West Virginia
UCF vs. West Virginia Predictions, College Basketball BetMGM Promo Codes, & Picks – January 23
Tuesday’s contest that pits the UCF Knights (11-6, 2-3 Big 12) against the West Virginia Mountaineers (7-11, 2-3 Big 12) at Addition Financial Arena has a projected final score of 73-66 (based on our computer prediction) in favor of UCF, who is the favorite in this matchup by our model. Tipoff is at 7:00 PM ET on January 23.
Oddsmakers have not yet set a line for this game.
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Sportsbook Promo Codes
UCF vs. West Virginia Game Info & Odds
- Date: Tuesday, January 23, 2024
- Time: 7:00 PM ET
- TV: ESPN+
- Live Stream: Watch this game on ESPN+
- Where: Orlando, Florida
- Venue: Addition Financial Arena
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UCF vs. West Virginia Score Prediction
- Prediction:
UCF 73, West Virginia 66
Spread & Total Prediction for UCF vs. West Virginia
- Computer Predicted Spread: UCF (-6.7)
- Computer Predicted Total: 139.5
UCF is 10-6-0 against the spread this season compared to West Virginia’s 8-8-0 ATS record. A total of seven out of the Knights’ games this season have hit the over, and eight of the Mountaineers’ games have gone over. In the past 10 games, UCF has a 7-3 record against the spread while going 6-4 overall. West Virginia has gone 5-5 against the spread and 4-6 overall in its last 10 matches.
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Other Big 12 Predictions
UCF Performance Insights
- The Knights have a +139 scoring differential, topping opponents by 8.2 points per game. They’re putting up 72.8 points per game to rank 237th in college basketball and are allowing 64.6 per outing to rank 30th in college basketball.
- The 39.9 rebounds per game UCF averages rank 39th in the nation, and are 5.8 more than the 34.1 its opponents collect per contest.
- UCF connects on 6.9 three-pointers per game (237th in college basketball) compared to its opponents’ 6.8. It shoots 30.9% from deep while its opponents hit 32.5% from long range.
- The Knights score 91.3 points per 100 possessions (267th in college basketball), while allowing 81.1 points per 100 possessions (eighth in college basketball).
- UCF has committed 12.4 turnovers per game (250th in college basketball action), 2.9 fewer than the 15.3 it forces on average (14th in college basketball).
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West Virginia
Arizona baseball drops midweek home game to West Virginia
It’s hard to defend free bases.
Arizona pitchers struck out 16 batters and only allowed five hits on Tuesday night, but they also issued 10 walks and hit two batters in a 7-4 loss to West Virginia at Hi Corbett Field.
“We gave them pretty much all seven runs,” UA coach Chip Hale said. “They did a good job of base running and putting some pressure on us, but the walks, the hit batsmen, the error, those things kill you.”
Arizona (9-19) fell to 0-9 this season when walking six or more batters. Last year, in reaching the College World Series, the Wildcats only walked six or more six times, and still won four of those games.
“It wasn’t like they they batted you around,” Hale said he told the five pitchers who threw Tuesday. “We just gave them those free ones, and then you advance them with some passed balls and some wild pitches, and that’s what winning teams take advantage of.”
Arizona led 2-0 on a 2-run home run by Carson McEntire, his team-leading 6th of the season, but West Virginia scored seven times over the next three innings with only the last two coming via a hit. The others scored on a wild pitch, fielding error, passed ball, hit batter and groundout.
Yet the UA also had some very good pitching. Jack Lafflam threw two scoreless innings to start, with one hit allowed and two strikeouts, but Hale said the true freshman “didn’t feel great” so he was pulled as a precautionary measure. Matthew Martinez struck out six over 2.1 scoreless innings and another true freshman, Benton Hickman, struck out four over the final two innings including two after loading the bases with one out in the 8th.
The Wildcats finished with seven hits, two by McEntire, who drove in three and is tied for the team lead with 19 RBI.
Arizona remains home to host ASU for three games beginning Thursday night. The finale on Saturday night is on ESPN2 but also happens to coincide with the Final Four.
“I would hope we can put some stuff on (the scoreboard) between innings,” Hale said.
West Virginia
After man’s death following insurance denials, West Virginia tackles prior authorization
Six months after Eric Tennant died following a protracted battle with his health insurer over doctor-recommended cancer care, West Virginia’s Republican governor signed a bill intended to curb the harms of insurance denials.
Tennant, a coal mining safety instructor from Bridgeport, died last September at age 58 from complications related to stage 4 cancer of the bile ducts. In early 2025, his insurer, the state’s Public Employees Insurance Agency, repeatedly denied him coverage of a $50,000 noninvasive cancer treatment that would have used ultrasound waves to target, and potentially shrink, the largest tumor in his liver. His family didn’t expect the procedure to eradicate the cancer, but they hoped it would buy him more time and improve his quality of life. The insurer said that the procedure, called histotripsy, wasn’t medically necessary and that it was considered “experimental and investigational.”
Becky Tennant, his widow, told members of a West Virginia House committee in late February that she submitted medical records, expert opinions and data as part of several attempts to appeal the denial. She also reached out to “almost every one of our state representatives,” asking for help.
Nothing worked, she told lawmakers, until KFF Health News and NBC News got involved and posed questions to the Public Employees Insurance Agency about her husband’s case. Only then did the insurer reverse its decision and approve histotripsy, Tennant said.
“But by then, the delay had already done its damage,” she said.
Within one week of the reversal in late May, Eric Tennant was hospitalized. His health continued to decline, and by midsummer he was no longer considered a suitable candidate for the procedure. “The insurance company’s decision did not simply delay care. It closed doors,” his wife said.
West Virginia’s Public Employees Insurance Agency enrolls nearly 215,000 people — state workers, as well as their spouses and dependents. The new law, which will take effect June 10, will allow plan members who have been approved for a course of treatment to pursue an alternative, medically appropriate treatment of equal or lesser value without the need for another approval from the state-based health plan.
“This legislation is rooted in a simple principle: if a treatment has already been approved, patients should be able to pursue a medically appropriate alternative without being forced to start the process over again — especially when it does not cost more,” Gov. Patrick Morrisey said in a statement.
“This is about common sense, compassion, and trusting patients and their doctors to make the best decisions for their care,” he said.
Had the bill been in effect last year, said Delegate Laura Kimble, the Republican from Harrison who introduced the legislation, Tennant could have undergone histotripsy without preapproval, because it was a less expensive alternative to chemotherapy, which had already been authorized by the insurer.
From Arizona to Rhode Island, at least half of all state legislatures have taken up bills this year related to prior authorization, a process that requires patients or their medical team to seek approval from an insurer before proceeding with care. These state efforts come as patients across the country await relief from prior authorization hurdles, as promised by dozens of major health insurers in a pledge announced by the Trump administration last year.
The West Virginia bill, passed unanimously by the state legislature, was signed by Morrisey on Tuesday. Kimble told KFF Health News the measure offers “a rational solution” for patients facing “the most irrational and chaotic time of their lives.”
U.S. health insurers argue that most prior authorization requests are quickly, if not instantly, approved. AHIP, a health insurance industry trade group, says prior authorization acts as an important guardrail in preventing potential harm to patients and reducing unnecessary health care costs. But denials and delays tend to affect patients who need expensive, time-sensitive care, multiple studies have shown.
Americans rank prior authorization as their biggest burden when it comes to getting health care, according to a poll published in February by KFF, the health information nonprofit that includes KFF Health News.
Samantha Knapp, a spokesperson for the West Virginia Department of Administration, would not answer questions about the law’s financial impact on the state. “We prefer to avoid any speculation at this time regarding potential impact or actions,” Knapp said.
In a fiscal note attached to the bill, Jason Haught, the Public Employee Insurance Agency’s chief financial officer, said the law would cost the agency an estimated $13 million annually and “cause member disruption.”
By late 2025, West Virginia and 48 other states, in addition to the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, already had some form of a prior authorization law — or multiple such laws — on the books, according to a report published in December by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
Many states have set up “gold carding” programs, which allow physicians with a track record of approvals to bypass prior authorization requirements. Some states establish a maximum number of days insurance companies are allowed to respond to requests, while others prohibit insurance companies from issuing retrospective denials after a service was already preauthorized. There are also a crop of new state laws seeking to regulate the use of artificial intelligence in prior authorization decision-making.
Meanwhile, prior authorization bills introduced this year across the country, including in Kentucky, Missouri, and New Jersey, have been supported by politicians from both parties.
“Republicans in conservative states see health care as a vulnerability for the midterm elections, and so, unsurprisingly, you’ll see some action on this,” said Robert Hartwig, a clinical associate professor of risk management, insurance, and finance at the University of South Carolina. “They realize that they’re not really going to get much action at the federal level given the degree of gridlock we’ve already seen.”
Last summer, the Trump administration announced a pledge signed by dozens of health insurers vowing to reform prior authorization. The insurers promised to reduce the scope of claims that require preapproval, decrease wait times and communicate with patients in clear language when denying a request.
Consumers, patient advocates and medical providers have expressed skepticism that companies will follow through on their promises.
Becky Tennant is skeptical, too. That’s why she advocated for the West Virginia bill.
“Families should not have to beg, appeal, or go public just to access time-sensitive care,” she told lawmakers. Tennant, who sees the bill’s passage as bittersweet, said she thought her husband would have been proud.
During Eric Tennant’s final hospital stay, she recalled, right before he was discharged to home hospice care, she asked him whether he wanted her to keep fighting to change the state agency’s prior authorization process.
“‘Well, you need to at least try to change it,’” she recalled her husband saying. “‘Because it’s not fair.’”
“I told him I would keep trying,” she said, “at least for a while. And so I am keeping that promise to him.”
West Virginia
West Virginia Lottery results: See winning numbers for Powerball, Lotto America on March 30, 2026
The results are in for the West Virginia Lottery’s draw games on Monday, March 30, 2026.
Here’s a look at winning numbers for each game on March 30.
Winning Powerball numbers from March 30 drawing
07-11-31-41-57, Powerball: 20, Power Play: 2
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Lotto America numbers from March 30 drawing
01-21-44-47-48, Star Ball: 04, ASB: 02
Check Lotto America payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Daily 3 numbers from March 30 drawing
5-7-5
Check Daily 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Daily 4 numbers from March 30 drawing
3-5-2-0
Check Daily 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Cash 25 numbers from March 30 drawing
03-05-10-16-19-21
Check Cash 25 payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
When are the West Virginia Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 11 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 10:59 p.m. ET Tuesday and Friday.
- Lotto America: 10:15 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Daily 3, 4: 6:59 p.m. ET Monday through Saturday.
- Cash 25: 6:59 p.m. ET Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a USA Today editor. You can send feedback using this form.
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