Miami (Ohio)'s March Madness run is over, but it won't be forgotten

For the better part of the past month, the most hyper-analyzed and breathlessly discussed team in men’s college basketball wasn’t in Lexington, Kentucky or Lawrence, Kansas or on North Carolina’s famed Tobacco Road.

It was a mid-sized state school in southwest Ohio that wasn’t even picked in the preseason to win its own (typically) one-bid conference and had gone nearly 20 years without an NCAA Tournament appearance.

When the 2025-26 season tipped off back in early November, few people outside of Oxford, Ohio could have imagined Miami (Ohio) would become one of the defining teams and storylines nationally by the time March Madness rolled around, yet there the RedHawks were, winning game after game and doing what only some of the most iconic squads in the sport’s modern history had been able to pull off.

That inspired run ended Friday, March 20, with Miami suffering just its second loss of the season, a 78-56 blowout at the hands of Tennessee in the first round of the NCAA Tournament in Philadelphia.

What happened across an ill-fated 40 minutes, though, did nothing to diminish the five months that preceded it.

The RedHawks became just the fifth Division I team since 1980 to start a season 30-0, joining the star-studded likes of 1990-91 UNLV and 2014-15 Kentucky. The fact those historical peers had significantly more next-level talent only added to Miami’s charm. A roster made up largely of once-overlooked recruits came together to play one of the more beautiful forms of basketball of any team in the country, an offensively explosive outfit that played at a frenetic pace, spread opponents out and knocked down shots at a dizzying rate.

In an age when mid- and low-major programs largely exist as feeder systems for college basketball’s biggest and richest schools, the RedHawks were a heat-warming anachronism, a group of players who came into the program, developed, improved and, perhaps most impressively, stayed. Of the 15 players who logged at least one minute for Miami this season, 12 began their careers at the school. Five of the top six scorers from a 25-win team the previous season came back, almost certainly spurning more lucrative opportunities elsewhere. And it was all coming under the direction of a coach in Travis Steele who, after stumbling as a head coach at the power-conference level, has made the most of a second chance.

At some point, an inspiring story became something decidedly more polarizing.

As the RedHawks inched closer to an unblemished regular season, debates began over their NCAA Tournament hopes. Their poorly rated nonconference schedule and subpar predictive metrics were nitpicked. Their series of tight wins drew skepticism. If they lost even just once and didn’t earn the Mid-American Conference’s automatic bid to the Big Dance, did they deserve a spot in the 68-team bracket? To some extraordinarily outspoken individuals, the answer was a firm “no.”

Despite Bruce Pearl’s best and most nakedly shameless efforts, and even after a loss to UMass in the MAC quarterfinals, Miami heard its name called on Selection Sunday, earning one of the final at-large spots and a trip to the First Four in Dayton that may as well have been a challenge from the NCAA tournament selection committee — if you really belong in this event, you’ll have the chance to prove it.

And, surely enough, they did.

Steele’s men of steel drained 16 3-pointers and knocked down 39% of their shots from beyond the arc to beat a high-scoring SMU team by double digits and pick up the program’s first NCAA tournament win since a Wally Szczerbiak-led run to the Sweet 16 in 1999.

“I think we do belong here,” Peter Suder, the team’s leading scorer, said Thursday heading into the first-round game. “I think we showed that last night especially, but just don't count us out.”

Two days later, they ran into a wall, taking on a bigger, more physical and more talented Tennessee squad that was as bad of a matchup on the court as it was on paper, outrebounding Miami by a 42-25 margin, limiting its effectiveness from 3 and holding it to a season-low 56 points.

For all but one team, the college basketball season ends in disappointment, but for some, success isn’t wholly defined by national championship or Final Four banners. For months, as Miami’s resume was relentlessly dissected, the RedHawks (and results of Freedom of Information Act requests) insisted that teams from the sport’s major conferences were unwilling to schedule them. They weren’t alone in that struggle. High Point, as coach Flynn Clayman made sure to note after his team upset No. 5 seed Wisconsin on Thursday, faced similar issues.

All that schools like them asked for was a chance in a sport that increasingly seems like it’s stacked against them and designed to kill stories like theirs before they even get the chance to begin. But in the NCAA Tournament, when there’s no hiding behind a cautious scheduling philosophy, those chasms between the haves and have-nots have a beautiful way of disappearing.

While Miami came up well short against Tennessee, it showed that it earned the right to be there. And, as its coach sees it, its hard-earned place in the sport has staying power.

"My goal is to get this thing to the second weekend of the NCAA tournament," Steele said after Friday's loss. "We will be back. I'm very very confident on that"

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Miami Ohio basketball's season is over, but it won't be forgotten

Sungjae Im takes lead into the weekend on the firm and fast Copperhead course

PALM HARBOR, Fla. (AP) — Sungjae Im held onto the lead on a breezy Friday afternoon in the Valspar Championship, rallying on the back nine to edge ahead of David Lipsky in firm and fast conditions on the Copperhead course at Innisbrook.

After missing two straight cuts in his return from a wrist injury, Im shot a 2-under 69 to get to 9-under 133 — a stroke ahead of Lipsky. On Thursday morning, Im had two eagles in a 64 for a one-shot advantage over Brandt Snedeker.

“The important thing, well, the most important thing is that I can get my drives into the fairways,” the 27-year-old South Korean player said through a translator. “If I do that, then I will be able to give myself good chances. There’s just a lot of danger out there on the course.”

On Friday, Im had three bogeys and two birdies in a front-nine 37, then birdied the par-5 11th and par-4 12th. He broke a tie for the lead with a 7-foot birdie putt on the par-3 17th.

“I want to really focus and be patient because I have a chance this weekend.” Im said. “This weekend, I think the winds are going to blow and the greens are going to get more firm.”

He has two PGA Tour victories, the 2020 Honda Classic and 2021 Shriners Children’s Open.

Lipsky had a 65, playing in the first group of the day off the first tee. Winless on PGA Tour, he birdied the first two holes and four of the the first six, added two more on 10 and 11 and parred the final seven.

“It was excellent. I did everything well,” Lipsky said. “Missed it in the right spots, holed the putts early on to get some momentum going. That finishing stretch is obviously tough, so able to save a couple pars down on 16 and 18 and really kept the round going.”

Chandler Blanchet and Doug Ghim were 7 under. Blanchet closed with a bogey for a 66. Ghim shot 67, making an eagle on the par-5 11th, then giving back the strokes with bogeys on 15 and 16.

“Obviously, I wish I would have finished a little bit better,” Ghim said. “Two bad holes doesn’t really necessarily kind of ruin a good day.”

Snedeker had a 72 to drop to 5 under. The 45-year-old U.S. Presidents Cup captain received a sponsor exemption.

“The good thing is it’s playing really tough and tricky this afternoon,” Snedeker said. “Try to take a positive from that. Hung in there when things weren’t going great.”

Jordan Smith (68) also was 5 under with Matt Fitzpatrick (69), Marco Penge (68) and Alex Smalley (69).

“I definitely hit it better yesterday and putted better today,” Spieth said. “So, just try to put them both together on the weekend.”

Fitzpatrick was second last week in The Players Championship.

Brooks Koepka was tied for 10th at 4 under after a 67 in his return to Innisbrook. He missed a 3-foot birdie putt on his final hole.

“Just keep doing what I’m doing,” Koepka said. “Playing well, like the way I’m striking it.”

Defending champion Viktor Hovland missed the cut with rounds of 70 and 75.

___

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

Yankees’ Jasson Dominguez gets sent to Triple-A despite strong spring

Jasson Dominguez is going to start the year in Triple-A.
Jasson Dominguez is going to start the year in Triple-A.

TAMPA — Jasson Domínguez came to camp with an uncertain role and put together one of the best springs of any Yankee. 

It still was not enough to win a spot on the Opening Day roster. 

The Yankees optioned Domínguez to Triple-A on Friday, two days before breaking camp with a full outfield that did not have room for the 23-year-old outfielder who had 429 plate appearances in the big leagues last season. 

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“[He took it] like a pro,” manager Aaron Boone said after a 3-1 win over the Orioles. “We had a good talk. Difficult conversation to have. One of the things that I told him is I’m proud of him, because he walked into this camp with all kinds of conversation around him and, ‘the option may be coming,’ if everything played out a certain way. It didn’t affect anything in the way he carried himself day in and day out, the way he worked. I think he continued to get better while he was here in this camp and he performed in this camp.” 

The writing was on the wall for this to happen since the opening days of camp, when GM Brian Cashman acknowledged that it would be in Domínguez’s best interest to be getting everyday at-bats, which was not going to happen in The Bronx (barring injury) with a starting outfield of Aaron Judge, Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger. 

Jasson Dominguez is going to start the year in Triple-A. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Domínguez’s chances became even slimmer when the Yankees brought veteran outfielder Randal Grichuk to camp on a minor league deal, with the right-handed hitter fitting the Yankees bench better than the switch-hitting (but better from the left side) Domínguez. 

Still, Domínguez did everything in his control to leave a strong impression this spring, batting .342 with a 1.013 OPS, three home runs and three steals in 13 games. 

Jasson Domínguez during spring training. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“Just because it’s not here to start doesn’t mean he can’t continue to get better each and every day there,” Boone said. “As talented a player he is right now, there’s still so much more for him to get to. It’s a crazy game and he could be back before you know it. The one thing I do think is he’ll impact our club in a way this year.” 


It certainly sounds as if Rule 5 pick Cade Winquest will claim one of the final bullpen spots, with Boone offering a strong vote of confidence for the reliever. 

“We feel like he’s going to be a good pitcher,” Boone said. “I think he’s shown enough to keep himself in that mix for us and to warrant us taking him. We’ll see in the end which way we go. But he’s taken to some of the minor adjustments we’ve had for him, the pitching group has had for him. That’s always a work in progress, but I think he’s got a chance to be good.” 

That, along with Kervin Castro being optioned to Triple-A on Friday, would appear to leave the final bullpen spot down to Brent Headrick or Jake Bird. 

Giancarlo Stanton got his first outfield game action of the spring on Friday, starting in right field and playing five innings, which was the latest positive indication of how he is feeling physically. 

“If we get into the season and we get into a spot where I have to use the DH from time to time for someone else and maybe he can go out there and spell us, I feel like right now, he’s in a position to do that,” Boone said. “I don’t think it’s going to be a lot necessarily, but want to be prepared for it without jeopardizing him physically.” 


Spencer Jones and Elmer Rodríguez were named the winners of the 2025 Kevin Lawn Awards, given annually to the Yankees’ minor league position player and pitcher of the year. … The Yankees optioned reliever Yerry De los Santos to Triple-A and reassigned catchers Ali Sánchez and Payton Henry and outfielder Kenedy Corona to minor league camp.

Game Thread: Knicks at Nets, March 20, 2026

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JANUARY 21: Ariel Hukporti #55 of the New York Knicks reacts as Day'ron Sharpe #20 of the Brooklyn Nets looks on during the second half at Madison Square Garden on January 21, 2026 in New York City. The Knicks won 120-66. 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 Sarah Stier/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When they played in January, the Knicks (45*-25) held the Nets (17-52) to 66 points. Tonight in Brooklyn, New York aims to extend their win-streak over their neighbors to 14 straight and sweep the four-game season series.

Tip-off is 7:30 pm EST on MSG. This is your game thread. This is Nets Daily. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Be good humans. And go Knicks!

* Should be one more, but NBA Cup wins are made of mesh.

Hawks at Rockets: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 16: Jock Landale #31 of the Atlanta Hawks three point basket against the Orlando Magic on March 16, 2026 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Atlanta Hawks (38-31) aim for a stunning twelve straight wins against the formidable Houston Rockets (41-27).

Starting lineup:

  • CJ McCollum
  • Nickeil Alexander-Walker
  • Dyson Daniels
  • Jalen Johnson
  • Onyeka Okongwu

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen

Location: Toyota Center, Houston, TX

Start Time: 8:00 PM EDT

TV: FanDuel Sports Network Southeast (FDSNSE)

Radio: Sports Radio 92.9 the Game (WZGC-FM)

Streaming: ESPN+, FanDuel Sports Network app, Fubo (out of market), NBA League Pass (out of market), Youtube TV (NBA League Pass out of market)

Cubs vs. Reds at Sloan Park and vs. A’s at Hohokam Stadium preview, Friday 3/20

MESA, Arizona — Today’s roster moves:

Friday notes…

  • FORMER CUBS IN REDS CAMP: Pierce Johnson, P.J. Higgins.
  • FORMER CUBS IN A’S CAMP: Aaron Civale, Mark Leiter Jr., Brooks Kriske.
  • SPLIT SQUAD: This is the only Cubs split squad game scheduled this spring. The home game begins at 8:05 p.m. CT and the away game at 8:10 p.m. CT.

Here are today’s particulars.

Cubs lineups at Sloan Park and Hohokam Stadium:

Reds lineup:

A’s lineup:

Matthew Boyd will start for the Cubs at Sloan Park. Other Cubs pitchers scheduled for the home game: Hunter Harvey, Phil Maton, Caleb Thielbar and Hoby Milner.

Brandon Williamson will start for the Reds. Other Reds pitchers scheduled tonight: Tony Santillan, Emilio Pagán, Zach Maxwell and Brock Burke.

Jameson Taillon will start for the Cubs at Hohokam Stadium. Other Cubs pitchers for the away game: Javier Assad.

Luis Severino will start for the A’s. Other A’s pitchers scheduled tonight: Mark Leiter Jr., Michael Kelly and Joel Kuhnel.

No TV for the home game. The away game will be on Marquee Sports Network and NBC Sports California. There will be a radio broadcast of the home game on the Reds flagship station, WLW 700. The away game will be with the A’s broadcasters on ATH Audio.

MLB.com Gameday for Cubs vs. Reds

MLB.com Gameday for Cubs vs. A’s

Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.

Please visit our SB Nation Reds site Red Reporter and A’s site Athletics Nation. If you do go there to interact with Reds or A’s fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.

As we have done in the past, we’ll have a first pitch thread at five minutes to game time and one overflow thread, 90 minutes after game time. For today, that will be 8 p.m. CT and 9:35 p.m. CT.

These threads will not post individually onto the front page; instead, you can find links to them in the box marked ”Chicago Cubs Game Threads” at the bottom of the front page. There will also be a StoryStream on the front page with all the game thread links, as well as the recap after the game is over. The pitcher photos and regular-season stats will return on Opening Day.

Discuss amongst yourselves.

Yankees option Jasson Domínguez to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre

LAKELAND, FL - MARCH 12: Jasson Dominguez #24 of the New York Yankees bats during the spring training game against the Detroit Tigers at Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium on March 12, 2026 in Lakeland, Florida. The Yankees defeated the Tigers 4-3. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

It was honestly only a matter of time.

Late Friday afternoon, the Yankees optioned former super-prospect Jasson Domínguez to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, among a flurry of roster moves. Once the Yankees signed Randal Grichuk as their fourth outfielder this move seemed inevitable. Even before that, it seemed unlikely El Marciano would start the season in the majors, given the Yanks’ need for a right-handed hitting outfielder and Jasson’s struggles from that side of the plate.

He’s not the only player being moved out as Opening Day nears. Kenedy Corona, who had himself a nice camp with a couple home runs and a keen eye at the plate, is headed to minor league camp, along with a couple other folks, and a couple others join Domínguez heading to Triple-A.

But the story here is obviously The Martian. To his credit, this is no indictment of his spring. He’s been a monster at the plate and, given the lack of Discourse About His Defense on social media, my impression is he hasn’t been a disaster in left field.

This comes down to a roster crunch and, honestly, the move to Triple-A might be best for Jasson. The Yanks needed a fourth outfielder who could hit right-handed pitching, which he’s been unable to do. And even if he made the team to start the season, it doesn’t do a single thing for his development to play sporadically for the Yankees.

This is still only his age-23 season and he’s lost basically two full seasons of development and reps. First, COVID-19 wiped out the 2020 minor league season, then he missed most of 2024 after undergoing Tommy John surgery with an internal bracing on his right elbow in September 2023.

Factoring all that in, Domínguez, despite seemingly having been around forever, has a grand total of 759 plate appearances above Double-A. Sitting on the Yankee bench seems highly unlikely to help him And, given the way injuries always rear their ugly heads, it’s still very probable we’ll see Jasson in the Bronx at some point in 2026.

Dodgers on Deck: Saturday, March 21 vs. Athletics

Mar 15, 2026; Mesa, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Emmet Sheehan (80) throws against the Chicago Cubs in the first inning at Sloan Park. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

The Dodgers reach the end of their Arizona residency on Saturday morning, with an early start time against the Athletics at Camelback Ranch. This game was originally set for a noon start, but was bumped up an hour earlier due to extreme heat.

Emmet Sheehan gets the start on Saturday, which would seemingly line him up to start next weekend against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the season-opening series, though nothing has been finalized yet regarding the Dodgers rotation order following Yoshinobu Yamamoto on opening day.

Left-hander Jacob Lopez starts for the A’s.

Saturday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Athletics
  • Ballpark: Camelback Ranch
  • Time: 11:05 a.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: A’s Cast

Villarreal overruns Real Sociedad to move into third place in La Liga

VILLARREAL, Spain (AP) — Villarreal beat Real Sociedad 3-1 and completed its first La Liga double over the Basque side since 2016-17 on Friday.

All of Villarreal’s goals came in a busy first half.

Gerard Moreno got the opener with a header after seven minutes, and eight minutes later Georges Mikautadze tapped in a second following good work from midfield by Alberto Moleiro.

Nicolas Pépé made it 3-0 midway through the first half when he strode forward and his deflected shot crept past goalkeeper Alex Remiro.

Luka Sučić pulled a goal back for Sociedad in the first minute of the second half but the visitor could not mount a comeback. It remained in seventh place after missing a chance to go equal on points with the team above it, Celta Vigo.

Villarreal, meanwhile, moved into third, a point above Atletico Madrid. Atletico's game in hand is on Sunday at archrival Real Madrid.

The win was Villarreal's 12th in 15 games at Estadio de la Ceramica this season, with the only defeats coming at the hands of Real Madrid and Barcelona.

___

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

Dodgers vs. Padres spring training game roster

Feb 13, 2026; Glendale, AZ, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani (17) talks to catcher Will Smith (16) during spring training camp. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

After their final Cactus League off day, the Dodgers host the San Diego Padres on Friday night at Camelback Ranch. Yoshinobu Yamamoto makes his final spring tuneup before his second straight opening day start.

Lineup

Shohei Ohtani DH
Kyle Tucker RF
Mookie Betts SS
Freddie Freeman 1B
Will Smith C
Teoscar Hernández LF
Max Muncy 3B
Andy Pages CF
Miguel Rojas 2B

First time back in the lineup for Shohei Ohtani and Will Smith since returning from the World Baseball Classic, the Dodgers’ closest to their opening day lineup all spring.

Other pitchers

Edwin Díaz is scheduled to pitch in his first game since returning from the World Baseball Classic. Also slated to throw are Jack Dreyer and the last two non-roster invitees in camp — Antoine Kelly and Chris Campos.

Up from minor league camp are Evan Shaw (wearing uniform number 90), Kelvin Ramirez (91), Myles Caba (92), and Nicolas Cruz (93).

Other position players

Non-roster catchers Eliézer Alfonzo and Seby Zavala are active on Friday night.

A slew of minor leaguers are active in this one, including outfielders Eduardo Quintero (07), Mike Sirota (08), Charles Davalan (88), and Kole Myers (); infielders Jake Gelof (06), Sean McLain (87), Jose Izarra (00), Kyle Nevin (05), John Rhodes (95), and Logan Wagner (94).

Victor Bericoto and Gregory Santos reassigned to Minor League camp

Victor Bericoto in the batter’s box.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 27: Victor Bericoto #83 of the San Francisco Giants bats during the fifth inning of the spring training game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Scottsdale Stadium on February 27, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Opening Day is just five days away for the San Francisco Giants, and the camp cuts are coming as fast and furious as my favorite modern movie franchise. The big news came on Thursday, when the Giants optioned top prospect Bryce Eldridge to AAA Sacramento, along with Grant McCray and Tyler Fitzgerald. That ended the camp-long question of whether or not Eldridge would make the roster for March 25’s Netflix special.

But more news came on Friday, when the Giants made their seventh round of camp cuts. This time, rather than optioning a trio of rostered players, the Giants reassigned a trio of non-roster invitees to Minor League camp: outfielder Victor Bericoto, right-hander Gregory Santos, and infielder Osleivis Basabe.

The biggest name here is Bericoto, who had an absolute breakout of a performance in his first Spring Training, which resulted in being named the 2026 Barney Nugent Award winner shortly before being reassigned. Bittersweet day!

Bericoto, a right-handed hitter who signed with the Giants in the same international period as Luis Matos and Marco Luciano (and who re-signed on a Minor League contract this past offseason after reaching free agency), was positively dynamic in Cactus League play, while manning both left and right field. In 19 games he hit a blistering 18-38 with a team-best three home runs as well as three doubles, while sporting a 1.264 OPS and a 221 wRC+. He also posted some of the most impressive exit velocities on the team, while striking out just seven times.

To the naked eye, then, it might seem like the Giants are making an error by reassigning him instead of giving him a spot on the Opening Day roster, especially since the players in the running for the fourth outfield spot — Matos, Will Brennan, Drew Gilbert, and Jared Oliva — aren’t exactly tearing holes in the box scores. But Bericoto, who recently turned 24, was never seriously in play for an Opening Day assignment. Spring Training numbers should always be taken with a grain of salt, and as exceptional as his were, it bears noting that he drew just one walk, rocked a hilariously unsustainable .517 BABIP, and did the bulk of his damage against fellow Minor Leaguers and NRIs. Most importantly, Bericoto has just 11 games in AAA to his name (during which time he hit just .196/.196/.283) so, despite his performance, he’s in need of some further development.

Still and all, he opened eyes, and certainly impressed his teammates, coaches, and front office. Given how unproven that aforementioned quartet is — plus McCray and Jerar Encarnación — there will almost certainly be a roster spot for Bericoto in a few months if he hits well with AAA Sacramento.

Join our March Madness conversation!

Drop in SB Nation’s March Madness open thread during Friday’s games where we’ll be talking about all the wild upsets, buzzer beaters, and Cinderella runs! 

SB Nation’s cast of characters will be enjoying the game together, so join Chris Dobbertean, Mike Rutherford, Ricky O’Donnell, Mark Schofield, James Dator, and others for 12 hours of basketball chaos!

While Bericoto was the most notable name given his spring, the most surprising of the three cuts was Santos. I’ve spent the offseason telling anyone who will listen that I think Santos — who was signed and developed by the Giants before being cut three years ago, and re-signed to a Minor League deal this past offseason — will end up being the team’s best reliever this year. I’m sticking with that, though it will take him a little while to get there, apparently.

Santos struggled with command this spring, walking five batters — while striking out just two — in 3.1 innings, leading to a 5.40 ERA and a 7.87 FIP. That shouldn’t be incredibly surprising, given that there’s rust to wash off: injuries have limited him to just 26.2 innings between both the Majors and the Minors over the last two seasons combined. The bright side is, when he finds his rhythm, command shouldn’t be a big concern: the 26-year old walked just 2.3 batters per nine innings during his breakout season with the Chicago White Sox in 2023, which is an astonishingly low number for a player who regularly clips triple digits with his fastball.

Given the lack of heat that the Giants have in the bullpen after trading Camilo Doval and seeing Randy Rodríguez suffer an injury — and given that fastball velocity is the primary barrier for entry in MLB bullpens these days — it feels like a matter of when, not if Santos will be a high-leverage reliever for this team.

As for Basabe, he had a great camp, but never really had a chance of making the team. The 25-year old right-handed hitter played his usual excellent defense across the infield, while really showing out with the bat, as he hit 12-31 with two triples, four doubles, and one walk, for a 1.051 OPS and a 167 wRC+. With Casey Schmitt and Christian Koss entrenched as the backup infielders — and Fitzgerald on the 40-man roster — the usually light-hitting Basabe (who is Matos’ cousin) was always ticketed for depth in Sacramento. But he played well enough that the organization will likely be quite comfortable bringing him up should injuries create a need.

The Giants are now down to 39 players in Major League camp: 34 rostered players, and five non-roster invitees (pitchers Michael Fulmer, Caleb Kilian, and Joey Lucchesi; catcher Eric Haase; and outfielder Oliva). They’ll have to trim 13 more names between now and Wednesday.

March Madness games tomorrow: NCAA Tournament second round schedule Saturday

Be sure to follow USA TODAY Sports' live updates keeping track of all of NCAA Tournament's Friday first round games.

The road to Indianapolis and the Final Four continues Saturday as the first eight teams will book their tickets to the Sweet 16.

Will High Point and VCU's magic continue? Top-seed Duke struggled against Siena, how will Blue Devils respond against No. 9 seed TCU? Saint Louis scores in bunches, can Michigan slow the Billikens down?

It should be a great feast of March Madness. Below is Saturday's schedule and TV listings. Here is the rest of Friday night's slate of games.

March Madness games tomorrow: Second round game times, schedule for Saturday, March 21

All times Eastern

  • 12:10 p.m.: No. 1 Michigan vs. No. 9 Saint Louis, CBS
  • 2:45 p.m.: No. 3 Michigan State vs. No. 6 Louisville, CBS (prediction)
  • 5:15 p.m.: No. 1 Duke vs. No. 9 TCU, CBS (prediction)
  • 6:10 p.m.: No. 2 Houston vs. No. 10 Texas A&M, TNT (prediction)
  • 7:10 p.m.: No. 3 Gonzaga vs. No. 11 Texas, TBS/truTV (prediction)
  • 7:50 p.m.: No. 3 Illinois vs. No. 11 VCU, CBS (prediction)
  • 8:45 p.m.: No. 4 Nebraska vs. No. 5 Vanderbilt, TNT (prediction)
  • 9:45 p.m.: No. 4 Arkansas vs. No. 12 High Point, TBS/truTV (prediction)

2026 Men's March Madness remaining full schedule

  • March 21-22: Second Round
  • March 26-27: Sweet 16
  • March 28-29: Elite 8
  • April 4: Final Four
  • April 6: National Championship

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness 2026 schedule: Who plays tomorrow, when in second round

Aaron Judge on a midseason WBC, Olympic future, and Team USA's no-fun perception

TAMPA – Try as he might to feign immunity to the noise,Aaron Judgeheard the questions about why the United States team he captained in the World Baseball Classic looked like it wasn’t having any fun. He admitted that friends and family wondered the same things the rest of the baseball world did when they saw the stoic Americans juxtaposed with the unmitigated joy of the Dominicans and Venezuelans: Why were the Americans so, well, boring?

“Everybody is different. Every culture is different. I loved everything that Mexico was doing, what Great Britain was doing, the DR, how they celebrated the game…that was amazing,” Judge said. “If they’re going to say we don’t have the passion – my passion is grinding in this cage when nobody is watching, grinding in the backyard as a six-year-old when I’d be in the backyard with my dad. That’s where our passion came from as kids. If I don’t show it outwardly like that, it doesn’t mean I don’t love the game.”

Judge said he felt certain that “every one of those guys” in the U.S. clubhouse would say they had never had more fun playing baseball than they did during the tournament. He said he saw players he had never seen show emotion unleash more than they ever showed during the major league season. But he also said he doesn’t feel there is much point in arguing.

“What am I going to do?” he said. “I can’t change their opinions.”

Few players in baseball show as dogged a commitment to a business-like demeanor as Judge, and in fairness, it seems to have served him well. He emerged as the Yankees' leader long before he qualified as a veteran. He accumulated enough respect around the league to be named captain of an American team loaded with viable leadership options. Perhaps it is no coincidence that both teams seemed to mirror his approach: Act like you’ve been there before. Winning is the only goal. Neither, or the expectations levied on both teams, allow much room for whimsy.

So perhaps it is not surprising that when asked if he would like to see more whimsy – dancing, bat flips, flair – in Major League Baseball, Judge looked down and paused, finally answering after several seconds of calculation.

“I think it’s just tough to do for 162 games. I think it’s just a lot of energy. A lot of…I don’t know,” Judge said. “I love how the game is, but definitely I would love more energy, more flair, stuff like that. I think it’s great for the fans. It’s great for the fans. It’s great for all the young kids watching the game who love seeing their favorite player do stuff like that.”

“That’s a good question,” he added, a notable addendum for a player who rarely says anything more than he must. “It was cool for that, but I don’t know.”

He was similarly as careful when asked how playing in the WBC final against Venezuela compared to playing in the World Series – a noticeable retreat from his comments during the tournament, suggesting the WBC crowd was “bigger and better” than the ones at the 2024 World Series.

“It’s different when you’ve got a band out in right field, a band out in left field, different chants, you don’t usually see that,” Judge said. “World Series games, a lot of the passionate fans, they can’t afford the tickets sometimes.”

Judge returned his focus to the World Series when he returned to Yankees camp Thursday. He will serve as the designated hitter in the Yankees’ game against the Baltimore Orioles on Friday night. As WBC participants go, Judge likely saw his spring disrupted least: He played every day. He got regular at-bats and full games’ worth of defensive build-up. And he will get a few more games of at-bats before the Yankees’ opener in San Francisco on Wednesday.

Still, he said he thinks conversations about potentially moving the WBC to the middle of the season should continue.

“There were so many restrictions, even with us. There were certain guys that couldn't pitch because of this, had to pitch on these days,” Judge said. “I think now, if you get into where everybody is built up, everybody has no restrictions, you get out there and just play -- I think it would be better for the game."

Judge said he would love to play for Team USA again, whether in the 2028 Olympics if MLB comes to an agreement to let players go, or in future WBC events. In the meantime, he said he is encouraged by where his Yankees are to start the season – and sees the return of so many familiar faces as an opportunity to improve on last year’s league-leading win total.

“I think it comes down to just details. That’s one thing we’ve talked about a lot. Fine-tune the details, figure out as a team how we can be better,” Judge said. “We’ve had stretches the last few years in July, August, when we’re puttering and you guys are asking some tough questions about what’s going on. I think if we can figure that out, we’ll be in a good spot.”

Jacari White helps Virginia snap 7-year March Madness win drought

Be sure to follow USA TODAY Sports' live updates keeping track of all of NCAA Tournament's Friday first round games.

PHILADELPHIA, PA — Virginia basketball coach Ryan Odom did not mention the elephant in the room with his team heading into Friday's Men's NCAA Tournament First-Round game against No. 14 seed Wright State.

"We never talked about it," Odom said following his team's 82-73 opening round win of the NCAA Tournament on Friday at Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia. "We only talk about what this team wants to accomplish. We had no thought about the history other than being proud of the history of Virginia basketball."

There was no need to. To Odom's point, the 2025-26 Cavaliers roster features 12 newcomers from last season, and Odom, himself, is in his first year on the sidelines in Charlottesville.

The 3-seeded Cavaliers' first NCAA Tournament win in 2,538 days didn't come easily, however. The Raiders had Odom's squad on upset watch for much of the game and forced them to fight until the end to break their three-game losing skid. Nonetheless, a win in March Madness can go a long way toward building a new team's confidence for a run in March.

"The first game is always the hardest, especially Wright State, credit to them. They did a great job executing. Their game plan was amazing," Virginia guard Malik Thomas said. "As a team, we were a little bit nervous. ... After we got our jitters out and we started to play our basketball and come together, we were able to string some shots together and hit some big shots."

Virginia struggled in the first half with Wright State's fast tempo. The Cavaliers turned the ball over seven times compared to Wright State's single turnover. Those seven turnovers led to four points for the Raiders in the first half, and a five-point halftime deficit.

"They played a little bit differently than we were expecting going into the game and how we prepared," Odom said. "...But our guys did a nice job throughout the game of adjusting, and just hanging in there. And that's what you've got to do in this tournament. It's not going to be perfect. It's not meant to be perfect."

The Cavaliers quickly erased the Raiders' halftime lead with a 7-2 run out of the locker room. They then pushed the lead to as many as four points at that point of the game when 23-year-old freshman Thijs De Ridder drained a 3-pointer in the corner.

Wright State would continue hanging in there with Virginia, which picked up its 30th win of the season, for the next few minutes before the Cavaliers shifted the momentum and the energy in the arena their way. Jacari White hit a few key shots down the stretch for Virginia to pull out the win with his six 3-pointers on the day.

Virginia separated itself from Wright State with an 11-0 run after a technical foul was called on Sam Lewis for bouncing the basketball off a Wright State player, going into a timeout.

White led the way for Virginia with 26 points, while Lewis added 12 and Thomas added 11. De Ridder also finished in double figures with 10 points and six rebounds in addition to two assists.

Odom mentioned that he's proud of how his team held together and played down the stretch to pull out the victory.

"We had to keep the pressure on defensively. We couldn't watch the guys shoot threes. A couple of times, we watched guys shoot and they made us pay. That's not something we have done all season," Odom said. "I think our guys did a nice job of showing the proper poise that was needed to be able to come out victorious."

Virginia will now look to punch its ticket to the second weekend for the first time since 2019 when it takes on the No. 6 Tennessee Vols.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Virginia holds off Wright State for first March Madness win since 2019

Pistons vs. Warriors preview: Two teams missing Star guards

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 30: Tobias Harris #12 of the Detroit Pistons drives to the basket between Brandin Podziemski #2 and Al Horford at Chase Center on January 30, 2026 in San Francisco, 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. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons lost Cade Cunningham to what was later diagnosed as a collapsed lung two games ago. He was out within five minutes of that first game, so effectively, two games minus their All-Star and most important player. They are 2-0. Or maybe they just played the Washington Wizards twice. The Golden State Warriors are no great shakes, and they are also missing their star in Steph Curry. But they are also not the Washington Wizards. As we move forward for the next couple of weeks, especially absent any kind of return timeline for Cunningham, every game becomes a test. Can this team pass the Warriors test if they only play as good as they did against the Wizards? I’m not so sure. But I also think they have a lot of room for improvement, even within their limited offensive skillset. There have been positives — Jalen Duren is a monster and Kevin Huerter is doing all the little things (big thing he’s still not doing — hitting 3s). Tobias Harris has stepped up as a rebounder, and it’s good to have Ausar Thompson back and healthy. Still, Daniss Jenkins is struggling, the lack of point guard play is hurting tertiary guys like Javonte Green and Ron Holland the most, and now the aforementioned Huerter and Duren are questionable with ankle and shoulder issues, respectively. The end of the season is going to be a roller coaster. Strap in.

Game Vitals

When: 7:30 p.m. ET
Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, Michigan
Watch: Fan Duel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons -5.5

Projected Lineups

Detroit Pistons (50-19)

Daniss Jenkins, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

Golden State Warriors (34-38)

Brandin Podziemski, De’Anthony Melton, Gui Santos, Draymond Green, Kristaps Porzingis