NWSL begins 11th season with increased ticket sales and sponsor interest, and is poised to cash in with new media rights deal.
Author: Nancy Armour, USA TODAY
It’s put up or shut up time for Caitlin Clark and Iowa with Stanford, Indiana out
Iowa has not gotten past the Sweet 16 since Caitlin Clark, the front-runner for this year’s Player of the Year, arrived on campus.
It’s Rick Barnes and it’s March. What more needs to be said?
Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes has gotten out of the Sweet 16 just three times in his nearly 40-year career.
Nick Saban gives a stinging rebuke to spinelessness shown by Nate Oats and Alabama
Finally, someone at Alabama acknowledged there are more important things than NCAA Tournament wins and big bonuses: football coach Nick Saban.
Fairleigh Dickinson’s upset against Purdue shows March Madness is perfect the way it is
The hope of doing the impossible, or watching it, makes tournaments special. If NCAA approves proposal that would expand the field, that will be lost.
Houston ruined its title hopes by playing Marcus Sasser before he was ready
Houston star guard Marcus Sasser injured his groin last weekend, yet for some reason, coach Kelvin Sampson played him on Thursday.
A 366% raise: Prize money for this summer’s women’s World Cup rises to $110 million
Prize money for 32-team tournament in Australia and New Zealand will be $110 million. The 32 teams in men’s tournament last fall split $440 million.
Aaron Rodgers plays the victim as well as he plays football. Maybe even better.
Aaron Rodgers says on “The Pat McAfee Show” he plans to play next season and wants to play for the Jets, requiring a trade from the Packers.
Gio Reyna back with USMNT after report details parents’ bullying of US Soccer officials
Gio Reyna included on roster for Nations League games later this month along with much of the US team from the World Cup in Qatar.
Why did NCAA women’s tournament selection committee stick it to Caitlin Clark and Iowa?
Iowa is seeded No. 2 despite winning Big Ten conference tournament while Stanford and Indiana get No. 1s despite losing in conference semifinals.