we did our homework and beyond that. And we got great culture guys. And it's paid off very well for us.”

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: What does Rick Pitino have in common with Deion Sanders? Portal madness