Madness, Cinderella
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Cinderella, who elevated underdogs, cut down juggernauts, and cultivated drama, surprise, and joy within the NCAA Tournament for more than three quarters of a century, died earlier this week after a ...
From The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Southeastern Conference sent a record 14 teams to the tournament this year and seven of them have made it all the way to the Sweet 16.
From CNN
I'm actually tied for first place. That's because I didn't pick them myself. AI did, and wouldn't you know, it went 28 for 32 in the first round and 14 for 16 in the second round.
From CNET
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Their proven projection model has simulated every game in the tournament 10,000 times. It has absolutely crushed its March Madness picks recently, beating over 91% of all CBS Sports brackets in four of the past six tournaments.
With the opening line of Duke’s Sweet 16 hovering near double digits, the Blue Devils are heavily favored in their matchup against No. 4 Arizona. Displaying dominant two-way play through two games, it’s easy to see why Duke currently sits at No. 1 entering the second weekend.
For the first time since the NCAA tournament expanded to 32 teams in 1975, every team that advanced to the Sweet 16 hails from a power conference.
21hon MSN
One year after making its first Final Four, No. 2 Alabama established a new NCAA Tournament record for 3-pointers made (25) in a win over BYU.
Nick Wright joins Colin Cowherd to discuss all four 1-seeds making the Sweet 16, and the lack of cinderella runs in this year’s March Madness tournament. Plus, they discuss Aaron Rodgers waiting to sign with a team.
Cinderella went home before curfew. Our initial Final Four picks are still alive. But, we're changing course and selling some of those intial picks.
College basketball may not be dead, but the March Madness Cinderella is on life support. The bracket more than ever is becoming a race to see who has the biggest checkbook, and for once, the Razorbacks are in perfect position to capitalize on the change.
“I’m telling you,” Jeff Hoffmeister, CSU Class of ’93, whispered to me Sunday while watching his beloved Rams fall to mighty Maryland in the second round of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament. “This is when legends are made.” Four seconds and an eternity later, Jalen Lake rose to the rafters and hit one of the biggest shots in CSU history.