Indianapolis, IN
Warmer throughout the week as spring officially begins | March 18, 2026
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH-TV) – Temperatures begin to warm today and into the end of the week. We are going to see some very light precipitation tomorrow morning but other than that looking for a dry pattern through the end of the weekend. Spring officially begins on Friday and we will see our temperatures more spring-like by the end of the week and into the weekend.
TODAY: A warm front lifts northward this morning and produces a few light snow showers across parts of the metro area. Not a lot of measurable precipitation expected with this system. Look for mainly cloudy conditions for the first part of the day and then some sunshine later in the afternoon. High temperatures will climb right around 47 degrees. This is still below normal but much closer to normal than what we had yesterday. Winds pick up a little bit out of the south and may gust at times to 20 miles per hour.
TONIGHT: Dry conditions if you are heading to the Pacers game this evening. Partly cloudy conditions overnight with winds dropping. Temperatures will fall into the thirties.
TOMORROW: A weak system passes through the Great Lakes bringing us a chance for a few light rain showers. We will start the day off with some cloud cover and then sunshine for the afternoon. High temperatures climb above normal with readings close to 60.
7 DAY EXTENDED FORECAST: Even warmer temperatures as we officially begin the first day of spring on Friday. Look for highs right around 67 degrees with mainly sunny skies.
Temperatures continue to climb and will be close to 70 on Saturday under partly cloudy skies. We can’t rule out a brief shower on Sunday. Temperature still above normal into the sixties. Heading into next week temperatures return back to normal with highs in the 50s.
Indianapolis, IN
Indiana football coach Curt Cignetti to drive Indy 500 pace car
After leading Indiana football to a 16-0 season and national championship, Curt Cignetti will drive the pace car for the Indianapolis 500 on May 24. Cignetti was announced as the pace car driver for the 110th Indy 500 on Fox during the World Baseball Classic final Tuesday.
Cignetti will lead the field of drivers in the new Chevrolet Corvette ZR1X to begin the race. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway gave the illustrious seat to the man who won 14 of the 17 national coach of the year awards he was eligible for in his first two seasons at Indiana.
Since Cignetti was hired ahead of the 2024 season, Indiana has gone 27-2 and made the College Football Playoff twice. This past season, Cignetti led the Hoosiers to their first Big Ten championship since 1967 and their first national championship ever.
“Coach Cignetti will have our field in a special victory lap formation as he leads the stars of the NTT IndyCar Series to the green flag at this year’s Indy 500,” IMS and IndyCar president Doug Boles said in a news release. “His Hoosiers have been nothing short of remarkable, and their national championship run inspired our entire state. He’s the perfect choice to drive the Chevrolet pace car, and I know his introduction on race day will bring out a special roar of appreciation from our crowd.”
Buy IU championship books, newspapers
Cignetti will become just the second football coach to drive the pace car, the first since Jim Harbaugh in 2013. Last year’s pace car was driven by Pro Football Hall-of-Famer and Fox analyst Michael Strahan.
Cignetti drove the Hoosiers to prominence in 2025, and he’ll now drive at the front of the pack to start “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”
Indy 500 pace car drivers: Indy 500 pace car drivers through the years at Indianapolis Motor Speedway
All-time list of Indy 500 pace car drivers
2026: Curt Cignetti, Indiana football coach
2025: Michael Strahan: Former NFL player, television host and Fox NFL analyst
2024: Ken Griffey Jr: Baseball Hall of Famer
2023: Tyrese Halliburton: Pacers player
2022: Sarah Fisher: Former race car driver
2021: Danica Patrick: Former race car driver
2020: Mark Reuss: President of General Motors
2019: Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Former race car driver
2018: Victor Oladipo: Pacers player
2017: Jeffrey Dean Morgan: Actor
2016: Roger Penske: Racing team owner, businessman
2015: Jeff Gordon: Race car driver
2014: Dario Franchitti: Race car driver
2013: Jim Harbaugh: NFL player, NFL and college coach
2012: Guy Fieri: Celebrity chef
2011: A.J. Foyt (Mari Hulman George passenger): Former race car driver
2010: Robin Roberts: Broadcaster, morning show host
2009: Josh Duhamel: Actor
2008: Emerson Fittipaldi: Race car driver
2007: Patrick Dempsey: Actor
2006: Lance Armstrong: Former professional bicycle racer
2005: General Colin Powell: U.S. Secretary of State, chairman joint chiefs of staff
2004: Morgan Freeman: Actor
2003: Herb Fishel: General Motors’ racing executive director
2002: Jim Caviezel: Actor
2001: Elaine Irwin Mellencamp: Supermodel
2000: Anthony Edwards: Actor
1999: Jay Leno: Comedian, Tonight Show host
1998: Parnelli Jones: Former race car driver
1997: Johnny Rutherford: Race car driver
1996: Bob Lutz: Automotive executive
1995: Jim Perkins: Automotive executive
1994: Parnelli Jones: Race car driver
1993: Jim Perkins: Automotive executive
1992: Bobby Unser: Race car driver
1991: Carroll Shelby: Race car driver, designer
1990: Jim Perkins: Automotive executive
1989: Bobby Unser: Race car driver
1988: Chuck Yeager: Test pilot, Air Force general
1987: Carroll Shelby: Race car driver, designer
1986: Check Yeager: Test pilot, Air Force general
1985: James Garner: Actor
1984: John Callies: Automotive executive
1983: Duke Nalon: Race car driver
1982: Jim Rathmann: Race car driver
1981: Duke Nalon: Race car driver
1980: Johnnie Parsons: Race car driver
1979: Jackie Stewart: Race car driver
1978: Jim Rathmann: Race car driver
1977: James Garner: Actor
1976: Marty Robbins: Country music singer, NASCAR driver
1975: James Garner: Actor
1974: Jim Rathmann: Race car driver
1973: Jim Rathmann: Race car driver
1972: Jim Rathmann: Race car driver
1971: Eldon Palmer: Indianapolis-area car dealer
1970: Rodger Ward: Race car driver
1969: Jim Rathmann: Race car driver
1968: William Clay Ford Sr.: Executive chairman of Ford motors
1967: Mauri Rose: Race car driver
1966: Benson Ford: Automotive executive
1965: P.M. Buckminster: Automotive executive
1964: Benson Ford: Automotive executive
1963: Sam Hanks: Race car driver
1962: Sam Hanks: Race car driver
1961: Sam Hanks: Race car driver
1960: Sam Hanks: Race car driver
1959: Sam Hanks: Race car driver
1958: Sam Hanks: Race car driver
1957: F.C. Reith: Automotive executive
1956: L.I. Woolson: Automotive executive
1955: Thomas H. Keating: Automotive executive
1954: William C. Newburg: Automotive executive
1953: William Clay Ford Sr.: Automotive executive
1952: P.O. Peterson: Automotive executive
1951: David A. Wallace: Automotive executive
1950: Benson Ford: Automotive executive
1949: Wilbur Shaw: Race car driver, president of IMS
1948: Wilbur Shaw: Race car driver, president of IMS
1947: George W. Mason: Automotive executive
1946: Henry Ford II: Automotive executive
1941: A.B. Couture
1940: Harry Hartz
1939: Charles Chayne: Automotive executive
1938: Stuart Baits: Race car designer
1937: Ralph DePalma: Race car driver
1936: Tommy Milton: Race car driver
1935: Harry Mack: Automotive executive
1934: Willard “Big Boy” Radar: Long distance test driver
1933: Byron Foy
1932: Edsel Ford
1931: Willard “Big Boy” Radar: Long distance test driver
1930: Wade Morton: Race car driver
1929: George Hunt
1928: Joe Dawson: Race car driver
1927: Willard “Big Boy” Radar: Long distance test driver
1926: Louis Chevrolet: Race car driver, founder of Chevrolet
1925: Eddie Rickenbacker: Race car driver, owner of IMS
1924: Lew Pettijohn: Test driver
1923: Fred Duesenberg: Founder of Duesenberg
1922: Barney Oldfield: Race car driver
1921: Harry C. Stutz: Founder of Stutz
1920: Barney Oldfield: Race car driver
1919: Jess G. Vincent: Engine designer
1916: Frank E. Smith
1915: Carl Fisher: Created IMS
1914: Carl Fisher: Created IMS
1913: Carl Fisher: Created IMS
1912: Carl Fisher: Created IMS
1911: Carl Fisher: Created IMS
Indianapolis, IN
2026 NCAA Tournament Bracket Strategy: Tips & Trends to Win Your Pool
One of the best traditions in sports is back at last. The 68-team 2026 NCAA Tournament bracket is set, and tens of millions will fill out their own brackets in the coming days, chasing bragging rights and the near-impossible perfect bracket across 67 games.
With upsets on tap, Cinderellas emerging, and blue-blood programs chasing another national title, everyone is searching for an edge with their bracket strategy.
There’s no guaranteed formula, but NCAA Tournament history offers clues.
Here are our NCAA Tournament bracket tips and trends that can improve your college basketball bracket predictions and help you win your bracket pool this year.
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2026 NCAA Tournament Bracket Strategy: 8 Tips to Win Your Pool
Many people know the one co-worker with minimal “ball knowledge” who has won the bracket pool by win coin flips for every game. Or the friend who nailed the national semifinal teams by picking based on mascots.
You can put in hours of research on advanced metrics, matchup breakdowns — and somehow, your bracket is busted before the first weekend ends.
If there’s one bad habit we have for brackets, it’s overthinking the wrong things. After hours spent diving into the data, it’s easy to get lost in the sauce.
Let’s narrow this bracket strategy to eight NCAA Tournament tips and trends to focus on when filling out brackets, melding together historical trends with this year’s tournament teams.
Tip #1: Don’t Sweat the Upsets
Upsets are what separate the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament from any other tournament, constantly providing results that no one could have expected.
Of course, upsets will happen, but how much do they really impact your bracket pool ranking? Most pools double your points by round for each correct pick. For example, you may earn 10 points for a first-round pick, followed by 20 points for the second round, and up to 320 points for nailing the National Champion.
With that said, maybe people place too much emphasis on the upsets.
Someone may be seen as a genius for predicting a 14-seed to upset a No. 3. But in the Round of 32, that 14-seed loses. In the end, that bracket only has a small advantage — usually 10 points — over the competition.
That’s dust in the wind compared to 80 points for a correct national semifinal pick.
Your time could be best served focusing on the later rounds — the teams that have real tournament longevity. High accuracy in hitting your final eight teams can easily erase any first- and second-round woes.
Tip #2: Make Your National Champion Pick With Data
Over the last 23 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournaments, 22 champions entered the bracket ranked in the top 25 of adjusted offensive efficiency and adjusted defensive efficiency on KenPom — an advanced analytic resource for college basketball.
Eight teams currently fit that metric: Duke, Arizona, Michigan, Florida, Houston, Iowa State, Michigan State, and Louisville. To no surprise, PrizePicks Team Picks — a sports prediction market — has the first six teams above listed as the favorites to win the NCAA Tournament, while Michigan State and Louisville are longer shot picks.
Oddly enough, Week 6 of the AP Top 25 Poll also holds some magic, with 21 consecutive and 35 of the last 36 champions ranking in the top 12 of the Week 6 poll. Out of the eight squads above, Florida is the only team that doesn’t fit the trend, ranked No. 18 in December’s poll.
Tip #3: 5 Seeds Have Never Won a National Title
When selecting a champ, team seeds should be kept in mind. Every seedline one through eight has won a national title — except for No. 5 seeds. In 2023, No. 5 San Diego State appeared in the national championship game, but it fell short against No. 4 UConn.
In the last 40 tournaments, 26 No. 1 seeds, five No. 2 seeds, four No. 3 seeds, two No. 4 seeds, one No. 6 seed, one No. 7 seed, and one No. 8 seed have won it all. As expected, the consistent pick is with No. 1 seeds, taking home 65 percent (26) of the past 40 titles.
No. 1 seeds are even more dominant in recent history; over the past 10 NCAA Tournaments, eight No. 1 seeds cut down the nets (or 80 percent). Perhaps the top seed isn’t the most exciting pick, but it yields results more often than not.
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Tip #4: Recent Tournaments Have Been Chalky
The 2025 NCAA Tournament featured all four No. 1 seeds in the national semifinals for the first time since 2008. An average of 1.6 No. 1 seeds per tournament appeared in the national semifinals from 2014 to 2024.
From 2013 to 2023, an average of 0.9 No. 1 seeds per tournament lost in the first weekend of play — the first or second round. Recent history busted that trend, with all four No. 1 seeds advancing to the Round of 16 in the last two tournaments.
While upsets are still bound to happen, the top dogs are creating separation from the pack. Perhaps this is a recent trend that could continue, with Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) introduced in the 2021-22 season, allowing the teams with the most financial backing to recruit and pay the best talent — even more so than before.
With that in mind, don’t be afraid to lean on more chalk by selecting the lowest seed in matchups, especially when it comes to the top teams.
Tip #5: And Then There Were Four
The national semifinals also win some serious points in your bracket pool. Let’s go over a few trends for selecting the four teams that will play for all the marbles in Indianapolis this year.
Before the 2025 NCAA Tournament, a No. 4 seed or higher had advanced in the national semifinals in 14 consecutive brackets. Last year bucked that trend, but there’s still plenty of history there.
On average, one ACC per tournament has appeared in the national semifinals since 2015. This included some improbable runs, such as No. 11 NC State in 2024 and No. 5 Miami (FL) in 2023.
Perhaps that’s support for circling Duke in 2026, which is tied as the favorite to earn a national semifinal berth on PrizePicks Team Picks, with a 1.75x payout to make it to the round of four.
Predicting the correct national championship game produces a truckload of points in bracket pools, too, and six of the last 10 title games featured two No. 1 seeds duking it out.
Tip #6: Expect Some Double-Digit Seed Upsets
These tips have focused plenty on the later rounds with juicy bracket pool points. But is it any fun without upsets? Don’t worry, there will be plenty of them.
Since the 2015 NCAA Tournament, an average of 8.9 upsets — or the lower-seeded team defeating the higher seed — occurred in the first round of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.
This pertains to any lower seed grabbing a dub, including No. 9 seeds over the No. 9 seedline. Last season featured only seven first-round upsets, emphasizing the chalk discussed above.
However, over the last 10 tournaments, No. 10, 11, and 12 each average at least one first-round win per tournament.
- No. 10 seeds – 1.5 average first-round wins since 2015
- No. 11 seeds – 2.0
- No. 12 seeds – 1.3
- No. 13 and No. 14 seeds (combined) – 1.3
A No. 15 or 16 seed has not won a game over the last two tournaments. That’s the first time since 2014 and 2015 that back-to-back tournaments featured all one and two seeds advancing to the second round.
With that said, even last season’s chalky bracket still had seven first-round upsets — and five were double-digit seeds snagging Ws.
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Tip #7: Prepare for First Weekend Chaos
Upsets are still frequent in the first weekend — consisting of the first and second rounds, meaning surprise teams continue to earn Round of 16 bids.
Over the last 10 tournaments, 1.6 double-digit seeds per tournament advanced to the second weekend of the tournament.
Nine of the past 10 tournaments had a double-digit seed in the Round of 16. Even the chalky 2025 NCAA Tournament featured No. 10 Arkansas knocking off No. 2 St. John’s in the Round of 32.
Eight of the last 10 tournaments had at least one No. 2 seed losing in the first weekend of play. Furthermore, an average of 1.7 No. 3 seeds lost in the first weekend per year over the last 10 tournaments.
Maybe fans haven’t enjoyed the usual Cinderella runs or No. 1 or 2 seeds falling in the first round, but upsets still occur, even in the chalkiest brackets.
Tip #8: A Perfect Bracket is Nearly Impossible
Above all else, have fun with your bracket. Don’t let the multitude of trends and data drive you to insanity. Roll with your favorite data and go with your gut. Bumps in the road are inevitable.
You think winning the Powerball is impossible? Try hitting a perfect bracket. In fact, your chance at a perfect bracket — with zero ball knowledge — is a one in 9.2 quintillion chance.
There has never been a verified perfect bracket. A man from Ohio holds the best verifiable win streak with 49 consecutive correct picks to begin his 2019 NCAA Tournament bracket.
In short, try to be easy on yourself as you fill out your 2026 NCAA Tournament bracket, as no one has ever pulled off the nearly impossible feat of a perfect bracket.
Make NCAA Tournament Picks on PrizePicks
From upset predictions to national championship picks for the NCAA Tournament, PrizePicks has it all in one spot, giving you the chance to earn real money with sports picks.
Your NCAA Tournament bracket picks can translate to college basketball predictions on PrizePicks Team Picks, where you can make predictions on winners, spread, and over/unders — now available in 35 states. Team Picks also offers futures, including payouts for the national championship and teams to advance to each round of the 2026 NCAA Tournament.
Keep tabs on the Playbook for continued college basketball predictions, picks, and news all the way through the NCAA Tournament.
Indianapolis, IN
Colts sign free agent safety Juanyeh Thomas from Dallas Cowboys
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — The Indianapolis Colts on Monday announced the signing of free agent safety Juanyeh Thomas.
Thomas joins the team after spending four seasons with the Dallas Cowboys from 2022 to 2025.
A news release from the Colts said Thomas originally signed with the Cowboys as an undrafted free agent on May 13, 2022, after playing collegiately at Georgia Tech. Throughout his professional career, he has appeared in 36 games and made four starts, totaling 47 tackles and 30 solo stops. During his career in Dallas, he recorded five passes defensed and one forced fumble. He also appeared in one postseason game. The safety was a frequent contributor to special teams units with the Cowboys, recording 15 special teams stops. On kickoff returns, he tallied 187 yards on seven attempts, averaging 26.7 yards per return and scoring one touchdown During the 2025 season, Thomas appeared in seven games and made three starts for Dallas. He finished that season with 20 tackles, including 12 solo stops and six stops on special teams.
The team on Monday also confirmed the re-signing of tight end Mo Alie-Cox, as News 8’s Andrew Chernoff reported Saturday.
This story was formatted for WISHTV.com using AI-assisted tools. Our editorial team reviews and edits all content published to ensure it meets our journalistic standards for accuracy and fairness.
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