
With few upsets and even fewer close games, this March is lacking madness
The national brain, long since spoiled with the Lilliputian magic of Cleveland State and Richmond and Valparaiso and George Mason and Stephen Curry and Ohio and Florida Gulf Coast and Saint Peter's, and with the goose-bumpy finishes therein and beyond, has spent the 2025 edition of men's March Madness suffering from a deficit of madness. Cup your ear and hear the moaning, the whingeing and the minor-key sounds of entitlement. Scroll past several fresh appearances of the hackneyed word 'meh.' What dopamine derailment.
Several factors have conspired for a tournament of tepidity. For the first time, here's a Sweet 16 wherein everybody hails from a major conference and nobody from a mid-major or a far-from-major. This tournament became the sixth since the seeding structure began in 1985, and the first since 2017, in which the teams seeded No. 13 through No. 16 went 0-16. For the 12th time, there's only one double-digit seed in the closing 16 — there were none in 1995 and 2007, just as there were five in 1999 and four in 2011, 2021 and 2022 — and that double digit would be No. 10 Arkansas, a storied program whose six Final Four berths include a national title under the great Nolan Richardson. The last 16 lack any magical little name that makes people wonder as to its location, unless there's somebody left out there who'll say, 'Hey, where's Duke, anyway?' Even a nation lousy at geography would seem able to achieve a reasonable pegging of location of Auburn.
Some past tournaments have gone chalk-prone — the Sweet 16 seedings in both 2009 and 2019 added up to a meager 49 — but few have gone both chalk-prone and rout-prone (although 2009 comes to mind). The 2019 event, for one, loaded up with early-round gasps such as Duke-UCF, Maryland-LSU, Tennessee-Iowa and the curious struggle of Kentucky-Wofford. This Madness started off with a buffet of routs, lacking any buzzer-beater until a Mr. Derik Queen from Baltimore supplied one, and the nation responded by arguing over whether he traveled. How quaint.
The four No. 16 seeds, given hope by recent-years acronyms such as UMBC (2018) and FDU (2023), lost by a combined 128 points. No. 15 seed Robert Morris stuck admirably with Alabama — every tournament can use a surging Robert Morris — and hinted at the kind of outrageous madness the American brain has come to require, but its 65-64 lead with seven minutes left bled into an 81-71 deficit with two and then a 90-81 loss by closing. McNeese State charmed and educated with its tale of a leaving coach exulting before leaving after an upset of Clemson, but even as basketball minds maintain that the difference in basketball caliber between lower seeds and high seeds has continued to narrow, Purdue and McNeese on the court together made Purdue look like the resident of a higher plane.
Tournaments through the years sometimes do lack for moments that lurk in memory banks, but in this one, precious few games have featured any airborne ball that carries the fates of many while the clock carries itself toward 0:00. The University of California at San Diego, where it's a wonder anyone can get anything accomplished given the understandable urge to stand around gazing at La Jolla, had its Tritons in the tournament, their story a fine stunner in a first year of eligibility. They took their 41-27 halftime deficit to Michigan and wrung a 65-63 lead with 2:29 remaining, then had a three-point shot with four seconds left to tie. They lost, 68-65, and the country hardly got to know and envy them. Call it an emblem of March 2025 thus far.
A season known as top-heavy, with statistics that showed it as top-heavy, has nodded toward a tournament gone top-heavy. The Big Ten at one point stood 10-0 in games and stands 12-4 with a quarter of the 16 lingerers. The Big 12 went 6-1 in the first round (with Kansas its lone fallen) and 10-3 in the first two and hogs another quarter. The SEC spent the year regarded as predominant, then got a record 14 tournament bids as a belief in its predominance, and now has landed half those teams in the 16 as a validation of that predominance. Calling to mind 2011, when Connecticut finished ninth in the Big East and then won the national championship, the SEC has taken its sharpened iron and has hurled a team in a four-way tie for ninth place at 8-10 into the 16. You know your tournament has gone chalk-prone when the upstart figure is John Calipari, participant in six previous Final Fours at three previous schools with three previous closing-Monday-night appearances and one previous national title.
Calipari weathered one hell of a tussle in Providence on Saturday afternoon — opposite Rick Pitino, who once recommended Calipari for the Massachusetts job — a game that might just last in memory even if its closing minutes rang with clangs. The wrestling match had so much effort and so much struggle that it looked not completely unlike Picasso's 'Guernica' even if none dare call it a masterpiece. 'I just saw we went 2 for 19 from three and won?' Calipari said. 'What in the world? Then I saw they were 2 for 22. Was it an ugly game? Or was it a game that was exciting? Like, both? An ugly exciting game. You know, I don't care. It could be an ugly-ugly game and I'm happy we're moving on.'
It's not an ugly-ugly tournament, but its first weekend, generally its best weekend, finished on the tamer side of mad, so now it must rely on promising Sweet 16 matches like BYU-Alabama and Florida-Maryland to keep up with its ballyhooed brethren of bygone years. Could it replicate 2008, when all four No. 1 seeds reached a Final Four, also in San Antonio? It could, even as Houston had to grapple with Gonzaga this past Saturday night and Florida breathed through a mighty struggle come Sunday with Connecticut, which is gone after two seasons of bracket dominance about as close to perfect as it gets. There will come a new champion two weeks hence, and that champion will come from an athletic mansion of a program that beat out other athletic mansions.
Hashtags

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


Boston Globe
2 hours ago
- Boston Globe
A 20-game win streak? Billerica boys' lacrosse built for a trip to Division 2 semifinals
Billerica's set defense was nearly impenetrable with Caden Canney, Daniel Kinsella, and senior captain AJ Parrella holding down the back line in front of junior goalie Nolan Heffernan (8 saves). Walpole (17-4) came in averaging over 13 goals per game, but could never get rolling, with five of its six goals coming unassisted. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'We knew defensively, we had to minimize their guys and did a really good job on that end,' said Parrella, 'It was just a really good team win.' Advertisement When Walpole started to chip away at a 6-2 halftime deficit in the third quarter, Gearin provided the response. The electric middie, who missed the majority of the season with a broken tibia, scored three times in the frame and provided the first four goals for his squad in the second half to keep the Wolves at bay. Gearin also provided an early spark with three assists in the first quarter. Advertisement '[Gearin has] been itching to go,' said Nickerson. 'He had some pent up energy and tonight was a big release for him. We knew it would be a good matchup for him against their defense, but I didn't think it would be this good. He was awesome tonight.' Division 1 Lincoln-Sudbury 14, Concord-Carlisle 5 — With a decisive third-quarter surge, the third-seeded Lincoln-Sudbury boys' lacrosse team pulled away from No. 6 Concord-Carlisle quarterfinal. Junior Brady Malo paced Lincoln-Sudbury (15-4) with three goals, and seniors Rex Friedholm, Nolan Martindale, and Will Fosnot added two apiece. 'Our seniors really stepped up today,' Lincoln-Sudbury coach Brian Vona said. Lincoln-Sudbury built a 3-2 edge through one quarter and 6-3 halftime advantage after a slick behind-the-back pass from Friedholm to Malo in the final seconds. The Harvard-bound Friedholm dictated the action throughout the night, and senior Dante Venuto was sharp at the face-off X. Senior Jason Swaim (3 goals) helped the Patriots (17-4) stay within striking distance, then Fosnot spearheaded a 6-2 third quarter for Lincoln-Sudbury to make it 12-5. The Patriots made some noise in the fourth, but the outcome had already been sealed. After quarterfinal exits each of the past two seasons, the Warriors are back in familiar territory. They'll face No. 2 St. John's Prep in the semifinals Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at Burlington High. 'I've never been to a Final Four game,' Friedholm said. 'A lot of these guys have never been. We were dying, we were dying. We were just clawing, scratching, everything we needed to do.' Division 2 State Advertisement Westwood 9, Longmeadow 8 — Senior Troy Fredrickson fired in the winner with 2:15 remaining (and assisted on another) to propel the 10th-seeded Wolverines (16-4) to the first semifinal appearance in program history. 'Today is one of the best days of my life,' an ecstatic coach Todd Zahurak said after the win. While there's not a singular star on the roster, 'we have a bunch of 'A' players that nobody really knows about,' said Zahurak. Junior attackman Sam Cochran had a trio of goals and classmate Jaden Pollack had 12 saves as the Wolverines completed a nearly 200-mile trip to upset No. 2 Longmeadow (17-4). Zahurak credited his defense, including junior Ryan Williams and senior Kyle Harvey for keeping a solid Longmeadow attack off the board. 'This group just really believes in each other, and they play for each other,' said Zahurak. Corresponents Lenny Rowe and Chloe Wojtanik contributed. Nate Weitzer can be reached at
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Duke Blue Devils Suffer Major Coaching Loss on Saturday
Duke Blue Devils Suffer Major Coaching Loss on Saturday originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Duke Blue Devils have been consistently competing for national titles and are known as one of the best college basketball programs in the country. Advertisement Last season, Duke boasted of one of the best teams in the nation, starring freshmen Cooper Flagg, Kon Knueppel and Khaman Maluach. The trio led Duke to the Final Four, where they eventually lost to Houston and finished the season with a 35-4 record. After a tremendous year for the Blue Devils, head coach Jon Scheyer is back at the whiteboard, working to find a way to return to the promise land. He will be working with a brand new team next season, given the departure of those three freshmen and other stars such as Tyrese Proctor and Sion James. Scheyer and the Blue Devils will also be looking for a replacement for Will Stephens, the team's Executive Director of Sports Performance. On Saturday, Stephens retired from the Duke Blue Devils. Advertisement View the original article to see embedded media. According to the Duke Blue Devils' official retirement announcement, Will Stephens spent 27 seasons at Duke. He helped lead the program to three national titles and seven Final Four appearances. Duke Blue Devils head coach Jon Scheyer looks to working with new players and Donnan-Imagn Images In the Duke Blue Devils' new post on Will Stephens, Flagg and Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum commented on his impact. "Coach Will is incredibly impactful for our program and everything that he did for us all year long," Flagg said. "He always brought the energy, always got us better, and always had us ready and excited to come into the gym every day." "Coach Will had a big impact on my career," Tatum said. "He really helped my mindset. He really helped me transform my body. He got our whole team ready mentally and physically at the highest level." Advertisement Related: Mike Krzyzewski Names Best Player in Duke Basketball History Without Hesitation Related: South Carolina Turns Heads After Team GPA Under Dawn Staley Surfaces This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 7, 2025, where it first appeared.


Boston Globe
4 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Behind standout Bella Camacho, No. 2 Wayland girls' tennis soars into Division 2 semifinals
Elena Tan (6-0, 6-0) and Olivia Todd (6-0, 6-0) also coasted at singles for Wayland (13-5). Arya Samaratunga and Yumi Niimi earned a 6-3, 6-1 victory at No. 1 doubles, and Emi Niimi and Ava Knourenko grinded out a 6-3, 6-2 win at No. 2 doubles. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The Warriors, who fell in the quarterfinals last year, were delighted to break through. Advertisement 'I'm just glad that all the work they've put in from Day 1, talking about getting to the Final Four and talking about winning, it's within their grasp,' said Wayland coach Jason Tassinari. 'I'm proud of them, and very thankful that we have more time with this great team.' While Duxbury's season ends at 16-5, Wayland gets ready to face No. 3 Notre Dame (Hingham) in the semifinals (TBA). Hingham 5, Amherst-Pelham 0 — In their quarterfinal sweep of No. 5 Amherst-Pelham (14-4), the fourth-seeded Harborwomen (20-1) took each match in straight sets, led by the second doubles duo of Cassie McCabe and Maddie Cusak with a 6-0, 6-0 win. Advertisement In singles, Sam Rudduick (6-2, 6-1), Sanya Khadivi (6-4, 6-3), and Hannah Mello (6-1, 6-1) rolled, and the first doubles pairing of Sammy Price and Gabi Magner won, 6-0, 6-1. Hingham will battle top-seeded Longmeadow in the semifinals (TBA). Division 4 State Lynnfield 5, Nantucket 0 — Paige Martino, Lily Alves, and Kami Khiat all won in straight sets in a quarterfinals victory for the top-seeded Pioneers (18-2) against No. 8 Nantucket (10-7). Lynnfield advances to play No. 4 Hamilton-Wenham (16-2) in the semifinals Wednesday (TBA). Boys' tennis Division 4 State Lynnfield 4, Mystic Valley 1 — At second singles, Shlok Kudrimoti came back after losing twice to his opponent in previous meetings, yet secured the third point for the second-seeded Pioneers (16-6) in a quarterfinals win over No. 7 Mystic Valley (12-10). Lenny Rowe and Cam Kerry contributed. Trevor Hass can be reached at