logo
Yahoo Sports AM: The Sweet 16 is set

Yahoo Sports AM: The Sweet 16 is set

Yahoo24-03-2025

Yahoo Sports AM is our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it every weekday morning.
⚽️ Nations League champs: Mexico beat Panama, 2-1, in a dramatic Nations League final to win the four-year-old competition for the first time. In the third-place game, the USMNT stumbled again with its second straight clunker in a 2-1 loss to Canada.
🏀 Coaching moves: Virginia is hiring VCU's Ryan Odom — who led UMBC over the Cavaliers in 2018's historic 16-over-1 upset — as their next head coach … Texas is hiring Xavier's Sean Miller to replace Rodney Terry, who they fired after losing to, yes, Xavier in the First Four.
🎾 Djokovic passes Nadal: Novak Djokovic keeps finding new records to break. This time, his third-round win at the Miami Open was the 411th of his career in an ATP Masters 1000 event, passing Rafael Nadal for the most all-time.
🏒 Badgers are champs again: Wisconsin won its record-extending eighth women's NCAA hockey national championship, beating Ohio State, 4-3 (OT), in their third straight title game matchup.
⚾️ What's wrong with Mookie? Dodgers superstar Mookie Betts hasn't played since before last week's Tokyo Series due to a mysterious illness that's left him unable to keep any food down. "My body's just kind of eating itself," he said, as he's fallen from 175 to 157 pounds.
It took almost the whole weekend, but on Sunday night the Madness finally came to March.
ICYMI: After Colorado State nailed a go-ahead three with six seconds left, Maryland's Derik Queen hit the first buzzer-beater of this year's tournament to give the Terps a 72-71 win over the Rams and send them into the Sweet 16. Oregon nearly pushed Arizona to a similar end in the final game of the weekend, but ultimately ran out of time in a thrilling loss to their former Pac-12 foe.
Powerhouses dance on: No. 12 Colorado State's loss means that this year's Sweet 16 is about as chalky as it gets, with just one team left lower than a 6-seed. And No. 10 Arkansas, an SEC program coached by Hall of Famer John Calipari, isn't exactly a Cinderella.
Speaking of the SEC: The league that sent a record 14 teams to the tournament has now sent a record seven teams to the Sweet 16, eclipsing the mark set by the ACC in 2016. That's right: half of the SEC's tournament teams are still dancing into the second weekend.
The Big Ten (four teams left), Big 12 (four) and ACC (one) are the only other conferences with a team left in the tournament, shattering the previous record for the fewest leagues represented in the Sweet 16 (seven).
Sweet 16 matchups:
Thursday: No. 1 Florida vs. No. 4 Maryland (San Francisco); No. 1 Duke vs. No. 4 Arizona (Newark); No. 2 Alabama vs. No. 6 BYU (Newark); No. 3 Texas Tech vs. No. 10 Arkansas (San Francisco)
Friday: No. 1 Houston vs. No. 4 Purdue (Indianapolis); No. 1 Auburn vs. No. 5 Michigan (Atlanta); No. 2 Tennessee vs. No. 3 Kentucky (Indianapolis); No. 2 Michigan State vs. No. 6 Ole Miss (Atlanta)
Field notes:
Streak snapped: Gonzaga's narrow loss to Houston snapped the Bulldogs' run of nine straight Sweet 16 appearances, tied with North Carolina (1985-93) and Duke (1998-2006) for the longest such streak since the tournament expanded to 64 games in 1985.
No three-peat: UConn's quest for an unprecedented three-peat ended in painful fashion, as the Huskies led top-seeded Florida for nearly the entire second half of the Gators' eventual 77-75 win.
Historic matchup coming: Kentucky has played no opponent more than Tennessee, which it has faced 241 times since 1910. But the two SEC foes have never met in the NCAA tournament… until now. That game is gonna be good.
Coach Cal's resurgence: John Calipari has more NCAA tournament wins in his first season with Arkansas (2) than he had across his final four seasons with Kentucky (1).
Title odds: Duke (+225 at BetMGM) is now the clear favorite to win the championship ahead of Florida (+350), Houston (+500) and Auburn (+525), the only other teams with better than 17-to-1 odds.
The first round of the women's tournament made all sorts of history, none of which was good for the underdogs.
Favorites flex their muscles: No team seeded 11 or lower won a first-round game for the first time since the field expanded to 64 in 1994. And the average margin of victory was 26.5 points, the highest of any round in tournament history, per ESPN's Michael Voepel.
By the numbers: Those blowouts — which included three 60-point shellackings (plus another two by 50+ and three more by 40+) — came courtesy of both high-octane offenses and lock-down defenses.
A record six teams scored at least 100 points in the first round (UConn, LSU, Notre Dame, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas). In fact, that ties the record for the most 100-point games across an entire tournament.
Duke and USC held their opponents to just 25 points, the second-fewest in any NCAA tournament game (Howard scored 21 against South Carolina in 2022).
Things are looking up, though: With those underdogs eliminated, the second round has thus far been much more competitive. The average margin of victory across Sunday's eight games was 11.5 points, with just one decided by more than 20.
Perfect bracket tracker: Only 10 perfect brackets remain in Yahoo Sports' Women's Bracket Mayhem.
Sun Valley, Idaho — Lindsey Vonn finished second in the super-G at the World Cup season finale on Saturday, earning her first podium since 2018 just a few months after making her comeback at age 40.
Palm Harbor, Florida — Viktor Hovland entered this weekend's Valspar Championship having missed three straight cuts; he left it with his seventh PGA Tour win after birdieing three of his final five holes to rally past Justin Thomas for a one-stroke victory.
Homestead, Florida — Kyle Larson used a late surge on Sunday to win at the Miami-Homestead Speedway, becoming the 30th driver ever to win 30 NASCAR Cup Series races.
Philadelphia* — Oklahoma State's Wyatt Hendrickson stunned Olympic gold medalist and two-time NCAA champion Gable Steveson on Saturday to win the NCAA heavyweight wrestling title, snapping Steveson's 70-match win streak and scoring the only takedown against him all season.
*Also on Saturday… Penn State's Carter Starocci became the first Division I wrestler ever to win five individual NCAA titles, moving up a weight class to 184 pounds after winning the last four championships at 174 pounds.
Shanghai — McLaren's Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris finished 1-2 at the Chinese Grand Prix, giving the reigning Constructors' Champions two straight wins to open the season. Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc, meanwhile, were both disqualified — a new low for the Scuderia.
Nanjing, China — Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen made history over the weekend, joining Ethiopia's Haile Gebrselassie (1999) as the only men to win gold in both the 1500m and 3000m at the same World Indoor Championships.
Lisbon, Portugal — One of these days, Cristiano Ronaldo will stop scoring goals. But that day has not come yet, as the ageless wonder scored his 929th career goal in Portugal's 5-2 win over Denmark on Sunday, pushing them into the UEFA Nations League semifinals.
York, England — The men's Six Nations Championship ended last week, but the women's edition is just getting started. England, seeking their seventh straight title, opened with a dominant win over Italy. Elsewhere, France beat Ireland and Scotland beat Wales.
The second round of the women's tournament ends today, and the eight-game slate features two unanimous first-team All-Americans (UConn's Paige Bueckers and USC's JuJu Watkins), the nation's leading scorer (FSU's Ta'Niya Latson) and the nation's leading rebounder (LSU's Aneesah Morrow).
No. 2 NC State vs. No. 7 Michigan State (12pm ET, ESPN)
No. 1 Texas vs. No. 8 Illinois (2pm, ESPN)
No. 3 Oklahoma vs. No. 6 Iowa (4pm, ESPN)
No. 4 Maryland vs. No. 5 Alabama (5pm, ESPN2)
No. 3 LSU vs. No. 6 Florida State (6pm, ESPN)
No. 3 North Carolina vs. No. 6 West Virginia (7pm, ESPN2)
No. 2 UConn vs. No. 10 South Dakota State (8pm, ESPN)
No. 1 USC vs. No. 9 Mississippi State (10pm, ESPN)
More to watch:
⛳️ TGL: New York vs. Atlanta (9pm, ESPN2) … Opening match* in the best-of-three Finals.
🏀 NBA: Lakers at Magic (7pm, NBA); Bucks at Suns (10pm, NBA)
🏒 NHL: Wild at Stars (8pm, ESPN+) … A battle of Western Conference playoff contenders.
⚾️ Exhibition: Red Sox at Sultanes de Monterrey (9:10pm, MLB) … First of a two-game series in Mexico at Estadio de Béisbol Monterrey.
*Tonight's lineups: Justin Thomas, Billy Horschel and Patrick Cantlay (Atlanta) vs. Xander Schauffele, Rickie Fowler and Cameron Young (New York).
Virginia's historic loss to UMBC in 2018 is back in the news after the Cavaliers hired Ryan Odom, UMBC's then-head coach, to take over in Charlottesville.
Question: Who is the only other 1-seed to lose to a 16 in the NCAA tournament, and which 16 seed got the win?
Hint: 2023
Answer at the bottom.
.
.
.
.
.
Trivia answer: No. 16 Fairleigh Dickinson beat No. 1 Purdue, 63-58
We hope you enjoyed this edition of Yahoo Sports AM, our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox every weekday morning.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

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

USA Today

timean 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.

Alex Cora optimistic about the return of Wilyer Abreu next week
Alex Cora optimistic about the return of Wilyer Abreu next week

Boston Globe

time2 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Alex Cora optimistic about the return of Wilyer Abreu next week

'This is what we thought it was going to be [timeline-wise],' said Cora, who referenced Abreu participating in weight-room activities. 'We talked to him [Monday], no chance we were going to play shorthanded for three or four days. This is the best move for him and obviously the roster.' Advertisement That tracks with the initial thought from Red Sox decision-makers that Abreu's injury maybe wouldn't require a stint on the injured list at all. When they realized Monday afternoon Abreu needed more than a day or two of recovery, they opted to play it safe and put him on the IL, prompting the call-up of Anthony, regarded as the top prospect in baseball. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up If Abreu indeed comes back quickly, it would raise questions about playing time, outfield arrangement and roster construction. The answers should depend on who is playing to what level of success by the time Abreu is ready. In Abreu's stead, Anthony is due to stick in right field, though he played all three outfield spots in the minors. Advertisement Slow for Slaten Reliever Justin Slaten (right shoulder inflammation) remains stuck in a shutdown period, according to Cora, and is not close to returning. He has been on the IL since June 1, his second arm injury in 11 months. 'It's slower than we expected, let's put it that way,' Cora said. 'He hasn't thrown. He hasn't reacted to treatment the way we expected. It's a slow process.' Slaten had served as a key late-inning option for Cora, who has had to lean more heavily on others in Slaten's absence. 'It's a big [loss],' Cora said. 'Hopefully this is something we can figure out in the upcoming days and get him going. Right now, it doesn't seem like it's going to be soon.' Numbers game Anthony, who wore No. 48 in his debut Monday, switched to No. 19 on Tuesday. He said clubhouse manager Tom McLaughlin gave it to him because he had worn that number in Triple A. Among the noteworthy former Sox who have worn No. 19: Jackie Bradley Jr. (2017-20 and 2022), Koji Uehara (2013-16), Josh Beckett (2006-12), Fred Lynn (1974-80) and Moe Berg (1935). Most recently, it had been worn last month by Middleborough native Sean Newcomb . Left out versus lefties Cora reiterated his plan to mostly not let Anthony as well as Marcelo Mayer bat against lefthanded pitchers, preferring the righthanded bats of Rob Refsnyder and Romy Gonzalez , respectively, in those spots. Even if Anthony in particular fared well against southpaws in the minors this year, Cora explained that there is a significant difference between those lefthanders and the lefties in the majors. So his righty/lefty splits aren't particularly meaningful. 'The gap is big. It's very big,' Cora said. 'The lefties here are real lefties. There's stuff here, especially guys in the bullpen … If you have stuff, you're going to be here. You're not going to be in Triple A or Double A. Advertisement 'The kids, they understand … They're all in to win it. They know. We will keep doing that.' Up in arms Of the 35 relievers who have appeared in 30 or more games this season, three are Red Sox: Greg Weissert (31), Brennan Bernardino (31) and Aroldis Chapman (30). Chapman pitched for a third day in a row — for the first time this season — Monday. 'You're going to go through stretches that you don't pitch,' Cora said. 'It seems like we've been in this stretch that everybody pitches every day for a month now.' . . . Seymour's homecoming The Rays optioned lefthander Ian Seymour , a St. John's of Shrewsbury product, back to Triple A Durham, a day after he picked up the win in his major league debut in Tampa Bay's 10-8 defeat of the Red Sox in 11 innings. Seymour pitched the two extra innings, allowing a lone unearned run and no hits . . . Lefthander Chris Murphy joined Triple A Worcester to continue his rehab assignment. He had Tommy John surgery in April 2024 . . . Tanner Houck (right flexor pronator strain) threw his second bullpen session Tuesday and said he is scheduled for another Friday . . . Tampa Bay's Zack Littell , who will start Wednesday, on his five days with the Red Sox in 2023: 'Every now and again, I'll see a picture of me in a Red Sox jersey and it's weird. It's almost like it didn't happen, but it did happen and there's proof.' Advertisement Tim Healey can be reached at

How to Watch United States vs Switzerland: Live Stream Men's International Friendly, TV Channel
How to Watch United States vs Switzerland: Live Stream Men's International Friendly, TV Channel

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

How to Watch United States vs Switzerland: Live Stream Men's International Friendly, TV Channel

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The USMNT takes on Switzerland on Tuesday in an international friendly at Geodis Park. This game serves as a send-off match for the team ahead of the CONCACAF Gold Cup later this month. Brian White #8 of the United States advances the ball during the second half against Costa Rica during an international friendly at Inter&Co Stadium on January 22, 2025 in Orlando, Florida. Brian White #8 of the United States advances the ball during the second half against Costa Rica during an international friendly at Inter&Co Stadium on January 22, 2025 in Orlando, Florida. John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF How to Watch United States vs Switzerland Date: Tuesday, June 10, 2025 Time: 8:00 PM EDT Channel: NBC Universo Stream: Fubo (Try for free) The USMNT comes into this matchup on a bit of a slide, losing its last three matches. That streak began in March with a loss to Panama in the Nations League semifinals, followed by a 2-1 loss to Canada in the Nations League third-place game. The team played on June 7 in East Hartford in a friendly match against Turkey, losing 2-1. Jack McGlynn scored in the first minute of the game, but that was all the USMNT could manage in the matchup. Switzerland is playing its second friendly this month, beating Mexico 4-2 in Salt Lake City on June 7th. Four different Swiss players scored goals in the victory, which secured the nation's first consecutive victories since early 2024. The Swiss team's victory also ended an eight-match winless streak as the team struggled in the second half of 2024. Tune in to NBC Universo on Tuesday night to watch this game between the USMNT and Switzerland. Live stream the United States vs Switzerland with Fubo: Start your free trial now! Regional restrictions may apply. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store