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Arizona’s buzzer-beating epic win over Iowa State delivers Big 12 what it sorely needed: the Game of the Year

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KANSAS CITY — Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark made a tough decision late Thursday night that guaranteed widespread reaction across the country, hardly all of it laudatory.

Less than 24 hours later, Yormark was rewarded for his goodwill gesture.

Despite the hype, marketing and promotion over the Big 12’s LED glass floor, the league and its commissioner were the subjects of routine mockery after sporadic slippage and one legitimate injury interfered with the basketball through the first three days of the men’s tournament.

Yormark swallowed his pride and decided to unplug the digital floor in exchange for good ol’ American hardwood. 

“We have a tremendous final four tomorrow night,” he told me late Thursday night. “That should be the story.”

Instead of a story, the Big 12 and college basketball were delivered an epic in Friday night’s opening semifinal between No. 1 Arizona and No. 7 Iowa State. The Wildcats’ buzzer-beating 82-80 win was nothing less than arguably the best game of this splendid season. Arizona senior/Big 12 Player of the Year Jaden Bradley hit a fallaway 17-footer from the wing at the buzzer over an immaculate defensive effort from Cyclones freshman defensive stud Killyan Toure. When the ball swished, that shot and this game buried the previous three days worth of chatter about the court.

“It was a crazy shot,” Bradley said. “It was great defense.”

This is how you flip the script.

Adding to the frenzy and upping the cosmetic appeal was the lack of timeouts called in the final frantic minutes, especially in the closing possessions. Lloyd had multiple in his pocket and didn’t use them.

“It set the stage for something epic to happen,” Lloyd told me. “In those games, you feel like Will Ferrell in Old School, where he gets up there and he’s doing the political argument against like James CarvuCarver, or something like that, and he and he kind of blacks out.”

Lloyd blacked out a little bit. The game was that great, the moments bursting with drama, the big shots happening a pace too quick to ingest them all properly.

Bradley being the hero was apt. BYU superstar AJ Dybantsa led the nation in scoring, but the league’s coaches voted for who they believed was the best player on clearly the best team. 

“I thought it was pretty tough for him the last couple days to win an award like that,” Lloyd told CBS Sports in the coach’s locker room after the game. “It is big, and he’s not a guy that tries to take up any extra space in the room. He’s not about individual things at all. And then to have people come back at him and say, ‘No, you shouldn’t have got it.’ I think that’s a tough space to put a young guy in. Even giving him the MVP trophy before the game yesterday is kind of weird. He hasn’t experienced anything like that and he just wants to be one of the guys. And then for him to come out and put a stamp on it, and a game like this, I think, is really cool.”

The frenzied finish that flooded into Bradley’s winner was a work of art. Arizona and Iowa State combined to make a shot on their final 11 possessions, including seven in a row from 3-point range. Arizona finished with 1.24 points per possession to ISU’s 1.21. 

“It’s like shooting in the ocean, you feel like you can’t miss,” Dell’Orso said. 

“I think it’s an amazing feeling,” Iowa State All-American Joshua Jefferson said of playing in a 40-minute masterpiece.

The night just as easily could have gone his team’s way. 

“They were able to make one more play tonight,” Iowa State coach TJ Otzelberger said. “Just like they’re Final Four contenders, so are we.”

The Cyclones got off to a 14-2 start and they also had a flurry 9-0 run to end the first half that had the joint blaring thanks to three 3-pointers from Cyclones senior forward Milan Momcilovic

“Larry Bird showed up,” Lloyd told me. “Thank God, the half ran out.”

Momcilovic sank eight 3-pointers, becoming just the fourth player in the history of the Big 12 Tournament to make so many triples in one game. 

“Great player, crazy shooter,” said Bradley.

Momcilovic’s 28 points were a game-high, but only two more than Arizona’s Anthony Dell’Orso, who had career-best 26 points (including six 3s) after combining to score 23 in his four previous games. 

“You enter into that kind of flow state,” Dell’Orso said. “And guys just brought everything. There were multiple facets of the game other than just shooting that go unnoticed, but we definitely pay attention to that.”

Everything crescendoed to Bradley’s buzzer-beater, the first by any Big 12 player in any game since 2022 (KansasBobby Pettiford vs. Wisconsin) and also the first winning shot as time expired in this tournament since Monte Morris beat Texas at the horn in the 2015 quarterfinals from damn near the same spot.

“They really made us dig deep literally 40 minutes. We were just trying to hang on by a thread, stay in the game,” Lloyd said.

God it was great. The NCAA Tournament is the main event for clear and obvious reasons, but every single year we are reminded why March Madness is the motto just as much for the two weeks that feed into Selection Sunday. And this game was one of the best conference tournament battles of the past decade. 

It was Arizona’s ninth win this season over a ranked team (second-most in college basketball history). The only teams to get 10 were 2024-25 Florida, 2010-11 Connecticut and 2000-01 Duke. They all won the national title. 

Arizona may well become the fourth/next to do it.

The result won’t change anything for Selection Sunday. Arizona is a lock No. 1 seed going to the West and Iowa State will most likely be a No. 2 seed in some other region of the bracket. 

Sometimes, a great game is all we want. On Friday, it’s what the Big 12 needed. Until tonight, the tournament was heavily trending toward being remembered for a floor that lit up like a casino game and induced some conspicuous extracurricular slipping and sliding while a basketball tournament was trying to play out.

Lloyd made sure to credit Yormark and the Big 12’s director of basketball, Brian Thornton, for not being too proud to stick with the glass floor. Lloyd and Kelvin Sampson in particular endorsed the switch from the moment they were asked on Thursday. 

It’s those two coaches who will still be on the sidelines for Saturday night’s title game.

“Shows a lot of courage and great leadership,” Lloyd told me. “I mean, on two levels. The foresight and the fortitude to try something outside the box and then have it not work and pull it back. It’s pretty special. The Big 12 makes basketball a priority and and that’s pretty special to be a part of. I don’t know if every power conference can say that, but we definitely can say that with our leadership.” 

Arizona will play in a second straight league championship game, and it will be a rematch: Houston beat Arizona for the league championship in this building a year ago. Now, again, the Big 12’s two best teams will battle for a trophy. Arizona won 73-66 at Houston back in February.

Now it goes for its Big 12 Tournament title. Houston is still vying for the last No. 1 seed. 

The stakes are clear. And look us now: Talking all about hoop. It’s back to being about the basketball, about the tournament, about the teams.As it always should have been. The Big 12 is more than good enough to sell the product on the floor and have that be enough. Turn on the lights, let the coaches and players take care of the rest and who knows what they’ll give you?

Sometimes it’s one of the best games you’ll ever see.





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Hegseth says there’s “no clear evidence” Iran is placing new mines in Strait of Hormuz

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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the U.S. has heard Iran talking about placing new mines in the Strait of Hormuz, but he told reporters Friday, “We have no clear evidence of that.”

He and Joint Chiefs Chairman Dan Caine briefed reporters at the Pentagon Friday on the latest developments in the war with Iran, as ship traffic remains largely stopped in the Strait, though Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said the U.S. Navy could escort oil tankers through the waterway.

U.S. forces are continuing to target Iran’s ballistic missiles and “continuing to destroy the Iranian navy,” Caine said, “and this means going after Iran’s mining capability and destroying their ability to go after commercial vessels.” 

“That’s not a strait we’re going to allow to remain contested,” Hegseth told reporters.

Hegseth and Caine spoke a day after a U.S. military refueling tanker crashed in western Iraq, killing at least four U.S. service members. Hegseth said of the crash that “bad things happen,” and he praised the crew as heroes.

Caine said during the briefing that rescue efforts were still underway as two other crew members remained missing. But later Friday morning, U.S. Central Command said in a news release that all six crew members had been killed, and the circumstances of the incident are under investigation. The service members’ identities are being withheld until 24 hours after next of kin have been notified, CENTCOM said.

The crash occurred over friendly territory while the crew was on a combat mission, Caine said, adding that it was not due to hostile or friendly fire.

Since the war began on Feb. 28, the U.S. military struck about 6,000 targets in Iran as of Thursday, according to Central Command. The U.S. and Israel combined have hit more than 15,000 “enemy targets,” according to Hegseth.

Iran’s missile volume is down 90%, Hegseth told reporters Friday. All of Iran’s defense companies will be destroyed — all have been “functionally defeated,” he said.

But Iran’s assaults have continued, and oil prices have risen to over $100 a barrel while stock prices are sliding, even in the face of the president’s assertions that he’ll end the war soon and announcements of major oil reserve releases

Bessent announced on Thursday that the U.S. would temporarily loosen sanctions against Russia, to allow the Kremlin to sell Russian oil that’s already at sea. It’s an effort to ease restrictions on Russia’s oil industry as the world grapples with high oil prices.

Asked about Iran’s nuclear program and whether U.S. military would need to take control of the enriched uranium in Iran’s possession in order to conclude its military operation, Hegseth only said that the U.S. retains options to keep Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. “We have options, for sure,” he said.

Hegseth was also asked about the military investigation into the bombing of an elementary school in Iran and reports that a preliminary probe suggested the U.S. was responsible for the strike. Hegseth said CENTCOM has designated an investigating officer from outside CENTCOM to carry out a command investigation of the incident, but declined to give a timeframe for the investigation. A command investigation is a more formal investigation into the facts surrounding an incident and can lead to accountability actions. 

CENTCOM Cmdr. Adm. Brad Cooper ordered the command investigation last week, immediately after an initial review was completed. 

So far, the administration has said little about Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, who was said by an Iranian official to have been injured in the attack, but is “alive and well,” though he has not been seen since the war began.  

Hegseth said Friday, “We know the new, so-called not-so-Supreme Leader is wounded and likely disfigured,” noting that a statement attributed to Khamenei on Thursday was written and included no image of him.

Iranian state media released the statement, which said Iran should keep leveraging its stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz and vowed to continue attacks on targets in Gulf Arab nations.  



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Lobos fall to SDSU in conference tournament semifinals

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – The Lobo men’s basketball team came up short during the semifinal round of the Mountain West tournament late on Friday night. No. 3 UNM lost to No. 2 SDSU 62-64. The Lobos left plenty of points on the floor, primarily at the free throw line. As a team, UNM went 15-28 from […]



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JAY WEINBERG Launches Official Reverb Shop Featuring SLIPKNOT, SPRINGSTEEN Tour Gear

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After nearly two decades behind the kit with some of rock and metal’s biggest acts, Jay Weinberg is opening the vault. The drummer has announced the upcoming launch of The Official Jay Weinberg Reverb Shop, giving fans the chance to purchase gear and memorabilia from across his career.

The shop will officially open Wednesday, March 18 on Reverb, with a portion of the proceeds benefiting the music industry support organization MusiCares. Fans can sign up in advance with their email addresses to receive notifications when the store goes live.

Weinberg has spent the last 17 years performing with major artists, including Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band, Slipknot, Suicidal Tendencies, and Against Me!. Over that time, he has amassed an extensive collection of instruments, stage outfits, awards, and other memorabilia — many of which will now be available to fans.

Among the items listed for sale will be drum kits used across different eras of his career, including the kit he played during the 2009 Working on a Dream World Tour with Springsteen. Also included are several fully customized SJC drum kits used during his decade-long tenure in Slipknot, along with numerous snares, cymbals, drum thrones, and other touring essentials.

In addition to instruments, the shop will feature stage-worn masks and outfits, signed studio-used drumheads and drumsticks, tour posters, and other collectible pieces – some designed by Weinberg himself.

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German Chemical Industry Warns of Supply-Chain Hit From Middle East War

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The sector is experiencing early signs of supply-chain disruptions from the war in the Middle East, with risks spreading beyond oil and natural gas, the VCI trade group said.



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Carson Johnson Teams Up With Cory Kidd V for Early-Season Success

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For Carson Johnson, the 2026 season has been anything but ordinary.

Consistent paydays and early-season momentum have positioned Johnson at No. 4 in the PRCA team roping heeling world standings. With the strong start, he has his sights set on qualifying for his first National Finals Rodeo, following in the footsteps of his world champion father, Jhett Johnson.

Family remains at the center of Johnson’s passion for the sport of team roping.

“I’m very close with my family and very grateful for them,” Johnson said. “I’ve learned so much from my dad growing up and watching him rope. I’ve also learned a lot from my mom — she’s the glue that holds us all together. I’m getting to do what I’ve always dreamed of.”

The Wyoming native credits those strong family ties for building the foundation of his professional career, including his longtime partnership with his brother, Kellan Johnson.

That foundation has also helped him transition into a new partnership in 2026 with longtime friend Cory Kidd V. Only a few months into roping together, Johnson and Kidd have already found success, collecting major checks at rodeos such as the Dixie National Rodeo and the San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo.

“I’m pumped,” Johnson said. “It’s nice to start winning and have good earnings. I’m excited to look toward the summer and work toward our goal of making the NFR. We still have a long way to go, but it’s a great start.”

For Johnson, the change has marked a new chapter in his roping career.

“I grew up with a built-in partner, and I’m so grateful for that,” Johnson said. “Changing partners is different than anything I’ve ever done, but I’m having the best winter I’ve ever had.”

The season also marks Johnson’s fifth year as a PRCA member. With more experience on the road, he says a strong mindset has become one of the biggest lessons he’s learned.

“Every steer counts,” Johnson said. “With so many opportunities and such a long season, you have to give it your all on every run.”

Looking ahead, Johnson and Kidd are focused on building consistency as their partnership develops.

“Our styles work well together,” Johnson said. “We’re focused on building a run we can make day in and day out. Consistency is key through such a long season, and we’re excited for the summer.”

With the remainder of the Texas Swing and the California rodeo run on the horizon, the duo will continue chasing their season-ending goals — one run at a time.





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Thailand’s ‘Death Fest’ invites visitors to embrace mortality

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NONTHABURI, Thailand — Thailand’s “Death Fest” invites people to confront mortality while also offering practical services and spiritual advice for the inevitable.

The unusual fair, now in its second year, has broached the subject that’s uncomfortable for many. It’s also one of the central teachings of Buddhism, which shapes much of Thailand’s culture, about life’s unavoidable sufferings: birth, old age, sickness and death.

Sangduan Ngamvinijaroon attended the three-day event Friday with her mother in Nonthaburi province near Bangkok. She said death used to be a difficult subject for her family, but having spent more than 20 years caring for ill family members, including her husband with a stroke and relatives with cancer, she has witnessed several deaths firsthand and now feels more at ease talking about it.

She said she liked the fair because “it’s not just about dying well. It’s also about the present moment and taking good care of our lives while we’re still here.”

The event brought together experts and organizations involved in health care, financial planning, palliative care, funeral services and memorial innovations. Activities and talks focused not only on preparing for death but also on maintaining quality of life until the final days.

“Death involves everybody. It’s not just about you,” said Zcongklod Bangyikhan, editor-in-chief of The Cloud magazine and one of the event’s lead organizers. “Instead of wondering what dying will be like, maybe we should think about how to make things easier for the people who remain after we’re gone.”

One popular exhibit is called “Test Die.” Visitors can lie inside coffins of different sizes and styles while looking at themselves in a mirror suspended above. The experience is designed to prompt reflection rather than fear.

Office worker Phinutda Seehad said it felt calming.

“I don’t think I’m scared of death,” she said. “I also don’t want to die, but when the time comes, I don’t think it will be that frightening.”

One company displayed a biodegradable coffin made from mycelium — the rootlike fibers of fungi — which helps naturally with decomposition.

Founder Jirawan Kumsao said the design reflects a more environmentally friendly approach to burial. Although she brought a human-sized coffin to the event, her company mainly produces coffins for pets.

“It gives people comfort to know they’ve cared for their pets until the very end,” she said. “It looks like a spacecraft, a capsule, for sending them to another world.”

Noppasaward Panyajaray, founder of the online memorial platform Sharesouls, has seen a similar emotional bond. Her service allows users to store photos and share stories about loved ones, creating a digital space where friends and family can leave messages and pay their respects.

She said her original idea was for the platform to preserve memories of family members. But she was surprised to find that many users were creating memorial pages for their pets.

“Many people sent me a message to say thank you, because nowadays we don’t really have any space to store stories or memories about their pets,” she said. “Every pet is meaningful to their owners as much as a family member.”



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Helipad at the US Embassy in Baghdad was hit by a missile

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The White House has given *** 4 to 6 week timeline, but President Donald Trump says the US is close to meeting his goals. The situation with Iran is moving along very rapidly. It’s Doing very well. The Pentagon says it’s achieving objectives ahead of schedule, which include taking out Iran’s missile, naval, and nuclear capacity. Now as of Thursday, the military struck 6000 targets and destroyed more than 90 boats, but Iran’s attacks on the oil industry could entangle the US for longer. On Thursday, Iran hit *** fuel depot in Bahrain and *** tanker in the Persian Gulf, but the uncertainty is driving up oil prices. worldwide and hitting American consumers at the pump. AAA reports the price of *** gallon of regular is up 360, 62 cents more than when this conflict started. Another factor complicating when the war will end is when America’s partner Israel is ready to stop fighting. We have formed an unprecedented alliance with the US. We are also operating in order to advance yet another goal to prepare the conditions. For the Iranian people so that they could remove the brutal regime, we’re hearing from Iran’s new leader for the first time who vowed in *** statement to keep attacking the US and its allies and also prevent oil from being shipped. President Trump weighing in this morning on social media about the Iranian regime, saying, quote, Watch what happens to these deranged scumbags today, adding it’s *** great honor to kill them. In Washington, I’m Rachel Hirsheimer.

Iraqi officials say a helipad at the US Embassy in Baghdad was hit by a missile

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Updated: 10:10 PM MDT Mar 13, 2026

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A missile struck a helipad inside the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad, two Iraqi security officials said.Associated Press footage showed a column of smoke rising Saturday morning over the embassy compound.Video above: US Military: Four American service members killed after refueling aircraft crashed in western IraqThe sprawling embassy complex, one of the largest U.S. diplomatic facilities in the world, has been repeatedly targeted by rockets and drones fired by Iran-aligned militias.There was no immediate comment from the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. On Friday, the embassy renewed its Level 4 security alert for Iraq, warning that Iran and Iran-aligned militia groups have previously carried out attacks against U.S. citizens, interests and infrastructure, and “may continue to target them.”The sprawling embassy complex, one of the largest U.S. diplomatic facilities in the world, has been repeatedly targeted by rockets and drones in the past by Iran-aligned militias.

A missile struck a helipad inside the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad, two Iraqi security officials said.

Associated Press footage showed a column of smoke rising Saturday morning over the embassy compound.

Video above: US Military: Four American service members killed after refueling aircraft crashed in western Iraq

The sprawling embassy complex, one of the largest U.S. diplomatic facilities in the world, has been repeatedly targeted by rockets and drones fired by Iran-aligned militias.

There was no immediate comment from the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. On Friday, the embassy renewed its Level 4 security alert for Iraq, warning that Iran and Iran-aligned militia groups have previously carried out attacks against U.S. citizens, interests and infrastructure, and “may continue to target them.”

The sprawling embassy complex, one of the largest U.S. diplomatic facilities in the world, has been repeatedly targeted by rockets and drones in the past by Iran-aligned militias.



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Kacey Musgraves’ ‘Lonely With a Capital H’ Lyric Explained

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Kacey Musgraves has fans doing a double-take with one particular lyric in her new song “Dry Spell.”

The track, from her upcoming album Middle of Nowhere (due May 1), opens with a line that immediately raised some eyebrows — and a few confused questions online.

Musgraves sings that she’s “lonely with a capital H.” And yes, there’s a reason that phrase sounds a little strange at first.

What Does It Mean?

At first glance, the lyric doesn’t make much sense. After all, there’s no “H” in the word lonely.

Read More: Kacey Musgraves ‘Dry Spell’ Lyrics Made Us Blush! [LISTEN]

But the line is actually a playful bit of wordplay. When Musgraves sings she’s “lonely with a capital H,” she’s hinting at the word horny — using the capital letter to emphasize the feeling behind the loneliness.

The full line from the opening verse makes the joke even clearer:

It’s been a real long three-hundred and thirty-five days /
And the last time, it wasn’t good anyway /
I’m so lonely, lonely with a capital ‘H’ /
If you know what I mean, I’ve been sitting on the washing machine.

The cheeky “washing machine” line drives the point home: Musgraves is joking that after nearly a year without intimacy, she’s been left to handle things herself.

A Song That’s Honest — and a Little Self-Aware

Despite the humor, “Dry Spell” comes from a real place for the country superstar.

Musgraves told NPR that she wrote much of her upcoming album during the longest stretch of single life she’s had as an adult.

“I wrote the title down — ‘Dry Spell’ — because it was what I was going through,” she explained.

Read More: 50 Best Country Breakup Songs Ever

After a breakup, the singer spent time reflecting on her relationships and learning how to embrace being on her own.

I was taking stock of my relationships and what I wanted in my life, and really learning how to lean into being alone,” she said. “I started really loving my singledom.”

Still, as the song makes clear, independence doesn’t mean the desire for intimacy disappears.

Musgraves leans into that reality with humor instead of pretending otherwise. As she put it, many songs try to convince listeners how sexy the artist is. On “Dry Spell,” she flips the idea on its head.

“People are trying to convince you of how sexy they are,” she said. “And I’m telling you how I have not been getting any.”

12 Naughty Country Songs That Will Make You Blush

Country music is often known for wholesome themes of God, faith and family, but that doesn’t mean the genre doesn’t have a sexier side. These 12 country songs are so naughty that it’s almost hard to believe they made it on the radio.

Gallery Credit: Sterling Whitaker





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Ulta Beauty Expects Growth to Slow as Consumers Focus on Value

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The cosmetics and fragrances retailer expects sales to grow 6% to 7% this fiscal year, compared with a 9.7% increase in the prior fiscal year.



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