Ciss scores contested late goal to give Rayo Vallecano draw with Levante

MADRID (AP) — Pathé Ciss' controversial goal in stoppage time gave Rayo Vallecano a 1-1 draw and shattered visiting Levante’s hopes on Monday of a rare win that would boost its chances of avoiding relegation from La Liga.

Levante started the night second from bottom in the table and went ahead when 20-year-old Carlos Espí headed the opener — his fourth goal in three games — four minutes before halftime.

However, in the fourth minute of second half added time, Ciss stole in at the back post to control a cross and stroke the ball past goalkeeper Mathew Ryan. Although Levante claimed he handled the ball before shooting, Ciss swore there was no touch.

“It wasn’t our day but we can’t always get what we want,” the Senegal midfielder said. “We suffered with a man less and maybe this point will be crucial at the season’s end.”

The man less was Nobel Mendy, who was shown a second yellow eight minutes after halftime.

The red card forced the home side into a reshuffle and it was more dangerous with 10 men than with 11 as Ciss’ last-gasp equalizer proved.

The result extended Rayo’s unbeaten run to six league games and the point lifted it two places into 13th.

Levante remained in the cellar. Although it has seven points from a possible nine in recent weeks, it was three points behind third-from-bottom Elche and five behind Alaves.

___

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

Game Preview #69 – Timberwolves vs. Suns

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - DECEMBER 08: Naz Reid #11 of the Minnesota Timberwolves drives to the basket against Oso Ighodaro #11 of the Phoenix Suns in the first quarter at Target Center on December 08, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Phoenix Suns
Date: March 17th, 2026
Time: 7:00 PM CDT
Location: Target Center
Television Coverage: FanDuel Sports Network – North
Radio Coverage: Wolves App, iHeart Radio

For a few beautiful, deeply misleading moments in the third quarter against Oklahoma City, the Timberwolves had all of us believing again.

They were swarming defensively. They were forcing the Thunder into ugly, uncomfortable possessions. The reigning NBA MVP, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, had been held to just four first-half points, blanketed by Anthony Edwards on the perimeter and rejected at the rim by Rudy Gobert. Ayo Dosunmu had caught absolute fire in the second quarter, piling up 15 first-half points and drilling threes with confidence. Julius Randle, who had looked like he’d been sleepwalking through parts of the post-All-Star schedule, suddenly seemed awake again, scoring efficiently around the basket and actually looking like the bruising, playoff-useful version of himself.

And despite all the usual self-inflicted nonsense, the turnovers, the loose rebounds they failed to secure, and the extra possessions they gifted away, the Wolves had built an nine-point lead. It wasn’t pristine, but it was gritty, it was competitive, and it felt like Minnesota had a real chance to walk into Oklahoma City, punch the champs in the mouth for the third time in four meetings, and announce to the Western Conference that the rumors of their collapse had been exaggerated.

Then the floor gave way.

Suddenly the defense lost its edge. Rotations were a beat late. Closeouts weren’t quite there. Those Thunder possessions that had looked so difficult in the first half started turning into open threes and comfortable rhythm looks. The Wolves’ offense, which had been hanging together through effort and timely contributions, started to grind and seize up. Ayo cooled off. Julius lost his edge. Edwards was trapped, crowded, doubled, and no one else could consistently rise up and punish Oklahoma City for overcommitting to him. The turnovers kept coming. The offensive rebounds kept coming. The second- and third-chance points kept piling up. And with every careless possession and every missed box-out, you could feel the game slipping.

By the end of it, the Wolves hadn’t just lost. They had been reminded, again, what the difference is between a team that plays like a champion and a team that keeps insisting it can just flip a switch whenever it feels like it. Oklahoma City looked like a team that knows exactly who it is. Minnesota looked like a team still arguing with itself in the mirror.

Now, if you’re feeling generous, and at this point I’m not sure how many Wolves fans still are, you can look at the glass half full and say Minnesota was right there. If they take better care of the ball, if they rebound with more force, if they stop tossing away possessions, maybe we’re talking about a statement win. Maybe we’re talking about a team that weathered a brutal week and still came out looking dangerous. Maybe we’re talking about momentum.

Instead, we’re talking about another demoralizing loss and another example of the gap between a team with championship maturity and one that is still trying to fake it until it makes it.

And now, because the Western Conference is the basketball equivalent of a highway pileup in freezing rain, the Wolves are sitting firmly in the six seed, just a game and a half ahead of the Phoenix Suns and the Play-In. Which means the next game on the schedule, a game that a month ago might have felt like just another meaningful late-season test, is now blaring red lights and sounding sirens.

Because this one is not just important.

This is a full-on HAVE TO WIN game.

Phoenix has already beaten Minnesota twice. One of those losses was the season’s biggest collapse. Holding a sizeable late-game lead on the road in the desert, the Wolves hemorrhaged turnovers and free throws and somehow managed to bleed out in the final minute, snatching defeat from the jaws of what should have been a routine win. The Suns are sitting directly beneath them in the standings, holding the tie-breakers, with a chance to gain serious ground and shove Minnesota even closer to the trapdoor. And with Detroit looming twice, Houston twice, and games against Boston and others still ahead, this is not the time for the Wolves to make their margin for error any thinner than it already is.

This is where the season starts asking serious questions. Can they finally stop playing with their food? Can they take an inferior, injured team seriously on their home floor? Can they act like a group that wants one of those top six spots, or are they going to keep wandering through March like they’re entitled to a playoff berth because of what happened last spring?


The Keys to the Game:

#1 – Take care of the basketball.

The turnovers lately have not just been bad, they’ve been insulting. Against the Clippers and Thunder, Minnesota repeatedly sabotaged itself before the offense even had a chance to function. Against Oklahoma City, the Wolves meaningfully outshot the Thunder, and it didn’t matter because they kept ending possessions before they ever got a real look. You simply cannot beat good teams, or even beat decent teams cleanly, when you’re casually throwing away twenty possessions a game. Against Phoenix, that nonsense has to stop. No gifts. No shortcuts. No helping the opponent do its job.

#2 – Dominate the paint and the glass.

This is where the Wolves catch a real break. Mark Williams, whose last feisty battle with Gobert ended with Rudy’s flagrant two, will not be playing. That matters. A lot. Phoenix’s frontcourt is thinner now, and that means Gobert should walk into this game with the expectation that the paint belongs to him. Sunday in Oklahoma City was a pedestrian game for Rudy by his standards. Fine. Flush it. This is the bounce-back spot. He needs to inhale rebounds, protect the rim, and turn the paint into a miserable experience for anybody wearing a Suns jersey.

Randle also has to build on the good things he showed against OKC. There were real signs of life there. He found his shot. He was physical. It was in Phoenix last year that he started to really wake up late in the season and carry that into a strong postseason. This would be an awfully good time to start writing that script again.

#3 – Win the little hustle battles.

Phoenix is not overwhelming anybody with talent. They’re not steamrolling teams because they have more stars. They’re surviving and climbing because they play hard, they stay connected, and they do all the boring little things that add up to wins. They scrap for rebounds. They stay in possessions. They don’t beat themselves quite as often. That’s the exact mentality Minnesota has to mirror. No getting outworked. No giving up second-chance points. No mental nonsense at the free-throw line. Every small play in this game matters because the standings say it does.

#4 – Anthony Edwards has to look like Anthony Edwards.

Oklahoma City made life miserable for him and deserves credit for it. They loaded up, they doubled, they forced the ball out of his hands, and to Ant’s credit he largely stayed composed and used that attention to open things up for Ayo and others. But this is not the same kind of challenge. Dylan Brooks, one of the guys who tends to turn games against Ant into full-on personal vendettas, will not be there. Without him, Phoenix does not have the same kind of defensive shell. This should be an Ant game. A 40-piece kind of night where he bends the game to his will and makes a statement that Phoenix is not grabbing his team’s spot on his home floor.

That doesn’t mean hero ball. It doesn’t mean dribbling the air out of the ball and firing late-clock nonsense. It means smart aggression, rim pressure, and using his gravity to open everything else up.

#5 – Play intense, connected defense – especially on the perimeter.

The Wolves cannot let Devin Booker get loose. He cannot be allowed to stroll into the paint, find comfort, and start building one of those silky 34-point nights. He needs to be put in a straightjacket. This has to be a high-energy, high-effort, highly communicative defensive performance. The Wolves have the size advantage. They have the home crowd. They should have the desperation edge.

Phoenix, in a lot of ways, is playing with house money. They weren’t supposed to be here. To be fair, Minnesota wasn’t supposed to be here fighting to stay out of the play-in either. The difference is the Wolves put themselves here with all the avoidable nonsense, including the previous two losses to this same team.

That’s why the heat has been turned all the way up now. No more moral victories. This is one of those nights where the Wolves need to act like a team that understands what’s at stake. The talent edge is theirs. The size edge is theirs. The urgency edge had better be theirs. If they can’t get up for this game, if they can’t beat an inferior and injured Suns team that is openly trying to take their playoff spot, then at some point you have to stop doing the hopeful fan thing and come to the difficult conclusion: Maybe they don’t deserve one of those six spots after all.

But that’s the beauty and cruelty of the NBA in March. You don’t have to answer the question in theory. You answer it on the floor.

Tuesday night at Target Center, the Wolves have a chance to do exactly that.

Mavericks vs Pelicans Preview and Injury Update: Southwest Division foes face off once more

NEW ORLEANS, LA - DECEMBER 22: Zion Williamson #1 of the New Orleans Pelicans dribbles the ball during the game against the Dallas Mavericks on December 22, 2025 at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, Louisiana. 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Dallas Mavericks (23-45) head to Louisiana to face of against an old friend/foe in the New Orleans Pelicans (22-46). Dallas took the Cavaliers to the woodshed on Sunday afternoon and have had a full day to recover and get ready for tonight’s game. The Pelicans, meanwhile, just keep winning. They have no incentive to lose, seeing as they don’t own this year’s draft pick, but it’s been fascinating watching them from afar (yes I know they lose to the Rockets in maddening fashion on Friday).

Here are the main things you need to know:

  • WHO: Dallas Mavericks vs New Orleans Pelicans
  • WHAT: Heading to Louisiana for a Southwest Division game
  • WHERE: Smoothie King Center, New Orleans, Louisiana
  • WHEN: 7:00 pm CST
  • HOW: KFAA Channel 29, MavsTV streaming, NBA League Pass

The Mavericks injury report is worth taking a gander at before tipoff. The two-way guys are all questionable, so the coaching staff is still deciding if they should play or not. Daniel Gafford is going to miss this game, as is Klay Thompson (each is doubtful as of this writing). Caleb Martin is questionable. Everyone else should be playing unless I cannot read (entirely possible).

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

The New Orleans side of the report is clean, with Dejounte Murray listed as questionable with an illness. deThe line is a whopping 8.5 favoring the Pelicans. That reads weird to me but Dallas is on their fourth game in five nights and New Orleans has been off for a few days. Still, that’s a massive line for one bad team to be favored over the other. We’ll see shortly I suppose!

Be sure to chime in with your predictions in the comments!

Consider joining Josh and me on Pod Maverick live after the game on YouTube, we should start LATE. Thanks so much for spending time with us here at Mavs Moneyball. Let’s go Mavs!

LIVE DISCUSSION: Portland Trail Blazers at Brooklyn Nets, 7:30 PM ET

PHILADELPHIA, PA - MARCH 14: Ben Saraf #77 of the Brooklyn Nets shoots a free throw during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers on March 14, 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 Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Inhale. Exhale. Michael Porter Jr, Day’Ron Sharpe, Noah Clowney, Egor Demin, and Terance Mann are all out for Brooklyn. That’s great news for those getting ready for the big dance.

In the meantime, Brooklyn hoops. 15 games remain including tonight.


🏀 KEY INFO

Who: Portland Trail Blazers (32-36) at Brooklyn Nets (17-50)
When: 7:30 PM ET
Watch: YES Network


✍️ Game Preview

“Amazingly, this is the first meeting between the two teams this season. This is the second night of a back-to-back and game two of a six game road trip for the Blazers. Former Nets assistant coach Tiago Splitter is coaching the Blazers these days. And it feels like a lifetime ago, but Splitter got the job because the feds got Chauncey Billups in a sweep. If he can get them into the playoffs, there’s a chance he’ll be there permanently.” | Brian Fleurantin


💬 DISCUSSION

Share your thoughts and react, but please be respectful. NetsDaily prides itself on being a safe space for Nets and basketball fans alike to have healthy conversation. Reach out to Anthony Puccio or Net Income with any issues.

Igor Thiago celebrates Brazil call-up with goal in Brentford draw with Wolves

LONDON (AP) — Igor Thiago celebrated his first call-up to the Brazil squad by scoring Brentford’s second goal in a 2-2 thriller against Wolves in the Premier League on Monday.

Nearing halftime, the striker tapped into the empty net for his 19th league goal of the season.

A few minutes earlier, Michael Kayode's glancing header put Brentford 1-0 up. It was his first goal in his 41st league appearance for the Bees.

Adam Armstrong pulled a goal back for Wolves a minute before halftime to round off a thrilling half.

Wolves, the league's bottom side, equalized with 13 minutes left when Tolu Arokodare headed home at the back post.

The result extended Wolves' unbeaten league run to three games but it remained bottom of the table, 12 points from safety.

“We know where we are in the league, it hasn’t been good enough," Armstrong said, "but since I’ve come in it’s been very positive. The results have been changing. To get my first goal is nice but the main thing is to get the three points. We didn’t quite get that today but we’ll take the positives.”

Brentford stayed in seventh place, two points ahead of Everton but three behind Chelsea.

"We’re disappointed to have let the game slip," Bees captain Jordan Henderson said.

Just hours before kickoff, Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti named Thiago in the squad for friendlies against France in Boston on March 26 and Croatia in Orlando four days later.

The former Cruzeiro, Ludogorets and Brugge striker was one of nine forwards included in a 26-man list that featured Endrick of Lyon, Rayan of Bournemouth, and João Pedro of Chelsea but no Neymar, who has underperformed recently at Santos.

He has excelled for Brentford this season and could have scored one or two more against Wolves. His 19-goal tally is the highest ever by a Brentford player in one Premier League season.

___

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

Game Thread: Suns @ Celtics

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 24: Derrick White #9 of the Boston Celtics handles the ball against Ryan Dunn #0 of the Phoenix Suns during the second half at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 24, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. 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. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Game 68.

Magic at Hawks: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

Jan 7, 2024; Orlando, Florida, USA; Orlando Magic forward Paolo Banchero (5) drives to the basket as Atlanta Hawks forward Jalen Johnson (1) attempted to defend during the first quarter at Kia Center. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

The Atlanta Hawks (36-31) welcome the Orlando Magic (38-28) to the city for a night battle of the hottest teams in the NBA.

Starting lineup:

  • CJ McCollum
  • Nickeil Alexander-Walker
  • Dyson Daniels
  • Jalen Johnson
  • Onyeka Okongwu

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen

Location: State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA

Start Time: 7:00 PM EDT

TV: N/A

Radio: Sports Radio 92.9 the Game (WZGC-FM)

Streaming: Peacock

Fiorentina beats Cremonese to pull away from Serie A drop zone

CREMONA, Italy (AP) — Fiorentina beat fellow Serie A struggler Cremonese 4-1 in its biggest away win of the season and moved four points clear of the relegation zone on Monday.

It was only the second time all season that Fiorentina scored more than three goals in one game and moved it into 16th place.

The loss extended Cremonese’s winless run to 14 matches and left it third from last, four points behind Fiorentina and three behind Lecce.

Pisa and Verona shared last place.

Fabiano Parisi put Fiorentina ahead with a fine solo effort after 25 minutes and Roberto Piccoli doubled the when he converted a perfect pass from Robin Gosens.

Dodo made it 3-0 with a lovely solo goal early in the second half and although David Okereke pulled a goal back for Cremonese nearly an hour in, Albert Gudmundsson added the fourth for Fiorentina.

___

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

College Basketball Crown bracket revealed: Teams, schedule

The 2026 College Basketball Crown bracket is set.

The postseason tournament backed by Fox Sports revealed its field Monday, March 16 for its second iteration. It was announced on the FS1 show "First Things First."

Teams in the 2026 Crown tournament are (in alphabetical order):

  • Baylor
  • Colorado
  • Creighton
  • Minnesota
  • Oklahoma
  • Rutgers
  • Stanford
  • West Virginia

Introduced in 2025, the College Basketball Crown is a postseason tournament in Las Vegas centered on name, image and likeness prizes for teams that didn't make the NCAA Tournament. Nebraska won the inaugural tournament.

The 2026 edition has eight teams instead of 16 like last year, and there were slots reserved from specific conferences; two teams from the Big Ten, Big 12 and Big East that didn't receive an NCAA Tournament bid, as well as two wild card selections. There is a $500,000 NIL prize pool for players in the tournament.

The College Basketball Crown trophy on display following the championship game between the UCF Knights and the Nebraska Cornhuskers at T-Mobile Arena on April 06, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

College Basketball Crown bracket

College Basketball Crown 2026 schedule

The 2026 College Basketball Crown will be played April 1-5 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena and T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. It will air on Fox and FS1.

Quarterfinals (MGM Grand Garden Arena)

  • G1: Oklahoma vs. Colorado (April 1, 8 p.m. ET, FS1)
  • G2: Baylor vs. Minnesota (April 1, 10:30 p.m. ET, FS1)
  • G3: Stanford vs. West Virginia (April 2, 8 p.m. ET, FS1)
  • G4: Rutgers vs. Creighton (April 2, 10:30 p.m. ET, FS1)

Semifinals (T-Mobile Arena)

  • Game 1 winner vs. Game 2 winner (April 4, 1:30 p.m. ET, Fox)
  • Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 winner (April 4, 4 p.m. ET, Fox)

Final (T-Mobile Arena)

  • TBD vs. TBD (April 5, 5:30 p.m. ET, Fox)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College Basketball Crown bracket: Who is playing in The Crown 2026?

Wizards vs. Warriors discussion

WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 08: Bilal Coulibaly #0 of the Washington Wizards handles the ball against the Miami Heat at Capital One Arena on February 08, 2026 in Washington, DC. 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. (Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Wizards play the Golden State Warriors at 7 p.m. ET at Capital One Arena. Chat about it in the comments below!

Rockets and Lakers battle it out in H-town

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 13: Jabari Smith Jr. #10 of the Houston Rockets congratulates Kevin Durant #7 in the fourth quarter against the New Orleans Pelicans at Toyota Center on March 13, 2026 in Houston, Texas. 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. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Houston Rockets vs Los Angeles Lakers

March 16, 2026

Location: Toyota Center — Houston, Texas

TV: Peacock

Radio: KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App, SCHN+

Time: 830pm

Probable Starting Lineups

Rockets: Amen Thompson, Tari Eason, Jabari Smith Jr., Kevin Durant, Alperen Sengun

Lakers: Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves, Lebron James, Marcus Smart, Deandre Ayton

Average score of March Madness final: Tips for winning bracket pool tiebreaker

Let’s be honest: you know why you’re here.

Every year, in the days leading up to the start of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, millions of people across the country with wildly varying levels of ball knowledge fill out brackets to try to determine who will make the Final Four and be crowned the national champion.

Oftentimes, there’s a tiebreaker for those bracket competitions: Seeing who comes the closest to picking the combined number of points scored in the national championship game.

While you could always just guess — which is mostly what filling a bracket’s all about, right? — why not make a potential March Madness bracket-winning prediction with a little more knowledge?

Here’s a closer look at the average score of national championship games:

Average score of March Madness final

Since 2016, the average combined point total from NCAA men’s basketball championship games is 142.4 points.

That time marker is a notable one. Ahead of the 2015-16 season, the NCAA cut the shot clock down from 35 seconds to 30, a rule that’s still in place today. So while championship games before that could provide some helpful guidance, it’s most useful to work only with title games that have come under the same time constraints as today, with more possessions and a generally faster pace of play.

During that nine-season stretch, the highest-scoring championship game came in 2019, when Virginia and Texas Tech combined for 162 points in the Cavaliers’ 85-77 victory, though that game went into overtime. Since 2009, it’s the only title game that has required overtime. The lowest-scoring game of the bunch came last year, when Florida and Houston had 128 combined points in the Gators’ narrow 65-63 win.

Interestingly, two of the past three championship games have had a combined 135 points exactly, though in what’s likely just a coincidence, both of the games in question involved UConn. If you’re looking for a sweet spot for point totals, it might be this: five of the past nine championship games have had between 135 and 141 combined points.

March Madness championship scores

Here’s a look back at the past nine NCAA tournament championship game final scores, as well as the combined point total:

  • 2025: Florida 65, Houston 63 (128 combined points)
  • 2024: UConn 75, Purdue 60 (135)
  • 2023: UConn 76, San Diego State 59 (135)
  • 2022: Kansas 72, North Carolina 69 (141)
  • 2021: Baylor 86, Gonzaga 70 (156)
  • 2020: Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
  • 2019: Virginia 85, Texas Tech 77 (OT) (162)
  • 2018: Villanova 79, Michigan 62 (141)
  • 2017: North Carolina 71, Gonzaga 65 (136)
  • 2016: Villanova 77, North Carolina 74 (151)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Bracket tiebreaker: What's average score of March Madness final?

Preview: Wizards host Pistons on Tuesday night

DETROIT, MI - FEBRUARY 5: Bilal Coulibaly #0 of the Washington Wizards drives to the basket during the game against the Detroit Pistons on February 5. 2026 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. 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 Brian Sevald/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Washington Wizards play the Detroit Pistons tomorrow night. Let’s get to the preview.

Game info

When: Tuesday, Mar. 17 at 7 p.m. ET

Where: Capital One Arena

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries: For the Wizards, Kyshawn George (elbow), Anthony Davis (hand, groin), Cam Whitmore (shoulder), and D’Angelo Russell (not with team) are out. Leaky Black and Alex Sarr also will sit out tonight’s game against the Warriors.

For the Pistons, Isaiah Stewart is out.

What to watch for

I am writing this recap before the Wizards’ game against the Golden State Warriors. Let’s just say that the Pistons just lost to the Toronto Raptors in their last game and won three straight before that. The second half of the storm hitting the Washington area and much of the eastern USA hasn’t arrived yet. And hey, while I’m sure I’ll still have a roof over my head, I’m not sure if I’ll have power. So I’m writing this now.

The Wizards are underdogs as usual, but hopefully we’ll see an upset.

Phoenix Suns (39-28) at Boston Celtics (44-23) Game #68 3/16/26

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 24: Grayson Allen #8 dribbles around a screen set by Oso Ighodaro #11 of the Phoenix Suns on Ron Harper Jr. #13 of the Boston Celtics during the second half at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 24, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Celtics defeated the Suns 97-81. 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. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Phoenix Suns (39-28) at Boston Celtics (44-23)
Monday, March 16, 2026
7:30 PM ET
Regular Season Game #68, Home Game #33
TV: NBCSB, 3TV, NBA-LP
Radio: 98.5 Sports Hub, KMVP 98.7, Sirius XM
TD Garden

The Celtics continue their home stand as they host the Phoenix Suns. This is the 2nd and final game between these two teams this season. The Celtics won the first game 97-81 in Phoenix on February 24. The Celtics won the series 2-0 last season and have won 5 straight against the Suns.. The Celtics are 80-60 overall all time and 44-24 in games played in Boston.

The Celtics are 2nd in the East, 4 games behind 1st place Detroit. They are 1.5 games ahead of 3rd place New York, 3.5 games ahead of 4th place Cleveland, 5.5 games ahead of 5th place Orlando, 6 games ahead of 6th place Toronto and 6.5 games ahead of 7th place Miami. The Celtics are 15-9 against Western Conference opponents. They are 22-10 at home and 6-4 in their last 10 games. They are coming off a win in their last game. (The Knicks and 76ers are playing as I write this so that may change.)

The Suns are 7th in the West, 13.5 games behind 1st place OKC, 3.5 games behind the 3rd place Lakers, 2.5 games behind 4th place Houston, 1.5 games behind 5th place Denver, and 6th place Minnesota. They are 5 games ahead of the 8th place LA Clippers. They are 14-10 against Eastern Conference opponents. They are 17-15 on the road and 6-4 in their last 10 games. They are coming off a loss in their last game.

After this game at home against Phoenix, the Celtics will close out their home stand against Golden State. Then they will play one game at Memphis before a 3 game home stand against Minnesota, Oklahoma City and Atlanta. Then it’s back on the road for a 4 game trip through Charlotte, Atlanta, Miami and Milwaukee. They will then play two games at home against Toronto and Charlotte before one game on the road at New York. They will finish the season with 2 games at home against New Orleans and Orlando.

The Suns are playing in the 4th game of a 6 game road trip. They will play at Minnesota and at San Antonio before returning home for a 4 game home stand against Milwaukee, Toronto, Denver and Utah. Then it’s a 4 game road trip through Memphis, Orlando, Charlotte and Chicago. Then it is 2 games at home against Houston and Dallas before ending the season on the road against the Lakers and OKC.

The Celtics have Nikola Vucevic on the injury report due to surgery to stabilize a fracture in his right ring finger. John Tonje is also iisted as out due to G-League assignment. For the Suns, Dillon Brooks is out as he recovers from a broken hand. Mark Williams is also out with a stress reaction in the third metatarsal of his left foot.

Probable Starting Matchups
PG: Derrick White vs Collin Gillespie

Derrick White | Getty Images
Collin Gillespie | Getty Images

SG: Jaylen Brown vs Devin Booker

Jaylen Brown | NBAE via Getty Images
Devin Booker | NBAE via Getty Images

SF: Sam Hauser vs Jalen Green

Sam Hauser | NBAE via Getty Images
Jalen Green | NBAE via Getty Images

PF: Jayson Tatum vs Royce O’Neale

Jayson Tatum | NBAE via Getty Images
Royce O’Neale | Getty Images

C: Neemias Queta vs Oo Ighodaro

Neemias Queta
Neemias Queta | Getty Images
Oso Ighodaro | Getty Images


Celtics Reserves

Payton Pritchard
Hugo Gonzalez
Luka Garza
Amare Williams
Jordan Walsh
Baylor Scheierman
Max Shulga
Charles Bassey (10-Day)

2-Way Players
Ron Harper, Jr

Injuries/Out

Nikola Vucevic (finger) out
John Tonje (G-League) out

Head Coach
Joe Mazzulla

Suns Reserves
Grayson Allen
Jamaree Bouyea
Amir Coffey
Ryan Dunn
Rasheer Fleming
Collin Gillespie
Jordan Goodwin
Haywood Highsmith
Khaman Maluach

2-Way Players

CJ Huntley
Koby Brea
Isaiah Livers

Injuries/Out
Dillon Brooks (hand) out
Mark Williams (foot)  out

Head Coach
Jordan Ott

Key Matchups
Jaylen Brown vs Devin Booker
Booker is averaging 25.4 points, 4.0 rebounds, and 6 assists per game. He is shooting 45.2% from the field and 32.8% from beyond the arc. He missed the first game against the Celtics in February. Booker owns the record for most points scored by a player at the TD Garden when he scored 70 points there on March 24, 2017. He is their best player and the Celtics need to defend him well.

Sam Hauser vs Jalen Green
Green is averaging 17.4 points, 3.3 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.3 steals per game.  He is shooting 40.8% from the field and 30.9% from beyond the arc.  In the first game against the Celtics, he finished with 13 points, 4 rebounds, and 1 assist while shooting 27.8% from the field and 12.5% from beyond the arc. 

Honorable Mention
Payton Pritchard vs Grayson Allen
Allen gives them a boost off the bench and plays very well.  He is averaging 17.3 points, 3.0 rebounds, 4.2 assists, and 1.4 steals per game.  He is shooting 40.6% from the field and 35.4% from beyond the arc.  In the first game against the Celtics,  he finished with 14 points, 3 rebounds, and 1 assist while shooting 16.7% from the field and 11.1% from beyond the arc. 

Keys to the Game
Defense – Defense is always a key to winning.  The Celtics have a defensive rating of 111.7 (5th) and the Suns have a defensive rating of 112.8 (9th).  The Suns take 41 threes per game (5th)  and make 14.9 threes per game (4th).  The Suns are a good shooting team and the Celtics will need to up their defense, especially on the perimeter,  if they want to beat the Suns.

Rebound – The Celtics need to rebound on the offensive end to give themselves extra possessions and to prevent the Suns from racking up fast break points.  They also have to crash the boards on the defensive end to prevent the Suns from getting tip ins and second chance points as they average 16.1 second chance points per game.  The Celtics are 4th with 46.4 rebounds per game while the Suns are 20th with 43.3 rebounds per game.  Rebounding is all about effort and the Celtics are going to have to put out extra effort to win the battle of the boards.

Move the Ball Carefully – The Celtics need to move the ball in order to find the best shot on each possession. When the ball sticks and players try to do too much, the Celtics struggle. They are at their best when they pass the ball and keep it moving. ISO ball is not usually winning ball.   The Celtics are 29-2 when they have at least 25 assists. They are 15-0 when they have at least 29 assists. They are also 18-1 when Jaylen Brown They need to keep the ball moving and find the open man. However, they need to be careful with their passes and ball handling since the Suns are 3rd with 20.5 points off turnovers per game.

Be Aggressive – The Celtics have to come out and be aggressive right from the opening tip.  They have to be aggressive on defense, driving to the basket, rebounding, diving for loose balls and just playing harder in general.  They need to get off to a strong start and play hard right up until the final buzzer. They can’t let the Suns outwork them for any period of time because even the best team in the league can lose to the worst if they don’t play with effort.

X-Factors
Home Game – The Celtics are at home where they should get a boost from the home crowd.  They need to focus on the game and gain motivation from having the fans behind them.  The Suns are playing in the 4th game of a 6 game road trip and should be dealing with distractions from travel, staying in a hotel,  and playing in a hostile arena as well as fatigue from traveling.  The Celtics need to protect home court and come out ready to play hard. 

Officiating – I know that I say this every game,  but the officiating always has the possibility to be an x-factor in every game and we have seen it in several recent games.  Every crew calls the game differently, whether they call every little ticky tack foul or they let a lot of contact go and let the teams play.  Some refs favor the home team and some call for both teams evenly.  The Celtics have got to adjust to the way the game is being called and not allow the officiating to take away from their focus. They also need to play hard enough throughout the game so as not to allow the outcome to be determined by a call or non-call at the end. 

NBA power rankings 2025-26: Thunder retake top spot, Lakers climbing fast

After a midseason funk, the Oklahoma City Thunder have reasserted themselves as the best team in the land, and any path to the Larry O'Brien Trophy goes through OKC. The Lakers are making the big leap this week, up to fifth.

1. Oklahoma City Thunder

(53-15, last week No. 2)
The last few weeks have been a reminder that, for as much fun as the Spurs, Celtics and everyone else may be, every team is chasing the Thunder. Oklahoma City sets the bar and is back to looking like the dominant, best team in the land. OKC is 11-1 since the All-Star break and has won eight in a row with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander back in the lineup, and that includes beating Denver, Boston and Minnesota this past week. Part of this run is because the Thunder are getting healthy with Ajay Mitchell, Alex Caruso, Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein all back in the lineup — and they are still waiting on Jalen Williams. SGA may have locked up MVP with his play against Denver.

2. San Antonio Spurs

(49-18, last week No. 1)
San Antonio has won 17-of-19 and established itself as a clear title contender, and it's not a shock that Victor Wembanyama has been leading that charge. In those 19 games, Wembanyama averaged 24.9 points and 11.2 rebounds per game, and he has shot 48% from 3-point range in his last six games. It's just not fair. De'Aaron Fox has scored at least 20 points in four of the Spurs' last six games. The Spurs are pretty locked in as the No. 2 seed, seven games up on the Lakers in third and with an outside chance to catch the Thunder for No. 1, but OKC would have to start losing in a way that is unlikely. Catch Wembanyama and the Spurs against the Clippers on Peacock NBA Monday.

3. Boston Celtics

(44-23, last week No. 3)
Boston lost twice last week but to the two teams above them in this ranking, so we're not knocking them down for that. What Boston has in common with those two teams is that they draft and develop players exceptionally well — Hugo Gonzalez was selected 28th last June and has become a valuable part of the rotation, especially defensively. The Celtics need to get back to winning this week. They are the No. 2 seed in the East, up one game (two in the loss column) on the No. 3 seed Knicks, and Boston has a much tougher schedule the rest of the way. This week that includes facing Phoenix and Minnesota.

4. Detroit Pistons

(48-19, last week No. 5)
Looking ahead to the summer, there is one key thing to watch: How much does Detroit have to pay restricted free agent Jalen Duren? They couldn't reach an extension before the season, now he's an All-Star having the best season of his career, and about to get paid. Focusing on this season, Detroit still has a four-game lead over Boston for the No. 1 seed in the East, but games like Sunday's loss to Toronto — or the ones in a recent four-game losing streak — mean the team has some work to do to hold on to that top spot. Fortunately, it's a soft week in the schedule (two games against the Wizards, one against the shorthanded Warriors).

5. Los Angeles Lakers

(42-25, last week No. 12)
LeBron James returned this week and comfortably slid right into a role as the third option, and with that, the Lakers just kept on winning — with or without LeBron, they have won 8-of-9 and moved up to third in the West. They have done it with an improved defense, top 10 in the league over the last 10 games. That's what sparked wins over Minnesota and New York this week. "We're not gonna be the No. 1 defense in the league, but to be above average, have those two performances against those two teams back-to-back, is really encouraging," JJ Redick said of the Lakers' defense. Critical week coming up for the Lakers if they want to stay in the top three or four and host a playoff round. "We have a ridiculously hard six-game stretch here, starting tonight," Redick said before the Lakers beat the Nuggets in Overtime on Saturday. The Lakers travel to Houston for games Monday — on Peacock NBA Monday — and Wednesday, with games on the road after that against the Heat, Magic and Pistons.

6. New York Knicks

(44-25, last week No. 4)
Getting the No. 2 seed is within reach for New York — it is just one game back of Boston for the spot and has a much easier schedule the rest of the way. After dropping games to both Los Angeles teams, New York fattened up on tanking teams (Utah, Indiana) or shorthanded ones (Golden State), and we'll just ignore the fact that a couple of those games were a lot closer than they should have been. The soft schedule continues this week (Indiana, Brooklyn and Washington).

7. Cleveland Cavaliers

(41-27, last week No. 6)
Cleveland may be 10-4 with Harden in the lineup, but recent losses to Boston, Orlando and Dallas — especially Orlando, because that could be a 4/5 first-round matchup — were concerning, mostly because of how they happened. When it mattered, the Cavaliers played poor defense, they were getting blown by the point of attack, and generally there was not enough physicality. The Cavaliers sit as the No. 4 seed as of this writing, but are just one game up on the Magic. The one advantage for the Cavaliers is that they have the easiest remaining schedule of any team in the East.

8. Denver Nuggets

(41-27, last week No. 8)
Denver isn't falling apart by any stretch, but its recent run of play isn't exactly inspiring, either. The Nuggets had six straight games against some of the best in the NBA, and they went 3-3. Not bad, not inspiring. Tough losses to the Thunder and Lakers in that stretch sting. The good news is Aaron Gordon is back, but how much this team misses Peyton Watson and his athleticism has become clear — only increasing how much they will have to pay to keep him this summer.

9. Orlando Magic

(38-28, last week No. 11)
Orlando is 10-3 since the All-Star break and, with that, has shot up to fifth in the East and started to look more like the threat we all thought they were before the season started. Give some of that credit to Tristan Da Silva, who, since the All-Star Break, has thrived in a larger role with Franz Wagner out, averaging 13.3 points and 5.8 rebounds a game in that stretch while providing needed shooting — 46.3% from beyond the arc (5.2 attempts a game). Big tests for the Magic this week against the Hawks — part of Peacock NBA Monday — as well as facing the Thunder, Hornets and Lakers.

10. Miami Heat

(38-30, last week No. 9)
Almost a week later, it still boggles the mind — Bam Adebayo scored 83 points in a single game. Bam scored more than Kobe. The only player to score more than Adebayo is Wilt Chamberlain, and he did it when Sean Connery was James Bond and battling Dr. No (1962). The key takeaway from that game — it was fun. Ignore the haters — Erik Spoelstra and Pat Riley were right to be defiant. Every game with that many points (including Kobe's 81) was manufactured to a degree. What Bam accomplished was a spectacle, it was historic, it was entertaining, Heat fans will long remember it, and it should be celebrated.

11. Minnesota Timberwolves

(41-27, last week No. 7)
Minnesota has dropped 4-of-5 and is either a team that thinks it can flip the switch for the playoffs, or it's not sure where that switch is. The Timberwolves are now the No. 6 seed in the West, and they have not fared well against potential first-round opponents (0-3 against the Lakers, the current matchup, and they are 1-3 vs. the Nuggets; they have only played the Rockets once, but lost). Minnesota needs to start racking up wins to stay in the top six in the West and avoid the play-in — No. 7 seed Phoenix is just 1.5 games back, and those two teams face off on Tuesday.

12. Houston Rockets

(41-25, last week No. 10)
Kevin Durant is averaging 26 points a game this season, which has him on track for his 18th straight season averaging 20+ points per game (this excludes the season he missed due to a torn Achilles), which moves him ahead of Karl Malone and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the 2nd-most 20+ points per game seasons in a career (LeBron James leads the list, this will be his 23rd such season). The Rockets sit fourth in a very tight West and have two key games against the Lakers — catch Monday night's game on Peacock NBA Monday — then face hot teams in Miami and Atlanta at home. The Rockets need wins to hold on to a top-four spot and home court in the first round.

13. Atlanta Hawks

(36-31, last week No. 16)
Monday night on Peacock is a showdown between the two hottest teams in the East: The Hawks, winners of nine straight, and the Magic, winners of seven in a row. This run from the Hawks has given a team that looked destined for the play-in a shot at the top six — Atlanta is still the No. 9 seed in the East but is now just two games back of Toronto in sixth. The Hawks are just half a game back of the banged-up 76ers and moving into the top eight in the East, which is a much easier path out of the play-in and into the playoffs. Atlanta senses the opportunity, can it grab it?

14. Toronto Raptors

(38-29, last week No. 15)
It remains difficult to get a feel for the Raptors. At a time when teams want to be gearing up and playing their best basketball heading toward the postseason, Toronto has lost recent games to Orlando, Miami and New Orleans — then it turns around and beats Phoenix and Detroit. Jakob Poeltl had 21 points and 18 rebounds in the game, and when the Raptors are at their best, he is the hub of everything, the glue that makes this offense make sense.

15. Phoenix Suns

(39-28, last week No. 13)
This ranking may be a little too low for a team that has won 4-of-5 and is knocking on the door of the top six in the West. The Suns have held it together, going 6-4 with Dillon Brooks out with a fractured hand, although they have had some rough defensive outings in that stretch (like against Toronto, although they were at a rest disadvantage in that one). Phoenix is 2-1 so far on its six-game road trip, but things get tough the rest of the way, playing at Boston, at Minnesota — in a key game if the Suns want to get into the top six — and at San Antonio.

16. Los Angeles Clippers

(34-33, last week No. 18)
While SGA has drawn rightful praise for his record-setting 20+ point game streak, Kawhi Leonard has quietly set the Clippers record for that streak this season with 45 games, passing the Hall of Famer Bob McAdoo. The question now is how much time Leonard might miss due to a tweaked ankle (this was not announced as of this writing). The Clippers became the first team in NBA history to start the season 6-21 and get back to .500 at any point, and they did it with a 16-3 run in the past month. The Clippers sit eighth in the West and look like a playoff team, with Darius Garland finding his footing now as a starter and Bennedict Mathurin playing like someone demanding respect after a trade off a Finals team. Big measuring stick game Monday against San Antonio, and you can catch it on Peacock NBA Monday.

17. Charlotte Hornets

(34-34, last week No. 14)
Charlotte is going to make the play-in — making the postseason was a preseason goal for this team — but it doesn't happen without the play of Kon Knueppel. He is the frontrunner now to win Rookie of the Year, averaging 19.3 points per game while shooting 43.8% from 3-point range and having made more 3-pointers in a season than any rookie in NBA history. The Hornets have 9-of-10 at home coming up, a chance to move up in the standings, but it's not easy out of the gate with the Heat and Magic being the first two teams coming to town.

18. Philadelphia 76ers

(34-31, last week No. 17)
The one guy still standing for Philadelphia deserves praise — VJ Edgecombe is having the kind of season that would win him Rookie of the Year a lot of years (but this year likely lands him third). He leads all rookies, playing 35 minutes per game, he's third among rookies in scoring (15.3 points per game, behind Cooper Flagg and Kon Knueppel) and fourth in assists (3.8 per game). The rookie also has words for the people doubting the 76ers, who have slid to eighth in the West (and were ninth before a win Sunday). "Everyone got something to say about this team. We don't care, to be honest. We just want everyone to be healthy. Health is more important than anything. Just work, stay together, keep building chemistry."

19. Portland Trail Blazers

(32-26, last week No. 20)
What matters most in Portland this past week is that the Oregon legislature approved money for the renovation of the Moda Center (while it was unlikely, the move alleviated any fears the new owners might want to move the team). Tom Dundon, owner of the NHL's Carolina Hurricanes, heads the group that bought the Trail Blazers, a needed change at the top that is another reason the long-term future in Portland seems bright.

20. Chicago Bulls

(27-40, last week No. 24)
Josh Giddey is on fire, with four triple-doubles in his last six games, and combine that with Matas Buzelis scoring a career-high 41 at Golden State last week, and you get a team with a couple of wins lately. Chicago is a team poised to play spoiler down the stretch — this team is not just rolling over and tanking, they play fast and teams are going to have to try to beat them.

21. Golden State Warriors

(32-35, last week No. 19)
The Warriors are 5-12 since Stephen Curry went out with his knee issues, they have fallen to the No. 9 seed in the West, and while there is speculation outside the locker room that the Warriors may want to just shut him down, Curry is having none of that, as he told Nick Friedell of The Athletic: "That's not who we are. If we have stuff to play for, we play. So, I'm working to get back."

22. New Orleans Pelicans

(22-46, last week No. 22)
It's flown under the radar nationally, but Zion Williamson has been healthy most of the season and is playing well. Zion is averaging 21.4 points per game on 58.8% shooting and grabbing 5.9 rebounds a night. More importantly for his pocketbook, he was in his 51st game last week, meaning he is guaranteed at least $25.3 million next season under his incentive-heavy contract (which is heavily tied to games played). If he gets to 61 games played, he adds another $8.4 million to that guarantee. At this point, we should just assume he's getting his full salary next year.

23. Milwaukee Bucks

(28-39, last week No. 21)
Following two losses to Atlanta (plus one each to Orlando and Miami) in the past two weeks, Milwaukee is 5.5 games out of the final play-in spot with 15 games remaining in the season — it's time to pull the plug on the season and try to help the team's draft position a little. The question is, will Giannis Antetokounmpo let them? Not that it matters much, they are 2-4 in the games he has played since his return from injury (and those wins were against tanking Utah and Indiana.

24. Dallas Mavericks

(23-45, last week No. 25)
Cooper Flagg looked more like his early-season self over the weekend, scoring 25 points and then 27 points in games against the Cavaliers (he also dished out 10 assists Sunday in a Mavericks' win). Most importantly, he was getting downhill and into the paint again, looking fully recovered from his injury.

25. Sacramento Kings

(18-51, last week No. 28)
Winners of 4-of-5, with one of those coming against the Clippers on the road, however the one loss in that stretch was enough to officially eliminate them from making the play-in. The wins have come thanks to an improved defense during the stretch, plus DeMar DeRozan is playing well.

26. Utah Jazz

(20-48, last week No. 26)
As rough as this season has been on the court, it's been better than last year — Utah has already won three more games than a year ago and has a net rating 1.8 points per 100 possessions better than a season ago. There is growth. This remains a team poised to make a leap next season, although for a week, hoops fans in Utah will be focused on BYU and Utah State in the NCAA Tournament.

27. Brooklyn Nets

(17-50, last week No. 27)
Can the Nets make any noise in the Brooklyn Bridge rivalry with the Knicks this week? The Nets have dropped 13 consecutive games to the Knicks, including 0-3 this season, with an average loss in those last three of 34.3 points. Yikes. The teams face off Friday Night at the Barclays Center.

28. Memphis Grizzlies

(23-43, last week No. 23)
Memphis doesn't just lead the NBA in blown 10-point leads this season — 21 — they are now just one short of the all-time record of 22 (2016-17 Timberwolves and last season's Heat). The Grizzlies have given up 120+ points in six straight games, have lost seven in a row, and have the toughest remaining schedule among Western Conference teams.

29. Washington Wizards

(16-50, last week No. 29)
As said by the great Nate Duncan, Washington's record would be a lot better if they played as hard all season as they did in the last five minutes against Miami and Bam Adebayo. That said, the Wizards were (rightfully) embarrassed and bounced back with a good effort against the Magic. This is going to be a respectable team next season, but the final weeks of this one will be rough. The Wizards have dropped 11 straight and after playing the shorthanded Warriors on Monday, it's a tough week with games against the Pistons, Thunder and Knicks.

30. Indiana Pacers

(15-53, last week No. 30)
Ivica Zubac is seeing real minutes since his return — 24+ in each of the last two games — and while the Pacrers are not winning (having dropped 13 in a row), there is real value in having the veteran big man acquired at the deadline out there, coach Rick Carlisle said: "It's important that Andrew Nembhard and Zubac play together… We're looking to introduce things that take advantage of Zu's strengths, the guys he's playing with. Now it's just a matter of more time together in games."