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No. 4 Alabama, No. 5 Texas Tech keep winning without star players

Syndication: Tuscaloosa NewsMar 7, 2026; Tuscaloosa, AL, USA; Alabama guard Labaron Philon Jr. (0) flexes during a time out of the game with Auburn at Coleman Coliseum. Alabama defeated Auburn 96-84. Mandatory Credit: Gary Cosby Jr.-Tuscaloosa News

Alabama and Texas Tech both had concerns regarding their roster makeup entering the NCAA Tournament.

Now one of them is guaranteed a spot in the Sweet 16.

The teams meet in Sunday night’s Midwest Region second-round game in Tampa, Fla.

Fifth-seeded Texas Tech (23-10) was looking like a national championship contender until losing star forward JT Toppin to a season-ending torn ACL on Feb. 17.

Still, the Red Raiders will challenge the Crimson Tide in many ways, particularly because of guard play — much of which was on display during the second half of Friday’s 91-71 handling of No. 12 Akron.

“This team does as good a job as anybody as I’ve seen at hunting mismatches,” Alabama coach Nate Oats said of Texas Tech.

Fourth-seeded Alabama (24-9) is without suspended guard Aden Holloway, who was second on the team in scoring with 16.8 points per game. He faces a felony drug charge stemming from his arrest on Monday.

Yet there’s plenty of firepower out there for both teams. Labaron Philon Jr. averages 22 points per game for Alabama, which rallied past 13 seed Hofstra 90-70 on Friday.

“I don’t know if there’s a comparison just because he’s got size and can do it in a lot of different ways,” Texas Tech coach Grant McCasland said of Alabama’s Oats. “But definitely impressed with his ability to win.”

The Crimson Tide are hoping that experience against different types of lineups will come in handy for Sunday’s showdown. Texas Tech is bound to want to keep the tempo at a moderate pace, while Alabama likes a brisker pace.

“I would say we’ve just got to get adjusted to how they play,” Alabama forward Aiden Sherrell said. “We play so many teams throughout the season that have a great guard play, and at the end of the day, we had to get adjusted.”

Sherrell had his third double-double of the season with 15 points and 15 rebounds against Hofstra. He’s ready to do more if that’s what’s needed.

“The key will be just trying to make the winning plays for sure, just doing whatever it takes to help my teammates succeed and help us win,” Sherrell said. “Just giving that second effort on every possession.”

Much of the outcome of the second-round game might depend on if Alabama can rebound at the rate that it did against Hofstra (a 46-34 advantage).

“I do think part of what makes Texas Tech good is all the hustle plays,” Oats said.

Texas Tech has had to compensate for rebounding since losing Toppin. It has become more of a group effort.

“I think that the guards since JT has been injured have stepped up for us,” forward LeJuan Watts said.

Watts said Alabama’s 17 offensive rebounds from the Hofstra game caught the Red Raiders’ attention.

McCasland said rebounding is a topic that has been uncomfortable for Texas Tech since Toppin’s injury. He understands why it’s viewed as such an important topic.

“Guard rebounding is huge for us,” McCasland said. “When we play our best, our guards are five rebounds-plus each, and that’s where it feels like we need to create advantages.”

Shooting from the perimeter might turn out as important.

“We like to get 3s off,” Oats said. “So do they. If we can get more good looks off than them, I like our chances.”

–Field Level Media

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Celtics' Luka Garza filling key role as unfocused Wolves visit

NBA: Boston Celtics at Memphis GrizzliesMar 20, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Boston Celtics guard Baylor Scheierman (55) and center Luka Garza (52) react during the fourth quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

Nikola Vucevic will remain unavailable with a broken finger when the Boston Celtics face the visiting Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday night, but that doesn’t mean Boston won’t have a quality center.

Luka Garza has given the Celtics (47-23) more offense since Vucevic was injured on March 6. Garza averages 7.6 points for the season, but has scored at least 15 points in three of his last four games. That includes a season-high 22 in Friday night’s 117-112 victory over Memphis.

Garza also had seven rebounds, five of which came at the offensive end.

“He was great on both ends of the floor,” Boston coach Joe Mazzulla said. “He does a great job screening. They (the Grizzlies) play a hectic style. They put a ton of pressure on you from a physicality standpoint and you have to be able to read and make plays and play through physicality. No one’s better at that than Luka.”

Vucevic, who had surgery on his ring finger March 7, isn’t expected back until the first half of April, so Garza likely will maintain his more significant role until then.

“Guys have always stepped up,” Garza said. “In my position, just try to make the little plays and help us win. So it’s definitely fun when you’re the guy doing that.

“I love being a part of this team. We play hard every single night no matter what, and I think when you do that, you put yourself in a good position.”

Jaylen Brown tossed in 30 points during Friday’s game, which extended Boston’s winning streak to four. Brown averages 28.5 points, which ranks fifth in the NBA.

The Timberwolves (43-28) were again without Anthony Edwards and Naz Reid for Friday night’s 108-104 loss to Portland. Edwards, who’s dealing with inflammation in his right knee, ranks third in the NBA with his 29.5 points per game. The Timberwolves are 2-1 in the three games Edwards has missed with the injury. Reid has missed the last two games with a right ankle sprain.

Minnesota allowed 68 points in the first two quarters of Friday’s loss, but limited Portland to 40 in the final two quarters.

“There wasn’t defensive intensity in the first half,” Minnesota coach Chris Finch said. “Thirty-three and 35 in the first two quarters and 40 in the last two tells the story.”

Minnesota trailed Portland by 18 at one point in the second quarter.

“Slow start … a step behind everything in the first quarter,” Minnesota’s Rudy Gobert said. “We got down 18 points and then we started playing hard. The last few games we’ve had a lot of these starts. We got to figure it out because we put ourselves in a tough position.

“We have to find a way to start the game more fired up — be mentally ready at the start of the game. It’s not physical, right? I think it’s just being mentally ready to start the game. We were warmed up, it’s not physical. It’s just mentally being a little sharper at the beginning of the game.”

–Field Level Media

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Padraig Harrington, Thongchai Jaidee tied through two rounds at Cologuard

Syndication: Palm Beach PostPadraig Harrington acknowledges the crowd on the 18th green during the final round of the James Hardie Pro Football Hall of Fame Invitational at The Old Course at Broken Sound Club on Sunday, March 8, 2026, in Boca Raton, FL.

Ireland’s Padraig Harrington carded a 6-under-par 65 on Saturday to forge a tie with Thailand’s Thongchai Jaidee atop the leaderboard with a round to play at the Cologuard Classic in Tucson, Ariz.

Harrington pocketed two impressive eagles over a three-hole stretch (holes 9-11) which also included a birdie as he surged into contention at La Paloma Country Club at 11 under for the tourney.

“You know, every hole out here, if you play it well, you’ve got a birdie chance. But it’s so difficult being committed to your shots,” Harrington said. “Nobody can expect to be perfect, but you’ve got to be committed to whatever number you come up with. Whatever formula you use, you’ve got to stick to it, and probably just roll with the punches when it doesn’t quite work out.”

Harrington finished with two eagles, five birdies and three bogeys.

Jaidee’s day was much calmer, as the veteran went bogey-free while snatching four birdies. His 4-under 67 followed a Friday round that more resembled Harrington’s Saturday: two eagles, four birdies and a bogey (64).

That had been good enough to position him in second, alongside South Africa’s Retief Goosen, who fell off the pace with a 2-over 73. That tumble left Goosen in a tie for 26th.

Defending champion Steven Alker of New Zealand might have raised eyebrows with his scintillating 9-under 62 that tied the course record and brought him back within striking distance at 9 under overall. No player has yet to successfully defend his title at the Cologuard Classic, but Alker will have a chance on Sunday.

“I just wanted to put up a good day to get back in the tournament,” Alker said. “Defending champ, so I wanted to kind of give it a good run. Kind of feel like I’ve put myself in there, three or four back, you never know at the end of the day. Yeah, it was a nice round. Some positive stuff going forward.”

Bo Van Pelt, who had also tied the course record with a 9-under-par 62 on Friday, shot 10 strokes worse than that in Round 2 (1-over 72), dropping him into a tie for eighth at 8 under for the tournament.

Two golfers are ahead of Alker in a tie for third at 10 under after shooting matching 67s: Tommy Gainey and Germany’s Bernhard Langer.

Zach Johnson (65) and Jason Caron (66) are tied with Alker in fifth.

–Field Level Media

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Women's NCAA Sacramento 4 roundup: Iowa evades Fairleigh Dickinson upset bid

NCAA Womens Basketball: NCAA Touranment First Round-Southern at South CarolinaMar 21, 2026; Columbia, South Carolina, USA; South Carolina Gamecocks forward Joyce Edwards (8) looks to shoot over Southern Jaguars guard Olivia Delancy (30) in the first half at Colonial Life Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Blake-Imagn Images

Ava Heiden scored 15 points in the fourth quarter to help No. 2 seed Iowa survive a strong upset bid from No. 15 Fairleigh Dickinson for a 58-48 win in Sacramento Region 4 first-round NCAA Tournament action Saturday in Iowa City.

The Hawkeyes (27-6) led by just two points entering the fourth quarter after they were outscored 16-15 over the middle two periods. Heiden accounted for half of the team’s scoring with 29 points on 11-of-16 shooting and 7-of-7 from the free-throw line, all of which came in the final quarter.

Hannah Stuelke added 13 points and a career-high-tying 16 rebounds as Iowa overcame a 1-for-13 3-point performance by handily outrebounding the Knights 47-28 to win their seventh straight NCAA Tournament opener.

The Hawkeyes next host No. 10 seed Virginia on Monday for a spot in the Sweet 16.

Fairleigh Dickinson’s only lead of the game came at 3-2, but the Knights (30-5) cut a 15-point first-quarter deficit to three points by the end of the first with a 12-0 run and trailed by one at halftime. Ava Renninger was the only Fairleigh Dickinson player in double figures with 13 points.

Bella Toomey tallied nine off the bench on a trio of treys, and Madlena Gerke and Kailee McDonald chipped in eight apiece as the Knights saw their 22-game winning streak come to an end.

No. 1 South Carolina 103, No. 16 Southern 34

Joyce Edwards scored 27 points to lead five Gamecocks players in double figures in a first-round romp over the Jaguars in Columbia, S.C.

Regional top seed South Carolina (32-3) will meet Southern Cal on Monday. Ta’Niya Latson had 17 points, Madina Okat and Agot Makeer both scored 15 and Tessa Johnson had 14 for the Gamecocks, who made 54.7% of their shots from the field.

Joceyln Tate had 10 points and eight rebounds off the bench for Southern (20-14), which shot just 18.5% from the field and committed 20 turnovers. The Jaguars knocked off Samford on the same court two days earlier in the First Four, but they were no match for South Carolina.

The Gamecocks led 23-6 early in the second quarter and outscored Southern 32-2 in the third quarter.

Johnson, who also pulled in 10 rebounds, connected on four of South Carolina’s eight 3-point baskets, matching Southern’s 3-point total. Alicia Tournebize had 11 rebounds for South Carolina, which built a 57-33 rebounding edge.

No. 10 Virginia 82, No. 7 Georgia 73 (OT)

Kymora Johnson poured in 28 points and Sa’Myah Smith racked up 23 as the Cavaliers dominated overtime in a first-round victory in Iowa City, Iowa.

Romi Levy provided 14 points for No. 10 seed Virginia (21-11), which takes on the Fairleigh Dickinson-Iowa winner on Monday. The Cavaliers outscored Georgia 11-2 in the extra period.

Mia Woolfolk, a Virginia native, posted 27 points and Rylie Theuerkauf, aided by five 3-point baskets, compiled 22 points for seventh-seeded Georgia (22-10). Savannah Henderson had 11 points, but the Bulldogs shot 7 of 24 on 3-pointers.

With the score tied at 71-all, Georgia got off two shots in the final seconds of regulation but didn’t connect.

Georgia wasn’t able to take full advantage of a huge edge in free-throw opportunities, going 22 of 35 at the line. Virginia was just 12 of 15, with six of those attempts coming in the final two minutes of overtime.

No. 9 USC 71, No. 8 Clemson 67 (OT)

Jazzy Davidson scored six of her game-high 31 points in overtime as the Trojans outlasted the Tigers in a first-round matchup in Columbia, S.C.

After Clemson (21-12) took a three-point lead in overtime, Davidson drilled back-to-back 3-pointers to put USC (18-13) ahead to stay. Kara Dunn scored 22, including four 3-pointers, and Kennedy Smith added 12 points and six rebounds for the Trojans.

Taylor Johnson-Matthews scored a team-high 16 for Clemson, which forced the extra session on two Mia Moore free throws with 50 seconds left. Moore finished with nine points, six rebounds and six assists, while Raven Thompson posted an 11-point, 12-rebound double-double. Morgan Lee chipped in 12 points off the bench.

The Trojans shot 45% (27 of 60) from the field while holding the Tigers to just 37.3% (22 of 59). Clemson won the rebound battle 37-33, but USC held a 32-26 edge in points in the paint.

–Field Level Media

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