Sports
The Bilas Index: Jay Bilas picks his top 68 teams this season
The Bilastrator doesn’t like to brag. Yet, by now, as a conscious being on this planet, you know that the Bilas Index is the preeminent, reliable and most universally respected indicator and compilation of basketball knowledge and judgment known to humankind. As such, it serves as much more than a guide or a road map to this men’s college basketball season — it is a pinpoint GPS for the year.
Why is the Bilas Index indispensable for any basketball fan or observer? It is quite simple and self-evident. While some mistakenly rely upon a strict analytics approach and others mistakenly rely upon a weekly vote among the unwashed masses, the Bilas Index is based upon the most powerful and consequential instrument of basketball wisdom and judgment the game has ever known: the gray matter of The Bilastrator himself. The Bilastrator’s immense and powerful brain is superior in processing basketball performance, potential and ability than any other analytical tool ever imagined.
To be clear, providing such context to these picks is not bragging. It is simply a recitation of unimpeachable fact. Last season, The Bilastrator dominated the NCAA tournament prediction field, as per usual. After taking intense criticism from the uninformed on Selection Sunday, The Bilastrator correctly predicted the four Final Four teams, the two title game participants and the national champion. In addition, The Bilastrator predicted seven of the Elite Eight teams. You’re welcome, America.
Of course, it is too early to prognosticate forward to the 2026 NCAA tournament. But in the meantime, the Bilas Index will provide you with a reliable guide to the season, with periodic updates as things progress. Again, you’re welcome.

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The Boilermakers have the nation’s best point guard, period, in Braden Smith. His interior counterpart, Trey Kaufman-Renn, is among the most efficient and productive big men in the college game. Purdue also has arguably the best coach in college basketball right now in Matt Painter, who has handled the recent challenges of the game without complaint. The Boilermakers know who they are and embrace their standards. For the past several years, Purdue has challenged for national honors, and it has improved throughout each season. With the exception of Florida and perhaps Duke, no team gave Houston a tougher challenge in the NCAA tournament. This season’s version of the Boilermakers will be even better than last season’s, especially with the addition of Omer Mayer, the Israeli guard who can shoot, handle and pass. Expect Purdue to be in Indianapolis.
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Kelvin Sampson has not only returned Houston to its glory days of the 1980s, he has established the program as one of the truly elite in the country. Houston has been the model of consistency and annually leads the nation, or is among the top teams, in playing hard. While Houston suffered losses from last season’s title game team, the returnees and additions make the roster title-worthy again. Guards Milos Uzan and Emanuel Sharp will lead the way, and Joseph Tugler has established himself as the premier defender in the country.
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Last season’s national champion returns the nation’s best and toughest forecourt in the country. The key to repeat will be the play of Florida’s guards. Gone are Walter Clayton Jr., Will Richard and Alijah Martin, last season’s best backcourt. Coming in are Boogie Fland and Xaivian Lee from Arkansas and Princeton, respectively. If those two can provide a reasonable facsimile of last season’s backcourt — especially Fland becoming this season’s Clayton — Florida will challenge again.
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After back-to-back national championships, the UConn faithful and coach Dan Hurley expected nothing less in the 2024-25 season. Instead, the Huskies went 0-3 in the Maui Invitational and Hurley set a modern record for highest blood pressure while wearing a Hawaiian shirt. Still, UConn was outstanding at the end of the season, giving Florida everything it had in the NCAA tournament’s second round before losing to the eventual national champion 77-75. This season’s Huskies should keep Hurley’s blood pressure within reasonable limits — UConn is very talented and has another challenger for the Final Four. Alex Karaban, Solo Ball and Tarris Reed Jr. return better, and Silas Demary Jr. (Georgia) and 7-0 freshman big man Eric Reibe will be heavily relied upon. UConn is legit.
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Jon Scheyer has engineered one of the best starts to a head coaching career in college basketball history. Entering his fourth season, Scheyer has won 89 games. He reached an Elite Eight in his second year and a Final Four in his third. Will this season’s Duke team match last season’s version? That is a tall order, because Duke had the National Player of the Year and Freshman of the Year in Cooper Flagg, and two other lottery picks in Kon Knueppel and Khaman Maluach. Yet Duke has the nation’s top recruiting class heading to Durham, led by Cameron Boozer, who is as big, as imposing and as talented as Paolo Banchero was entering Duke a few years ago. A key to Duke reaching its potential as a team will be leadership from the guard position, most notably the play of Caleb Foster.
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Rick Pitino won a Big East title last season and resurrected a proud tradition at St. John’s in just two years. The 2024-25 Red Storm won 31 games behind dizzying defense and relentless offensive rebounding, and only an uncharacteristic performance in the NCAA tournament second round blemished an otherwise amazing season. This season, Pitino returns Zuby Ejiofor, one of the nation’s best big men, and surrounds him with talented transfers, including Bryce Hopkins, Dillon Mitchell and better perimeter shooting. Can St. John’s better its finish when the lights are on? It’s tough to bet against Rick Pitino.
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The Wolverines lost two 7-footers in Danny Wolf and Vlad Goldin, but they bring in one of the best and most productive players in the nation in UAB transfer Yaxel Lendeborg. Last season, Lendeborg led UAB in scoring, rebounding, assists, steals and blocks. Cooper Flagg was the only other player to do that. Don’t be surprised if coach Dusty May goes through Lendeborg even more than he went through Wolf last season. In addition to Lendeborg, May brings in North Carolina transfer Elliot Cadeau and UCLA big man Aday Mara to blend with Nimari Burnett and Roddy Gayle Jr., to make Michigan the top threat to Purdue in the Big Ten.
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Mark Pope did a masterful job last season of bringing Big Blue Nation together and injecting a positive attitude among the players and the faithful. Pope also brought beautiful offense to Lexington, and before some injuries slowed the Wildcats down, Kentucky was a true joy to watch. One thing that was missing was lockdown defense, which will be different this season. Kentucky will be able to defend at a much higher level, with length and athleticism at multiple positions. Otega Oweh returns and will likely lead the Cats in scoring again, thanks to his consistent performances, especially in second halves. Florida transfer Denzel Aberdeen, Arizona State transfer Jayden Quaintance and Alabama transfer Mo Dioubate will bring defense and toughness, and Pittsburgh transfer Jaland Lowe will prove to be one of the best guards in the country.
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For what feels like the first time since Bernard King and Ernie Grunfeld played in Knoxville, Zakai Zeigler will not be in a Vols uniform. Zeigler was the embodiment of the Vols program under coach Rick Barnes, and the heart and soul of the program for years. Also gone are Chaz Lanier, Igor Milicic Jr. and Jahmai Mashack, so the Vols need to establish an identity with a new crop of players. Few are better than Barnes in accomplishing that task. Felix Okpara, the lengthy rim-protecting and rebounding big man who made good strides offensively, will blend in with transfers Ja’Kobi Gillespie, Jaylen Carey and Amaree Abram, but the straw that stirs it all will be Nate Ament, a 6-9 freshman who is as talented as any in the country. Ament is not Kevin Durant, but he conjures the image of KD, especially when one considers Barnes coached the NBA star at Texas. Expect Ament to be Barnes’ queen on the Vols’ chess board.
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It was not an easy season in Westwood in 2024-25, but UCLA still won 23 games and a first-round NCAA tournament game. Not bad at all, for most programs — it’s just not a memorable season at UCLA. The Bruins return a trio of very good players in Tyler Bilodeau, Eric Dailey and Skyy Clark, but the key to the season will be New Mexico transfer Donovan Dent. While Purdue’s Braden Smith is the nation’s best point guard, Dent is a close second. Dent can score, but what he can really do is distribute and make winning decisions. If Xavier Booker, the big man transfer from Michigan State, can realize his potential at UCLA, the Bruins can leave last season in the rearview mirror. A better road is ahead.
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The Red Raiders lost a lot from their Elite Eight team from a season ago, but they have so much coming back and have added to the mix. Start with the Big 12 Player of the Year, JT Toppin, add an elite guard in Christian Anderson and you have a contending team in the conference and nationally. Texas Tech will shoot it well from multiple positions and will have a number of athletic, rangy defenders. Toppin could very well take home the Wooden Award — he could wind up as the nation’s best all-around playmaker.
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Petrovic. Stojakovic. Ivisic. Mirkovic. The Illinois roster might read like a FIBA World Cup team, but it will also translate to being a Big Ten contender. The Illini have size, shooting, skill and depth. And Brad Underwood — also known as “Bradimir” — has leaned into the international flavor of his roster. Watch for former Stanford and Cal wing Andrej Stojakovic to be a focal point. Stojakovic is an excellent shooter who can really pass.
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Has there been a better turnaround in college basketball than Louisville’s eight-win 2023-24 to 27 wins last season? And despite some big losses from last season’s roster, the Cardinals are set up to contend again. Freshman Mikel Brown Jr., a 6-4 guard and five-star recruit, is a projected top-five NBA draft pick and the most well-rounded player on Pat Kelsey’s uber-talented roster. Isaac McKneely (14.4 PPG at Virginia) and Ryan Conwell (16.5 PPG at Xavier) enter their first years in the ACC as some of the most promising scorers in the conference.
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Another Elite Eight run last season made it four out of the past five years that Nate Oats’ squad has reached at least the Sweet 16, and the Tide look primed for another go this season. Labaron Philon Jr. recorded 16 points (including 3-for-6 from 3), 5 rebounds, 3 assists and 3 steals in that Elite Eight loss to Duke, and he’s the standout from one of the country’s best backcourts. Aden Holloway, who averaged 11.4 PPG last season, takes over the offense from All-American Mark Sears. How he replaces him will tell us a lot about Alabama’s chances this season.
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T.J. Otzelberger’s squad continues to be one of the Big 12’s elite, and this season, with a solid core of returners, should see it build on last season’s 25-win campaign. Tamin Lipsey, who returned for opening night after suffering an MCL sprain, is one of college basketball’s best point guards. He’s an elite defender who averaged 10.6 points last season and has been an All-Defensive selection in the Big 12 two straight years. Milan Momcilovic and Joshua Jefferson also return for the Cyclones and should take big steps forward this year.
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The Cougars are can’t-miss basketball this season — Kevin Young had the best offense in the country for the back half of last season, and added this year’s top recruit, explosive 6-9 wing AJ Dybantsa. There has never been this much hype about a player in Provo — he’s the potential No. 1 draft pick — and he joins transfers Robert Wright III (11.5 PPG at Baylor) and returner Richie Saunders, who averaged 16.5 points and shot 43.2% from 3 last season. The Cougars are coming off a Sweet 16 appearance, but with how Young has leveled up this offense, they’re pushing for the first Final Four berth in 2026.
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Tommy Lloyd’s Wildcats are surprisingly well set up for a squad that lost five players from last season, including 2024 Pac-12 Player of the Year Caleb Love, who averaged 17.2 points, 4.4 rebounds, 3.4 assists and 1.2 steals last season. Two five-star freshmen, Brayden Burries and Koa Peat, will be key contributors in Tucson, alongside a strong defensive core of returners. Peat went off in the Wildcats’ opener, an upset of No. 3-ranked Florida: 30 points, 7 rebounds, 5 assists and 3 steals. Peat won four state championships and has four gold medals with USA Basketball, and he looks ready to lead the Wildcats to another deep Big 12 and NCAA tourney run.
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After two of the worst seasons in Kansas basketball history, Bill Self’s squad looks ready to reemerge, thanks to a player Self calls the best incoming freshman he has ever coached. That’s Darryn Peterson, the No. 2 player in ESPN’s top 100. In a season stacked with talented freshmen, Peterson is among the elite, a 6-6 guard with hardly any weaknesses. He joins Flory Bidunga, who withdrew his name from the transfer portal and should make a big leap for the Jayhawks in his sophomore season — in six starts last season, he averaged 8.2 points, 6.7 rebounds and 2.0 blocks.
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Another season, another likely WCC championship for Mark Few’s Bulldogs — but the 2025-26 season will be the last, with Gonzaga moving to the Pac-12 next season. Returners Graham Ike and Braden Huff are primed to lead Few to another 30-win season — and maybe a deep tourney run? Both players stood out in Gonzaga’s Sweet 16 loss to Houston, with Ike scoring 27 points and Huff adding 11 points, 4 rebounds and 3 assists. Transfer Tyon Grant-Foster‘s injunction to play a final season after the NCAA had denied his eligibility waiver earlier in the summer was huge for Few (he averaged 14.8 PPG at Grand Canyon).
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After a 24-win season in 2024-25, John Calipari’s Razorbacks look ready to level up this season. With three starters returning, including D.J. Wagner (11.2 PPG) and Karter Knox (8.3 PPG), the Razorbacks will be better at both ends of the court. Knox is a popular breakout pick this season after finishing with double-digit scoring in nine of his final 12 games, including a 20-spot against Texas Tech in the Sweet 16. And we haven’t even gotten to freshman Darius Acuff Jr., a five-star recruit who will be the latest in a long line of Calipari frosh to lead an offense.
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Ryan Kalkbrenner was a mainstay for Greg McDermott’s squads in the past four years, but he seems to have done a decent job retooling. Two transfers from Iowa, Josh Dix and Owen Freeman, join the Bluejays, and both seem to be good fits — Freeman will be tasked with replacing Kalkbrenner after he recovers from knee surgery, and Dix, who shot better than 42% from 3 the past two seasons, is a perfect fit on McDermott’s trey-happy offense.
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Every single Baylor player from 2024-25 is gone, thanks to either graduation or the transfer portal, but coach Scott Drew has showed plenty that he’s good enough to regroup. Bringing in Tounde Yessoufou — No. 9 in the SC Next 100 — was the biggest coup. Yessoufou is an elite offensive player with a decent midrange game. In a year crowded with freshman talent, he should be a draft lottery pick.
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Last year, All-American John Tonje ran the show, but sophomore John Blackwell grew into his role behind him, averaging 15.8 points and 5.1 rebounds (both big jumps from his freshman season). With Tonje gone, Blackwell will have even more room to shine in his junior season, particularly alongside talented transfer Nick Boyd (13.4 PPG at San Diego State last season) and returner Nolan Winter, who neared 10 points per game in 2024-25.
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A 24-win team last season, Ole Miss will have a ton of holes to fill this season, but returning forward Malik Dia should be a bright spot. He averaged 10.8 points last season, and showed off in an 18-point, 8-rebound performance against Iowa State in the NCAA tournament round of 32. He could be a contender for All-SEC honors if he keeps improving on his shooting, which got better through SEC play.
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Eric Musselman’s squad will be starting almost from scratch this season after plenty of transfer turnover. Terrance Williams II returns and five-star prospect Alijah Arenas is rostered, though his status after an offseason knee surgery won’t be clear for months. So the Trojans will be depending on portal pickups this season. Rodney Rice is a standout — he was one of the Big Ten’s best offensive players last season for Maryland, averaging 18.8 points over an eight-game span in conference play. Auburn transfer Chad Baker-Mazara also will be key, coming off career highs in scoring (12.3) and assists (2.7).
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Tom Izzo’s Spartans will have to contend with a crowded Big Ten that could send double-digit teams dancing, finishing ahead of only Wisconsin among the six conference programs that made the preseason AP Top 25. The Spartans return four rotation players — Coen Carr (8.1 PPG), Jaxon Kohler (7.8 PPG), Jeremy Fears Jr. (7.2 PPG) and Carson Cooper (5.0 PPG) — from a team that won 30 games and a regular-season conference title.
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Steven Pearl barely escaped his coaching debut with a 95-90 win over (checks notes) Bethune-Cookman, which forced overtime in Monday’s season opener. The Tigers do have a very talented roster anchored by Tahaad Pettiford, but he is the only returning player from last season’s Final Four squad. Steven might have his work cut out for him in succeeding his father, Bruce.
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The Tar Heels’ inclusion in last season’s NCAA tournament caused an uproar that is still hanging over them as they earned their lowest ranking (No. 25) in the preseason AP Top 25 since 2005. Hubert Davis has a lot to prove this season, but he’ll have one of the top recruits — Caleb Wilson, who debuted with 22 points in Monday’s win over Central Arkansas — to help him do it.
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Buzz Williams has won NCAA tournament games at all three programs he has led, taking Texas A&M dancing in each of his final three seasons before departing for Maryland. A few players followed him, including Pharrel Payne, who averaged 10.4 points last season and had a game-high 21 points to go with 6 rebounds and 2 assists in the Terrapins’ season-opening win over Coppin State.
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Will Wade’s revamped Wolfpack wasted no time making a splash with 114 points in Monday’s season-opening win over North Carolina Central, with seven players finishing in double-figure scoring — not a typo! After winning only 12 games last season, Wade takes over in Raleigh with a roster infused with transfer talent led by Darrion Williams (15.1 PPG at Texas Tech in 2024-25).
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The Commodores are coming off their first NCAA tournament appearance since 2016-17 and a 20-win season in a loaded SEC. Can they make it again? That could depend on how much returning players such as Tyler Nickel (10.4 PPG last season) continue to develop alongside transfers such as AK Okereke (13.9 PPG at Cornell last season).
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The Bulldogs lost a lot of talent to the portal and graduation from a roster that won 21 games and made the NCAA tournament last season, but they return their leading scorer Josh Hubbard, who averaged 18.9 points and 3.1 assists in 2024-25.
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Potentially good news for an Aggies team that has gone dancing each of the past three seasons: New coach Bucky McMillan took his Samford Bulldogs to their first NCAA tournament in more than 20 years in 2024. And he has a roster filled with interesting transfer talent, including Pop Isaacs (16.3 PPG in eight games at Creighton) and Jacari Lane (17.3 PPG at North Alabama).
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Texas had a tough opening opponent in Duke, but expectations will rise as Sean Miller’s first season in Austin unfolds — he has won at least 20 games in 15 of his 20 seasons of coaching. And though last season’s leading scorers (Tre Johnson and Arthur Kaluma) are gone, the Longhorns do return Jordan Pope (11.0 PPG in 2024-25) and Tramon Mark (10.6).
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The Tigers have made the NCAA tournament in two of Dennis Gates’ first three seasons in Columbia. They lost two of their top three leading scorers from a 22-win team, but return Mark Mitchell (13.9 PPG), and have already seen returns on transfers Shawn Phillips Jr. (16 points) and Jayden Stone (13) in Monday’s opening win over Howard.
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The Hoosiers are hoping Darian DeVries can return them to March relevance. The program has only two NCAA tournament wins over the past nine seasons — and one was during the First Four in 2022. With two-time Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year Tucker DeVries following his father to Bloomington, Indiana, could be a dangerous bubble team.
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The Bulldogs lost their top contributors from last season with Asa Newell on to the NBA and Silas Demary Jr. transferring to UConn, but they return Blue Cain (9.6 PPG), who tied Cal transfer Jeremiah Wilkinson with a team-high 15 points in Monday’s season-opening win over Bellarmine. BYU transfer Kanon Catchings (7.2 PPG) also makes a team that won 20 games a season ago interesting.
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The Golden Eagles turned over their top three contributors from last season but return their last double-figure scorer Chase Ross (10.5 PPG in 2024-25), who led Marquette with 15 points in Monday’s season-opening win. Shaka Smart also brought in a trio of SC Next 100 recruits led by Nigel James Jr. (No. 67).
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The Bearcats fell short of high expectations as a preseason AP Top 25 team last season, finishing 7-13 in Big 12 play to miss the NCAA tournament altogether. Wes Miller could be coaching to keep his seat, but has another talented roster with incoming freshmen and transfers, three of whom each scored 18 points in Monday’s opener: Shon Abaev (No. 26 recruit in SC Next 100), Baba Miller (Florida Atlantic) and Moustapha Thiam (UCF).
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Year 2 in the behemoth that is the Big Ten should be interesting for Dana Altman — he lost a lot of talent in the offseason. But Nate Bittle, a 7-foot former five-star high school recruit, finally had his breakout moment last season to the tune of 14.2 PPG and returns for a fifth. Jackson Shelstad (13.7 PPG) should be one of the best clutch performers once fully healthy. The Players Era festival will be a test of the Ducks’ future tournament potential, but it also helps that, once again, they face the giants of the conference — Purdue, Michigan, Michigan State — just the one time.
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The Tigers are looking to erase a bad first-round exit — 13 points in the first half?! — with a full rebuild. It’s not as if they had a choice: They lost all five starters and are now a roster cobbled together with three-star recruits and mostly mid-major transfers. Can they return to the second weekend of the tournament after making an Elite Eight run two seasons ago? It will be tough, but if anyone knows how to pull off a miracle, it’s perennial hot-seat coach Brad Brownell.
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Sure, Brian Dutcher and Miles Byrd — due for another step up after breaking out last season — are still there, in SDSU’s final year in the Mountain West. The Aztecs are hungry for another deep tournament run after their first Final Four appearance in 2023, and will look to boost their résumé via facing down powerhouses in the Players Era festival (Michigan, Oregon) as well as Arizona before conference play begins.
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The incredibly efficient Bruce Thornton (50.1% shooting, 42.4% on 3s) is sticking around Columbus for another season, giving Jake Diebler his best chance to return the Buckeyes to the NCAA tournament in his second full season as head coach. Thornton will have John Mobley Jr., another efficient player (13.0 PPG, 39% on 3s), and breakout junior forward Devin Royal (26 points vs. Michigan last season) around him. A tough stretch for Ohio State looks closer to ending.
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In Tech’s 2025-26 opener, last season’s leading scorer Tobi Lawal kept the momentum going with 20 points and West Virginia transfer Amani Hansberry had 19. Highly touted international newcomer Neoklis Avdalas — who impressed at the NBA draft combine before deciding to play in college instead — had only nine points. But he should settle in and be key for a team looking to improve on an 8-12 ACC record.
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Utah State’s challenge this season is multifold: Win its final Mountain West tournament before moving to the Pac-12, against a gauntlet that includes current projected tournament teams San Diego State and Boise State. Keep Jerrod Calhoun from moving onto the high majors after a season, as happened with its past two coaches — Ryan Odom to VCU then Virginia, Danny Sprinkle to Washington. Continue to unlock Mason Falslev (15.0 PPG, 6.3 RPG, 39% on 3s last season). And avoid a Big Ten team in the first weekend of the tournament after losing to Purdue in 2024 (second round) and UCLA in 2025 (first round). If the right dominoes fall, a return to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1970 could be in the cards.
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Robbie Avila, aka “Cream Abdul-Jabbar,” transferred from Indiana State to Saint Louis last season and didn’t miss a step with his ridiculous production: 17.3 PPG, 6.9 RPG, 4.0 APG. In Monday’s season opener, he recorded an 18-point, 11-rebound double-double. With a strong supporting cast — Dion Brown also had a double-double, and three others scored in double figures — he should help Saint Louis navigate a potential multibid A-10 and win its first league tournament crown since 2019.
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Can the Cornhuskers build on the momentum from winning the inaugural College Basketball Crown? Rienk Mast (12.3 PPG in 2023-24) is fully healthy and back after sitting out a full year, as are four players who started games last season. They increase the chances coach Fred Hoiberg can win 20-plus games — yes, even in the loaded Big Ten — for a third consecutive year and get a second invite in three seasons to go dancing.
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The perennial bubble team is rarely not in the tournament conversation despite having its appearance streak (three) broken last season. This season’s team, led by Andrew Meadow (12.6 PPG in 2024-25), is too dangerous to miss out again — that is, if it can recover from its big (capital B) upset loss to Division II Hawai’i Pacific on opening night.
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Xavier didn’t return a player who played a single minute last season (Roddie Anderson III redshirted after transferring from Boise State), forcing new head coach Richard Pitino to rebuild entirely via the portal. The good news is, the new roster won its opener with four double-figure outings from Malik Messina-Moore, Jovan Milicevic, All Wright and Tre Carroll. Can the Musketeers offer any kind of challenge to UConn and St. John’s in the Big East, though? We’ll be watching to see if college basketball can survive two Pitinos in the same league.
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Former NBA players haven’t tended to last long as college basketball head coaches. Penny Hardaway is an exception to that recent trend. Losing an entire roster in the offseason wasn’t a problem for Hardaway, who recruited top transfers to come play for him. What’s left to see is whether this group — headlined by Dug McDaniel (11.4 PPG at Kansas State), former five-star Aaron Bradshaw (6.0 PPG at Ohio State) and Sincere Parker (12.2 PPG at McNeese) — can mesh and dominate the American again.
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Coach Steve Forbes enters Year 6 at Wake Forest looking to make his first foray into March Madness with the Demon Deacons. Tre’Von Spillers is the team’s top returning player, and Washington transfer Mekhi Mason looks to spark the backcourt.
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Since 2007-08, the Gaels under coach Randy Bennett have won more than 20 games every season except the COVID-19-shortened season of 2020-21. But they must now replace WCC Player of the Year Augustas Marčiulionis, who led them to 29 wins and a fourth consecutive NCAA tournament berth last season.
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Ryan Odom takes over for the Cavaliers after two seasons at VCU, including an NCAA tournament appearance last season. Thijs De Ridder signed this season out of Belgium and has made an immediate impact, going for 21 points and 10 rebounds in his college debut against Rider.
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Looking to bounce back from last season’s 16-17 campaign, the Wildcats turn to superstar transfer P.J. Haggerty. The dynamic scoring guard is on his fourth team in as many years, but he averaged 21.7 points at Memphis last season and 21.2 at Tulsa the season before.
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Jeff Capel is in his eighth year with the Panthers and looking to return to the tournament for the first time since 2023. Cameron Corhen could be key in that endeavor: He’s a force on the interior, as shown by his 23 points and 12 rebounds in a season-opening win over Youngstown State.
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The Knights have almost an entirely new team for coach Johnny Dawkins in his 10th year at the helm. Look for the group to push the ball and rely on a handful of transfers, led by former Mississippi State guard Riley Kugel (19 points against Hofstra on Monday night).
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Can the Orange make their first NCAA tournament since 2021? Adrian Autry’s squad returns preseason All-ACC pick J.J. Starling and Donnie Freeman, who averaged 13.4 points and 7.9 boards last season. Newcomers include Georgia Tech transfer Naithan George and blue-chip recruit Kiyan Anthony, son of Carmelo.
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The Horned Frogs got off to a rough start with a 78-74 loss to New Orleans in the season opener, though sophomore forward David Punch was a bright spot with 19 points. TCU will look to rely on transfer guards Jayden Pierre (12.3 PPG at Providence) and Brock Harding (8.8 PPG at Iowa) going forward.
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After coach Darian DeVries left Morgantown for the Indiana Hoosiers, the Mountaineers had to start over completely. With no returning players from last season, first-year coach Ross Hodge (after two years at North Texas), will look to North Dakota transfer Treysen Eaglestaff to lead the way.
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The top scorer in the Big Ten last season was … a Wildcat. Nick Martinelli (20.5 PPG) returned for a potential All-American season with 17 points against Mercyhurst on Monday, and he was joined in the double-figuring scoring club by Cincinnati transfer Arrinten Page (18 points) and returnee K.J. Windham (11 points). Also among the staggering eight newcomers — the most NU has seen since 2019-20 — is freshman Tre Singleton. Northwestern’s goal this season should not only be getting back to the dance, but also making it to the second weekend for the first time in program history.
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Damon Stoudamire’s team will go as far as its bigs take it. Baye Ndongo (13.4 PPG, 8.9 RPG in 2024-25), a 6-foot-9 junior and a second-team All-ACC preseason pick, and 6-10 freshman Mouhamed Sylla, the nation’s No. 29 recruit last year, will be leaned on heavily.
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The days of VCU hanging around the top of the A-10 are in danger of ending this season; this is a loaded league. But the Rams have a few things going for them: Lazar Djokovic is an early standout (21 points on 7-for-10 shooting from the field against Wagner in the season opener). Plus, first-year coach Phil Martelli Jr. knows about being at the top of a conference after guiding Bryant on a historic run last season that included a berth in the NCAA tournament. This should be a fun league race to watch.
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Losing top-10 pick Jeremiah Fears to the NBA will hurt, but the Sooners made a huge splash in the transfer portal to revamp their roster. They added ESPN’s eighth-best transfer class, featuring four of the top 60 available: Xzayvier Brown (St. Joseph’s), Derrion Reid (Alabama), Nijel Pack (Miami) and Tae Davis (Notre Dame).
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After a disappointing 2024-25 season, the Friars will look to rebound on the talents of Jason Edwards, a senior guard and third-team All-SEC selection out of Vanderbilt. He averaged 17.0 points last season and is sure to be second-year coach Kim English’s best scoring option.
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Andy Enfield’s 24-win Mustangs finished fourth in a down ACC last season. Though the conference should look better in 2025-26, SMU could contend again if the chips fall right. Seniors Boopie Miller, B.J. Edwards and Jaron Pierre Jr. all went off for 20-plus points in this season opener against Tarleton State.
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Bobby Hurley has taken the Sun Devils dancing only once in the past five seasons after making the NCAA tournament in two of his first four in Tempe. After going 4-16 in Big 12 play last season, they effectively have a new roster that will need to produce quickly to get the team back into the field of 68.
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Is this the season Markus Burton‘s team finally lives up to his individual play? The junior guard has been a star throughout his college career, averaging 21.3 points last season, and he could be a sneaky ACC Player of the Year pick. But Notre Dame hasn’t won behind him — yet. If the Irish can make a jump this season, Burton will shine.
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Coach Matt McMahon has one of the better teams of his four-year tenure in Baton Rouge — and after a losing record in his first three years, he needs a dance ticket. His best bet is UNLV transfer Dedan Thomas Jr., a former top-40 recruit who averaged 15.6 points for his hometown squad last season.
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Sturla Holm Lægreid wins third Olympic medal after tearful cheating confession goes viral
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Sturla Holm Lægreid may have had one of the most bizarre Olympics moments of all time, revealing he had an affair on his now ex-girlfriend, but his time at the 2026 Milan Cortina Games continues to go well regardless.
The Norwegian biathlete went viral for a tearful confession, saying that he cheated on his ex-girlfriend and regretted it after winning bronze during the 20-kilometer biathlon.
But Lægreid has won two medals since, including his third on Sunday when he captured silver in the men’s 12.5-kilometer biathlon pursuit.
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Sturla Holm Laegreid, of Norway, reacts after he won bronze as teammate Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold comforts him after the men’s 20-kilometer individual biathlon race at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Anterselva, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
It’s been quite the week for Lægreid, though, as he explained through a levy of tears that he has had the “worst week of his life” due to the weight of what he did in his love life.
“Six months ago, I met the love of my life and the most beautiful and kindest person in the world,” he said after his event to NRK in Norway. “Three months ago, I made my biggest mistake and cheated on her, and I told her about a week ago.”
NORWEGIAN OLYMPIAN REGRETS REVEALING AFFAIR AFTER WINNING MEDAL: ‘NOT THINKING CLEARLY’

Sturla Holm Laegreid of Team Norway competes in the Men’s 20km Individual on day four of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Anterselva Biathlon Arena on Feb. 10, 2026 in Antholz-Anterselva, Italy. (Michael Steele/Getty Images)
He was crying and hugging friends after the race, and followed his initial comments with more during a news conference.
“It was the choice I made,” he said about revealing the information on the broadcast. “We make different choices during our life, and that’s how we make life,” he told a room full of reporters. “So, today I made a choice to tell the world what I did, so maybe, maybe there is a chance she will see what she really means to me. Maybe not.”
Lægreid said one day later he “deeply regrets” revealing that very personal detail about his life on live television, exposing a private matter in one of the most public ways possible.
“I am not quite myself these days and not thinking clearly,” he said in a statement on Wednesday. “My apologies go to Johan-Olav (Botn), who deserved all the attention after winning gold. They also go to my ex-girlfriend, who unwillingly ended up in the media spotlight. I hope she is doing well. I cannot undo this, but I will now put it behind me and focus on the Olympics. I will not answer any further questions about this.”
Lægreid remained in headlines throughout the week, though it was due to his performance at the Milan Cortina Games, securing a bronze medal on Friday in the men’s 10km sprint.

Gold medalist Martin Ponsiluoma of Team Sweden, Silver medalist Sturla Holm Laegreid of Team Norway and Bronze medalist Emilien Jacquelin of Team France celebrate after the Men’s Biathlon 12.5km Pursuit on day nine of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Anterselva Biathlon Arena on Feb. 15, 2026 in Antholz-Anterselva, Italy. (Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)
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The Norwegian is a six-time world champion, and though this is something entirely different in terms of adversity, he is clearly still performing well not the biggest world stage in Italy this week.
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What the soccer world can learn from FA Cup heroes Macclesfield
MACCLESFIELD, England — Sam Heathcote is out on the field, handing out training bibs on a cold January morning. He’s no stranger to this: At 28 years old, he has been a footballer all his adult life, plying his trade in English soccer’s lower leagues. His proudest moment came a few weeks ago when he helped Macclesfield, a sixth-tier semiprofessional club, defy all odds in the FA Cup to knock out Premier League side Crystal Palace.
It was one of those magical days in football — an all-time Cinderella story — and it’s really hard to overestimate how unprecedented that result was. There were 117 places between Macclesfield and Palace in the English soccer pyramid when they met on Jan. 10, and Palace were the tournament’s defending champions. Never before during 154 years of the FA Cup — a competition, just like NCAA’s March Madness, known for its “David vs. Goliath” upsets — had a result delivered such a shock. Fans had streamed onto the field at the final whistle; players were paraded on shoulders. It was a scene that everyone at Macclesfield replayed in their heads again and again.
Those memories were fresh for Heathcote on this brisk morning, although it’s not the kind of training session you would expect. It’s on a concrete pitch at a grade school just outside of Manchester, and all the players in the session are 10 years old. Most of Macclesfield’s squad have second jobs: There is a property developer, a lawyer, a podcaster and a gym owner. Their captain, Paul Dawson, supplements his wages packing boxes for a friend’s candle company.
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Heathcote, their 6-foot-2, no-nonsense center back, is a gym teacher, and on this particular morning, his day job is in session.
“Aubrey, everyone’s gone for red. You’ve gone for orange,” Heathcote says to one of the children.
“I like the color orange!” Aubrey, seemingly unaware of soccer’s strict two-color system, replies.
“Well, fair enough,” Heathcote says as Aubrey sticks resolutely to orange. Life comes at you fast as a semiprofessional footballer.
Macclesfield’s 15 minutes of fame is not over yet. The upset victory meant they won a place in the FA Cup fourth round and a date with Premier League side Brentford on Monday (Stream live on ESPN+). The question is whether they can do it all over again.
Brentford can learn a lot from Palace, whose manager, Oliver Glasner, said afterwards that his players “never showed up.” But what can they and other teams learn from Macclesfield?
LESSON 1: Find a purpose
If one person in the small town of Macclesfield were to teach a class on resilience, the football club’s 48-year-old owner, Robert Smethurst, would be a good place to start. He bought the club six years ago, just as it went out of business. English soccer’s pyramid can be a cruel system and Macclesfield had been on the losing end for years, tumbling down the league pyramid as unpaid tax bills and debts of £190,000 ($258,554 USD) piled up, causing players to go on strike.
Despite growing up 8 miles from the club’s stadium, Moss Rose, Smethurst had never been a fan of the team, nor had he ever been to see a game. He never realized the scale of the problem: Debt collectors had already taken pretty much anything of value. There was no kitchen equipment. Copper pipes were removed. There was a gap where an air-conditioning unit had been. The playing squad had left. Why did he do it?
The truth is, Smethurst doesn’t actually remember buying the club. Macclesfield was on its knees, but so was he. After selling his online car business for more than £10 million ($13.6 million) a couple of years prior, he felt he’d lost any sense of purpose.
“Being bored at 12 o’clock, what do you do? I opened a bottle of wine,” Smethurst tells ESPN. “For me, that then got worse. It went into addiction. I was drinking more and more and losing the person I was.”
It was a friend of Smethurst’s who had spotted Macclesfield, recently out of business, on a real estate website called Rightmove. Without much thought — and in a cloud of his alcoholism — he asked his solicitor to send a £500,000 ($680,267) offer.
“I can’t really remember it because I just thought it was fun for me,” Smethurst says, barely paying a second thought to it until he got a call days later to say the sale had gone through. That’s when reality hit.
“I was like, ‘What the hell have I bought?'” he says. “When I finally came round a little bit, came to have a look at it — I’d never even seen it — I realized that it had been ripped apart. The whole place was just s—.”
If the stadium was bad enough, the club’s wider predicament was even worse. After going out of business, a club has to be recreated, starting at the very foot of English soccer’s pyramid system. Forget the sixth-tier where they are now. Macclesfield Town were entered into the North West Counties Football League — the ninth and final tier — where attendances often rank in the low hundreds.
Smethurst’s drinking didn’t stop until a year later. “I put myself into recovery,” he says. He did the steps, learned more about why he drank and realized he had a purpose that he was leaving unfulfilled. Around the same time, he was diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
“I went into recovery and kind of came out there with a great mindset,” he says. “I was really fighting for my life, but also wanting to make a difference … Everything that I’ve done with the club was about: ‘How can I build something special after recovery? How can I change people’s lives?’
“I started on that journey. I spent about £4 million ($5.4 million) of my own money doing it all up, new pitches, new bars, a gym for the community, all that kind of stuff.”
Macclesfield earned three promotions in four seasons, winning three league titles along the way. The trophies are proudly on display inside the club bar. They did so, primarily, by being the biggest spenders in each of those divisions. Anyone you speak to in Macclesfield will readily cite the club’s facilities and Smethurst’s financial backing as the primary reason for going from the ninth tier to beating Crystal Palace.
Smethurst is the first to admit that the club’s relative financial might got them through the first three divisions. Now that they’ve found their level in the sixth tier, it is the town’s togetherness — and outside investment — that can take them further.
“People like the fans can come and talk to me and access and come and meet me in the office,” he says. “I’ve been out for a coffee with fans before. It’s a different thing. We’re all in this together. I’m accessible to everybody. If anybody wants to come and talk to me, they can. If they want to take my number, they can. If they’re worried about anything, they can call me.”
LESSON 2: You always have each other
John Rooney should really have been worrying about the tactics board. It was an hour before the FA Cup clash with Palace, and Rooney, brother of Manchester United legend Wayne Rooney, taking his first steps into football management at Macclesfield, was worried about something else entirely.
The team gathered in the home dressing room, but one player’s locker was left empty. It was for their 21-year-old striker Ethan McLeod, who died in a road traffic collision on Dec. 16 — just one week after Macclesfield got the dream draw to face Palace, and less than a month before the big game.
Rooney had spoken to McLeod’s parents the night before the Palace game. McLeod’s father had wished the team luck and said they would be in attendance. Now, as the team counted down the minutes to kickoff, Rooney was worried that passing on that message would add too much pressure.
“I was questioning myself, do we tell them or do we not?” Rooney tells ESPN.
Ultimately, he decided against it. The grief was still fresh. Rooney knew his players genuinely wanted to win it for Ethan, whose image looks over the pitch at Moss Rose and whose number was retired. That kind of message could wait until after the game.
The incident happened on a Tuesday night after a last-gasp 2-1 win over Bedford Town FC. McLeod, who had just started to get a run in the team, was an unused substitute.
“Something I’ll never forget that will live with me for a long, long time is the selflessness that he had,” striker Danny Elliott, Macclesfield’s top scorer, says. “He was a striker, I’m a striker. For most of the season, I think it’s fair to say that he was kind of second to me. That night against Bedford, he didn’t actually get on the pitch, but I scored a winning goal in the last minute. As a 21-year-old striker, I know that I would have probably been a bit disappointed to not get on the pitch, but he was the first person to come and celebrate with me. He was really happy for me.”
McLeod would typically have travelled back with the rest of the squad on the team bus, but on this occasion, it was easier for him to drive back to his hometown, Wolverhampton. He got in his car and drove ahead. The team bus left minutes later, but was soon held up in standstill traffic. When they passed the incident, they realized it was a major crash. They didn’t give it much more thought until Rooney, who returned home at 6 a.m. in part due to the traffic, got a call to say it was McLeod’s car in the fatal collision.
Rooney, who had now been awake for nearly 24 hours, decided his players should hear the news from him. He called them all, one by one.
“The players were breaking down on the phone, and after that, I’d pick the phone up, tell someone else and — and then someone else,” Rooney recalls.
“I can’t imagine how difficult that must have been for him,” Elliott said of his manager. “I have the utmost respect for him. That was actually his birthday as well, so I can’t imagine what that must have been like.”
The following night, the team met at their Moss Rose stadium in the club bar and sat for hours. “We sat in the room and cried together for a few hours,” Elliott says. “But also, the beautiful thing about football is that it continues.”
Macclesfield canceled their game the following weekend to, as Elliott put it, “grieve as a group.” They lost two of their next three games. The FA Cup third-round date would be the fourth.
LESSON 3: Ignore the odds
All Crystal Palace’s players had to do was look to their left to see the warning sign. It was written on the side tunnel, the last they would have seen before they stepped out onto the field for the FA Cup tie. It read, in capital letters: “DREAM. BELIEVE. ACHIEVE. AGAINST ALL ODDS.”
Maybe Palace players never paid much notice. The pitch had been freshly thawed from a snowstorm days earlier. Macclesfield captain Dawson, on top of his job at the candle company and youth coaching, made time to help club staff shovel snow off the pitch earlier that week for a league game — much to the ire of his manager, Rooney.
“I was on the shovel until the gaffer rang me,” Dawson says. “He wasn’t very happy. I told him that I was just sat on the tractor all day, which I hadn’t. I just lied.”
Dawson’s hard work had paid off, but it still would have been below the standards that Premier League teams are used to. Before the game, Dawson walked out onto the field and met his opposing captain, England international Marc Guéhi (who would sign for Manchester City later in January). Dawson later told British radio station TalkSport: “Franny [our assistant coach Francis Jeffers] turned around to Marc and he goes, ‘Pitch all right for you?’ He replied, ‘No, not a bit of me this.’ From that moment on I thought, ‘You know what? There’s something here for us.'”
As it turned out, it was Dawson who scored the game’s opening goal. He had been bleeding from his head just eight minutes into the tie from a clash with Palace defender Jaydee Canvot, meaning he donned a bandage around his forehead for the rest of the game. When Macclesfield were awarded a free kick 30 yards from Palace’s goal, Heathcote helped him rearrange the dressing before the ball was floated into the box, which Dawson duly headed home.
“I have to be honest, I’ve watched it several times. I don’t actually remember it happening,” Dawson says. “When a big moment like that happens, it just erases from your memory. I don’t really remember much of the game until I’ve watched it back.”
Scenes in the dressing room 🍾
Macclesfield FC players and staff sing Adele’s Someone Like You after their FA Cup victory over Crystal Palace 🎶 pic.twitter.com/by44M82ZFx
— Football on TNT Sports (@footballontnt) January 10, 2026
What happened next only added to the Cinderella story. Macclesfield went in at halftime with their highly unlikely 1-0 lead, and manager Rooney told his team to calm down: If they just didn’t concede in the second half, then they would pull off the upset. You can imagine the shock when forward Isaac Buckley-Ricketts made it 2-0 in the 61st minute, prodding the ball past the Palace goalkeeper.
There was still time for Palace to spoil the party. Macclesfield’s two-goal lead was cut in half after a free kick from Palace winger Yéremy Pino, whose £26 million ($35 million) transfer fee last summer is 26 times larger than Macclesfield’s entire player expenditure. When that proved too little, too late, the customary fan pitch invasion followed. Soon, Dawson was hoisted onto two fans’ shoulders.
“The next minute I was in the air. My calf had a cramp!” he says. “I was trying to stretch it, but everyone kept patting me and singing.”
Dawson reunited with his teammates in the changing room, McLeod’s spot still vacant. They linked arms and sang Adele’s “Someone Like You.” McLeod’s parents came to join the celebrations, and Rooney passed on the message he had agonized about before the game.
“I will always remember that they were part of this day with us,” Rooney says. “To have his family around to be part of that day with us meant a lot to me.”
Opta, the leading data provider in world soccer, have a live global power ranking of 13,000 teams across world football. Palace were 19th prior to that FA Cup clash; Macclesfield were 6,879th — around the same level as Mons Calpe, who are third in the Gibraltar Premier League, and similar to Ghanaian minnows WaleWale Catholic Stars FC.
Next up in their FA Cup odyssey is Brentford, another Premier League side who, at the time of writing, are ranked 13th in Opta’s system. Macclesfield were the first team to beat a club five leagues above them. Lightning would have to strike twice for it to happen again.
But who would bet against it?
“I’m a football fan. My whole life has been football, so the Premier League for me is what I always watch,” Rooney says. “We know lots about them … Listen, we’re not going to be naïve. We’ll treat them like any other game, like we did with Crystal Palace.
“As we do with teams in our own league, we treat every team with respect, and I’m sure they’ll treat us with that respect as well.”
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