John Carlson ‘not near done,’ ‘thrilled’ to join Ducks in deadline deal

Nov 8, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; Washington Capitals defenseman John Carlson (74) celebrates after scoring a goal against the Tampa Bay Lightning in the second period at Benchmark International Arena.

ANAHEIM, Calif. – It wasn’t a place veteran defenseman John Carlson expected himself to be on Friday, let alone at any point in his NHL career.

Carlson addressed media on a video call just after the league’s trade deadline just before he was set to leave his home of Washington, D.C. for the first time in his 17-year NHL career and hop on a plane to the West Coast to join his new teammates on the Anaheim Ducks.

Carlson said it had felt destined he’d play his entire NHL career with one franchise, which includes a 2018 Stanley Cup championship, and finish as a lifetime Capital, but circumstances dictated otherwise, when he was traded Thursday night for a conditional first-round pick and a 2026 third-round pick.

“It’s tough to say after the fact, but for sure, if you asked me a couple days ago, I would say, yeah,” Carlson said. “That was always a goal of mine (to finish in Washington). That was always what I had anticipated or strive to be that person in the community and on the ice, and it didn’t work out like that. So, I move on. I’m excited for this new opportunity. Excited to get out of my comfort zone too and get to a new organization, meet a lot of new faces, mesh with a lot of new players, and I think that’s a challenge that’s very appealing to me.”

That was a recurring theme for Carlson in his media availability. Despite the weirdness of the situation–including the middle-of-the-night announcement, which was first relayed to him by his Massachusetts cousin, who was up late shoveling snow–the 36-year-old defenseman was excited about his move to the Ducks.

“Crazy day with my family, crazy day. Packing, getting ready, saying goodbyes,” Carlson said. “It’s an exciting time and certainly, as getting more and more exciting as I’m nearing the plane, but there was a lot that went into the day as well that I’ve never had to deal with. And that’s part of life. That’s part of this league. I’ve been lucky not to have to do too many of these things, but with that said, thrilled to be an Anaheim Duck and thrilled to start getting going.”

Carlson’s impact on the Capitals in his 17-year run was evident from the media sessions in Washington, where NHL all-time goals leader Alex Ovechkin called it the saddest day of his career.

It’s a loss for the Capitals organization, but a gain for Anaheim.

“Definitely was a difficult morning from that standpoint, as well as the getting in front of guys that you care so much about, and have all touched you in different ways,” Carlson said. “I’ve learned so much whether it was from Ovi or whether it was from Justin Sourdif or Ryan Leonard. I really ingested so much information from those guys, from the coaches to Wellsy as a new coach. I think that’s always been my mentality, is learning from others. And they have so many great people in that organization that mean so much to me. That was very difficult, and certainly, those emotions of friendships and memories will be there for a long time.”

Carlson now joins the young and rising Ducks, whose roster of talented budding superstars like Leo Carlsson and Cutter Gauthier sparked enthusiasm for Carlson about the move.

And while several years the senior of Carlsson, Gauthier and the youthful left side of the Ducks defensive corps, the 36-year-old right-handed blue-liner declared “I’m not near done.”

“I think I got a lot left in the tank,” Carlson said. “I think mentally I’m better than ever. I think obviously, I’ve been out a few games here (recently) and that kind of stinks, but this season I felt like I played some of my best hockey. My body’s felt some of the best it’s felt in four or five years. So, I think I got a lot of momentum in that respect.  I think even before this trade, I would say coming into the year, I was as hungry as ever.”

Below is a full transcript of the media call with Ducks defenseman John Carlson on Friday (questions and responses edited for clarity):

In the hours since the deal, what’s it been like to kind of process this for you?

Obviously I wasn’t aware kind of at the time of getting announced, just kind of sleeping and whatnot, but soon enough, after your phone rings enough, you kind of start wrestling around and actually, one of my cousins was up in Massachusetts plowing and stuff. He had the news too, and he was calling me, and so you kind of figured it out. In the middle of the night, it’s not the best way to find out some, some very altering news like that. Just been a crazy day. Crazy day with my family, crazy day. Packing, getting ready, saying goodbyes. It’s an exciting time and certainly, as getting more and more exciting as I’m nearing the plane, but there was a lot that went into the day as well that I’ve never had to deal with. And that’s part of life. That’s part of this league. I’ve been lucky not to have to do too many of these things, but with that said, thrilled to be an Anaheim Duck and thrilled to start getting going.

It’s my understanding that your contract talks with your representation and the Caps went right up to their decision. Am I correct with that? And did you really think that there was a possibility that they would go ahead and make this move to trade? 

Yeah, so that’s pretty accurate, I would say. Obviously, in the days leading up, I became more aware of the potential for something like this to happen, and that’s where I stood. So, it wasn’t a total blindside or anything like that. Like I said before, maybe the timing of the whole situation was a little wacky, but I guess that’s just part of it and whatnot. Like I said, again, I’m excited, thrilled to be with the Ducks, thrilled to get out to California.

I’m sure you have dual thoughts here, among the many that are going through your head. The way it went down, did that bother you at all? Were you notified, or were you given any sort of heads up before you went to sleep? And then the flip side of it is, what about joining this Ducks team that seemingly is on the rise and obviously made a big move to get you?

It was days coming to the understanding that this is a potential. So from that standpoint, that’s what I knew. It wasn’t a complete blindside or anything like that. Like I said, about the timing in the middle of the night, I don’t know how these things work. I’ve never been a part of one. Don’t care to be a veteran in that sense. But the team, I think that it’s an amazing opportunity for me. I’ve been here forever, so obviously to one of your questions, yeah, there’s many, many emotions throughout this day from the time that I found out until the time I’m talking to you right now. And those emotions will be there for a long time. I’ve had a very long run here. A lot of great friendships on and off the ice uh, in the community and not, that I’m going to miss. And to have a family and be away and have to move them maybe across the country. Those are all big things in life. And it’s exciting time. It’s a great team to come to. I think they are loaded with talent, loaded with some character guys that I’m really looking forward to playing with. After seeing them on TV, seeing the games against them, and so I’m excited to take on this new challenge.

I say this as a 36 year old myself. You’re having a pretty good season, but how much more do you still think you have left in the tank as an NHL player?

I think I got a lot left in the tank. I think mentally I’m better than ever. I think obviously I’ve been out a few games here and that kind of stinks, but this season I felt like I played some of my best hockey. My body’s felt some of the best it’s felt in four or five years. So, I think I got a lot of momentum in that respect.  I think even before this trade, I would say coming into the year, I was as hungry as ever. I’m not near done. I don’t have 10 years left, though. So I think as that clock starts to tick. Every practice, every game, everything just means a little bit more and I think that’s where I’m at mentally. I’m thrilled to take on this challenge. But certainly, I’m not ready to be done with this great game, and I know that I can be a very effective player into the future.

I know you’re still trying to wrap your head around the situation being traded at all, I’m sure, but is there any thought to you’re going to a new spot, you want to kind of latch in and kind of stick with that? Or are you not taking too far ahead in terms of where you might have to make those decisions in the summer?

Yeah, I don’t know. I’m worried about getting on the plane right now, and meeting the guys and doing all that. I think there’ll be due time for everything. We’ll see what happens. I guess I would say that I’m open to anything and everything. Like I said, it’s a new experience. It’s a whole new thing for me. There’ll be a lot to sort through, a lot of unpacking these emotions and channeling my excitement. I’m just thrilled. I really am. I’m grateful for the new opportunity.

I know you’ve crossed paths with a few of the guys here in Anaheim, whether it’s Radko (Gudas, former Capitals teammate) or Chris Kreider (Team USA World Juniors teammate). Have you talked to any of those guys yet, reached out? 

Yeah, no, I think they’ve been–everyone from the staff down has been very receptive, very friendly, reaching out. Which is big. I always say that, and usually I’m the one on the other end of the line, but I think the more confident and comfortable you can get in a situation, the better you’re going to play in, especially in a quick manner.

A lot of guys (in Washington) talked about today, just talking to Ovechkin and to Tom Wilson and some of the other guys this morning. What was that like for you? It seems surreal that it was actually happening.

Yeah, definitely had that feeling. Definitely was a difficult morning from that standpoint, as well as the getting in front of guys that you care so much about, and have all touched you in different ways. I’ve learned so much whether it was rom Ovi or whether it was from Justin Sourdif or Ryan Leonard. I really ingested so much information from those guys, from the coaches to Wellsy as a new coach. I think that’s always been my mentality, is learning from others. And they have so many great people in that organization that mean so much to me. That was very difficult, and certainly, those emotions of friendships and memories will be there for a long time.

I know you were talking contract, but did you think that this was gonna be a place you’re gonna be for your entire career?

Yeah, I mean, it’s tough to say after the fact, but for sure, if you ask me a couple days ago, I would say, yeah. That was always a goal of mine. That was always what I had anticipated or strive to be that person in the community and on the ice, and it didn’t work out like that. So, I move on, and like I said before, I’m excited for this new opportunity. Excited to get out of my comfort zone too and and get to a new organization, meet a lot of new faces, mesh with a lot of new players, and I think that’s a challenge that’s very appealing to me.

What was the conversation like with your kids this morning? Did they understand what was going on or?

My younger ones don’t really care. I think my oldest one, I think it’s kind of hit him here and there. Oh, are we moving? What are my friends, or where are my, you know–there’s a lot more to it when you’re 10 years old than than five or two. Those are hard conversations too, to say, well, I’m going to be gone for a long time. I hope that we sort out what our family plan is and all that. So those are tough conversations to have, and especially when your kids are that age and have feelings and emotions too.

When you were coming up from Hershey (Washington’s AHL affiliate), like you, and Ovie, and Kuzy, all these guys were young guys that were kind of sitting on ‘Go’ as a young core. How do you feel now coming into a team that has that? But you’re kind of on the other side of this, the veteran guy, looking at Cutter and Leo and all these guys that are, knocking on the door for Anaheim. 

Yeah, no, I think that’s a very interesting and cool kind of angle from this whole thing, too, is I think I can add a lot of value both in my play and what I can do out there, but also what I think I can impart on them mentally or through talking and chatting. I think there’s so much talent there. There’s so much fun to be had that it’s an exciting proposition, and like I said before, I mean, I think that these guys, especially now, with how skilled they are, I mean, they were top, top elite players that I’m coming to play with. So, I’m gonna be learning from them just like I hope that they’ll be learning from me.

You’re touched on this a little bit in terms of things you learned from Ovechkin and as time as captain there. I know this morning he said something to the effect that this was like the saddest day of his career of you being traded. Can you just talk to kind of the personal bond you had with him and maybe some of the other guys that did a really long tenure in DC there?

I’ve played with four or five guys for a really long time, and I’ve built many, many deep friendships with and family friendships and kids and and all that. That’s a tough part of the business. It’s really, it’s not easy to do those things. It’s not easy to go your separate ways, but, like I said, it’s part of the gig, I guess. And it’s just something that you have to deal with right now and work through as we’re all going our different directions. 

I know you guys had a fantastic regular season last year, the playoffs didn’t go quite how you’d hoped. How excited are you now to be stepping into a situation where you’re on a trajectory to be in the playoffs, to be in a division that’s pretty wide open in terms of the playoffs and maybe get a deep run with a new group here?

I think that they got all the makings of a team that’s more than capable of that too. That’s obviously very attractive to me and very advantageous and I’m grateful to be able to land in a spot like this, really, truly. From anything, from how I’ve been treated so far to the quality of players that I’ll be playing with and the community and how everything’s sounds great. I didn’t have too much today, obviously, as far as a no-trade list and stuff, but you can still find yourself in different situations throughout this league and I’m grateful to be in this one.

How was Anaheim perceived in the rest of the league? Because they have been scuffling for a little bit. They seem to be really good this year. Is that the perception? Do you think you’re coming to a team that can make a deep playoff front? And the fact that Anaheim is where they are, they add you, and you’re like the final piece. You’re their big trade deadline acquisition. How do you feel about that? Is that a lot of pressure? Is that more of a compliment than anything else?

I think it’s both, for sure. I think there’s definitely both sides to that. I think the feeling around the league is very positive, I think. I’ve had former coaches, players, teammates reach out and kind of allude to the fact that this seems the real deal. They got some really, really amazing pieces. Obviously, we’ve played against them. I’ve watched them. I know a lot about them myself, but guys in different divisions and all that have seen them more, that means a lot to me too. So like I said, I’m thrilled to be here. I’m thrilled to looking up and down this roster and seeing what we got there is very cool to see and very exciting to get to get to be a part of. 

2026 Men’s D1 College Basketball Conference Tournament Central

The 31 men’s conference tournament finals in schedule order. | Chris Dobbertean using logos from SportsLogos.net

Schedule For Friday, March 6

  • An asterisk (*) indicates that the tip time is approximate.
  • Games marked with a carat (^) have other viewing options available. Please check the conference’s section below and your local listings.

Finals Before 3/14

ASUN

Jacksonville, Fla.
Wednesday, March 4 (UNF Arena and Swisher Gym) and Friday–Sunday, March 6–8 (Veterans Memorial Arena)
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Lipscomb

NOTE: West Georgia will participate but is ineligible for the automatic bid as the Wolves are reclassifying.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the championship.

First Round (Wed. 3/4)

Gm. 1: (9) Jacksonville (12-20, 7-11) 79, (8) Bellarmine 82
Gm. 2: (12) North Alabama (9-21, 4-14) 58, (5) FGCU 69
Gm. 3:(10) Stetson 92, (7) Eastern Kentucky (11-21, 7-11) 76
Gm. 4: (11) North Florida (7-25, 5-13) 85, (6) West Georgia 93

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/6)

Gm. 5: (8) Bellarmine (13-19, 7-11) 73, (1) Central Arkansas 86
Gm. 6:(5) FGCU 77, (4) Lipscomb (19-13, 12-6) 53
Gm. 7: (10) Stetson (12-21, 7-11) 60, (2) Austin Peay 69
Gm. 8: (6) West Georgia (15-16, 8-10) vs. (3) Queens (18-13, 13-5), 7:30*

Semifinals (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 9: (5) FGCU (16-17, 8-10) vs. (1) Central Arkansas (21-11, 15-3), 5
Gm. 10: Gm. 8 winner vs. (2) Austin Peay (22-8, 15-3), 7:30*

Championship (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 11: Semifinal winners, 2 (ESPN2)

Big Sky

Boise, Idaho
Saturday–Wednesday, March 7–11
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Montana

ESPN+ ($) will stream and Scripps Sports Montana will air all games before the semifinals.

First Round (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 1: (10) Northern Arizona (10-21, 4-14) vs. (9) Idaho State (12-19, 5-13), 7:30
Gm. 2: (8) Sacramento State (10-20, 6-12) vs. (7) Idaho (17-14, 9-9), 10*

Quarterfinals (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 3: Gm. 1 winner vs. (1) Portland State (19-10, 13-5), 7:30*
Gm. 4: Gm. 2 winner vs. (2) Montana State (18-13, 12-6), 10

Quarterfinals (Mon. 3/9)

Gm. 5: (5) Northern Colorado (20-11, 10-8) vs. (4) Montana (16-15, 10-8), 7:30
Gm. 6: (6) Weber State (16-15, 10-8) vs. (3) Eastern Washington (13-18, 11-7), 10*

Semifinals (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. Gm. 5 winner, 9 (ESPNU)
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. Gm. 6 winner, 11:30* (ESPN2)

Championship (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 9: Semifinal winners, 11:30 (ESPN2)

Big South

Johnson City, Tenn.
Wednesday, March 4 and Friday–Sunday, March 6–8
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: High Point

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the championship.

First Round (Wed. 3/4)

Gm. 1:(9) Gardner-Webb 65, (8) USC Upstate (13-19, 5-11) 64

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/6)

Gm. 2: (9) Gardner-Webb (4-29, 1-15) 59, (1) High Point 81
Gm. 3: (7) Charleston Southern (15-17, 6-10) 81, (2) Winthrop 86
Gm. 4: (5) Longwood (16-15, 8-8) vs. (4) UNC Asheville (14-16, 8-8), 6
Gm. 5: (6) Presbyterian (14-17, 7-9) vs. (3) Radford (16-15, 9-7), 8:30*

Semifinals (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 6: Gm. 4 winner vs. (1) High Point (28-4, 15-1), 12
Gm. 7: Gm. 5 winner vs. (2) Winthrop (22-10, 13-3), 2:30*

Championship (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 8: Semifinal winners, 12 (ESPN2)

Coastal Athletic

Washington, D.C.
Friday–Tuesday, March 6–10
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: UNCW

FloHoops ($) will stream all games before the semifinals.

First Round (Fri. 3/6)

Gm. 1: (13) Northeastern 88, (12) North Carolina A&T (11-19, 4-14) 72

Second Round (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 2: (9) Campbell (14-17, 8-10) vs. (8) Stony Brook (17-14, 9-9), 12
Gm. 3: (13) Northeastern (7-23, 2-16) vs. (5) Drexel (16-15, 10-8), 2:30*
Gm. 4: (10) Hampton (13-18, 7-11) vs. (7) Towson (17-14, 9-9), 6
Gm. 5: (11) Elon (14-17, 6-12) vs. (6) William & Mary (19-11, 10-8), 8:30*

Quarterfinals (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 6: Gm. 2 winner vs. (1) UNCW (26-5, 15-3), 12
Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. (4) Monmouth (17-14, 11-7), 2:30*
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. (2) Charleston (21-10, 14-4), 6
Gm. 9: Gm. 5 winner vs. (3) Hofstra (21-10, 12-6), 8:30*

Semifinals (Mon. 3/9)

CBSSN will air both games.

Gm. 10: Gm. 6 winner vs. Gm. 7 winner, 6
Gm. 11: Gm. 8 winner vs. Gm. 9 winner, 8:30*

Championship (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 12: Semifinal winners, 7 (CBSSN)

Horizon

Higher seeds
Monday and Wednesday, March 2 and 4
Indianapolis
Sunday–Tuesday, March 8–10
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Robert Morris

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the semifinals.

Play-In (Mon. 3/2)

Gm. 1: (11) IU Indianapolis (7-25, 3-17) 93, (10) Cleveland State 101

First Round (Tues. 3/3)

Gm. 6: (6) Purdue Fort Wayne (17-15, 11-9) 56, (5) Green Bay 64

First Round (Wed. 3/4)

Gm. 2: (10) Cleveland State (11-22, 6-14) 61, (1) Wright State 90
Gm. 3: (9) Youngstown State (15-17, 8-12) 53, (2) Robert Morris 68
Gm. 4: (8) Milwaukee (12-20, 8-12) 63, (3) Detroit Mercy 84
Gm. 5:(7) Northern Kentucky 85, (4) Oakland (16-16, 12-8) 84

Second Round (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 7: (7) Northern Kentucky (19-13, 10-10) vs. (5) Green Bay (18-14, 12-8), 3:30

Semifinals (Mon. 3/9)

Gm. 8: Gm. 7 winner vs. (1) Wright State (21-11, 15-5), 7 (ESPNU)
Gm. 9: (3) Detroit Mercy (16-14, 12-8) vs. (2) Robert Morris (22-10, 13-7), 9:30* (ESPN2)

Championship (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 10: Semifinal winners, 7 (ESPN)

Metro Atlantic

Atlantic City, N.J.
Thursday–Sunday, March 5–8 and Tuesday, March 10
PDF Bracket/ BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Mount St. Mary’s

NOTE: Niagara (8-22, 5-15, 11th), Canisius (10-21, 5-15, 12th), and Rider (4-25, 3-17, 13th) did not qualify.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the championship.

First Round (Thurs. 3/5)

Gm. 1: (9) Sacred Heart 91, (8) Iona (18-14, 10-10) 80
Gm. 2: (10) Manhattan (12-20, 8-12) 60, (7) Fairfield 71

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/6)

Gm. 3: (9) Sacred Heart (14-19, 9-11) 48, (1) Merrimack 70
Gm. 4: (7) Fairfield (20-12, 11-9) vs. (2) Saint Peter’s (17-11, 14-6), 8:30*

Quarterfinals (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 5: (5) Marist (18-11, 12-8) vs. (4), Quinnipiac (19-12, 12-8), 6
Gm. 6: (6) Mount St. Mary’s (15-16, 11-9) vs. (3) Siena (20-11, 13-7), 8:30*

Semifinals (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 7: Gm. 5 winner vs. (1) Merrimack (22-10, 17-3), 6
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. Gm. 6 winner, 8:30

Championship (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 9: Semifinal winners, 9 (ESPN2)

MVC

St. Louis, Mo.
Thursday–Sunday, March 5–8
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Drake

MVC TV partners will air (check local listings) and ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the semifinals.

First Round (Thurs. 3/5)

Gm. 1: (9) Drake 67, (8) Southern Illinois (16-16, 10-10) 63
Gm. 2: (10) Indiana State (11-21, 4-16) 62, (7) Valparaiso 63
Gm. 3: (11) Evansville (7-25, 3-17) 59, (6) Northern Iowa 68

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/6)

Gm. 4: (9) Drake100, (1) Belmont (26-6, 16-4) 81
Gm. 5:(5) UIC 92, (4) Murray State (20-12, 12-8) 79
Gm. 6: (7) Valparaiso (18-14, 11-9) vs. (2) Bradley (20-11, 13-7), 7
Gm. 7: (6) Northern Iowa (20-12, 11-9) vs. (3) Illinois State (20-11, 12-8), 9:30*

Semifinals (Sat. 3/7)

CBSSN will air both games.

Gm. 8: (9) Drake (14-19, 6-14) vs. (5) UIC (18-14, 12-8), 3:30
Gm. 9: Gm. 6 winner vs. Gm. 7 winner, 6*

Championship (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 10: Semifinal winners, 12 (CBS)

NEC

Higher seeds host
Wednesday, Saturday, and Tuesday, March 4, 7, and 10
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Saint Francis (DNQ)

NOTES:

  • New Haven (14-17, 9-9, 5th) is not participating as the Chargers are in their first reclassification year, so only one team missed the field of eight on record.
  • Saint Francis (7-24, 5-13, 10th) did not qualify in the Red Flash’s final season as a D1 member.
  • Le Moyne and Mercyhurst are ineligible for the automatic bid as they are reclassifying.

Quarterfinals (Wed. 3/4)

NEC Front Row will stream all four games.

Gm. 1: (8) Chicago State (7-25, 5-13) 75, (1) LIU 79
Gm. 2:(7) Wagner 70, (2) Central Connecticut State (18-12, 12-6) 62
Gm. 3: (6) Fairleigh Dickinson (11-21, 8-10) 61, (3) Mercyhurst 70
Gm. 4:(5) Stonehill 81, (4) Le Moyne (15-17, 10-8) 71

Semifinals (Sat. 3/7)

Teams were reseeded.

ESPN+ ($) will stream both games.

Gm. 5: (5) Stonehill (12-20, 8-10) at (3) Mercyhurst (16-16, 10-8), 12
Gm. 6: (7) Wagner (14-16, 8-10) at (1) LIU (22-10, 15-3), 2

Championship (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 7: (2) at (1), 7 (ESPN2)

OVC

Evansville, Ind.
Wednesday–Saturday, March 4–7
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: SIUE

NOTE: Tennessee Tech (13-18, 8-12, 9th), Southern Indiana (7-23, 4-16, 10th), and Western Illinois (5-26, 1-19, 11th) did not qualify.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the semifinals.

First Round (Wed. 3/4)

Gm. 1:(8) Eastern Illinois 77, (5) SIUE (19-13, 12-8) 71 (OT)
Gm. 2: (7) Little Rock (12-20, 9-11) 62, (6) Lindenwood 72

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/5)

Gm. 3: (8) Eastern Illinois (13-20, 8-12) 63, (4) UT Martin 66
Gm. 4: (6) Lindenwood (18-15, 11-9) 66, (3) Southeast Missouri 68

Semifinals (Fri. 3/6)

ESPNU will air both games.

Gm. 5: (4) UT Martin (22-10, 13-7) vs. (1) Tennessee State (21-9, 15-5), 8
Gm. 6: (3) Southeast Missouri (20-12, 14-6) vs. (2) Morehead State (19-12, 15-5), 10:30*

Championship (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 7: Semifinal winners, 9 (ESPN2)

Patriot

Higher seeds host
Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday, and Wednesday, March 3, 5, 8, and 11
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: American

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the semifinals.

First Round (Tues. 3/3)

Gm. 1: (9) Army West Point (11-21, 5-13) 55, (8) Bucknell 65
Gm. 2:(10) Holy Cross 82, (7) Lafayette (11-21, 8-10) 77

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/5)

Gm. 3: (8) Bucknell (10-23, 6-12) 69, (1) Navy 74
Gm. 4: (5) American (16-16, 9-9) 73, (4) Boston U. 75
Gm. 5: (6) Loyola Maryland (12-20, 8-10) 77, (3) Colgate 90
Gm. 6: (10) Holy Cross (11-22, 5-13) 66, (2) Lehigh 69

Semifinals (Sun. 3/8)

CBSSN will air both games.

Gm. 7: (3) Colgate (18-14, 11-7) at (2) Lehigh (16-16, 11-7), 12
Gm. 8: (4) Boston U. (16-16, 10-8) at (1) Navy (26-6, 17-1), 2

Championship (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 9: Semifinal winners, 7 (CBSSN)

SoCon

Asheville, N.C.
Friday–Monday, March 6–9
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Wofford

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the semifinals.

First Round (Fri. 3/6)

Nexstar-owned stations in the SoCon footprint will air both games.

Gm. 1:(9) The Citadel 88, (8) Chattanooga (13-19, 7-11) 85
Gm. 2: (10) VMI (6-25, 1-17) vs. (7) UNCG (13-18, 9-9), 7:30*

Quarterfinals (Sat. 3/7)

SC ETV affiliates will air all four games.

Gm. 3: (9) The Citadel (11-21, 7-11) vs. (1) ETSU (21-10, 13-5), 12
Gm. 4: Gm. 2 winner vs. (2) Wofford (19-12, 11-7), 2:30*
Gm. 5: (6) Furman (19-12, 10-8) vs. (3) Samford (18-13, 11-7), 6
Gm. 6: (5) Western Carolina (14-15, 10-8) vs. (4) Mercer (19-12, 11-7), 8:30*

Semifinals (Sun. 3/8)

ESPNU will air both games.

Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. Gm 6 winner, 4
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. Gm. 5 winner, 6:30*

Championship (Mon. 3/9)

Gm. 9: Semifinal winners, 7 (ESPN)

Southland

Lake Charles, La.
Sunday–Wednesday, March 8–11
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: McNeese

NOTE: Lamar (12-19, 7-15, t-9th), Incarnate Word (12-19, 7-15, t-9th), Southeastern Louisiana (9-22, 6-16, t-11th), and East Texas A&M (11-21, 6-16, t-11th) did not qualify.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games other than the first semifinal and championship.

First Round (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 1: (8) Houston Christian (12-19, 8-14) vs. (5) New Orleans (14-17, 12-10), 6
Gm. 2: (7) Northwestern State (10-21, 8-14) vs. (6) Nicholls (13-18, 12-10), 8:30*

Quarterfinals (Mon. 3/9)

Gm. 3: Gm. 1 winner vs. (4) Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (17-14, 13-9), 6
Gm. 4: Gm. 2 winner vs. (3) UTRGV (18-13, 14-8), 8:30*

Semifinals (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 5: Gm. 3 winner vs. (1) Stephen F. Austin (27-4, 20-2), 7 (ESPNU)
Gm. 6: Gm. 4 winner at (2) McNeese (26-5, 19-3), 9:30*

Championship (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 7: Semifinal winners, 5 (ESPN2)

Summit

Sioux Falls, S.D.
Wednesday–Sunday, March 4–8
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Omaha

Midco Sports will air and Summit League Network ($) will stream all games up to the semifinals.

First Round (Wed. 3/4)

Gm. 1: (9) Kansas City (4-27, 1-15) 62, (8) Oral Roberts 84

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/5)

Gm. 2: (8) Oral Roberts (10-23, 4-12) 65, (1) North Dakota State 76
Gm. 3: (7) South Dakota State (14-18, 7-9) 67, (2) St. Thomas 80

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/6)

Gm. 4: (5) Omaha (15-16, 8-8) vs. (4) South Dakota (16-15, 8-8), 7
Gm. 5: (6) Denver (15-16, 8-8) vs. (3) North Dakota (16-16, 10-6), 9:30*

Semifinals (Sat. 3/7)

CBSSN will air both games.

Gm. 6: Gm. 4 winner vs. (1) North Dakota State (25-7, 14-2), 8
Gm. 7: Gm. 5 winner vs. (2) St. Thomas (24-8, 12-4), 10:30*

Championship (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 8: Semifinal winners, 9 (CBSSN)

Sun Belt

Pensacola, Fla.
Tuesday–Monday, March 3–9
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Troy

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the championship.

First Round (Tues. 3/3)

Gm. 1: (13) Georgia State (10-22, 7-11) 75, (12) Louisiana 84
Gm. 2: (14) ULM (4-28, 1-17) 80, (11) Old Dominion 87

Second Round (Wed. 3/4)

Gm. 3: (12) Louisiana (11-22, 7-11) 72, (9) James Madison 87
Gm. 4: (11) Old Dominion (12-21, 7-11) 84, (10) Georgia Southern 88

Third Round (Thurs. 3/5)

Gm. 5: (9) James Madison (18-15, 9-9) 80, (8) Southern Miss 86
Gm. 6:(10) Georgia Southern 80, (7) Arkansas State (20-12, 11-7) 77

Fourth Round (Fri. 3/6)

Gm. 7: (8) Southern Miss (17-15, 9-9) vs. (5) Texas State (19-12, 11-7), 6
Gm. 8: (10) Georgia Southern (18-15, 8-10) vs. (6) South Alabama (21-10, 11-7), 8:30*

Quarterfinals (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 9: Gm. 7 winner vs. (4) App State (19-12, 11-7), 6:30
Gm. 10: Gm. 8 winner vs. (3) Coastal Carolina (19-12, 11-7), 9*

Semifinals (Sun. 3/8)

Gm. 11: Gm. 9 winner vs. (1) Troy (20-11. 12-6), 6
Gm. 12: Gm. 10 winner vs. (2) Marshall (19-12, 11-7), 8:30*

Championship (Mon. 3/9)

Gm. 13: Semifinal winners, 7 (ESPN2)

West Coast

Las Vegas, Nev.
Thursday–Tuesday, March 5–10
PDF Bracket / BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Gonzaga

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the quarterfinals.

First Round (Thurs. 3/5)

Gm. 1: (12) Pepperdine (9-23, 4-14) 68, (9) Portland 77
Gm. 2: (11) San Diego 66, (10) Loyola Marymount (15-17, 6-12) 62

Second Round (Fri. 3/6)

Gm. 3: (9) Portland (14-18, 6-12) vs. (8) Washington State (12-19, 7-11), 9
Gm. 4: (11) San Diego (12-20, 5-13) vs. (7) Seattle U (19-12, 8-10), 11:30*

Third Round (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 5: Gm. 3 winner vs. (5) San Francisco (16-15, 8-10), 9
Gm. 6: Gm. 4 winner vs. (6) Pacific (17-14, 8-10), 11:30*

Quarterfinals (Sun. 3/8)

ESPN2 will air both games.

Gm. 7: Gm. 5 winner vs. (4) Oregon State (16-15, 9-9), 8:30
Gm. 8: Gm. 6 winner vs. (3) Santa Clara (24-7, 15-3), 11*

Semifinals (Mon. 3/9)

Gm. 9: Gm. 7 winner vs. (1) Gonzaga (28-3, 16-2), 9 (ESPN)
Gm. 10: Gm. 8 winner vs. (2) Saint Mary’s (27-4, 16-2), 11:30* (ESPN2)

Championship (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 11: Semifinal winners, 9 (ESPN)

Finals On 3/14 or 3/15

America East

Higher seeds host
Saturday, Tuesday, and Saturday, March 7, 10, and 14
BtB Primer
2025 Champion: Bryant

NOTE: Binghamton (8-23, 4-12, 9th) did not qualify.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the championship.

Quarterfinals (Sat. 3/7)

Gm. 1: (8) New Hampshire (9-20, 5-11) at (1) UMBC (21-8, 14-2), 1 p.m.
Gm. 2: (7) Bryant (9-21, 5-11) at (2) Vermont (20-11, 12-4), 2 p.m.
Gm. 3: (5) UAlbany (11-20, 7-9) at (4) UMass Lowell (14-17, 9-7), 2 p.m.
Gm. 4: (6) Maine (8-23, 6-10) at (3) NJIT (15-16, 10-6), 4 p.m.

Semifinals (Tues. 3/10)

Teams will be reseeded.

Gm. 5: (4) at (1)
Gm. 6: (3) at (2)

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 7: (2) at (1), 11 a.m. (ESPN2)

American

Birmingham, Ala.
Wednesday–Sunday, March 11–15
2025 Champion: Memphis

NOTE: Teams finishing 10th, 11th, 12th, and 13th (UTSA) will not qualify.

First Round (Wed. 3/11)

ESPN+ ($) will stream both games.

Gm. 1: (9) vs. (8), 7
Gm. 2: (10) vs. (7), 9:30*

Second Round (Thurs. 3/12)

ESPNU will air both games.

Gm. 3: Gm. 1 winner vs. (5), 7
Gm. 4: Gm. 2 winner vs. (6), 9:30*

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/13)

ESPN2 will air both games.

Gm. 5: Gm. 3 winner vs. (4), 1
Gm. 6: Gm. 4 winner vs. (3), 3:30*

Semifinals (Sat. 3/14)

ESPN2 will air both games.

Gm. 7: Gm. 5 winner vs. (1), 3
Gm. 8: Gm. 6 winner vs. (2), 5:30*

Championship (Sun. 3/15)

Gm. 9: Semifinal winners, 3:15 (ESPN)

Atlantic 10

Pittsburgh, Pa.
Wednesday–Sunday, March 11–15
2025 Champion: VCU

First Round (Wed. 3/11)

USA Network will air both games.

Gm. 1: (13) vs. (12), 11:30
Gm. 2: (14) vs. (11), 2*

Second Round (Thurs. 3/12)

USA Network will air all four games.

Gm. 3: (9) vs. (8), 11:30
Gm. 4: Gm. 1 winner vs. (5), 2*
Gm. 5: (10) vs. (7), 5
Gm. 6: Gm. 2 winner vs. (6), 7:30*

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/13)

USA Network will air all four games.

Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. (1), 11:30
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. (4), 2*
Gm. 9: Gm. 5 winner vs. (2), 5
Gm. 10: Gm. 6 winner vs. (3), 7:30*

Semifinals (Sat. 3/14)

CBSSN will air both games.

Gm. 11: Gm. 7 winner vs. Gm. 8 winner, 1
Gm. 12: Gm. 9 winner vs. Gm. 10 winner, 3:30*

Championship (Sun. 3/15)

Gm. 13: Semifinal winners, 1 (CBS)

ACC

Charlotte, N.C.
Tuesday–Saturday, March 10–14
2025 Champion: Duke

NOTE: Teams finishing 16th, 17th, and 18th will not qualify.

First Round (Tues. 3/10)

ACC Network will air all four games.

Gm. 1: (13) vs. (12), 2
Gm. 2: (15) vs. (10), 4:30*
Gm. 3: (14) vs. (11), 7*

Second Round (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 4: (9) vs. (8), 12 (ESPN)
Gm. 5: Gm. 1 winner vs. (5), 2:30* (ESPN)
Gm. 6: Gm. 2 winner vs. (7), 7 (ESPN2)
Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. (6), 9:30* (ESPN2)

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. (1), 12 (ESPN/2)
Gm. 9: Gm. 5 winner vs. (4), 2:30* (ESPN/2)
Gm. 10: Gm. 6 winner vs. (2), 7 (ESPN/2)
Gm. 11: Gm. 7 winner vs. (3), 9:30* (ESPN/2)

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

Gm. 12: Gm. 8 winner vs. Gm. 9 winner, 7 (ESPN/2)
Gm. 13: Gm. 10 winner vs. Gm. 11 winner, 9:30* (ESPN/2)

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 14: Semifinal winners, 8:30 (ESPN)

Big 12

Kansas City, Mo.
Tuesday–Saturday, March 10–14
2025 Champion: Houston

First Round (Tues. 3/10)

ESPN+ ($) will stream all four games.

Gm. 1: (13) vs. (12), 12:30
Gm. 2: (16) vs. (9), 3*
Gm. 3: (15) vs. (10), 7
Gm. 4: (14) vs. (11), 9:30*

Second Round (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 5: Gm. 1 winner vs. (5), 12:30 (ESPN2)
Gm. 6: Gm. 2 winner vs. (8), 3 (ESPN+ ($))
Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. (7), 7 (ESPN+ ($))
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. (6), 9:30 (ESPNU)

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

Gm. 9: Gm. 5 winner vs. (4), 12:30 (ESPN/2)
Gm. 10: Gm. 6 winner vs. (1), 3* (ESPN/2)
Gm. 11: Gm. 7 winner vs. (2), 7 (ESPN/2)
Gm. 12: Gm. 8 winner vs. (3), 9:30* (ESPN/2)

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

Gm. 13: Gm. 9 winner vs. Gm. 10 winner, 7 (ESPN/2)
Gm. 14: Gm. 11 winner vs. Gm. 12 winner, 9:30* (ESPN/2)

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 15: Semifinal winners, 6 (ESPN)

Big East

New York
Wednesday–Saturday, March 11–14
2025 Champion: St. John’s

First Round (Wed. 3/11)

Peacock ($) will stream and NBCSN will air all three games.

Gm. 1: (9) vs. (8), 4
Gm. 2: (10) vs. (7), 6:30*
Gm. 3: (11) vs. (6), 9*

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

Gm. 4: Gm. 1 winner vs. (1), 12 (Peacock ($)/NBCSN)
Gm. 5: (5) vs. (4), 2:30* (Peacock ($)/NBCSN)
Gm. 6: Gm. 2 winner vs. (2), 7 (FS1)
Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. (3), 9:30* (FS1)

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

Fox will air both games.

Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. Gm. 5 winner, 5:30
Gm. 9: Gm. 6 winner vs. Gm. 7 winner, 8*

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 10: Semifinal winners, 6:30 (Fox)

Big Ten

Chicago
Tuesday–Sunday, March 10–15
2025 Champion: Michigan

First Round (Tues. 3/10)

Peacock ($) will stream and NBCSN will air both games.

Gm. 1: (17) vs. (16), 5
Gm. 2: (18) vs. (15), 7:30*

Second Round (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 3: Gm. 1 winner vs. (9), 12 (Peacock ($)/NBCSN)
Gm. 4: (13) vs. (12), 2:30* (Peacock ($)/NBCSN)
Gm. 5: Gm. 2 winner vs. (10), 6:30 (BTN)
Gm. 6: (14) vs. (11), 9 (BTN)

Third Round (Thurs. 3/12)

BTN will air all four games.

Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. (8), 12
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. (5), 2:30*
Gm. 9: Gm. 5 winner vs. (7), 6:30
Gm. 10: Gm. 6 winner vs. (6), 9*

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/13)

BTN will air all four games.

Gm. 11: Gm. 7 winner vs. (1), 12
Gm. 12: Gm. 8 winner vs. (4), 2:30*
Gm. 13: Gm. 9 winner vs. (2), 6:30
Gm. 14: Gm. 10 winner vs. (3), 9*

Semifinals (Sat. 3/14)

CBS will air both games.

Gm. 15: Gm. 11 winner vs. Gm. 12 winner, 1
Gm. 16: Gm. 13 winner vs. Gm. 14 winner, 3:30*

Championship (Sun. 3/15)

Gm. 17: Semifinal winners, 3:30 (CBS)

Big West

Henderson, Nev.
Wednesday–Saturday, March 11–14
2025 Champion: UC San Diego

NOTE: Teams finishing 9th, 10th, and 11th will not qualify.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the second semifinal.

First Round (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 1: (8) vs. (5), 9
Gm. 2: (6) vs. (7), 11:30*

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

Gm. 3: Gm. 1 winner vs. (4), 9
Gm. 4: Gm. 2 winner vs. (3), 11:30*

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

Gm. 5: Gm. 3 winner vs. (1), 9
Gm. 6: Gm. 4 winner vs. (2), 11:30* (ESPN2)

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 7: Semifinal winners, 10 (ESPN2)

Conference USA

Huntsville, Ala.
Tuesday–Saturday, March 10–14
2025 Champion: Liberty

NOTE: Teams finishing 11th and 12th will not qualify.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the semifinals.

First Round (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 1: (10) vs. (9), 6:30
Gm. 2: (8) vs. (7), 9*

Quarterfinals (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 3: Gm. 1 winner vs. (1), 6:30*
Gm. 4: Gm. 2 winner vs. (2), 9

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

Gm. 5: (5) vs. (4), 6;30
Gm. 6: (6) vs. (3), 9*

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

CBSSN will air both games.

Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. Gm. 5 winner, 12:30
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. Gm. 6 winner, 3*

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 9: Semifinal winners, 8:30 (CBSSN)

Ivy League

Ithaca, N.Y.
Saturday and Sunday, March 14 and 15
2025 Champion: Yale

NOTE: Teams finishing 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th will not qualify.

Semifinals (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 1: (4) vs. (1), 11 a.m. (ESPNU)
Gm. 2: (3) vs. (2), 1:30* (ESPN News)

Championship (Sun. 3/15)

Gm. 3: Semifinal winners, 12 (ESPN2)

Mid-American

Cleveland, Ohio
Thursday–Saturday, March 12–14
2025 Champion: Akron

NOTE: Teams finishing 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, and 13th will not qualify.

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

ESPN+ ($) will stream all four games.

Gm. 1: (8) vs. (1), 11 a.m.
Gm. 2: (5) vs. (4), 1:30*
Gm. 3: (7) vs. (2), 4*
Gm. 4: (6) vs. (3), 6:30*

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

CBSSN will air both games.

Gm. 5: Gm. 1 winner vs. Gm. 2 winner, 5
Gm. 6: Gm. 3 winner vs. Gm. 4 winner, 7:30*

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 7: Semifinal winners, 8 (ESPN2)

MEAC

Norfolk, Va.
Wednesday–Saturday, March 11–14
PDF Bracket
2025 Champion: Norfolk State

NOTE: Coppin State (7-24, 5-9, t-6th) will not participate as it is ineligible for the postseason due to APR violations.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the championship.

Game numbering includes the women’s tournament.

Quarterfinals (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 3: (7) Delaware State (7-22, 2-12) vs. (2) Morgan State (14-15, 10-4), 6

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

Gm. 6: (5) South Carolina State (9-21, 7-7) vs. (4) Norfolk State (15-16, 8-6), 6
Gm. 7: (6) Maryland-Eastern Shore (9-22, 5-9) vs. (3) North Carolina Central (12-17, 8-6), 8:30*

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

Gm. 10: Gm. 6 winner vs. (1) Howard (21-10, 11-3), 6
Gm. 11: Gm. 3 winner vs. Gm. 7 winner, 8:30*

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 12: Semifinal winners, 1 p.m. (ESPN2)

Mountain West

Las Vegas
Wednesday–Saturday, March 11–14
2025 Champion: Colorado State

First Round (Wed. 3/11)

MWN will stream all four games.

Gm. 1: (9) vs. (8), 3
Gm. 2: (12) vs. (5), 5:30*
Gm. 3: (10) vs. (7), 9
Gm. 4: (11) vs. (6), 11:30*

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

CBSSN will air all four games.

Gm. 5: Gm. 1 winner vs. (1), 3
Gm. 6: Gm. 2 winner vs. (4), 5:30*
Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. (2), 9
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. (3), 11:30*

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

CBSSN will air both games.

Gm. 9: Gm. 5 winner vs. Gm. 6 winner, 9:30
Gm. 10: Gm. 7 winner vs. Gm. 8 winner, 12 a.m.*

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 11: Semifinal winners, 6 (CBS)

SEC

Nashville, Tenn.
Wednesday–Sunday, March 11–15
2025 Champion: Florida

First Round (Wed. 3/11)

SEC Network will air all four games.

Gm. 1: (16) vs. (9), 12:30
Gm. 2: (13) vs. (12), 3*
Gm. 3: (15) vs. (10), 7
Gm. 4: (14) vs. (11), 9:30*

Second Round (Thurs. 3/12)

SEC Network will air all four games.

Gm. 5: Gm. 1 winner vs. (8), 12:30
Gm. 6: Gm. 2 winner vs. (5), 3*
Gm. 7: Gm. 3 winner vs. (7), 7
Gm. 8: Gm. 4 winner vs. (6), 9:30*

Quarterfinals (Fri. 3/13)

Gm. 9: Gm. 5 winner vs. (1), 12:30 (ESPN)
Gm. 10: Gm. 6 winner vs. (4), 3* (ESPN)
Gm. 11: Gm. 7 winner vs. (2), 7 (SECN)
Gm. 12: Gm. 8 winner vs. (3), 9:30* (SECN)

Semifinals (Sat. 3/14)

ESPN will air both games.

Gm. 13: Gm. 9 winner vs. Gm. 10 winner, 1
Gm. 14: Gm. 11 winner vs. Gm. 12 winner, 3:30*

Championship (Sun. 3/15)

Gm. 15: Semifinal winners, 1 (ESPN)

SWAC

Atlanta
Monday–Saturday, March 9–14
PDF Bracket
2025 Champion: Alabama State

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the championship.

First Round (Mon. 3/9)

Gm. 1: (11) Alcorn State (8-22, 7-11) vs. (10) Alabama State (10-21, 7-11), 2
Gm. 2: (12) Mississippi Valley State (3-29, 2-16) vs. (9) Grambling State (13-18, 7-11), 8:30

Second Round (Tues. 3/10)

Gm. 3: Gm. 1 winner vs. (8) Prairie View A&M (14-17, 9-9), 2
Gm. 4: Gm. 2 winner vs. (7) Jackson State (11-20, 10-8), 8:30

Quarterfinals (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 5: Gm. 3 winner vs. (1) Bethune-Cookman (17-14, 14-4), 2
Gm. 6: Gm. 4 winner vs. (2) Florida A&M (14-15, 11-7), 8:30

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

Gm. 7: (5) Alabama A&M (17-14, 10-8) vs. (4) Texas Southern (12-17, 10-8), 2
Gm. 8: (6) Arkansas-Pine Bluff (13-18, 10-8) vs. (3) Southern (15-16, 11-7), 8:30

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

Gm. 9: Gm. 5 winner vs. Gm. 7 winner, 2
Gm. 10: Gm. 6 winner vs. Gm. 8 winner, 8:30

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 11: Semifinal winners, 7:30 (ESPNU)

Western Athletic

Las Vegas
Wednesday–Saturday, March 11–14
2025 Champion: Grand Canyon (now in the Mountain West)

NOTE: Utah Valley may not participate if its dispute with the conference over exit fees is not resolved.

ESPN+ ($) will stream all games before the championship.

First Round (Wed. 3/11)

Gm. 1: (7) vs. (6), 8:30

Quarterfinals (Thurs. 3/12)

Gm. 2: (5) vs. (4), 9
Gm. 3: Gm. 1 winner vs. (3), 11:30*

Semifinals (Fri. 3/13)

Gm. 4: Gm. 2 winner vs. (1), 9
Gm. 5: Gm. 3 winner vs. (2), 11:30*

Championship (Sat. 3/14)

Gm. 6: Semifinal winners, 12 a.m. (ESPN2)

The Bengals got a great deal with Dalton Risner contract

Oct 12, 2025; Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA; Cincinnati Bengals guard Dalton Risner (66) during the game against the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images | Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

The Cincinnati Bengals’ signing of Dalton Risner to a one-year deal was the first domino of the offseason to fall. It’s a great move by the Bengals, and a move that needed to happen.

Further details of the contract show that the Bengals not only got their starting right guard back, but they also didn’t overpay and still have plenty of money to fix the defense.

According to Over The Cap, Risner is guaranteed $3.25 million this coming season with incentives up to $5 million. That base cash amount ranks 21st among 81 left guards.

Over The Cap had Risner’s 2025 valuation at $7,764,000, so the Bengals clearly got a good deal last year at $1.3 million and do so again this year.

You could tell by listening to Risner speak on Monday how thankful he is to be here and be on the Bengals for the 2026 season. And the Bengals will absolutely be better off because of it. His 98.0% pass block efficiency was a career high and ranked eighth-best in the league among starting guards last season.

The Bengals are finally a mainstay home for Risner and his wife, Whitney. Duke Tobin, Mike Brown, Katie Blackburn, and the Bengals front office listened to Risner say how much he wanted to be here and got the deal done.

Now, it’s time to make bigger moves.

Blanchet leads in Puerto Rico as John Daly II stays in the mix

RIO GRANDE, Puerto Rico (AP) — Chandler Blanchet did more than make his first cut of the year on the PGA Tour. His 5-under 67 on Friday gave him a four-shot lead in the Puerto Rico Open with a pair of teenager and John Daly’s son around for the weekend.

Blanchet made birdies on all the par 5s at Grand Reserve and matched the tournament record for largest lead through 36 holes.

Gordon Sargent, one shot off the lead when the day began, shot 70 to fall four back.

Blanchet was at 13-under 131.

“The first part of the season, it’s been difficult, for sure,” Blanchet said. “It’s no fun practicing on Saturday and Sunday and not playing and waiting five days. So will be very happy to play some golf on a Saturday and Sunday this weekend.”

Blades Brown, the 18-year-old who turned pro before graduating high school in January, gets another crack at becoming the youngest PGA Tour winner in 95 years. Brown shot 67 and was tied for third, hoping to build off the experience of playing in the final group with Scottie Scheffler at The American Express last month.

Brown was at 8-under 136 along with Ricky Castillo (68), Jesper Svensson of Sweden (69) and Jeremy Paul of Germany (67).

“Yeah, we’re halfway there,” Brown said. “A lot can happen in two days, so I’m excited for the weekend.”

Daly played bogey-free and was six shots out of the lead in a tie for seventh. The Arkansas alum is making his PGA Tour debut.

His father, the two-time major champion, played the Puerto Rico Open six times, making the cut four times with his best finish at tie for 10th in 2015, when his son was 11.

“It’s awesome. This place has always been one of my favorites to come watch my dad play back in the day, so it’s pretty cool to make it to the weekend,” Daly said.

Brown wasn’t the only teenager to make the weekend. Miles Russell, the 17-year-old who already has committed to play at Florida State, make his first cut in his fifth PGA Tour start by making birdie from the bunker on his final hole at the par-5 ninth.

The winner gets a spot in The Players Championship next week and the PGA Championship, but not the Masters because it is held opposite the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

John Daly authored one of the more amazing wins when he was the ninth alternate for the 1991 PGA Championship, got in when Nick Price withdrew, and then overwhelmed Crooked Stick with his power to win.

Could another surprise be in the works with his son?

“Honestly, go out there and try to go a low as I can,” Daly said. “I got nothing to lose, so just go out there and have fun and just keep doing what I’m doing.”

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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Blanchet leads in Puerto Rico as John Daly II stays in the mix

RIO GRANDE, Puerto Rico (AP) — Chandler Blanchet did more than make his first cut of the year on the PGA Tour. His 5-under 67 on Friday gave him a four-shot lead in the Puerto Rico Open with a pair of teenager and John Daly’s son around for the weekend.

Blanchet made birdies on all the par 5s at Grand Reserve and matched the tournament record for largest lead through 36 holes.

Gordon Sargent, one shot off the lead when the day began, shot 70 to fall four back.

Blanchet was at 13-under 131.

“The first part of the season, it’s been difficult, for sure,” Blanchet said. “It’s no fun practicing on Saturday and Sunday and not playing and waiting five days. So will be very happy to play some golf on a Saturday and Sunday this weekend.”

Blades Brown, the 18-year-old who turned pro before graduating high school in January, gets another crack at becoming the youngest PGA Tour winner in 95 years. Brown shot 67 and was tied for third, hoping to build off the experience of playing in the final group with Scottie Scheffler at The American Express last month.

Brown was at 8-under 136 along with Ricky Castillo (68), Jesper Svensson of Sweden (69) and Jeremy Paul of Germany (67).

“Yeah, we’re halfway there,” Brown said. “A lot can happen in two days, so I’m excited for the weekend.”

Daly played bogey-free and was six shots out of the lead in a tie for seventh. The Arkansas alum is making his PGA Tour debut.

His father, the two-time major champion, played the Puerto Rico Open six times, making the cut four times with his best finish at tie for 10th in 2015, when his son was 11.

“It’s awesome. This place has always been one of my favorites to come watch my dad play back in the day, so it’s pretty cool to make it to the weekend,” Daly said.

Brown wasn’t the only teenager to make the weekend. Miles Russell, the 17-year-old who already has committed to play at Florida State, make his first cut in his fifth PGA Tour start by making birdie from the bunker on his final hole at the par-5 ninth.

The winner gets a spot in The Players Championship next week and the PGA Championship, but not the Masters because it is held opposite the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

John Daly authored one of the more amazing wins when he was the ninth alternate for the 1991 PGA Championship, got in when Nick Price withdrew, and then overwhelmed Crooked Stick with his power to win.

Could another surprise be in the works with his son?

“Honestly, go out there and try to go a low as I can,” Daly said. “I got nothing to lose, so just go out there and have fun and just keep doing what I’m doing.”

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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Arizona women’s basketball GM Michelle Marciniak announces departure from program

TUCSON, AZ – JANUARY 10: Arizona Wildcats head coach Becky Burke during a women’s basketball game between the UCF Knights and the Arizona Wildcats on January 10, 2026, at McKale Center in Tucson, AZ. (Photo by Christopher Hook/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Arizona women’s basketball posted a job listing for three assistant coaches on Mar. 5. One of those coaches will take the place of former UA general manager Michelle Marciniak.

Marciniak announced her departure from the program on Facebook Friday afternoon. She wrote:

After much reflection, I’ve made the difficult decision to step down from my role as General Manager of the The University of Arizona Women’s Basketball program and return home to Knoxville, Tennessee – to be with my Mom as she continues to battle the relentless progressing disease of Alzheimer’s.

My Mom has always been there for me and it’s time to go home.

I’m incredibly grateful for my time at the University of Arizona. I want to sincerely thank Athletics Director Desiree Reed-Francois and her entire leadership team for their trust, support, and exemplary leadership. It was an honor to work alongside such dedicated colleagues who care deeply about student-athletes and the future of Arizona Athletics.

I’m also thankful to Coach Becky Burke for trusting me with a role that is still evolving in collegiate athletics. Building together with her, the staff, and our players has been a truly special experience and I’m proud to be a part of laying the foundation for the new era of Arizona WBB.

Thank you Arizona Women’s Basketball fans. Your passion for WBB is truly special and some of the best support I’ve experienced in my career!

As a former Tennessee Lady Vols Basketball player, I can’t help but bleed orange – but a piece of my heart will forever remain in Tucson.

An Arizona spokesperson addressed both Marciniak’s decision to step away to take care of her family and the other two staff changes for head coach Becky Burke.

Michelle shared with us that she’ll be stepping away to prioritize her family and care for her mother, who is battling Alzheimer’s disease. Coach Burke and everyone in the department fully support her decision.

As she moves into her second year, Coach Burke will continue evaluating all areas of the program as a whole. She built a strong foundation in her first season, and this process is really about building on that progress and positioning the program for continued success.

The three job postings you may have seen are about giving her flexibility as she works through that process.

Stanley Cup chase is wide open and more takeaways from the NHL trade deadline

The NHL trade deadline showed that the race to succeed the Florida Panthers as Stanley Cup champions after they went back to back and fell short this season is wide open.

The Colorado Avalanche are rightfully the betting favorites, 5-2 on BetMGM Sportsbook, since they have been atop the league since October. Reacquiring center Nazem Kadri, who was part of their 2022 title run, while also shoring up forward and defensive depth only better positioned them for a deep playoff run.

But plenty of other contenders made trades to take a shot at hoisting hockey’s hallowed trophy, including the Central Division rival Dallas Stars and Minnesota Wild. The Eastern Conference-favorite Tampa Bay Lightning made a relatively minor addition but one that could help take them back to the final.

“There’s a lot of good hockey teams in the National Hockey League, and only one team is going to be happy at the end of it,” Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland said. “We understand that has to happen on the ice. You can talk about it — the deadline, who wins this? Who wins that? None of it matters. It’s what happens on the ice.”

All the top contenders made at least one trade

Colorado got Kadri from Calgary, at a reduced price because the Flames retained 20% of his $7 million salary, for forward Victor Olofsson, the rights to unsigned pick Max Curran, a conditional 2028 first-round pick and conditional 2027 second-rounder. The Avalanche even got a fourth-rounder with Kadri.

Dallas earlier this week fortified its defense by acquiring 6-foot-8 Tyler Myers from Vancouver, and filled a need up front by getting Michael Bunting from Nashville.

Minnesota’s blockbuster move came back in December, winning the sweepstakes for Quinn Hughes. This week, Wild focused on adding depth with center Michael McCarron, forward Bobby Brink and defenseman Jeff Petry.

Tampa Bay got Corey Perry from Los Angeles, adding a winger with edge to a group brimming with talent. Carolina had skill and speed but lacked obvious toughness, so the Hurricanes sent a late, conditional draft pick to Philadelphia for modern-day enforcer Nicolas Deslauriers.

Vegas did its big-game shopping in January by landing defenseman Rasmus Andersson from Calgary. The Golden Knights would never bypass a deadline, though, and GM Kelly McCrimmon got shutdown center Nic Dowd from Washington.

Edmonton, which has made consecutive trips to the final and lost to Florida each time, made moves to try to keep the puck out of its own net. The Oilers paid a hefty price for forwards Jason Dickinson and Colton Dach and got defenseman Connor Murphy in a separate deal with Chicago.

Some big trades did not happen

The Buffalo Sabres came close to landing St. Louis forward Robert Thomas, in his prime at 26 and signed through 2031. They got even closer to adding big defenseman Colton Parayko, with a deal worked out with the Blues for him.

Neither happened.

“I don’t comment on unfinished business,” GM Jarmo Kekalainen said.

Parayko invoked his no-trade clause, nixing the trade. Kekalainen’s only regret in the trade falling through was how it might be perceived as a knock on Buffalo or the team, which is in position to snap an NHL-record 14-season playoff drought.

“Buffalo is a great city,” said Kekalainen, who arrived in Buffalo as a senior adviser in June and was promoted to GM when Kevyn Adams was fired in mid-December. “I’ve loved every second of it. We have a great hockey team that’s winning games and the fun atmosphere, electric building and I would think that our players are loving it here.”

The New York Rangers also held on to U.S. gold medal-winning center Vincent Trocheck, and Philadelphia did not trade Rasmus Ristolainen, who played defense at the Olympics for Finland. Those teams set asking prices high, and it was a seller’s market in general.

“Sometimes, the ask for some of the elite players that were available, it wasn’t even a question that we’d do that as an organization because a year from now, it just wouldn’t make the organization any better,” Utah GM Bill Armstrong said.

Brothers get to play together

Nick Foligno couldn’t help but think of his late mother, Janis, upon being traded to Minnesota on Friday to team up with his brother, Marcus, calling it a humbling move.

“Honestly, it feels like our mom’s got a little something to do with that, smiling down on us today,” Foligno said, referring to their mother who died of breast cancer in 2009. “It’s something I don’t take for granted.”

While Nick and Marcus were reunited, another NHL brother tandem was involved in separate trades.

Luke Schenn went first, sent from Winnipeg to Buffalo early Friday morning. Younger brother Brayden went next, from St. Louis to the New York Islanders. Don’t worry, they’ve gotten to experience what the Folignos are now: the Schenns played together with the Flyers for 3 1/2 seasons from 2012-16.

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AP Sports Writers Pat Graham, Aaron Beard and Dan Gelston and AP freelance writer Denis Gorman contributed to this report.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/NHL

Stanley Cup chase is wide open and more takeaways from the NHL trade deadline

The NHL trade deadline showed that the race to succeed the Florida Panthers as Stanley Cup champions after they went back to back and fell short this season is wide open.

The Colorado Avalanche are rightfully the betting favorites, 5-2 on BetMGM Sportsbook, since they have been atop the league since October. Reacquiring center Nazem Kadri, who was part of their 2022 title run, while also shoring up forward and defensive depth only better positioned them for a deep playoff run.

But plenty of other contenders made trades to take a shot at hoisting hockey’s hallowed trophy, including the Central Division rival Dallas Stars and Minnesota Wild. The Eastern Conference-favorite Tampa Bay Lightning made a relatively minor addition but one that could help take them back to the final.

“There’s a lot of good hockey teams in the National Hockey League, and only one team is going to be happy at the end of it,” Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland said. “We understand that has to happen on the ice. You can talk about it — the deadline, who wins this? Who wins that? None of it matters. It’s what happens on the ice.”

All the top contenders made at least one trade

Colorado got Kadri from Calgary, at a reduced price because the Flames retained 20% of his $7 million salary, for forward Victor Olofsson, the rights to unsigned pick Max Curran, a conditional 2028 first-round pick and conditional 2027 second-rounder. The Avalanche even got a fourth-rounder with Kadri.

Dallas earlier this week fortified its defense by acquiring 6-foot-8 Tyler Myers from Vancouver, and filled a need up front by getting Michael Bunting from Nashville.

Minnesota’s blockbuster move came back in December, winning the sweepstakes for Quinn Hughes. This week, Wild focused on adding depth with center Michael McCarron, forward Bobby Brink and defenseman Jeff Petry.

Tampa Bay got Corey Perry from Los Angeles, adding a winger with edge to a group brimming with talent. Carolina had skill and speed but lacked obvious toughness, so the Hurricanes sent a late, conditional draft pick to Philadelphia for modern-day enforcer Nicolas Deslauriers.

Vegas did its big-game shopping in January by landing defenseman Rasmus Andersson from Calgary. The Golden Knights would never bypass a deadline, though, and GM Kelly McCrimmon got shutdown center Nic Dowd from Washington.

Edmonton, which has made consecutive trips to the final and lost to Florida each time, made moves to try to keep the puck out of its own net. The Oilers paid a hefty price for forwards Jason Dickinson and Colton Dach and got defenseman Connor Murphy in a separate deal with Chicago.

Some big trades did not happen

The Buffalo Sabres came close to landing St. Louis forward Robert Thomas, in his prime at 26 and signed through 2031. They got even closer to adding big defenseman Colton Parayko, with a deal worked out with the Blues for him.

Neither happened.

“I don’t comment on unfinished business,” GM Jarmo Kekalainen said.

Parayko invoked his no-trade clause, nixing the trade. Kekalainen’s only regret in the trade falling through was how it might be perceived as a knock on Buffalo or the team, which is in position to snap an NHL-record 14-season playoff drought.

“Buffalo is a great city,” said Kekalainen, who arrived in Buffalo as a senior adviser in June and was promoted to GM when Kevyn Adams was fired in mid-December. “I’ve loved every second of it. We have a great hockey team that’s winning games and the fun atmosphere, electric building and I would think that our players are loving it here.”

The New York Rangers also held on to U.S. gold medal-winning center Vincent Trocheck, and Philadelphia did not trade Rasmus Ristolainen, who played defense at the Olympics for Finland. Those teams set asking prices high, and it was a seller’s market in general.

“Sometimes, the ask for some of the elite players that were available, it wasn’t even a question that we’d do that as an organization because a year from now, it just wouldn’t make the organization any better,” Utah GM Bill Armstrong said.

Brothers get to play together

Nick Foligno couldn’t help but think of his late mother, Janis, upon being traded to Minnesota on Friday to team up with his brother, Marcus, calling it a humbling move.

“Honestly, it feels like our mom’s got a little something to do with that, smiling down on us today,” Foligno said, referring to their mother who died of breast cancer in 2009. “It’s something I don’t take for granted.”

While Nick and Marcus were reunited, another NHL brother tandem was involved in separate trades.

Luke Schenn went first, sent from Winnipeg to Buffalo early Friday morning. Younger brother Brayden went next, from St. Louis to the New York Islanders. Don’t worry, they’ve gotten to experience what the Folignos are now: the Schenns played together with the Flyers for 3 1/2 seasons from 2012-16.

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AP Sports Writers Pat Graham, Aaron Beard and Dan Gelston and AP freelance writer Denis Gorman contributed to this report.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/NHL