Category: Sports

  • 2026 NASCAR Odds: Denny Hamlin, Ryan Blaney Top Board for Martinsville

    2026 NASCAR Odds: Denny Hamlin, Ryan Blaney Top Board for Martinsville



    Tyler Reddick, Michael Jordan and 23XI have been unstoppable this NASCAR season. 

    Reddick — the driver of the No. 45 car — has won four of the first six races, sits atop the NASCAR rankings and also leads Bob Pockrass’ most recent power rankings.

    But he’s not the favorite to win again when the Cup Series goes to Martinsville for the Cook Out 400 on Sunday, March 29 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1).

    The current favorites are Denny Hamlin and Ryan Blaney, two drivers who’ve both gotten into Victory Lane once this year. Will either of them get a second win this weekend?

    Check out the early odds for the entire field at DraftKings Sportsbook as of March 29.

    This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.

    Cook Out 400 2026

    Denny Hamlin: +350 (bet $10 to win $45 total)
    Ryan Blaney: +450 (bet $10 to win $55 total)
    Chase Elliott: +600 (bet $10 to win $70 total)
    William Byron: +700 (bet $10 to win $80 total)
    Kyle Larson: +700 (bet $10 to win $80 total)
    Joey Logano: +900 (bet $10 to win $100 total)
    Christopher Bell: +1400 (bet $10 to win $150 total)
    Tyler Reddick: +1400 (bet $10 to win $150 total)
    Ty Gibbs: +1800 (bet $10 to win $190 total)
    Bubba Wallace: +1800 (bet $10 to win $190 total)
    Carson Hocevar: +2000 (bet $10 to win $210 total)
    Josh Berry: +2500 (bet $10 to win $260 total)
    Austin Cindric: +2500 (bet $10 to win $260 total)
    Ryan Preece: +3000 (bet $10 to win $310 total)
    Chase Briscoe: +3500 (bet $10 to win $360 total)
    Brad Keselowski: +4000 (bet $10 to win $410 total)
    Ross Chastain: +5000 (bet $10 to win $510 total)
    Shane van Gisbergen: +5500 (bet $10 to win $560 total)
    Chris Buescher: +5500 (bet $10 to win $560 total)

    Kyle Busch: +7500 (bet $10 to win $760 total)
    Justin Allgaier: +10000 (bet $10 to win $1,010 total)
    Austin Dillon: +13000 (bet $10 to win $1,310 total)
    Daniel Suarez: +15000 (bet $10 to win $1,510 total)
    Todd Gilliland: +20000 (bet $10 to win $2,010 total)
    Connor Zilisch: +20000 (bet $10 to win $2,010 total)
    Michael McDowell: +30000 (bet $10 to win $3,010 total)
    Erik Jones: +30000 (bet $10 to win $3,010 total)
    Zane Smith: +35000 (bet $10 to win $3,510 total)
    Ricky Stenhouse Jr.: +35000 (bet $10 to win $3,510 total)
    John Hunter Nemechek: +35000 (bet $10 to win $3,510 total)
    AJ Allmendinger: +35000 (bet $10 to win $3,510 total)
    Ty Dillon: +50000 (bet $10 to win $5,010 total)
    Riley Herbst: +50000 (bet $10 to win $5,010 total)
    Noah Gragson: +50000 (bet $10 to win $5,010 total)
    Cole Custer: +50000 (bet $10 to win $5,010 total)
    Cody Ware: +50000 (bet $10 to win $5,010 total)
    Austin Hill: +50000 (bet $10 to win $5,010 total)

    The Favorites: Denny Hamlin and Ryan Blaney are the only drivers other than Reddick who’ve won races this season. Blaney got into Victory Lane at Phoenix and Hamlin won at Las Vegas. However, when the series went to Martinsville in the spring of 2025, Denny led 274 laps and took the checkered flag with a margin of victory of 4.617 seconds. Currently, though, Blaney is in slightly better shape than Hamlin in the standings. The driver of the No. 12 car is ranked second in the Cup standings and Denny sits fourth.

    One to Watch: Ty Gibbs could be one to watch at Martinsville. In 2026, the JGR driver has been trending up. On the season, he’s got four top-10 finishes and three in the top five. He comes into the weekend off a sixth-place finish at Darlington. In this same race last year at Martinsville, he started 13th and also ended up finishing 13th.

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  • 2026 NFL League Meeting: 5 Storylines to Watch as Owners, Coaches, GMs Convene

    2026 NFL League Meeting: 5 Storylines to Watch as Owners, Coaches, GMs Convene


    Free agency is starting to wind down, and the 2026 NFL Draft is still nearly a month away. However, one of the most important weeks of the NFL’s offseason has arrived. 

    NFL owners, general managers, head coaches and league personnel will convene at the Arizona Biltmore Hotel starting Sunday for the league’s annual meeting. The NFL’s busy schedule includes voting on five rule changes put forth by the league’s 11-person competition committee.

    The owners will also discuss the continued growth of the game globally, with a league-high nine games scheduled internationally in 2026, including the NFL’s first regular-season foray into Australia. The NFL will also continue its initiative to grow flag football, which received a boost from the Fanatics Flag Football Classic last week in Los Angeles, in which teams mostly consisting of NFL players lost handily to USA Football. 

    “We’ll spend a fair amount of time talking about international growth, joined by a couple of special guests – Amon-Ra St. Brown and Kenny Moore will be there,” said Jeff Miller, NFL Executive Vice President overseeing Player Health and Safety during a conference call with reporters this week. “And we’ll speak at length about flag and its growth, including the run-up to the Olympics in ‘28 and the premier time for flag to be in the Olympics.” 

    Here are five other big storylines to follow during the meetings this week. 

    5. Proposal to avoid Fail Mary 2.0

    The infamous Fail Mary play from 2012 has the NFL setting up a potential contingency plan in case replacement refs will be used this season. (Photo by Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images)

    NFL owners will consider a new rule allowing replay assist to correct clear and obvious missed calls temporarily for a year in the event of a referee work stoppage, which would mean the implementation of replacement officials. 

    The last time the NFL used replacement officials was in 2012, due to a lockout. However, that ended three weeks into the regular season with an eight-year agreement after a Monday Night Football game between the Seattle Seahawks and Green Bay Packers, when a replacement official incorrectly ruled a touchdown catch for Golden Tate that ended the game with a victory for the Seahawks.

    Rich McCay, Atlanta Falcons CEO and chairman of the competition committee, said the league is in a better place to help replacement officials if it gets to the point. At least 24 of the 32 owners are needed to approve the measure. 

    “Replay assist already allows us to do things that we never could do in 2012 and review a ton of plays – scoring plays, turnovers, all those things – and so for us, this was just another bucket we wanted to put in there in case we have to operate under that set of circumstances,” McKay said. 

    The league and the referees reached a stalemate on compensation, along with the amount of dead time for officials during the down period from the end of the Super Bowl in February to May 15. The current agreement is set to expire at the end of May. The two sides were scheduled to meet for two days this week, but broke off talks after just a half day, with both sides claiming they were not negotiating in good faith. 

    “The negotiations with the officials have not gone as quickly as we would have wanted,” Miller said. “We’ve made a number of proposals. We’re looking to improve the accountability and performance of the officials, and we just haven’t gotten to where we need to go. 

    “We’re going to play football this fall, and we’re going to need officials to do it. So, this is part of the preparation, and we felt compelled to make these sorts of decisions in anticipation of playing football in a different environment.”

    4. Another Super Bowl in Las Vegas?

    After hosting Super Bowl LVIII in February 2024, Allegiant Stadium is expected to be named the host of Super Bowl LXIII in February 2029 this week. (L.E. Baskow/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

    We’ve seen a lot of repeat Super Bowl locations in recent years. Be prepared for another city to find out it’s hosting the Super Bowl for the second time in a relatively short span this week. 

    Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas is expected to be approved as the host of Super Bowl LXIII during the meeting. Allegiant Stadium hosted its first Super Bowl in 2024, a Kansas City Chiefs overtime victory over the San Francisco 49ers

    SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, is slated to host the Super Bowl for the second time in February 2027. The Los Angeles Rams won the Super Bowl in the team’s home stadium against the Cincinnati Bengals the last time SoFi Stadium hosted the game in 2022.

    And Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium is scheduled to host the NFL’s championship game in 2028 – the second time that facility will host the blockbuster event since the New England Patriots defeated the Rams in 2019.

    Allegiant Stadium has been home to the Las Vegas Raiders since 2020.

    3. The tush push lives

    The Eagles will be able to use the tush push again in 2026. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

    The NFL’s most controversial play isn’t going anywhere. A proposal to potentially ban the tush push won’t be put forward when league owners meet this week. 

    A proposal to ban the play put forth by the Green Bay Packers mustered 22 votes last year, falling two votes shy of the required 75% majority for a rule change. Last season, NFL referees struggled to accurately officiate the play at times, failing to see offsides in the close quarters of a scrum.

    However, defenses did a better job of defending the play and teams converted the tush push at a lower rate in 2025. Teams converted first downs on quarterback sneaks 77.4% of the time last season, compared to 76.4% on tush push plays, according to the league. That’s compared to 2024, when offenses converted first downs on 82.4% of Tush Push plays and 75.8% on traditional quarterback sneaks.

    Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay, a member of the competition committee and an opponent of the tush push in years past, no longer sees the play as an issue.

    “There are some optics that you’re saying, ‘It doesn’t feel like football,’” McVay said in a conference call. “But it’s like, ‘Hey, get over it.’ It’s not a big deal. If we did it at a high clip like Philly, we would be using it too. 

    “We have to figure out how to stop it and if it becomes a part of our offense, then we’ll figure out how to execute it. … I’m not losing any sleep or thinking much about that one.”

    Still, will there be some chatter about the play in Arizona this week? We’ll see if other coaches agree with McVay’s assessment and the decision to keep the tush push alive for another year. 

    A.J. Brown trade rumors are expected to be at the forefront of this week’s league meeting. (Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images)

    Teams around the league remain interested in securing the services of three-time All-Pro receiver A.J. Brown via trade, but are the Philadelphia Eagles still willing to move him?

    Eagles general manager Howie Roseman understands that the Eagles still have a talented roster and remain in a Super Bowl window. However, can the mercurial Brown continue to be a productive part of the team moving forward? And with the draft compensation teams like the Miami Dolphins received for trading Jaylen Waddle this season and the Seattle Seahawks moving DK Metcalf to the Pittsburgh Steelers last year, maybe it makes sense to trade Brown when his value is potentially at a high point?

    Philadelphia will take a $43.4 million dead money salary cap hit if they trade Brown before June 1. That lowers to just over $16 million if the Eagles move Brown after June 1, so it makes sense for Roseman to be patient.

    With the New England Patriots and both teams in Los Angeles as potential suitors, this week provides another opportunity for Roseman to assess Brown’s market. 

    1. Seahawks sale, Mark Davis succession plan for Raiders

    Mark Davis might be moving into a reduced role with the Raiders. (Photo by Chris Unger/Getty Images)

    The Seahawks announced 10 days after winning the franchise’s second Super Bowl that owner Jody Allen is putting the team up for sale, according to the wishes of her brother Paul Allen, who died in 2018 at the age of 65 after complications from non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

    The annual meeting in Phoenix provides an opportunity for the league to update fellow owners on potential ownership bids for the Seahawks and the expectation for owners to eventually approve vetted, final bid proposals to buy the franchise.

    NFL owners are also set to vote on a succession plan for Raiders owner Mark Davis that would give minority owner Egon Durban the option to purchase a majority stake in the team from Davis. Durban, the co-chief executive of tech private equity firm Silver Lake, and Discovery Land Company founder Michael Meldman each bought a 7.5% stake in the Raiders two years ago. 

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  • James Hinchcliffe: Why INDYCAR at Barber Punishes Drivers, Tests Their Bravery

    James Hinchcliffe: Why INDYCAR at Barber Punishes Drivers, Tests Their Bravery


    In Driver’s Eye with James Hinchcliffe, the six-time INDYCAR winner will bring you inside the mind of a racer while breaking down the nuts and bolts of the sport for fans.

    I crashed the most expensive car I had ever driven. Well, the most expensive at the time. 

    This was in 2011 at Barber Motorsports Park, where INDYCAR is racing Sunday (1 p.m. ET on FOX and FOX One). It’s also where I made my career debut. The course is hugely physical and punishing for a driver at any level — both 15 years ago and for drivers this weekend — but more on that later.

    Back then, I was a 24-year-old rookie for Newman-Haas Racing, and after two seasons in Indy Lights — the developmental series now known as Indy NXT — I was ready. 

    Or so I thought. 

    James Hinchcliffe at Barber Motorsports Park in 2011 in Birmingham, Alabama. (Photo by Nick Laham/Getty Images)

    Coming off just one prior test at Barber and the weekend’s practice sessions, I was feeling what every INDYCAR rookie feels before their first start: a combination of excitement, anticipation and being moderately terrified. 

    I was nervous from the beginning, but the imposter syndrome really kicked in before the green flag when officials began clearing the grid of anyone who wasn’t a team member. For two years as an Indy Lights driver, I would go on every INDYCAR grid and leave with everyone else when it was time. 

    The butterflies were abundant, and finally getting to remain on the grid was surreal. 

    I qualified eighth, which is pretty strong for a guy making his first INDYCAR start. Beside me on the grid was Dario Franchitti, who, at that point, was already a three-time INDYCAR champion and a two-time Indianapolis 500 winner. (He ultimately won each one more time.)

    Starting alongside one of the legends of the sport — a guy who I had looked up to for such a long time — and to be that far up the grid, I felt like I didn’t belong. And I hoped I wouldn’t make a fool of myself. 

    Thankfully, I didn’t. But my day ended in heartbreak when I got caught up in someone else’s wreck. 

    On a Lap 41 restart, a driver in front of me heading into the big brake zone in Turn 5 suffered some contact and spun. Now, the first lesson they teach you in racing school is if you’re spinning out, put both feet to the floor, pressing the brakes and the clutch — yes, Indy cars had three pedals back then! 

    Well, this guy was clearly napping on Day 1 of racing school, because as I took evasive action and swerved around his car, he released the brake pedal and his car rolled back into mine and cleared out the left-rear corner.

    You only get one shot at your first race, and mine ended in smoke. 

    E.J. Viso and James Hinchcliffe wreck at Barber in 2011. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

    I hated damaging that car. But that’s motorsports, that’s racing at Barber, and this course can get the best of the greatest racers.

    If I could go back and talk to my 2011 INDYCAR rookie self with all the knowledge and experience I possess now, I’d tell myself to just breathe. Just stay calm. 

    [INDYCAR: Everything to Know About Eclectic Barber Track]

    And I’d probably relay what Franchitti actually said to me a couple weeks after that Barber debut. He checked in to see how I was doing and offered sage words that stuck with me.

    You spend your whole life trying to get to this level, and then you get here, and you realize you’re racing against the same boneheads you’ve been competing against since go-karts, he pointed out to me. It shifted my whole perspective and drained my imposter syndrome. 

    In INDYCAR, we accomplish exceptional feats at the fastest speeds in some of the most expensive cars in the world. But we’re all just people, and anyone is beatable — if you apply yourself and relentlessly work. Franchitti reminded me that no one is invincible, and every driver out there has had to claw their way into the sport like everyone else before them. 

    You’re here for a reason, just as they are, he reminded me, so act like you belong, believe that you belong and just go race these guys like you’ve raced anyone else.

    So I did. And that’s how drivers now approach sharing the track with INDYCAR champs like Alex Palou, Scott Dixon and Will Power — who won that 2011 race and could very well win again on Sunday.

    HIGH-SPEED PARITY

    With how this season started, we could see four winners in the first four races.

    In the first three, fans were treated to some incredible on-track battles, three different winners from three different teams and, for the first time in more than 620 days, a new championship leader.

    Let’s break it down ahead of Barber on Sunday.

    Palou has been the dominant force in INDYCAR in the last half-decade, earning four titles in the last five years. And he picked up right where he left off with Chip Ganassi Racing, winning the season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. But an uncharacteristic DNF (did not finish) for the almost-29-year-old Spaniard on the short oval at Phoenix Raceway in Week 2 dropped him from the top for the first time in nearly two years.

    Team Penske’s Josef Newgarden won Phoenix, while Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood landed atop the podium with a win at the all-new hallmark event around AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas — and in the championship race lead.

    So, who looks poised to make a mark at Barber this weekend? 

    Palou, second in the points, is the defending race winner. His record on road courses is, by far, the best of all the various INDYCAR tracks. 

    But you can’t count out the trio behind him. 

    Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward, Newgarden and Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin sit third through fifth in the title race and previously have all stood at the top of the podium at Barber.

    Scott McLaughlin celebrates after winning the 2023 INDYCAR Children’s of Alabama Indy Grand Prix at Barber. (Photo by Chris McDill/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Of that group, you would have to say that McLaughlin is the favorite — despite crashing Saturday during practice and going to a backup car. He’s won two of the last three races at Barber and was on the podium in the third. But he’s also coming off a winless 2025 and desperately wants to assert himself in the championship discussion.

    With all the top-5 drivers in peak form and capable of getting it done this weekend, we could very well be looking at the fourth different winner — and points leader — in as many races.

    [INDYCAR: Rotating Points Leaders and More Parity Before Barber]

    THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE FAST: BARBER

    So, let’s talk about Barber Motorsports Park. 

    It’s a 2.3-mile, 17-turn road course through the hilly outskirts of Birmingham, Alabama. The course was originally designed as a motorcycle track, but in 15 INDYCAR races there since 2010, we have had some incredible on-track battles. 

    The INDYCAR field during the 2024 Children’s of Alabama INDY Grand Prix at Barber Motorsports Park.  (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    The landscaping may be scenic, but it’s the asphalt that makes this place so special. It’s comprised of many long, fast corners that really push the aerodynamic limits of an Indy car — and the drivers’ necks! Not to mention huge elevation changes and blind corners that challenge the drivers’ bravery and commitment.

    Because of the speed and length of the corners, the physical forces applied to the drivers’ bodies are intense. Seventy laps around Barber is like flying a fighter jet around an obstacle course for two straight hours. 

    You can train all you want in the gym in the offseason, but when you get to a track like this, especially so early in the season, it can be a truly punishing, physical event.

    SOUND LIKE AN INDYCAR EXPERT

    For me, Barber holds the coolest corner combo of the entire INDYCAR season. 

    At the end of the back straightaway are Turns 12 and 13, which you approach at the top of sixth gear, almost 180 miles an hour. You lift just before the turn — but only enough to allow the engine to let you knock it down one gear before getting back on the power for a quick burst. The entry is downhill and blind. 

    Pato O’Ward heads into Turn 12 during the 2022 INDY Grand Prix of Alabama at Barber Motorsports Park.  (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    At the exit, you immediately tap the brakes again to speed-correct for Turn 13, which angles extremely uphill and means the exit is totally blind. The car gets super light on the exit as the track drops back away, and it’s so easy to misjudge your throttle point. 

    It’s as much fun as you can have in a race car!

    With this being the first true road course of the year after two street tracks and an oval — it also happens to be the most physical — drivers needed to adjust their training in the off-week after Arlington. 

    A huge emphasis on neck, upper-body and core strength likely made their way into drivers’ training programs to ensure they aren’t falling out of the seat late in the race. 

    Sometimes you can see a lap time drop off in the final stint for certain drivers, and you know it’s not the car…

    Alex Palou and team owner Chip Ganassi celebrate winning the 2025 Children’s of Alabama Indy Grand Prix at Barber Motorsports Park. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    1 FOR THE ROAD

    Finally, I would be remiss not to mention this will be the first race held at Barber’s beautiful facility since the passing of its creator, Mr. George Barber, in February. He was 85. 

    Barber — a businessman, philanthropist and racer himself — built this place as his own personal race track and even built a museum to house his record-setting motorcycle and car collection.

    His attention to detail and commitment to perfection are evident in everything you see and touch at Barber Motorsports Park. 

    It’s nicknamed the Augusta National of Motorsports, and such is the quality of presentation each time we show up. His contribution to this sport and the area simply cannot be overstated. 

    While it will certainly feel different without Mr. Barber on hand this weekend, having worked closely with many of those who have trained and worked with him over the years, I have no doubt whatsoever the trademark Barber look, feel and friendliness will carry on for years to come. 

    Here’s hoping to a great weekend for his legacy.

    Catch you on the INDYCAR on FOX Barber broadcast Sunday!

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  • Kalshi Promo Code FOXSPORTS: Get a  Bonus Ahead of the Final Eight Games of the College Basketball Tourney

    Kalshi Promo Code FOXSPORTS: Get a $10 Bonus Ahead of the Final Eight Games of the College Basketball Tourney


    This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.

    The tournament is down to its final eight, and the intensity couldn’t be higher as teams battle for a spot in the Final Four. Now is the time to get involved with the Kalshi promo code FOXSPORTS, where new users can trade $10 and get a $10 bonus ahead of today’s matchups.

    Iowa continues their Cinderella run as a 9-seed, but 3-seed Illinois stands in the way of a chance to punch their ticket to the Final Four. Meanwhile, Purdue faces their toughest test yet against top-seeded Arizona, with both teams knowing one win gets them closer to their goal. Every possession carries massive weight with so much on the line.

    Claim your $10 bonus after $10 in trades with the Kalshi promo code FOXSPORTS and get in on the action as the tournament narrows to its final contenders.

    Kalshi

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    1. Click one of the Claim Now buttons on this page (or click here) to visit Kalshi and start the signup process.
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    Kalshi Odds

    *Odds are subject to change*

    Team Chance Yes No
    3-seed Illinois 75% 76¢ 25¢
    9-seed Iowa 25% 25¢ 76¢

    Team Chance Yes No
    1-seed Arizona  70% 71¢ 30¢
    2-seed Purdue  30% 30¢ 71¢

    9-seed Iowa Hawkeyes vs. 3-seed Illinois Fighting Illini – Game Details

    • Matchup: Iowa 24-12 (12-11 Big Ten) vs. No. 13 Illinois 27-8 (15-6 Big Ten).
    • Location: Houston; Today, 6:09 p.m. EDT.
    • Betting Line: Illinois -6.5; O/U 137.5.
    • Conference Success – Illinois: 15-6 in Big Ten play; 12-2 in non-conference games.
    • Ball Security – Illinois: Averaging 8.5 turnovers; 8-2 when winning turnover battle.
    • Defensive Edge – Iowa: Allowing 66.1 PPG, best in Big Ten; holding opponents to 45.9% shooting.
    • Scoring Advantage – Illinois: Averaging 84.2 PPG, 18.1 more than Iowa allows (66.1).
    • Three-Point Shooting – Iowa: 8.1 made threes per game, 0.3 fewer than Illinois allows.
    • Series Note: Illinois won last meeting 75-69 on Jan. 11.

    Top Performers

    • Keaton Wagler (ILL): 17.7 PPG, 5.1 RPG, 4.3 APG, 2.4 3PT, 41.1% 3PT.
    • David Mirkovic (ILL): 16.4 PPG, 53.3% FG (last 10 games).
    • Bennett Stirtz (IOWA): 19.7 PPG, 4.4 APG.
    • Cooper Koch (IOWA): 10.6 PPG (last 10 games).

    Last 10 Games

    • Fighting Illini: 7-3, 82.8 PPG, allowing 69.2 PPG, shooting 45.7%.
    • Hawkeyes: 5-5, 71.8 PPG, allowing 70.7 PPG, shooting 47.7%.

    2-seed Purdue Boilermakers vs. 1-seed Arizona Wildcats – Game Details

    • Matchup: No. 8 Purdue 30-8 (17-7 Big Ten) vs. No. 2 Arizona 35-2 (19-2 Big 12).
    • Location: San Jose, California; Today, 8:49 p.m. EDT.
    • Betting Line: Arizona -6.5; O/U 153.5.
    • Conference Success – Arizona: 19-2 in Big 12 play; 16-0 in non-conference games.
    • Rebounding Edge – Arizona: Averaging 39.9 rebounds, led by Tobe Awaka (9.2).
    • Close Game Note – Purdue: 2-2 in one-possession games.
    • Scoring Advantage – Arizona: Averaging 86.7 PPG, 16.4 more than Purdue allows (70.3).
    • Field Goal Efficiency – Purdue: Shooting 50.3%, 11.1% higher than Arizona allows (39.2).

    Top Performers

    • Jaden Bradley (ARIZ): 13.3 PPG, 4.4 APG, 1.5 SPG.
    • Brayden Burries (ARIZ): 18.8 PPG (last 10 games).
    • Braden Smith (PUR): 14.3 PPG, 8.9 APG, 1.7 SPG.
    • Trey Kaufman-Renn (PUR): 17.2 PPG (last 10 games).

    Last 10 Games

    • Wildcats: 10-0, 85.4 PPG, allowing 70.2 PPG, shooting 50.4%.
    • Boilermakers: 8-2, 80.7 PPG, allowing 72.6 PPG, shooting 50.6%.



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  • Underdog Promo Code FOXSPORTS: Unlock a  Bonus For Today’s College Basketball

    Underdog Promo Code FOXSPORTS: Unlock a $50 Bonus For Today’s College Basketball


    This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.

    The stakes couldn’t be higher with today’s college basketball action, and now is the time to jump in with the Underdog promo code FOXSPORTS, where new users can play $5 and get $50 in bonuses.

    Illinois will rely on freshman guard Keaton Wagler as they take on Iowa, with a trip to the Final Four on the line. Meanwhile, Arizona, led by Jaden Bradley, look to keep their dominant run towards a Final Four. Purdue could end the Wildcats’ run and punch their own ticket to the Final Four, a showdown between two of thr best teams in country. Every possession matters as these teams fight to keep their championship hopes alive.

    Claim your $50 bonus after playing $5 with the Underdog promo code FOXSPORTS and get in on all of today’s college basketball action.

    Underdog

     Claim the Underdog Bonus Code

    1. Click here or on any “Claim Bonus” button on this page to go directly to Underdog Fantasy (bonus code FOXSPORTS applied automatically).
    2. Register your account: provide full name, email, date of birth, address, and last 4 of SSN to verify eligibility.
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    5. Play $5 in pick’em or sportsbook markets.
    6. Once the entry/first wager settles, Underdog credits $50 in bonus cash (usable across DFS or sportsbook).

    9-seed Iowa Hawkeyes vs. 3-seed Illinois Fighting Illini – Game Details

    • Matchup: Iowa 24-12 (12-11 Big Ten) vs. No. 13 Illinois 27-8 (15-6 Big Ten).
    • Location: Houston; Today, 6:09 p.m. EDT.
    • Betting Line: Illinois -6.5; O/U 137.5.
    • Conference Success – Illinois: 15-6 in Big Ten play; 12-2 in non-conference games.
    • Ball Security – Illinois: Averaging 8.5 turnovers; 8-2 when winning turnover battle.
    • Defensive Edge – Iowa: Allowing 66.1 PPG, best in Big Ten; holding opponents to 45.9% shooting.
    • Scoring Advantage – Illinois: Averaging 84.2 PPG, 18.1 more than Iowa allows (66.1).
    • Three-Point Shooting – Iowa: 8.1 made threes per game, 0.3 fewer than Illinois allows.
    • Series Note: Illinois won last meeting 75-69 on Jan. 11.

    Top Performers

    • Keaton Wagler (ILL): 17.7 PPG, 5.1 RPG, 4.3 APG, 2.4 3PT, 41.1% 3PT.
    • David Mirkovic (ILL): 16.4 PPG, 53.3% FG (last 10 games).
    • Bennett Stirtz (IOWA): 19.7 PPG, 4.4 APG.
    • Cooper Koch (IOWA): 10.6 PPG (last 10 games).

    Last 10 Games

    • Fighting Illini: 7-3, 82.8 PPG, allowing 69.2 PPG, shooting 45.7%.
    • Hawkeyes: 5-5, 71.8 PPG, allowing 70.7 PPG, shooting 47.7%.

    2-seed Purdue Boilermakers vs. 1-seed Arizona Wildcats – Game Details

    • Matchup: No. 8 Purdue 30-8 (17-7 Big Ten) vs. No. 2 Arizona 35-2 (19-2 Big 12).
    • Location: San Jose, California; Today, 8:49 p.m. EDT.
    • Betting Line: Arizona -6.5; O/U 153.5.
    • Conference Success – Arizona: 19-2 in Big 12 play; 16-0 in non-conference games.
    • Rebounding Edge – Arizona: Averaging 39.9 rebounds, led by Tobe Awaka (9.2).
    • Close Game Note – Purdue: 2-2 in one-possession games.
    • Scoring Advantage – Arizona: Averaging 86.7 PPG, 16.4 more than Purdue allows (70.3).
    • Field Goal Efficiency – Purdue: Shooting 50.3%, 11.1% higher than Arizona allows (39.2).

    Top Performers

    • Jaden Bradley (ARIZ): 13.3 PPG, 4.4 APG, 1.5 SPG.
    • Brayden Burries (ARIZ): 18.8 PPG (last 10 games).
    • Braden Smith (PUR): 14.3 PPG, 8.9 APG, 1.7 SPG.
    • Trey Kaufman-Renn (PUR): 17.2 PPG (last 10 games).

    Last 10 Games

    • Wildcats: 10-0, 85.4 PPG, allowing 70.2 PPG, shooting 50.4%.
    • Boilermakers: 8-2, 80.7 PPG, allowing 72.6 PPG, shooting 50.6%.



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  • UConn’s Geno Auriemma Takes Aim at NCAA Over Women’s March Madness Format

    UConn’s Geno Auriemma Takes Aim at NCAA Over Women’s March Madness Format



    UConn men’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma is ripping the double-regional format being used in the women’s NCAA Tournament, saying it doesn’t make sense for the teams still playing or for efforts to grow the game.

    Auriemma brought up attendance, bad shooting percentages and teams having to come to the arena early and late on the same day when taking aim at the format that’s in place for the fourth year, and set to continue for at least five more.

    “Well, I think the first question you’d have to ask is why did they go from four (sites) to two. What was the rationale?” the 12-time national champion coach said Saturday. “If they can explain it legitimately and then prove that it works, then great. So what was the reason?”

    NCAA officials didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press.

    The defending national champion Huskies (37-0), the overall No. 1 seed, play Notre Dame (25-10) in the Fort Worth Regional 1 final on Sunday.

    The Huskies held their required media availability Saturday morning, after the Fighting Irish had already completed their session and before two Sweet 16 games in Fort Worth Regional 3 were played at Dickies Arena. UConn and Notre Dame both had scheduled practice times there later in the evening.

    “So we had to get our kids up, come over here. You already knew who we were playing last night, but we can’t get on the court, and neither can the other teams,” Auriemma said. “Does anybody who makes these decisions ever ask the coaches and the players, hey, does this work?”

    AP All-America teammates Azzi Fudd and Sarah Strong agreed with their coach’s strong sentiment.

    “Everyone’s trying to figure that out right now,” Fudd said. “Every team is going through that. There’s no excuse in that. So we’ll figure it out. We’re making it work, but it definitely isn’t the most ideal setup.”

    Auriemma, the winningest men’s or women’s NCAA basketball coach with 1,287 victories, didn’t wait for a question from reporters to share his thoughts on the format, opening his session by reading off a piece of paper these numbers: 4 for 20, 4 for 22, 1 for 17, 5 for 17, 4 for 16, 7 for 26.

    “That’s the 3-point shooting yesterday across the country,” he said. “How many arenas are we going to sell out with that? Now, maybe it was just a bad day shooting by everybody. These are all teams that average probably 30%, over 30, for the season. Know what time our shootaround was yesterday? Six in the morning, 6:20, I think, for half an hour.”

    He also mentioned the total combined attendance (18,821 announced) at the two venues Friday, in Fort Worth and Sacramento, California.

    UCLA coach Cori Close, whose team is the top seed in Sacramento Regional 2 and plays Duke in an Elite Eight game on Sunday, said it is important to get maximum exposure and coverage while also looking for the best setup to have high-level basketball played on the court.

    “I think that I was in favor of going to the two regional sites when that happened,” Close said. “I think every year we should look and go, where are we in our game, how did this play out efficiency-wise, from a student-athlete well-being side, is there some ways in which we can organize to make things a little bit more cohesive so teams aren’t going back and forth from media coverage to practices later and those kinds of things?”

    Auriemma said there is a lack of input from coaches, and that nothing changes even when the NCAA sends representatives to schools every year after the tournament.

    “Hopefully I’m speaking for the other coaches,” he said. “Some coaches might think I’m full of it. And this is not about UConn. I hope everybody understands that. This is not about us. … We’ve managed to go to the Final Four and win national championships no matter where they’re played, when they’re played, what time they’re played, whatever.

    “I think there is a level of frustration right now among the coaches that’s higher than any time I’ve ever seen it.”

    Duke coach Kara Lawson would like more practice time on the game court, especially more than the designated half-hour on game days for shootarounds, which routinely last about an hour the rest of the season.

    “That would be the only thing I’d change,” Lawson said. “I mean two regionals. I think the arena thing is the thing that’s hard. It’s not that we’re in the same city, it’s that we don’t get long enough practice or shootaround times in the venue for your most important games of the season.”

    For the second day in a row, Auriemma mentioned new rims and new basketballs being used during NCAA Tournament games, and the impact those have on shooting.

    “It’s hard to make shots in the postseason,” Auriemma said Friday after UConn’s 63-42 win over North Carolina, in which the teams were a combined 8 of 42 on 3-pointers. “They just break out these new baskets, new rims, and then it gets in the kids’ heads.”

    The coach on Saturday again brought up “new basketballs right out of the box” and the rims.

    “Got people dribbling the ball off their feet,” he said. “You got people missing layups all over the place. You bounce the ball, and it goes up to the ceiling. There’s just no concept of how basketball is played. Not that I have any of the answers. 

    “Believe me, I just have questions.”

    Reporting by The Associated Press.

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  • Dominic Smith Delivers Emotional Grand Slam in Braves’ Win Over Royals

    Dominic Smith Delivers Emotional Grand Slam in Braves’ Win Over Royals


    Braves designated hitter Dominic Smith’s mother died less than two weeks ago. He said the team has picked him up the last few weeks, and he returned the favor Saturday night.

    Smith became the first player in MLB history to hit a walk-off grand slam in his debut with a new team, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. He finished off the Braves’ six-run ninth inning in a 6-2 win over the Kansas City Royals.

    “It’s just amazing,” said Smith, who was one of the last players to make the Braves’ opening day roster. “Played against the Braves for a long time, and being on the other side a lot of these endings kind of hurt, so to be on the right side of it this time was so fun.”

    Dominic Smith crushes walk-off GRAND SLAM as Braves defeat Royals, 6–2

    Dominic Smith crushed a walk-off grand slam as the Atlanta Braves defeated the Kansas City Royals, 6–2.

    Smith told reporters after the game the Braves had been very supportive during spring training when his mother was ill. She was diagnosed with cancer in September and almost died at the start of camp. Smith said he left the team for a little over a week when she had a “scare,” and returned because he was fighting for a job. He was not with her in California when she passed away.

    “This team is just so awesome,” Smith said. “I’m so blessed because of the love they showed me, the support every day. They’re asking about her, asking about her well-being, my well-being, and that’s all they really cared about. They didn’t care about baseball.”

    Smith was able to show his thanks in the ninth inning off Royals closer Carlos Estevez, who led MLB in saves last season with 42. The Braves erased a 2-0 deficit on RBI singles by Mike Yastrzemski and Michael Harris II and had the bases loaded with one out. On a 3-2 pitch, after calling timeout to gather himself, Smith lifted a fly ball into the right field seats that sent the sold-out crowd into a frenzy.

    Smith said he felt his mom’s presence in the celebration, and he looking forward to the Braves road trip to Anaheim next week where he will be able to see family and “say his goodbyes.”

    “I got choked up a bunch of times, and it’s, you know, I’m trying to hold back tears now,” he said. “I feel her every day. I miss her dearly. It’s not a moment I don’t think about her. And like I said, I’m just so thankful because this team knows what I’m going through. So they really, you know, picked me up the last few weeks.”

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  • 7 Calls Overturned by ABS as Aaron Judge, Yankees Sweep Giants

    7 Calls Overturned by ABS as Aaron Judge, Yankees Sweep Giants


    Aaron Judge homered for a second straight day to nearly the same left-field spot, Ben Rice hit a two-run double in the third inning, and the New York Yankees beat the San Francisco Giants 3-1 on Saturday for a three-game sweep.

    San Francisco matched a franchise record dating to 1909 by going 20 straight innings without a run to start the season before Matt Chapman’s RBI single in the third finally got the Giants — and new manager Tony Vitello — on the scoreboard in 2026.

    Meanwhile, Aaron Boone won his 700th game as the Yankees’ manager.

    Seven automated ball-strike challenges of calls by plate umpire Chad Whitson were all overturned — four by San Francisco, three by New York.

    Judge connected with two outs in the fifth, a 383-foot drive that ricocheted off the roof of an ambulance parked in the tunnel just inside the foul pole.

    Aaron Judge crushes solo home run, extending Yankees’ lead over Giants

    Rice put New York ahead in the third against right-hander Tyler Mahle (0-1), done after four innings in his San Francisco debut.

    Jake Bird (1-0) pitched 1 2/3 innings of relief and David Bednar finished for his second save after surrendering two straight singles to start the inning before getting Patrick Bailey to ground into a game-ending double play.

    The Giants were shut out by New York 7-0 and 3-0 with only four hits over their initial two games — the first time that had happened in baseball history to start a season.

    Jung Hoo Lee began the third with a double to right off Will Warren. Chapman followed with an RBI single, and the crowd cheered as many fans jumped to their feet in obvious relief.

    Vitello, hired from the University of Tennessee despite no professional playing or coaching experience, became the ninth manager in baseball history to be shut out in each of his first two games with a team, and seventh to do so in his first two games overall, according to Sportradar.

    The 20 consecutive scoreless innings matched the previous franchise mark from 1909, when the Giants were scoreless for 13 innings in their opener and the first seven in Game 2.

    Up next

    After Sunday’s off day in this quirky opening-week schedule, LHP Ryan Weathers pitches the series opener at Seattle for the Yankees. The Giants hadn’t announced a starter for their series opener Monday at San Diego.

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  • Senegal Celebrates With AFCON Trophy Despite Decision to Award Title to Morocco

    Senegal Celebrates With AFCON Trophy Despite Decision to Award Title to Morocco


    Senegal’s national team stars have made a defiant statement by parading the Africa Cup of Nations trophy in front of a sold-out crowd at the Stade de France. Despite a recent ruling that officially stripped them of their continental crown, the Lions of Teranga clearly still consider themselves the rightful champions of Africa.

    Defiant scenes in Saint-Denis

    In a remarkable display of defiance, Senegal players and staff presented the AFCON trophy to their supporters ahead of a friendly match against Peru on Saturday. Captain Kalidou Koulibaly led the squad in a lap of honour, while goalkeeper Edouard Mendy held the silverware aloft to thunderous cheers from the stands. The squad even took a formal group photo with the trophy, signalling their refusal to accept the governing body’s recent intervention.

    This public celebration comes just 10 days after the Confederation of African Football (CAF) shook the continent by revising the tournament history books. Senegal had initially secured a 1-0 victory on the pitch in January, but they are now operating under a cloud of administrative controversy that has seen the title handed to their final opponents, Morocco.

    The walk-off that changed everything

    The controversy stems from the dramatic final in Rabat, where coach Pape Thiaw ordered his players to return to the dressing room in protest. The Lions of Teranga were incensed when the referee awarded Morocco a last-minute penalty following a VAR review for a foul on Brahim Diaz. Although Sadio Mane eventually convinced his teammates to return to the field after a 17-minute delay, the damage was done in the eyes of the regulators.

    While the match continued and Pape Gueye eventually scored an extra-time winner after Diaz missed the penalty, the

    Legal battle moves to Lausanne

    The Senegalese Football Federation (FSF) has appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to overturn the CAF ruling, branding it an “administrative robbery.” FSF President Abdoulaye Fall is seeking reinstatement as champions, and while the legal process could take months, the federation has already added a second star to the national team’s jerseys to mark their contested victory.

    Statement from CAF

    The CAF Appeal Board was explicit in its justification for the ruling, stating: “The CAF Appeal Board decided today that in application of Article 84 of the Regulations of the CAF Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON), the Senegal National Team is declared to have forfeited the Final Match of the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) Morocco 2025 (“the Match”), with the result of the Match being recorded as 3–0 in favour of the Fédération Royale Marocaine de Football (FRMF).”

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  • 2025-26 Women’s Elite 8 Odds: Spreads, Lines, What to Know for all 4 Games

    2025-26 Women’s Elite 8 Odds: Spreads, Lines, What to Know for all 4 Games



    Only a handful of teams remain in the women’s NCAA Tournament.

    Check out the odds for each game at DraftKings Sportsbook as of March 28, as well as what to know about each matchup.

    This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.

    SUNDAY, MARCH 29

    No. 6 Notre Dame vs. No. 1 UConn

    Spread: UConn -27.5
    Moneyline: UConn -100000, ND +5000
    O/U: 141.5

    What to know: We saw this matchup during the regular season, and if you can’t tell by the spread, it didn’t go well for Notre Dame. UConn beat the Irish 85-47, with all five of its starters scoring in double figures. There are some silver linings for Notre Dame, depending on how you look at things. The Irish only trailed by nine at half, after a 16-16 second quarter. In addition, N.D. shot a dreadful 1-for-16 from 3 in that game. Also, that game took place way back on Jan. 19. Is it possible the Irish can make things a little more pressurized for the Huskies? Unlikely, but you never know. 

    No. 3 Duke vs. No. 1 UCLA

    Spread: UCLA -11.5
    Moneyline: UCLA -675, Duke +490
    O/U: 130.5

    What to know: This is another one that we’ve seen before that didn’t go well for the losing team. UCLA and Duke shared the court on Nov. 27, and after the first quarter, it was a 30-7 lead for the Bruins, en route to an 89-59 win. However, the spread is not as large as one might think, most likely because the Blue Devils have completely turned their season around. Consider this: Duke lost six of its first nine games, before winning 17 straight and eventually winning the ACC Tournament. Then it beat 6-seed Baylor in the Round of 32 (lost to Baylor by six in its regular-season opener) and beat 2-seed LSU by two in the Sweet 16 (lost to LSU by 16 on Dec. 4). Can the Blue Devils avenge a regular-season loss for a third time when they face UCLA? 

    MONDAY, MARCH 30

    No. 2 Michigan vs. No. 1 Texas

    Spread: Texas -10.5
    Moneyline: Texas -575, Michigan +425
    O/U: 139.5

    What to know: Arguably no team in the country is more battle-tested than Texas, which played 17 ranked teams during the regular season and Big 12 Tournament. It went 14-3 in those games, including wins over UCLA (the Bruins’ only loss of the season) and South Carolina three times (Texas won twice). The Longhorns and Wolverines did not cross paths this season, and although Michigan went 6-5 against ranked opponents in the regular season and Big Ten Tournament, it can say something that no other team this season can say: It was the only team to challenge UConn, losing to the Huskies by only three back on Nov. 21. UConn won every other game this season by at least 13 points, including 30 wins by 25 or more. Point is, Michigan can hang with the biggest dogs. 

    No. 3 TCU vs. No. 1 South Carolina

    Spread: SC -13.5
    Moneyline: SC -1200, TCU +750
    O/U: 131.5

    What to know: South Carolina has made the last five Final Fours, three of the last five championship games, and has won the national title twice in the past five years. Dominant, much? It will be a tall task for TCU to take down the Gamecocks, considering the Horned Frogs have won their three Tournament games by a combined 59, and South Carolina has won its three games by a combined 135 points. Talk about hitting your stride. TCU got 10-seed Virginia in the Sweet after the Cavaliers upset 2-seed Iowa in the Round of 32. This will be a step-up in competition for the Horned Frogs, to say the least. 

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