
March Madness games today: Analyzing men's NCAA Tournament Elite Eight matchups
March Madness games today: Analyzing men's NCAA Tournament Elite Eight matchups
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Sunday's Elite 8 slate features Michigan St. vs. Auburn, Tennessee vs. Houston
Mackenzie Salmon breaks down Sunday's Elite Eight matchups.
Sports Seriously
Half of the NCAA men's tournament Final Four spots are filled. Florida is a representative of the SEC after beating Texas Tech and Duke is there from the ACC after dispatching Alabama. The other two will be determined Sunday in a pair of Elite Eight matchups
The action will start from the Midwest Region in Indianapolis. Top seed Houston is coming off a dramatic win against Purdue with the benefit of a last-second inbounds play. Tennessee will be playing in their fourth Elite Eight, but have yet to reach the Final Four. On the plus side, the Volunteers were in this spot last season and can draw from their experience in a loss to Purdue.
The second matchup takes place in Atlanta. Auburn, the tournament's No. 1 overall seed, looked to be in trouble in the second half against Michigan during the Sweet 16. Then Denver Jones stepped up with 3-point shots, and the Tigers blew away the Wolverines to make just their third Elite Eight in school history. Michigan State is no stranger to this situation but struggled Friday with Mississippi and faces a bigger challenge here.
No. 1 Houston vs. No. 2 Tennessee
Time/TV: 2:20 p.m., ET, CBS
Like defense? You'll be in love with this game. The Cougars and Volunteers are first and eighth in fewest points allowed, respectively. They're also third and fourth in field-goal percentage defense. Points will be hard to come by for both teams. The matchup at point guard is one to watch. Houston has Milos Uzan, an Oklahoma transfer, to run the offense. Tennessee counters with Zakai Zeigler, who is the heart and soul of the team on both offense and defense. Both teams boast big bodies inside that should be interesting to watch. An edge there could be critical. While the disappointing history of the Volunteers will get a lot of attention, the Cougars have had their own disappointments in the past four tournaments when trying to return to their first Final Four since 2020. They'll be plenty motivated.
No. 1 Auburn vs. No. 2 Michigan State
Time/TV: 5:05 p.m., ET, CBS
If experience matters, then there should be lots of optimism for the Spartans. Tom Izzo has been here 10 previous times and gone 8-2 in regional finals. He knows how to get a team ready on a short turnaround with a Final Four berth on the line. But it also takes players to get it done on the court. Michigan State possesses the size to match up with Tigers big man Johni Broome (18.5 ppg and 10.8 rpg), though it will require a team effort to slow him down. Auburn, however, is more than just Broome, forcing the Spartans to be aware of perimeter scorers that include Jones, Chad Baker-Mazara and Tahaad Pettiford. Should the Tigers prevail, it would be quite to coup to take down the Big Ten's two Michigan schools along the way.
Hashtags

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


Washington Post
38 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Fisk University women's gymnastics team, the first at an HBCU, to stop competing after 2026
NASHVILLE — Fisk University's bold experiment in women's gymnastics is coming to an end. The school has announced it is shuttering the program at the end of the 2026 season. Fisk made history in 2023 when it became the first historically Black college or university to launch a women's artistic gymnastics team.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Diversity in College World Series field reminds us what college sports is all about
Diversity in College World Series field reminds us what college sports is all about Show Caption Hide Caption Jeremiah Smith, Ryan Williams on cover of EA Sports College Football '26 EA Sports chose Ohio State's Jeremiah Smith and Alabama's Ryan Williams to be on the cover of College Football '26. We talk to the athletes about what this moment means to them. This week, with the approval of the House vs. NCAA settlement, college sports officially split into two. The power conference schools are going to pay their athletes, make their own rules and take the responsibility of enforcement and punishment from an NCAA that was never very good at it in the first place. Is there fear and resentment across the rest of the college sports landscape about where this is all headed? Of course there is. Schools at the lower end of Division I see a power grab led by the Big Ten and SEC and wonder if the clock is ticking on their conference's automatic access to NCAA championships and perhaps even a full divorce. To many folks in the smaller conferences, it feels like they're paying the price for a problem they didn't cause. But in a world where it increasingly feels like the new financial realities of the Big Ten and SEC are driving a land grab for postseason bids, starting with the College Football Playoff but undoubtedly trickling down to every sport in the future, this year's College World Series shows why some traditions are worth preserving. The eight teams that advanced to Omaha over the last few days represent seven different conferences: The SEC (LSU and Arkansas) The Big 12 (Arizona) The ACC (Louisville) The Big Ten (UCLA) The Sun Belt (Coastal Carolina) The Missouri Valley (Murray State) The Pac-12 (Kind of. Oregon State played as an independent this season but was crucial in the effort to resurrect a new Pac-12, which will begin play in the 2026-27 academic year.) Is such a huge conference spread a bit of an anomaly? Absolutely. In recent renditions of the CWS, you'll see a whole lot of SEC and ACC representation, some strong Big 12 and Pac-12 programs (before it imploded) and your occasional interloper from outside the power conferences. But this year's field underscores a very simple point that the SEC and Big Ten would be wise to remember as they go about the business of remaking college sports: At the end of the day, competition is what this is all about. And even if that means you come up on the short end some years, it's nothing to be afraid of. That's just sports. Though we can find a thousand things the NCAA has done wrong on its journey toward the professionalization of college sports, it did one thing that was really genius. In constructing its format for national championship tournaments, it ensured that all Division I conferences would be represented by an automatic qualifier. This means that when the men's basketball players at SIU-Edwardsville began last season, they could dream of playing in March Madness. Was there a realistic chance to win a national championship? Of course not. Were they even likely to win a game? Heck no. Were they better than dozens of basketball teams who missed the tournament? According to the computers, they weren't even in the top 200. But they won their conference, earned their moment on the big stage and got blown off the court by Houston. That's what usually happens. But every now and then, you get an upset everyone remembers. Either way, the possibility of that moment keeps those programs viable and those communities invested in college basketball. Overall, it's a pretty great system. Folks at those lower levels have good reason to wonder if they'll keep those automatic bids going forward, not just in basketball but a variety of sports. SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, in particular, has made public comments that could be considered threatening to the notion of equal access regardless of conference size or strength. Meanwhile, there was talk a few weeks back that the SEC and Big Ten could be interested in a 16-team CFP format where they get four automatic bids each, with the ACC and Big 12 getting two apiece and one going to the top-ranked Group of Five champion. It seems as if that idea has subsequently died down. Even though the ACC and Big 12 locking in two bids each might have been tempting on the surface, formalizing an existence as second-class citizens would not have gone over well with those fan bases. If you were to construct the CWS on the same kinds of principles that the Big Ten and SEC have been flirting with this year in their CFP expansion discussions, you'd never have seven conferences involved like this year. And the reason it's such a timely development for college sports is that it should remind people in the industry why they do this in the first place. Everyone understands that a true level playing field is impossible, but competition is about more than revenue on a spreadsheet. And when it comes to the structure of Division I, giving an automatic bid to every conference underlines that they are partners in an enterprise whose mission is to deliver a good product – even if a lot of those partners can't stack up competitively to the mighty SEC. You can't deliver as good of a product for the sport – the entire sport – by stacking the deck and using historical performance to engineer future outcomes in your favor. You can only do it by making the postseason possibility available to everyone and letting the chips fall where they may. Even in a more complicated and professionalized world, you don't need to apologize for the outcome when you just let sports do its thing.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Zach Edey has left ankle surgery that could sideline him for the start of next season
FILE - Memphis Grizzlies center Zach Edey (14) reacts in the first half of Game 3 of an NBA first-round playoff series against the Oklahoma City Thunder in Memphis, Tenn., on Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Brandon Dill, File) MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Zach Edey could miss the start of the 2025-26 season after the Memphis Grizzlies rookie center had surgery Tuesday on his left ankle. Edey needed the procedure to repair and restabilize his ankle after spraining it again during offseason training last week. The Grizzlies said the 7-foot-3 Canadian would be evaluated again in four months, which is less than two weeks before the 2025-26 season opens Oct. 21. Advertisement The two-time national player of the year at Purdue missed 12 games early in the season because of a sprained left ankle. He went on to play in 66 games, making 55 starts, and averaged 9.2 points and a rookie-leading 8.3 rebounds. He was voted to the All-Rookie first team. ___ AP NBA: