Kansas
Here’s Bracket Help For The $1 Billion NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament: Applaud Bill Self And Take Kansas
The explanation the TV duo of CBS and Turner pays the NCAA a median of $1 billion per season via 2032 for March Insanity protection is as a result of something can occur between the primary and the final dribble of most video games.
Not solely that, however it usually does.
Numbers. A lot of numbers inform you all it is advisable to know concerning the mania surrounding the NCAA males’s basketball match, and people numbers transcend $3.1 billion, which is the amount of cash the American Gaming Affiliation estimated 45 million People wagered on final 12 months’s occasion.
Let’s begin with the numbers that received’t occur Thursday or Friday when the NCAA males’s basketball match begins its quick break towards the Ultimate 4 slated for the primary week of April in Houston.
For the second time in 148 tries, a No. 16 seed received’t threaten to trigger earth to swap locations with Jupiter by beating a No. 1 seed.
It’s 5 years later, and I’m nonetheless rubbing my eyes.
Virginia actually did lose again then to UMBC (or the College of Maryland, Baltimore County, to be official). Worse, the supposedly loaded Cavaliers owned the general No. 1 seed, however they have been clobbered by 20 factors.
As for this faculty basketball season, New York Publish author Zach Braziller had it precisely proper in mid-January when he stated of the chaos within the nationwide rankings as much as that time, “Of the Related Press high 25, 11 groups misplaced on Saturday. There have already been 13 completely different groups ranked within the high 5. Of the six main conferences, the first-place group with the most important lead is, of all groups, the ACC’s Clemson, picked eleventh within the league.”
That stated, UMBC clones received’t floor this time round sporting glass slippers for Texas A&M-Corpus Christi. As a substitute, general No. 1 seed Alabama will crush the Islanders within the S0uth area.
Identical to Alabama, Purdue is simply too strong and too centered to undergo a first-round knockout from a light-weight, which suggests Purdue received’t choke towards Fairleigh Dickinson within the East. Neither will H0uston versus Northern Kentucky within the Midwest nor Kansas versus Howard within the West.
Houston and Kansas joined Alabama and Purdue by working most of this season with tunnel imaginative and prescient.
Now about these different numbers . . .
I’ll tease you with a few of them (whereas offering strategies) that will help you construct a basis for a worthwhile bracket. As an illustration: A No. 11 seed has triumphed throughout the opening spherical of 64 throughout the previous 17 tournaments.
Take No. 11 seed Pitt over No. 6 seed Iowa State.
Pitt is a prolific taking pictures group, particularly from 3-point vary, the place the Panthers join 36% of the time. OK, OK, they dropped three of their final 4 video games, however Iowa State limped into the match with eight defeats over 11 video games, and of the 12 losses for the Cyclones, 11 have been away from house.
FYI: Greensboro, North Carolina (the place Pitt and Iowa State play Friday within the opener) is 1,040 miles from Ames, Iowa.
There are also these numbers: A No. 8 or a No. 9 seed has reached the Candy 16 for the final 5 straight years. Go together with Anfernee “Penny” Hardaway within the East along with his streaking No. 8 seed Memphis Tigers. They’ve received six of their final seven video games, together with a 40-point victory over Tulane throughout the semifinals of the American Athletic Convention match.
They’re fast, environment friendly and constant on offense and protection. They’ll crush No. 9 seed Florida Atlantic, and so they’ll outrun Purdue’s 7-foot-4 heart Zach Edey within the second spherical to achieve the Candy 16.
I’ll shut with the biggie.
For 5 straight tournaments, a No. 1 seed has received all of it.
It’ll be six straight.
Kansas will turn into the primary repeat champion in males’s faculty basketball since Florida in 2006 and 2007.
Two phrases: Invoice Self. He’s the Kansas miracle employee of a head coach in so some ways. The Huge 12 was this season’s hardest convention, however regardless of his Jayhawks shedding 74% of their scoring from that 2022 nationwide title group, they have been within the high 25 in offense. In addition they remained Invoice Self robust on protection by ending among the many nation’s high 10.
To conclude that “miracle employee” theme for Self, he’s in his 3oth season as a university basketball coach general and twentieth at Kansas. He missed the Huge 12 match final week to have two stents positioned in his coronary heart for therapy of blocked arteries.
He’s again for the NCAA match.
Guess what would make a fairy story ending this season for Kansas and their 60-year-old coach who was simply in a hospital mattress?
Uh huh.
Kansas
Kansas State lands transfer safety Mar'Quavious Moss
Kansas State has landed another player out of the transfer portal. West Georgia safety Mar’Quavious Moss has committed to K-State.
The announcement from Moss comes shortly after an official visit to Kansas State. His visit took place December 14th and he has been one of many prospects in Manhattan in the past few weeks. Moss has had a busy visit schedule as he has visited Georgia Tech, Tulane, Virginia and Houston in addition to K-State. Nebraska was involved late and got the last visit, which forced Moss to push his commitment back a day.
A tip of the hat goes to the Wildcats defensive coordinator and safeties coach Joe Klanderman. Kansas State was the first school to offer Moss when he entered the transfer portal and made him a major priority. K-State also had the advantage of Moss previously playing at Dodge City Community College for one season and has a connection to West Georgia on the Wildcats staff as Assistant Director of On Campus Recruiting Riley Galpin spent the last two years at West Georgia.
The true sophomore safety had a productive first season at West Georgia. He totaled 56 tackles with nine being tackles for a loss and 4.5 sacks along with four pass breakups and a forced fumble. His work around the line of scrimmage likely will have him playing the ‘Jack’ safety role in Manhattan.
According to the On3 Industry Ranking (a combination of all four recruiting services), Moss is the No. 120 player in the transfer portal. He is also the No. 9 safety in the transfer portal as well as the No. 6 safety among players still available.
Moss is the No. 27 player added to the Wildcats roster in the 2025 recruiting class and is the third transfer added. The West Point, Georgia native will come to Kansas State with two seasons of eligibility remaining. He also has a redshirt available.
Kansas
Kansas governor wary of overspending as Legislature’s budget overhaul takes shape • Kansas Reflector
TOPEKA — The Kansas Legislature’s unprecedented budget takeover will enter the 2025 legislative session with a bare bones spending plan and sweeping cuts while Republican lawmakers eye property and corporation tax reductions.
Gov. Laura Kelly is still preparing her own budget — as is customarily the governor’s duty — and said her greatest apprehension ahead of the 2025 session is overspending, she told Kansas Reflector on Wednesday.
The apprehension applies both to spending on programs and further tax cuts, she said.
“Obviously, we know what happens when you go too far too fast on tax cuts,” Kelly said, recalling her predecessor Gov. Sam Brownback’s tenure, during which he implemented an experimental tax program that diminished the state’s tax base creating revenue deficits. “And I don’t think anybody in the state of Kansas wants to go back to that, including the Legislature.”
Kansas Republicans created a new committee this year to give legislators the opportunity to craft their own preliminary budget. The committee wrapped up its meetings Thursday.
The meetings consisted of iterative presentations from almost 100 state agencies and departments seeking funding enhancements, which also were presented to the governor.
Under Kansas’ customary budget process, state agencies can appeal the Division of Budget’s recommendations to the governor. This year, about $1.1 billion worth of requests are up for appeal, according to committee chairman Rep. Troy Waymaster, a Bunker Hill Republican. The governor typically gets the final say on whether to accept or reject an appeal.
Waymaster weighed the possibility of denying all appeals requests in the legislative budget, regardless of what the governor decides.
“If we want to do property tax relief for the people of the state of Kansas, there’s no way we can approve the 1.1 billion that’s been appealed,” he said.
But House Speaker Dan Hawkins, a Republican from Wichita, proposed eliminating all requested budget enhancements that added any new staff and the salary increases associated with them, leaving the Legislature with a base budget that could see additions as the session proceeds. A majority of committee members supported Hawkins’ proposal.
Expanding bureaucracy
Mounting requests for new facilities and expanded bureaucracy have too often flown under the radar, said Rep. Henry Helgerson, a Democrat from Eastborough, at a Dec. 12 committee meeting. He pointed to a $114 million ask from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation for a new headquarters and the now over-budget Docking State Office Building, which is set to finish renovations in April.
“We have gotten to a point where we just approve things and don’t say anything,” Helgerson said.
It’s up to legislators to curtail spending, he said, wary, too, of the majority party’s plans for further tax cuts.
“This group has to change the trajectory of our spending in the state,” he said, referring to the legislative budget committee.
Rep. Kristey Williams, an Augusta Republican who chairs the K-12 Education Budget Committee, agreed but said spending scrutiny must be applied indiscriminately. Lawmakers can’t ignore certain “golden areas” the Legislature refuses to touch, she said, specifically referencing the Kansas State Department of Education.
Kansas
Kansas school board rejects textbooks because they’re too anti-Trump
A Kansas school board reportedly rejected textbooks because they believed that the teaching materials were too “biased” against Donald Trump.
A proposed contract with a Boston-based education company was also voted down by the newly elected conservative majority on the Derby Board of Education over their public statements on diversity, equity, and inclusion, KCUR-FM reported.
The $400,000 contract with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt was rejected even though it was recommended by Derby High School teachers, who requested a new school curriculum after being left without social studies textbooks for several years.
But board members reportedly said that parts of textbooks and other learning materials offered by the company did not reflect fairly on Trump’s first presidency.
“My biggest concern … involved what I would define as bias of omission,” board member Cathy Boote said, according to the outlet.
Boote then shared examples of the material she deemed did not accurately reflect the president-elect’s time in office, including the controversial “Muslim travel ban.”
“Then there was the ‘Muslim ban,’” Boote said and made air quotes as she spoke.
“With no mention of the fact it wasn’t aimed at all Muslim countries, just those that have no ability to vet. Safety was the top priority, but they leave it sit there, with no explanation, to make you think he was xenophobic.”
Trump’s travel ban, issued in January 2017, restricted entry into the US for certain people from foreign nations. It was nicknamed the “Muslim ban” by Trump as well as his aides and critics because a majority of those affected by the executive actions came from predominantly Muslim countries.
President Joe Biden issued a proclamation revoking the travel ban when he entered office, but in May this year Trump said he would reinstate the ban.
“We will bring back the travel ban — you remember the famous travel ban,” he said.
Boote said that she was also concerned about the way Trump was portrayed in the text books when it came to trade deals with China, the January 6 Capitol riot and his position on Cuba.
Another board member, Michael Blankenship, reportedly agreed with the concerns raised by Boote, but also rejected the proposal to work with the company because of a pro-Black Lives Matter statement they made in 2020.
“We believe Black Lives Matter [and] we believe in social justice,” the company said.
“That’s a pretty bold statement,” Blankenship reportedly said. “Wouldn’t anybody want to know, ‘What do you mean?’ I still don’t have that answer.”
The Independent has contacted Houghton Mifflin Harcourt for comment.
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