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NCAA tournament bracket takeaways: Selection committee snubs UCLA and USC

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March Insanity has begun with the discharge of the NCAA event bracket. Right here’s a primary take a look at the bracket and breaking down UCLA’s and USC’s first-round opponents.

UCLA vs. Akron

1. It’s all in regards to the matchups. Assuming the Bruins (25-7) get previous Thirteenth-seeded Akron (24-9) within the first spherical, they seemingly would face fifth-seeded St. Mary’s (in any other case referred to as the staff that beat Gonzaga) within the second spherical. The Gaels are scrappy however not overly athletic or prolonged, that means it’s a very good matchup for the Bruins. Subsequent up would almost definitely be top-seeded Baylor, which isn’t practically as scary because it was final season, when it was in any other case referred to as the staff that beat Gonzaga. The Bruins most likely did nicely to keep away from a possible matchup with Gonzaga earlier than the Ultimate 4.

2. San Diego snubbed? Many of the widely-used metrics ranked UCLA above Texas Tech, which might have put the Bruins within the San Diego pod for the primary and second video games. However the NCAA event choice committee clearly disagreed, giving the Crimson Raiders the No. 3 seed that despatched them to San Diego whereas delivery the Bruins up the West Coast to Portland, Ore. Oh, nicely. At the very least it’s a foodie’s paradise.

3. Lengthy distance runaround? UCLA getting put within the East Area implies that the regional semifinal and finals can be on the Wells Fargo Heart in Philadelphia, ought to the Bruins advance that far. That’s a protracted technique to make one of many high groups within the nation go that deep into the event. Carry your winter coat.

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USC vs. Miami

1. The committee wasn’t that impressed with USC’s record-breaking resume. The Trojans received 25 regular-season video games — a program report —- however nonetheless discovered themselves a No. 7 seed in Greenville, S.C., the place they’re unlikely to get many followers to journey. Andy Enfield was hopeful USC (26-7) can be seeded increased, however an absence of top-tier wins — solely two towards event groups — wasn’t sufficient. At the very least ahead Chevez Goodwin will get to go near dwelling for his USC swan tune.

2. USC might have hassle maintaining with Miami. The Hurricanes (23-10) aren’t probably the most constant staff, however their offense ranks among the many high 20 within the nation, in response to KenPom.com. A January win over Duke confirmed what Miami is able to at its greatest, and it practically knocked off Duke once more this week within the ACC event. Guard Kameron McGusty is likely one of the high scorers within the ACC at 17.6 factors per sport.

3. It’s a troublesome highway again to the event’s second weekend. Not solely does USC must shake off its final two weeks to get previous Miami, however Auburn and its freshman star Jabari Smith seemingly loom within the second spherical. Wisconsin and its excruciatingly gradual tempo is one other robust out within the backside half of the Midwest Area.

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Mendes: Why the Oilers are not 'Canada's team' in the Stanley Cup Final

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Mendes: Why the Oilers are not 'Canada's team' in the Stanley Cup Final

In the aftermath of the Edmonton Oilers clinching their spot in the Stanley Cup Final, the question to Connor McDavid on the podium was predictable.

Winnipeg, Vancouver and Toronto also had Stanley Cup aspirations this spring, but Edmonton is the last Canadian team standing. And so the question to the Oilers superstar was somewhat inevitable, as Edmonton is on the precipice of wiping out a Canadian Stanley Cup drought that has lasted more than three decades.

GO DEEPER

NHL Stanley Cup Final predictions: Athletic staff picks for Oilers-Panthers, Conn Smythe and more

“Can you talk about being Canada’s team?” a reporter asked McDavid on Sunday evening. “Everybody coast to coast is cheering for the Oilers. Any added pressure with that?”

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McDavid seamlessly stick-handled the question.

“We’re a Canadian team and we’ve got great Canadian fans,” responded McDavid. “And it feels good to maybe unite the country a little bit and bring people together.”

It’s a nice, easy narrative, isn’t it?

A hockey-obsessed nation that is starving for its championship trophy to rightfully be returned north of the border.

It’s a storyline repeatedly pushed by a Boston Pizza commercial that seems to play during every single TV timeout and intermission in these playoffs. The commercial opens by relaying the heartbreak of several Canadian teams since Montreal’s magical run to a Stanley Cup title in 1993.

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Somebody has punched through drywall after Vancouver lost Game 7 to the Rangers in 1994.

A Toronto fan has thrown a plate through their television screen after losing to Carolina in the conference final.

An Oilers fan repeatedly runs over their flat-screen TV with a pickup truck following a second-round loss to Anaheim in 2017.

And a bitter Montreal fan tosses their AM radio to the ground after the Canadiens lost to Tampa in the Stanley Cup Final in 2021.

(The Flames’ and Senators’ runs to the Stanley Cup Final in 2004 and 2007 respectively were omitted from the commercial. But hey, there is only so much Canadian misery you can shoehorn into a 30-second spot.)

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The message of the commercial is simple: Canadian NHL fans have only known bitter disappointment over the last 30 years. It’s time for hockey fans in this country to put aside their deep-rooted, historical rivalries and pull in the same direction.

As the commercial draws to a close, fans are gathered inside a Boston Pizza sports bar clad in merchandise that is just generic enough to skirt a trademark infringement suit from the NHL. But it’s clearly meant to show a Canucks fan and a Flames fan high-fiving at the bar. A Senators fan and a Canadiens fan standing side by side. An Oilers fan and a Leafs fan clinking full beer glasses together.

“A Canadian team hasn’t won the Stanley Cup in 30 years. Maybe it’s time to try something different,” the commercial urges. “This year, let’s team up with the fans we’ve always cheered against.”

This commercial and the reporter’s question to McDavid, however, are rooted in pure fantasy — not reality.

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Will some casual hockey fans in Canada be pulling for the Oilers over the Panthers?

Absolutely.

Will some big NHL fans in this country be hoping that McDavid — the absolute best player of his generation — winds up with a Stanley Cup ring?

You bet.

But will the majority of die-hard hockey fans in this country be actively rooting for the Oilers as if they were cheering on their own team?

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Forget it.

Sure, most Canadians want the Stanley Cup drought to end, but with a very important caveat: only if it happens for their favourite team. Otherwise, it’s just like watching your neighbour win the lottery. I suppose it’s nice for them, but what does it do for you?

Consider this social media poll from Sportsnet 650 in Vancouver after the two Stanley Cup Finalists were determined. Of the 1,531 people who cast a vote, more than 70 percent of them said they would be cheering for the Panthers. Only 16.4 percent said they would be actively rooting for Edmonton, while almost the same number (12.9 percent) said they would remain completely neutral.

And yes, Vancouver fans — who would have made up the vast majority of that poll  — might be bitter because Edmonton did eliminate them in the second round.

But that’s the whole point.

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You cannot simply ask a Vancouver fan to temporarily suspend their hatred of an Edmonton team that just bounced them from the playoffs. Nor can you ask a Calgary fan to ignore decades of hatred and bitterness in the Battle of Alberta to suddenly pull for their provincial rival. In fact, Calgary fans have full permission to sit out this entire Stanley Cup Final.

The trifecta of Montreal-Toronto-Ottawa will never cheer for one another, and while Winnipeg always seems like the most likeable Canadian team, it’s not like they have forged a national identity of any kind.

It’s a ridiculous question we wrestle with each time a Canadian team is still alive after Victoria Day. Should we embrace the last Canadian team standing for the sake of national pride?

But the answer is always in plain sight.

Consider the backlash in Toronto when the CN Tower — the city’s most iconic building — was lit up in red, white and blue in the summer of 2021 to commemorate the Montreal Canadiens reaching the Stanley Cup Final.

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That felt awkward and it created such a stir that a spokesperson for the CN Tower had to release a statement explaining, “It is a federally owned and operated property that belongs to all Canadians.”

When the Canucks were the last Canadian team standing in the COVID-19 bubble in the summer of 2020, our James Mirtle and Sean McIndoe had a fun and spirited debate over the idea of Vancouver being Canada’s team.

But to definitively settle this argument, we should compare the Oilers’ run to what the Toronto Raptors accomplished five years ago. When the Raptors went on their magical run to the NBA title in the summer of 2019, it felt like the entire country was galvanized. There were massive viewing parties being held all across Canada.

In Abbotsford, B.C., more than 1,500 fans turned up to watch Game 5 of the Raptors-Warriors series inside the Abbotsford Centre. At the opposite end of the country in the Maritimes, there were massive viewing parties for Raptors games in places like Halifax and Moncton.

That summer, Cineplex Odeon opened up 33 movie theatres across the country to show Raptors games on the big screen.

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“Canadian fans are invited to unite and rally behind the Raptors as they face-off against the Golden State Warriors, live on the big screen,” their press release stated.

Surely, they must be doing the same for Canada’s team — the Edmonton Oilers — here in 2024, right?

Alas, a Cineplex Odeon spokesperson told The Athletic this week, “Currently, we are not scheduled to show the Stanley Cup Final series in theatres as cinema rights haven’t been granted.”

And maybe that’s a technicality on the “cinema rights” point, but it doesn’t feel like the Oilers would have the nationwide appeal of viewing parties in every major city.

We do that for massive Olympic events. The FIFA World Cup. And yes the Raptors and Toronto Blue Jays, because they are the only professional teams based in Canada in their respective sports.

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But if there are massive outdoor viewing parties planned for Oilers games in Ottawa, Winnipeg and Toronto this month, I certainly haven’t heard of them.

So to our American friends who think we’re obsessed with getting our trophy back, please know that we haven’t put the country on pause waiting to see if the Oilers bring home the title. Not everybody on this side of the border is on pins and needles. We’re not like England waiting for a FIFA World Cup.

The only time we’re all definitively pulling on the same rope is when we’re cheering for Team Canada in national competitions. The Olympics matter to us and on that front, this country has accomplished a lot since 1993. A trio of Olympic gold medals on the men’s side is a pretty nice consolation prize during a prolonged Stanley Cup drought.

(And we’re not pointing any fingers, but we do know of a certain country to our south that hasn’t won a gold medal on the men’s side since 1980. Forty-four years is a pretty good drought too, FYI.)

An Oilers championship — while erasing a 31-year drought for a Canadian-based team — does nothing for any other fan base in this country. Cities like Ottawa, Vancouver and Winnipeg, who have never hoisted a Stanley Cup, don’t receive partial credit for an Oilers championship. And if anything, an Edmonton Stanley Cup championship will only further enrage Toronto fans, who are closing in on six decades without a title.

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But if there is one reason we should be collectively pulling in Canada for an Oilers Stanley Cup this month, it would be to end this ridiculous notion that we’re all waiting for the Stanley Cup to come home.

And maybe if the Oilers win a Stanley Cup in June, we can put this whole “Canada’s Team” narrative to bed once and for all.

(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic. Photo: Jeff Bottari / NHLI via Getty Images)

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Cowboys' Micah Parsons open to joining Mike Tomlin, Steelers if he ever left Dallas later in career: report

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Cowboys' Micah Parsons open to joining Mike Tomlin, Steelers if he ever left Dallas later in career: report

Aside from adding offensive lineman Tyler Guyton in the first round and drafting seven other players, the Dallas Cowboys front office has had what many have described as a quiet offseason.

However, the franchise’s football personnel decision makers continue to work to determine whether the team can keep multiple key players on its roster in the long term. 

Three-time Pro Bowler Micah Parsons is widely considered one of the pillars of Dallas’ defense. The 2021 first round draft pick could eventually command a historic salary if the Cowboys want to retain his services for the foreseeable future.

Micah Parsons #11 of the Dallas Cowboys looks on against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field on November 05, 2023 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)

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Parsons could be in line to become the highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL history, a distinction Minnesota Vikings star Justin Jefferson currently holds. Earlier this week, the wide receiver agreed to an historic deal with the Vikings worth $140 million with $110 million guaranteed, ESPN reported.

While there are currently no indications that Parsons is interested in switching jerseys anytime soon, it is possible the star pass rusher eventually lands elsewhere.

COWBOYS COACH MIKE MCCARTHY TAKES SHOT AT MICAH PARSONS FOR SKIPPING OTAS

Parsons, who was born in Pennsylvania and played college football at Penn State, did concede that if he did end up leaving the Cowboys, he would be open to playing in his home state.

If Parsons “hypothetically did go home later in his career it would be to join the Pittsburgh Steelers,” the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported.

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Micah Parsons vs Lions

Dallas Cowboys linebacker Micah Parsons (11) calls out defensive signals during the game between the Dallas Cowboys and the Detroit Lions on December 30, 2023 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. (Matthew Pearce/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Parsons’ consideration at least revolves around his respect for longtime Steelers coach Mike Tomlin. 

If Parsons did somehow make his way to Pittsburgh, he could end up playing alongside one-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year and six-time Pro Bowler TJ Watt.

Micah Parsons fist pumps

Micah Parsons #11 of the Dallas Cowboys reacts against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field on November 5, 2023 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  (Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

Elsewhere, Dak Prescott’s future with the Cowboys is up in the air beyond the 2024 season as he enters the final season on his contract with the team.

Prescott earned MVP votes last season after leading the NFL with 36 touchdown passes to go along with 4,516 passing yards. He’s gotten Dallas to the playoffs five times in eight seasons, but the Cowboys have not made it further than the divisional round.

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Dallas also has to focus on re-signing CeeDee Lamb, who is in the final year of his contract. 

Parsons could be a free agent after the 2025 season. Parsons has 40.5 regular season sacks, and finished the 2023 campaign with a career-high 14 sacks.

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Sparks fall behind early and get pummeled by the Minnesota Lynx

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Sparks fall behind early and get pummeled by the Minnesota Lynx

Offensive struggles and a 25-point clinic by Napheesa Collier helped Minnesota beat the Sparks 86-62 on Wednesday.

Collier made 10 of 15 from the field, 4 of 5 from the free-throw line and added two steals while Kayla McBride recorded 13 points, three rebounds and three assists. The game was altered by foul trouble for the Sparks and Lynx, who put up 20 and 18, respectively.

Dearica Hamby led the Sparks with 17 points and 11 rebounds for her fifth double-double of the season. Layshia Clarendon, who returned from a concussion-triggered absence, added seven points, four rebounds and a pair of steals.

After an 11-0 run by Minnesota to open the contest, the Sparks couldn’t catch up, letting the Lynx build a 20-point lead in the second quarter. Minnesota led 45-26 at the half and maintained a double-digit lead the rest of the game.

The third quarter saw the Lynx extend their lead over the Sparks to a game-high 28 points. Cecilia Zandalasini committed a flagrant foul on Rae Burrell, who fell to the ground clutching her shin. Burrell quickly returned to the court.

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The Sparks began to play with a sense of urgency in the fourth quarter and narrowed the gap to 12 at one point, but they still weren’t able to capitalize on shooting opportunities and struggled to get past a relentless Lynx defense.

With Wednesday’s loss, the Sparks dropped to 2-7. They continue their search for their second home win of the season at 7 p.m. Friday against the Dallas Wings.

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