Yahoo Sports’ Jason Fitz and former Big 12 player of the year Marcus Morris Sr. react to the Cowboys’ stunning win over the 5-seed Tigers to move on to the second round.
NHL Hockey News, Scores, Standings, Rumors, Fantasy Games 2025-03-21 19:30:17
Xavier vs Illinois Prediction: Odds, Expert Picks, Betting Trends and Stats for 2025 March Madness
March Madness perfect bracket counts plunge just 7 games into the NCAA Tournament
Fewer than a million perfect brackets remained on ESPN and just over a million were left on the NCAA's platform midway through the first day of the NCAA Tournament on Thursday. ESPN's perfect bracket tracker listed 806,020 remaining out of more than 24 million filled out on its site following the seventh game of the day, No. 6 seed BYU's 80-71 win over No. 11 seed VCU. The NCAA listed about 1,100,000 perfect brackets out of more than 34 million.
Knicks' Jalen Brunson out of walking boot, doing some light shooting
Knicks point guard Jalen Brunson has taken a big step toward his potential return.
Brunson is out of the walking boot and has been doing some light shooting, Tom Thibodeau revealed Thursday ahead of the team's game against the Hornets in Charlotte.
While the 26-year-old captain likely still has a ways to go before getting back out there with the team in practice and then game action, this is certainly an encouraging step forward.
Brunson, of course, injured his ankle late in overtime during the Knicks' loss to the Los Angeles Lakers back on March 6.
Heading into Thursday night's game, New York has gone 3-3 without him, and his absence has been felt heavily on both ends of the court.
He is expected to be evaluated again around the two-week mark from the injury, though, ESPN's Shams Charania reported last week that the two-time All-Star could be sidelined through March or early April.
Following Thursday's contest, the Knicks have five more games this month and then eight in April before kicking off the playoffs.
Braves add to outfield depth by signing veteran Alex Verdugo to one-year, $1.5 million deal
ATLANTA — The Atlanta Braves bolstered their outfield depth on Thursday by signing Alex Verdugo to a one-year, $1.5 million contract and optioning him to Triple-A Gwinnett.
Verdugo, 28, hit .233 with 13 homers and 61 RBIs for the New York Yankees in 2024 following four seasons with Boston. He took a big cut in pay from last year, when he had an $8.7 million base salary and earned $50,000 in performance bonuses for plate appearances.
The left-handed hitting Verdugo played for the Los Angeles Dodgers for three seasons, beginning in 2017. He has a career batting average of .272 and is a superior defender.
In similar moves to bolster depth this week, the Braves signed nine-time All-Star closer Craig Kimbrel and catcher James McCann to minor league deals.
Atlanta’s biggest offseason move was signing outfielder Jurickson Profar to a three-year, $42 million contract.
Profar, who is expected to be ready for the regular season after missing time with a jammed left wrist this spring training, is the projected starter in left field.
Atlanta is awaiting the return of 2023 NL MVP Ronald Acuña Jr., who tore his left ACL on May 26.
The Braves also signed Bryan De La Cruz to a one-year deal, and De La Cruz is expected to share right field with Jarred Kelenic while Acuña’s recovery continues. Michael Harris is set in center field.
Verdugo’s signing was a surprise because the Braves may have a glut of outfielders when Acuña is healthy, perhaps as early as May.
No. 12 seed McNeese holds off late Clemson charge to earn first March Madness victory
McNeese coach Will Wade and his boombox-toting manager are moving on in March Madness after the 12th-seeded Cowboys held off late-charging No. 5 seed Clemson 69-67 on Friday in the first bracket buster of the NCAA Tournament. Brandon Murray scored 14 of his 21 points in a stifling first half, when the Southland Conference school from Lake Charles, Louisiana, held Clemson to 13 points. After falling behind by as many as 24 in the second, the Tigers rallied, erasing most of a 12-point deficit in the final minute before running out of time.
Reds, newly acquired catcher Jose Trevino agree to three-year contract worth $14,925,000
GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Catcher Jose Trevino and the Cincinnati Reds agreed Thursday to a three-year contract worth $14,925,000, a deal that adds $11.5 million in newly guaranteed money.
Trevino was acquired from the New York Yankees in December for reliever Fernando Cruz and catcher Alex Jackson, and the 32-year-old avoided arbitration when he agreed to a one-year contract worth $3,425,000. Trevino would have been eligible for free agency after this year’s World Series.
His new deal adds salaries of $5.25 million each for 2026 and 2027 plus a $6.5 million club option for 2028 with $1 million buyout.
Trevino will begin the season as the Reds top catcher. Tyler Stephenson is sidelined by an oblique injury; he last played March 11, was scratched the following day and had an MRI on March 13.
Trevino was limited to 74 games last year, hitting .215 with eight homers and 28 RBIs. He was a first-time All-Star in 2022, playing a career-high 115 games and earning a Gold Glove while batting .248 and setting career bests with 11 homers and 43 RBIs.
Trevino has a .236 batting average, 32 homers and 141 RBIs over seven major league seasons with Texas and the Yankees.
What we learned as Steph's injury casts shadow on Warriors' win
What we learned as Steph's injury casts shadow on Warriors' win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO – While the Warriors outlasted the undermanned Toronto Raptors for a 117-114 win Thursday night at Chase Center, the final score was secondary.
Steph Curry in the third quarter took a hard fall and later was ruled out with a pelvic contusion.
Curry before leaving the game scored 17 points on 6-of-8 shooting and made two 3-pointers. The Raptors did everything they could to make anybody else on the Warriors beat them.
Challenge accepted. Most of all by Draymond Green, who scored a team-high 21 points, which is his second-most this season. The combination of Green and Jimmy Butler carried the Warriors to victory down the stretch.
Butler recorded his second triple-double since joining the Warriors with 16 points, 11 rebounds and 12 assists. His best play of the night, however, came on defense. Jamal Shead had a chance to make it a one-point game with 20 seconds remaining, but Butler had other plans.
JIMMY BUTLER CLUTCH BLOCK 🚫pic.twitter.com/YFGOJKlSlz
— Warriors on NBCS (@NBCSWarriors) March 21, 2025
Not to be forgotten, rookie center Quinten Post scored 18 points off the bench, going 6 of 9 from 3-point range. Jonathan Kuminga also was a major scoring punch off the bench, scoring 18 points. Plus, Brandin Podziemski had 15 points in his second game returning from a back injury.
The Warriors will take the results of a win, but now the real news awaits.
Here are three takeaways from the Warriors completing a 6-1 seven-game homestand.
Draymond Lets It Fly
The way Green completely shut down Giannis Antetokounmpo in the Warriors’ win Tuesday night gave coach Steve Kerr every reason to call him “the best defender I’ve ever seen.” Two nights later, Green began the win as an offensive threat.
As it always has, though, everything starts with Curry. The Raptors heavily top-locked Curry from the jump for all 94 feet, and Green quickly adjusted. First, because of the way nobody wants to leave Curry, the Warriors used an inverted pick-and-roll for a wide-open lane to let Green throw down a dunk. Later in the first quarter, the two used their synergy to execute their pick-and-roll closer to the basket, making Green’s man leave him and leading to a layup.
Watch out, Draymond comin' through 🚂pic.twitter.com/q7MvHaNuJl
— Warriors on NBCS (@NBCSWarriors) March 21, 2025
In the second quarter, four seconds after checking back into the game, Green found Curry cutting behind Toronto’s defense with a perfect bounce pass for two points. How did Curry make his first three of the second half? By rubbing off a strong screen set by Green. He wound up assisting Curry on three of his six made shots.
The Raptors paid no attention to Green as a scorer, and he made them pay for it. He had 10 points in the first quarter and 18 going into halftime, including four 3-pointers. Green’s 18 points were his third-most ever for a half, and the five threes he wound up with tied a season-high.
Draymond already has FOUR 3s 🥵pic.twitter.com/dHsMV71Zxv
— Warriors on NBCS (@NBCSWarriors) March 21, 2025
Raptors’ Anybody-But-Steph Strategy
Though the Warriors only held a six-point lead through the first half, four of their players already had scored in double figures. Green’s 18 points led all scorers. He wasn’t alone.
Kuminga gave Golden State 14 first-half points off the bench. Podziemski was right behind with 13, and Post drained four threes off the bench for 12 points going into the second half.
Curry, however, was held to seven points. So in a sense, the Raptors’ strategy somewhat worked.
But Curry then scored 10 of the Warriors’ first 16 points in the third quarter before exiting to an injury. The Warriors responded by going on a 10-4 run to close the quarter to hold a 93-92 lead going into the fourth.
A total of six Warriors scored in double figures. From the time of Curry’s injury to the end of the game, the Warriors outscored the Raptors by eight points, 34-26.
Steph’s Scary Injury
All of Chase Center fell silent with a little more than three minutes left in the third quarter. A pin drop could be heard echoing off the court. That’s what happens when Curry goes down.
Curry drove to the basket and was hammered by two Raptors as he delivered a pass across his body from the paint to the left corner. He bounced off the court, immediately lifted his back and began grabbing at his tailbone area. For what felt like an eternity, Curry stayed down on the ground and was tended to by assistant athletic trainer Drew Yoder.
On his own power, Curry walked to the Warriors’ bench before being joined by director of sports medicine and performance Rick Celebrini down the tunnel and back to the locker room.
Steph Curry goes down and all of Chase Center holds their breath in the third quarter
Curry walked down the tunnel and back to the locker room with Rick Celebrini @NBCSWarriorspic.twitter.com/IDPKpxUYFG
— Dalton Johnson (@DaltonJ_Johnson) March 21, 2025
Early into the fourth quarter, the Warriors ruled Curry out because of a pelvic contusion. He was listed as questionable two games ago with lower back soreness, which first occurred during pregame warmups one week ago against the Sacramento Kings. Curry then was given rest last game, the first one he didn’t suit up for in nearly two months.
The Warriors on Saturday begin a six-game road trip starting in Atlanta against the Hawks. They’re 5-3 in eight games without Curry this season.
McNeese State stuns Clemson for first upset of March Madness 2025
Kentucky relying on newcomers to end its recent history of postseason frustration
Travis Green On Fabian Zetterlund: 'He's Going To Have To Wait For More Ice Time'
Two weeks ago, on March 6th, Ottawa Senators winger Fabian Zetterlund was a member of the San Jose Sharks, preparing for a game against the Colorado Avalanche. That night, Zetterlund played almost 19 minutes, took seven shots on goal, and scored his 17th goal of the season.
On Thursday night, Zetterlund is preparing for another game against the Avalanche, only now he's preparing as a fourth-line player. So far, the 25-year-old is averaging 9:43 of ice time with zero goals, zero points, and four shots on goal in his first five games with the Senators.
The deadline-day deal for Zetterlund and a fourth-round pick seemed at the time like an absolute steal. He was San Jose's leading goal scorer last year with 24 goals and only cost the Senators Zack Ostapchuk, Noah Gregor, and a second-round draft pick. That felt inexpensive, especially when viewed through the lens of a scoring upgrade for the top nine, maybe even the top six.
But Senators head coach Travis Green hasn’t yet viewed it that way. Green has had Zetterlund on the fourth line for each of his first five games in Ottawa.
His usage initially raised eyebrows in some circles, but since the Senators were in the middle of a winning streak, the assumption was that Zetterlund would eventually get his chance when the team cooled off. The Senators did cool off in Montreal on Tuesday night, losing 6-3 to the Canadiens and ending their six-game winning streak.
But at practice on Thursday morning, there was Zetterlund again, skating on the fourth line.
Green’s intent isn’t to bury Zetterlund, nor is it a reflection of his play. And he’s trying to keep the lines of communication open with the player.
“You know, I've had good conversations with him,” Green told the media after Thursday’s game-day skate. “Probably three times, I've just talked to him. The coaches have done a good job showing video. He's learning a lot on the fly, system-wise, different players. He's a younger player who hasn't played a whole lot in the league. And also, being patient—it’s not always easy.
“I think if we, as coaches, can have open dialogue with a player, it’d be different if we were saying, ‘Hey, we don’t like your play. You know, this is where you're slotted,’ but that's not the case.”
That said, despite an uninspiring effort in Montreal on Tuesday, Green doesn’t want to start tinkering with his lineup yet.
“Our team's been playing well, and (Zetterlund) is going to have to wait for more ice time. I'd like to get him some more ice time here and there. But that's the reality. We're also here to win every night. And it’s a fine line, making those decisions on who goes on the ice and who doesn't.”
Interestingly, Green’s strategy wasn't also applied to fellow newcomer Dylan Cozens, who arrived in Ottawa with fewer goals and points than Zetterlund. Cozens got here ice cold, with one point in his previous five games, all losses with the Sabres. His coach, Lindy Ruff, said the kid "just couldn't find his game."
What he found here was the second-line centre role and a boatload of power play time. As a result, Cozens has five points in six games as a Senator and now stands tied with Zetterlund at 36 points.
In a parallel universe, Green could have made Cozens his fourth-liner for his first five games to ease him in and not mess with a winning formula, just as he has with Zetterlund. When Cozens arrived, the Sens had just pulled five out of a possible six points out of their previous three games. Centre Shane Pinto had three goals in those three games and could have easily moved up until further notice.
We know now that it's good that Green didn't choose that route. So why is he choosing it with Zetterlund? Zetterlund isn’t here to be a fourth-liner, nor is he particularly well-suited for the role.
And while having plug-and-play scoring depth in the event of a slump or injury is a nice notion in theory, the Sens are playing with fire in assuming Zetterlund will be unfazed by any of this. They're trusting that he can flick the switch on command when they finally move him up and give him a chance.
That's a lot easier said than done, but hopefully, for the Sens' sake, he can.
Because the longer the player goes without providing secondary scoring, the more people will start to wonder why they bothered to make this trade.
By Steve Warne
Site Editor at The Hockey News Ottawa
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Yankees' Clarke Schmidt throws successful BP, but status as IL candidate still 'up in the air'
The good news for the Yankees is that Clarke Schmidt successfully completed a live batting practice session on Thursday without any hitches. The bad news is that he's still a potential injured list candidate once the regular season arrives next week.
While speaking to Anthony Rieber of Newsday, Schmidt acknowledged that his Opening Day status remains "up in the air," as he's not yet built up due to recent shoulder fatigue.
The Yankees haven't arrived at a decision either. According to Gary Phillips of the New York Daily News, manager Aaron Boone is still determining whether Schmidt's next trip to the mound will come in another batting practice session or game action.
The right-hander threw 32 pitches at Steinbrenner Field on Thursday, and faced a group of hitters that included Austin Wells, Dominic Smith, and Paul Goldschmidt.
Instead of starting Monday's game against the Toronto Blue Jays, Schmidt threw a bullpen session in Tampa. The 29-year-old threw 24 pitches then, and Boone told reporters that it went well.
The chances of Schmidt beginning the 2025 campaign on the shelf seem rather high, considering that the spring training window closes soon. Even if he builds up to 50 pitches in his next outing -- and without any setbacks -- it's not the workload required for a starter. The Yankees will undoubtedly err on the side of caution, despite the encouraging progress.
Schmidt's lone start of camp took place on March 11 against the Baltimore Orioles. He threw 38 pitches (23 strikes) and allowed three runs on four hits while striking out four.
'Just Go Play': Playoffs Are Where Maple Leafs' Scott Laughton Will Make His Mark
While some big trades at the NHL trade deadline had immediately positive results, the Toronto Maple Leafs acquiring Scott Laughton from the Philadelphia Flyers isn’t one of them.
Laughton has yet to produce a point in six games as a Leaf, and his role diminished on Wednesday as Max Domi improved his play. Leafs coach Craig Berube cut Laughton’s minutes on Wednesday night against Colorado. Laughton played just 11:13 – his lowest time-on-ice total since Dec. 8.
Laughton's current woes must be humbling as someone who averaged more than 15 minutes of ice time as a Flyer before being traded to the Leafs. But not every trade will be an immediate success, and what matters most is how Laughton handles the transition to a new club and what he does by the playoffs.
“I think he’s trying to probably play the game without making mistakes, and he’s overthinking things instead of just playing,” Berube said of Laughton. “Just play. Be aggressive, do your thing, and that will come around. I do believe that. He wants to do well. He’s just got to loosen up and go play. Use your ability. You’re a good player. You’ve played in the league a long time. Just go play. I think he’s holding back a little bit. Just too safe, almost.”
When you don’t have any offense to point to, and when the Leafs are only 3-3 since the trade deadline, it’s easy to grow frustrated.
Laughton’s under a huge microscope in Toronto, where every shift is hyper-analyzed, and Leafs fans constantly compare him to the best the Buds have had to offer.
But if Laughton can shut out the naysayers, he will work out of this funk and show everyone why Toronto GM Brad Treliving gave up a first-round pick and decent prospect in Nikita Grebenkin for his services.
The Maple Leafs don’t need Laughton to do all the heavy lifting. They have Auston Matthews and John Tavares doing that by centering the top two lines. He just has to settle in – either at center on the third line or on the wing – and read the game.
Toronto beat the Calgary Flames and the Avalanche to regain second place in the Atlantic Division. That will set up the Leafs for a better position in the playoffs, where Laughton’s game best suits the team.
Scoring isn’t his specialty, as his career highs are 18 goals and 43 points. He had 11 goals and 27 points in 60 games for the Flyers before the trade. But his two-way play, penalty-killing, physicality, flexibility between center and left wing and his hockey IQ are what the Leafs need in their bottom six. Since the trade deadline, he ranks second among Leafs forwards in blocked shots, with six, and he has 14 hits.
It’s a matter of time before Laughton fully acclimates to his home team.
“He’s from here, and he’s got a lot going on and people and everything else. You want to please, right,” Berube said. “You’ve got to forget about pleasing and play and do your thing. You’re a good player. That’s why you’re in the National Hockey League for a long time.”
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DeRozan reaches historic NBA career-scoring milestone vs. Bulls
DeRozan reaches historic NBA career-scoring milestone vs. Bulls originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
DeMar DeRozan reached yet another incredible milestone amidst his 16th NBA season.
The star Kings forward eclipsed 25,000 career points with one of his patented mid-range buckets in the third quarter of Sacramento’s game against the Chicago Bulls on Thursday night at Golden 1 Center.
DeRozan entered Thursday’s game with 24,983 career points, needing 17 to reach the milestone.
He now becomes the 27th player in league history to reach the rare feat, just behind Golden State Warriors superstar Steph Curry, who reached the career mark earlier this month.
DeRozan is the sixth active player with at least 25,000 points, joining LeBron James, Kevin Durant, James Harden, Russell Westbrook and Curry.
The 35-year-old has been one of the purest scorers in the league, still showcasing his efficiency nearly two decades in.
Entering Thursday’s game, DeRozan was averaging 22.2 points on 48.6-percent shooting from the field and 35.6 percent from 3-point range, with 4.0 rebounds and 4.1 assists in 35.8 minutes across 62 games (62 starts) with Sacramento this season.