Yankees' Aaron Judge is MLB's greatest hitter – and ultimate MVP teammate

SCOTTSDALE, AZ — San Francisco Giants ace Logan Webb has never done it in his career but it’s out of sheer and genuine respect that has him wanting to acknowledge the man Wednesday night in the season opener at Oracle Park.

So when New York Yankees great Aaron Judge steps to the plate in the first game of the 2026 MLB season (8:05 ET, Netflix), Webb plans to touch the bill of his cap, look into his eyes, and nod. It will let him know they will always be fierce competitors, but after being teammates for two weeks in the World Baseball Classic, he’ll forever have Webb’s ultimate respet.

“It’s kind of part of the game now where there’s a lot of tipping of the caps and stuff now, and it’s not necessarily my favorite thing," Webb tells USA TODAY Sports. “But for Aaron, I’ve got to do it, right?

“I mean, the guy was just the captain of our team. He’s captain of the Yankees. He does everything the right way. And he’s such a great person, a great family man, everything you’d ever want."

Aaron Judge won the AL MVP award in 2022, 2024 and 2025.

They nearly became teammates three years ago when Judge was a free agent, and the Giants offered him a nine-year, $360 million contract – $40 million more than the Yankees' initial offer. The Giants brought in Webb to help recruit, along with former Giants All-Star Rich Aurilia, who was Judge’s favorite player growing up in Northern California; and had messages from Golden State Warriors superstar Steph Curry. Judge’s parents, Patty and Wayne, even drove two hours from Linden, California to join the meeting and a late dinner. Despite the Giants’ offer to spend the night, they still drove back home in the late evening.

The Yankees wound up matching the Giants’ offer, and Judge stayed put, but when he saw Giants president Larry Baer before Team USA’s exhibition game against the Giants, he came over, gave Baer a warm embrace, and thanked him for showing such strong interest in him and the way they treated his parents.

“It was so amazing to meet his parents, you can see where Aaron has become the person he is," Webb said. “I remember when he signed with the Yankees, I text him, 'Congratulations’ right away.

“Really, this is where he’s supposed be, captain of the Yankees."

'Greatest humble superstar'

You don’t need a 50-person analytics team to let you know that Judge is the greatest hitter on the planet. He’s a three-time MVP, joining Joe DiMaggio, Yogi Berra, and Mickey Mantle as the only Yankees to achieve the feat. He is the American League season-season home run king. He’s a seven-time All-Star. He’s a five-time Silver Slugger winner. He’s a batting champion. And he already is considered one of the greatest right-handed hitters in history

And yet, the most mind-boggling attribute about Judge?

“He’s even a better person than he is a player," says Sean Casey, Yankees former hitting coach who was the co-hitting coach for Team USA, “and that’s saying a whole lot since he’s the greatest player in the universe. The way he treats everybody, the security guards, the batboys, everybody that he comes across, it’s just unreal.

“I think a real leader is how you treat people when no one's looking, how you treat people when that can't really do anything for you. He's the best I've ever seen. The greatest humble superstar you’ll ever meet."

Judge was captain of the United States' WBC team, and despite the tears and heartache of losing the gold medal to Venezuela, the players, coaches and staff members say the one of the best parts of the experience was spending two weeks around Judge.

They had heard the stories about Judge’s kindness. They knew his reputation as being one of the game’s finest clubhouse leaders. But to see his interaction every day with teammates and staff members. To see Judge make everyone around him feel comfortable. To have him make everyone feel welcome.

Well, there’s a reason why the Yankees have the greatest recruiting tool in the world, knowing just how badly everyone wants to play with Judge.

“I had heard so much about him over the years that I was really curious to see what he’d be like," said Michael Young, the former seven-time All-Star infielder who was the Texas Rangers’ clubhouse leader. “It’s incredible. I mean, the back of his baseball card speaks for itself, but the person is off the charts.

“In terms of commanding a room, leading a team by both his actions, words, encouragement, positiveness and competitiveness, he’s the very best I've ever seen do it.

“And I don’t throw that around lightly."

It’s not as if Judge, 6-foot-7, 280 pounds, can arrive to the ballpark and go unnoticed. When he walks into the clubhouse door, people who want to talk to him. People want to see him. People want a piece of him. There are corporate sponsorships. Commercial shoots. Interview requests. Autograph sessions.

Still, despite all of the demands, he still makes connections with everyone he sees. He’ll make eye contact. He’ll give a fist-bump. He has a knack for making every single person he comes across feeling special.

“He’s the best leader I've ever been around on the baseball field, at any level," Yankee first baseman Paul Goldschmidt says. “I think he honestly cares about the team more than himself, and he lives that out. He just makes the people around him better.

“I mean, I've seen him strike out three times, and before he even takes the puts the bat back in the bat rack, he’ll tell the next guy, 'Hey, come on. You got this.’ He just leaves his own performance behind so quickly, and just sets the example for everyone. It becomes really contagious where he doesn't make it about himself."

There, of course, has been a great tradition of Yankee clubhouse leaders. Derek Jeter was a role model and captain winning four World Series from 1996-2000. He carried the torch until Brett Gardner and CC Sabathia took over. And now it belongs to Judge, who is beginning his 10th full season in pinstripes.

Judge shines in WBC

Jeter, of course, won five World Series rings. Sabathia and Gardner won the 2009 World Series together. Now, they’d love to see Judge get that elusive championship, too. The Yankees have reached the postseason in all but one of Judge’s seasons, but have won just one pennant.

“We’d all love to see it happen for him," said Sabathia, the Hall of Fame pitcher. “You see the way guys follow him, and want to be around him. He felt that responsibility early on when I knew him, and he was like, “I'll take it on.’ It's been awesome to see him grow into that role, the Yankee way, and how to do things.

“Really, he reminds me a lot of Gardy, the way that he goes about his business. The willingness to play through anything. The toughness and just wanting to go out and win a ball game every single day. The guy is just so genuine, and he has never changed."

Former veteran reliever Adam Ottavino, who’s more than six years older than Judge, joined the Yankees in 2019, walked through the clubhouse door, and Judge immediately introduced himself.

“He's just like a naturally friendly guy, a very inclusive type of guy," Ottavino said. “I mean, I had just gotten to the team, and he's already introducing me to his parents. He’s just the type of guy that goes around and checks in with everybody every day.

“He's more of a lead-by-example guy, but when he speaks, it carries a lot of volume. He just always seems to know what to say. And it’s all natural. There's nothing at all manufactured there."

Really, just being around Judge during Yankees spring training camp and the WBC, said Yankees pitching great Andy Pettitte, his demeanor reminds him so much of Jeter.

“They’re not big rah-rah guys, and just go about their business,’’ Pettitte says, “but the humility this guy [Judge] shows is absolutely amazing. I mean, and he is the superstar of all superstars. That's what separates him... He’s just an unbelievable human being."

It was during the World Baseball Classic in Houston when Judge barely had time for batting practice. He was in the cage for maybe six or seven swings, and had to run to prepare for the game. Yet instead of rushing off, he stayed behind, picked up the baseballs scattered around the infield just like anyone else, and bumped fists with batting practice pitcher Ali Modami.

“What really jumped out at me," DeRosa said, “was how engaging he is with his teammates. He makes everybody feel like they're a part of it, whether it's a wink, whether it's a pat on the ass, or just an acknowledgement. He never once walked by me without saying or doing something.

“I mean, just an unbelievable person. Such a special human being with the amount of focus and attention that's on every him every move he makes, and handles it all with style and grace. He’s one-in-a-million today. He’s a special player with special gifts is a special person. He holds everybody accountable, and holds himself accountable.’’

When Judge was the first player announced on the USA team, DeRosa’s phone wouldn’t stop buzzing. Everyone wanted to be part of the team. Philadelphia Phillies DH Kyle Schwarber had one request when he signed up: “Can you make sure I’m part of his BP [batting practice] group?"

Judge celebrates his home run against Mexico for Team USA.

“That’s why if I’m a player, and I want to go somewhere as a free agent, I go to New York because of Aaron Judge," Casey said. “I’ve watched it. He can make a bench guy feel like he’s the best player on the team. He doesn’t big-league anybody. Some guys are prisoners of their own fame. I saw that around Ken Griffey Jr. They can’t live the same, but he does. It’s not like he can hide, but he fits in with everyone, and he’s as genuine as they come."

It’s Judge’s interactions with his teammates that had coaches like David Ross, the former Cubs manager and World Series champion, in awe of his demeanor. They heard the stories from Yankee manager Aaron Boone but to see it in person was something else.

“He knows he's one of the faces of baseball, if not the face of baseball,’’ said Ross, who was on the WBC coaching staff, “but he’s not afraid to be the first person to speak and own the room. He's just very cool and calm and he treats everybody with a ton of respect. Just watching the way he carries himself, way he interacts with players in batting cage, the pitchers in the locker room, speaking up after games, it’s special, man.

“His presence is intimidating, but his personality lets down every guard that you ever might have had."

Says Milwaukee Brewers All-Star second baseman Brice Turang: “He's the real deal, man. He’s such a great player, but even a better dude. There's always a smile on his face. He's always positive. He always wants the best for everybody. And he always wants to win."

Aaron Judge 'wouldn't have it any other way'

Judge, 33, realizes that once he gets to Oracle Park on Wednesday afternoon, all eyes will be on him again. There will be dozens of national TV cameras filming his arrival. Home run champion Barry Bonds will be on hand. The Netflix crew will be there to interview him. And then, of course, come all the actual baseball demands.

“I got to tell you the amount of people that ask him for something over the course of the day," said Jason Zillo, Yankees vice president of communications and media relations, “is staggering. Just in my little world, it's an insurmountable a number of people want time with him. ... The gift of patience for him is off the charts."

And yet, there’s always the smile.

“Just the fact that you have someone of that magnitude embracing the standard of playing for and being employed by the New York Yankees organization is unquantifiable," Zillo said. “You’ve got this direct lineage of clubhouse leaders through the years, and now it's landed squarely on Judge's plate. And he's like, 'Bring it on. I want this. I love this.’

“This is what it means to play for the Yankees and what it means to be a captain for the New York Yankees. It doesn't have to do with hitting 50 or 60 homers. It's just how we go about doing things.’’

It’s a different time than when Jeter broke in with the Yankees. Cell phones were a luxury. There were no camera phones. Players could leave the clubhouse, have dinner hit a Broadway show, and not a soul would know.

These days, players can’t stop to buy a bag of groceries without being filmed.

“Derek could go to dinner, he could go out and have drinks," Zillo said, “and it wouldn’t be chronicled and documented and thrown up on billboards. Aaron can't do that. None of these players can. You’ve got to have your head on a swivel now because everybody has the ability to capture content from the moment they walk out the front door until the moment they come home.’’

Still, Judge understands and embraces the responsibility. He doesn’t have the luxury of being a superstar in Kansas City, like Bobby Witt Jr. He can’t be Shohei Ohtani in Los Angeles and only talk to media once or twice a week.

Privacy doesn’t exist when you’re the biggest star, in the biggest media market, playing for the New York Yankees.

“I love it," Judge said. “I really do. I wouldn’t have it any other way. I just want to win. I want to be a World Series champion for the New York Yankees.

“That would mean everything."

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Yankees' Aaron Judge is MLB's greatest hitter and teammate: Opening Day

March Madness bracket predictions redo: Revised Final Four picks ahead of Sweet 16

OK, so Florida's loss to Iowa had a lot of us crumbling up our brackets.

The defending champions were a popular pick to repeat. But the No. 1 seeded Gators were hit with a second-round Hawkeyes dagger, leading many looking for a mulligan on the Final Four predictions.

So let's give this another try. Here are USA TODAY Sports staff's updated Final Four picks.

Final Four predictions: Who will win Sweet 16, Elite 8?

John Brice

  • East: Duke
  • Midwest: Michigan
  • South: Illinois
  • West: Arizona

Blake Toppmeyer

  • East: Michigan State
  • Midwest: Michigan
  • South: Houston
  • West: Arizona

Paul Myerberg

  • East: St. John's
  • Midwest: Michigan
  • South: Houston
  • West: Arizona

Craig Meyer

  • East: UConn
  • Midwest: Michigan
  • South: Houston
  • West: Arkansas

John Leuzzi

  • East: Duke
  • Midwest: Michigan
  • South: Houston
  • West: Arizona

Ehsan Kassim

  • East: Duke
  • Midwest: Alabama
  • South: Illinois
  • West: Arkansas

Who is favorite to win March Madness? NCAA championship odds heading into Sweet 16

Here's a look at the updated championship odds for the 16 teams remaining.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Final Four picks: Rethinking our March Madness predictions ahead of Sweet 16

Pinheiro Braathen set to win World Cup giant slalom season title after Odermatt skis out

HAFJELL, Norway (AP) — Olympic champion Lucas Pinheiro Braathen is well set to add the season-long World Cup title in giant slalom, as he was fastest in the first run after standings leader Marco Odermatt failed to finish on Tuesday.

Odermatt, starting first with the No. 1 bib, skied out of a ragged run where he earlier had to recover from a big mistake.

That opened the door for Pinheiro Braathen, who needs a top-three finish in the last giant slalom of the season to guarantee a first crystal trophy for a Brazilian skier.

The Norway-born Pinheiro Braathen skied more precisely on the slope at Hafjell where he grew up racing and posted a time 0.21 seconds faster than Stefan Brennsteiner.

Loïc Meillard, the Olympic champion in slalom, was third with 0.63 to make up in the afternoon run. Meillard can still top the giant slalom standings if he wins the race and Pinheiro Braathen finishes off the podium.

Odermatt already secured the World Cup season titles in downhill, super-G and overall and also is defending the giant slalom title.

The Swiss superstar has seemed fatigued in the final weeks of the season and does not relish the softer spring-like snow typical of World Cup courses in March.

The men’s World Cup season ends on Wednesday with a slalom. Pinheiro Braathen is competing for that title with his childhood friend Atle Lie McGrath.

___

AP skiing: https://apnews.com/hub/alpine-skiing

2026 Bluebird Banter Top 40 Prospects: 32-29

BBB Top 40 Prospects logo, it is a Blue Jays logo hatching out of an egg with a circular banner that says Bluebird Banter Top 40 Blue Jays Prospects

Yesterday we kicked things off with the firsttwo installments of our top prospect series. Today we’re back with the next tier up

32. Yondrei Rojas, LHP, Age 23 (DOB: 11/22/2002), Grade 35, 2025: NR

Rojas has been in the system a long time, having singed as a Venezuelan International Free Agent back in 2021. He spent his first three years developing primarily as a starter, but struggled to get past A ball because of a tendency to get hit pretty hard. He shifted full time to relief in 2024, with initially limited success. His K rate spiked 10%, to 29%, but he developed a walk problem and posted a middling 4.36 ERA in his third tour of the level. Things seemed to click in 2025, though. He was bumped up to A+ Vancouver, where he punched out 36 batters in 23.2 innings while getting his walks back under control (just 6 in that span). That earned him a promotion to AA New Hampshire. His strikeouts ebbed at the higher level, dropping back to 22%, but he still generated a solid 12.5% swinging strike rate.

His raw stuff is good, with a fastball that sits in the mid 90s and touches 98, a slider that projects as plus, and a cutter and change that are usable extra options if not above average weapons. He’s a sneaky good athlete for a smaller guy without the prototypical pitcher’s build, with a loose delivery that allows some continued projection on his command. He profiles as a solid middle reliever with a fairly deep arsenal to compensate for no clear plus pitch, and having already had success in the mid minors means he could enter the big league bullpen depth mix soon.

31. Sam Shaw, 2B/OF, Age 21 (DOB: 2/26/2005), Grade 35, 2025: NR

The 2023 9th round pick hails from Victoria, B.C. He performed solidly at the complex after signing, but struggled with power production in his first full pro season in 2024. He was advanced to A ball this past season and flourished, posting a .253/.383/.418 line that was 29% better than the Florida State League average. That earned him a cup of coffee in Vancouver late in the season. He struggled in his 28 PA at the higher level, but the sample is too small to put much of a damper on a strong season.

Shaw’s calling card is his hit tool. He’s an impressively selective hitter, although it tips over into passivity sometimes, and his excellent 16% walk rate was counterbalanced by a too high 19% called strike percentage. When he does swing, his 83% contact rate was well above average. Raw power won’t be a significant part of his game, as his exit velocities maxed out at a low 107mph this year and his 5’10” frame doesn’t have obvious room for more muscle. That said, his swing is geared for pulled fly ball contact and because he has such strong hitting ability he managed a solid 43% hard hit rate in spite of his limited strength. He might manage to be a 15 home run type hitter in spite of his physical limitations if his knack for barreling the ball translates against better pitching.

His bat is going to have to carry him, as Shaw is a fringy defender at second with a notably weak arm. He’s also spent some time in the outfield, where his routes are good but his below average speed probably limits him to left field as a regular. His ceiling is probably something like a more contact oriented Davis Schneider. That’s a hard skillset to make work, but we’ve seen in happen and it’s something the Jays seem to think they know how to develop.

30. Connor Cooke, RHP, Age 26 (DOB: 11/2/1999), Grade 35, 2025: 20th

Cooke was a 10th round pick out of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette back in 2021. He pitched sparingly in his first two seasons as a Ragin’ Cajun before moving into the rotation and breaking out in his junior season, striking out 90 in 79 innings and posting a 2.82 ERA. The Blue Jays tried him briefly in the rotation again in 2022, but quickly moved him back to the bullpen. He dominated right away, striking ou t80 in 44.1 innings during the 2023 season and rocketing all the way to AAA. Unfortunately, things went sideways the following year, as his stuff backed up significantly and he lost the plate, posting a 30:28 K:BB ratio in 31.2 innings. Ultimately, that turned out to be the product of elbow problems, and he had Tommy John surgery in January of last year.

Cooke slides down the list this season mostly because it’s a little bit deeper than it was. We don’t really have any new information since last year, but he should be close to returning to action at this point. If he’s back to his 2023 self, he looks like a potential setup man. His drop and drive delivery gives his fastball a flat plane to the plate, allowing it to play as a solidly plus offering. His second weapon is a plus low-mid 80s slider with huge horizontal sweep, and he also features a change-up that flashes above average. Before his injury issues, his command was close to average.

29. Edward Duran, Age 21 (DOB: 5/29/2004), Grade 35, 2025: NR

The return in the Anthony Bass trade, Duran has spent three years slowly climbing the levels of the Jays system, reaching A+ in 2025. He’s a solid contact hitter, posting above average contact rates and showing decent feel for the strike zone. His raw strength is well below average without projection for more to come, and he hits about half his balls in play on the ground, so his power output is probably always going to be minimal. If everything translates, he could produce respectable OBPs that allow him to remain playable as a backup catcher.

The good news is that his glove is more than adequate for that role. He’s a plus receiver with good blocking skills, and although he needs to clean up his accuracy a bit he has a plus arm that should allow him to control the running game.

This is a straightforward profile. Duran doesn’t possess MLB regular upside, because he just doesn’t impact the ball enough, but he also doesn’t look likely to be an offensive black hole because of his on base ability, which will allow him to be a quality backup. It’s not a sexy profile, but this skill set turns into 10 year major league careers all the time

What if Danny Ainge drafted Markelle Fultz over Jayson Tatum?

PHILADELPHIA, PA - OCTOBER 20: Markelle Fultz #20 of the Philadelphia 76ers stands next to Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics during foul shots in the first half at the Wells Fargo Center on October 20, 2017 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Celtics defeated the 76ers 102-92. 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 Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Former #1 pick in the 2017 NBA Draft Markelle Fultz signed a 10-Day contract with the Toronto Raptors yesterday after spending time with their G-League affiliate this season. The last time Fultz played in the NBA was with the Sacramento Kings in the 2024-25 season where he averaged 2.9 points in 21 games.

Although the plan in 2017 was always for the Celtics to draft Jayson Tatum, there was a short time where Fultz was thought of to be in Boston alongside the core group of Isaiah Thomas, Al Horford, potentially Gordon Hayward, Jaylen Brown and Marcus Smart.

This took me back to when the Boston Celtics won the 2017 Draft Lottery and wondering what would have happened if they decided to draft Fultz first overall? What would this iteration of the Boston Celtics look like today? Would this decision have affected the moves made in that offseason? Finally, what does Jayson Tatum’s career look like?

Lead Up to the Draft Lottery

How did the Boston Celtics end up with even a chance at the Number 1 overall pick at this time coming off of a 2016-17 season where they were first in the Eastern Conference Standings, Isaiah Thomas had a top-5 MVP finish, and made the Eastern Conference Finals where they lost to the Cleveland Cavaliers in five games?

This draft pick was traded to Boston by the Brooklyn Nets in the Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett trade. Brooklyn had a miserable season without both of those guys on the roster, finishing with a league worst record of 20-62. That trade really was the gift that kept on giving.

The Celtics pick was projected to have a 25% chance of finishing number one overall and it finished that way as well, with the Los Angeles Lakers finishing with the second pick and the Philadelphia 76ers finishing with the third pick. Boston now had the chance to pick the no doubt best player in college basketball, Markelle Fultz out of Washington.

Fultz Workouts With Celtics

Markelle Fultz was a star at Washington where he averaged 23.2 points per game and looked like the sure fire best player in college basketball. He was seen better than guys who played in March Madness that year like Lonzo Ball, Jayson Tatum, De’Aaron Fox, Josh Jackson, and Malik Monk.

According to an article written by Chris Forsberg of ESPN, Fultz was excited to potentially join the Celtics saying, “It almost feels like I belong here,” while he looked at some of the pictures of past Boston legends outside of the locker room. He was really excited about the opportunity to be able to wear Ray Allen’s old N0. 20 and play alongside former Washington Huskies alum Isaiah Thomas.

When Danny Ainge was about the workout, he didn’t give much information saying, “He’s talented…I didn’t find anything today that I didn’t already know, which is the same case with almost every draft workout. … He has a personality, has some charisma — he’s fun.”

Little did we know that Ainge had a master plan that would change the history of the Boston Celtics franchise forever.

The Trade and Draft

Danny Ainge traded the first overall pick to the Philadelphia 76ers in exchange for the third overall pick in the 2017 draft plus another future first round pick. This gave the 76ers a chance to draft Fultz and pair him along with Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons, but what was the Celtics plan?

Projections at the time had them taking Kansas forward Josh Jackson with the third pick, but Ainge had his heart set on a forward from Duke named Jayson Tatum. Boston would select Tatum with that pick and the rest was history.

It came out after the fact that the Celtics were always going to select Tatum whether it was with the first pick or not and that paid off in spades for Boston, winning countless awards and making deep playoff runs that eventually ended with a championship in 2024.

Fultz on the other hand did not work out with the 76ers. He was later diagnosed with Thoracic Outlet Syndrome on his shoulder, completely messing up his shooting mechanics. When the 76ers traded for Jimmy Butler the next season, it was over for Fultz’s time in Philadelphia, being traded to the Orlando Magic in 2019 after only 33 games with the team that drafted him. Fultz would play 5 seasons with the Magic but deal with some devastating injuries like a torn ACL and other knee and shoulder issues. He would play 21 games for the Kings last season but didn’t find a spot on an NBA roster until now.

Hypothetical Scenarios

I always wonder what would have happened if Markelle Fultz was drafted by the Celtics with the first overall pick. There would have obviously been a log jam at the point guard position with Isaiah Thomas, Marcus Smart, and Terry Rozier at those spots and if Fultz had the same injury issues he did with the 76ers, there’s a chance he could have been moved on from in a similar way.

However, this might have stopped Boston from trading away Thomas in exchange for Kyrie Irving. Would Ainge have made the deal if they had Fultz who could have been the point guard of the future?

What about Gordon Hayward? He was a free agent that was recruited heavily by the Celtics and Isaiah Thomas specifically. Would he have still signed here?

What about Jayson Tatum’s career? He might have ended up getting chosen by the 76ers or Phoenix Suns at picks 3 or 4 since it felt like the Lakers were always going to take Lonzo Ball. Would his career have been as successful on a worse team or would it have looked similar to the career of Josh Jackson with the Suns?

Thankfully, we don’t have to ever live out these scenarios in real time. It feels like the we ended up with the best possible timeline for the Celtics as a whole but it is a crazy domino effect that could have had some real serious implications on the future of the franchise for Boston.

Re-seeding the Sweet 16 teams: Separating the contenders from pretenders

Over four action-packed days, a 64-team bracket was quartered.

And with it, we’ve got 16 men’s college basketball teams whose dreams of a national championship get to live for at least a few more days.

With the Final Four and national championship pictures now much clearer than they were a week ago, how do the remaining teams stack up?

Here’s a ranking of the Sweet 16 teams:

Re-Ranking Sweet 16 teams

16. Texas

The Longhorns fit the traditional mold of an underachieving power-conference team that gets some favorable matchups and starts to play up to its potential in the single-elimination crucible of the tournament. Their three wins in five days against NC State, BYU and Gonzaga may not be the end for them, either. Dailyn Swain is one of the best bucket-getters remaining in the field and seven-footer Matas Vokietaitis is averaging 18.3 points and 11 rebounds per game in the tournament.

Despite its placement on this list, this is the kind of team that could absolutely give Purdue problems.

15. Iowa

Ben McCollum wins wherever he goes, whether it’s four national championships at Division II Northwest Missouri State or 31 wins and a second-round trip in his lone season at Drake. Now, in his first season at Iowa, the Hawkeyes are off to their first Sweet 16 since 1999 after a 73-72 upset of Florida on Sunday. The win came despite star guard Bennett Stirtz missing all nine of his 3-point attempts, but Iowa got it done closer to the basket, making 19 of its 27 2-pointers against one of the country’s tallest teams.

Their next foe is a familiar one — a Nebraska team it went 1-1 against during the regular season.

14. Tennessee

While the performance of Rick Barnes teams in the tournament makes for an easy punchline, the Volunteers’ losses in the Elite Eight each of the past two seasons came against the eventual national runner-up. With a win over No. 3 seed Virginia on Sunday, they’ve overperformed their seed and, because of it, Tennessee’s now off to the Sweet 16 for the fourth-consecutive season, the first time in program history that’s ever happened.

13. Nebraska

The Cornhuskers shed the historical ignominy of being the only power-conference program without an NCAA Tournament win by blowing out Troy in a 4-versus-13 matchup before doubling that all-time tournament victories count two days later after surviving Vanderbilt and Tyler Tanner’s nearly miraculous, in-and-out heave.

Now, instead of having to face No. 1 seed and reigning national champion Florida, Fred Hoiberg’s team gets a more manageable Sweet 16 matchup in No. 9 seed Iowa in a game that won’t lack any intensity.

12. St. John’s

The Red Storm gave away a 13-point lead with seven minutes remaining only to get it back thanks to Dylan Darling’s buzzer-beating heroics. The Johnnies have some of the same offensive concerns that led to a surprisingly early ouster from last year’s tournament — namely, a lack of consistent outside shooting — but they’re one of the most tenacious and reliable teams defensively in the country and, maybe more importantly, have one of the greatest coaches in the sport’s history leading the way.

If there’s a number to make St. John’s fans optimistic heading into its game against Duke, it’s this: Rick Pitino is 12-1 in his career in the Sweet 16.

11. Alabama

Aden Holloway’s arrest cast significant doubt over the Crimson Tide entering the tournament, but Nate Oats’ team wiped much of that away with wins over Hofstra and Texas Tech by a combined 45 points. Alabama looked as offensively potent as ever in those victories, scoring 90 points in each game. Though Latrell Wrightsell did an excellent job helping make up for Holloway’s absence, the Tide will probably need their embattled No. 2 scorer available to knock off No. 1 seed Michigan in the Sweet 16.

10. Arkansas

The Razorbacks had to sweat it out a bit in the second round, but as High Point showed against Wisconsin, a victory against the Panthers, even as a power-conference program, can’t be taken for granted. The biggest reason for optimism for a deep Arkansas run was on full display in the first two games, with freshman superstar Darius Acuff Jr. scoring 60 combined points in first- and second-round wins. 

John Calipari has ridden talented freshman point guards on deep tournament runs, from Derrick Rose to John Wall to De'Aaron Fox. The Hogs have a tall task in the Sweet 16 against Arizona, but they just might have the top-line talent and athleticism to match up with the Wildcats.

9. Michigan State

It’s a familiar story for a Tom Izzo-coached team, with defense and rebounding helping push the Spartans into the Sweet 16 for the 17th time since 1998. Michigan State smoked North Dakota State by 25 and pulled away for an eight-point win against a shorthanded Louisville team in the second round. Jeremy Fears Jr. looked every bit like the All-American he is in those victories, dishing out a combined 27 assists, including 16 against the Cardinals to break a program NCAA Tournament single-game record previously held by Magic Johnson.

8. UConn

Perhaps no player in the event had a more impressive opening week of the tournament than Tarris Reed Jr., who had 41 points and pulled down 40 rebounds in wins against Furman and UCLA. He’s the first player to go off for at least 40 points and 40 rebounds in the first week of the tournament since Tim Duncan all the way back in 1997.

We all know Dan Hurley’s program can get it done this time of year, even with a team the predictive metrics haven’t been quite as high on this season, at least compared to their fellow top-two seeds.

7. Purdue

The Boilermakers have been absolutely lethal in the second half of games so far in the tournament, outscoring No. 15 seed Queens 59-38 and No. 7 seed Miami 41-29 in the final 20 minutes of those matchups. While NCAA Division I career assists leader Braden Smith deservedly gets his fair share of attention, Trey Kaufman-Renn has been Matt Painter’s best player so far this tournament, with 44 combined points in his team’s opening two wins.

6. Iowa State

Things could have very well gotten dicey for the Cyclones with All-American forward Joshua Jefferson out with a sprained ankle for a second-round game against Kentucky. Instead, Iowa State bombarded the Wildcats’ high-priced roster, overcoming an early 18-6 deficit to outscore them 76-45 the rest of the way in an 82-63 blowout.

This is as good of a defensive team as there is in the sport and this squad may have some of the offensive firepower that has prevented it from advancing further in past tournaments. The question is now how quickly Jefferson can get back and how effective he can be.

5. Illinois

The Fighting Illini didn’t just beat their opening two opponents, but snatched their souls. After a 35-point drubbing of Penn, Illinois turned around and won by 21 against a VCU team that had won 17 of its previous 18 games, including an overtime victory two days earlier against North Carolina.

Brad Underwood’s team is No. 2 nationally in adjusted offensive efficiency, according to KenPom, and has the right combination of length, skill and shooting to get to the program’s first Final Four in 21 years.

4. Duke

Of all the remaining No. 1 seeds, the Blue Devils looked the shakiest in the tournament’s first week. They trailed No. 16 seed Siena by 13 early in the second half before gutting out a 71-65 win and were tied with No. 9 seed TCU with 14 minutes remaining before pulling away for a 23-point victory in the second round.

The tournament’s No. 1 overall seed will need to get through two hall-of-fame coaches (or, in Dan Hurley’s case, eventual hall-of-fame coaches) just to make the Final Four. For now, Duke’s biggest question is how it can continue to survive and advance with point guard Caleb Foster still sidelined.

3. Houston

The Cougars advanced to the Sweet 16 even more effortlessly than any of the No. 1 seeds, beating Idaho and Texas A&M by 31 points apiece while limiting those teams to 104 combined points. 

Under Kelvin Sampson, Houston has annually been among the country’s best teams defensively, but with superstar freshman Kingston Flemings, this squad might just have that extra offensive jolt that could allow the Cougars to earn their long-awaited first national championship. And if that’s not enough, their path to the Final Four now goes through their hometown, with Sweet 16 and (potentially) Elite Eight games in Houston.

2. Michigan

The Wolverines’ typically stout defense looked surprisingly porous in the first round, giving up 80 points to No. 16 seed Howard, but they fared much better 48 hours later in a 23-point romp over a dynamic Saint Louis team in which college basketball cult hero Robbie Avila was effectively neutralized. Michigan has one of the country’s best players in Yaxel Lendeborg and a group of players surrounding him that would feel insulting to refer to as a supporting cast.

Even with guard L.J. Cason out for the season, Dusty May’s squad has everything you need to win a title.

1. Arizona

The Wildcats were one of the most dominant teams during the regular season and showed few, if any, signs of slowing down in their first two tournament games. They ensured LIU never got the chance to get their fins up in a 34-point beatdown in the first round before pulling away to win by 12 against a Utah State team that was woefully under-seeded as a No. 9 seed.

Until it actually happens, there will be lingering questions about whether Tommy Lloyd can get Arizona to a Final Four and a national championship, but this squad looks more than well-equipped to break through and reach those heights.

Sweet 16 schedule, tip times, dates

THURSDAY, MARCH 26

  • 7:10 p.m.: No. 2 Purdue vs. No. 11 Texas (West), CBS
  • 7:30 p.m.: No. 4 Nebraska vs. No. 9 Iowa (South), TBS/truTV
  • 9:45 p.m.: No. 1 Arizona vs. No. 4 Arkansas (West), CBS
  • 10:05 p.m.: No. 2 Houston vs. No. 3 Illinois (South), TBS/truTV

FRIDAY, MARCH 27

  • 7:10 p.m.: No. 1 Duke vs. No. 5 St. John's (East), CBS
  • 7:35 p.m.: No 4 Alabama vs. No. 1 Michigan (Midwest), TBS/truTV
  • 9:45 p.m.: No. 2 UConn vs. No. 3 Michigan State (East), CBS
  • 10:10 p.m.: No. 2 Iowa State vs. No. 6 Tennessee (Midwest), TBS/truTV

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Sweet 16 re-seed: Ranking the teams left in Men's March Madness

Grading hires from 2026 men's college basketball coaching carousel

For 68 men’s college basketball programs, March comes with the opportunity to compete for a national championship in front of millions of fans on the biggest, grandest stage that their sport has to offer.

For dozens of others outside of the NCAA tournament field, and even some in it, March is a time to dream of better days that might be ahead in the not-so-distant future.

The annual college basketball coaching carousel is a time for hope, with programs across the country looking for the x-and-o maestro or ace recruiter who can help them compete for NCAA tournament appearances, conference titles and maybe just maybe Final Fours and national championships.

It doesn’t always work out that way, of course. For as many schools that find their savior, there are many more than find themselves in the same position of looking for a new coach only a handful of years later.

As hires are made, they’re dissected by fans and media across the country who try to assess whether or not they’ll work. It’s an imprecise exercise. In the past 10 years alone, there are universally praised hires like Archie Miller at Indiana and Chris Mack at Louisville who didn’t pan out and were gone within four years. Conversely, there are other, more unproven commodities like Tommy Lloyd at Arizona and Jon Scheyer at Duke who had never previously been Division I head coaches, but who now lead teams that are No. 1 seeds in this year’s NCAA tournament.

All of this is a longwinded way of saying what you’re about to read could turn out to be hilariously wrong.

As the coaching carousel starts to settle, USA TODAY Sports has graded hires from college basketball’s five major conferences.

College basketball coaching hire grades

This will be updated to include hires as they occur.

Jerrod Calhoun, Cincinnati: A-

A Cincinnati program that has been shut out of the NCAA tournament every year since Mick Cronin left for UCLA in 2019 may have finally found the right person to lead it back to prominence.

Calhoun checks off virtually every quality the Bearcats could have hoped to fulfill. He has ties to the area, as an Ohio native and a Cincinnati graduate. He has ties to the program’s glorious recent past, having worked as an assistant under Bob Huggins. Most importantly, he’s been a winner everywhere he’s been. He went 124-38 and finished as national runner-up once in five seasons at Division II Fairmont State. He put up a respectable 118-106 record at Youngstown State, one of the more difficult jobs in the Horizon League. Most recently, he guided Utah State to a 55-15 mark in two seasons, which included two NCAA tournament berths.

There’s no guarantee he’ll thrive with the Bearcats — in a league as deep and difficult as the Big 12, that’s impossible — but on paper, he makes all the sense in the world for a historically decorated program that’s dying for a winner.

Randy Bennett, Arizona State: A-

For all of their inherent advantages — an enormous and famously fun school in one of the country’s biggest cities — the Sun Devils have been a basketball afterthought for much of their recent history, having not earned better than a No. 10 seed in the NCAA tournament since 2009 when James Harden was suiting up for them.

With Bennett, there’s reason to believe better days should be ahead. Bennett completely transformed Saint Mary’s, leading a program with three all-time NCAA tournament appearances at the time of his hiring in 2001 to the Big Dance 12 times in his final 22 seasons there. He did so with a distinct and consistent identity, with plodding, tough-minded teams built around strong defenses and international players.

The question becomes how transferrable is that blueprint from the West Coast Conference to the Big 12, especially at a school with so little historical success, but Bennett’s fully capable of doing what so many haven’t in Tempe.

Bryan Hodgson, Providence: B+

Hodgson’s resume is relatively thin, which is the only reason this grad isn’t higher, but it’s quite impressive.

The 38-year-old western New York native learned for eight seasons as an assistant under one of the country’s best coaches in Nate Oats and has implemented Oats’ fast-paced, 3-point-heavy system to great success at Arkansas State and South Florida, where he went 70-37 in three seasons and showed an eye for overlooked talent like eventual American Conference player of the year Izaiyah Nelson.

There’s some risk with this hire, but the upside, particularly with what projects to be a large NIL war chest for the Friars, is immense.

Alan Huss, Creighton: B+

This hire wasn’t exactly a surprise, as Huss was tabbed as Creighton’s associate head coach and coach-in-waiting last year. With Greg McDermott’s retirement this month, he officially takes over at his alma mater.

Huss is as familiar with Creighton as anyone, having played at the school and later coached there under McDermott for six seasons as the Bluejays were regularly among the best teams in the Big East. He thrived for two seasons at High Point, taking over a program that went 14-17 the season before he took over and guiding it to a 56-15 mark while coaching some of the top offenses in the country.

Moving on from a long-tenured coach like McDermott is never easy, but this is a transition that, at least on paper, should work out.

Casey Alexander, Kansas State: B

Alexander never technically made the NCAA tournament at Belmont – his 2020 team qualified before the COVID-19 pandemic canceled the event – but he did about everything else you realistically could. He went 166-60 and won at least 20 games in each of his seven seasons at his alma mater. He ran a beautiful, modern offense. Perhaps most importantly for a school like Kansas State, he was a masterful player evaluator, signing the previously unheralded likes of Wil Richard, Ja'Kobi Gillespie and Cade Tyson before they transferred to power-conference schools.

He inherited a much better situation from Rick Byrd at Belmont than he will taking over for Jerome Tang at Kansas, and the geographic fit isn’t seamless for someone who’s spent his entire career in the southeast, but this is an understandable move.

Gerry McNamara, Syracuse: B-

The program hiring a successful former player to be its head coach has been a well-traveled path in college basketball the past 15 years, one that has been unsuccessful more often than not.

There’s reason to believe McNamara could be different, though. Unlike some of those other hires like Patrick Ewing and Chris Mullin, he has previous college head-coaching experience, having taken over a Siena program that was 4-28 the season before he arrived and leading it to 23 wins and an NCAA tournament berth only two years later. He’s spent all but five of the past 24 years of his life at the school in some capacity, making him intimately familiar with some of the challenges it presents. If nothing else, his status as a beloved former player should help the Orange in their NIL efforts.

Syracuse has been largely an afterthought the past five years and reportedly lagged behind many of their ACC competitors with what they paid for their roster, but with McNamara, there’s at least potential for a better way forward.

Scott Cross, Georgia Tech: C+

Cross has been one of the more underrated coaches in the sport for the past 15 years and his firing at UT Arlington in 2018 stands as one of the most baffling college basketball coaching moves this century. He has a strong overall record, 350-260 across 19 seasons in Division I, and just led Troy to five straight 20-win seasons and back-to-back NCAA tournament appearances.

If anything, this grade’s more of a reflection of Georgia Tech, which has inherent, sometimes unavoidable obstacles and which has one NCAA tournament berth since 2010. Cross has shown he can do more with less and he’ll need to if he’s going to turn the Yellow Jackets into a steady winner in an improving ACC.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College basketball coaching hires: Grading the moves in 2026 carousel

As he passes 500 wins, it's time to recognize what Matt Painter is: a Big Ten legend

ST. LOUIS – Matt Painter did exactly what you’d expect Matt Painter to do Sunday, when asked about becoming the fourth coach in Big Ten history to reach 500 career wins with his school.

He talked about his players.

“The one thing that gets lost at Purdue, because we don’t sign McDonald’s All Americans, is that our players are really good,” he said. “These guys have put in — I know coaches talk about it — but they've put in so much in all areas to be the best that they can be. And that's how you end up getting a lot of victories, because you have really good players that are committed.”

It was typical for Painter, whose thoughtful humility has underpinned so much of his success at Purdue. He’s become one of the most-respected voices of his sport, commanding that respect with both his results and his measured, considered positions on the game to which he’s devoted his life.

But whatever the merits of those talented and accomplished players (and there are, of course, many), they all share one throughline whose excellence speaks for itself, no matter how much he might try to deflect it.

As he joins Tom Izzo, Bob Knight and Gene Keady in that exclusive foursome, it’s time to acknowledge Matt Painter is a modern-day Big Ten legend.

Painter can parry all he wants. His work speaks for itself.

In addition to being just one of four coaches with 500 career wins leading a Big Ten program, he’s also one of six with double-digit NCAA appearances. His 17 match Keady, his mentor and former coach.

Painter is fifth — behind Knight, Izzo, Bo Ryan and Thad Matta — in career win percentage among coaches with at least 10 post-war seasons in the conference. He will almost certainly pass Keady in wins (and probably Tournament appearances) next season, and he’s on pace to pass Knight in about seven years. Possibly six.

He’s right about his players, of course. Braden Smith’s seizure of the all-time NCAA assist record this weekend is just the latest such accomplishment for a Painter-coached Boilermaker.

Two of the top four scorers in program history played for Painter, including all-time leading scorer Zach Edey. In total he counts five former players in the program’s top 11.

Three of Purdue’s top five and six of its top 10 all-time leading rebounders played on Painter teams. The Boilermakers’ all-time assist leader, of course, plays for Painter right now. His former charges have a monopoly on all sorts of single-season and career marks scattered throughout Purdue’s record book.

“When you go through and you recruit, you’re nor drafting people. They’ve got to say yes, too,” Painter said. “Learning how to pivot when you don’t get maybe your top guy, or the guy that you think, and just keep working toward getting the guys that have that high competitive spirit, that are about winning, that have a high skill level. It’s their passion.”

Here, attempting to praise his players, Painter in a roundabout way did the same for himself. Because great players don’t get there without great coaches, and if you lined those players up, probably to a man they’d tell you Painter is the central reason for their success.

Critics will point to the lack of a national championship. Dismissing for a moment that Painter has plenty of time to win his, that one line item alone does not make or break a resume. No one would reasonably argue Kevin Ollie has a better resume than Ryan, Matta, Keady or a host of others, simply because of a ring.

Painter is also plenty accomplished in the postseason.

Five times named Big Ten coach of the year, he’s won the conference tournament three times, including this month. He’s reached the second weekend of the Big Dance nine times. This year marks his second run of three-straight Sweet 16 appearances, something Keady and Knight each only managed once.

All of which also misses the fundamental point of this exercise. We’re not here to argue where Painter fits in the pantheon of Big Ten coaches. Time and score will sort that for us.

This is simply to say something that might be obvious to some — might be obvious to many — but still should be said out loud: Painter has entered that elite class. He is one of the true greats of a conference hardly short of them.

Maybe none of this needed written. Maybe you, the reader, already recognized Painter fit here.

But so much of our modern discourse has become an exercise in propping up by tearing down. Picking out the GOAT (an acronym my 8-year-old son claims he invented) by way of pushing aside everyone else.

We don’t appreciate greatness enough in its time. We don’t feat it properly until it has passed us by.

Greatness delivers annually in West Lafayette. Right now, and year on year. Matt Painter is one of the truly great Big Ten men’s basketball coaches of all time. If he won’t say it, we’ll do it for him.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Purdue's Matt Painter is a Big Ten legend, championship ring or not

Revisiting our March Madness predictions: How'd we do? Grading our brackets

Picking NCAA Tournament brackets are hard. Usually they end up in the trash can by the end of the first weekend.

Iowa's upset over Florida wiped out a large portion of the field. And Tennessee's win over No. 3 Virginia in the second round claimed the final last perfect bracket of the more than 35 million submitted in the major online challenges, including USA TODAY's.

So keep that in mind when taking a look at how our staff fared through March Madness' first two rounds.

Grading our March Madness bracket predictions: Our best, worst picks

Blake Toppmeyer (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 23 of 32
  • Round 2: 11 of 16
  • Sweet 16: Has 11 teams left
  • Elite Eight: Has 5 teams left
  • Final Four: Has all 4 teams left
  • Champion: Arizona

Worst pick: He had BYU going to the Elite Eight. The Cougars didn't get out of the first round. We get it, AJ Dybantsa is really good. But he needed help.

Best pick: Called the VCU upset of North Carolina.

Matt Hayes (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 24 of 32
  • Round 2: 13 of 16
  • Sweet 16: 13 teams left
  • Elite Eight: Has 7 left
  • Final Four: Has 3 left
  • Champion: Arizona

Worst pick: Hurt most by Florida's second round exit. Matt had the Gators reaching the Final Four.

Worst pick II: Took a chance on McNeese as a sleeper Sweet 16 pick. The Cowboys lost to Vanderbilt in the first round.

Best pick: Had the High Point upset of Wisconsin.

Jordan Mendoza (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 23 of 32
  • Round 2: 9 of 16
  • Sweet 16: Has 9 teams left
  • Elite Eight: Has 6 left
  • Final Four: Has 3 left
  • Champion: Arizona

Worst pick: Picked Wisconsin to reach the Sweet 16. Badgers lost to High Point, so this was Jordan's low point.

Worst pick II: Took a chance on Akron as a sleeper Sweet 16 pick. Texas Tech zipped that up by 20.

Worst pick III: Swear we're not picking on Jordan, but he lost three Sweet 16 teams in the first round. He was a believer in AJ Dybantsa and BYU.

Paul Myerberg (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 25 of 32
  • Round 2: 13 of 16
  • Sweet 16: Has 13 teams left
  • Elite Eight: Has 7 teams left
  • Final Four: Has all 4 teams
  • Champion: St. John's

Brent Schrotenboer (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 25 of 32
  • Round 2: 11 of 16
  • Sweet 16: Has 11 teams left
  • Elite Eight: Has 6 teams left
  • Final Four: has 3 teams left
  • Champion: Florida

Worst pick: Lost his champion in the second round. Gator baited.

Worst pick II: Had UNC going to the Sweet 16. That looked good until Tar Heels blew 19-point lead in first round loss to VCU.

Worst pick III: Took a chance on Texas Tech. Shot himself in the foot.

John Brice (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 26 of 32
  • Round 2: 12 of 16
  • Sweet 16: Has 12 left
  • Elite Eight: Has 6 left
  • Final Four: Has all four left
  • Champion: Arizona

Best pick: The entire East Region. He got it all right.

Worst pick: Gonzaga to the Elite Eight. Not the first to be stung by the Zags.

Craig Meyer (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 30 of 32
  • Round 2: 13 of 16
  • Sweet 16: Has 13 teams left
  • Elite Eight: Has 7 teams left
  • Final Four: Has 3 teams left
  • Champion: Florida

Best pick: The entire top half of the bracket. Got every pick right so far in the East and West regions. That includes the High Point upset and Texas making the Sweet 16.

Worst pick: Craig was doing so well. But then the Gators bit him in the butt.

Eddie Timanus (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 23 of 32
  • Round 2: 9 of 16
  • Sweet 16: Has 9 teams left
  • Elite Eight: Has 7 teams left
  • Final Four: Has 3 left
  • Champion: Arizona

Worst pick: Had Wisconsin going to the Sweet 16. Tough break. Nearly every other Big Ten team made it.

Matt Glenesk (full bracket)

  • Round 1: 24 of 32
  • Round 2: 11 of 16
  • Sweet 16: Has 11 teams left
  • Elite Eight: Has 6 left
  • Final Four: Has 3 left
  • Champion: Florida

Worst pick: Florida winning it all? Ugh.

Worst pick II: Had Miami (Fla.) going to the Elite Eight. This Floridian got burned twice by Sunshine State.

Sweet 16 schedule, game tip times, dates

THURSDAY, MARCH 26

  • 7:10 p.m.: No. 2 Purdue vs. No. 11 Texas (West), CBS
  • 7:30 p.m.: No. 4 Nebraska vs. No. 9 Iowa (South), TBS/truTV
  • 9:45 p.m.: No. 1 Arizona vs. No. 4 Arkansas (West), CBS
  • 10:05 p.m.: No. 2 Houston vs. No. 3 Illinois (South), TBS/truTV

FRIDAY, MARCH 27

  • 7:10 p.m.: No. 1 Duke vs. No. 5 St. John's (East), CBS
  • 7:35 p.m.: No 4 Alabama vs. No. 1 Michigan (Midwest), TBS/truTV
  • 9:45 p.m.: No. 2 UConn vs. No. 3 Michigan State (East), CBS
  • 10:10 p.m.: No. 2 Iowa State vs. No. 6 Tennessee (Midwest), TBS/truTV

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Grading our March Madness bracket predictions: Our best, worst NCAA picks

Stats Rundown: 3 numbers from the Mavericks overtime loss to the Warriors

DALLAS, TEXAS - MARCH 23: Draymond Green #23 of the Golden State Warriors makes a move to the basket past P.J. Washington #25 of the Dallas Mavericks during the first quarter at American Airlines Center on March 23, 2026 in Dallas, 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 Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dallas Mavericks lost 137-131 to the Golden State Warriors in an overtime thriller Monday night in Dallas. Cooper Flagg led all scorers with 32 points but a balanced Warriors attack and sloppy Mavericks miscues prevented the Mavericks from a feel-good win.

Dallas nearly blew the game open in the second quarter, outscoring Golden State 42-29 and taking a 15-point lead at one point. After halftime it was all Warriors, and a frantic comeback late in the fourth left Dallas with a chance to win on the final possession, only for Naji Marshall to miss a wide-open potential game-winning three. In overtime it was all Warriors.

Here are the numbers to know.

15: Combined turnovers for Cooper Flagg, Naji Marshall

Mavericks coach Jason Kidd continues to experiment with Cooper Flagg at point, and yet again the Mavericks ball handling woes bit them. Dallas actually shot the ball when when they got up a shot, the problem was they didn’t get up a shot enough — the team had 23 turnovers, with Flagg and Marshall responsible for 15 of them, Marshall having eight, Flagg having seven.

Those two were the perimeter players that touched the ball the most, and for them to cough the ball up so frequently really stalled the Mavericks out in the third quarter, which ignited the Warriors rally. Kidd throwing Flagg into the deep end of the pool, and it was frankly uncomfortable to watch Flagg sink a bit in the second half, when the Warriors full-court pressure forced multiple turnovers.

It’s a shame because Flagg did such a good job scoring, but the ball control was a major issue.

23-8: Warriors 2nd chance points advantage

Dallas shot nearly 60 percent from the field and 55 percent from three on 36 three point attempts. How did they lose? Well besides turnovers, the Mavericks gave up 17 offensive rebounds, good for 23 second-chance points from the Warriors.

No one on the Mavericks did well on the boards. Starting center Daniel Gafford only had five defensive rebounds in 32 minutes. Mavericks forwards PJ Washington and Cooper Flagg each had three defensive boards. So that’s 11 combined defensive rebounds from the Mavericks starting front court, so to speak (even if Flagg is running point). That’s just not good enough, and it cost Dallas.

8: Warriors in double digits

The Warriors are a very unique team, in which their offense is truly more than the sum of its parts — lots of cutting, lots of off-ball action, less isolations and direct pick and roll. It’s a fun system, tailored made to take advantage of Steph Curry’s almost limitless on-floor gravity off the ball. Even without Curry, like the Warriors were tonight, it can be impressive.

Golden State had eight players with 10 or more points, led by Moses Moody with 23 points. The one that jumped out the most, however, was Gary Payton II and his 17 points on perfect 8-of-8 shooting. Payton seemed to make the right play at the right time throughout the second half, including a giant corner three late in the game, along with two steals.

Payton is fun to watch when being utilized well — he was basically rim-running as a guard, and it threw the Mavericks offense off on multiple occasions.

Giants do what they set out to vs. Sultanes

Bryce Eldridge running the bases.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 12: Bryce Eldridge #8 of the San Francisco Giants runs to third base during the Spring Training game against the Chicago White Sox at Scottsdale Stadium on March 12, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants played their penultimate game of the spring on Monday night, hosting Sultanes de Monterrey at Oracle Park, less than 48 hours before the start of the 2026 MLB season. You can’t draw many conclusions from such a contest, but the Giants did a lot of the things they hoped to do in a 10-2 victory. They looked mostly fresh, energetic, and focused. The biggest question mark on their roster — the bullpen — performed very well. The gameday operations appeared to go off without a hitch, which is half of the point of these home park exhibitions.

And they even got a little bit of excitement from a critical place.

While the performance can’t teach us too much, there was a little info to be gained before the game even started. We’ve officially reached the point of the preseason where the lineup card carries meaning. There’s some stuff to decode there.

For instance: Luis Arráez hit leadoff, despite facing a left-handed pitcher. There’s been a lot of speculation as to where Arráez would hit — personally, I’d opt for fifth or sixth — and the Giants haven’t tipped their hand. This is our first real data point, and it seems safe to assume that the team’s new second baseman will hit first with some regularity. Similarly, Jung Hoo Lee batted cleanup, which might seem unconventional. But we’re seeing more and more teams use contact hitters in the heart of the lineup, as the San Diego Padres did with Arráez on multiple occasions last year. Could we see Lee — the team’s second-best contact hitter, but a player shy on power — hold down the fourth spot in the lineup from time to time? It’s looking like the answer could be “yes.”

Also of note is that Rafael Devers was the designated hitter, while Casey Schmitt played first. Devers still hasn’t played the field since returning from a mild hamstring injury, and now it wouldn’t be surprising if that carries into the season.

And speaking of players not in the field, Harrison Bader was once again absent, as he deals with a hamstring injury of his own. Missing this game certainly casts some doubt on Bader’s availability for Wednesday’s opener, and possibly even brings into play the idea of him beginning the year on the Injured List. Jared Oliva started in center field in Bader’s place, as he continues to trend towards being the 2026 winner of theannual Christian Koss award for the non-roster invitee who doesn’t have a chance to make the team, they’re just there for Minor League depth, but wow, they sure are playing well, and huh, they sure are playing a lot, and wait a minute, maybe they do have an outside chance at making the roster even though that would be crazy oh, hey, yep, they made the opening day roster award. Working title. Let me know if you have any feedback. If Bader isn’t healthy by Wednesday, it would feel like Oliva’s spot on the roster is essentially a lock.

Tony Vitello opted for a bullpen game rather than getting a final start for Adrian Houser or Landen Roupp, which might signal that he plans to shorten the rotation in the first week of the season, and use one of those players as a ninth bullpen arm who needs to be available sooner rather than later. Or, more likely, it signals a desires to get some extra work for as many arms as possible.

Those lineup card observations are more than we learned during the actual game, but there were some takeaways from the action, as well.

Lefty Ryan Borucki, signed on Saturday to my deepest confusion, made his organizational debut in the second inning, and set down the side in order on a trio of ground balls, with some slick-handed help from his infield defense … which included himself.

If there’s a competition for left-handed spots in the bullpen, Borucki was in a three-way tie on Monday, as the other candidates (Erik Miller and Matt Gage), both pitched perfect innings as well. All three pounded the strike zone, with Borucki throwing 10 of 14 pitches for strikes, Miller throwing eight of 11, and Gage tossing nine of 13. But there may not be a competition, other than a healthy one. Earlier in the day, during the Giants Talk podcast, reporter Alex Pavlovic stated that the team has been trending towards three southpaw relievers, and the Borucki signing would seem to confirm that — neither he nor Gage have options, and there’s no way that Miller gets left off of the Opening Day roster. So it would seem that trio will all be standing on the chalk on Wednesday.

But who will join them? Spencer Bivens is a favorite but not a lock, and he tossed a scoreless first inning with a pair of strikeouts, though he also gave up a pair of hits. Tristan Beck hasn’t had a strong spring, but his sweeper was downright nasty as he handled a perfect third inning with a pair of strikeouts. Caleb Kilian needed just 10 pitches for a three-up, three-down fifth inning, though his velocity was a far cry from what we saw earlier this spring, as it topped out at 96.0 mph. The Giants need some electricity, and Kilian feels like a logical choice to make the roster as an NRI, especially with Gregory Santos already reassigned to Minor League camp. Although Santos made one last statement, reminding us all that he could be a serious addition to the bullpen at some point this year: he pitched a scoreless ninth with a hit and a strikeout, with eight of 11 pitches going for strikes, and hit 99.2 mph with his fastball.

Even Marques Johnson, who was not in camp this year, impressed in his opportunity, handling a perfect eighth inning on just nine pitches, while striking out two with a dynamic sweeper/cutter combo meal.

The lone pitching hiccup came from Carson Seymour, who gave up four singles and two runs in his inning of work. That said, it wasn’t like Seymour got lit up or lost control: he threw 19 of 25 pitches for strikes, while one of the hits he allowed was a doink at 68.3 mph, with two more in the 80s. He wasn’t helped by his defense either, which had a rare sloppy inning: Heliot Ramos sold out to try to make a play for his teammate, diving at a ball he probably shouldn’t have gone horizontal for … and then, in don’t-hurt-yourself-before-opening-day fashion, lightly jogged after the ball, letting a double turn into a triple. Later in the inning, Arráez committed a throwing error on a play where Schmitt surely felt he should have caught the ball.

On offense, there were exciting signs of life. Schmitt and Patrick Bailey lined back-to-back opposite-field singles to open the third inning, with the former scoring on a bunt single by Oliva (one of two infield hits he had on the day, though I’m not sure if either would have held up under the scrutiny of replay review). Jung Hoo Lee smoked a two-run double later in the inning, as the Giants started to take control of the game.

In the sixth inning, Willy Adames — who had a fairly miserable spring — crushed a leadoff home run (Ramos almost made it back-to-back shots, with a fly ball that fooled the broadcast booth, if not the atmosphere).

But the exciting hit of the day came in the eighth inning. As the Giants started to pull their regulars, Bryce Eldridge came up for his lone at-bat of the day. Eldridge was, to his disappointment, optioned last week, all but ensuring that he won’t make the Opening Day roster. He responded on Sunday in the organization’s intrasquad game when he donned a AAA Sacramento jersey and took Tyler Mahle deep for a booming home run, before later doubling. On Monday, against Sultanes, Eldridge went deep in a big league ballpark for the first time in his life (apologies, Athletics — Sutter Health Park doesn’t count).

With two on and one out, and a 3-1 count, the super-prospect took a cutter on the outer half of the plate, and launched it into the left field bleachers with astounding ease.

Lest you question Eldridge’s power potential, you don’t see a lot of opposite-field home runs hit that easily at Oracle Park. And especially not from the bats of 21-year olds.

It was certainly a statement from Eldridge to Vitello and Buster Posey. He has taken the assignment in stride, and said and done all the right things. But he wants to leave no doubt where he is going, and no doubt about the speed at which he’ll get there.

This game might have been about setting the team up for Opening Day, but it ended up being about the future.

A few other notes:

  • Also homering was Tyler Fitzgerald, which was great to see. He had a really tough camp, but his speed, power, and versatility make him so intriguing. He’ll be fighting to work his way back to the roster (he was optioned already) and should get plenty of chances if he performs well in Sacramento.
  • Solid days for the outfielders who are still in camp trying to earn a spot. In addition to Oliva’s 2-3 day, Luis Matos drew a walk in his only plate appearance, while Drew Gilbert singled. Will Brennan went 0-1, and Jerar Encarnación didn’t play.
  • Matt Chapman made some fantastic defensive plays. He looks about as ready as ready can be.
  • Kruk and Kuip had quite a cast of names join them for in-game interviews: Posey, Arráez, Logan Webb, and Sergio Romo. It was a lot of fun.
  • The five hardest-hit balls of the day for the Giants: Ramos’ flyout (104.5 mph); Oliva’s infield single (103.9); Eldridge’s home run (103.8); Adames’ big fly (102.3); and a Schmitt single (101.4).
  • The team’s final exhibition game is on Tuesday, again at Oracle Park, again against Sultanes, and again at 6:45 p.m. PT on NBC Bay Area. It will be interesting to see whether the Giants use a regular lineup again, or if they give their veterans a day off before Opening Day.

Detroit puts home win streak on the line against Atlanta

Atlanta Hawks (40-32, sixth in the Eastern Conference) vs. Detroit Pistons (52-19, first in the Eastern Conference)

Detroit; Wednesday, 7 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Detroit hosts Atlanta looking to prolong its four-game home winning streak.

The Pistons are 34-11 against Eastern Conference opponents. Detroit leads the Eastern Conference with 57.8 points in the paint led by Jalen Duren averaging 14.4.

The Hawks are 22-21 against Eastern Conference opponents. Atlanta ranks seventh in the league averaging 14.5 made 3-pointers per game while shooting 36.9% from downtown. Nickeil Alexander-Walker leads the team averaging 3.1 makes while shooting 39.2% from 3-point range.

The Pistons average 117.3 points per game, 0.9 more points than the 116.4 the Hawks allow. The Hawks average 8.8 more points per game (118.3) than the Pistons give up to opponents (109.5).

The teams square off for the fourth time this season. The Pistons won the last matchup 142-115 on Dec. 13, with Isaiah Stewart scoring 17 points in the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: Ausar Thompson is averaging 9.9 points, 5.8 rebounds and 1.9 steals for the Pistons. Duren is averaging 23.4 points over the last 10 games.

Dyson Daniels is scoring 11.8 points per game and averaging 6.6 rebounds for the Hawks. Alexander-Walker is averaging 24.1 points and 2.6 rebounds over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Pistons: 7-3, averaging 119.3 points, 42.5 rebounds, 30.2 assists, 10.0 steals and 5.9 blocks per game while shooting 49.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.9 points per game.

Hawks: 9-1, averaging 123.6 points, 44.0 rebounds, 30.1 assists, 10.0 steals and 4.9 blocks per game while shooting 50.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 110.3 points.

INJURIES: Pistons: Cade Cunningham: out (lung), Isaiah Stewart: out (calf), Marcus Sasser: day to day (hip).

Hawks: Jalen Johnson: day to day (shoulder).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Brooklyn takes on Golden State, seeks to break 8-game slide

Brooklyn Nets (17-55, 13th in the Eastern Conference) vs. Golden State Warriors (34-38, 10th in the Western Conference)

San Francisco; Wednesday, 10 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Brooklyn enters the matchup with Golden State after losing eight straight games.

The Warriors have gone 19-15 at home. Golden State averages 15.0 turnovers per game and is 20-12 when it wins the turnover battle.

The Nets are 8-29 on the road. Brooklyn averages 15.3 turnovers per game and is 4-17 when turning the ball over less than opponents.

The Warriors average 115.1 points per game, 0.7 fewer points than the 115.8 the Nets give up. The Nets average 13.3 made 3-pointers per game this season, 0.7 more makes per game than the Warriors allow.

The teams play for the second time this season. In the last meeting on Dec. 30 the Warriors won 120-107 led by 27 points from Stephen Curry, while Michael Porter Jr. scored 27 points for the Nets.

TOP PERFORMERS: Brandin Podziemski is shooting 44.4% and averaging 12.9 points for the Warriors. LJ Cryer is averaging 2.0 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

Nic Claxton is averaging 11.8 points, seven rebounds and 3.8 assists for the Nets. Tyson Etienne is averaging 2.1 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Warriors: 2-8, averaging 113.3 points, 41.1 rebounds, 28.4 assists, 10.1 steals and 4.3 blocks per game while shooting 45.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 119.9 points per game.

Nets: 2-8, averaging 102.7 points, 38.2 rebounds, 23.3 assists, 8.0 steals and 5.7 blocks per game while shooting 43.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 115.8 points.

INJURIES: Warriors: Jimmy Butler III: out for season (knee), Seth Curry: out (adductor), Al Horford: out (calf), Stephen Curry: out (knee).

Nets: Noah Clowney: out (wrist), Terance Mann: out (rest), Danny Wolf: out (ankle), Egor Demin: out for season (foot), Day'Ron Sharpe: out for season (thumb), Michael Porter Jr.: out (hamstring), Drake Powell: out (knee).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Indiana hosts Los Angeles on 9-game home slide

Los Angeles Lakers (46-26, third in the Western Conference) vs. Indiana Pacers (16-56, 15th in the Eastern Conference)

Indianapolis; Wednesday, 7 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Indiana is looking to end its nine-game home losing streak with a win over Los Angeles.

The Pacers are 10-25 on their home court. Indiana is 4-34 in games decided by 10 points or more.

The Lakers have gone 23-14 away from home. Los Angeles is eighth in the Western Conference with 14.6 fast break points per game led by LeBron James averaging 5.7.

The Pacers are shooting 45.4% from the field this season, 2.9 percentage points lower than the 48.3% the Lakers allow to opponents. The Lakers average 12.0 made 3-pointers per game this season, 0.1 more makes per game than the Pacers give up.

The teams play for the second time this season. The Lakers won the last matchup 128-117 on March 7, with Luka Doncic scoring 44 points in the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: Pascal Siakam is averaging 24 points, 6.6 rebounds and 3.8 assists for the Pacers. Jarace Walker is averaging 14.3 points over the last 10 games.

Doncic is scoring 33.4 points per game and averaging 7.9 rebounds for the Lakers. Austin Reaves is averaging 2.2 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Pacers: 1-9, averaging 113.6 points, 38.4 rebounds, 30.1 assists, 7.0 steals and 4.5 blocks per game while shooting 47.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 125.4 points per game.

Lakers: 9-1, averaging 120.0 points, 41.4 rebounds, 25.4 assists, 8.6 steals and 4.4 blocks per game while shooting 50.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 112.6 points.

INJURIES: Pacers: Johnny Furphy: out for season (knee), Ivica Zubac: out for season (rib), Tyrese Haliburton: out for season (achilles).

Lakers: Marcus Smart: day to day (ankle), Rui Hachimura: day to day (calf).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Oklahoma City puts road win streak on the line against Boston

Oklahoma City Thunder (57-15, first in the Western Conference) vs. Boston Celtics (47-24, second in the Eastern Conference)

Boston; Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Oklahoma City will try to keep its seven-game road win streak alive when the Thunder face Boston.

The Celtics are 24-11 in home games. Boston is third in the Eastern Conference with 12.8 offensive rebounds per game led by Neemias Queta averaging 3.0.

The Thunder have gone 28-8 away from home. Oklahoma City has a 5-6 record in games decided by 3 points or fewer.

The 114.1 points per game the Celtics average are 6.6 more points than the Thunder give up (107.5). The Thunder are shooting 48.2% from the field, 4.1% higher than the 44.1% the Celtics' opponents have shot this season.

The teams square off for the second time this season. The Thunder won the last matchup 104-102 on March 13, with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scoring 35 points in the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: Derrick White is shooting 39.6% and averaging 17.3 points for the Celtics. Jaylen Brown is averaging 25.7 points over the last 10 games.

Chet Holmgren is averaging 17.2 points, nine rebounds and 1.9 blocks for the Thunder. Gilgeous-Alexander is averaging 26.5 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Celtics: 6-4, averaging 109.6 points, 48.5 rebounds, 23.7 assists, 6.3 steals and 3.3 blocks per game while shooting 43.9% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 107.0 points per game.

Thunder: 10-0, averaging 116.1 points, 45.2 rebounds, 25.4 assists, 8.7 steals and 4.7 blocks per game while shooting 47.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 105.0 points.

INJURIES: Celtics: Nikola Vucevic: out (finger).

Thunder: Thomas Sorber: out for season (knee).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.