Orlando visits Toronto on 3-game road skid

Orlando Magic (39-34, ninth in the Eastern Conference) vs. Toronto Raptors (41-32, fifth in the Eastern Conference)

Toronto; Sunday, 6 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Orlando travels to Toronto looking to stop its three-game road skid.

The Raptors have gone 29-16 against Eastern Conference opponents. Toronto averages 114.0 points and has outscored opponents by 1.7 points per game.

The Magic are 24-23 against conference opponents. Orlando is 15-17 in games decided by 10 points or more.

The Raptors' 11.5 made 3-pointers per game this season are just 0.4 fewer made shots on average than the 11.9 per game the Magic allow. The Magic are shooting 46.4% from the field, 0.3% lower than the 46.7% the Raptors' opponents have shot this season.

The teams play for the third time this season. In the last matchup on Jan. 31 the Magic won 130-120 led by 32 points from Desmond Bane, while Brandon Ingram scored 35 points for the Raptors.

TOP PERFORMERS: Scottie Barnes is averaging 18.5 points, 7.8 rebounds, 5.6 assists and 1.5 blocks for the Raptors. RJ Barrett is averaging 20.1 points and 5.1 rebounds over the past 10 games.

Bane is scoring 20.4 points per game and averaging 4.2 rebounds for the Magic. Tristan da Silva is averaging 2.0 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Raptors: 5-5, averaging 115.9 points, 40.5 rebounds, 29.7 assists, 8.9 steals and 5.5 blocks per game while shooting 49.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.0 points per game.

Magic: 4-6, averaging 119.8 points, 40.8 rebounds, 25.5 assists, 7.4 steals and 2.7 blocks per game while shooting 46.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 122.3 points.

INJURIES: Raptors: Immanuel Quickley: out (foot), Trayce Jackson-Davis: out (knee), Collin Murray-Boyles: day to day (back).

Magic: Franz Wagner: out (ankle), Anthony Black: out (abdomen), Jonathan Isaac: out (knee).

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

Three UConn veterans step up to deliver Sweet 16 win vs. Michigan State

WASHINGTON — Connecticut was the hammer. Michigan State was the nail.

The No. 2 Huskies made six of their first seven attempts from 3-point range to lead the No. 3 Spartans 25-6 midway through the first half of the Sweet 16, seemingly snapping out of the month-long slump that had cost them the Big East regular-season and tournament championships.

“I think we were able to slow them down in transition and then execute, not turn the ball over,” said guard Silas Demery.

But things are never that easy for this UConn team. Things haven’t been easy, in fact, since the second of the program’s back-to-back national championships in 2024.

Michigan State stormed back. A late bucket by Jeremy Fears Jr. made the score 35-27 at halftime. The lead was 35-34 just over three minutes into the second half. By the midpoint of the second half, the Spartans went ahead 45-44 for their first lead since going in front 4-3 just 74 seconds into the game.

“I think we’ve got to be able to handle those runs better,” said guard Solo Ball. “I think we gave in and let them have that run. We lost focus on what we do best, the defense and rebounding that put us up.”

But down the stretch, the Huskies’ three veteran leaders — Ball, forward Alex Karaban and center Tarris Reed Jr. — stepped up to deliver a 67-63 win that leaves UConn a win away from the eighth Final Four appearance in program history.

“Tarris and Solo and then (Karaban) at the end over there just willed up to the victory,” coach Dan Hurley said.

UConn will next face No. 1 Duke in the Elite Eight. The two programs have met nine times, including a 77-74 UConn win in the 1999 national championship game.

Karaban, Reed and Ball combined for 49 points, 73.1% of the team’s total. Karaban posted 17 points and 7 rebounds for his 11th career NCAA Tournament game in double-figure scoring. Reed finished with 20 points, 5 rebounds and 4 assists. Ball had 12 points, including a pair of free throws and layup on successive possessions that helped the Huskies move ahead 55-49 with 5:30 to play.

At a crucial point, these three put the Huskies on their backs to avoid what might have been the worst loss of the Hurley era.

“We responded the right way,” said Demery. “We took that punch and were able to go back and forth with them.”

The key was Karaban, the only member of the roster to log meaningful minutes during the back-to-back run. A veteran of 17 career tournament games and just one tournament loss, the senior delivered key buckets down the stretch and, more importantly, helped keep the Huskies’ emotions in check as the Spartans stormed ahead in the second half.

“Alex responded like he’s been there before. He’s been in these moments,” Demery said.

Karban is “the leader of this team,” said Reed. “He’s the captain of this ship. Following what he’s doing is going to help us go as a deep as we can.”

At a second-half timeout after MSU had drawn within a possession at 51-49 on a Jeremy Fears Jr. layup, Karaban told his teammates to stay together and composed. Be there for your brother, Deremy recalled Karaban saying, and be ready to swing back.

“We knew we had to stay together no matter what,” said Karaban. “Everything was tested for us. Every possession, offense, defense, was a test for us. I think it was a special game.”

Reed cracked the 20-point mark for the second time this tournament, joining his monster 31-point, 27-rebound performance against No. 15 Furman in the opening round, on a pair of game-icing free throws with four seconds left.

“You would think in those moments it would be nerve-wracking,” Reed said. “But when you're in it, it wasn't that nerve-wracking. Like I said, 'Trust the work.'

“I've been working on it. Taking my time and breathing and trusting in the shot and living with the result.”

Reed was “amazing, dominant, the guy,” said Karaban. While the former Michigan transfer has given the Huskies a much more interior-centered feel than the two championship teams, his ability to draw attention helped free Karaban for a 12-point second half that saw him play all 20 minutes after the break.

Behind these three veterans, UConn was able to outmuscle one of the toughest and most physical programs in the country. That’s a testament to the program’s growth not just since losses to Marquette and St. John’s late in the regular season but since last year’s frustrating team, which bowed out in the second round to eventual national champion Florida.

“It happens every single game,” Ball said. “There are new guys that step up. But at the same time, I think it’s just the mentality. We’re not just going to do anything to lose. It’s all 15 of us trying to stay in the same locker room as long as we can. That’s the biggest motivation.”

Now the focus shifts to the Blue Devils, who pulled out a physical win of their own in the first regional semifinal against the Red Storm. Unlike the Huskies, Duke has no seniors in the rotation and are heavily reliant on freshmen and sophomores such as Cameron Boozer, Dame Sarr, Isaiah Evans and Patrick Ngonba II.

That could give UConn a pregame edge in the matchup to determine which team advances out of this star-studded region.

“That's what this time of year is all about,” Hurley said. “You've got to have great upperclassmen. You have to have great juniors, great seniors, veteran players that are not going to blink and just can handle the pressure of the moment and also can bounce back.”

Now playing their best basketball in weeks, if not the entire year, the UConn veterans “don’t want it to end,” Reed said.

“I just remember last year we were crying in the locker room after the round of 32. It was one of the worst feelings ever. I'm motivated.

“I love everybody in this locker room and want to keep going. I want to go to the Final Four and make history.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: UConn relies on veteran players to get past Michigan State in Sweet 16

Diamondbacks Mistakes Cost Them in LA

Los Angeles, CA - March 27:Dodgers Will Smith (16) tags out Diamondbacks Pavin Smith (26) at home plate during third inning action at Dodger Stadium on Friday, March 27, 2026. (Photo by David Crane/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

Game Summary

The Diamondbacks showed a little more fight compared to their campaign opening loss last night, but still came up short at Uniqlo Field at Dodger Stadium (ugh). Ryne Nelson started the game for the good guys against Emmet Sheehan and very-much-bad-not-good-at-all guys, and it was a bit of a mixed bag for our talented righty. Ryne finished the night with a line very similar to Zac’s from last night, a not incredibly impressive 4 ER over 4.2 IP. Nelson did leave a better taste in our mouth than Zac did thanks to Nelly’s 4 runs all coming in the 3rd before he bounced back and retired the last 7 hitters he faced, compared with Zac mowing the Dodgers down for 4 innings then getting lit up at the end. Nelson has room for improvement, but this was largely a good start for him and I imagine it will be somewhat easier to limit his blow-up innings against teams that don’t stack 8 straight All Stars at the top of the lineup.

The offense showed more punch than the night before as well, but for as many opportunities as they gave themselves with the bat, they took away some key opportunities with mistakes on the base paths. Pavin Smith getting sent from first to home should be something on the Do Not Do list given out to the coaches when pitchers and catchers report in February, but apparently our third base coach was feeling froggy and wasted a prime scoring opportunity in the second by sending Pavin to his doom on Alek Thomas’ first RBI double of the evening. Then, Alek undid his own good when he tried to stretch an RBI double into a triple in the fourth inning. It wasn’t the last out of the inning, and he did actually beat the throw, but having Alek at second with one out and a potential to flip the order over would’ve been a favorable outcome for the Snakes.

The defense was again pretty solid, with the only real miscue being Gabi’s throw into centerfield when trying to throw out a stealing Kyle Tucker, but that didn’t end up hurting the team’s chances. The bullpen was mostly brilliant for the second night in a row, with a single pitcher allowing a run that wound up being the difference on the night. While Loaisiga and Thompson looked solid, almost brilliant, Ginkel and his diminished fastball velocity made one mistake too many and cost his team the game. Giving up a leadoff double to the only Dodger not expected to be an All-Star this year was the death knell as the Dodgers ‘fundamentaled’ the go ahead run in with Shohei’s grounder to second advancing the runner to third and Tucker putting the ball perfectly into the hole between Ketel and Santana to put the Dodgers ahead in the 8th.

Coming into the 8th inning, the Dodgers had scored 4 runs on 2 hits. The D-Backs had quadrupled that hit total, but had still only scored the same 4 runs. The margin for error against this squad is too small for the D-Backs to afford making extra outs on the bases or giving up costly hits to the 9-hole hitter (2-3 with a 2B and HR). Make one mistake and that is all they need.

Loss Probability and Box Score

Outside the Box Score

  • Geraldo Perdomo greeted home plate umpire Corey Blaser as he walked up to home plate for his first at bat of the ballgame and lingered a little while longer than perhaps is usual with him. Blaser was the umpire who called Perdomo out with that now infamous low Strike 3 call to end the Dominican game against USA in the WBC just a couple weeks ago. Appears all is water under the bridge at this point and Blaser even gave Domo the benefit of a borderline pitch in a 2-strike count later on in the AB, but Will Smith successfully challenged resulting in a strikeout.
  • Ryne Nelson couldn’t quite match Emmet Sheehan’s 3 strikeouts in the first inning, but he buckled both Shohei and Tucker with beautiful knee-high sliders to ꓘ them starting off the game. Mookie put the first ball in play of the whole game with a soft lineout to Corbin in right.
  • Alek Thomas delivered a moneyball line drive into the corner in right field with runners at first and second in the second inning. Unfortunately, Pitters immediately went into flashbacks of last season when our third base coach sent Pavin trundling home where he was a dead duck for the third out of the inning. On the bright side, Gabi did score to give the Snakes a 1-run lead, but it’s really annoying to be giving baserunners away yet again in 2026.
  • Ketel Marte’s homer off Sheehan came on a 3-0 fastball that was absolutely tanked into the right field bleachers. 107.2 mph off the bat and 391 feet.
  • Gabi got his first ABS reversal of the season (I think?) during Shohei’s second AB of the night when Ryne missed his spot and flew a pitch to the far side of the plate. The pitch was completely inside the strike zone but called a ball because, as it has for generations, when a pitcher wildly misses his spot he loses the benefit of the doubt. This type of situation is exactly what I’m most excited for ABS to correct. The borderline pitches that could go either way don’t usually bother me too much, but the obvious balls/strikes that are missed are what I want to see addressed and glad they can be now.
  • Nelson had Kyle Tucker struck out in the bottom of the third on a foul tip, but Gabi couldn’t hang on to the tip so Tucker got new life. The next three pitches were all balls and Tucker earned a free pass. That set the table for Mookie’s three run bomb a couple pitches later.
  • Weird factoid: the first groundball of the entire ball game didn’t come until the last out of the third inning when Will Smith grounded out to Domo. That was the 27th plate appearance of the game!
  • Pavin Smith earned full count walks in both of his first 2 plays appearances. I’d bet that both of the called Ball 4s could’ve been challenged and overturned to Strike 3. We’ll take it!
  • After our third base coach, apparently with the last name of House per the fellow Pitters in the GDT, sent Pavin from first to home on a double into the right field corner, there was some banter about Pavin and House combining for more buffoonery when he got a leadoff walk in the fourth. To my horror, Carlos Santana roped a double into the right field corner just like what happened in the second inning. Thankfully for my heart health, House learned his lesson and held Pavin at third to set the table for Alek’s 2-RBI double (thrown out when he overslid the bag trying to stretch it into a triple).
  • Jonathan Loaisiga made his D-Backs debut in the fifth to face Kyle Tucker with 2 outs and the bases empty. Loaisaga made him look silly finishing him off with 3 nasty changeups to end the inning. I’m really excited for what he could bring to the team.
  • In Ketel’s at bat in the top of the 6th inning, he was spun around to the right side against Alex Vesia where Ketel is known for his extremely hard swings. In the AB he got a line drive single to left that wasn’t particularly astonishing, but his recorded swing speed was 83.1mph which was the fastest of the game to that point (the second fastest swing for either team was his HR swing earlier in the game, nearly 5.5mph slower at 77.7mph). Interestingly, Corbin Carroll topped that high swing speed in the very next AB with 83.5mph.

Comment of the Game

It wasn’t Opening Night levels, but the GDT was still well populated, finishing at 267 comments at time of publishing. Many went Sedona Red, but first COTG for the season goes to VW Beetle with a game-leading number of Recs with his reaction to Alek’s hit and the base coach assisted TOOTBLAN in the second inning:

Coming Up

The Diamondbacks face the Dodgers for the third and final game of this series tomorrow night at 6:10pm. WBC hero – and the Snakes only LHP – Eduardo Rodriguez will be on the mound trying to stave off a season-opening sweep, while the Fighting Guggenheims counter with Tyler Glasnow. Tune in and join the GDT to give the recapper Dano some company.

Mariners try hitting home runs with runners on base, beat Cleveland 5-1

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 27: Luke Raley #20 of the Seattle Mariners reacts after his two-run home run during the sixth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at T-Mobile Park on March 27, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Maddy Grassy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tonight’s game started off on a sour note, with another first-inning bomb from Guardians rookie Chase DeLauter, already his third on the season. It seemed to foreshadow a replay of last night’s loss. But the next batter flipped the vibes, as Cole Young went full extension to corral a hard-hit grounder from Jose Ramírez and get things back on track for Mariners starter George Kirby.

Kirby settled down from there, kicking off a run of retiring 11 of 12 batters with five strikeouts. In some ways, he looked like vintage Kirby, with pinpoint command and touching 98 at times. In other ways, it was an unusual performance for him. He went to his four-seamer almost 50% of the time, about twice as much as last year. The fact that the Guardians’ major threats batted from the left side help explain why Kirby left his sinker on the shelf, and the DeLauter dinger coming on a terrible slider may explain Kirby’s hesitance to return to that pitch. He’s also deliberately trying to use his curveball against opposite-handed hitters more this year.

“[The curveball] is a great weapon, especially against the lefties to start the count or finish it,” he said after the game. “But we were aggressive with heaters, and using the curve just to kind of change their sights a little bit and then go back to the heat. But yeah, the curveball is one pitch I really want to rely on to lefties. Good strike pitch, good strikeout pitch. And the more I throw it, the better it is.”

The plan faltered in the fifth inning, when Kirby gave up rare back-to-back walks to open the inning and, an out later, hit a batter. But for as much as the tension rose in the moment, Kirby says he didn’t feel it: “For me right now the biggest thing is to find a way to get back in control and stay in control. Those runners out there in that situation were the least of my worries. Just go attack the hitter – I think it was Kwan at the time – these guys are on, flush it, get back in control and attack from there. So I feel like I’ve made a big step in that side of my game.”

The result was inducing an easy fly ball to shallow left. A baffling baserunning decision by Rhys Hoskins turned it into the easiest double play of Randy Arozarena’s career—just the way Randy likes it—and the end of the threat.

Kirby came back out for one more three-up-three-down inning to finish the night with six strikeouts, two walks, and just two hits and one run on 90 pitches. After an uneven 2025, this was a very promising first start to 2026 for him.

He also left with the lead thanks to the bottom half of the Mariners lineup. It was another quiet night for the heart of the order, with a meaningless walk from Julio Rodríguez the only time he reached base, Cal Raleigh wearing a golden sombrero, and Josh Naylor also sporting a goose egg for his batting line. But at least Randy Arozarena recovered from last night’s torpor, catalyzing the guys behind him a couple times.

He worked a four-pitch walk in the fourth inning, inspiring Dominic Canzone to do the same. With those two runners on base, Cole Young fouled off two belt-high fastballs in a row. Finding himself in an 0-2 count to a pitcher who’d been struggling with command all game could have overwhelmed Cole Young. He says he “definitely” could not have stayed on top of a 97-mph heater in an 0-2 count last year. But this isn’t last year. Crediting a new routine and his work with machines that simulate a given pitcher’s spin, he feels he’s better able to execute. And that’s just what he did, taking the third pitch into the seats for his first home run of the season to make the score 3-1.

Two innings later, Randy led off with another walk, once again never even feinting that he might swing. But if he was a statue in the box, he was anything but once he reached first base, dancing around like a silent disco with long, fidgety, start-and-stop leads. It seemed to get Guardians reliever Colin Holderman shook, leading to him leaving a very tempting middle-middle cutter to Luke Raley, who drove it out of the deep part of the park. It’s worth noting that Raley pulled that off after attempting a bunt earlier in the at-bat. The delightfulness of that juxtaposition and his earlier 110-mph fly out earns Luke Raley this season’s first Sun Hat Award, an award I give out in my recaps to a player who makes a noteworthy individual contribution to the game.

Kirby’s having pitched that extra sixth inning after seeming to lose it a bit in the fifth meant that the Mariners could use just three relievers tonight, saving arms for the rest of the series. We were treated to the season’s first appearances by Eduard Bazardo, Matt Brash, and Andrés Muñoz, who each allowed a harmless single as they get themselves dialed in and were otherwise the reliable arms you hope for at the back of a bullpen. The biggest highlight of the back three innings was Julio instituting the No Fly Zone in earnest for the first time this season, with a front slide and slick wrist work to wrangle in a ball in the no man’s land behind the infield.

Julio might still be looking for his first hit, but he can’t have one, he’s making damn sure no one else can have one either.

That play helped lock down the 5-1 win as the Mariners look to get over .500 in Game 3 and stay there for another 159 games after that.

Luka Doncic leads Lakers to blow out win over Nets

The first game after a lengthy road trip can be tricky. 

Coach JJ Redick warned ahead of the Lakers’ home matchup against the Nets that games like Friday night can often feel like road games. And it showed for the Lakers, who struggled early on against the tanking Nets.

But Luka Doncic continued his hot streak, scoring 41 points in the Lakers’ 116-99 win over the Nets at Crypto.com Arena.

But Luka Doncic continued his hot streak, scoring 41 points in the Lakers’ 116-99 win over the Nets. NBAE via Getty Images
The Lakers struggled early on against the tanking Nets. NBAE via Getty Images

“Just playing my game, just trying to get downhill,” Doncic responded when asked what’s helped him sustain his level of player for the last few weeks.

Doncic has averaged nearly 40 points (39.7) in the Lakers’ last 12 games.

“Sometimes the 3s going, sometimes not,” Doncic added. “Just trying to touch the paint, make plays and see what the defense gives me.” 

The Lakers outscored the Nets 31-15 in the fourth quarter after leading by just one (85-84) after the first three quarters.

The Nets, who are more interested in having the best shot at securing a high pick in June’s draft instead of winning games, didn’t play three starters (Ziaire Williams, Noah Clowney and Nic Claxton) in the final quarter.

Austin Reaves added 26 points, eight rebounds and five assists. He scored 15 points of his scoring total in the fourth.

LeBron James had 14 points, eight assists and six rebounds. 

What it means

The Lakers improved to 48-26 after their 14th victory in their last 16 games. 

Turning point

When Jaxson Hayes blocked Ben Saraf’s putback attempt with 4:19 seconds left in the game. 

The Lakers were up 103-97 at the time, struggling to create meaningful separation against the Nets. 

Hayes’ block led to Rui Hahcimura drawing a shooting foul in transition, with Hachimura making both free throws to put the Lakers up by eight.


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James made a layup on the Lakers’ next possession to put them up 107-97, their largest lead of the second half up to that point. 

The Lakers went on a 7-0 run after Hayes’ block. 

His performance on Friday was his second consecutive 40-point game. NBAE via Getty Images

MVP: Luka Doncic

Despite picking up his technical foul in the third, meaning he’ll have to serve a one-game suspension unless the technical is rescinded, Doncic earned the honor.

His performance on Friday was his second consecutive 40-point game, his sixth in his last 12 games and league-leading 15th 40th-point game of the season. 

Stat of the game: 18

That was the combined number of blocked shots and steals the Lakers had against the Nets. 

Hayes led the Lakers with five blocked shots, while Doncic had a team-high three steals. Deandre Ayton also had three blocked shots.

Up next

The Lakers will have two full days in between games before hosting the Wizards on Monday.

It’ll mark the first time since mid-January that they had multiple days in between games, outside of the All-Star break. 

“It’s gigantic,” James said. :And we got to take full advantage of it, for sure.”

They’ll likely be without Doncic after he picked up his 16th technical foul of the season, leading to a league-mandated one-game suspension. 

Nets' losing streak reaches 10 games after 116-99 loss to Lakers

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Luka Doncic had 41 points and eight rebounds while also picking up his suspension-triggering 16th technical foul during the Los Angeles Lakers ' 116-99 victory over the Brooklyn Nets on Friday night.

Austin Reaves scored 15 of his 26 points in the fourth quarter while the Lakers finally pulled away from the young Nets to secure their 11th victory in 12 games. LeBron James added 14 points and eight assists for the Lakers in their return from a 5-1 road trip that has put them in third in the Western Conference standings.

Josh Minott had 18 points and six rebounds in Brooklyn’s 10th consecutive loss. Nic Claxton and Ziaire Williams scored 16 points apiece while leading the Nets’ lively effort, but both starters were kept on the bench for the entire fourth quarter along with Noah Clowney.

The young Nets still hung with the road-weary Lakers until the final minutes, erasing an early double-digit deficit and leading in the fourth quarter of their 20th loss in 22 games overall.

Doncic hit five 3-pointers during his 15th 40-point game of the season, but the Slovenian superstar found trouble when he and Williams were whistled for double technical fouls in the third quarter.

Williams was celebrating an offensive foul called against Doncic by gleefully screaming in Doncic’s personal space. When Doncic reached out to shove Williams’ arm, Williams responded with a backhand swipe across Doncic’s face.

Unless Doncic’s technical is rescinded, he will be suspended for a game. He already had a technical rescinded last week after he was whistled for a verbal altercation with Orlando’s Goga Bitadze.

Bronny James played alongside his famous father for the second straight game, with LeBron getting the first father-son assist in NBA history on Bronny’s 3-pointer in the second quarter. Bronny has been limited largely to mop-up action in his first two NBA seasons, but he has earned rotation minutes this week in the injury absence of Marcus Smart.

Bronny and Williams played together in high school at Sierra Canyon School in suburban Los Angeles.

Up next

Nets: Host Sacramento on Sunday.

Lakers: Host Washington on Monday after LA’s first consecutive days off since the All-Star break.

LeBron James, Bronny James combine for first father-to-son assist in NBA history

The Los Angeles Lakers returned home from their most recent road trip, earning a 116-99 victory over the Brooklyn Nets on March 27.

The game saw LeBron James and Bronny James share the court for a second straight game.

The duo created a moment in the second quarter of the game, producing the first father-son assists in NBA history.

Bronny had initially passed the ball to LeBron with 7:54 left in the second quarter before the veteran player drew a double team and immediately passed the ball back to his son, who made a wide-open three-pointer.

Bronny’s long-range shot cut into Brooklyn’s lead and made it a two-point game at 44-42. The Nets were on a 16-4 scoring run before the Lakers’ 3-pointer.

LeBron finished with 14 points, eight assists and six rebounds in 37 minutes of play. Bronny finished the game with three points in four minutes of play.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Lakers' LeBron James, Bronny James create another NBA moment together

Dodgers new signings key late-inning magic in win over Dbacks

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Edwin Díaz (3) pitches against the Arizona Diamondbacks, Image 2 shows Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker (23) hits an RBI single against the Arizona Diamondbacks

The Dodgers must have wanted to hear the trumpets on Friday night.

Because right as new closer Edwin Díaz began to warm up with the score tied in the bottom of the eighth inning, their previously slumbering lineup finally came back to life.

In a 5-4 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks, the Dodgers gave what had been a slog of a game a high-octane (and high-priced) finish.

As new closer Edwin Díaz began to warm-up in the bottom of the eighth inning, their previously slumbering lineup finally came to life. Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

To break the 4-4 tie, Alex Freeland hit a leadoff double and came around to score on a go-ahead RBI single from Kyle Tucker, his first signature moment since signing a $240 million deal this winter. 

That set the stage for the top of the ninth, when Díaz’s iconic, trumpet-filled entrance song “Narco” was performed  by live trumpeter Tatiana Tate out in left field. 

Díaz took care of the inning, recording his first Dodgers save since inking his own $69 million blockbuster contract this offseason.

And all the offensive frustration that had been building up before then was quickly negated, handing the Dodgers a series win to open their pursuit of a third-straight World Series. 

“The two acquisitions this offseason,” manager Dave Roberts said, “came up big tonight.”

Before the late theatrics, the Dodgers (2-0) had struggled to generate much at the plate.

With the score tied 4-4 in the eighth, Alex Freeland hit a leadoff double and came around to score on a go-ahead RBI single from Kyle Tucker. Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Their first hit didn’t come until the third inning, when Freeland –– fresh off beating out Hyeseong Kim for the final spot on the roster this spring –– hit a solo home run.

Three batters later, Mookie Betts cranked an opposite-field shot for a three-run homer, turning an early two-run deficit into a two-run lead.

But after that, the Dbacks (0-2) retired 14 Dodgers hitters in a row, preserving what had become a 4-4 tie after Alek Thomas’ two-run double in the fourth.

That left a big task for the Dodgers’ bullpen, which was called into action early after starter Emmet Sheehan pitched only 3 ⅓ innings. Each arm they turned to, however, put a zero on the scoreboard; culminating in the playing of trumpets and a second-straight Dodgers season-opening win.

Their first hit didn’t come until the third inning, when Freeland –– fresh off beating out Hyeseong Kim for the final spot on the roster this spring –– hit a solo home run. AP

What it means

So far, so good for the Dodgers’ two marquee offseason signings.

In addition to his game-winning hit in the eighth, Tucker had two outfield assists on relay plays with Freeland at second. He also followed his eight-inning single with a stolen base, advancing all the way to third on a bad throw.


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Díaz, meanwhile, was able to skirt around trouble in the ninth, stranding a runner at second after a one-out walk and stolen base from Thomas.

He collected two strikeouts in his outing, and ended the game on a groundout from All-Star Ketel Marte.

Alex Freeland didn’t hit much during the spring, winning a platoon job at second base despite a .125 Cactus League batting average. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

Who’s hot

Freeland didn’t hit much during the spring, winning a platoon job at second base despite a .125 Cactus League batting average.

But in his first regular-season start Friday, the 24-year-old rookie validated the team’s faith.

His third-inning home run came after he fell behind in the count 0-2 against Ryne Nelson, only to lay off a couple pitches and launch an inside fastball to the right-field pavilion. 

After that, he added his eighth-inning double on a line drive to the right-center field gap, setting up the game-winning rally. 

“I wasn’t thinking about any of the outside noise,” said Freeland, whose inclusion on the roster over Kim caused consternation from some corners of the fan base. “I just tried to have a quality at-bat, like I’ve been doing all spring. So nothing really changed.”

Emmet Sheehan was playing catch-up all spring, and in his season debut, it showed. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

Who’s not

Sheehan was playing catch-up all spring, both with his pitching progression (thanks to an illness that put him behind schedule early in camp) and with his fastball velocity (which was a couple ticks below his average of 95.6 mph from last year).

In his season debut Friday, it showed. After striking out the side in the first, Sheehan gave up runs in the second (on a Thomas double) and third (on a Marte 3-0 homer) before allowing two runners to reach in the fourth –– and being removed with his limited pitch count already up to 83.

The right-hander’s fastball velocity remained down, averaging just 94 mph. And while he finished with six strikeouts, he also allowed five hits, two walks and four runs, with the runners he left behind coming around to score against Jack Dreyer.

“I think it’s just my delivery is a little bit off,” Sheehan said. “But we’re working hard on it, so it’s going to get right. I know it will.”

Up next

The Dodgers go for a series sweep on Saturday, when Tyler Glasnow will make his season debut following a promising performance this spring. The Dbacks will counter with left-hander Eduardo Rodriguez, the veteran pitcher who infamously nixed a trade to the Dodgers at the 2023 deadline.

Edwin Diaz unveils epic 'Narco' trumpet entrance in Dodgers debut

Edwin Diaz made his debut for the Los Angeles Dodgers against the Arizona Diamondbacks on March 27, and part of the anticipation was how the All-Star closer would get to the pitcher’s mound.

With his signature, epic entrance — that's how.

Following a tradition he started in 2018, Diaz entered the field from the outfield bullpen, then headed to the pitcher’s mound to the sound of trumpets as his walk-out song "Narco" played over the stadium speakers. Diaz struck out two batters to close out the 5-4 win.

For the past three years, he did it at Citi Field as a member of the New York Mets. On March 27, he unveiled the walk-out ritual at Dodger Stadium.

Diaz told reporters in December he was looking forward to the moment after signing a three-year, $69 million contract with the Dodgers.

“It would be fun,’’ Diaz said at the time. “I think that music will get into the fans right away. That's a nice walk-up song, so I can't wait to, first game of the season, come in the ninth with Timmy Trumpet and get the W for the Dodgers."

The sound of trumpets almost always signals a triumphant moment. Diaz, the 32-year-old from Puerto, has recorded 253 saves in his nine-year MLB career, He also was named the American League Reliever of the year in 2018 and the National Reliever of the Year in 2022 and 2025.

Edwin Diaz walk-in trumpet entrance video

What to know about the entrance

Diaz started using Narco as his walk-out song in 2018. At the time, he was pitching for the Mariners, which provided a few options, according to MLB.com.

Why did he pick the song?

"The trumpets," Díaz told Matt Monagan of MLB.com in 2022. "The trumpets were unique. Something different from what everybody uses. That's why I picked it."

Released in 2017, the hit song is by Blasterjaxx, Dutch DJ and record production duo, and Timmy Trumpet, an Australian DJ/producer.

Upon joining the Mets in 2019, Diaz started using “No Hay Limite’’ as his walk-out song. But he went back to “Narco’’ in 2020 and has remained faithful to the trumpets ever since.

One rendition stands out as the most epic.

On Aug. 31, 2022, Timmy Trumpet played live at Citi Field in Queens, N.Y. when Diaz took the mound in the ninth inning against – who else? – the Dodgers.

He closed out the game for a 2-1 Mets victory.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers closer Edwin Diaz sets trumpets with epic entrance in debut

Kyle Tucker helps Dodgers take late lead in 5-4 win

Los Angeles, CA - March 26: Kyle Tucker #23 of the Los Angeles Dodgers watches his RBI double as teammate Shohei Ohtani (not pictured) scores against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the seventh inning of an opening day baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Thursday, March 26, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

After the pomp and circumstance that came from the Dodgers’ second consecutive ring night, the Dodgers had a close affair on Friday against the Arizona Diamondbacks, pulling away late to win 5-4.

Emmet Sheehan made his first start of the season, and he made quick work of the first three Arizona hitters by striking out the side in order. The final one of the inning was initially called a ball, but Will Smith issued a challenge and the Dodgers won their first ABS challenge in team history.

Arizona began the top of the second inning by putting their first two hitters on base via a single from Gabriel Moreno and a walk to Pavin Smith. Sheehan managed to strike out Nolan Arenado and get Carlos Santana to fly out, but Alek Thomas got the Diamondbacks in front early with an RBI double that could’ve scored two, but a great relay from Kyle Tucker and Alex Freeland caught Smith at the plate. Arizona padded their lead to two as Ketel Marte launched a line drive home run to right field in the top of the third inning on a 3-0 fastball from Sheehan.

Arizona right-hander Ryne Nelson was one out away from keeping the Dodgers at bay over the first time through the lineup, but Alex Freeland got one of the two runs back with a towering home run to right field— a little thank you to Dave Roberts for adding him to the opening day roster. Shohei Ohtani and Kyle Tucker both walked against Nelson to put the potential tying and go-ahead runners on base, and Mookie Betts, who homered twice on ring night last year, crushed a go-ahead three-run home run to right-center field to give the Dodgers their third four-run inning over their first 11 innings on offense.

Sheehan struggled again in his second time facing the bottom half of Arizona’s lineup, as he allowed his second walk to Smith and a double to Carlos Santana to put the tying run in scoring position. Sheehan was pulled after tossing 83 pitches over just 3 1/3 innings of work, allowing two earned runs on five hits and two walks while striking out six. Jack Dreyer came in relief of Sheehan, and Thomas once again made the Dodgers pay with his second double of the night, this time driving in two and tying the game, but Thomas overran the third base bag going for a triple and was tagged out.

Arizona threatened to retake the lead in the top of the sixth inning, as Ben Casparius allowed two baserunners while recording just two outs in the top of the sixth inning. Dave Roberts went to Tanner Scott for the second day in a row, needing him to put away Thomas with the go-ahead run at second base. The gamble paid off, and Scott struck him out to get the Dodgers out of the jam.

Both Alex Vesia and Edgardo Henríquez tossed a scoreless inning as the bullpen kept the Diamondbacks off the board after the second double from Thomas. The Dodgers couldn’t supply anything offensively after the home run from Betts, going hitless over their next 14 at-bats against Nelson and the Arizona bullpen. Freeland snapped the hitless skid to begin the bottom of the eighth inning with a ringing double to the right-center field gap. Ohtani moved him over to third on a groundout, and Tucker lined a ball into right field past a drawn in infield to put the Dodgers back on top by a run.

This set up the perfect opportunity for Edwin Díaz to make his Dodger debut, and emerged from the left field bullpen to the blaring sounds of “Narco” by Timmy Trumpet for the first time at his new home. Díaz put the tying run on base, but struck out two and tossed a scoreless inning to pick up his first save as a Dodger and help his new squad take the series from Arizona.

The Dodgers last season started the year 8-0. They are a quarter of the way there this time around.

Game particulars
  • Home runs— Ketel Marte (1); Alex Freeland (1), Mookie Betts (1)
  • WPEdgardo Henríquez (1-0): 1 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 0 walks, 1 strikeout
  • LP— Kevin Ginkel (0-1): 1 IP, 2 hits, 1 earned run, 0 walks, 0 strikeouts
  • SV— Edwin Díaz (1): 1 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 1 walk, 2 strikeouts
Up next

The Dodgers wrap things up against Arizona Diamondbacks on Saturday before an off-day on Sunday, with a three-game series against the Cleveland Guardians beginning the following day. Tyler Glasnow makes his first start of the season against left-hander Eduardo Rodríguez.

Lakers grind out win over Nets

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 27: Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on during the game against the Brooklyn Nets on March 27, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

An unnecessarily close game ended with the Lakers pulling away in the fourth for a 116-99 win over the Brooklyn Nets. 

The game began with LA taking control early. Luka Dončić scored seven points. LeBron James was close behind with four points. The Lakers went up by 11, prompting a Nets timeout. Out of the break, Brooklyn missed their shot attempt. 

Los Angeles was shooting 69% from the field.

After starting the game terribly, Brooklyn went on a 9-2 scoring run to make it a five-point game. Luka entered double figures with 11 points. Luke Kennard drained a triple as the quarter was winding down. 

At the end of the first, the purple and gold were up by five. 

Terance Mann started the second period by converting on a jumpshot for the Nets. Brooklyn made it a one-point game after scoring four in a row. It forced the Lakers to call a timeout. 

Out of the break, Mann knocked down a 3-pointer that put them in the lead.

LeBron and Bronny James combined for a quick seven points to tie the game. Luka knocked down his third triple of the half. He was a perfect 3-3 from behind the arc and had 19 points so far. 

The Lakers were on a 14-2 scoring run.

Nolan Traore was having a nice game for the Nets with nine points. Nic Claxton was in double figures with 12. They were a big reason why it became a two-point game at halftime. Traore ended the half with a buzzer-beating triple. 

The third period began with Austin Reaves getting fouled and converting on both free throws. Noah Clowney responded with a 3-pointer on the other end. Luka helped extend LA’s lead to five. The lead went back and forth between three and five as Los Angeles struggled to build a bigger advantage.

At the 5:40 mark, Los Angeles was nursing a three-point lead. 

Ziaire Williams scored a quick four points in a row that gave them the lead again. Luka picked up his 16th technical foul, which means he will miss the next game. Williams was playing great for the Nets. He was at 15 points. 

The Nets jumped into the lead with 3:04 left in the quarter. 

Brooklyn was winning the second-chance points battle 19 to four. The Nets kept it close, but LA led by one going into the fourth quarter. Luka added to his monster night, pushing his total to 36 points.

Kennard opened the final frame with a layup for Los Angeles. LeBron connected with Jaxson Hayes for the jam on the other end. The Lakers were nursing a three-point lead until Josh Minott tried to throw down a wild dunk that went in. The Nets went up by one with 8:50 left. 

Reaves knocked down a much-needed 3-pointer.

Another triple from Reaves and a free throw from LeBron gave LA a small amount of breathing room with their lead. Luka and Reaves then took over, combining for five points to push Los Angeles’s lead to nine with five minutes left. 

Minott drained a 3-pointer to stop some of their bleeding. 

With two minutes left, LA was up by 11 when Luka and Reaves put the finishing touches on the win with back-to-back 3-pointers.

Key Player Stats

Luka finished with 41 points, eight rebounds, three assists and three steals. LeBron notched 14 points with eight assists. Reaves ended with 26 points, eight rebounds and five assists.

Rui Hachimura logged eight points off the bench. Jaxson Hayes had 10 points and eight rebounds. Deandre Ayton scored nine points with seven rebounds. 

The Lakers’ next matchup will be against the Washington Wizards on Monday at 7:00 PM PT.

You can follow Karin on Twitter at @KarinAbcarians.




Guardians fall to Mariners on Primetime

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 27: Chase DeLauter #24 of the Cleveland Guardians celebrates after hitting a home run on a fly ball to right center field during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on March 27, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Maddy Grassy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Can’t win them all, I suppose. Although, tonight was a frustrating game in the fashion of the summer 2025 Guardians. Gavin Williams took the mound this evening and really struggled to find the zone. He threw a measly 31% of his pitches in the strike zone, per Statcast. The good news is he generated 15 whiffs! His stuff also looked fantastic across the board, just would’ve been nice if said stuff could’ve been located in that lovely white box that appears on the television. Gavin’s sweeper, especially, looked fantastic tonight. He seems to have tweaked that pitch this offseason, and is now more consistently throwing it east-west.

Some more good news as Chase DeLauter homered AGAIN in his first at-bat tonight, an almost exact replica of his first home run in the opening night game.

Per MLB researcher Sarah Langs (@SlangsOnSports on X), DeLauter is the third player since (at least) 1900 to record 3 home runs in their first two career regular season games. The most recent player was Trevor Story in 2016.

Anyway, Gavin’s command struggles eventually came back to bite him when he surrendered a 3-run homer to Cole Young (native Clevelander, of course) in the fourth.

Speaking of struggles, the Guardians loaded the bases in the top of the 5th with only 1 out. Hoskins and Naylor walked, and Rocchio was hit by a pitch. Kwan stepped to the plate, weakly flew out to left and, well, if you didn’t watch it live, I’ll let you watch it now.

Oops!

The Guardians offense was much less fun to watch than it was last night, unfortunately. All good things must come to an end.

DeLauter did have a weird play in the field in the 3rd. Leo Rivas hit a fly ball near the foul line in right, DeLauter seemed to have caught it in his glove, but then dropped it right after. Rivas was awarded a triple.

Newly minted Guardians reliever Colin Holderman came into the game in the 6th and promptly gave up a 2-run homer. Oops!

Another newly minted Guardians reliever Peyton Pallette (Rule 5 pick from the White Sox) made his Guardians debut today, and it went far better than Holderman’s. Pitched 2 innings, struck out 2 (Donovan and Raleigh). Got both strikeouts in his first inning, and did surrender some hard contact in his second, but did not give up a hit. His stuff looked fantastic, per Thomas Nestico (@TJStats on X)

He seems to have spontaneously added almost 5 inches of ride on his fastball in his debut, which resulted in that stellar 114 stuff+ rating.

Anyway, the Guardians look to take the series lead tomorrow night with Cantillo on the mound. It’ll be Bryan Woo for the Mariners.

Winners and losers of March Madness Sweet 16: Big Ten puts 4 teams in Elite 8

It's a party of Midwest teams heading to the Elite Eight of the 2026 men's NCAA Tournament.

A record-breaking four Big Ten teams won Sweet 16 games, giving the conference more than half of the remaining teams in March Madness. It could've put five teams to the Elite Eight, but Michigan State narrowly lost to UConn 67-63.

Iowa has been the biggest surprise of the NCAA Tournament, and its historic run continued with an upset victory over fellow Big Ten foe Nebraska in the Sweet 16. First-year coach Ben McCollum and the Hawkeyes are making their first Elite Eight appearance since 1987, and McCollum has already won four career Division I NCAA Tournament games despite being in only his second season at the level.

Three No. 1 seeds — Duke, Arizona and Michigan — also punched their tickets to the Elite Eight. The Wildcats and Wolverines rolled in wins over No. 4 seeds Arkansas and Alabama, respectively, whereas the Blue Devils survived a tough matchup with coach Rick Pitino and No. 5 St. John's.

Here's a look at the winners and losers of the Elite Eight, with only four games remaining before the Final Four gets underway in Indianapolis:

Sweet 16 winners

Big Ten

The Big Ten put a record-breaking four teams — Michigan, Purdue, Illinois and Iowa — in the Elite Eight, making up half of the remaining teams in national championship contention. It's only the third time since the NCAA Tournament expanded that a single conference has had four members in the Elite Eight, joining the SEC in 2025, the ACC in 2016 and the Big East in 2009.

The Big Ten could've broke the record, too, but Michigan State fell to No. 2 UConn by four points in the Sweet 16. Overall, the conference has a 17-5 record in the NCAA Tournament, proving the conference was the best in college basketball this season.

Iowa, of course, is the biggest surprise inclusion among Big Ten teams. Michigan, Purdue and Illinois are all ranked top 10 in KenPom. The Hawkeyes proved there's still some Madness in March, though.

Caleb Foster

Caleb Foster suffered a hairline fracture in his foot on March 7 that required surgery and returned to game action in Duke's 75-70 win over St. John's in the Sweet 16. His 19 minutes off the bench against the Red Storm Devils was his first 5-on-5 action in the 20 days since suffering the injury, and he didn't miss a beat.

While he didn't return to the starting lineup, he scored 11 points — all of which came in the second half. His gutsy performance resulted in a teary-eyed Jon Scheyer after he was asked of Foster after the game.

"He had no business playing today," Scheyer said to CBS Sports' Tracy Wolfson after the game. "He was determined. That was one of the most special performances I've ever seen. He was incredible, even in the huddles what he was doing, and some big-time plays too.

"That's a leader right there and that's a guy that came through for us when we needed him the most."

Tommy Lloyd

Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd has established himself as one of the premier coaches in men's college basketball in his first four seasons with the Wildcats, accumulating a 112-33 record. However, he and Arizona had some NCAA Tournament blunders, failing to surpass the Sweet 16 in any of those four seasons.

Lloyd and Arizona squashed that narrative against Arkansas in the Sweet 16, defeating the Razorbacks 109-88. The Wildcats were able to score 109 points despite making just five 3-pointers after shooting 64% from the field.

Arizona is playing like one of, if not the best team in college basketball right now.

Trey Kaufman-Renn

Purdue forward Trey Kaufman-Renn saw his scoring average dip from 20.1 points per game last season to 14.3 this season. He's shown up big for the Boilermakers in the NCAA Tournament regardless, proving he still has "it" when it matters.

The 6-foot-9 senior scored a buzzer-beater tip-in to give Purdue a 79-77 win over No. 11 Texas in the Sweet 16, avoiding an upset against the surging Longhorns. He finished the game with 20 points and eight rebounds on 8-of-10 shooting, after scoring 19 against Miami and 25 against Queens in the first round.

Kaufman-Renn has been wildly efficient in the postseason, as far back as scoring 20 points on 10-of-15 shooting in Purdue's Big Ten Conference Championship win over No. 1 Michigan prior to the NCAA Tournament. His re-emergence has been huge for the Boilermakers' chances at getting back to the Final Four.

Sweet 16 losers

Houston offense

Houston narrowly fell to Florida in the national championship game last season, and brought back three stars along with two potential NBA first-round picks in Kingston Flemings and Chris Cenac Jr. However, an offensive cold spell doomed the Cougars against Illinois in the Sweet 16.

Making their seventh consecutive Sweet 16, Houston was held to an abysmal 34% mark from the field in its 65-55 loss, making just 22 of its 64 shots. The Cougars' defense held a stout Illinois offense in check, one that ranks No. 2 nationally in KenPom's adjusted offensive efficiency this season.

Still, it wasn't enough to get back to the Final Four, leaving Houston heading into next season still seeking its first-ever national championship under legendary coach Kelvin Sampson, one of the best coaches to have never won a title.

Joshua Jefferson-less Iowa State

Iowa State won't get to see how far it could've gone with star forward Joshua Jefferson, after the senior forward suffered an ankle injury in the opening minutes of the Cyclones' first-round win over East Tennessee State. He missed out on Iowa State's win over Kentucky in the second round and was unable to get ready for its 76-62 Sweet 16 loss to No. 6 Tennessee.

Jefferson, a second-team All-American, averaged 16.4 points with 7.4 rebounds and 4.8 assists per game this season, making him one of the best all-around players in college basketball. His presence was missed against the Vols, who finished with 16 offensive rebounds and outrebounded Iowa State 43-22 overall.

It's an unfortunate ending for Iowa State's veteran trio of Jefferson, Tamin Lipsey and Milan Momcilovic, who have started nearly every game for the Cyclones the past two seasons. Jefferson and Lipsey end their college careers with 232 regular season starts, while Momcilovic will likely lead the program as a senior next season.

Alabama

Alabama was on fire in the first half against No. 1 Michigan in the Sweet 16 on March 27, even leading the Wolverines 49-47 in the first half. The Crimson Tide came out of halftime and were dominated the rest of the game, however.

Alabama made nine 3-pointers in the first half and was led by star guard Labaron Philon Jr., who scored 19 points in the first 20 minutes before finishing with 35 points with seven rebounds and four assists. The shooting went cold as it was outscored by Michigan 43-28 in the second half, as the Crimson Tide were held to a 5-of-23 mark from 3-point range and only 10 field goals in general.

The Crimson Tide were close to pulling off an upset, but ultimately won't be heading to the Elite Eight for the third consecutive season.

Nebraska fans

Nebraska fans took over Oklahoma City for its first-ever wins in the NCAA Tournament against Troy and Vanderbilt in the first weekend. Cornhuskers fans arrived in droves for their Sweet 16 game against Big Ten foe Iowa in Houston, but to no avail after Nebraska lost in heartbreaking fashion to the Hawkeyes.

Nebraska led for all but 2:10 of regulation, which happened to be the final moments of the game. The Cornhuskers also had only four players on the court following a timeout, which led to a massive 3-point play for Iowa's Alvaro Folgueiras, which ultimately sealed the game.

Nebraska ultimately leaves March Madness as winners in 2026, laying the groundwork for where the program can go in the future. However, it squandered an opportunity to keep its run going against Iowa, which it already defeated once this season in conference play.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Winners of losers of men's NCAA Tournament Sweet 16

Bagley scores 26 points and Mavericks snap a 5-game skid in a 100-93 win against Trail Blazers

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Marvin Bagley III scored a season-high 26 points off the bench and Cooper Flagg had 24 to lead the Dallas Mavericks past the Portland Trail Blazers 100-93 on Friday night, snapping a five-game skid.

Naji Marshall had 19 points and five steals for the Mavericks, who had dropped seven of their previous nine games on the road and bounced back from a 142-135 loss at Denver on Wednesday night.

Bagley, who had his most points since scoring 25 last April, shot 11 of 14 from the field, including 3 of 5 from 3-point range, and had nine rebounds. Flagg had four steals for Dallas.

Jrue Holiday scored 23 points and Deni Avdija had 20 points and nine rebounds for the Trail Blazers, who had their two-game winning streak stopped and fell below .500 at 37-38. Portland, which has clinched a playoff spot and is currently in ninth place in the Western Conference, had won five of its previous six to get back to .500 for the first time in over two months.

Donovan Clingan had 17 rebounds and six points for the Trail Blazers.

The game was tied at 92 with 2:25 remaining after Holiday made a 3-pointer, but the Mavericks sealed the victory with an 8-1 run to end it. Bagley had a layup and a dunk to start the run and Marshall and Brandon Williams combined to make four free throws.

Up next

Mavericks: Host Minnesota on Monday night.

Trail Blazers: Host Washington on Sunday night.

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

Lakers’ Luka Doncic picks up 16th technical foul against Nets

Less than a week after avoiding a suspension because of an accumulation of technical fouls, Lakers star guard Luka Doncic picked up his 16th technical foul of the season on Friday night, meaning he’ll have to serve a one-game suspension in the team’s next game. 

Doncic picked up the technical foul after he and Nets forward Zaire Williams were double T’d up after an altercation midway through the third quarter of Friday’s matchup at Crypto.com Arena. 

After Doncic was called for an offensive foul against Nic Claxton on an inbounds play underneath the Lakers basket, Williams was yelling next to Doncic after the turnover. Doncic shoved Williams in the back before Williams hit Doncic in the face while his back was turned to him. 

Less than a week after avoiding a suspension because of an accumulation of technical fouls, Lakers star guard Luka Doncic picked up his 16th technical foul of the season on Friday night NBAE via Getty Images
Doncic picked up the technical foul of the season after he and Nets forward Ziaire Williams were double T’d up. NBAE via Getty Images

The referees review saw a “push” from Doncic, followed by an “action” after the push by Williams, leading to the double technicals. 

“He [yelled] in my face three times,” Doncic said postgame. “I just wanted to get out of there. It’s a double tech, of course. What can I say? I didn’t even talk. I just wanted to get out of there. And they said I pushed. My push was exaggerated, which was obviously not. And I don’t know what else to tell you.”

Doncic is unlikely to dodge the league’s mandated one-game suspension for accumulation of technicals this time around. 

“I’m sure we will appeal it,” coach JJ Redick said. “I didn’t see what happened.”

Doncic was assessed a 16th technical during the March 21 road win over the Magic for a verbal back and forth with Magic center Goga Bitadze, who was also given a technical foul, but they later rescinded by the league, allowing Doncic to be eligible for the March 23 road loss to the Pistons.

Because the technical was rescinded, Doncic entered Friday with 15 technical fouls. 

If Friday’s technical foul isn’t rescinded, Doncic will have to serve the suspension for Monday’s home game against the Wizards.


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It’d mark the first suspension Doncic has had to serve because of an accumulation of technical fouls despite coming close in previous seasons. 

Before 2025-26, there had been three times in his NBA career (2020-23) that Doncic had finished a season with 15 technical fouls. 

He finished with 13 techs in 50 games last season with the Mavericks and Lakers after having 13 in 2023-24 with the Mavericks.

While playing for the Mavericks, Doncic narrowly avoided a one-game suspension in the season finale of the 2021-22 season after the NBA office rescinded his 16th technical foul.Doncic also picked up a 16th technical foul late in the 2022-23 season, which was also rescinded, resulting in him not having to serve a one-game suspension then either.