Men's Mar. Madness Elite 8 schedule
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CBS News |
The men's games are scheduled for Saturday, March 29, and Sunday, March 30, 2025 and the women's games are scheduled for Sunday, March 30 and Monday, March 31, 2025.
Education Week |
Teachers are scoring big with students by bringing the spirit of March Madness into the classroom.
East Bay Times |
Houston gave Tennessee a lesson in defensive dominance, shutting down the Vols for a 69-50 win to reach the Final Four for the seventh time.
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OKC Thunder Wire on MSNMarch Madness Elite Eight: Complete wrap-up of potential OKC Thunder prospectsDuke continues to prove why they entered March Madness as the easy title favorite. An 85-65 win over Alabama showed off the clear talent gap between the Blue Devils and the rest o
Led by Madison Booker's 18 points and a 13-point showing from senior Rori Harmon, Texas recorded a 58-47 win over TCU at Legacy Arena on Monday night.
Bueckers has scored a total of 50 points across those two games, including 28 when UConn defeated USC in the Elite Eight last year to advance to the Final Four. Bueckers has also recorded a total of 13 rebounds and eight assists and has shot 44.4 percent from the field and 35.7 percent from 3-point range against the Trojans.
The USC Trojans' loss of JuJu Watkins will really be felt in the Elite Eight matchup on Monday against Paige Bueckers and the UConn Huskies. UConn is a 13.5-point favorite at DraftKings Sportsbook for the Regional 4 final in Spokane.
The Houston Cougars like mixing it up — and turning things ugly. Their hard-nosed defense has been a staple throughout coach Kelvin Sampson's 11-year tenure, and it served them well again in Indianapolis against two teams with much larger fan bases,
MSU head coach Tom Izzo fell to 8-3 in Elite Eight games in a night that was all Auburn from the start in March Madness, March 30, 2025 in Atlanta.
Madness continues Sunday with four more Elite Eight games in the men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments. The women started things off, with defending champion South Carolina outlasting Duke to return to the Final Four.
Since March Madness expanded to 64 teams in 1985, the only other year that all four top-seeded teams from their respective regions earned Final Four spots was 2008. That year, Kansas won a national title with an overtime victory over Memphis.