NBA playoff picture: Celtics, Knicks in a tight race for No. 2 seed

NBA playoff picture: Celtics, Knicks in a tight race for No. 2 seed originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

First, a reality check: The Boston Celtics’ quest for the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference is all but over.

After falling to the Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday night, the Celtics (47-24) sit 4.5 games behind the East-leading Detroit Pistons (51-19), who have won two in a row after losing superstar Cade Cunningham to a collapsed lung.

Boston has 11 regular-season games remaining, while Detroit has 10. If the Pistons win just six of their last 10 games, they’re guaranteed the No. 1 seed. Even if they stumble and go 4-6 down the stretch, the Celtics would need to win 10 of their last 11 games to make up that 4.5-game gap.

So, it’s time for Celtics fans to shift their focus to a much tighter race: the battle with the New York Knicks for the No. 2 seed.

Let’s lay everything out.

Eastern Conference standings

As of Monday morning, the Celtics are up just 0.5 games on the surging Knicks, who have won six in a row.

Basketball Reference’s Playoff Probabilities Report, which is based on 10,000 simulations for the remainder of the season, gives Boston a 53 percent chance of earning the No. 2 seed, just ahead of New York at 43.5 percent.

The Cleveland Cavaliers are lurking 2.5 games behind the Knicks (and three games behind the Celtics), but for all intents and purposes, the No. 2 seed should come down to New York vs. Boston.

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Remaining schedules

Which team is better positioned to earn the No. 2 seed?

Both the Celtics and Knicks have pretty difficult schedules down the stretch: Per Tankathon, Boston owns the NBA’s third-toughest remaining schedule (opponents have a combined winning percentage of .544), while New York has the ninth-toughest (.530 opponent winning percentage).

In fact, just two of the Celtics’ remaining 11 games are against teams with losing records, while the Knicks play just three of their remaining 10 games against teams below .500.

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What’s at stake

Why is the No. 2 seed so important, you ask?

While the Pistons hope Cunningham will return at some point in the playoffs, his injury casts major doubt over their ability to make a deep playoff run. And if a Cunningham-less Detroit team gets eliminated early, the No. 2 seed would have home-court advantage for the rest of its postseason run through the East.

As for first-round matchups, the No. 2 seed would face the winner of the East play-in tournament (the No. 7 seed), while the No. 3 seed would face the No. 6 seed. The bottom of the East playoff race is an absolute mess — just 2.5 games separate the No. 5 seed from the No. 10 seed — so it’s impossible to predict Round 1 matchups at the moment.

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The Celtics would be favored to win any first-round matchup, but there are some teams that could give them trouble — notably the red-hot Atlanta Hawks, who are 12-1 in their last 13 games.

For now, Boston’s goal should be staving off the Knicks for the No. 2 seed and letting the chips fall where they may. And based on the current standings, we could be gearing up for a photo finish.

Tottenham’s interim manager Igor Tudor mourns death of his father, Mario

  • Tudor informed of news after 3-0 defeat by Forest

  • Cristian Romero promises ‘200%’ in remaining games

Tottenham’s interim manager, Igor Tudor, is mourning the death of his father, Mario. Tudor was unable to fulfil his media commitments after Spurs’ 3-0 Premier League home defeat by Nottingham Forest because of the bereavement.

The Spurs assistant Bruno Saltor stepped in and the Spaniard declined to reveal any details on Tudor’s “family issue”. Juventus announced on Monday that their former player and manager was grieving his father’s death. In a statement the club said: “Juventus stands with Igor Tudor and his family at this difficult time. Juventus joins in mourning the passing of his father.”

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What Josh Hart thinks of Knicks coach comparing him to pivotal Warriors player

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Josh Hart celebrates on Knicks bench during win over Wizards on March 22, 2026, Image 2 shows Andre Iguodala during Game 6 of the 2015 NBA Finals
Josh Hart; Andre Iguodala

Mike Brown has coached both and made the comparison.

Last week, Brown said there are similarities in how Josh Hart impacts the game to how Andre Iguodala did when Brown was an assistant with the Warriors.

The idea that there might not be one particular skill that they excel at, but that there a bunch of areas they affect the game and when you look at the whole body of work, it results in a winning player.

Josh Hart celebrates on Knicks bench during win over Wizards on March 22, 2026. Jason Szenes / New York Post

What does Hart think of that comparison?

“Andre is extremely talented, definitely was a better player in this league than I am,” Hart told The Post before the Knicks’s game against the Wizards Sunday night at Madison Square Garden. “But we can be like an older version of Andre. Older, less athletic, scoring version of Andre. But it’s cool, Andre is someone who is highly respected for everything he’s done for the game. So it was cool.”

Iguodala was a key glue guy — and one-time finals MVP — on four championship teams with the Warriors. His impact often did not necessarily jump off the box score, though.

It’s that part of the comparison Hart most enjoys — and knows often goes unnoticed.



Andre Iguodala during Game 6 of the 2015 NBA Finals. USA Today Sports

“I take a lot of pride in it,” Hart said. “Especially right now, you just look at numbers and you don’t understand the process of the game. A lot of people think you can just throw five guys in that score X amount of points, and that’s how it’s gonna be.

“But that’s not always what it is, situations are different. So for me, especially in that [starting] group, I’m a guy that’s gonna connect the dots, a guy that’s gonna try to be unselfish, get other guys involved, get other guys flowing in good rhythm. I think that gets overlooked, but for me, I take pride in it.”

Canadiens: Guhle Delivered Best Performance Of the Season

Montreal Canadiens’ defenseman Kaiden Guhle has struggled this season, not just because of injuries, but also on the ice, where his performances have not been up to the standard we’ve been accustomed to.

However, in Saturday night’s crucial game against the New York Islanders, the rugged defenseman took it up a notch and played what was arguably his best game of the season. Not just because he gathered three points, including what would turn out to be the game-winning goal, but also because his decision-making was spot on in all aspects of the game.

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He had five shot attempts, three of which made it to the net. On the other side of the puck, he had a team-leading four blocked shots and landed three hits. In the third frame, as tempers were running high and the Islanders were getting frustrated by the turn of events, Matthew Barzal dropped his gloves and tried to fight captain Nick Suzuki, and it only took seconds for the rugged blueliner to come to his rescue.

The defenseman told the media after the game that the Canadiens met after last weekend’s games against the San Jose Sharks and the Anaheim Ducks and talked about buckling down:

Commitment to defend, to play hard, to not take any shit. It’s all that I think we were missing there for a bit, and we found it
-

That perfectly sums up Guhle’s performance on Saturday night. His stepping up for Nick Suzuki was definitely part of the “not taking any shit” point, and it showed how healthy the team culture is in Montreal. Especially if you compare that reaction to the Maple Leafs’ reaction, or lack thereof, when Radko Gudas ended their captain’s season.

That performance was definitely a step in the right direction for Guhle, but he now needs to play like that consistently. That’s harder to do than it sounds, but the rugged defenseman proved last night that he can play the exact kind of game that’s needed in the playoffs.


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Raptors take aim at decimated Jazz squad

Feb 1, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Utah Jazz guard Ace Bailey (19) drives to the basket against Toronto Raptors guard Jamal Shead (23) in the second half at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images | Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

Coming off a brutal loss last night in Phoenix, the Raptors are playing their second game of a back-to-back, this time, agains the Utah Jazz in Salt Lake City. This game against an injured opponent should be a chance for the Raptors to stop a dangerous skid late in the season.

The Jazz have had a season of distinct highs and lows. They started the season by drafting a high value forward in Ace Bailey, saw point guard Keyonte George break out, and traded for former Defensive Player of the Year Jaren Jackson Jr. At the same time, many of their starters have been ruled out for extended periods, since November when Walker Kessler was shut down, and have caught league-wide flack for a tanking scandal, with players getting benched in a manner that was perceived to be unethical. Indeed, Monday’s game will see Keyonte George, Isaiah Collier, and Lauri Markkanen still out, not to mention the host of previous injuries to JJJ and Jusuf Nurkic, amongst others.

As it currently stands, the Jazz are in poor shape to win games with most of their starting lineup out, so the Raptors can breathe relatively easily when they step into the Delta Center. The Raptors are playing with almost their entire roster intact, though Collin Murray-Boyles remains on the injury report, as he has been for nearly a month. This game should hopefully be a chance to bounce back after last night’s loss, which saw an extremely lacklustre offence combined with a total lack of production from some of the Raptors’ starters.

Scottie Barnes, RJ Barrett, and Brandon Ingram have been instrumental in getting the Raptors back on track with a three game winning streak, taking out the Pistons, Suns, and Bulls, before falling to the Denver Nuggets and the Phoenix Suns in consecutive games. Establishing a consistent offence will be important for this game against the Jazz, as well as ensuring that they’re able to slow down Ace Bailey and avoid him getting hot. The rookie has had two thirty point explosions over his last ten games, and keeping him subdued will be important in keeping the Jazz hitting sour notes. Brice Sensabaugh has been shooting threes at a 41.3% clip over the past ten games, meaning that Toronto’s perimeter defence needs to be on point to avoid an upset.

Considering the state of Utah basketball, it is unlikely for Toronto to drop this game. A soft opponent on the road is a luxury this late in the season, with the Eastern Conference looking as dangerous as it is. Toronto is unlikely to fall out of the Play-In Tournament, but are within only a few games of every opponent within the sixth to the tenth seed. 4.5 games behind the Cleveland Cavaliers, and half a game behind both the Atlanta Hawks and the Philadelphia 76ers, the Raptors are in serious danger of relinquishing their playoff spot to a rival if they don’t clean up their act and begin performing consistently.

Today’s game is likely to be another part of the same old story for the Raptors: lose to the best teams, but beat down the worst ones.

Game Information and Details

Game Time: 9:00 EDT

Watch On: SportsNet

Injury Report:

Toronto: Collin Murray-Boyles (Out – thumb), Chucky Hepburn (Day-To-Day – knee)

Jazz: Isaiah Collier (Out – hamstring), Lauri Markkanen (Out – hip), Keyonte George (Out – hamstring)

Projected Lineups

Toronto: Scottie Barnes, Brandon Ingram, Immanuel Quickley, RJ Barrett, Jakob Poeltl

Jazz: Ace Bailey, Cody Williams, Brice Sensabaugh, Kyle Filipowski, Kennedy Chandler

Open Thread: Spurs launch fan loyalty program

Per a Spurs press release:

The San Antonio Spurs announced the launch of “Spurs Rewards,” powered by Fanmaker, a new loyalty program offering fans a way to earn rewards, unlock exclusive experiences and receive value through their support of the Spurs. Debuting March 12 vs. the Denver Nuggets, Spurs Rewards allows fans to earn points for activities such as attending games, shopping and engaging with the team across digital and in-person experiences. Fans can learn more and sign up for free by texting REWARDS to 210-444-5940 or visiting the Official Spurs Mobile App, presented by Frost. Official program terms apply.

Chief Commercial Officer at SS&E Frank Miceli stated,

“Spurs Rewards is about creating a smarter, more rewarding fan experience that recognizes the many ways our fans support the team throughout the season. Whether it’s attending games, shopping or engaging digitally, this platform turns that support into meaningful value.”

Fans can earn one point for every dollar spent on Spurs single-game tickets via Ticketmaster, retail purchases through the Spurs Official Fan Shop, and Frost Bank concessions at Frost Bank Center.

Knicks 145, Wizards 113: “Tyler going nuclear is a nice victory cigar”

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MARCH 22: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 and Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks react during the second quarter against the Washington Wizards at Madison Square Garden on March 22, 2026 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Pamela Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Wizards (16-55) are in a neck-and-neck race with the Indiana Pacers for last place in the conference. They had lost 15 games in a row before tonight’s tilt at Madison Square Garden against the Knicks (47*-25). The Wizards showed some signs of life in the first half, and a brief heartbeat after intermission, but their 16th loss was never really in doubt. New York took the W, 145-113, beating the Wiz for the 12th straight time.

New York started on the right foot, with Mikal Bridges (14 PTS, 6 AST) and Karl-Anthony Towns (26 PTS, 16 RBS, 9-13 FG) helping to build a small cushion. Washington kept up with them, though, with five points by Tristan Vukcevic (13 PTS) and Bub Carrington (14 PTS, 8 ASTS) getting to the line. Once again, New York allowed their opponents to shoot freely from the perimeter. Luckily for them, Washington’s not a strong three-point shooting team, making 4-of-10 from deep over the first 12 minutes. With the visitors coughing up the rock seven times, the Knicks built a head of steam and went up by double-digits late in the quarter.

The Knicks’ best stretch came midway through the quarter, with Towns flexing his muscles on the glass, Jalen Brunson (23 PTS, 4 AST) drawing contact, and Josh Hart (16 PTS, 6 RBS, 4 AST) logging rebounds, steals, and an alley-oop to Mitchell Robinson (10 PTS, 10 RBS, 2 BLK). Then the pendulum swung the other way. Jaden Hardy (25 PTS, 7-13 3PT) sparked a run with three triples in a short span—two assisted by Sharife Cooper (11 PTS)—narrowing the Knicks’ lead to 32-27 by the buzzer.

The quarter opened with Washington briefly finding a rhythm—Cooper hit an early jumper, and Anthony Gill (18 PTS, 3 STL, 8-10 FG) followed a steal with a dunk. A few minutes in, a Cooper triple tied the score at 38 before New York got serious. After that, Towns cleaned up inside with putbacks and rebounds, while Bridges and OG Anunoby (9 PTS, 4 TO) chipped in buckets. Jose Alvarado (8 PTS, 8 AST) played but was a mixed bag. Hart helped to push the pace, and Robinson made his presence felt as the good guys regained a double-digit lead. Down the stretch, New York turned stops into buckets, pushed the margin to 15, and went into halftime ahead 68-52.

The Knicks shot 57% from the field and 50% from yard, which beat Washington’s 43% and 29%. KAT gave NY a big advantage in the paint, which they won 34–20, and where they outrebounded the Zards, 22–16. Towns led all scorers with 15 points. For the visitors, Gill scored 11 to lead a bench that contributed 30 points.

Hart and Bridges hit a pair of triples to start the second half, then Vukcevic scored eight straight points to chase New York into a timeout. Following that, Hart and Bridges knocked down threes, and Brunson hit some middies. The key, though, was Towns, who scored with hook shots, drives, free throws, and a three-pointer. Washington’s sorry frontcourt had no antidote for the big fella. With the Knicks starting to get in sync, a 13-5 run pushed their lead to 20 by the midway point.

Washington made a push when Hardy drilled a trey and a pull-up jumper, and Gill converted from long range. All that effort was little more than a death rattle, though. New York took a 105-81 score into the fourth.

The Knicks kept the party going in the fourth, pushing their lead to 27. Alvarado and Jordan Clarkson (8 PTS) provided steady hands, and Mouhamed Diawara (12 PTS, 3-4 3PT) hit back-to-back threes. Jeremy Sochan (8 PTS, 6 RBS, 8 MIN) subbed in and benefited from a gorgeous Clarkson lob. But the most interesting storyline of the final frame: Tyler Kolek scored 42 points for the Westchester Knicks this morning, and added 11 points (on 4-of-4 shooting) tonight to finish the day with 53! Quoth Jslashnoel: “Tyler going nuclear is a nice victory cigar.”

Notes

  • With tonight’s totals, KAT has 50 double-doubles for the season to lead the league.
  • March 22, 2013: Ray Williams passed away at the age of 58. That night, Carmelo Anthony scored 37 points and Kenyon Martin added 19 points and 11 rebounds in a 99-94 win at Toronto, securing New York’s third straight trip to the postseason.
  • Hart is pumping! Josh has made 12 of his last 17 three-point attempts.
  • Their 16th consecutive loss ties Washington’s franchise record. The Knicks have won six straight three times this season.
  • New York scored 93 points against the Nets on Friday. They topped that with four minutes left in the third quarter tonight.
  • Washington head coach Brian Keefe was an assistant coach for the Knicks during the 2015-16 season.

Up Next

New York visits the Big Easy on Tuesday to pluck the Pelicans. Safe travels, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

* Should be one more, but NBA Cup wins crumble when handled.

DitD & Open Post – 3/23/26: Outright Putrid Edition

Mar 20, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Capitals right wing Ethen Frank (53) shoots the puck as New Jersey Devils goaltender Jake Allen (34) defends during the third period at Capital One Arena. Mandatory Credit: Amber Searls-Imagn Images | Amber Searls-Imagn Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

A late goal from Jesper Bratt kept the Devils from being shut out, but otherwise the goals dried up as the Devils dropped a 2-1 loss to the Capitals on Friday. [Devils NHL]

“It’s been a tough season for the Maple Leafs, but Knies has been one of their more productive players. He’s averaged 2.26 points per 60 minutes at five-on-five, making him their second most efficient five-on-five scorer behind William Nylander. However, there are red flags that’d give me pause about acquiring Knies. There are only two Maple Leafs skaters above 50 percent in xGs, and Knies is not one of them. Not even close. He has an xG% of 45.88 percent this season, one of the worst marks on the Maple Leafs.” [Devils on the Rush ($)]

Injury updates:

“Fitzgerald’s draft record in the second round and beyond is more or less fine. By that, I mean that the probability of a draftee turning into an NHL-caliber player generally drastically diminishes in the second round and beyond, and, to be frank, the Devils have drafted two NHL-caliber players (Lenni Hämeenaho and Seamus Casey) in the second round. New Jersey has not hit on any third-rounders in recent memory, and any draftee in the fourth round and beyond is typically some form of dart throw. The first round resume, however, is outright putrid.” [Devils’ Advocates]

Hockey Links

Some history for Ovi:

A brutal hit nets A.J. Greer just a three-game suspension:

“This year’s Sabres aren’t just the season’s best bandwagon team; they might be the single greatest bandwagon team of all time. Seriously, can you think of a better option?” [The Athletic ($)]

“Minnesota’s hockey community is mourning longtime NHL writer Jessi Pierce and her three children following a deadly house fire in White Bear Lake. Fire officials said four people — including three children — were found dead inside a home early Saturday, March 21, in the 2100 block of Richard Avenue. Authorities have not yet publicly identified the victims or said what caused the fire.” [Minnesota Star Tribune]

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

Viktor Gyökeres vows to use Arsenal’s Carabao Cup pain as fuel in treble hunt

  • Gunners eyeing trophies after Carabao Cup final woes

  • Striker ‘even more motivated’ for coming games

Viktor Gyökeres has articulated the hurt and defiance inside the Arsenal dressing-room after Sunday’s 2-0 Carabao Cup final defeat by Manchester City and promised to use it as fuel in the club’s pursuit of other trophies.

Arsenal picked a bad time to produce their worst performance of the season with everybody in the starting XI falling well below their best – apart from maybe William Saliba. No one will want to dwell on the period from the beginning of the second half to the moment when Nico O’Reilly scored his second goal in the 64th minute to put City in an unassailable position. It was one-way traffic, Arsenal pinned back, unable to get out.

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Are there men's March Madness games today? When NCAA Tournament will resume

The madness isn't over, it's just on hold.

After a Men's NCAA Tournament second round that saw a No. 1 seed in Florida, a few bluebloods in Kansas and Kentucky, and a pair of No. 3s in Gonzaga and Virginia eliminated, the Sweet 16 is set. Duke overcame a shaky start to advance to the second weekend, UConn rolled over UCLA after a slog against Furman, and Michigan has largely looked dominant thus far.

But none of that matters. As the teams in the Sweet 16 prepare for their prospective opponents, they'll have time off until Thursday for half the field and Friday for the other half. There are no games on Monday March 23, but they'll be back — likely with a vengeance as the field condenses — on Thursday, March 26.

Here's what to know about the college basketball schedule, as the teams remaining recharge for the second of three frenetic weekends.

Are there Men's NCAA Tournament games on today?

Following four days of action, the Men's NCAA Tournament will be taking a respite. There are no games on Monday, March 23, as teams prepare for the Sweet 16.

There are, however, Women's NCAA Tournament second round games, as its first weekend concludes.

When do Men's March Madness games resume?

Men's NCAA Tournament games will recommence on Thursday, March 26 when No. 2 Purdue plays No. 11 Texas to open the Sweet 16. From there, it will be eight games, concluding with No. 2 Iowa State vs No. 6 Tennessee on Friday, March 27.

Men's Sweet 16 schedule

Here's a look at the schedule for when games come back.

THURSDAY, MARCH 26

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

FRIDAY, MARCH 27

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

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: When Men's NCAA Tournament will resume after first two rounds conclude

5 worst moments of March Madness Round 2, from Tyler Tanner's miss to Kentucky flop

The top-seeded teams dominated the second round of the NCAA Tournament, with the lone double-digit seed advancing to the Sweet 16 being Texas, one of the most iconic brands in college sports.

Texas being a "Cinderella" in 2025-26 is fitting for where men's college basketball is as a sport amid the name, image and likeness era. The lone double digit seed to reach the Sweet 16 last season was Arkansas, which is led by one of the greatest coaches ever in John Calipari and was riddled with talent.

No. 12 seed High Point gave its best shot at breaking that mold on Saturday, March 21, before ultimately falling to No. 4 Arkansas 94-88 in a highly competitive game. No. 11 VCU also had a chance to be the latest mid-major to reach the Sweet 16, but was dominated by No. 3 Illinois 76-55.

Only 16 teams remain, with just one weekend before the Final Four returns to Indianapolis. Here's a look at our five worst moments of the NCAA Tournament's second round in 2026:

5 worst moments of NCAA Tournament second round

Tyler Tanner misses game-winning halfcourt shot

Vanderbilt star Tyler Tanner nearly made an all-time shot for the win against No. 4 Nebraska in the second round, but the ball rimmed out after multiple bounces off the backboard and rim.

Tanner was already having a career performance, as he finished with 27 points and four assists with four steals. With 2.2 seconds he caught the inbounds pass on the opposite side of the court before heaving it from behind halfcourt, which barely missed and resulted in Vanderbilt's entire bench falling to their knees in disappointment.

Nebraska's Braden Frager hit a game-winning driving layup to hand his school its second-ever NCAA Tournament win and first Sweet 16 appearance. Unfortunately, one of Vanderbilt or Nebraska was headed home after one of the best second-round games in recent memory.

"We were in an inch away from being in the Sweet 16," Vandy coach Mark Byington said. "It's going to take a while for us to get over."

Florida goes home early

Florida was shocked by No. 9 seed Iowa in the second round, falling 73-72 after Alvaro Folgueiras hit a game-winning 3-pointer with less than five seconds remaining. It's a brutal finish to the season for the Gators, who played their way back onto the 1-seed line after winning 16 of their last 17 regular-season games.

Florida looked like a top national championship contender, especially with its impressive frontcourt of Alex Condon, Thomas Haugh and Rueben Chinyelu. But sometimes March Madness strikes, and unfortunately it did for Florida before the first weekend came to a close.

Iowa ended the game on a 7-3 run, which was ultimately the difference in the back-and-forth, highly competitive game.

Kentucky makes the bad kind of history

While Kentucky survived a scare against Santa Clara in the first round, it took a wild shot from Otega Oweh at the buzzer to force overtime. The Wildcats kept within distance of Iowa State in the first half of their game on March 22, before the Cyclones pulled away for a dominant 82-63 win.

Kentucky played sloppy basketball against Iowa State, setting a program record for most turnovers (20) in an NCAA Tournament game. The 19-point loss was also Kentucky's largest loss in a March Madness game since 1972.

Second-year coach Mark Pope is facing a pivotal offseason, especially with Oweh exhausting his eligibility.

David Punch's nose

TCU star David Punch took a shot to the face from Duke's Cameron Boozer late in the second half of a close game on Saturday, March 21, and wasn't the same after returning to the game. Boozer was called for a Flagrant 1 on the play, although Punch was unable to shoot the free-throws as he returned to the bench with blood flowing down his face.

Punch Jr. briefly went to the locker room, missing the remainder of the first half before returning in the final 20 minutes of the game.

TCU trailed 38-34 at halftime, before falling apart and losing 81-58 to Duke to end its season. And despite coming off a 16-point, 13-rebound performance against Ohio State in the first round, he was held to four points on 1-of-10 shooting against the Blue Devils.

High Point's season comes to an end

High Point's program-best season came to an end against No. 4 Arkansas, as it fell 94-88 after winning its first-ever NCAA Tournament game in the first round. The Panthers dominated the regular season, finishing the regular season 30-4 with a Big South Conference Tournament win.

Chase Johnston became the latest March Madness legend after helping High Point to a win over Wisconsin, and Rob Martin channeled his inner-Kemba Walker with 30 points and five assists in High Point's loss to Arkansas.

High Point was putting on for mid-major programs in the NCAA Tournament and hopes to continue its momentum fresh off a respect-earning trip.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness worst moments of NCAA Round 2, including Tyler Tanner

Ranking top 5 upsets so far in March Madness, from Iowa to High Point

Through two rounds of the 2026 NCAA Tournament, and for the second time in as many years, March has been missing some of its trademark madness.

There have been exciting moments, of course, from Otega Oweh’s buzzer-beater to send Kentucky to overtime against Santa Clara to Tyler Tanner’s 49-foot heave that rimmed out and nearly gave Vanderbilt a stunning win over Nebraska in what would have instantly been one of the most iconic shots in NCAA tournament history. There have been uplifting stories, too, from Miami (Ohio) continuing its magical season with a win over SMU in the First Four — the RedHawks’ first NCAA tournament victory since 1999 — to High Point picking up its first-ever NCAA tournament win.

For the most part, though, an event historically defined by upsets has had precious few of them, with favored teams with more talent and resources largely handling business.

How have the small handful of unexpected results stacked up?

Here’s a look at the top five upsets through the first two rounds of March Madness.

NCAA tournament biggest upsets

1. No. 9 Iowa over No. 1 Florida

Before the first week of the 2026 NCAA Tournament wrapped up, one of the four No. 1 seeds had already been bounced from the field — and it just so happened to be the reigning national champions.

After an emphatic end to the regular season, with a 22-3 record since Dec. 10, and just two days removed from the second-largest margin of victory ever in an NCAA tournament game, Florida seemed well-positioned to win back-to-back titles for the second time in program history. Iowa had other ideas. The Hawkeyes jumped ahead by as many as 12, but saw that lead evaporate before fighting back, with a 3-pointer from Robert Morris transfer Alvaro Folgueiras with 4.5 seconds remaining securing a stunning 73-72 win in a matchup in which Iowa was a 10.5-point underdog.

It marked the ninth time since 1979 that a No. 9 seed defeated a No. 1 seed. After winning four Division II national championships at Northwest Missouri State and leading Drake to 31 wins and a second-round tournament appearance last season, Ben McCollum has once again proved his wizardry, this time in his first season as a power-conference head coach. And with his latest win, he helped secure Iowa’s first Sweet 16 berth since 1999.

2. No. 12 High Point over No. 5 Wisconsin

In just the fourth game on the first full day of the tournament, we got what feels like the most emotionally resonant upset, with a mid-major program taking down a team from one of the sport’s biggest, most powerful conferences. High Point’s victory over Wisconsin wasn’t just notable, but thrilling, with the Panthers winning despite trailing for 34 of a possible 40 minutes. Chase Johnston finished it off with a transition layup with 11 seconds remaining, his first made 2-pointer of the season.

For good measure, High Point coach Flynn Clayman provided the exclamation point, offering an impassioned rallying cry for mid-majors everywhere in his post-game interview with TBS.

“It looks pretty obvious to me that high-majors need to play mid-majors during the season,” he said. “They said we ain’t played nobody — we played somebody now.”

3. No. 11 Texas over No. 3 Gonzaga

By seed difference, this is technically tied for the biggest upset of the first four days of action, even if it doesn’t quite feel like it considering the Longhorns had the fourth-largest men’s basketball budget during the 2025 fiscal year.

Still a team that snuck into the tournament as one of the final four at-large selections wrapped up a run of three wins in five days by knocking off a Bulldogs squad that was ranked in the top 15 virtually the entire season (even if it was playing without No. 2 scorer Braden Huff).

Because of that, Texas will be the only double-digit seed in the Sweet 16.

4. No. 11 VCU over No. 6 North Carolina

Despite the difference of five seed lines, the Tar Heels were only a 2.5-point favorite over the Rams, but the way VCU’s victory unfolded made this an astonishing result. North Carolina led by as many as 19 in the second half and was up 14 with 6:15 remaining before getting outscored 19-5 in the final 6:12 and falling in overtime. 

Terrence Hill Jr. was brilliant in leading the comeback, scoring 16 of his game-high 34 points in the final 12:02 of regulation, including a jumper that tied the game with 11 seconds remaining. He was instrumental in the extra period, as well, draining the game-winning 3-pointer with 15 seconds left in overtime.

Though the Rams are consistently one of the best programs nationally outside of the power conferences, they burnished their reputation as giant-killers. Over the past 20 years, they’ve knocked off Duke, Kansas and, now, North Carolina as a No. 11 seed.

5. No. 11 Texas over No. 6 BYU

The Longhorns make another appearance, this time for a win over a BYU team that was favored by 2.5. The result wasn’t a complete surprise, as the Cougars had gone 7-9 in their final 16 regular-season games, but Texas was able to withstand 35 points from AJ Dybantsa to pull off one of two 11-over-6 upsets in this year’s tournament.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness: Ranking the top 5 upsets from the first two rounds

Sweet 16 predictions: Experts pick who will advance in March Madness bracket

How's your bracket looking?

Probably not so bad if you picked all the favorites.

But there were a few surprises in the Men's NCAA Tournament first two rounds, the biggest being No. 9 Iowa taking down defending champion Florida.

That result means we won't get a second straight Final Four with all No. 1 seeds. So who will reach Indianapolis? First things first, who will in this week's Sweet 16?

USA TODAY Sports staff made their picks. Check them out below:

SOUTH REGION (in Houston)

Nebraska vs Iowa prediction

No. 4 Nebraska vs. No. 9 Iowa, 7:30 p.m. (TBS/truTV)

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Nebraska
  • Paul Myerberg: Nebraska
  • Jordan Mendoza: Nebraska
  • Matt Glenesk: Nebraska
  • Craig Meyer: Iowa
  • John Leuzzi: Nebraska
  • Austin Curtright: Iowa
  • Ehsan Kassim: Nebraska

Houston vs Illinois prediction

No. 2 Houston vs. No. 3 Illinois, 10:05 p.m. (TBS/truTV)

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Houston
  • Paul Myerberg: Houston
  • Jordan Mendoza: Houston
  • Matt Glenesk: Houston
  • Craig Meyer: Houston
  • John Leuzzi: Illinois
  • Austin Curtright: Houston
  • Ehsan Kassim: Illinois

WEST REGION (at San Jose)

Purdue vs Texas prediction

No. 2 Purdue vs. No. 11 Texas, 7:10 p.m. (CBS)

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Purdue
  • Paul Myerberg: Purdue
  • Jordan Mendoza: Purdue
  • Matt Glenesk: Purdue
  • Craig Meyer: Purdue
  • John Leuzzi: Purdue
  • Austin Curtright: Purdue
  • Ehsan Kassim: Texas

Arkansas vs Arizona prediction

No. 1 Arizona vs. No. 4 Arkansas, 9:45 p.m. (CBS)

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Arizona
  • Paul Myerberg: Arizona
  • Jordan Mendoza: Arizona
  • Matt Glenesk: Arkansas
  • Craig Meyer: Arkansas
  • John Leuzzi: Arizona
  • Austin Curtright: Arizona
  • Ehsan Kassim: Arkansas

MIDWEST REGION (in Chicago)

Michigan vs Alabama prediction

No 4 Alabama vs. No. 1 Michigan 7:35 p.m. (TBS/truTV)

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Michigan
  • Paul Myerberg: Michigan
  • Jordan Mendoza: Michigan
  • Matt Glenesk: Michigan
  • Craig Meyer: Michigan
  • John Leuzzi: Michigan
  • Austin Curtright: Michigan
  • Ehsan Kassim: Alabama

Iowa State vs Tennessee prediction

No. 2 Iowa State vs. No. 6 Tennessee, 10:10 p.m. (TBS/truTV)

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Tennessee
  • Paul Myerberg: Iowa State
  • Jordan Mendoza: Iowa State
  • Matt Glenesk: Tennessee
  • Craig Meyer: Tennessee
  • John Leuzzi: Iowa State
  • Austin Curtright: Iowa State
  • Ehsan Kassim: Tennessee

EAST REGION (at Washington D.C.)

Duke vs St. John's prediction

No. 1 Duke vs. No. 5 St. John's, 7:10 p.m. (CBS)

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Duke
  • Paul Myerberg: St. John's
  • Jordan Mendoza: Duke
  • Matt Glenesk: St. John's
  • Craig Meyer: Duke
  • John Leuzzi: Duke
  • Austin Curtright: Duke
  • Ehsan Kassim: Duke

Michigan State vs UConn prediction

No. 2 UConn vs. No. 3 Michigan State, 9:45 p.m. (CBS)

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Michigan State
  • Paul Myerberg: Michigan State
  • Jordan Mendoza: Michigan State
  • Matt Glenesk: Michigan State
  • Craig Meyer: UConn
  • Austin Curtright: Michigan State
  • Ehsan Kassim: UConn
  • John Leuzzi: UConn

Sweet 16 schedule: Game tip times, dates

THURSDAY, MARCH 26

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

FRIDAY, MARCH 27

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

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness predictions: Sweet 16 expert picks for NCAA bracket

March Madness winners, losers spawn Big Ten dominance entering Sweet 16

One weekend down, two to go.

A chalky bracket seemed unlikely to yield any major upsets until No. 9 Iowa knocked off No. 1 seed Florida in the South region, bringing some chaos to a men’s NCAA Tournament that had lacked the underdog stories that can often define the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight.

Until the Hawkeyes’ win, the tournament Cinderella was No. 11 Texas, which beat fellow No. 11 North Carolina State in the play-in round, beat No. 6 Brigham Young in the first round and then beat No. 3 Gonzaga 74-68 on Saturday to reach the program’s second Sweet 16 since 2008.

While Florida has been sent packing, the name-brand teams and programs still alive should make for an intensely competitive weekend.

Starting with the Big Ten, let’s get ready for the Sweet 16 by breaking down the biggest winners and losers from the second round:

Winners

Big Ten

The Big Ten leads the way with six teams in the Sweet 16, ahead of the four from the SEC (No. 4 Alabama, No. 4 Arkansas, No. 6 Tennessee and No. 11 Texas), three from the Big 12 (No. 1 Arizona, No. 2 Houston and No. 2 Houston), two from the Big East (No. 2 Connecticut and No. 5 St. John’s) and one from the ACC (No. 1 Duke). It's the second-most for any conference after the SEC had seven last season. The Big Ten went 6-1 in the second round, with the only blemish coming in No. 7 UCLA’s 73-57 loss to the Huskies. Moving on are No. 1 Michigan in the Midwest region, No. 2 Purdue in the West, No. 3 Michigan State in the East and No. 3 Illinois, No. 4 Nebraska and No. 9 Iowa in the South.

Nebraska

The Cornhuskers did it again. Two days after beating No. 13 Troy for the first tournament win in program history, Nebraska took home one of the best games from the opening weekend, beating No. 5 Vanderbilt 74-72 on freshman Braden Frager’s driving layup with 2.2 seconds to go. More drama ensued: Vanderbilt’s Tyler Tanner, who was brilliant in the loss, put up a heave from beyond half court that barely rimmed out to preserve the Cornhuskers’ win. Next up is the third meeting this year with the Hawkeyes after each team held serve at home during the regular season.

John Calipari

After losing his tournament mojo at Kentucky, Calipari is back in the Sweet 16 for the second time in as many years at Arkansas after the No. 4 Razorbacks avoided an upset with a 94-88 win against No. 12 High Point. Arkansas has scored 191 points while shooting 52.9% from the field through two tournament games. Importantly, the win against High Point also saw the Razorbacks do better from 3-point range; after making just 4 of 21 from deep against No. 13 Hawaii, they connected on 9 of 16 attempts against the Panthers.

Michigan forward Oscar Goodman (5) shoots the ball while defended by Saint Louis guard Kellen Thames (0) and guard Amari McCottry (4) during a second round of the 2026 NCAA men's tournament at Keybank Center in Buffalo, N.Y.

Losers

Florida

Down by as many as 12 points in the second half, the defending national champions stormed back to lead 71-70 and had guard Isaiah Brown at the free-throw line after stopping Iowa guard Bennett Stirtz’s driving layup with 8 seconds left. But after Brown missed his first attempt before making the second, Iowa inbounded to Stirtz, who raced downcourt and found forward Alvaro Folgueiras, who drilled a corner 3 to give the Hawkeyes the win. This is Iowa’s first Sweet 16 appearance since 1999.

Kentucky

While Arkansas made its second Sweet 16 appearance in a row, Calipari’s former program was ejected in the second round with an ugly 82-63 loss to No. 2 Iowa State. The Cyclones dominated despite playing without second-leading scorer Joshua Jefferson, who sprained his ankle against No. 15 Tennessee State. After pulling off a miraculous comeback and win against No. 10 Santa Clara, the No. 7 Wildcats committed 20 turnovers, shot 9 of 25 from deep and were obliterated in the second half: ISU led 31-30 at the break but quickly blew things open, turning a 43-38 game with 15:36 left into a 59-41 lead about six minutes later. This was a miserable end to the Wildcats’ miserable season.

Kansas

Down 58-45 to No. 5 St. John’s with 7:22 remaining, No. 4 Kansas went on a 20-7 run to even the score on two Darryn Peterson free throws with 13 seconds left. (Peterson had 21 points on 5 of 15 shooting in his likely college finale.) But on the game’s final possession, Dylan Darling took an inbounds pass on the Red Storm’s side of midcourt with 3.9 seconds to play, raced through the KU defense and banked in a running layup as time expired for his only points of the game and a 67-65 win. This loss was emblematic of the Jayhawks’ season: Terrific in spurts but mostly unreliable, they never quite put everything together.

Lower seeds

Overall, lower seeds went 4-12 in the second round. While Iowa changed the complexion of the Sweet 16, the total combined seeding heading into the second weekend remains pretty low at 60. That’s a combined 11 in the East, 18 in the South, 13 in the Midwest and 18 in the West. For the fourth year in a row, there will be only one double-digit seed in the Sweet 16.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness Round 2 winners, losers spawn Big Ten dominance

‘We smell blood’: O’Reilly believes Wembley glory can reignite Manchester City title bid

  • Two-goal hero says City are ready to hunt down Arsenal

  • Rodri feels Carabao Cup can be springboard in title race

Nico O’Reilly has stated Manchester City “smell blood” as they hunt down Arsenal’s nine-point Premier League advantage following Sunday’s 2-0 Carabao Cup final triumph.

Two second-half headers by O’Reilly defeated Mikel Arteta’s team at Wembley to give City the season’s first major trophy. Pep Guardiola’s side have a game in hand on the leaders and host them next month at the Etihad Stadium.

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