Sports
Dick Vitale’s men’s college basketball teams, storylines to watch
This season is gonna be Awesome, with a capital A!
College hoops fans, get ready — your favorite time of year is back! I’m talking about buzzer-beaters, Diaper Dandies and Prime Time Players (PTPers) lighting up the court from coast to coast. And guess what? Yours truly is back, too, and I can’t wait to tip off the season calling the Dick Vitale Invitational on Nov. 4: Duke vs. Texas in Charlotte, North Carolina, baby!
That’s right, we’re coming to the Queen City to start the party with some fireworks (8:45 p.m. ET, ESPN).
But before we get there, let me give you 12 reasons why I’m fired up for the 2025-26 college basketball season!

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1. Florida is GUNNING for history
Can you say back-to-back national champs, baby? Florida’s roster is deeper than the Atlantic Ocean, with Alex Condon returning after pulling out of the NBA draft. He’s a shot blocker, rebounder and low-post beast. Add in Rueben Chinyelu‘s rim protection and Thomas Haugh‘s stretch-four skills, and you’ve got a paint presence that will punish opponents.
But here’s the kicker: Todd Golden added two electric guards in Boogie Fland, a five-star dynamo who can light it up from deep, and Xaivian Lee, a combo guard from Princeton who’s as slick as they come. This team’s got talent, size, experience and a coach who knows how to push the right buttons. The Gators are chasing a rare repeat — and they’ve got the juice to do it!
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2. Cameron Boozer takes the torch at DUUUUKE!
It’s the Boozer Brothers era in Durham. Cameron Boozer is the most complete freshman in the country, a double-double machine with NBA polish. And he’s bringing his twin, Cayden, along for the ride. Cameron is considered one of the top contenders to go No. 1 in the 2026 NBA draft, alongside Kansas‘ Darryn Peterson and BYU‘s AJ Dybantsa. Also in Jon Scheyer’s No. 1 recruiting class in America are Dame Sarr, Nikolas Khamenia and Sebastian Wilkins. Duke also brings back Caleb Foster, Isaiah Evans and Patrick Ngongba II, three rising stars ready to take the next leap. The talent’s there, the depth is scary and Cameron Indoor Stadium is gonna be rockin’ every night. Watch out, ACC. Duke’s comin’, baby!
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3. Houston has liftoff!
You thought Houston was done after losing LJ Cryer and J’Wan Roberts? Think again. This squad is stacked like flapjacks at a Sunday brunch. The Cougars return Emanuel Sharp, Milos Uzan, Joseph Tugler and Mercy Miller — all key contributors from last year’s title game run. And then, boom! They added Chris Cenac Jr. and Isiah Harwell, two five-star standouts, both likely first-round NBA draft picks. Kelvin Sampson’s culture of toughness, discipline and defense is a proven formula, and this roster is as complete as any in America.
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4. Cal’s new blueprint at Arkansas is a WHOLE NEW HOG
It’s John Calipari like you’ve never seen him. Gone is the all-freshmen formula; now, it’s experience plus elite youth. Year 2 in Fayetteville looks on fire with Karter Knox returning to lead a group that includes D.J. Wagner, Billy Richmond III and Trevon Brazile — that guy’s a pogo stick with a jump shot. Cal also brought in five-star backcourt monsters Darius Acuff Jr. and Meleek Thomas, plus big men Malique Ewin and Nick Pringle to bang down low. This team is more physical, more mature and more dangerous than last year’s Sweet 16 squad. Don’t be shocked if the Hogs make their first Final Four since they were Rollin’ with Nolan.
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5. Braden Smith, assist king in waiting
Purdue‘s Smith is the floor general of the nation. He averaged 15.8 points and 8.7 assists last year, and he’s got his eyes set on Bobby Hurley’s all-time NCAA assist record. The reigning Big Ten Player of the Year and Bob Cousy Award winner is smart, steady and runs the offense like a maestro with a baton. He’s flanked by Trey Kaufman-Renn, a 20-point scorer who took over last year for Zach Edey like a boss. With a veteran core, strong supporting cast and national title expectations, Purdue enters the season as a legitimate favorite to cut down the nets in April and finally bring that elusive national title back to the Big Ten. It’s go time in West Lafayette.
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6. The Little Apple’s big bite: Kansas State‘s P.J. power!
P.J. Haggerty, the American Player of the Year, dropped 21.7 points, 5.8 rebounds and 3.7 assists a night at Memphis, and now he’s Jerome Tang’s main man in Manhattan, Kansas. He’s got that slashing style, can draw fouls, create for others and score at all three levels. His 3-point shot improved and he’s a very efficient scorer whose speed allows him to score with ease in transition. He plays strong on-ball defense and is not afraid to use his body near the rim and finish tough shots. Kansas State has missed the tournament the past two years, but this guy changes everything. With Akron’s Nate Johnson and Serbian sensation Andrej Kostic joining him in the backcourt, the Wildcats could be dancing in March — and doing some damage once they get there.
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7. The Bluegrass Rivalry in the NIL era
Two proud programs, two coaches in their second year with their respective teams, and a whole lotta barking flying around. Kentucky‘s Mark Pope went wild in the portal, pulling in Jaland Lowe (Pitt), Kam Williams (Tulane), Denzel Aberdeen (Florida), Mouhamed Dioubate (Alabama) and top-five NBA prospect Jayden Quaintance (Arizona State). The Wildcats are big, fast and defense-first.
Over at Louisville, Pat Kelsey brought in a five-star recruit and potential NBA Lottery pick in Mikel Brown Jr., who made a gold medal run with Team USA at the FIBA U19 World Cup. He’s a lightning-quick point guard with one of the smoothest jumpers in the game. Add Germany’s Sananda Fru along with three 1,000-point scorers in Ryan Conwell, Isaac McKneely and J’Vonne Hadley, and this group of Cardinals can light it up. Both teams are Final Four contenders, and if the bracket gods smile, they might meet again in March Madness.
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8. The Big East brawl
You want old-school toughness with new-school talent? After winning back-to-back national championships in 2023 and 2024, Dan Hurley’s UConn Huskies are back in title-hunting mode with a reloaded roster featuring elite shooters, top-tier freshmen and a deep bench.
Rick Pitino’s St. John’s is bringing New York City fire to every game. The Red Storm won their first Big East regular-season crown since 1985 last year. This year’s mix of vets and freshmen looks Final Four ready. Together, these programs have created a talent-rich top tier in the Big East, drawing national attention and restoring the league’s reputation as one of the premier basketball conferences in the country. Their success not only boosts the Big East’s visibility, it intensifies competition across college basketball, challenging the other power conferences on the national stage.
9. International infusion: It’s a global game, baby!
Over 70 international players joined high-major rosters this year. Wow! You’ve got Dame Sarr (Italy) at Duke, Luka Bogavac (Montenegro) at North Carolina, Tounde Yessoufou (Benin) at Baylor, Oscar Cluff (Australia) at Purdue, just to name a few. Illinois alone has Croatian twins (Tomislav and Zvonimir Ivisic), a Serbian point guard (Mihailo Petrovic) and a Montenegrin forward (David Mirkovic). That’s an Olympic roster. These international stars bring skill, maturity and a pro mindset. They’re changing the way teams are built, and the way the game is played. I’m excited to see the influence they’re bringing.
10. The race for No. 1 has Diaper Dandies dominating!
It’s a freshman takeover. Darryn Peterson at Kansas is the top recruit in the land. Even Peterson’s coach, Bill Self, called him the best player he has ever recruited. AJ Dybantsa at BYU? A 6-foot-9 highlight reel! Cameron Boozer at Duke is NBA ready right now. And don’t sleep on Darius Acuff Jr. (Arkansas), Mikel Brown Jr. (Louisville), Kiyan Anthony (Syracuse) or Nate Ament (Tennessee), another Swiss Army knife. The Diaper Dandies list grows even deeper when you throw in Isiah Harwell and Chris Cenac Jr. at Houston, Tounde Yessoufou at Baylor, Koa Peat at Arizona and Caleb Wilson at North Carolina. This draft class could rival 2003’s, baby. We’re talkin’ Carmelo, LeBron, Bosh and Wade vibes!
11. Feast Week frenzy!
We start the college season with some heavyweight matchups, and I, for one, won’t miss a minute. The Champions Classic hits Madison Square Garden on Nov. 18 with Kentucky vs. Michigan State (6:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) and Duke vs. Kansas (9 p.m. ET, ESPN). NBA scouts have already circled their calendars. Then the action shifts to Vegas: The Players Era Festival has 18 top men’s programs — including Alabama, Houston, Gonzaga, Kansas, Tennessee, Baylor and St. John’s — battling for bragging rights and big-time NIL exposure. It’s the biggest non-March Madness event ever. It’s a three-day basketball bonanza!
12. #NewRules, smarter hoops!
Let’s talk strategy, baby! This season brings coaches’ challenges, cleaner continuous motion rules and clearer foul guidelines. Officials can now call just one shot clock off if there’s a malfunction — no more double stoppages. The changes are aimed at speeding up the game and giving teams more control in key moments. It’s gonna be smarter, sharper and smoother on the court. I, for one, like the changes.
And now, the main event, baby. Get your popcorn ready. Nov. 4 is the date, and Spectrum Center in Charlotte is the place for the Dick Vitale Invitational featuring Duke vs. Texas. We’ve got super freshmen, electric energy and two blue bloods battling under the bright lights. And I’ll be there on the call to start my season.
Let’s get this party started, baby! I’m talking PTPer after PTPer, big-time performances and March Madness dreams being built every night. College hoops is back, and I just can’t wait!
Sports
Mbappé ties Ronaldo record for most Real Madrid goals in a year
Kylian Mbappé added his name to another line in the record books Saturday, tying Cristiano Ronaldo for the most goals by a Real Madrid player in a calendar year.
The milestone was about to escape the France striker until he converted a penalty kick with four minutes left to complete a 2-0 win over 10-man Sevilla in Madrid’s final game of the year.
He marked the achievement, which came on his 27th birthday, with a subdued version of Ronaldo’s trademark “Siu” goal celebration before blowing a kiss at the television cameras.
“A special day,” Mbappé said. “We won the game, which was important — that was the objective. With the record, it’s incredible in my first year doing what Cristiano did, the best player in Real Madrid’s history, a role model in world football.
“It’s an honor for me. He’s always been affectionate to me, talking to me about Madrid and how to adapt. I’m very happy now to score goals for Real Madrid.
“[The celebration] was for him. I have my own usually, but I wanted to share it with him today. He was my idol as a kid, I have a good relationship with him, and he’s my friend now.”
The former Paris Saint-Germain star, who joined Madrid in summer 2024, has scored 29 times for Madrid this season, putting him into a tie with Bayern Munich‘s Harry Kane for most goals by a player from a club in Europe’s top five leagues.
“I congratulate him, and I encourage him to start 2026 well,” Madrid boss Xabi Alonso said of Mbappé, who also has a LaLiga-leading 18 goals this season.
Jude Bellingham scored with a header in the 38th minute to give Madrid the lead on Saturday before Sevilla lost defender Marcão to a second booking for rash tackles with 20 minutes left.
The result was still in doubt until Mbappé converted his spot kick after Juanlu fouled Rodrygo in the area.
The win will do little to ease the pressure on Alonso, with the team underperforming despite three consecutive wins this week.
“We know the moment we’re in,” Alonso said. “We’re demanding and self-critical to play better, we know this isn’t our level and we want to improve. … The priority was to win, but obviously some things didn’t go as we wanted.”
Madrid sit a point behind LaLiga leaders Barcelona ahead of the Catalan club’s match with Villarreal on Sunday.
Information from ESPN’s Alex Kirkland, ESPN Research and The Associated Press was used in this report.
Sports
Return of The Robot! Haaland bringing back Crouch’s iconic goal celebration
For someone who scores so many goals, Manchester City striker Erling Haaland is not usually the most enthusiastic when it comes to celebrating them.
There has been the odd exception, such as when he marks hitting the back of the net by adopting the lotus position and appearing to enter a Zen state while sitting cross-legged on the field. But for the most part, the Norway international is an understated character who is happy to let his football do the talking for him.
Erling Haaland. That is all. 🤖 pic.twitter.com/Jp0bMFAP3I
— NBC Sports Soccer (@NBCSportsSoccer) December 20, 2025
However, recently he has revived a classic goal celebration to add to his repertoire: The Robot.
He hit the celebration in the 3-1 win over Bournemouth on Nov. 2, and he doubled down on Saturday when he scored the opener in the 3-0 win over West Ham United.
The celebration’s most famous foray from the breakdance mat to the football pitch came in 2006, when England striker Peter Crouch performed it in a pre-FIFA World Cup friendly win over Jamaica. It became his trademark, and Prince William even once asked Crouch to hit the move when the future king visited England’s training ground.
Crouch is keen to remind everyone who the true robo-GOAT is. After that Bournemouth game, the former Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur forward posted on social media: “I walked so they could run.”
Now, Haaland has picked up the mantle. Given his remorseless quest for goals is like that of The Terminator, it seems rather fitting.
Sports
Reranking men’s basketball power conferences: A Big Ten vs. Big 12 battle for No. 1
1:17
Abilene Christian Wildcats vs. Arizona Wildcats: Game Highlights
Abilene Christian Wildcats vs. Arizona Wildcats: Game Highlights
We’re changing the formula for this season’s monthly rankings of men’s college basketball power conferences. Instead of measuring only the projected number of NCAA tournament bids and seeding, our ranking is based on a single question: Which conference is most likely to produce the 2026 national champion?
Hint: It’s a close race between the Big Ten and Big 12 for the top spot in the December edition.
Note: “Current bids” represents the number of teams from each conference in the latest Bracketology. “Projected bids” represents the number of bids we forecast a conference could have on Selection Sunday.

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5. Big East
November rank: 4
Current bids: 4 (-1 from Nov.)
Projected bids: 3
Average seed: 6.8
Championship caliber: UConn is even better than we projected heading into the season. St. John’s isn’t, at least not yet. And the aggregate Big East picture is less than promising. It’s conceivable that only the Huskies and Red Storm make the NCAA tournament, which would net the conference’s lowest bid total yet.
Joey Brackets says: The modern Big East has officially evolved from a conference carried by Villanova to one carried by UConn. That boosts the conference’s profile when the Huskies reach the first Monday of April but doesn’t change its footprint on Selection Sunday. Seton Hall‘s pleasant emergence isn’t enough to make up for lackluster nonconference slates for Nova, Creighton, Xavier and Providence. And this will be the last time Marquette is mentioned for a long while.
Game of the year: UConn at St. John’s on Feb. 6 (8 p.m. ET)
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4. ACC
November rank: 5
Current bids: 8 (+3 from Nov.)
Projected bids: 8
Average seed: 5.9
Championship caliber: Duke remains the most obvious national championship contender, but soon-to-be-healthy archrival North Carolina has joined Louisville among ACC teams with Final Four potential. We also like Virginia as a sleeper.
Joey Brackets says: The ACC bounce-back is real. Any projection in which the conference doubles its NCAA output from a season ago will be received happily by anyone who felt slighted by pundits like yours truly the past several seasons.
Game of the year: Duke at Louisville on Jan. 6 (7 p.m. ET)
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3. SEC
November rank: 2
Current bids: 9 (-2 from Nov.)
Projected bids: 9
Average seed: 5.3
Championship caliber: Unlike a season ago, when the SEC would have been hard-pressed to not produce the national champion, there is no certain title contender in an otherwise deep and ferocious conference. It boasts both quality and quantity, just not at the same elite level as 2024-25.
Joey Brackets says: The lower probability of generating a champion doesn’t mean there aren’t a half-dozen SEC teams that could make the Final Four, including we-should-have-seen-it-coming Vanderbilt. There just isn’t a clear favorite or even a “probable” to do the deed, akin to the position the Big Ten has been in on multiple occasions over the past few seasons.
Game of the year: Alabama at Vanderbilt on Jan. 7 (9 p.m. ET)
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Highlight: No. 13 Vanderbilt stuns Memphis in overtime thriller
Duke Miles powers the offense with 22 points and Tyler Tanner puts up 16 as the Commodores outlast the Tigers in overtime to secure the 77-70 victory.
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2. Big Ten
November rank: 1
Current bids: 10 (-1 from Nov.)
Projected bids: 10
Average seed: 5.3
Championship caliber: If we sent the top two Big Ten teams (Michigan and Purdue) and the top two Big 12 teams (Arizona and Iowa State) to the Final Four right now, would anyone outside of Durham or Storrs complain? Put another way: If someone wants to give me those four against the field, I’m all ears.
Joey Brackets says: I won’t victory lap my preseason national champion prediction of Michigan for at least another month, but the margin between the Big Ten and Big 12 for the No. 1 spot in this month’s ranking is razor thin. The Big Ten loses out ever so slightly because it has a worse (and larger) bottom. I also can’t get Iowa State’s 81-58 thrashing of Purdue at Mackey Arena out of my mind.
Game of the year: Michigan at Purdue on Feb. 17 (6:30 p.m. ET)
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1. Big 12
November rank: 3
Current bids: 9 (8 in Nov.)
Projected bids: 9
Average seed: 5.2
Championship caliber: The Big 12 currently holds two projected No. 1 seeds (Arizona and Iowa State) and a No. 2 seed (BYU). And that’s without mentioning Houston — a preseason 1-seed by acclamation and losers of just a single one-possession game to date — or Kansas, which has collected a staggering 11 top seeds under Bill Self. In other words: The Big 12 is loaded.
Joey Brackets says: Prior to the SEC’s record-setting storm a season ago, the Big 12 was the No. 1 conference on KenPom for three straight seasons and nine of the past 11. It is on track to regain the top spot in 2026.
Game of the year: Iowa State at Arizona on March 2 (9 p.m. ET)
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