Home Blog Page 183

College football spring football: Notes around the country

0


Texas: Yes, quarterback Arch Manning is back and should be better in his second season as full-time starter, but his supporting cast has also gotten an upgrade. Coach Steve Sarkisian is expecting the Longhorns to have a more explosive offense this fall, “and that’s when we’re at our best,” he said. The two running backs out of the transfer portal — Hollywood Smothers (NC State) and Raleek Brown (ASU/USC) — are versatile enough to catch the ball out of the backfield, “which is something we like to do that we didn’t have at our disposal a year ago,” Sarkisian said. The addition of transfer receiver Cam Coleman (Auburn) on the outside will create a deep threat to alleviate some of the pressure from Ryan Wingo.

“There’s some real pieces in place that we feel very confident about,” Sarkisian said. “I think we will be a better running football team, but I definitely think we’re going to be a more explosive offensive football team, which is something that we’re accustomed to being.”

Auburn: First-year Auburn coach Alex Golesh is excited about his linebackers, his defensive line and the safeties. He’s curious about his corners. Offensively, Golesh is excited about quarterback Byrum Brown coming with him from South Florida, and he has a talented group of running backs to work with.

As for the offensive line?

“I think if you asked me every year for the last 20 if I was nervous about any group, it’d be the O-line group,” Golesh said. “Nervous in the sense kind of in the same breath as the corner room — excited to see who the five are, what depth we have, and then truly build a system around what we’re good at, but it’s virtually a whole new group.”

Boise State: After winning three straight Mountain West titles, Boise State is headed to the Pac-12 this summer, where coach Spencer Danielson said “it’s going to be even more difficult” to reach the CFP.

“You’ve got really good coaches, really good players, and everyone’s investing in football and continuing to push forward to be that fifth conference,” he said, referring to the pecking order behind the Big Ten, SEC, ACC and Big 12. “That’s a big push, and I really believe it’s going to be that.”

The Broncos have a chance to make a huge playoff statement early with their season opener at Oregon — a game Danielson said the staff will start preparing for in May.

“I’ve been very open with our team about this game,” he said. “We’ve played them a lot in the past. We are very open about this game and the task at hand — Dante Moore coming back, what they’re going to be ranked — we’re just not running from it.”

UNLV: Boise State has been a constant contender for a CFP spot and beat UNLV twice last year to win its third straight Mountain West Conference title. But the Broncos are moving to the Pac-12 this summer, which means UNLV could have an easier path to the conference title — and in turn a CFP bid — in just the second season under coach Dan Mullen.

“Goal No. 1 is the one we can control, which is winning the Mountain West championship,” Mullen said, “and then hopefully we’ll be able by doing that to put ourselves in a position for the playoff. That was the idea behind scheduling Memphis and North Texas. I was trying to get two of the top American teams on the schedule. We play Cal, so we have a Power 4 game, and we have two data points against American conference teams. That’s a schedule that gives us the opportunity to have a résumé to get into the College Football Playoff.”

BYU: Coach Kalani Sitake wanted to take a minute to remind everyone that his starting quarterback, Bear Bachmeier, was a true freshman last year who didn’t arrive on campus until June. He learned the playbook during the season, which meant the staff couldn’t really “open it up” until the very end.

Now?

“Now that he knows the offense, it’s like night-and-day difference,” Sitaki said. “It just helped that he was able to win us a lot of games last year while he was learning. Now I’m excited to see what happens with him knowing the offense. The spring ball has already been different because he’s not learning — he’s refining, which is good, but that comes with a lot of expectations, too.”

The entire team is facing lofty expectations after being on the brink of a CFP berth last year as the Big 12 runner-up. BYU doesn’t face Texas Tech this year but does have an Oct. 17 home game against Notre Dame.

“I think Indiana has really shown what you can do with great strategy and great culture and playing a team game,” Sitake said. “That’s been a good example for not just us, but everyone out there — ‘Hey, you can do some really good things if you’re playing cohesively as a team.’ So that’s a goal, but we’ve got a long ways to go, a lot of work to do.”

Florida: First-year coach Jon Sumrall said he isn’t “in awe” about entering the SEC during its first season in a nine-game league schedule, but he certainly has respect for the difficulty of it. He faced Ole Miss twice last year as Tulane’s head coach — including in the first round of the CFP — and in 2024 he lost at Oklahoma 34-19. He also lost to Florida that season, 33-8, in the Gasparilla Bowl.

Now he has more resources, a bigger staff (“What the hell do I need all these people for” he joked), and a Power 4 transfer quarterback from Georgia Tech in Aaron Philo, who is competing with Tramell Jones Jr. for the starting job.

“It’s probably going to be Philo or Tramell Jones Jr.,” Sumrall said, “but I’ve had this happen before where I thought it was going to be one guy or another and then someone else emerges, so I’m not assuming anything.”

SMU: SMU senior linebacker Alex Kilgore, one of the Mustangs’ team captains, recently told coach Rhett Lashlee that this year’s team has a similar vibe to the one in 2024 that went undefeated during regular-season ACC play and earned a spot in the CFP.

“I think we have the making of a group that – just from those intangibles – is going to have the things we need,” Lashlee said. “And I think we’ve upgraded our talent. So that’s another win.”

Heisman hopeful quarterback Kevin Jennings returns, and the staff lured in key players from the portal and its recruiting class, particularly on defense. Lashlee said he expects the corners to be better and the defense as a whole to be better against the pass. They also return the most experience they’ve had on the interior of the defensive line, he said, and should be stronger up the middle and deeper on the edge. SMU should have a more consistent running game, and if they can navigate a tricky start to the season – and a November trip to Notre Dame – Lashlee said this could be the best team he’s had yet.

“Look, I’d rather you tell everybody we’re gonna be terrible,” he deadpanned, “but we’ve gone three straight years now where SMU either started the season in the top 25, finished in the top 25 or both. … I think we have the potential to be the best team we’ve had since we’ve been here.”

Playoff talk

When leaders of the College Football Playoff decided to stay with the current 12-team format, the SEC coaches weren’t thrilled — especially as they prepare to enter their first season in a nine-game league schedule.

“Sitting at our conference meetings a couple of weeks ago, that was everybody’s bitch, was, ‘Man, we went to a nine-game schedule, but we didn’t get a 16-team playoff, and we’re all being evaluated on whether we made the playoff,'” an SEC coach said. “That’s how everybody sees it. And by everybody, I mean the entire room, from who was in the playoff to the teams that weren’t. Everybody sees it the same way.”

Many coaches want to know specifically how the committee weighs certain metrics such as scoring margin and schedule strength — factors that have been subjective for all 12 years of the system. One asked if he should keep his starters in and run up the score or if it’s OK to take them out and develop younger players.

“In the NFL, you know who gets in and you know who doesn’t because of the way the structure of the playoff is set up,” another SEC coach said. “Ours is set up so poorly and it’s up to a committee to decide who gets in? You have to give us something to say, ‘This is what you need to do to earn more points in favor to get in.’ The strength of schedule is bulls—. That doesn’t matter.”

USC coach Lincoln Riley said he’s in favor of a larger format that would give schools “a little bit more leeway in scheduling,” because right now, it’s more uneven than ever.

“I do feel like one of the weaknesses of the system is still the scheduling inequities,” Riley said. “I think the gaps right now in scheduling and college football have never been bigger. You’ve sacrificed some of these nonconference games and then the Big Ten and SEC have added all of these really good teams and are now a long ways ahead of these other leagues. They just are. It is what it is. I’m not saying there aren’t good teams in the other leagues — there are — but it’s more different than it’s ever been.

“Something’s got to give,” Riley added. “Our group has been proactive about finding solutions. Some groups sit there and say no and try to find something wrong and don’t really provide any kinds of solutions for things that need to be fixed. I’m glad that we’re being active.”

Although the Big Ten’s push for 24 teams remains on hold for now, decision-makers in every conference have become more open to the idea. The question is if enough SEC leaders will latch on.

“Let’s see how this season plays out,” one SEC source said. “There may be a change in our attitude depending on how this plays out, that we may be more amenable to 24 than we are at this time right now. I think you’ll have some schools in our conference that are going to say, ‘We think 24 will be good.’ I think some coaches in our conference would like that because most of our teams, if you have a decent year, you’re going to be in the top 24.”



Source link

Benjamin Netanyahu tries to dispel viral rumors of his death, fueled by AI paranoia

0


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has become the subject of a widely debunked but ongoing claim that he is dead, a particularly high-profile example of the clouded and exceedingly fraught information environment created by the mix of AI and social media.

Social media users began to speculate about the Israeli leader’s well-being after footage of a recent televised address began circulating online last week, in which Netanyahu gave an update on the war in Iran.

Some viewers suggested the video was AI-generated, noting that at one point, Netanyahu’s hand appears to have six fingers, a common artifact of generative artificial intelligence output. Screen grabs of his hand became widespread on platforms like X.

Fact-checking website PolitiFact rated the six-finger claims false, writing that “a trick of light likely made part of his palm appear to be an extra finger.”

But unsubstantiated rumors of Netanyahu’s death continued to spread, with TikTokers and meme accounts analyzing subsequent posts from his account.

Netanyahu, 76, has made few pre-announced public appearances since the war broke out, with Iran having vowed to target him personally in retaliation for the killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Mojtaba Khamenei, Ali Khamenei’s son and the new supreme leader of Iran, has also not been seen in public since the U.S. began its war on the country and has similarly been the subject of speculation about his health.

While there is nothing to suggest Netanyahu is currently unwell, his health has also loomed over Israeli politics before, with his emergency heart surgery to fit a pacemaker in 2023, as well as a prostate removal surgery in 2024.

Netanyahu first tried to shut down the rumors Sunday by posting a video of him grabbing coffee at a cafe in Jerusalem, joking in the clip: “I am dying for coffee.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Prime Minister Benjamin NetanyahuGovernment Press Office

Despite the proof of life attempt, users continued to parse through each frame of that video for signs of possible AI manipulation.

The confusion around AI content comes as many social media platforms, which pay creators for engagement, have given users incentives to recycle old photos and videos to ramp up emotion around viral news moments. The amalgam of misinformation, experts have said, is creating a heightened erosion of trust online — especially when it mixes with authentic evidence.

Speculation about the health of world leaders has also become relatively common online, with some social media users last year theorizing that President Donald Trump was having medical issues due to some signs of physical issues observed in photos and videos and a brief stretch in which he was not seen in public. Trump rebuffed those rumors.

On Tuesday, Netanyahu posted a video with Mike Huckabee, the U.S. ambassador to Israel, again referencing the ongoing speculation.

In the video, Huckabee is seen walking with Netanyahu as he tells the prime minister that President Donald Trump asked him to “come and make sure you were OK.”

“Yes, I’m alive,” Netanyahu responded in the video. He emphasized that he and Trump “shake hands with five fingers in each hand,” before going on to praise his military operations and the U.S. government’s support.

Netanyahu then showed Huckabee a “punch card” depicting two names he has “erased,” plus more he plans to target — referring to Israel’s announcement that it killed the Islamic Republic’s top security official, Ali Larijani, and the head of its Basij force, Gholam Reza Soleimani. Iranian authorities later confirmed their deaths.

Huckabee later followed up with his own post, which included an image of him posing with the Israeli leader.

“He sure looked alive & was in great spirits,” Huckabee wrote. “News to the contrary? Phony as a Kosher pork chop.”





Source link

Arrest made nearly 15 years after Iowa realtor was killed at open house

0



Police have made an arrest in the murder of an Iowa realtor Ashley Okland nearly 15 years after her death.Video above: Full statement from Ashley Okland’s sister, Brittany BruceKristin Elizabeth Ramsey, 53, is charged with first-degree murder. She is being held on a $2 million cash-only bond.Okland, 27, was found dead with two gunshot wounds inside a model townhome where she was holding an open house on April 8, 2011.The 911 call came in on a Friday afternoon around 2 p.m. Even though the crime happened in the middle of the afternoon, the case went unsolved for nearly 15 years. ‘Feels like a long time’Sister station KCCI spoke with Josh Okland, Ashley’s brother, in 2025, around the 14th anniversary of his sister’s death.”When I think about the last time I saw her, yeah, 14 years feels like a long time,” said Josh Okland.He’s spent the last decade and a half wondering why someone would want to kill his sister. He vividly remembers being with her the day before she died.”April 7th, we spent the entire afternoon together. Her real estate career was booming, and she hired me to be her assistant to work on small stuff for her, make pamphlets. So we sat at Panera in Ankeny for four hours, and she was training me, but yeah, I will never forget that day,” said Josh Okland.He had no indication that anything was wrong or that she was afraid of anybody. “No. Not at all. And we were very close. If there was something going on, she would have told me,” he said.Ashley Okland’s legacy is permanently planted in Ewing Park, where a playground for children with special needs is built in her honor.”I am proud to be her brother. She impacted so many people in such a positive way and such a good role model for a short 27-year life. Her legacy lives on,” said Josh Okland.The investigationIn 2025, the West Des Moines Police Department told KCCI that investigators had interviewed hundreds of people and looked into more than a thousand leads in the case. In 2024, when Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird announced the state’s new Cold Case Unit, Josh Okland was there with several other families seeking answers and justice.

Police have made an arrest in the murder of an Iowa realtor Ashley Okland nearly 15 years after her death.

Video above: Full statement from Ashley Okland’s sister, Brittany Bruce

Kristin Elizabeth Ramsey, 53, is charged with first-degree murder. She is being held on a $2 million cash-only bond.

Okland, 27, was found dead with two gunshot wounds inside a model townhome where she was holding an open house on April 8, 2011.

The 911 call came in on a Friday afternoon around 2 p.m. Even though the crime happened in the middle of the afternoon, the case went unsolved for nearly 15 years.

‘Feels like a long time’

Sister station KCCI spoke with Josh Okland, Ashley’s brother, in 2025, around the 14th anniversary of his sister’s death.

“When I think about the last time I saw her, yeah, 14 years feels like a long time,” said Josh Okland.

He’s spent the last decade and a half wondering why someone would want to kill his sister. He vividly remembers being with her the day before she died.

“April 7th, we spent the entire afternoon together. Her real estate career was booming, and she hired me to be her assistant to work on small stuff for her, make pamphlets. So we sat at Panera in Ankeny for four hours, and she was training me, but yeah, I will never forget that day,” said Josh Okland.

He had no indication that anything was wrong or that she was afraid of anybody. “No. Not at all. And we were very close. If there was something going on, she would have told me,” he said.

Ashley Okland’s legacy is permanently planted in Ewing Park, where a playground for children with special needs is built in her honor.

“I am proud to be her brother. She impacted so many people in such a positive way and such a good role model for a short 27-year life. Her legacy lives on,” said Josh Okland.

The investigation

In 2025, the West Des Moines Police Department told KCCI that investigators had interviewed hundreds of people and looked into more than a thousand leads in the case. In 2024, when Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird announced the state’s new Cold Case Unit, Josh Okland was there with several other families seeking answers and justice.



Source link

NASCAR Driver Suspended for Homophobic Remarks: What Did He Say?

0


A NASCAR driver has been suspended indefinitely after making homophobic comments about another driver on a live stream. Daniel Dye will need to undergo sensitivity training. He has also apologized.

What Did Daniel Dye Say To Get Suspended?

Daniel Dye was opening trading cards during a livestream on Whatnot when he began talking about IndyCar driver David Malukas, runner-up in the Indianapolis 500 last year. He recalled meeting Malukas but not knowing who he was or his resume.

Someone from off camera suggests that Malukas “plays for the other team” and at first Dye didn’t comment on that. Soon after he begins an impersonation.

“He’s like, ‘Oh my gosh, yes, we race Indianapolis, too. Love Indianapolis. And Roger Penske. I love Roger. Love you, Roger!’”

Dye’s voice was higher and included a lisp while impersonating the other driver. He keeps opening and flipping through cards as he speaks.

“As soon as I start doing a David Malukas gay voice, I hit a gold (card). So let’s keep it going.”

Those comments led to a suspension from his Kaulig Racing team. NASCAR reporter Bob Pockrass notes the specific rule Dye broke with his speech in a post to X.

Soon after Dye issued a long apology to Malukas and anyone offended.

Read More: Denny Hamlin Gets First Win After Father’s Death

I have some close friends in the LGBTQ+ community who I would never want to feel less of themselves because of what I said, and that’s exactly why I should hold myself to a higher standard. In talking with them, I realize that a true friend would know better than to act the way I did and for that I need to be a better friend. What I said doesn’t reflect how I feel about them or anyone else.

 

Is David Malukas Gay?

Several outlets share that Malukas is dating a civil engineer and model named Kamila Jurkus. Both driver and girlfriend have active social media profiles and often share photos of one another.

At this time, neither has commented.

Who Is NASCAR Driver Daniel Dye?

Daniel Dye is a NASCAR truck series driver who signed with Kaulig Racing last fall. Per MotorsportsStats, he has never won in 47 races. This year, his best finish was 15th in Las Vegas.

The New York Times points out that Dye has courted controversy before. In 2022 he was arrested on battery charges after hitting a high school classmate in the groin. The charge was later dissmised after he agreed to community service and anger management.

13 NASCAR Drivers With Smokin’ Hot Wives

These 13 NASCAR drivers really outkicked their coverage.

Learn how racers like Jeff Gordon, Brad Keslowski, Harrison Burton and Dale Earnhardt Jr. met their wives. Many of these women have modeling or dance experience.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes

Best Country Songs About NASCAR

Country music and NASCAR have a long history! Many fans of the genre just so happen to be fans of the motorsport and so are many of the artists themselves. So it’s no surprise there are a few songs inspired by racing.

We’ve rounded up eight of the best country songs about NASCAR.

Gallery Credit: Jess Rose





Source link

Opinion | Kissinger Helped Create the World’s Oil Reserves

0




He deserves thanks for the IEA and its strategic petroleum stocks.



Source link

NCAA bracket 2026: Ranking every March Madness tournament first-round game

0



The most glorious weekend of the sports calendar is upon us, as the 2026 NCAA Tournament begins, in earnest, on Thursday with first round action spanning from the lunch hour on the east coast until after midnight. Then we get to do it all again on Friday as the field of 64 gets whittled to 32.

This year’s 1-32 ranking of the first round games features a few distinct sections. The four No. 1 seed vs. No. 16 seed games are slotted as the “worst” since they bring minimal upset potential and are likely going to be blowouts. Of course, they also include the possibility of something legendary transpiring, but it’s highly improbable. In fact, the first nine games on the list are lopsided seeding matchups. At least one will inevitably produce an exciting finish, but it’s hard to know where it will happen.

The next distinction is in the 10-13 range, where four teams with stud freshmen are featured. Tennessee’s Nate Ament, BYU’s AJ Dybantsa, Arkansas‘ Darius Acuff and KansasDarryn Peterson are all worth watching in games that carry at least some upset potential.

Finally, games 9-1 are all brimming with intrigue. Most of them should be bangers. The top two feature blue bloods that appear to be in danger against double-digit seeds from outside the high-major structure.

Here’s the full 32-1 ranking of the first round’s best games in descending order from worst to best.

Clock is ticking for Brackets! Get back in your pools and enter our Bracket Challenge for your chance to win a dream trip to the 2027 Final FourⓇ.

32. (1) Florida vs. (16) Prairie View A&M/Lehigh

Friday | 9:25 p.m. | TNT
Florida will be angry after getting blown out against Vanderbilt in the second round of the SEC Tournament. The Gators are legitimate contenders to repeat as national champions and should cruise here. UF absolutely demolished the handful of teams of this caliber that it played during nonconference action.

31. (1) Michigan vs. (16) Howard

Thursday | 7:10 p.m. | CBS
Michigan is No. 28 in average height, per KenPom. Howard is 337th. This is David vs. Goliath — both in terms of program status and actual height. The Bison will need a 3-point barrage for the ages to have a chance. Considering they hit just 6.7 triples per game (288th nationally), it’s probably not happening.

30. (1) Duke vs. (16) Siena

Thursday | 2:50 p.m. | CBS
A game between two former national title-winning players who are now coaches gives this 1 vs. 16 matchup a little more juice than most. Duke’s Jon Scheyer (a former Duke star) and Siena’s Gerry McNamara (a former Syracuse star) are names and faces that any college basketball fan who was conscious during the early 2000s will vividly remember as players.

29. (1) Arizona vs. (16) LIU

Friday | 1:35 p.m. | TNT
LIU’s “fins up” story is the sort of stuff that college basketball’s appeal to casual fans is built upon. Your first-grader or your grandmother can play along with the LIU’s new trademark motion and enjoy. It’s got a great backstory, too. Better get in on the while you can, because the Sharks are 30.5-point underdogs against Arizona.

28. (3) Michigan State vs. (14) North Dakota State

Thursday | 4:05 p.m. | TNT
You’ll be stunned to hear that a Michigan State team coached by Tom Izzo has reached the NCAA Tournament and looks capable of making a deep run. The Spartans are historically pretty solid in the first round under Izzo, with a 2016 loss to Middle Tennessee serving as a notable exception. North Dakota State doesn’t have the size down low to handle the Spartans on the boards, so the Bison will have to make it rain from deep to have a shot.

27. (2) Houston vs. Idaho

Thursday | 10:10 p.m. | truTV
Houston’s average margin of victory over its last six first-round NCAA Tournament games is 27.1 points. The Cougars’ length and defensive tenacity makes them a nightmare for teams like Idaho. The Vandals are making their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1990 after somehow making it through the Big Sky Tournament while shooting just 25.3% from beyond the arc. They will need to shoot it much better against Houston to make it worth staying up to see the end of Thursday’s final game.

26. (2) UConn vs. (15) Furman

Friday | 10 p.m. | TBS
Furman stunned No. 4 seed Virginia in the first round of the 2023 NCAA Tournament. This team doesn’t look nearly as dangerous, but it does have one of the NCAA Tournament’s most under-appreciated freshmen in Alex Wilkins. It will also be worth staying up late to see Dan Hurley’s antics. If this pod goes according to chalk, we’ll get Hurley vs. Mick Cronin in the second round for a chance to face Tom Izzo in the Sweet 16. The bottom half of the East Region is officially the angry coach section of the bracket.

25. (3) Illinois vs. (14) Penn

Thursday | 9:25 p.m. | TNT
When folks turn over to TNT for this one, they are going to say, “whoa, is that Fran McCaffery?” Yes, the former longtime Iowa coach is back at Penn, his alma mater. Their next comment may be, “whoa, is that TJ Power?” Yes, the former five-star prospect who played at Duke and Virginia is now a 3-point flamethrower for the Quakers. He scored 48 in their Ivy League Tournament title game victory over Yale.

24. (2) Iowa State vs. (15) Tennessee State

Friday | 2:50 p.m. | CBS
Tennessee State’s Nolan Smith is the first coach in 18 years to snap a 30-plus year NCAA Tournament drought for a program while in his first season as a Division I head coach. The former star guard at Duke has already led Tennessee State to its most victories in a season (23) since it joined the D-I ranks in 1977. The 37-year-old’s career was on a strong trajectory before TSU won the Ohio Valley Conference tournament. Now, Smith’s career is one Friday afternoon upset away from an injection of rocket fuel.

23. (8) Clemson vs. (9) Iowa

Friday | 6:50 p.m. | TNT
This is a fairly nondescript matchup between two of the least-interesting high-major teams in the field. The winner gets a likely death sentence in the second round against Florida. But if you want to get excited about it, the Hawkeyes have one of the best guards in all of college basketball. Bennett Stirtz led Drake to an upset of Missouri in last year’s first round before following coach Ben McCollum to Iowa.

22. (3) Gonzaga vs. (14) Kennesaw State

Thursday | 10 p.m. | TBS
Kennesaw State ranks No. 163 at KenPom, and Gonzaga did lose to No. 202 Portland on Feb. 4. So maybe there is some upset potential here as the Owls seek their first-ever NCAA Tournament victory. But in all likelihood, the Zags will cruise behind the interior dominance of Graham Ike and a top-10 level defense.

21. (2) Purdue vs. (15) Queens

Friday | 7:35 p.m. | truTV
Teams that have knocked Purdue out of the NCAA Tournament over the past decade: Little Rock (2016), North Texas (2021), Saint Peter’s (2022) and FDU (2023). You will forgive Boilermakers fans if they are weirdly nervous to be facing Queens. The Royals are in their first season of NCAA Tournament eligibility since transitioning from Division II, which would make them a perfect addition to the list of surprising teams that have frazzled Purdue in the past.

20. (3) Virginia vs. (14) Wright State

Friday | 1:50 p.m. | TBS
The irony in Ryan Odom now being Virginia’s coach is that he was the coach of UMBC in 2018 when the Retrievers beat Virginia and became the first No. 16 seed to ever beat a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Now, after being the hunter with programs like UMBC, Utah State and VCU, Odom is the hunted. Life on the other side of the lopsided matchup can be unpleasant.

19. (8) Villanova vs. (9) Utah State

Thursday | 4:10 p.m. | TNT
The number of old men who will be yelling at clouds over Devin Askew showing up on their screens will be high. The Villanova guard is on his fifth school and is the only player in the field with that distinction. Askew began his career at Kentucky as a highly rated prospect in the Class of 2020, which also included now-veteran NBA players like Cade Cunningham and Evan Mobley. Utah State’s Kolby King is right behind him with four schools in four years.

18. (5) St. John’s vs. (12) Northern Iowa

Friday | 7:10 p.m. | CBS
Northern Iowa has more NCAA Tournament victories this century than St. John’s. But this is a tough draw for the Panthers, who are up against an under-seeded Red Storm team that won the Big East regular season and tournament titles. St. John’s has been performing at a top-10 level over the past month. If the Red Storm win, we could get Rick Pitino vs. Bill Self in the second round. If that’s not your taste, UNI vs. Cal Baptist is also on the table.

17. (5) Vanderbilt vs. (12) McNeese

Thursday | 3:15 p.m. | truTV
McNeese student manager Amir Khan is back on the scene. After following Will Wade to NC State, he transferred back home to be with the Cowboys. Whether McNeese has the juice for another big upset after taking down Clemson in the first round last year remains to be seen. But Khan’s presence ensures the vibes will be strong for McNeese.

16. (7) UCLA vs. (10) UCF

Friday | 7:25 p.m. | TBS
It would have been hilarious to see UCLA scheduled for the 12-1 p.m. window after being sent three time zones away from home as a better-seeded team for this game. The meltdown from Bruins coach Mick Cronin after a loss in those circumstances would have been must-see stuff. Nonetheless, he’ll still be mad about the cross-country travel if UCLA loses at 7:25 p.m. If the Bruins win, we’ll likely get a Cronin vs. Dan Hurley matchup in the second round. Those poor officials. Either way, enjoyers of Cronin’s antics are in for a good time.

15. (4) Nebraska vs. (13) Troy

Thursday | 12:40 p.m. | truTV
Nebraska is seeking its first-ever NCAA Tournament victory, and anything less would be a disappointing cap to one of the best programs in season history. The Cornhuskers started 20-0 but are just 6-6 since, which suggests they may be a little vulnerable against a capable Troy team. The Trojans boast excellent continuity, especially for a mid-major program, and they showed their mettle with a win at San Diego State in November. If the upset occurs, it would be absolutely gutting for a Nebraska team with no March Madness history to speak of.

14. (7) Miami vs. (10) Missouri

Friday | 10:10 p.m. | truTV
If you like star left-handed forwards who transferred away from historically proud programs, this is the game for you. Malik Reneau, formerly of Indiana, is averaging 18.8 points and 6.6 rebounds on 54.9% shooting for the Hurricanes, who turned things around quickly in Year 1 under coach Jai Lucas. Missouri is led by ex-Duke forward Mark Mitchell, who averages 18.3 points and 5.3 rebounds on 55.1% shooting. For such a late-night game, the atmosphere should be great since Mizzou is playing a de facto home game in St. Louis.

13. (6) Tennessee vs. (11) SMU/Miami (Ohio) 

Friday | 4:25 p.m. | TBS
Depending on the opponent, the intrigue of this game will fluctuate drastically. But we’ll be like the selection committee with Vanderbilt at the SEC Tournament and just predetermine an outcome before knowing the whole picture. The game won’t be mega-interesting to casual viewers if it’s Tennessee vs. SMU. But it will be super interesting if it’s Tennessee vs. Miami (Ohio) as the RedHawks try to prove their unbeaten regular season was more than just the product of a poor schedule.

12. (6) BYU vs. (11) Texas

Thursday | 7:25 p.m. | TBS
If you happen to be a fan of an NBA team that’s going to have a lottery pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, this NCAA Tournament is the one for you. BYU wing AJ Dybantsa has been comfortably slotted at No. 2 in the CBS Sports Draft Prospect Rankings and is set to show what he can do on the big stage. He is college basketball’s leading scorer at 25.3 points per game.

11. (4) Arkansas vs. (13) Hawaii

Thursday | 4:25 p.m. | TBS
If you haven’t watched Darius Acuff Jr. yet, you are in for a treat. Arkansas’ freshman guard is already a superstar, and the NCAA Tournament should only accelerate his rise to fame. Best of all, Razorbacks coach John Calipari lets him start, which is not an honor that all of Calipari’s elite freshman guards have received over the years. If there’s one player in this bracket capable of putting a team on his back and carrying it to the Final Four, it’s probably Acuff.

10. (4) Kansas vs. (13) Cal Baptist

Friday | 9:45 p.m. | CBS
Only in college basketball do we get a generational professional prospect playing against Cal Baptist as part of the race to determine a national champion. What version of Darryn Peterson will we get? That’s the big question looming over a loaded East Region. The answer will determine how far the Jayhawks go. What’s crazy is that he’s not even the highest-scoring player in this matchup. That distinction belongs to Cal Baptist’s Dominique Daniels, who is the second-highest scoring player in the NCAA Tournament at 23.2 points per game behind only BYU’s AJ Dybantsa.

9. (5) Wisconsin vs. (12) High Point

Thursday | 1:50 p.m. | TBS
Thursday afternoon has some electric potential with Louisville vs. South Florida and Wisconsin vs. High Point set to tip within 20 minutes of each other. High Point enters the NCAA Tournament with the nation’s longest winning streak at 14 games. The Panthers are one of the smallest teams in the field, but they rank third nationally in points per game (90.0), which equips them to hang with Wisconsin’s high-octane offense led by high-scoring guards Nick Boyd and John Blackwell.

8. (5) Texas Tech vs. (12) Akron

Friday | 12:40 p.m. | truTV
Akron has become a regular in the NCAA Tournament in recent seasons under coach John Groce. The Zips haven’t broken through for a Cinderella moment, but this could be the year. It’s Groce’s best team yet, with a true star in undersized guard Tavari Johnson. Meanwhile, the Red Raiders are navigating life without injured star JT Toppin, which makes them vulnerable to a potential upset.

7. Saint Mary’s vs. Texas A&M

Thursday | 7:35 p.m. | truTV
One year ago, Saint Mary’s was a No. 7 seed and defeated No. 10 seed Vanderbilt — an SEC team led by a first-year coach — in a clash of styles during the first round. The Gaels will attempt to pull off an eerily similar victory Thursday evening. Once again, the opponent is a fast-paced SEC team led by a first-year coach in Texas A&M’s Bucky McMillan. The stylistic tug of war could go a variety of ways. Saint Mary’s will hope it goes like last year’s 59-56 win over Vanderbilt.

6. (8) Ohio State vs. (9) TCU

Thursday | 12:15 p.m. | CBS
TCU owns neutral-site victories over No. 1 seed Florida and No. 5 seed Wisconsin. The Horned Frogs also beat No. 2 seed Iowa State at home and No. 5 seed Texas Tech on the road during the regular season. They have won nine of their past 11. Ohio State has also been playing elite basketball since March began. Might the winner push No. 1 seed Duke in the second round? Don’t rule it out.

5. (8) Georgia vs. (9) Saint Louis

Thursday | 9:45 p.m. | CBS
The over/under on shot-clock violations in this game should be 0.5. Georgia and Saint Louis average a combined 177 points, which is the most entering any NCAA Tournament matchup of the past 20 seasons. How’s that for some late-night entertainment on a Thursday? Between the two, 12 players are averaging at least nine points per game. 

4. (6) Louisville vs. (11) South Florida

Thursday | 1:30 p.m. | TNT
This one will bring some juice to the Thursday afternoon slate. The two highest-volume 3-point shooters in the entire NCAA Tournament bracket are on opposite sides of this matchup. Louisville’s Ryan Conwell gets up 9.6 attempts per game while South Florida’s Wes Enis comes in slightly behind with 9.4. This game will be the ultimate version of 3-point roulette as the Cardinals seek to advance in the Big Dance for the first time since 2017. 

3. (4) Alabama vs. (13) Hofstra

Friday | 3:15 p.m. | truTV
Hofstra beat Pitt and Syracuse during nonconference play, so there won’t be any shock factor associated with facing an athletic high-major program. The Pride ranks 33rd nationally in 3-point percentage at 36.8%, and a hefty share of their shot attempts come from beyond the arc. Alabama is expected to be without second-leading scorer Aden Holloway, who picked up a felony drug charge this week. That certainly helps Hofstra’s hopes of pulling a big first-round upset.

2. (6) North Carolina vs. (11) VCU

Thursday | 6:50 p.m. | TNT
A North Carolina team playing without injured star freshman Caleb Wilson is on upset alert. VCU has won 16 of its past 17 games under first-year coach Phil Martelli Jr. and plays with ruthless intensity. The Rams shoot it great from beyond the arc, but can still find ways to win even when 3-pointers aren’t going down. The Tar Heels better watch out.

1. (7) Kentucky vs. (10) Santa Clara

Friday | 12:15 p.m. | CBS
UK’s anxiety will make this entertaining for all those who like watching blue bloods sweat. Santa Clara coach Herb Sendek is trying to win an NCAA Tournament game with his fourth school after previously advancing in the Big Dance with Miami (Ohio), NC State and Arizona State. He’s a grizzled veteran of these battles. Meanwhile, Kentucky coach Mark Pope has just been trying to keep the Wildcats on the rails during an up-and-down season marred by injury. Exiting before John Calipari once again would be painful.





Source link

Tulsi Gabbard, top intel officials testify at Senate hearing on threats to U.S.

0


In his opening statement, Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the top Democrat on the committee, claimed Gabbard’s office is falling short in protecting U.S. elections from foreign interference, accusing Gabbard of an “organized effort to misuse her national security powers to interfere in domestic politics … and provide a pretext for the president’s unconstitutional efforts to seize control of the upcoming elections.”

“For months, the committee has repeatedly requested briefings from the IC, briefings that are required by law, on legitimate foreign threats to the midterms,” Warner said. “We have received no response.”

The Virginia Democrat accused Gabbard of misusing her authority to “interfere” in domestic politics, highlighting her presence at a law enforcement operation to seize election ballots and voting machine records in Fulton County, Georgia. Fulton County, which Mr. Trump lost in 2020, has long been a source of frustration for the president. Gabbard told lawmakers the president requested her presence. 

“When the warrant supporting the raid was unsealed, it showed something deeply troubling: there was no foreign connection to justify the involvement of our nation’s top spy,” Warner said.

“This raises one very serious question — if the intelligence community is not being deployed, mobilized against foreign threats, why is it being deployed at all on a domestic issue? The DNI’s appearance at this raid, as well as her involvement in seizing voting machines from Puerto Rico, suggests something that should also alarm every American: I believe an organized effort to misuse her national security powers to interfere in domestic politics and potentially provide a pretext for the president’s unconstitutional efforts to seize control of the upcoming elections.”

Turning to the FBI, Warner also said agents working on a task force focused on threats from Iran, “clearly something that’s pretty damn important right now,” were “dismissed because they had previously participated in the investigation of the president’s mishandling of classified information.” 

Warner also criticized the administration’s evacuation of Americans in the Middle East.

“This was a foreseeable security crisis,” Warner said. “When you start a war of choice, when there was no imminent threat, you should be able to prepare to make sure you get Americans out of the war zone.” 



Source link

Judge orders Voice of America to rehire employees, resume news operations

0




A judicial appointee of former President Ronald Reagan on Tuesday ordered Voice of America (VOA) to rehire its employees and resume international broadcasting. The ruling from District Judge Royce C. Lamberth comes more than a year after President Trump significantly downsized the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) and directed Voice of America to dismiss all […]



Source link

LAMB OF GOD’s MARK MORTON Reflects On 30 Years In Music: “The Business Changes – You Have To Adapt”

0


After more than three decades in heavy music, Lamb Of God guitarist Mark Morton says the music industry looks dramatically different from when the band first started – particularly when it comes to how fans consume music and how artists earn a living.

Speaking in a new interview with Premier Guitar, Morton reflected on the constant evolution of the business side of music, explaining that modern bands must balance multiple revenue streams to survive.

“We do so many things,” Morton said. “A band at this level, we do a lot of things. We play shows. We tour and play concerts. We play a bunch of different kinds of concerts. We do our own tours, we play festivals, we play in different territories. We write and record music. We sell merchandise. So all of those are different activities in different parts of the business.”

Despite the many business elements, Morton emphasized that creativity remains the heart of the band. “And then there’s the business of being in the band, and then there’s the music, which is really the part that – that’s where the soul is. I mean, it’s a business, and you gotta make money and support your family.”

One of the most dramatic shifts Morton has witnessed is how fans listen to music. “I’ve been around and in the business long enough where when we first started, we sold a lot of records, physical copies – CDs, really, at the time,” he explained.

“And now less so. And the most physical copies you sell are LPs again. And streaming is, obviously, the way people consume most of the music.”

While the industry transformation has been significant, Morton noted that change isn’t unique to music. “I think any business you’re in changes, though, really,” he said. “There’s probably very few industries that haven’t had to evolve and change, and you have to adapt to it.”

The Richmond, VA metal band’s trajectory shifted dramatically when they signed with Epic Records in 2003. Their first major-label release followed in 2004, marking a major step forward after years of operating on minimal budgets.

“We have made records early on that were on a shoestring [budget], for sure, and they sounded like they were,” Morton said. “But that’s part of the journey.”

Before the major-label deal, Morton was already trying to make music his full-time career – even if it meant balancing other work.

“I was a roofer and I was kind of doing side work and stuff, just kind of hustling,” he recalled. “But signing a contract like that and getting into the big league, so to speak, did take some pressure off of the finances.”

Still, the guitarist didn’t expect the band’s success to last forever. “I lived pretty humbly,” he said. “And I just figured we’d be touring for a couple years and then eventually have to go back to some kind of day job – which it just didn’t work out that way.”

While fans might assume label expectations created the most stress, Morton says the real pressure came from within the band itself. “The most pressure I ever felt… it wasn’t from them; it was self-imposed.”

At the time, Lamb Of God had just released the 2003 album As the Palaces Burn when major labels started circling. “That record came out, and I think within five or six months we were talking actively to major labels,” he said. “So when we signed to Epic, of course they want their record: ‘Let’s go. Let’s make a record.'”

The challenge was that the band had already poured its best material into the previous album. “We were kind of creatively squeezed out,” Morton admitted. “We had just put all our best stuff into this record. Then we got signed off of it, and now they want a record right away.”

For Morton personally, it was a nerve-racking moment. “I remember feeling the pressure of, like, this is probably the most important, business-wise, creatively, moment. And I’m like, ‘I don’t have any material. What am I gonna do?'”

Ultimately, however, the band found its footing – and the gamble paid off.

Want More Metal? Subscribe To Our Daily Newsletter

Enter your information below to get a daily update with all of our headlines and receive The Orchard Metal newsletter.



Source link

Australian GPS-Alternative Unicorn Raises $110 Million for Expansion

0




An Australian startup that helps aircraft, ships and other vehicles navigate GPS dead zones has raised $110 million, hitting Silicon Valley’s prized unicorn status as it seeks to accelerate growth in the U.S. and Europe.



Source link