Sports
Michigan holds off UConn to capture first men’s basketball national title since 1989
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The Michigan Wolverines are finally national champions once more in men’s basketball, taking down the UConn Huskies, 69-63, to finish a thrilling NCAA Tournament in style at Lucas Oil Stadium on Monday night.
This is the first time Michigan has won since 1989, and just the second time in program history they’ve called themselves champions.
Meanwhile, the Huskies were looking to win their third title in the last four tournaments, but their shooting failed them in the end.
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Elliot Cadeau celebrates during the first half of the 2026 NCAA men’s basketball national championship game against UConn at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana, on April 6, 2026. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
While both team’s offenses came into this game working like a machine, it was a low-scoring affair to kick off this game. Michigan only owned a 33-29 first-half lead by the buzzer, but it wasn’t Yaxel Lendeborg leading the way in the points department for the Wolverines.
The Michigan star, who is playing on a sprained left MCL and left ankle, which came during the win over Arizona in the Final Four, was just 1-of-5 shooting for four points in the first half. It was Morez Johnson Jr. (10 points) and Elliot Cadeau (seven points) finding some rhythm for the Wolverines.
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But it didn’t help that Michigan was scoreless from beyond the arc and shooting just 37% from the field. Meanwhile, UConn wasn’t doing themselves any favors either.
The Huskies shot just 33% in the first half, with Alex Karaban hitting two of his five three-point attempts. Solo Ball, who was spotted in a walking boot entering the game with “some type of foot sprain,” according to head coach Dan Hurley, had eight points on 3-of-4 from the field.
While they were down, UConn was certainly playing the type of game they wanted against Michigan – a rugged battle, especially on the glass. Michigan has shown its prowess of taking momentum and sprinting with it offensively, dominating opponents all year long, including this NCAA Tournament.

Yaxel Lendeborg of the Michigan Wolverines dribbles during the first half against the UConn Huskies in the National Championship of the 2026 NCAA men’s basketball tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Ind., on April 6, 2026. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
However, the Huskies know their scratching and clawing abilities for 40 minutes allows them to never let an opponent feel comfortable. Just ask the Duke Blue Devils what happened in the Final Four.
The Huskies had that same demeanor in the second half, though it didn’t help they took a page out of the Wolverines’ first-half playbook – they couldn’t find the stroke from range. UConn was desperate to hit a three-pointer, but despite open looks, they couldn’t get one to fall as the Michigan lead eventually got to 11 points after Cadeau finally broke the seal for his squad on the opposite end, burying a three-pointer to get to a double-digit lead.
But Hurley was firing up the crowd as the Huskies never quit, cutting the lead to five with less than nine minutes to play in the game. Lendeborg, though, after shaking his head on the bench as he wasn’t having the game he hoped in the national championship, stepped up when he checked back in.
Lendeborg saw a sweet pass from Cadeau in transition and got the lead back to 11 with a tough layup, making it 56-45 with less than six minutes to play. He would also come in clutch with another two points following a Braylon Mullins three-pointer.
Once again, the Huskies wouldn’t quit, as Mullins finally found his shot beyond the arc, knocking that Michigan lead back to single digits with a follow-up three-pointer again to Lendeborg’s layups. But, just as gritty as the Huskies played, the Wolverines seemed to always have the answer in this hard-fought contest.

Head coach Dan Hurley of the UConn Huskies reacts during the first half of the NCAA men’s basketball national championship game against the Michigan Wolverines at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Ind., on April 6, 2026. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
A key example of that was, after Karaban buried a three-pointer to cut the Michigan lead to six, Trey McKenney stepped back and drilled a 26-footer with 1:49 left in the game to get the lead back to nine points. The Wolverines faithful in the crowd went ballistic, knowing how much that basket meant considering what UConn has been able to do in this tournament.
With 37 seconds left in the game, Ball got some help from the backboard, making a three-pointer to cut the lead to 67-63 for the Wolverines. Roddy Gayle Jr. made things more interesting in this game, as he couldn’t knock down his two free throw attempts for Michigan. But Karaban didn’t have another clutch three-pointer in him, coming up short with 13 seconds left.
That was it for UConn’s desperation attempt, and Michigan celebrated their win.
In the box score, Cadeau led all scorers with 19 points on 5-of-11 shooting and 8-of-9 from the free throw line. Lendeborg was just 4-of-13, though he still had 13 points. Johnson had a double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds for the Wolverines as well.
Cadeau was named the Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four.
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Michigan was just 2-of-15 from the three-point line, and head coach Dusty May even noted after the game getting dominated on the glass, as they were out-rebounded by UConn, 46-39.
The Huskies, though, couldn’t find it offensively. Karaban finished with 17 points and 11 rebounds, but shot just 4-of-14 and 3-of-10 from three-point territory. Tarris Reed Jr. had a double-double as well with 13 points and 14 rebounds, while Mullins, the hero against Duke with his half court shot, was only 4-of-17 for 11 points.
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How Dusty May and Michigan turned a team of transfers into a national champion
INDIANAPOLIS — BEFORE HE could become the star of the second national championship basketball team in Michigan basketball history, Yaxel Lendeborg had to make a choice.
After he simultaneously entered the 2025 NBA draft and the transfer portal after two promising years at UAB, NBA executives told him he could be a late first-round pick. But the Michigan Wolverines‘ promise to develop the 6-foot-9 talent into an undeniable pro prospect — along with their seven-figure NIL offer — was too tempting to pass up.
“We said, ‘You’ve got to get good at some of these other things, and we’re going to help you learn it,'” Michigan assistant coach Mike Boynton Jr. said about the recruitment process. “‘And then when you struggle, we’re going to watch film and figure out what we can do to improve it. And when you do it well, we’re going to be damn unstoppable.'”
They were right. And it turned out Lendeborg was the missing piece for a Michigan program that cut the nets down at Lucas Oil Stadium on Monday, capping a dominant 37-3 season with a 69-63 win over the UConn Huskies, marking the Big Ten’s first men’s basketball title since 2000.
Lendeborg, clearly affected by the knee injury that sidelined him for most of his team’s win over Arizona in the Final Four, refused to exit the national title matchup even when he missed his first five shots and was at times hobbling on the court. But he played with energy — and scored 13 points — even when it was clear he wasn’t 100 percent.
Even as he grappled with the reality of his limitations, his teammates and coaches didn’t let him lose his confidence.
“We just told him that we know how good he is, that he didn’t need to play with any kind of extra pressure to score or make shots,” Boynton said after Monday’s victory. “We wanted him to shoot the shots that were there, but otherwise just play good basketball. And he still did that. He made some really key plays for us, made some big passes. He set some good screens, came up with some deflections and he brought some energy to our team, which we needed.”
That resilience was part of the reason Michigan recruited him in the first place. When Lendeborg arrived in Ann Arbor, he joined a group of transfers with similar ambitions, an unlikely band of upperclassmen who won this year’s title in a season in which the talent of a generational freshman class dominated the headlines.
Former North Carolina standout Elliot Cadeau had something to prove after a rocky stint in Chapel Hill. Morez Johnson Jr. didn’t want to be stuck in a box at Illinois. Aday Mara needed a chance to showcase the tools he has with a 7-foot-3 frame after leaving UCLA. The self-described “Monstars” thought they would jell under Dusty May, a coach with a track record of putting the pieces together.
Coming off last season’s run to the Sweet 16, May — steeped in a coaching philosophy that embraces the idea that a player being in the right situation is more important than being at the same school for four years — pursued the best available talent in the portal. It’s a philosophy that May witnessed Bob Knight use to win games at Indiana when May was a student manager for the Hoosiers in the late 1990s — and put into action himself in his years as an assistant.
With the right combination of talent, May believed, beautiful things could happen. When he landed Lendeborg, it all came to fruition.
“I feel like we’re the best team in college basketball,” Lendeborg said at the Players Era Festival in November. “We might be the best Michigan team ever. We’re going to try to go for that.”
The Wolverines had just routed San Diego State, Auburn and Gonzaga by 110 points combined. That’s when they began to refer to themselves as not just one of the greatest teams in school history but “the best team ever assembled” — just weeks into the season they would end as champions.
Even as May watched One Shining Moment on the Jumbotron after the win on Monday, he admitted that, yes, he believed his team could win it all — but he also understood this group had no guarantees.
“I didn’t have this vision,” May said, standing on a court littered with confetti. “We thought it was possible but we didn’t see this one coming.”
MICHIGAN’S ROSTER ISN’T that unique. Kentucky spent more than $20 million on its team. Duke had multiple projected first-round picks. Arizona had one of the most balanced rosters in the field, too. The best teams in America all spent millions to chase the rings the Wolverines earned. Yet, their approach worked because everyone on the roster — from Lendeborg, the team’s leading scorer, to the last man on the bench — came to Ann Arbor and bought in on the idea that doing less can mean so much more on a squad with an abundance of stars.
Their system isn’t bogged down by restrictions or assignments. It’s fostered by trust. The Wolverines switch on defense and believe that even their big men can chase your fastest guards. In the NCAA tournament, they tossed passes all over the floor like they were playing a video game together, not competing in a single-elimination affair with a title on the line. They just rolled the ball out onto the court and dared any opponent to beat them.
“I would say just the freedom that we have as players, the confidence that he gives us, it’s probably one of the keys,” Mara said of May’s coaching. “We don’t play with sets or plays. We just hoop, so it’s easier like that to create, to play your game.”
Two important developments made Michigan’s championship possible. The NCAA’s 2025 blanket waiver granted former junior college players such as Lendeborg additional eligibility, and the NIL system made another year in college for fringe NBA first-round prospects a win-win scenario. Both paved the way for constructing a starting lineup of all transfers.
Lendeborg, Johnson and Mara are projected first-round picks in ESPN’s latest NBA mock draft, rising significantly from their projections at their previous schools.
At UCLA, Mick Cronin didn’t use Mara the way May has this season. Having grown up watching fellow Spaniards Pau Gasol and Marc Gasol, Mara craved the chance to play in a system that would give him the “freedom” to play like a fluid big man, too.
Johnson was a high-energy dunking machine at Illinois — not the more versatile two-way player he has become at Michigan — and he worried his NBA dreams had died. He’s now listed as an “excellent” offensive player who has made 69% of his shots around the rim, according to Synergy Sports.
Cadeau also craved a fresh start. The five-star recruit had a couple of up-and-down seasons in Chapel Hill and already had a relationship with the Michigan staff.
“There’s a confidence element to it with all these guys,” Boynton said. “Elliot obviously lost some of that, some of his swag. The thing that makes a little guard good is just, like, believing you’re better than what everybody talks about.”
In the portal, the players who led this national title push were not only pursuing their personal goals — they were looking for a home.
“The transfer portal helps out a lot of people, especially me, coming from a program where I didn’t play that much and I felt restricted,” Johnson said before his team’s first-round matchup against Howard. “Coming here with Coach May, I started to love basketball again. It was fun. “
FIFTY-TWO MILES south of Lucas Oil Stadium, Bob Knight planted a seed that has stuck with May throughout his coaching career.
In 1987, Keith Smart hit the winning shot for Indiana vs. Syracuse in the national championship. Knight brought Smart to Bloomington after he’d been a star in junior college, which had college basketball’s original pool of immediately eligible talent. By the time May arrived as a student manager in 1995, Knight had modeled how to build a team with players who started their careers elsewhere.
“What we do as well as anything is see the best in people, and instead of bringing in a player and saying he’s too this or too that, it’s ‘OK, how can we use that as an advantage?'” May said.
Before he assembled this Michigan team, May watched Indiana standouts and juco transfers William Gladness and Rob Turner thrive for the Hoosiers in the late 1990s. When May was an assistant at Murray State during the 2006-07 season, junior college transfer Bruce Carter was the team’s leading scorer. A year later, when May joined the UAB staff as an assistant, Indiana transfer Robert Vaden ranked in the top 20 nationally in scoring (21.1 points per game) for the Blazers. Later, three of May’s top five scorers at Louisiana Tech were transfers in his first year as an assistant for the Bulldogs. And players such as Canyon Barry, who had started at Charleston, were standouts when May was with Mike White’s staff at Florida.
May then led Florida Atlantic to the Final Four as a head coach in 2023, with Texas Tech transfer Vlad Goldin in the paint. Two years after that run, Goldin and Danny Wolf — a first-round pick in 2025 — led the Wolverines to the Sweet 16. The success of that pairing set the tone for this season’s frontcourt trio and backed up May’s mantra that a player can reach their potential only if they’re in the right place.
“I think we all are better in certain situations than others,” May said Sunday. “When the Oklahoma City Thunder won the championship last year … I wasn’t judging them because Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was drafted by the Clippers or because they signed Isaiah Hartenstein as a free agent. I thought, ‘Wow, those guys played beautiful basketball, that’s a great team, that’s a real model for young players to watch, a group that obviously cared about each other, that played the game the right way, that represented their organization, their city, their families, their last name.'”
Once he had his starting lineup locked in, May faced his next challenge: making sure they were all on the same page.
He had to order a few pizzas to make it happen.
JOHNSON WASN’T CONCERNED about the fact that he, Lendeborg and Mara were all centers at their former schools. May and his staff had been honest with him about the selflessness the team’s starting rotation would require and the potency the group would possess if everyone bought in.
Off the court, however, the Illinois transfer wondered whether everyone would get along. That didn’t last long. At May’s house over the summer, the head coach invited the Wood Fired Up pizza truck in Ann Arbor to make customized pies for everyone on the team.
“Hawaiian pizza,” Johnson said of his order.
While they were munching on slices, they were also talking and vibing. Michigan returnees Will Tschetter, Nimari Burnett and Roddy Gayle Jr. were key holdovers from last season’s squad who helped Lendeborg & Co. adapt to the program’s culture. At the Final Four, the Wolverines have had a Nintendo Switch 2 with a nonstop game of Mario Kart World going in the corner of the locker room. Their season has included laughs and get-togethers throughout.
“We were playing, um, what’s that thing called? Toss bags? Um, wait, no, cornhole, cornhole,” Johnson said. “Dusty is pretty good. [Charlie May] is pretty good. I’m not good. I didn’t really play because I don’t like to lose.”
It might seem silly to think that a couple of pizzas and a few rounds of cornhole could be a factor for Michigan’s national championship team, but it was a setting for a group of guys who didn’t know much about one another — beyond how they played on the court — to form relationships.
That connection translated to the floor on Saturday, when Cadeau started 2-for-14 in the first half against Arizona — although May said later he asked the point guard to throw a few shots off the backboard to make it easier for Mara to get rebounds and score against the Wildcats’ big frontcourt. Rather than critique his effort at halftime, Cadeau said the staff told him to “keep shooting.”
“It’s just having a great connection off the court as well and having a lot of team dinners, hanging out with each other,” said Cadeau, who scored or assisted on 37 of Michigan’s 91 points against Arizona, per ESPN Research.
“This is one of the most connected teams I’ve played on that actually hangs out with each other off the floor. With having five different playmakers on the court at all times, I really think that our passion makes it look like we have chemistry. We do have chemistry, but that just helps build it.”
WHEN UAB HEAD coach Andy Kennedy sat down with Lendeborg last spring, he was honest with the player about his future.
“I said, ‘I know your goal is the NBA and you put yourself in a position for that to be a possibility,'” Kennedy said. “I said, ‘If you want us to give you some guidance as to helping you find your next spot’ … and he looked at us like we were crazy. ‘What? Are you guys running me off?'”
No, they were nudging him toward a brighter, more lucrative future — one Lendeborg took full advantage of in his sole year in Ann Arbor. Lendeborg’s long road — two years at junior college, two at UAB — led him to Michigan, where he was an All-American, earned Big Ten Player of the Year and won a championship.
The portal was only the beginning for this group. Between last offseason and when the final buzzer rang Monday, Michigan’s players blossomed. Fans can debate whether this group is the best Michigan team of all time or one of the best we’ve seen in recent college basketball history. What’s not up for debate is that Michigan — and its collection of transfers — was the best team in the country this season.
And for anyone who thinks May took a rent-a-player approach to this championship run, the players who believe they’re better than any men’s college basketball team ever assembled aren’t concerned.
“Being in this situation, I’ve had the best year of my life,” Lendeborg said before the first game of the tournament. “I’m in the spotlight, getting coached by a new coach that came from a mid-major, so he knows how everything works. And, man, we’re really not bad kids. He did a good job recruiting guys that care for each other and put the team above themselves. If that’s what they want to call a ‘mercenary,’ I would love to be a mercenary. That’s cool with me.”
ESPN’s Jeff Borzello and Pete Thamel contributed to this report.
Sports
Lincoln City promoted to Championship after 65-year absence
Lincoln clinched promotion to the Sky Bet Championship for the first time since 1961 thanks to a hard-earned 2-1 victory at League One playoff chasers Reading.
Needing just one point to return to the second tier for the first time in 65 years, Lincoln made a bright start and went in front in only the fifth minute through Ryan One.
Reading levelled in the second minute of stoppage time at the end, from a Lewis Wing free kick, but Jack Moylan snatched the winner four minutes later.
Harry Leonard’s equaliser earned a share of the spoils from a 1-1 draw for Peterborough against second-placed Cardiff who dropped yet more points in the promotion race.
Leonard immediately cancelled out Alex Robertson’s opener for the Bluebirds as their wobble extended to just two wins in eight games, with the gap between them and third – now occupied by Bradford – down to seven points.
Bradford came from behind to beat Wycombe 2-1 at Adams Park, Aden Baldwin’s second-half dealing their play-off hopes a huge boost after Bobby Pointon had cancelled out Andre Vidigal’s opener for Wycombe, who slumped to 11th.
Bolton and Stockport cancelled each other out with a 2-2 draw which effectively ended both teams’ hopes of securing automatic promotion, Ben Osborn’s late own goal earning the home side a point.
Stevenage moved back into the playoff places with a 1-0 win at home to Blackpool, Harvey White firing the winner in the 66th minute to raise hopes of promotion, though seventh-place Plymouth’s 3-0 win at Barnsley kept the pressure on.
Luton kept alive their play-off hopes with a 3-0 win away at AFC Wimbledon, Burton picked up a precious point in their battle for survival in a goalless draw at Mansfield, and Wigan took a significant step towards survival with a 3-1 win over Northampton at Sixfields.
Exeter ended a 15-match winless run to give their hopes of avoiding relegation a boost with a 3-0 thrashing of Doncaster while Leyton Orient lost 2-1 at home to Huddersfield.
In League Two, MK Dons failed to take advantage of leaders Barrow not playing as they were held to a 1-1 draw away at Oldham, Mike Fondop with a late goal to deny Dons after Marvin Ekpiteta’s opener.
Lucas Ness headed in his first two career goals to put Notts County into the top three following a 3-1 win over relegation-threatened Newport County at Meadow Lane, while Cheltenham dented Cambridge’s automatic promotion hopes after Jake Eastwood’s scored a stoppage-time own goal in a 1-1 draw.
Late goals from Fletcher Holman and Aaron Drinan saw Swindon come from behind to beat Walsall 2-1, Salford’s automatic play-off hopes were dented as they went down to a 1-0 defeat at Crewe while Chesterfield won 1-0 at Barrow.
First-half goals from Jaze Kabia and Harvey Rodgers boosted Grimsby’s play-off bid with a 2-0 win at 10-man Crawley, Gillingham were 2-0 winners against Accrington and Ellis Harrison scored twice as Bristol Rovers beat Harrogate 3-2.
Barnet moved to within four points of the play-off places with a 5-2 win over Fleetwood, Grimsby won 2-0 at Crawley and Tranmere lost 1-0 at home to Colchester.
Sports
Golfers react to Tiger Woods’ absence at Augusta National during Masters week: ‘It’s unfortunate’
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Tiger Woods may not be competing in this year’s Masters Tournament, but he is on golfers’ minds as they prepare for the major this year.
Woods’ DUI arrest in Florida on March 27 sent a shockwave through the golf community, and despite needing to lock in at one of the hardest courses on the golf schedule, it’s hard not to think about the five-time Masters winner.
Bodycam footage from his arrest, which occurred after a rollover crash in Jupiter Island, Florida, saw Woods admit he was “hoping to” play in the Masters. But he released a statement after his arrest, saying he would be stepping away from golf to “seek treatment.”
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Tiger Woods of the United States looks on during a practice round prior to the 2024 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 9, 2024 in Augusta, Georgia. (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)
“I look at it and go, ‘He’s just a human being like everyone else, and we have struggles,’” Jason Day said on Monday regarding Woods’ situation, per ESPN. “It’s unfortunate. The only thing that I don’t understand is that it’s a little bit selfish of him to drive and put other people in harm’s way as well.”
Day added that Woods was “my hero growing up.”
“The reason why I play golf is because of this tournament and Tiger. It’s hard to see him go through what he’s going through, and especially under the microscope.
“Some people want him to fail. Some people obviously want him to succeed. It’s really difficult for me to go through that and watch him, and I know that he’s getting the help now, which is good. I’m just hoping he comes out on the other side and is better.”
Patrick Reed, a green jacket winner like Woods, is also missing him in Augusta, as well as fellow LIV Golf star Phil Mickelson, who announced he won’t be playing in the tournament due to a family health matter just days after Woods’ arrest.
“Let’s be honest, without Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson in the events, in golf, when they both step away, honestly I feel it hurts the game of golf,” Reed said, per ESPN. “But at the same time, we want them to come back and be healthy and ready to go.”

In this image taken from police body camera video released by the Martin County, Fla., Sheriff’s Office, golfer Tiger Woods performs a field sobriety test for sheriff’s deputies following a car crash in Jupiter Island, Fla., Friday, March 27, 2026. (Martin County Sheriff’s Office/AP)
Bubba Watson viewed Woods’ situation from a human perspective — not as a fellow golfer.
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“I could care less about Tiger’s golf,” he said, per ESPN. “I told him from day one that we started hanging out back in [2006 or 2007], somewhere in there, that I’m pulling for him as a human being. Forget his golf — I could care less about his golf.”
Woods’ DUI arrest resulted in charges of driving under the influence with property damage and refusal to submit to a blood alcohol level (BAL) test after law enforcement said his vehicle collided with another while he drove impaired.
Woods released his statement after entering a plea of not guilty, waiving his right to an arraignment and demanding a trial with a jury Tuesday.
“I know and understand the seriousness of the situation I find myself in today,” Woods said in a statement posted on social media.

Tiger Woods of the United States plays a shot on the ninth hole during the second round of the 2024 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 12, 2024 in Augusta, Georgia. (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)
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“I’m committed to taking the time needed to return in a healthier, stronger, and more focused place, both personally and professionally. I appreciate your understanding and support, and ask for privacy for my family, loved ones and myself at this time.”
This arrest marked Woods’ second DUI arrest within the last decade. In 2017, he was taken into custody, also in Jupiter Island, after taking prescription drugs and falling asleep behind the wheel of a running car at 3 a.m.
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