Phillies News: Zack Wheeler, Otto Kemp, the Outfield

WASHINGTON, DC - AUGUST 15: Zack Wheeler #45 of the Philadelphia Phillies pitches during a baseball game against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on August 15, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s cold. Very cold. You know where it’s not cold? Clearwater.

Now is a pretty good time to plan a Spring Training trip.

Phillies news

Zack Wheeler was set to play for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic before his injury derailed the plans.

MLB.com takes a look at the Phillies’ outfield for the upcoming season.

Lochlahn March of the Inquirer looks at what Otto Kemp can contribute to the team. ($)

MLB news

Farm system rankings! Get your farm system rankings here!

One player in each division you can’t take your eyes off of. Will Phillies fans like the choice for the NL East? No, but it’s hard to argue against it.

The Yankees and Angels made a trade, with the Halos getting a pitcher and the Pinstripes getting cash considerations.

Chicago Cubs history unpacked, January 30

On Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, Bleed Cubbie Blue is pleased to present a Cubs-centric look at baseball’s colorful past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow the various narrative paths.

“Maybe I called it wrong, but it’s official.” — Tom Connolly, HoF Umpire.

Happy birthday to Brailyn Marquez*, Grover Cleveland Alexander threatens to retire,and other stories.

Today in baseball history:

  • 1917 – Pitcher Grover Cleveland Alexander announces he is ready to retire from professional baseball and join a semipro team if his salary demands are not met. Alexander wants a three-year contract at $15,000 per year. (2)
  • 1926 – The Major League Rules Committee agrees that pitchers may have access to a rosin bag. On February 8, the American League will refuse to permit its use, but on April 28th, the league will give in and allow a rosin bag on the field, but discourage its use by players. The Committee also discusses the possible elimination of the intentional walk, a topic that has come up before, by making the pitcher throw to the batter. Calling a balk on the catcher if he steps out of his box has not eliminated the intentional walk as intended. No action is taken, however. (2)
  • 1952 – Peter J. McGovern becomes the Little League‘s first full-time president and the league’s office is moved to Williamsport, Pennsylvania. (2)
  • 1958 – Commissioner Ford Frick announces that players and coaches, rather than the fans, will vote on selections for the All-Star Game. The vote will not return to the fans until 1970, when Commissioner Bowie Kuhn reverses Frick’s action. The decision is a reaction to alleged ballot box stuffing by Cincinnati fans before last year’s All-Star Game. (2)
  • 1987 – The Oakland Athletics acquire veteran third baseman Ron Cey from the Chicago Cubs for infielder Luis Quiñones. Cey will hit .221 for Oakland this year – his final major league season. (2)
  • 2006 – The Cubs and Jerry Hairston Jr. (.261, 4, 30) avoid salary arbitration when the second baseman/outfielder agrees to a one-year, $2.3 million deal. The 29-year-old Illinois native was acquired from the Orioles last February for slugger Sammy Sosa. (2)
  • 2011 – The Cubs sign two Cuban defectors who once played for the junior national team, OF Rubi Silva and C Yaniel Cabeza, both 21 and already veterans of the Serie Nacional. (2)
  • 2017 – Commissioner Rob Manfred issues a ruling in the case of an employee of the St. Louis Cardinals caught for hacking into the scouting database of the Houston Astros. The Cards are fined $2 million, which they must pay to Houston, and also surrender two top picks in the upcoming amateur draft to the Astros. The guilty former employee, Chris Correa, incurs a lifetime ban. This is on the top of the 46-month prison sentence and $279,000 fine he received after pleading guilty to federal charges last July. (2)

Cubs Birthdays:Doc WatsonVin CampbellDavey JohnsonMatt AlexanderBrailyn Marquez*.

Today in History:

  • 1661 – Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England is ritually executed after having been dead for two years.
  • 1835 – Richard Lawrence misfires at President Andrew Jackson in Washington, D.C. in first attempted assassination of a US President.

Common sources:

*pictured.

Some of these items spread from site to site without being fact-checked, and that is why we ask for verifiable sources, in order to help correct the record.

DitD & Open Post – 1/30/26: Lower-Body Edition

NEWARK, NEW JERSEY - JANUARY 29: Roman Josi #59 of the Nashville Predators looks to play the puck while being defended by Jack Hughes #86 of the New Jersey Devils during the first period at Prudential Center on January 29, 2026 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

A tying third-period goal from Jesper Bratt, and a Nico Hischier goal in overtime pushed the Devils to a 3-2 win over the Predators on Thursday. [Devils NHL]

Well!

“The Devils did well in the Palát half of this trade, but Tsyplakov is not a bum. He only has one goal and one assist in 27 games this season, but he was a legit middle-six winger as a rookie last season. Tsyplakov was one of the Islanders’ more efficient five-on-five scorers a season ago, averaging 1.84 points per 60 minutes. That ranked fifth among the team’s skaters.” [Devils on the Rush]

“Things have changed leading up to the Palat trade with some Devils trade chips. With the expectation that New Jersey isn’t done dealing, what tier do each of their assets live in?” [New Jersey Hockey Now]

On Luke Hughes: “As well as he anticipates offensively, it just hasn’t connected when he doesn’t have the puck on his stick. And those mistakes can spiral and directly contribute to the Devils falling behind in games. The circumstances around him have put even more attention on that. If Hughes can start processing defensive situations quicker and more efficiently, he should be able to problem solve back to offensive situations — and that’s the area of his game that really lacks. Fixing that will keep him on the path to becoming a true top-pair caliber defenseman.” [The Athletic ($)]

Hockey Links

It’s still hard to believe this is happening in Tampa, but it is: “The crew building the ice rink for the 2026 Navy Federal Credit Union Stadium Series feels it has hit the lottery despite it being one of the trickiest projects in the NHL’s 23-year history of outdoor games.” [NHL.com]

Stadium Series announcement:

Artemi Panarin:

A look at the trade and contract extension market for Artemi Panarin: “It most likely involves teams that aren’t scared of signing a 34-year-old player to a four-year extension with, perhaps, a double-digit average annual salary. That’s what we think the extension would be if this gets done.” [TSN]

A look at how seven early NHL trades have worked out so far: [Sportsnet]

Assessing 12 rebuilding franchises and where they stand on their journeys: [Daily Faceoff]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Rangers 'share anger' over Porto stadium issues

Rangers say they have received numerous reports from fans and staff regarding issues at Porto's stadium during the Europa League defeat and will be "pursuing them with the relevant parties".

Rangers will collect further information about the complaints, with reports suggesting visiting fans were held inside Estadio do Dragao for up to two hours on Thursday night after the 3-1 defeat.

Djeidi Gassama gave Danny Rohl's team the lead but the home side fought back to win and leave Rangers in 32nd place of the 36 teams in the Europa League phase.

A Rangers statement read: "Following the match in Porto, we've received multiple reports from supporters and staff about issues in and around the stadium.

"That's not what anyone who travelled to support Rangers should have had to deal with, and we share the concern, anger and frustration felt by those affected.

"We will be gathering complaints and feedback and will pursue this with the relevant parties."

March Madness Bracketology: Big Ten dominates NCAA Tournament projection as Purdue slides

With four teams on the top three lines, the Big Ten continues to show out in USA TODAY Sports’ latest installment of bracketology.

But one Big Ten heavyweight, Purdue, drops to a No. 4 seed after falling 72-67 to Indiana on Tuesday night for its third loss in a row. The Boilermakers are now 7-3 in conference play, two games behind co-leaders Michigan, Illinois Nebraska and Michigan State.

The updated bracket finds s place for the Hoosiers, who have rebounded from a four-game slide with two wins in a row to climb to 14-7 overall and 5-5 in league play.

The Wolverines remain on the No. 1 line, joined by Arizona, Duke and Connecticut. Nebraska is a No. 2, along with Illinois, while Michigan State is a No. 3.

Purdue is replaced on the No. 3 line by Texas Tech, which moved to 16-4 on the heels of a five-game winning streak that included marquee victories against Brigham Young and Houston.

There was one slight change in the SEC. Auburn and Kentucky swapped spots, with the Tigers moving up to a No. 7 after winning four in a row and the always confounding Wildcats down to a No. 8 after getting losing by 25 points to Vanderbilt on Tuesday night.

March Madness Last four in

UCLA, New Mexico, Miami (Fla.), Indiana.

March Madness First four out

TCU, Virginia Tech, Seton Hall, Missouri.

NCAA tournament bids conference breakdown

Multi-bid leagues: Big Ten (11), SEC (10), ACC (8) Big 12 (7), Big East (3), Mountain West (3), West Coast (2).

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness Bracketology: Big Ten leads NCAA Tournament projection

Marc-Andre Fleury appreciates interest, but he's staying retired

The goalie trade market is pretty scarce, so some NHL teams have reached into the recent past.

And while retired Marc-Andre Fleury is flattered by the attention, he says he plans to stay retired.

"I had some calls and I took the time to think about it," he recently told USA TODAY's Sports Seriously. "It's very nice of them to think of me in that way, very flattering, but then at the end of the day, I stopped playing for some reasons. I thought it was better to just stay on the sidelines."

Fleury hung up his skates after 21 seasons in 2025, finishing with three Stanley Cup titles, a Vezina Trophy and the second most regular-season wins in NHL history (575). Since the playoffs ended for the Minnesota Wild, he played for Canada in the world championships and for one period and a shootout of a preseason game with the Pittsburgh Penguins, but now his focus is on a post-playing life.

He's enjoying the freedom of having more time but says there are other times when he misses playing.

"I miss the guys, I miss the competition, I miss battling as a team trying to win a game and the feeling that you get when you win a game," he said.

But he's finding plenty to do. He's coaching his 6-year-old, he's playing tennis, has driven a race car, tried some boxing and he went skiing, which he wouldn't be able to do under an NHL contract. He has a partnership with Kraft Hockeyville, which brings a preseason NHL game to a small community and helps refurbish rinks. He occasionally puts on the goalie pads, as his agent, Allan Walsh, posted on Thursday.

He'll be watching as NHL players return to the Olympics for the first time since 2014. Being a Quebec province native, he's choosing Canada to win, though he also said the USA and Sweden have solid teams.

"I just think it will be great hockey," he said. "I think it will be fun to watch, so many good teams and players out there. You never know in a tournament. It's not a best of seven, it's one game, so crazy things can happen. It can go different ways."

Fleury was also paying attention when Florida's Sergei Bobrovsky and San Jose's Alex Nedeljkovic had the first goalie fight since 2020.

"I think it's awesome," he said. "Nobody got hurt and to see two goalies fight, it's always so awkward because we got all the equipment and we're not used to fighting. It's funny to watch."

Fleury nearly had his chance in 2023 but was kept away as he skated down the ice and challenged St. Louis' Jordan Binnington.

"I have nothing against Jordan, really," he said. "I always wanted one fight in the NHL since I came in. In 21 years, I wanted to score a goal and have a fight. I came close on both but couldn't get it done."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Marc-Andre Fleury not interested in comeback despite interest

How Miami Ohio became college basketball's most unlikely undefeated team

Above Travis Steele’s desk in his office on the Miami University campus in Oxford, Ohio is a three-by-five index card tacked to the wall, right above a picture of his five-year-old whoodle Ryder.

On it is a message written in red ink:

Be obsessed with your trajectory, not your current results.

It’s a mantra Steele is trying to embody in the middle of his fourth season as the RedHawks’ men’s basketball coach. Wins and losses matter, of course, but success is ultimately judged by whether his players and program are getting better on a given day.

This season, though, the results have been too good to overlook — and the rest of the country’s starting to take notice.

As February approaches and the start of the NCAA tournament inches that much closer, there are two remaining undefeated teams in men’s college basketball. There’s No. 1 Arizona, a squad led by a pair of five-star freshmen who are representing one of the most decorated programs in the sport over the past 40 years. The other? Steele’s Miami team, which is 21-0, off to the best start in the history of the Mid-American Conference and ranked in the top 25 for the first time in 27 years.

Along the way, the RedHawks have become one of the biggest stories in the sport, with a long-stagnant program enjoying the kind of attention and acclaim it hasn’t received since a Wally Szczerbiak-led run to the Sweet 16 in 1999.

“It’s really flipped,” Steele said to USA TODAY Sports. “It just shows that anything can be done anywhere in the country. It just takes a lot of people pulling in the same direction and it takes a vision. If you have all the alignment right, man, anything can happen.”

The run hasn’t exactly come from out of nowhere — Miami won a program-record 25 games last season, after all — but it has thrust Steele, his players and the school into a position few could have realistically envisioned even three months ago.

“It’s exciting for me to be doing what I’ve been doing with CBS since 2010 and now have my alma mater so relevant in the national landscape of college basketball,” Szczerbiak said to USA TODAY Sports. “It’s awesome. It’s a dream for me.”

Miami Ohio basketball's long road back to relevance

Miami’s path to perfection has been hard-earned.

For decades, it was one of the more successful mid-major programs in the sport, crashing the regional semifinals of the NCAA Tournament four times from 1958-99 and serving as a launching pad for future NBA standouts like Szczerbiak and Ron Harper.

Since the turn of the century, though, the RedHawks’ fortunes waned. They’ve made the NCAA Tournament just once since their Sweet 16 appearance in 1999. In many of those years, they haven’t gotten particularly close, either. Over a 15-year stretch, from 2009-24, they finished with a winning record just once — and that was a 12-11 mark during the COVID-19-affected 2020-21 season.

When the university hired Steele after the 2022 season, it was in search of a long-awaited jolt.

“They wanted it, but the fan attendance wasn’t there, the support wasn’t there,” Steele said. “I knew it was going to be a rebuild in a lot of ways when I took it over. I knew we’d have to get more talent and get the culture right. But I probably didn’t realize quite how much the rebuild was going to be because of the disconnect with former players and the current program and the community and the current program. It just wasn’t there.”

At the time, Miami’s new coach was in search of a restart just as much as the program he was inheriting.

In 2018, at 36 years old, Steele was named the head coach at Xavier, where he’d helped lead the Musketeers to a Big East championship and a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament as their top assistant the previous season. His teams never bottomed out, but they had a clearly defined ceiling, never winning more than 19 games and missing out on the NCAA Tournament four years in a row at a program that had made it to March Madness in 26 of 33 seasons before he took over. After going 19-13 in his fourth season at the school with a team that missed the tournament despite a 16-5 start, Steele was fired.

In the days that followed, he mulled his future. He wasn’t burnt out and didn’t feel the need to step away from coaching. While he felt like he didn’t have a purpose being away from a team and a locker room, he also didn’t want to rush back to the sideline for the sake of it. The fit had to be right.

In Miami, he found just that — a school with a strong academic reputation and an idyllic campus that allowed him to stay in southwest Ohio, where his wife, Amanda, was from and where he had lived since 2008. Just 15 days after he was let go at Xavier, he’d accepted a new challenge.

“You live and you learn, right?” Steele said. “I made a lot of mistakes at Xavier. I made some mistakes and you don’t want to make those again. You figure out fit is everything. What are your non-negotiables?”

Miami Ohio's basketball renaissance

In his early discussions with Miami athletic director David Sayler, Steele warned that his approach may take some time to materialize.

He wasn’t wrong. The RedHawks struggled in their first two seasons under their new coach, going 12-20 in the 2022-23 season and before a modest improvement to 15-17 in 2023-24. 

By Steele’s third season, and with players he brought aboard earlier in his tenure stepping into larger roles, Miami got a long-awaited breakthrough. It went 25-9, its first 20-win season since the 1999 Sweet 16 team, and fell one game short of the NCAA Tournament, losing to Akron 76-74 in the MAC championship game on a layup with two seconds remaining.

Now, a team picked to finish second in the MAC has shattered even the more optimistic expectations that greeted it entering the season. While it’s not rare for a power-conference program to flirt with an undefeated season heading into February, Miami’s only the seventh non-Gonzaga team from a mid-major league to start a season 20-0 since 1990.

“You really just enjoy the moment when you have it because you may never have this again,” freshman guard Justin Kirby said to USA TODAY Sports.

The RedHawks haven’t just gotten to 21-0, but they’ve done so with an unmistakable flair. 

Steele overhauled his style after arriving at Miami, leaving behind his more plodding approach at Xavier for an offense that’s now 46th of 365 Division I teams in tempo, according to KenPom. They’re not just fast, but efficient, ranking fourth nationally in 2-point percentage, 18th in 3-point percentage and 23rd in free-throw percentage while rarely turning the ball over. Six players are averaging at least 10 points per game and six of the team’s top eight scorers are shooting at least 40% from 3 — and the two who aren’t are both at 39.4%. They’ve managed to do that despite playing about half the season without starting point guard and team captain Evan Ipsaro, who tore his ACL in a Dec. 20 win against Ball State.

It’s a free-flowing style, another contrast from Steele’s Xavier tenure. He said he sometimes calls as few as five set plays over the course of a game, preferring for his veteran roster to play in the flow of a contest with the concepts he has taught them.

The 21-0 mark hasn’t come without some fits of anxiety. Miami’s past three wins have come by a combined 11 points, with two of those victories — against Buffalo and at Kent State — coming in overtime. In the Buffalo game, Eian Elmer hit a buzzer-beating 3 to send the game to overtime before Peter Suder broke a tie with a 3 of his own with one second remaining in the extra period. On Tuesday, the RedHawks overcame a 10-point first-half deficit to knock off UMass.

Miami’s unblemished start has been made possible, in part, by a soft non-conference schedule that KenPom ranks as the fourth-easiest in the country. Three of its wins came against non-Division I teams and of the nine Division I squads they faced in non-conference play, only one (Wright State) currently has a winning record.

The RedHawks’ success isn’t a mirage, though. Their strength of record is 20th among all Division I teams, putting them above the likes of No. 18 North Carolina, No. 19 Clemson, No. 20 Louisville, No. 23 St. John’s and No. 25 Iowa.

As their wins mount, interest in the program has, too, with a fan base hungry for national relevance embracing the team that has given it to them. After averaging 2,656 fans per game last season, Miami moved to 8-0 in a Dec. 6 win against Maine in front of a home crowd of 1,349 on hand for the final home contest before the fall semester ended. With students back on campus, Tuesday’s 86-84 victory against UMass attracted 9,223 fans. It was the 10th-largest crowd in the history of 57-year-old Millett Hall, the RedHawks’ home arena, and the largest since 1996.

“The program has just totally taken off,” Szczerbiak said. “Ticket sales are through the roof. The excitement is there. It’s exactly what the program deserves and needs.”

Beyond attendance figures, the storybook start has reconnected generations of Miami fans to the program.

A quarter-century since he last suited up for the RedHawks, Szczerbiak has a daughter who’s a sophomore at Miami who attends all the games. Sophomore guard Luke Skaljac, who stepped in for Ipsaro after his injury, is the son of two Miami graduates and grew up in suburban Cleveland hearing stories from his father about Harper and Szczerbiak’s heroics.

Now, those halcyon days are back.

“It’s definitely surreal for him,” Skaljac said to USA TODAY Sports. “He’s kind of amazed this is happening right now and that I’m a part of it.”

How Miami Ohio built a winning roster — and kept it together

The RedHawks have been an unlikely success story, not only because of their record, but the way they’ve reached it.

During an age when immediate eligibility for transfers can radically reshape rosters at a given school annually, Miami has been a model of continuity. Twelve of the 15 players who have logged at least one minute this season for the RedHawks began their college careers at the school. 

Like virtually anyone else in the sport, Steele has used the transfer portal. Three of Miami’s top six scorers this season — Suder (from Bellarmine), Almar Atlason (Bradley) and Antwone Woolfolk (Rutgers) — transferred in from other Division I programs. It’s been more of a complementary tool, one used to fill in holes rather than build an entire team. For Steele, retention is his No. 1 priority.

At a mid-major like Miami, that’s far easier said than done. Every spring, eager power-conference programs pluck the top scorers and best players of teams from smaller leagues with shallower pockets.

For the most part, the RedHawks have managed to avoid that fate in a sport increasingly designed to make stories like theirs impossible. Though they lost players to Kentucky and Georgia Tech over the offseason, they brought back five of their top six scorers from last season’s 25-win squad, all of whom had remaining eligibility. It’s not just players, either. Four of Steele’s five assistant coaches have been by his side since he took over at Miami.

How’d they do it? Steele and his players credit a close-knit, familial atmosphere that has been fostered over the years, which has been enough to hold on to many standouts at a program that’s reportedly in the middle of the MAC when it comes to name, image and likeness resources.

“You just aren’t going to find a better fit than Miami, especially for a lot of us,” Skaljac said.

Steele said he doesn’t give a breathless recruiting pitch to his players after every season, instead stressing the value of long-term decisions over short-term ones and how staying at Miami and earning a degree from the school benefits them. 

“The grass isn’t always greener. It’s not,” Steele said. “I think those guys know that. They’ve heard stories from friends that are at other places. What we have is special. That doesn’t mean we’re going to be perfect keeping everybody. I’m OK with that. I want guys that want to be here.”

That carryover has allowed the RedHawks to dream at this late stage of the season.

As of right now, Miami figures to be a favorite in each of its 10 remaining regular-season games and it has already beaten the two teams directly behind it in the MAC standings, Akron and Kent State. Some sizable obstacles remain, though, with KenPom giving the RedHawks a 5.1% chance of finishing the regular season unbeaten.

But an undefeated season, while nice, was never the goal for this group. After the gutting loss in last year’s MAC title game, the biggest priority has been getting back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in nearly 20 years. Even with Miami’s hot start, that’s hardly a guaranteed destination, especially coming out of what’s almost always a one-bid league. One ill-timed slip-up or an off shooting night could undo weeks and months of perfection.

That leaves the RedHawks with a straightforward objective – just keep winning. So far, they’ve been pretty good at it.

“The results will take care of themselves if our process is right,” Steele said. “It may not always happen immediately, but eventually it will figure itself out. That’s why our guys have been so loose. We feel no pressure, none. Our guys are enjoying it. We’re having fun on this journey together.”

Miami Ohio basketball 2026 schedule

Here's who the RedHawks have left on their schedule:

  • Jan. 31: vs. Northern Illinois, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • Feb. 3: at Buffalo, 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • Feb. 7: at Marshall, 4 p.m.
  • Feb. 13: vs. Ohio, 8 p.m. (ESPNU)
  • Feb. 17: at UMass, 7 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • Feb. 21: vs. Bowling Green, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • Feb. 24: at Eastern Michigan, 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • Feb. 28: at Western Michigan, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • March 3: vs. Toledo, 7 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • March 6: at Ohio, 7 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • March 12-14: MAC Tournament, at Cleveland

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Miami Ohio basketball is one of two undefeated teams left in NCAA

NHL mock draft: Ivar Stenberg leads Gavin McKenna before the Olympics

As the scouting cycle for the upcoming NHL draft progresses, the gaps between the top talent in the 2026 class are closing at a rapid rate.

Headlined by Gavin McKenna, Ivar Stenberg and Keaton Verhoeff, this group features a ton of players making second-half surges, such as Chase Reid and Caleb Malhotra, proving the rankings of these prospects are far from decided.

The NHL standings are far from decided as well. The Vancouver Canucks are still in last place, but the St. Louis Blues slid, while the Winnipeg Jets climbed up three spots in the past two weeks.

Considering the standings and the needs of the teams positioned to select in the top 16 of the first round, let's take a crack at what those picks could look like in June.

(Draft order determined by standings, sorted by points percentage, before games on Jan. 29, 2026)

NHL mock draft: Top 16 picks

1. Vancouver Canucks: Frolunda (Sweden) left wing Ivar Stenberg

With 28 points in 29 games, Stenberg is scoring at a rate we rarely see among draft-eligible players in pro hockey, challenging Daniel Sedin's record for the most points by a Swedish League player in their draft year. Production is one thing, but his ability to create offense through contact, his vision, shooting, playmaking and two-way game have him projected as a top-end talent that will give opposing teams nightmares at both ends of the ice.

2. St. Louis Blues: Penn State (NCAA) left wing Gavin McKenna

McKenna has really found his confidence since returning to Penn State after the world juniors, putting together 11 points in his last five games, including a hat trick in a four-point effort against Wisconsin. If he continues to string together games where he shows how overwhelming and assertive he can be offensively, while also finding ways to impact the game away from the puck, he'll reclaim the top spot in this class.

3. Calgary Flames: Boston University (NCAA) center Tynan Lawrence

There are few players who can match Lawrence's pace of play in this class. His ability to transport the puck through the neutral zone remains elite, and there were times this season in the USHL when he looked two steps ahead of every other player, creating dangerous chances. There have been some growing pains since switching to the NCAA, but Lawrence still possesses high-end tools that make him worthy of being selected in this range.

4. New York Rangers: North Dakota (NCAA) defenseman Keaton Verhoeff

As a 6-foot-4, 208-pound right-shot defenseman, Verhoeff possesses one of the most sought-after physical profiles in today's NHL. On top of that, he handles a heavy workload at the NCAA level, often playing over 20 minutes a night while displaying a mature defensive foundation and consistently improving as an offensive threat with his shot and playmaking vision. There are others pushing Verhoeff as the top defender in this class, but he remains the top choice.

5. Winnipeg Jets: Sault Ste. Marie (OHL) defenseman Chase Reid

Chase Reid is truly the total package. His length, mobility, and hockey IQ makes it very difficult for opposing players to create advantages over him while defending. He’s also arguably the best player at creating transition offense next to Lawrence in this class with his feel for anticipating offense, developing into a breakout threat with his passing and skating. There’s not much separating him from Verhoeff, and he could easily be a top-3 pick this summer.

6. Chicago Blackhawks: Jukurit (Finland) defenseman Alberts Smits

Smits may have the highest compete level among all players in this class. His game oozes confidence in his willingness to engage in the rush, and he looks to be a difference-maker every time he steps on the ice despite playing against grown men in Finland. Smits is on Latvia's roster for the Winter Olympics in Milan, and it should be a treat to watch him play against the top competition in the world.

7. Nashville Predators: Vancouver (WHL) defenseman Ryan Lin

While concerns regarding Lin's size may have others leap him on draft day, he's easily the most detailed defender in this class. He's not overly physical, but he competes incredibly hard and wins puck battles at a high rate without compromising his positioning. His offensive production may be misleading, as he doesn't have any standout tools that would suggest he'll be a top point producer in the NHL, but he's a reliable top-four D-man nonetheless.

8. Washington Capitals: Djurgarden (Sweden) center Viggo Bjorck

Bjorck plays with a motor that has allowed a lot of scouts to overlook his size disadvantages and skating issues this season. He's constantly putting pressure on opponents while on the forecheck and wins a ton of battles that turn into dangerous scoring chances thanks to his crafty playmaking. It's unlikely he'll remain a center as he develops, but he'll undoubtedly be a great complementary winger with top-six potential at the NHL level someday.

9. New Jersey Devils: Windsor (OHL) left wing Ethan Belchetz

Things have trended downward a bit for Belchetz over the past few weeks. He's continued to show flashes of high-end playmaking, and his physical tools alone will still make him highly sought after on draft day. However, with his offensive production slowing down, he must find a way to impose his will as he did early in the season to overcome his skating issues and maintain his status as a top-10 prospect.

10. Ottawa Senators: Forfeited draft pick

The Ottawa Senators will forfeit this year's draft pick after failing to disclose Evgenii Dadonov's limited no-trade clause when they sent him to Vegas in 2021, leading to an invalidated trade between the Golden Knights and Anaheim Ducks the following year. The Senators drafted in the top 10 four times in the last six years, choosing Tim Stutzle, Jake Sanderson, Tyler Boucher and Carter Yakemchuk.

11. Boston Bruins (via Toronto): Prince George (WHL) defenseman Carson Carels

Carels has some of the best hockey sense in this class, and it's reflected in the trust he's gained in Prince George, playing on the power play and penalty kill. What makes Carels so special is that he projects as a top-pairing defender who could play in a shutdown role or use his playmaking instincts to affect the game offensively, depending on what the assignment is on any given night.

12. Seattle Kraken: Prince Albert (WHL) defenseman Daxon Rudolph

Rudolph is a smooth skater who uses his feet effectively to lead rushes and shut down plays in the defensive end. While he's not overly physical, he has great range at 6-foot-2 and is smart with his stick in breaking up plays in zone and off the rush. As Rudolph continues to stack dominant offensive performances with the Prince Albert Raiders, he's inching closer to being a top-10 player in this class.

13. Philadelphia Flyers: Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL) defenseman Xavier Villeneuve

There is no defenseman in this class who's more gifted with the puck than Villeneuve. He uses his deception and skating ability to create separation at the blueline very similarly to Lane Hutson. Villeneuve's defensive game leaves a lot to be desired, and as an undersized defender, that could be a cause for concern. However, his compete level and foundation of skills are worth betting on as a potential top power-play quarterback in the NHL.

14. Columbus Blue Jackets: Brantford (OHL) center Caleb Malhotra

Malhotra's skill, decision-making and mature two-way habits undeniably make him worthy of being picked in this range. He's been a standout offensive producer in his first OHL season on a Brantford team filled with NHL-drafted talent, and in a class without many high-end options at the center position, don't be surprised if he's taken much higher on draft day. 

15. Anaheim Ducks: Peterborough (OHL) left wing Adam Novotny

Novotny has continued to be an offensive threat for Peterborough after a solid world juniors showing with Czechia, displaying his high-end skating and wicked shot that beats goaltenders regularly from just outside the dots. Novotny feels like a player coaches at the NHL level will gravitate toward, given his stick habits and polished defensive game. He projects as a middle-six winger with scoring upside who is capable of playing both special-teams roles.

16. San Jose Sharks: HV71 (Sweden) defensemen Malte Gustafsson

Gustafsson is a 6-foot-4 defenseman with good mobility. He's shown flashes of playmaking as of late, earning him some power play opportunities at the Swedish men's level while playing an overall bigger role on a weak HV71 team. He's hovered in this range for a while, but if he shows that he can truly add an offensive layer to his game, there's a good shot he'll end up as a lottery pick this year.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NHL mock draft 2026: Ivar Stenberg leads pre-Olympics edition

NBA All-Star reserves predictions: Who fills out rosters?

The trading deadline isn’t the only major event currently happening in the NBA calendar.

The league will reveal its reserves for the 2026 All-Star Game Sunday, Feb. 1 at 6 p.m. ET during the pregame show of the “Sunday Night Basketball” premier on NBC.

This comes after the league on Jan. 19 announced the 10 players — five from each conference — who were named All-Star starters.

Of course, there are more than 10 players deserving of the honor, and NBA coaches will determine the 14 reserves — seven from each conference — who will be making the trip to Los Angeles for the All-Star Game Feb. 15.

NBA All-Star Game reserve selection process

There are 24 All-Stars, with 12 per conference. Players are selected without regard for position.

The 10 starters (five per conference) are selected through three tranches: fan votes (50%), current NBA player votes (25%) and a media panel (25%).

For reserves, the collection of NBA coaches will cast votes for the players they think deserve the honor, and the totals are tallied, regardless of position.

There is one wrinkle this year, however.

Because the league is using a USA versus the world format in which three, 8-player teams will compete in a round-robin tournament, NBA commissioner Adam Silver will intervene and appoint additional All-Stars so that there are enough players to reach the quota of at least 16 U.S.-born players and eight international players. If necessary, the international players can include American players with ties to other countries.

NBA All-Star Game reserves predictions

Based on their performance from this season, here are the players I would pick as All-Star reserves.

Eastern Conference

Donovan Mitchell, Cleveland Cavaliers

Jalen Johnson, Atlanta Hawks

Jalen Duren, Detroit Pistons

Scottie Barnes, Toronto Raptors

Brandon Ingram, Toronto Raptors

Michael Porter Jr., Brooklyn Nets

Norman Powell, Miami Heat

Western Conference

Anthony Edwards, Minnesota Timberwolves

Jamal Murray, Denver Nuggets

Devin Booker, Phoenix Suns

Kevin Durant, Houston Rockets

Deni Avdija, Portland Trail Blazers

Kawhi Leonard, Los Angeles Clippers

LeBron James, Los Angeles Lakers

NBA All-Star Game starters

Here are the players already selected as All-Star starters.

Eastern Conference

Cade CunninghamDetroit Pistons (second All-Star selection)

Jalen BrunsonNew York Knicks (third)

Tyrese MaxeyPhiladelphia 76ers (second)

Jaylen Brown, Boston Celtics (fifth)

Giannis AntetokounmpoMilwaukee Bucks (10th)

Western Conference

Stephen Curry, Golden State Warriors (12th All-Star selection)

Shai Gilgeous-AlexanderOklahoma City Thunder (fourth)

Luka DončićLos Angeles Lakers (sixth)

Victor WembanyamaSan Antonio Spurs (second)

Nikola JokićDenver Nuggets (eighth)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA All-Star roster predictions: Who will be the reserves?

Big 12, Big Ten lead Starting Five college basketball schedule of games to watch

The long, frigid month of January is coming to a close, but the action on basketball courts on college campuses nationwide is as hot as ever.

Our list of the five best men’s college games of the weekend includes a pair of top-10 showdowns in the Big Ten bookending the schedule. The Saturday offerings include a top-20 tilt in the Big 12 and a heated west-coast rivalry that is sadly about to become a thing of the past. There are plenty of other games to watch as well, so feel free to dial around if you’re stuck indoors awaiting the spring thaw.

No. 2 Michigan at No. 8 Michigan State

Time/TV: Friday, 8 p.m. ET, Fox

The Starting Five gets a Friday night jumpstart with this rivalry clash with maximum intensity guaranteed. The Wolverines haven’t been posting the huge victory margins as they were in December but have still been finding ways to win in the rugged Big Ten. The Spartans, of course, are also in the mix as usual hoping to hold on to a share of the league lead by defending their storied home floor at the Breslin Center. Veteran MSU point guard Jeremy Fears directs the offense well, but points on the interior will nevertheless be hard to get against the Wolverines, who average nearly six rejections a game. Michigan’s front court is equally effective at the offensive end, with Yaxel Lendeborg rarely choosing bad shots.

No. 13 Brigham Young at No. 14 Kansas

Time/TV: Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET, ESPN

The headliner in the Big 12 this weekend features a couple of teams that are comfortably in the bracket hoping to optimize their seeding. This is not a new situation for the Jayhawks, of course, but they could use more high-end results regardless. The Cougars have won the games they were supposed to, but a win here in the hostile environs of Allen Fieldhouse would demonstrate real March staying power. Continuity has been fleeting for Kansas with freshman sensation Darryn Peterson in and out of the lineup, but improved production from Flory Bidunga has helped. BYU’s own touted rookie A.J. Dybantsa is coming off one of the least efficient games of his young career in Monday night’s loss at top-ranked Arizona, so a few early buckets would be most beneficial.

Brigham Young's AJ Dybantsa is defended by Texas Tech guard Donovan Atwell during their game, Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026, at United Supermarkets Arena.

Saint Mary’s at No. 6 Gonzaga

Time/TV: Saturday, 10:30 p.m. ET, ESPN

These West Coast Conference rivals have staged some epic contests over the last couple of decades. Gonzaga’s pending departure for the new Pac-12 means it won’t be a regular event after this year, so we must enjoy the final installments. Unfortunately the Zags will still not be at full strength with leading scorer Braden Huff out with a knee injury, though center Graham Ike (ankle) might be back in the lineup. As usual, stingy defense is the Saint Mary’s hallmark, holding opponents to just 40.4% shooting. When the Gaels need a bucket, they most often look inside for Paulius Murauskas.

No. 23 Alabama at No. 21 Florida

Time/TV: Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, ABC

The SEC has been well-represented in recent Final Fours. These two programs have been part of that success, and they arguably have the highest ceiling of the league’s candidates this year. The Gators feature a frontcourt trio of Thomas Haugh, Alex Condon and Rueben Chinyelu, which will be a matchup problem for the Crimson Tide, even with the return of Charles Bediako. But the 3-point arc is the equalizer for Alabama, especially if primary facilitator Labaron Philon’s own shots are also falling.

No. 10 Illinois at No. 5 Nebraska

Time/TV: Sunday, 4:30 p.m. ET, FS1.

We wrap up the weekend back in Big Ten territory, where the Cornhuskers look to bounce back from their first loss of the season by completing a regular-season sweep of the Fighting Illini. It was way back on Dec. 13 when Illinois dropped a thriller at home to Nebraska, but the Illini have produced some impressive results since then. With no history of tournament success the Cornhuskers are not household names yet, but fans should get to know high-scoring forwards Pryce Sandfort and Rienk Mast. The Illini roster is similarly constructed, but Keaton Wagler requires extra attention at the arc. Backcourt mate Kylan Boswell remains sidedlined with a hand injury.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College basketball games to watch schedule features Big Ten, Big 12

Top college basketball head coaches on the rise for high-major jobs

College basketball is past the midway point of the regular season, and a few low- and mid-major programs are starting to pull away as the top contenders from outside the power conferences to make the 2026 NCAA men's tournament.

That means the coaches of those smaller programs are also starting to gain attention across the sport — potentially even for jobs at bigger programs once the coaching carousel starts.

There were numerous mid-major coaches to jump to power programs after the 2024-25 season, with Will Wade heading to North Carolina State from McNeese after an tournament win and Bucky McMillan taking his up-tempo style from Samford to Texas A&M. Richard Pitino, the son of Rick Pitino, also moved from New Mexico to Xavier, a team that commonly faces his dad's St. John's squad, and Ben McCollum went from Drake to Iowa.

Some of the top recent coaching hires among Power Four teams have come from the mid-major level. Michigan's Dusty May and Vanderbilt's Mark Byington, from Florida Atlantic and James Madison, respectively, have achieved turnarounds in their second seasons at new schools.

So, which coaches are in line to make a similar jump after this year? Here's a look at the top college basketball coaches who could be the next in line for a bigger job after the 2025-26 season:

Top college basketball head coaches on the rise

Josh Schertz, Saint Louis

Schertz will be likely one of the top names in the upcoming coaching carousel, as he has led Saint Louis to a 20-1 record and a No. 22 ranking in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

The 50-year-old former Indiana State coach finished 32-7 in his final season with the Sycamores in 2023-24, and was one of the first four teams out of the field after falling to Drake in the Missouri Valley Conference championship game. He went 19-15 last season at Saint Louis.

Saint Louis features seven players averaging nine or more points per game this season, with his leading scorer averaging 13.1 points per game. The balanced attack could make Saint Louis a tough out in the tournament, should it get there.

Jerrod Calhoun, Utah State

Jerrod Calhoun, hired away from Youngstown State, led Utah State to an No. 10 seed in his first season in 2024-25. The Aggies are on track to reach March Madness again in 2026.

Calhoun and Utah State are 17-3 and tied for second in the Mountain West standings. He has done a nice job keeping the Aggies' forward momentum after former coach Danny Sprinkle left for Washington after the 2023-24 season.

Utah State coach Jerrod Calhoun walks the sideline during his team's game against Colorado State at Moby Arena.

Takayo Siddle, UNC Wilmington

Takayo Siddle has done nothing but win since taking over at UNC Wilmington in 2020-21, accumulating a 122-49 record through six seasons, with a CBI Championship in 2021-22. The former longtime Kevin Keatts assistant led the Seahawks to a tournament appearance last season and is primed for another bid this season.

Siddle, 39, will be an intriguing option for numerous potential power conference openings.

Coach Takayo Siddle gets his team going as UNCW played Marshall at Trask Coliseum. UNCW beat Marshall 70-69.

Travis Steele, Miami (Ohio)

Travis Steele's tenure didn't go well at Xavier, as he was fired after the 2021-22 season without reaching the NCAA tournament. He has turned it around at Miami (Ohio) with the 21-0 RedHawks one of two unbeatens left in the country. He could be in line for a jump back to a bigger school.

Steele went a combined 27-37 in his first two seasons at Miami (Ohio) but has a 46-9 record the past two seasons. His team runs a fast-paced offense, which leads the country in scoring (94.6 points per game).

Miami (Ohio) men's basketball coach Travis Steele speaks with a referee in the second half his team's game against Buffalo, Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026, at Millett Hall in Oxford, Oh.

Tony Skinn, George Mason

Tony Skinn took over as a first-time head coach at his alma mater in 2023-24, and is nearing his third consecutive 20-win season after winning Atlantic 10 coach of the year honors last season.

Skinn, 42, has the Patriots at 19-2 and in second place in the league standings behind Saint Louis. He was a key member of George Mason's Cinderella run to the Final Four in 2006, when he averaged 12.6 points per game as a senior.

Skinn was twice an assistant for now-Villanova coach Kevin Willard, serving as an assistant coach at Seton Hall from 2018-21 and again as an assistant at Maryland from 2022-23.

George Mason head basketball coach Tony Skinn, at URI, Jan. 24, 2026

Eric Olen, New Mexico

Eric Olen landed one of the top mid-major jobs in college basketball last offseason after spending more than 20 years at UC San Diego as an assistant and head coach.

Olen led UC San Diego to four consecutive NCAA Division II tournament berths from 2015-19 and was 30-1 in 2020 before the tournament was canceled. He then oversaw the Tritons' jump to Division I and led the program to its first-ever Division I bid last season after finishing the regular season with a 30-5 record in the Big West.

Olen has kept things rolling in his first season at New Mexico, leading the Lobos to a 17-4 record with an 8-2 mark in Mountain West play. New Mexico's roster was gutted after Richard Pitino left for Xavier, but Olen has managed a roster led by two freshmen leading scorers.

UC San Diego coach Eric Olen on the sideline during the game against Pepperdine on Nov. 9, 2024 at LionTree Arena.

Bryan Hodgson, South Florida

Bryan Hodgson spent eight seasons as an assistant at Buffalo and Alabama under Crimson Tide coach Nate Oats from 2015-23. Hodgson is in his third season as a head coach, and first at USF.

The 38-year-old New York native went 45-28 in his first two seasons at Arkansas State and has led the Bulls at 14-7 with a 6-2 record in American play so far this season.

Hodgson deploys a similarly high tempo offense like Oats', as USF ranks 17th nationally in adjusted tempo, per KenPom. USF also ranks No. 12 nationally in scoring offense, averaging 89.8 points per game.

South Florida men's basketball coach Bryan Hodgson coaches his team against Alabama at Coleman Coliseum.

Scott Cross, Troy

Scott Cross was fired by Texas-Arlington after the 2017-18 season despite being the school's all-time wins leader and the only coach in program history with a winning record.

He spent a season as an assistant at TCU during the 2018-19 season under Jamie Dixon before taking over at Troy, which he led to its third-ever tournament berth in 2024-25. The Trojans are 15-7 with an 8-2 mark in Sun Belt play with Cross looking for his fifth consecutive 20-win season after the Trojans won 20 combined games in his first two campaigns.

The 51-year-old has been a head coach for 19 years with a winning record in all but five seasons at two unassuming programs.

Troy men's basketball coach Scott Cross watches play during his team's game against Kentucky in the 2025 NCAA men's tournament at Fiserv Forum.

Ryan Miller, Murray State

A longtime assistant, Miller got his first head-coaching gig this season, and has led Murray State to a 16-6 record while sitting second in the Missouri Valley standings.

Miller, the older brother of 17-year NBA veteran Mike Miller, was an assistant at Creighton under Greg McDermott from 2021-25, and was also an assistant under Dixon at TCU from 2016-21. He also coached at Memphis as an assistant under John Calipari, along with stints at Pepperdine, New Mexico, Auburn and UNLV.

Miller might need a year or two at Murray State, but depending on how the Racers finish, he could be a hot name this cycle.

Matt Braeuer, Stephen F. Austin

Texas Tech coach Grant McCasland already has a solid coaching tree despite being in his third season at Texas Tech.

Braeuer is a first-year coach at Stephen F. Austin and is off to an 18-3 start this season with a first-place standing in the Southland. McCasland assistants have done well, with Ross Hodge at West Virginia, Dave Smart at Pacific and Braeuer at SFA.

Texas Tech basketball assistant Matt Braeuer stands on the sidelines prior to a game against Bethune-Cookman, Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, at United Supermarkets Arena.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Top college basketball head coaches on the rise for high-major jobs

Patrick Reed climbs leaderboard with 67 in Bahrain but 10 shots off lead

AL MAZROWIAH, Bahrain (AP) — Patrick Reed shot 5-under 67 in the second round of the Bahrain Championship on the European tour on Friday and was 10 strokes behind clubhouse leader Calum Hill of Scotland.

Reed won the Dubai Desert Classic on Sunday and announced on Wednesday he was leaving LIV Golf.

The American will play on the European tour for the rest of the year, with the aim of finishing high enough in the Race to Dubai standings to earn full status on the PGA Tour in 2027.

Reed made seven birdies. Hill made 11 — and no bogeys — in his 61 to move onto 16-under par for the tournament and held a four-shot lead midway through the second round.

___

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

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 1/30/26

NEW YORK, NY - OCTOBER 07: Ben Rice #22 and Trent Grisham #12 of the New York Yankees look on from the dugout before the game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on October 7, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We’re nearly ready to close out January, which means we’ve almost run out the clock on the last month without any professional Major League baseball being played. By the end of February, spring training games will be in full swing, and not long after that, we’ll have genuine, high-stakes international baseball in the form of the WBC. It’s close enough to be mouth-watering, but for just a little while longer, we’ll have to wait out the cold. On the site today, Estevão analyzes the free-agent deal the Yankees once gave Mariano Rivera as part of our Free Agent series, while Sam celebrates an obscure player, Hipólito Peña, for our Yankees Birthday series. Also, with the Yankees’ starting pitching depth still in question to start the season, Andrés ponders whether they should consider someone like veteran José Quintana.

Questions/Prompts:

1. If you had to pick now, who would you choose to hit the second-most homers on the Yankees in 2026?

2. Now that most of the major free agents have signed, what would you say has been the most surprising signing of the offseason?

Pens Points: Winning ways continue

PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 29: Ryan Shea #5 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his second period goal against the Chicago Blackhawks at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 29, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Here are your Pens Points for this Friday morning…

Forwards Anthony Mantha and Egor Chinakhov scored in a 31-second span in what was a dominant second period, as the Pittsburgh Penguins breezed by the Chicago Blackhawks 6-2 on Thursday night for their fifth straight victory. [Recap]

As seen during the game, the Penguins officially recalled forward Rutger McGroarty from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Thursday morning. [PensBurgh]

With Bryan Rust out for the next three games (including the game against the Blackhawks on Thursday), forward Justin Brazeau is expected to perform top-line duties in his absence. [Trib Live]

Updates from around the NHL…

The Colorado Avalanche donned Quebec Nordiques jerseys on Thursday against the Montreal Canadiens at the Bell Centre, ceremoniously reigniting the Battle of Quebec that took place decades prior. [Sportsnet]

The Dallas Stars will host the Vegas Golden Knights at AT&T Stadium, home of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, in a Stadium Series game next season. The game will take place on Feb. 20, 2027. [Sportsnet]

New York Rangers forward Artemi Panarin is not expected to play again before the Olympic break, according to NHL insiders, for what is being called “roster management purposes.” [TSN]

Kane owns the record: Detroit Red Wings forward Patrick Kane became the highest-scoring United States-born player in NHL history in the Red Wings’ 4-3 loss to the Washington Capitals on Thursday night. [Associated Press]

March Madness bubble watch: Indiana becomes NCAA Tournament contender

It's quite fascinating how when the NCAA men's basketball tournament picture gets magnified, the bubble for teams hoping to make the field begins to move in all sorts of ways.

Teams like UCLA and Indiana pick up major victories that put them on track to avoid this uncomfortable position in the March Madness conversation. Then you get ones like TCU and Seton Hall that start to get punched in the mouth by their conference foes and are having a hard time recovering.

The bubble watch has taken notice and now reaches another critical point: January is wrapping up, which means there's about one month left in the regular season, and teams can be worry free or completely stressed by the time conference tournaments begin.

Here are the teams currently on the bubble in the latest USA TODAY Sports Bracketology.

UCLA

  • Record: 15-6 (7-3)
  • NET Ranking: 42
  • Quad 1 record: 2-5
  • Projected seed: No. 11 (first four)
  • Quality wins: vs. Purdue
  • Bad losses: vs. California (neutral)

The Bruins are in a resurgence at the right time, with its win against Purdue kick starting a three-game win streak. While a Quad 2 game, this weekend's home contest against Indiana will be a big opportunity to get out of the bubble. In the top half of the Big Ten, UCLA must stay in that group before the schedule gets tough in the middle of February.

New Mexico

  • Record: 17-4 (8-2)
  • NET Ranking: 38
  • Quad 1 record: 1-3
  • Projected seed: No. 11 (first four)
  • Quality wins: at Virginia Commonwealth
  • Bad losses: at New Mexico State, at Boise State

The Lobos are doing all they can to maintain their stock while the opportunities to impress aren't necessarily there, bumping the Quad 2 record to 4-0. However, New Mexico needs to handle San Jose State to set up a monster Mountain West showdown with Utah State on Feb. 4, which is shaping up to be a Quad 1 chance, one it needs to get off the bubble.

Miami (Fla.)

  • Record: 17-4 (6-2)
  • NET Ranking: 36
  • Quad 1 record: 1-3
  • Projected seed: No. 11 (first four)
  • Quality wins: At Wake Forest.
  • Bad losses: vs. Florida State

A team that has tumbled down the bracket, the Hurricanes find themselves in the bubble thanks to a missed opportunity against Clemson and a bad Quad 3 loss to Florida State. The lone Quad 1 victory is against Wake Forest, not really impressive. Miami has at least responded accordingly with two consecutive wins, and it will have to keep it going with California and Boston College on deck to avoid falling completely out of the field.

Indiana

  • Record: 14-7 (5-5)
  • NET Ranking: 32
  • Quad 1 record: 1-6
  • Projected seed: No. 11 (first four)
  • Quality wins: vs. Purdue
  • Bad losses: at Minnesota

Has some of the football magic rubbed off on Hoosier basketball? Whatever it is, things are going great in Bloomington with the hoops team trending up. Indiana finally got the much-needed Quad 1 win, and it's even sweeter it came against rival Purdue. Hopefully, the momentum travels to Los Angeles for a massive West Coast trip, with Quad 1 games in UCLA and Southern California up next. At least a split is needed, but a perfect visit would keep the good times rolling.

Indiana Hoosiers forward Tucker DeVries (12) celebrates after a play against the Purdue Boilermakers during the first half at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall.

TCU

  • Record: 13-8 (3-5)
  • NET Ranking: 46
  • Quad 1 record: 3-5
  • Projected seed: First four out
  • Quality wins: vs. Florida (netural), vs. Wisconsin (neutral)
  • Bad losses: vs. New Orleans, vs. Notre Dame, at Utah

The Horned Frogs now see themselves currently on the outside looking in as the Big 12 gauntlet rages on. They did get a Quad 1 win against Baylor but couldn't build upon it by losing to Houston. There's no reason to panic yet since TCU does have a slight break facing Colorado and Kansas State next, so just win those games to get back to .500 in conference play.

Seton Hall

  • Record: 15-6 (5-5)
  • NET Ranking: 50
  • Quad 1 record: 1-3
  • Projected seed: First four out
  • Quality wins: vs. North Carolina State (neutral)
  • Bad losses: at DePaul

What started off as a promising season for Shaheen Holloway's team has fizzled out of a bit. The Pirates lost four consecutive games, including games against Butler and DePaul, that resulted in Seton Hall falling out of the field. It needs to improve its conference record and capture those few Quad 1 opportunities to boost that NET ranking, which is possible with trips to Villanova and Creighton on the horizon.

Missouri

  • Record: 14-7 (4-4)
  • NET Ranking: 73
  • Quad 1 record: 3-4
  • Projected seed: First four out
  • Quality wins: vs. Florida, at Kentucky
  • Bad losses: at Notre Dame, at Mississippi

Missouri really helped its case when it won three of its first four SEC games, but regressed when it proceeded to lose three of the next four. The Tigers have some quality wins, but their No. 73 NET ranking is extremely high for an at-large team. The Tigers need to handle Mississippi State and South Carolina when their resume can't afford to lose those contests.

Virginia Tech

  • Record: 16-6 (5-4)
  • NET Ranking: 54
  • Quad 1 record: 1-5
  • Projected seed: First four out
  • Quality wins: vs. Virginia
  • Bad losses: vs. Stanford

The Hokies are making progress toward being a major in the bubble, with three wins in the last four games. It only makes Virginia Tech think what if it were able to close out some of those conference losses, as two of them were by one point and another by three points. Regardless, Virginia Tech is trending upward, and there is no greater chance to continue them climb with Duke coming to town and then another Quad 1 chance at North Carolina State.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness bubble watch sees Indiana rise in tournament projection