Is LeBron James likely to play for Cavs next season?

CLEVELAND, OHIO - JANUARY 28: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers posts up against Nae'qwan Tomlin #35 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during the fourth quarter at Rocket Arena on January 28, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers defeated the Lakers 129-99. 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 Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Lakers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

With LeBron James set to be an unrestricted free agent this summer, he’ll have all of the options on the table regarding what his future in basketball will be.

He can negotiate a new deal with the Lakers, take his talents elsewhere, or call it a career after 23 seasons in the NBA.

LeBron has made it clear he isn’t sure what the future will be, leaving everyone wondering how much of his career is left and where that ending will take place.

For our SB Nation Reacts survey this week, we asked, what does the future hold for LeBron James?

The results are in, and 40% of fans believe he will be joining the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Now, 40% is a big number, but it makes sense given LeBron’s history. After all, he’s the kid from Akron and what better way to end his career than where it all started?

While the Cavs option did win the poll, the Lakers were a very close second at 38%. Since LeBron joined the Lakers, there has been speculation about his exit. However, he’s been here for eight years, his longest stint in one place in his career. So, how appropriate would it be if he closed things out here while everyone speculates about a change?

LA looks like a good team with LeBron, and if they can figure out a contract that allows the Lakers to pursue other players, James’ return might be best for all involved.

It would allow them to keep an All-Star player, improve as a team and celebrate LeBron as he calls it a career.

The front office has consistently stated that they would love for James to return next year.

Tied for last are the options of LeBron retiring or joining another team. It’s surprising that retiring is so low given his age and the years on his body, but then again, until he leaves, it’s probably always going to feel like he’ll play.

Only 11% voting for a different team makes sense. This late into his career, playing somewhere else might seem like a lot of change just to wrap it up in a season or two.

Another question in our SB Nation Reacts survey asked who should win the MVP this season.

It’s important to note that this was asked last week before Luka Dončić went off and scored 60 against the Heat.

In our poll, Victor Wembanyama was the winner with 39% of the vote.

Wemby has had a great year, averaging 24.3 points, 11.1 rebounds, and three blocks per game. Considering he’s leading the Spurs to their best season in years, he has a valid argument for MVP.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander getting 34% of the vote also isn’t a shock. He won the MVP last year and his team is destined to be the No. 1 seed in the West, yet again.

Nikola Jokić got 15% of the vote and Cade Cunnigham came in last at 12%.

With Luka Dončić leading the league in scoring and the Lakers currently sitting at No. 3 in the West, he’s also putting himself in the MVP race.

On FanDuel, Luka’s MVP odds are at +1500, so it seems that the betting markets agree that he is a top candidate.

There’s still a month of basketball to go, so we’ll see if Luka improves his odds and makes this a compelling MVP race. And as far as LeBron’s future, it looks like that’s going to be more of a wait-and-see game.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.

'It was not easy.' Sure looked like it for March Madness favorite Arizona

SAN DIEGO – Inside the Arizona Wildcats’ locker room after their 92-58 victory against Long Island University, players leaned back in their chairs, stretched their long legs and scrolled through their phones.

Yawn.

They had just dominated their opponent in a first round Men’s NCAA Tournament game with so much firepower that it almost looked easy. They seemed relaxed.

“No, it was not easy,” Arizona freshman forward Ivan Kharchenkov told USA TODAY Sports afterward on Saturday, March 20.

Say what?

No. 1-seed Arizona jumped out to a 27-point lead in the first half and got at least 14 points from three freshman starters, including Kharchenkov, who scored 14 with 10 rebounds.

“The game starts 0-0,” Kharchenkov explained. “We don’t start with a 20-point lead or anything.”

Yet they still pretty much did. They led 38-18 with 7:21 left in the first half and looked every bit the part of a potential Final Four team while advancing to the second round Sunday against No. 9 seed Utah State, who beat Villanova, 86-76.

Pizza night in San Diego for Arizona

Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd still pushed the same message in his postgame news conference before he was even asked a question.

“These games are never easy,” said Lloyd, whose team improved to 33-2 this season. “You never take them for granted.”

It’s the kind of mindset the Wildcats are trying to keep as they stay on upset alert as a fashionable pick to win this tournament. They’ve been to the NCAA Tournament 19 times since 2001 but never reached the Final Four since then, when the late Lute Olson was still coaching the team.

This time the team carried the hopes of the thousands of red-and-blue-clad fans who packed Viejas Arena here on the campus of San Diego State. Many of them drove 400 miles west from Tucson. Some even joined Lloyd for pizza Wednesday night at local restaurant owned by former Arizona guard Matt Othick.

“He told anybody that had any affiliation with the Arizona Wildcats to show up…,  Lloyd said. “I was expecting a small little get-together of a few players. But man, the place was hopping.”

'I don't look at them as freshmen,' Arizona coach says

It was hopping at Viejas too, especially with 15 seconds left. The crowd loudly chanted “U of A! U of A!” after Arizona’s freshmen led the way once again. Five freshmen for Arizona combined for 55 points, led by guard Brayden Burries, who scored 18, including four 3-pointers in the first half.

Burries himself was playing in front of family who made the trip roughly 100 miles south of his hometown of San Bernardino.

“Especially being back in Cali – I hadn’t been back in a minute,” Burries told USA TODAY Sports. “Being back here, the weather’s great. Got to see my people. So it was great.”

They all had the pleasure of seeing what the Wildcats are capable of in a key sequence in the first half. After Burries drained a 3-pointer, senior guard Jaden Bradley got the rebound on the other end and skipped a one-bounce pass to Kharchenkov, who rolled to basket for a left-handed layup. The bucket put Arizona up 47-20 with 3:46 left before halftime — a feat that is definitely not easy to do for just any group of freshmen. These rookies are different, though.

“I don't look at them as freshmen, you know what I mean?” Lloyd said. “I just look at them as really good basketball players. These guys, they have high IQs. They have great character and obviously they're talented basketball players. And they put the work in.”

The win overshadowed the remarkable turnout of 16th-seed LIU under coach Rod Strickland, the former NBA player. Three years ago, the Sharks were the nation’s worst team and won just three games. They finished at 24-11 with the loss.

“We knew it was going to be a tough game,” Strickland said. “That team (Arizona) is predicted to win the tournament.”

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

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Why Arizona's first round NCAA win wasn't as 'easy' as it looked

Why Nick Sirianni is sitting courtside for Tennessee vs Miami (Ohio) March Madness game

Rick Barnes and Travis Steele weren’t the only coaches on the court for Tennessee’s matchup against Miami (Ohio) in the first round of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

Philadelphia Eagles coach Nick Sirianni was sitting courtside for the meeting between the Volunteers and RedHawks on Friday, March 20.

Xfinity Mobile Arena, the site of the game and the home venue of the NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers and NHL’s Philadelphia Flyers, is a short walk across 11th Street in South Philadelphia from Lincoln Financial Field, where Sirianni’s team plays its home games.

Sirianni has no connection to either school, though he did play college football at Mount Union, a Division III powerhouse in Alliance, Ohio, about 260 miles across the state from Miami’s campus in Oxford, Ohio.

Sirianni is entering his sixth season as the Eagles’ coach. He led the franchise to a pair of Super Bowl appearances, including the franchise’s second-ever Super Bowl victory, though his teams have been wildly erratic from year to year. Philadelphia finished 11-6 last season and lost at home to the San Francisco 49ers in the wild-card round of the NFL playoffs.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Why is Nick Sirianni at Tennessee vs Miami Ohio basketball in March Madness?

Otega Oweh saved Kentucky's season Friday. He might have done more than that

ST. LOUIS – No one in America got a better view of March’s maddest moment so far than Mark Pope, who stood mere feet away from his leading scorer as Otega Oweh saved Kentucky’s season.

He might have done even more than that.

Hands on his hips as Oweh rose and fired, Pope stood almost precisely on the spot where an invisible line could be drawn through him, Oweh and the first S in the March Madness logo at midcourt of the Enterprise Center. As an arena held its breath, Pope heard his star bark out, “That’s a bucket.”

And it was.

In what has at times been a trying, stressful season in Lexington, the player who more than any other defines the first two years of Pope’s tenure leading his alma mater delivered a moment to erase all kinds of frustration and pain. Oweh’s banked-in 3 extended into overtime No. 7 Kentucky’s 89-84 first-round NCAA Tournament win against Santa Clara on Friday.

The Wildcats (22-13) looked destined to become another high-profile victim, joining North Carolina and Wisconsin among the ranks of the upset in the opening round of this year’s tournament. Fittingly, it was the player who has now scored more points over two years than any other Wildcat — who at times might have led his coach to pull it out if, as Pope said Friday, “I had longer hair” — that delivered the defining memory of their shared season.

In one shining moment, Oweh erased so much of a winter’s frustration, and rewrote Kentucky’s story in style.

Otega Oweh a 'unique, unique player'

St. Louis got the competitive game we all expected.

KenPom made the Wildcats just two-point favorites, and No. 10 Santa Clara (26-9) answered that projection accordingly. Despite early foul trouble that limited versatile freshman Allen Graves, the Broncos hung onto a rough-and-tumble game and a slim halftime lead (31-29), meeting Kentucky’s athletic advantage with the toughness that delivered Santa Clara’s first NCAA Tournament berth in 30 years to begin with.

This packed arena muddled along with both teams through a first half that sometimes bordered on turgid. Waiting patiently for something more inspiring, they clapped everyone off following a competitive first 20 minutes.

They got their reward soon enough. First-half grind was about to turn into second-half excellence. And no one would light the game up quite like Kentucky’s double zero.

“We’re three-quarters of the way through the first half, and (Oweh’s) got five or six or seven points,” Pope said. “And he finished the game the way he does. He’s a unique, unique player.”

'Sometimes Otega sneaks up on you'

Pope still marvels at Oweh’s ability to ambush a game.

He was not necessarily alone — after the two teams combined to shoot just 23 of 60 in the opening 20 minutes, they made 9 of 12 field goals collectively to start the second.

But Oweh’s impact spread beyond scoring.

He finished with 35 points, 28 of them after halftime. He earned 12 free-throw attempts, one fewer than Santa Clara’s team total and three more than the rest of the Wildcats combined.

If Oweh got carried away in the current of that rugged, physical first half, no one else broke the game open in the second quite like he did.

The New Jersey native, a two-time All-SEC performer, grabbed eight rebounds and handed out seven assists, his fingerprints all over the final score.

“Sometimes Otega sneaks up on you,” Pope said, smiling. “This guy, man, he just shows up every single game in only a unique Otega Oweh way. It’s just brilliant.”

To its credit, Santa Clara answered time and again. A game featuring 20 lead changes needs equal partners, and Herb Sendek’s team duly obliged.

Elijah Mahi scored 20 points on 16 field goal attempts. Sash Gavalyugov nearly doubled his scoring average, with 16 points that backfilled what Graves’ foul trouble left behind. Graves himself scored 15 after halftime, none more important in the moment than the three he drained with just more than two seconds left in the second half.

Here, Sendek might have legitimate grievance.

After Graves’ 3 left everyone on the floor briefly stunned, Denzel Aberdeen rushed the ball into an already moving Oweh. The clock appeared to start a half-beat late, allowing Oweh an extra dribble as Sendek shouted from the Santa Clara bench for a timeout.

Had he been granted time, Sendek might have been able to design a better defense, or instruct his team to foul up three points. Instead, he watched as Gavalyugov’s late contest could not quite reach Oweh’s leaning heave.

“I was just trying to get the ball out quick, and get as close as I can to the goal,” Oweh said. “I was looking at the clock the whole time.”

Just seconds earlier, Oweh looked like the hero when his spinning layup tied the score briefly with 9.9 seconds left. That, it turned out, was just an opening act.

Brandon Garrison played key role, too

Pope spared a thought for the Broncos on Friday, though Sendek probably captured the emotional swings of the afternoon best when he described it as “a really euphoric high, followed by a tough one to swallow.”

He also confirmed he was trying — demonstrably, upon video review — to call timeout before Oweh’s banker.

“I unequivocally called timeout, but they didn’t grant it,” Sendek said afterward. “(Calling timeout) is a likely response after Allen hits the 3. Any coach would be calling timeout to set the defense, which I tried to do.”

Context fades with time. March-made legends don’t.

Oweh parried his glory postgame, taking every opportunity to praise teammates who earned it themselves.

Like Brandon Garrison, who twice got fingertips to Gavalyugov 3s in overtime as part of his six-block performance.

Crucial as those moments were, they did not happen by accident. It was Garrison who, in one of Kentucky’s late-game, gut-check huddles, suggested the Wildcats start switching Santa Clara’s pick-and-pop actions. Let Garrison guard Gavalyugov, big man to point guard.

“BG just stepped up and made a call, and we all backed him,” Oweh said. “He’s a game changer.”

Oweh kept the door open. Teammates forced Kentucky’s way through. Then their star man finished it at free-throw line, his final pair stretching the lead to two possessions with 17 seconds left. After 45 stressful minutes, a big blue party broke out in the Enterprise Center.

“These guys just keep getting up,” Pope said. “We get knocked down. They keep getting up and they keep getting up and they keep getting up.”

St. Louis first hosted the NCAA Tournament in 1973. This was the 57th game played in the Gateway City.

Phi Slama Jama played here. North Carolina beat Illinois in the 2005 final here. Kentucky won its 1978 national championship here.

In pure weight, Oweh’s buzzer-beating bank won’t be remembered the same way. But it carries the same magic, that particular kind of moment that manifests the beauty of this month.

When his team had no options remaining, other than defeat, Oweh stepped forward and reset the Wildcats’ season. Depending upon what Kentucky does with this second chance, he might have redefined it entirely.

“We’re not,” Oweh said, “done playing yet.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: How Otega Oweh saved Kentucky basketball's season vs Santa Clara

Raptors vs Nuggets Boosted Same Game Parlay for March 20

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The Toronto Raptors will try to pad their three-game winning streak tonight when they take on the Denver Nuggets in the Mile High City. 

I'm taking advantage of this evening's showdown with a three-leg same-game parlay centered on the shiftiness of Immanuel Quickley. The lightning-fast guard is poised to have his way with Denver's defenders, leading to plenty of dimes and a W for the visitors. 

This parlay has been BOOSTED from +2300 to +2800 by our friends at bet365.

Raptors vs Nuggets same game parlay for March 20

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Tonight's matchup against Denver sets up extremely well for Immanuel Quickley and his assists prop, which is why I’m targeting a massive alternate Over on this line. This is far and away my favorite assists props on the board for Friday.

Jamal Murray is expected to be Quickley’s primary defender, and he tends to struggle against quick, shifty guards—exactly Quickley’s profile. On top of that, Murray carries a significant offensive load, which likely limits his defensive impact.

There’s also a schematic edge working in Quickley’s favor. With Nikola Jokić playing higher in coverage to take away pull-up threes, it opens the door for Quickley to attack downhill. That allows him to use his snake dribble, get into the lane, draw help from defenders like Aaron Gordon, and create easy dump-off opportunities.

I’m also pairing Quickley with RJ Barrett, as no teammate has converted more of his assists over the last five games. Barrett has finished 10 of Quickley’s assists during that stretch. If Quickley is piling up assists, it means his teammates are knocking down shots, which puts the Raptors in a strong position to compete on the road.

Read our full Raptors vs. Nuggets prediction for even more analysis ahead of tip-off tonight.

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Browns offseason, free agency improvement ranked in Top 10, 3 moves among best

HOUSTON, TEXAS - DECEMBER 21: Tytus Howard #71 of the Houston Texans takes the field prior to a game against the Las Vegas Raiders at NRG Stadium on December 21, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The sheer volume of moves made by the Cleveland Browns this offseason has been less than in previous seasons, but it is still a lot. That doesn’t include a final decision by OL Joel Bitonio at this point. Bitonio’s contract voided on March 11th, but no other decision or announcement has been made.

The Browns also spent much of their resources in replacing much of their offensive line, along with other moves:

Cleveland has only lost four players so far in free agency:

Kevin Cole ranked the additions of Howard, Johnson, and Jenkins among the top 10 improvements with players changing teams this offseason:

It is important to note that Cole’s process is all about improvement. With Howard replacing what Jack Conklin, KT Leveston, Cornelius Lucas, and others provided last year for the Browns, the uptick was going to be pretty big. Cole’s projections also do not give any credit for players who are retained, because that is not considered improvement.

With that in mind, Cleveland has improved among the most in all of the NFL this offseason:

It is unsurprising to see some of the worst teams in the NFL near the top of the list. On the other hand, the Minnesota Vikings (Kyler Murray in for Carson Wentz/JJ McCarthy) and the Los Angeles Rams (acquiring CB Trent McDuffie in a trade) jump out of the group at the top, given their recent history of success.


Do you really think the Browns have improved signficantly or is it just a testament to how bad the team’s offensive line was last year?

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NBA tank watch: Teams eye high draft picks, early vacations

NBA scouts and executives are keeping an eagle eye on the start of the Men's NCAA Tournament this week, hoping that one of the stars eligible for the NBA draft falls in their lap and changes their fortunes overnight.

One thing is for sure: Those same scouts and executives are happy because they don't have to look at their own teams for the next two weeks and can really concentrate on finding the next superstar, so they won't routinely find their teams on lists like this.

There are more than enough intriguing college players to consider with the No. 1 pick, including Darryn Peterson of Kansas, BYU's AJ Dybantsa (the nation's leading scorer), Duke's Cameron Boozer and Caleb Wilson of North Carolina.

Without further ado, this week's edition of Tank Watch, featuring the best of the worst the NBA has to offer.

NBA teams already booked for Cancun

All records and winning percentages are through games on Thursday, March 19.

Indiana Pacers (15-55; .214)

The Pacers have long since given up and haven't won since the All-Star break, a skid of 15 consecutive games. It's the second time this season they have set a franchise record for regular-season futility.

Washington Wizards (16-53; .232)

Any team that gives up 83 points to Bam Adebayo, as the Wizards did last week, not only needs a vacation, but the league needs to think about retraction as well. Washington has lost 10 games or more in a row three different times this season.

Brooklyn Nets (17-52; .246)

If you want to find the equivalent of a junior varsity team taking the court against real professionals, look no further than Brooklyn's 121-92 humiliating loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday, March 18.

Sacramento Kings (18-53; .254)

The Kings' M.A.S.H. unit is filled with All-Star-caliber players, and the situation is so bad that people have coined the term "ethical tanking" to excuse the putrid product put out nightly.

Utah Jazz (21-49; .300)

The NBA's version of the Washington Generals, otherwise known as the league's worst defensive team, couldn't be bothered with keeping a dribbling offensive player in front of them. NBA fans couldn't be bothered watching them either.

NBA teams waiting to spend hours in TSA line to board flight

It's just a matter of time before the teams listed below are mathematically eliminated from playoff contention and can start making trips to Cancun (or Galveston, according to Charles Barkley) for an early vacation – or to Turkey to explore hair transplants, whichever one applies to them.

(All records and winning percentages are through games on Thursday, March 19.)

Memphis Grizzlies (24-44; .353)

Memphis better be glad the league is expanding to 32 teams, or their franchise would be the first one to exit stage left out of town.

Dallas Mavericks (23-47; .329)

Dallas got rid of incompetent general manager Nico Harrison earlier this season. Next on the hit list, the American Airlines Center.

New Orleans Pelicans (25-46; .352)

At least the gumbo and jambalaya are good year-round.

Chicago Bulls (28-42; .400)

The only good news this week for Chicago: Former star Dennis Rodman is being inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA tank watch: Teams with best chance to land No. 1 draft pick

Time to see how serious UNC is about basketball. Go get Todd Golden

There’s only one way out of this thing, and in the shocker of all shockers, it involves throwing money at the problem. 

Not just $5 million in go-away money for North Carolina coach Hubert Davis, but huge, nasty cash to fix it once and for all. 

Because if you’re North Carolina and you’ve committed tens of millions of dollars to Bill Belichick and his plan to rescue your football program, what’s the price to resuscitate your suddenly stale yet still iconic basketball program?

Let me give you a hint: a hundred million or more commitment. 

This is big business, people. We’re talking about one of the three biggest college basketball brands struggling to not only reach the NCAA Tournament, but avoid disaster in the first round.

The program of Michael Jordan and Dean Smith and Roy Williams and all of those All-Americans and national championship moments, just blew a 19-point lead to VCU in the NCAA Tournament. 

This isn’t about the loss of injured star freshman Caleb Wilson and how it affected the last two weeks of the season. It’s about the totality of Davis’ tenure, and if North Carolina is ready for a Belichick-ian response.

That can only mean one thing: Start printing cash for Florida coach Todd Golden.

If you’ve given Davis everything he could possibly want and need — the roster was valued at $15 million this season — and you’re still getting beat by VCU in the NCAAs, there’s no half-measure response to this unfolding nightmare.

North Carolina can’t keep throwing bad money after good and expect different results. The football program is on the verge of that very scenario with Belichick, who produced all of four wins with his bag of cash — and it doesn’t look much better after he signed the 50th-ranked transfer portal class according to the 247Sports composite.

This is no time for the timid. Be bold and brave ― and eliminate any possibility of Kentucky swooping in and signing Golden first.

Take the rare step and pay Golden like a football coach — or better yet, more than a football coach. More than Kirby and Cigs and Sark. 

Offer $13-14 million a year over 10 years, and commit to $20 million annually in NIL funds (including private deals). Once the Belichick experiment fades — and it will — North Carolina will again realize what’s important, what fuels the Carolina brand. 

Who knows if Golden would leave Florida, but you’re not starting over with one of the top three programs in the history of the sport with a mid-major coach, or another learn-on-the-go Carolina Man. 

You’re not going to make a regional hire like UNC Wilmington’s Takayo Siddle, or High Point’s Flynn Clayman coming off an NCAA run.

You’re not hiring a former NBA coach, and you’re (probably) not getting John Calipari to leave Arkansas. OK, maybe Cal would go — but how much longer is he coaching?

It’s time to see just how serious North Carolina is about basketball.

Golden can be in Carolina Blue for three decades if he wins and wants to hang around. He can win big and recreate the pecking order of legendary UNC coaches. 

Dean, Roy and Todd. Or Dean, Todd and Roy.  

The only option is Golden, whose choice will be building a legacy at Florida or embracing the rebuild at arguably the most iconic brand in the sport.

He’s young, knows how to reach players in the NIL-driven world and has proven he can build and develop rosters and win a national title. He has made Florida a basketball school again.

Billy Donovan eventually walked away from what he built at Florida, and headed to the NBA. Golden could do the same — unless UNC pays him like an NBA coach.

This has nothing to do with the “football school” and “basketball school” nonsense. Florida has won it all with two different coaches at their first major job, and has the structure and financial wherewithal to win it all again with another.

This is a North Carolina question, not a Florida question. 

How badly does North Carolina want to win big again, and at what cost?

Big, nasty cash to fix it once and for all.

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: North Carolina basketball must replace Hubert Davis, hire Todd Golden

Joshua Jefferson injury update: Iowa State star injured in March Madness first round

Iowa State started its March Madness run already with a scary incident.

Star forward Joshua Jefferson was injured early in the first-round matchup against Tennessee State on Friday, March 20.

The Cyclones player landed landed awkwardly after going up for a layup attempt less than three minutes into the contest, appearing to twist his ankle as he landed. He had to be helped off the floor by support staff as he was unable to put any weight on his left foot. Jefferson went straight to the locker room after the incident.

Joshua Jefferson injury update

Jefferson has not return to the game against the Tigers, and it doesn't look like he will.

Around the 11-minute mark in the first half, the broadcast showed Jefferson on crutches going into a room in the arena.

It's unknown the severity of the injury but it can be a brutal one for an Iowa State team trying to reach its first Final Four since 1944. Jefferson is a dynamic player for the Cyclones, averaging 16.6 points, 7.4 rebounds and 5.0 assists per game. He has two triple doubles this season.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Joshua Jefferson injury update: Iowa State star hurt in March Madness

Oklahoma City will not be visiting White House to celebrate championship

The Oklahoma City Thunder are in our nation's capital this weekend for a game against the Washington Wizards, but the Thunder players will not be visiting the White House to celebrate their title last June, reports Joel Lorenzi of The Athletic.

"We have been in touch with the White House and we are appreciative and grateful for the communication we have had, but the timing just didn't work out," the Thunder said in a statement shared with The Athletic.

President Donald Trump is in Washington for part of Friday, but according to his official schedule, he is flying to Mar-a-Lago in Florida later in the day and will not be around for the weekend.

There was a long tradition of the champions of the United States' major professional sports teams visiting the White House to celebrate their accomplishment, regardless of which party was in power at the time. However, in our deeply divided nation right now, that tradition has gone out the window (like many others). For example, after the recent Milan Cortina Olympics, the USA Gold Medal winning men's hockey team did visit President Trump to celebrate their dramatic win, but the USA Gold Medal winning women declined that request.

With the NBA, during President Trump's first term, the 2017 Golden State Warriors refused an invitation to visit (or, as the White House would have it, had their invitation revoked). Other teams in other sports have followed suit. The Boston Celtics visited President Biden after their 2024 win, but the Thunder will not be going this year.

McTominay goal gives Napoli win over Cagliari and second place in Serie A

CAGLIARI, Italy (AP) — Napoli won at Cagliari 1-0 and moved into second place in Serie A on Friday.

A Scott McTominay goal after just 90 seconds proved to be decisive in a game the visitor dominated.

The Scotland international tapped in a loose ball after a cross from the right fell at his feet, and the lead was never challenged by a side that did not have a shot on target in the entire match.

It was the fourth win in a row for Antonio Conte’s men.

The win lifted Napoli two points above third-placed AC Milan, which plays Torino on Saturday. League leader Inter Milan is at Fiorentina on Sunday.

Cagliari’s winless league run was extended to seven games dating to the end of January. It remained in 15th place, but with only eight rounds remaining it could easily be dragged into the relegation battle. It was six points above the drop zone with the five teams below it all having a game in hand.

In another piece of good news for Conte, Belgium international Kevin De Bruyne played 90 minutes for the first time since injuring a hamstring last October.

___

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Raptors vs Nuggets Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The Toronto Raptors have put together a much-needed three-game winning streak, thanks in part to a red-hot Brandon Ingram.

But the Raps will need him to stay hot if they want to keep up with Nikola Jokic and the high-powered Denver Nuggets offense.

My Raptors vs. Nuggets predictions expect a tight battle, meaning this spread is just a little too big.

That and more NBA picks for this matchup set to tip off at 9:00 pm ET at Ball Arena in Denver, on Friday, March 20.

Raptors vs Nuggets prediction

Raptors vs Nuggets best bet: Raptors +7 (-110)

Brandon Ingram has been a big part of the Toronto Raptors' win streak, putting up 36, 34, and 18 points while shooting nearly 60% from the floor.

He and the Raptors should keep putting in work against a Denver Nuggets defense that ranks 21st in defensive rating.

Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets are tough to stop, but Toronto’s eighth-ranked defense should be able to keep this game competitive

The Raptors will likely do what they always do: give fans hope they can win before giving it away late. Even so, that’s likely enough to cover a 7-point spread.

Raptors vs Nuggets same-game parlay

Ingram has topped this number in three of his last four games, and the only reason he didn’t in the Raptors’ last game was that they were beating the Chicago Bulls so badly he didn’t need to play much late.

The other way the Raptors stay competitive in this game is by moving the ball. Toronto has one of the highest assist rates in the NBA, while Denver ranks 21st in opponent assists per possession.

I’m taking Scottie Barnes Over 4.5 assists. He averages 5.1 per game, and dished out 10 times the last time the Raptors played the Nuggets.

Raptors vs Nuggets SGP

  • Raptors +7
  • Brandon Ingram Over 21.5 points
  • Scottie Barnes Over 4.5 assists

Our "from downtown" SGP: Dino Dimes

Passing the ball will be the key to the Raptors keeping this game close, so let's jump on them to dish out the dimes.

Raptors vs Nuggets SGP

  • Scottie Barnes Over 4.5 assists
  • Brandon Ingram Over 3.5 assists
  • Immanuel Quickley Over 6.5 assists
  • Jamal Shead Over 4.5 assists

Raptors vs Nuggets odds

  • Spread: Raptors +7 | Nuggets -7
  • Moneyline: Raptors +220 | Nuggets -270
  • Over/Under: Over 238.5 | Under 238.5

Raptors vs Nuggets betting trend to know

The Nuggets have only covered the 2H spread in nine of their last 30 home games (-15.07 Units / -43% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Raptors vs. Nuggets.

How to watch Raptors vs Nuggets

LocationBall Arena, Denver, CO
DateFriday, March 20, 2026
Tip-off9:00 p.m. ET
TVSN, ALT2

Raptors vs Nuggets latest injuries

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Officials missed Herb Sendek timeout on Otega Oweh March Madness buzzer-beater

Kentucky was able to rally to defeat Santa Clara in the opening round of the men's NCAA Tournament — and it may have gotten lucky with officials missing some key moments.

After Allen Graves hit a go-ahead 3-pointer for Santa Clara with 2.4 seconds left, Broncos coach Herb Sendek tried to call a timeout, likely wanting to set up his defense for Kentucky's last shot. While the CBS broadcast caught it, the referees didn't appear to see it and didn't award the timeout.

Kentucky's Otega Oweh instead hit a stunning 3-point buzzer beater from the March Madness logo to force overtime. While there's no telling if that happens or not if Santa Clara got its timeout, the Broncos could have had a chance to defend the final play more efficiently.

"Well, I unequivocally called timeout. But they didn't grant it," Sendek said. "I think the video evidence is clear, and anybody is able to pull it up. So, you know, is a likely response after Allen hits the three that the coach would be calling timeout to set the defense, which I tried to do, and I was successful in doing, other than it wasn't acknowledged or recognized. So that's what happened."

CBS studio analyst Bruce Pearl said Sendek could have gone slightly on the court to alert the officials, but one of them should've noticed the call.

"I 100% of the time think you foul, but because they didn't call timeout, they didn't have an opportunity," Charles Barkley said on the postgame broadcast.

Did Otega Oweh get away with travel?

The second controversial moment came in overtime.

With the Wildcats up by two points in the final minute of overtime, they were able to block a potential game-tying shot from Santa Clara's Sash Gavalyugov, leading to a loose ball. Oweh grabbed it and threw it ahead to Brandon Garrison for the dunk to make it a two-possession game and get the distance it needed for the win.

A replay of the play appeared to show Oweh took more than two steps without dribbling the ball, which should result in a travel. On the CBS broadcast, play-by-play man Spero Dedes said rules analyst Gene Steratore told them Oweh should have been called for traveling.

The controversial no call did have an effect, with the Wildcats winning 89-84.

Otega Oweh travel reactions

People on social media believed officials cost Santa Clara a huge March Madness upset. Here's a sampling of some reactions:

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Referee controversy looms as officials miss timeout, travel in Santa Clara loss to Kentucky

Where Julian Champagnie would go in a 2022 re-draft

SAN ANTONIO, TX - MARCH 19: Julian Champagnie #30 of the San Antonio Spurs shoots the ball during the game against the Phoenix Suns on March 19, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photos by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Julian Champagnie is having a career year and has been one of the steady role players who have helped the San Antonio Spurs have their best season since 2016-17. He’s come a long way since going undrafted in 2022 and being waived as a rookie, serving as another example of a player development system that works. 

He’s in his fourth season, averaging the fifth-most minutes per game on the team (27.8), and his style as a knockdown shooter fits anywhere. Still, he’s more than that as 31.7 percent of his shots are two-pointers, he rebounds well and he is not a liability on defense. Don’t forget that he’s been a key piece of the team’s most-used lineup this season: the one including De’Aaron Fox, Devin Vassell, Stephon Castle, Victor Wembanyama and Champagnie, is the 16th most-used lineup in the league. 

It says a lot about his basketball character that he’s a necessity on a contender. Being a seamless fit with the starters has made it possible for the team to preserve the talents of veteran Harrison Barnes. This all begs the question, where would Champagnie go in a re-draft?

He was once asked to assess his game before becoming a pro and he said, “I kind of fill roles on the court.” He elaborated a bit, saying he was more of a shooter than his brother Justin, who prefers to play the power game. 

His production mirrors that of a mid-to-late first-round pick, which aligns with where I predict he would go if it was redone today, which is 17th. He is third in made 3-pointers, fifth in effective field goal percentage (55.9), 12th in points and 16th in rebounds in his draft class.  All of this makes him more reliable and impactful than 70 percent of the picks, aside from him being an excellent mover without the ball.

When examining further, Andrew Nembhard and Ryan Rollins were the only second-rounders chosen that can be definitively taken over Champagnie since they are better scorers. Still, for the purpose of this exercise, they were re-slotted into the top seven and 14, leaving no one in round two more productive than Champagnie. To boot, anyone who has earned a starting rotation spot brings value that it way above a second-rounder.

Moreover, he’s one of the most lethal shooters in the NBA when given space, making 47.6 percent of wide-open 3-point shots, which NBA describes as having six feet or more of space. Of course, he’s in the perfect situation being next to two great penetrators and a control tower who does it all, and lots of his shots come from a pass to the corner/wing or one outside following an offensive rebound. He also does a good job of getting open in transition, helping the team with unscripted plays that do lots of damage. In many ways, Champagnie is a security blanket.

His marksmanship set a franchise record, making 11 3-pointers on Dec. 31 against the New York Knicks. Stephen Curry and Trey Murphy III are the only players to have made more in a game this season (12). 

He is averaging more minutes than 18 2022 first-rounders and is sixth in total minutes. Even being older by modern standards, debuting his career at age 21, shouldn’t have made him fall so much on draft night. Quality players slipping through the cracks happens more often than it should.

The next step for him is to improve his passing out of a two-man action. He’s not catching opponents by surprise anymore, so adding the slip-back pass to prevent a trap on a dribble handoff would be useful.

Finding players like him, and signing them for the low, can make a significant difference for a team’s flexibility. Just for perspective, the Miami Heat drafted Nikola Jović 27th in 2022 and paid him based on potential with a four-year extension worth $62.4 million. He was one of the 12 players from the 2022 draft who got a new deal before the season and, sadly for them, he’s barely an NBA player with availability issues, making his contract unmovable for now.

The Spurs are in the opposite situation with Champagine. I’m not saying the Spurs were scheming for a trade at the deadline, but if they wanted to make a splash, opposing squads would have presumably demanded that he be included in the deal because his production so much outweighs his $3 million salary. 

Another one of the valuable things he does well is screen for his teammates. Granted, some of those are ghost screens, but he is third behind Luke Kornet and Wembanyama in screen assists and screen assist points on the team. This hustle extends to the other side since he is second in the league among forwards in defensive loose balls recovered. His 6’ 10 wingspan helps him track those down as well as when closing out to shooters.

His future is bright because he is an unselfish overachiever, and he thinks he hasn’t reached his ceiling. Credit to Noah Magaro-George of the Vic-and-Roll podcast for comparing him first to Danny Green, one of the best snipers in team history. Don’t be surprised if Champagnie continues his work when he enters his first playoff, or if he is in a 3-point contest soon, and wins it. 

Otega Oweh points today: Kentucky forward explodes for career-high 35 points

Be sure to follow USA TODAY Sports' live updates keeping track of all of NCAA Tournament's Friday first round games.

Kentucky basketball looked to be on its way to a first-round upset in the Men's NCAA Tournament when 10-seed Santa Clara was up by three with 2.4 seconds remaining in the second half.

Otega Oweh wasn't ready to head home, however, as he hit a game-tying 3-pointer from the logo to tie the game at 73-73 to send it to overtime. He then delivered a dagger in overtime with a pair of free throws to send the 7-seeded Wildcats into the second round of March Madness.

Oweh led the way with a career-high 35 points for the Wildcats in their 89-84 overtime win at the Enterprise Center.

Here's a deeper look at Oweh's full stats from Friday's win over Santa Clara:

Otega Oweh points today in NCAA Tournament

Here's a look at Oweh's stats from Friday's game against Santa Clara:

  • Points: 35
  • Shooting: 11-of-24
  • 3-point shooting: 3-of-8
  • Free throw shooting: 10-of-12
  • Rebounds: 8
  • Assists: 7
  • Steals: 1
  • Blocks: 1
  • Turnovers: 2
  • Minutes: 43

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Otega Oweh points today: Big man sends Kentucky to second round with 35 points