
What does BYU stand for? What to know of Cougars' basketball team amid March Madness run
What does BYU stand for? What to know of Cougars' basketball team amid March Madness run
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Duke coach Jon Scheyer, players preview Baylor matchup in March Madness
Duke plays Baylor in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Jon Scheyer and several Blue Devils discussed the matchup Saturday at Lenovo Center.
The men's NCAA Tournament is as much a cultural phenomenon as it is a sporting event, bringing in viewers from all walks of life who may or may not be interested in the sport of men's college basketball.
As such, what may be well known to diehard basketball fans might be new to viewers tuning in to watch the action for the first time all year. And, every year, certain queries arise around certain teams as they make their March Madness runs.
REQUIRED READING: Men's basketball live scores: Today's March Madness results as Auburn survives Creighton
Kevin Young's BYU men's basketball team is one such team amid the 2025 men's NCAA Tournament. The No. 6 seed Cougars, looking for their first Sweet 16 berth since 2011, have garnered interest not only for their March Madness berth, but also unique moniker.
With that, here's what to know of BYU's name, what it stands for, the university's founding and more:
What does BYU stand for?
The name BYU is an abbreviation for Brigham Young University, eponymously named after the university's founder in 1875. It is a private institution, and the flagship university of the Church Educational System, sponsored by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS).
Who was Brigham Young?
Brigham Young is a prominent member in LDS and Utah state history. He was an American religious leader and politician, not only serving as the second president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1847 through 1877, but also serving as the first governor of the Utah territory from 1851-58.
He also was behind the founding of Utah's two largest institutions: the University of Utah in 1849 and Brigham Young University. Young organized a board of regents to establish a university in Salt Lake Valley. In 1850, the University of Deseret was established, which later changed its name to the University of Utah.
Young later deeded buildings and land in Provo, Utah, to a board of trustees in 1875 to establish a branch of the University of Deseret. The university broke off from the University of Deseret and changed its name to Brigham Young Academy in 1876, a precursor to what would become Brigham Young University.
REQUIRED READING: Arkansas, Calipari stun Pitino and No. 2 St. John's to reach Sweet 16 of March Madness
Where is BYU located?
Location: Provo, Utah
Provo, Utah Enrollment: 35,000 students
BYU is located in Provo, Utah and boasts an enrollment of 35,743 total daytime students and 32,823 undergraduate students as of the fall 2024 semester, per its facts and figures page. It also has 198 undergraduate majors; 113 undergraduate minors; 94 master's programs; and 28 doctoral programs.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NBC Sports
29 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Summer McIntosh breaks world record in 200m individual medley
Summer McIntosh broke the world record in the 200m individual medley, giving her the fastest time in history in three different long course swimming events. McIntosh, a triple 2024 Olympic gold medalist, clocked 2 minutes, 5.70 seconds on Monday at the Canadian trials for the World Championships in Singapore in July and August. She broke the world record of 2:06.12 set by Hungarian Katinka Hosszu at the 2015 World Championships, the third-longest standing world record in women's long course (50-meter pool) swimming. McIntosh, 18, was previously the third-fastest 200m IMer in history thanks to her 2:06.56 to win Paris Olympic gold. With Monday's time, she passed American Ariana Kukors, who swam 2:06.15 at the 2009 Worlds, and Hosszu. McIntosh also owns world records in the 400m IM (set in 2024) and the 400m freestyle (reclaimed from Australian Ariarne Titmus last Saturday). On Sunday, she swam the third-fastest 800m free in history, trailing only Katie Ledecky's top two times. She also owns the second-fastest time in history in the 200m butterfly. For this season's worlds, McIntosh said she plans to swim five individual events: her three Olympic gold-medal events — both IMs, 200m fly — plus the 400m free and one of the 200m free, 200m backstroke or 800m free. Michael Phelps is the only swimmer to win five individual golds at a single worlds, doing so in 2007 to set the table for repeating the feat at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, where he also won three relay golds for eight total. Nick Zaccardi,


New York Times
34 minutes ago
- New York Times
College World Series field set: Hello Murray State! Racers crash 8-team field
The eight-team field for the 2025 College World Series is complete with Murray State beating Duke on Monday night to earn the final spot. The Racers are the fourth No. 4 seed to make it to Omaha since the NCAA Tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1999, joining Fresno State in 2008, Stony Brook in 2012 and Oral Roberts in 2023. Fresno State went on to win the national championship. Advertisement Murray State, out of the Missouri Valley Conference, joins a geographically diverse field that includes two teams from the SEC (Arkansas and LSU) and one each from the ACC (Louisville), Big 12 (Arizona), Big Ten (UCLA) and Sun Belt (Coastal Carolina) as well as one independent (Oregon State). Friday: Arizona vs. Coastal Carolina, 2 p.m. (ET); Louisville vs. Oregon State, 7 p.m. (ET) Saturday: UCLA vs. Murray State, 2 p.m. (ET); LSU vs. Arkansas, 7 p.m. (ET) Only three of the eight national seeds and five of the top 16 seeds overall advanced to the College World Series. That's down from five of eight and seven of 16 in last year's field. The national seeds to advance: No. 3 Arkansas, No. 6 LSU and No. 8 Oregon State. Other top-16 seeds to advance: No. 13 Coastal Carolina and No. 15 UCLA. Top seed Vanderbilt, No. 2 seed Texas and No. 7 seed Georgia each failed to get out of the Regional round, while No. 4 seed Auburn and No. 5 seed North Carolina lost in the Super Regionals. There will not be a repeat champion as Tennessee, the No. 14 seed, lost to Arkansas in the Super Regionals. The last repeat champ was South Carolina in 2010 and 2011. Also, there is a completely new field in 2025. None of the teams from the 2024 CWS are back in Omaha. 2025 will be the first time in the super regional era (since 1999) that no team that made it to the College World Series the year before will be back in Omaha — Aria Gerson (@aria_gerson) June 9, 2025 LSU is a slight betting favorite over Arkansas to win the CWS, but the pick here is Arkansas. The Hogs hit a few speed bumps late in the season — losing four of five series during one stretch — but this is the most complete team in the country. The lineup is balanced and powerful (seven players have at least 13 home runs), and the pitching staff is as deep and versatile as any in college baseball. Arkansas is making its 12th trip to the CWS but has yet to win a national title. That drought will end this season.


Hamilton Spectator
2 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Saskatchewan Roughriders sign all-star running back Ka'Deem Carey
REGINA - The Saskatchewan Roughriders have signed all-star running back Ka'Deem Carey, the CFL club announced Monday. Carey was a CFL East all-star with Toronto last season after rushing for a team-high 1,060 yards with seven touchdowns. He had 79 yards and a TD in the Argonauts' 41-24 Grey Cup victory over Winnipeg. However, he was among Toronto's final round of cuts before the start of the season. The move comes after Riders running back A.J. Ouellette left Saskatchewan's 31-26 season-opening win over Ottawa on Thursday with a suspected head injury. Before joining Toronto, Carey spent four seasons with the Calgary Stampeders. He helped the Stamps win a Grey Cup as a rookie in 2018 and led the CFL in rushing in both 2021 and 2022, earning a CFL all-star nod in the latter season. Over 62 regular-season games, the 32-year-old from Tucson, Ariz., has totalled 3,915 rushing yards and 26 touchdowns. The Roughriders also added American linebacker Braxton Hill and American offensive lineman Darius Washington. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 9, 2025.