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Miami-Ohio has March Madness’ most polarizing resume, but there’s an easy solution

Miami-Ohio has March Madness’ most polarizing resume, but there’s an easy solution

In the 64-team NCAA Tournament era of college basketball — which dates back to 1985 — only seven teams have won their first 28 games of a season.

The first six of those — 1990-91 UNLV, 2004-05 Illinois, 2013-14 Wichita State, 2014-15 Kentucky, 2016-17 Gonzaga and 2020-21 Gonzaga and —all earned No.1 seeds from the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee.

The seventh member of that elite group is this year’s Miami University Redhawks. They will not be receiving a No. 1 seed on Selection Sunday, and there are more than a few people who believe Travis Steele’s team doesn’t deserve to see its name included in the tournament field at all.

The Redhawks won their first 31 games (although the Committee will only recognize the 28 wins that came against Division-I opponents) this season, becoming just the eighth team since 1975-76 to end a regular season without a loss. Miami’s first defeat of the season came Thursday afternoon when 8th-seeded UMass pulled off an 87-83 stunner in the quarterfinals of the Mid-American Conference Tournament.

Instantly, a debate began to rage throughout the sports world, one which is unlikely to settle down until the early hours of Sunday evening.

Simply put, there is zero precedent for a team with an NCAA Tournament resume like Miami’s.

The 31-1 record is as gaudy as a blemished mark can be, but there are problems below the surface. For starters, Miami played just the 269th-toughest schedule in a sport that features 365 teams. The lack of schedule pop isn’t entirely Miami’s fault — as showcased by Matt Brown of Extra Points — but the fact that this team played 32 games and not one of them presented a Quad-I opportunity is something the Committee still has to take into consideration.

Predictive metrics, which seem to increase in importance every year, all believe that Miami wouldn’t even be flirting with an NCAA Tournament bid if it played in a better conference or had been able to piece together a more challenging non-conference schedule. The three predictives that the Committee looks at — Ken Pom, T-Rank and BPI — have the Redhawks ranked 90th, 85th and 90th, respectively. That’s good for an average of 88.3.

On the flip side, the three resume rankings that the Committee utilizes have Miami at 21st, 40th and 50th, for an average of 37.0. While predictive and resume rankings are fairly frequently at odds during this time of the season, there’s never been a case before where the disparity has been this extreme.

Here’s the even better news for the Redhawks: Last month, when select members of the media met for a mock NCAA Tournament selection exercise, NCAA Vice President of Basketball Dan Gavitt told those in attendance that the wins above bubble metric would be prioritized by the Committee, especially when it comes to selecting which teams make the field and which teams are left out.

Miami entered Thursday with a highly respectable wins above bubble ranking of 33. Compare that with the ranking of power conference bubble teams like NC State (43) or Auburn (44), and you’d think the Redhawks would be in pretty good shape to receive an at-large bid on Selection Sunday. Probably. Maybe. Who knows?

The only gap larger than the one between Miami’s predictive and resume rankings is the one between college basketball fans who believe the Redhawks haven’t done enough to warrant inclusion in March Madness and those who cant’t wrap their mind around the idea of a 31-1 team being relegated to the NIT.

There seems to be no middle ground on this one. Both sides are equally passionate, and equally unwilling to listen to any argument to the contrary.

Here’s just a sampling of my Twitter mentions on the topic:

After analyzing all the information we have at our disposal, there seems to be a common sense play for the Committee to make here.

If Wins Above Bubble is saying the Redhawks deserve to be selected, but the predictive metrics are saying they should be very poorly seeded, it would seem as though the best way to try and satisfy both extremes would be to put Miami in the field, but send them to the First Four in Dayton for a Tuesday or Wednesday night game. In this scenario, the little guy with the gaudy record doesn’t get left behind, but the little guy who hasn’t beaten a top 65 opponent all season finally has to prove it in order to make it into the tournament’s main draw.

In the NIL transfer portal era, the notion that college basketball is leaving behind the Cinderella stories that have largely defined the sport for the past 50 years has never been more prevalent. Excluding a 31-1 team from any conference would drive that point (or fear) home stronger than any other piece of news from last five years has.

Chasing fairness through evolved evaluation tools is important, but so is maintaining your soul. We’ve never seen a situation like Miami’s in large part because we’ve never seen an era like this in college basketball.

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England has underachieved since winning the 2017 Women’s World Cup, and ​it is determined to put that right ‌when it hosts the Twenty20 edition ​on home soil in June, ⁠captain Nat Sciver-Brunt said.

The 33-year-old replaced Heather Knight as all-format captain in April last year, and the T20 World Cup will be her second major International ‌Cricket Council (ICC) event as captain and ‌her ⁠first at home.

Sciver-Brunt led the team ⁠at the 50-over World Cup last year in India and Sri Lanka, where it was knocked ​out in the ‌semifinals by South Africa.

“We would have liked to have won a lot more than we have done and we’d ‌obviously like that to change this ​summer,” she told BBC Sport on Monday.

“A win could change what ⁠women’s cricket looks like in this country. Just the carrot of that is enough ‌to motivate anyone, really. It certainly could change what this team is about. We didn’t really do it after 2017, but being a consistently good team is something that everyone tries to do. ‌I’m hoping we can be a consistently good ​team and we’d love to start off with a T20 World ⁠Cup win.”

England is drawn in Group B alongside ⁠defending champion New Zealand, West Indies, Sri Lanka, Ireland and Scotland. ‌It opens its campaign in the 12-team tournament against Sri Lanka on June ​12. 

Published on Apr 28, 2026

#Englands #SciverBrunt #aiming #title #drought #T20 #World #Cup">England’s Sciver-Brunt aiming to end title drought at T20 World Cup 2026  England has underachieved since winning the 2017 Women’s World Cup, and ​it is determined to put that right ‌when it hosts the Twenty20 edition ​on home soil in June, ⁠captain Nat Sciver-Brunt said.The 33-year-old replaced Heather Knight as all-format captain in April last year, and the T20 World Cup will be her second major International ‌Cricket Council (ICC) event as captain and ‌her ⁠first at home.Sciver-Brunt led the team ⁠at the 50-over World Cup last year in India and Sri Lanka, where it was knocked ​out in the ‌semifinals by South Africa.“We would have liked to have won a lot more than we have done and we’d ‌obviously like that to change this ​summer,” she told        BBC Sport on Monday.“A win could change what ⁠women’s cricket looks like in this country. Just the carrot of that is enough ‌to motivate anyone, really. It certainly could change what this team is about. We didn’t really do it after 2017, but being a consistently good team is something that everyone tries to do. ‌I’m hoping we can be a consistently good ​team and we’d love to start off with a T20 World ⁠Cup win.”England is drawn in Group B alongside ⁠defending champion New Zealand, West Indies, Sri Lanka, Ireland and Scotland. ‌It opens its campaign in the 12-team tournament against Sri Lanka on June ​12. Published on Apr 28, 2026  #Englands #SciverBrunt #aiming #title #drought #T20 #World #Cup

Deadspin | Ranger Suarez, Red Sox blank Blue Jays, win third straight  Apr 27, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN;  Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Ranger Suarez (55) delivers a pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays in the second inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images   Left-hander Ranger Suarez pitched eight innings of one-hit ball Monday night as the visiting Boston Red Sox defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 5-0.  Suarez (2-2) struck out 10 and walked one in the opener of a three-game series. Greg Weissert pitched around a double in the ninth to complete the shutout.  The Red Sox have won three in a row for the first time this season, the past two under interim manager Chad Tracy.  Carlos Narvaez hit a solo homer for Boston, and Marcelo Mayer and Wilyer Abreu each had two hits, a walk and an RBI.  Boston opened the scoring in the fourth inning against Dylan Cease (1-1). Willson Contreras led off with a single, took second when Abreu walked with one out and scored on Mayer’s two-out single to center.  The Red Sox scored twice in the fifth.  Caleb Durbin walked with one out and was forced at second on Jarren Duran’s grounder to second. Contreras was hit by a pitch, and the runners advanced when Cease’s pickoff throw to second sailed into center field.   Duran came home when Cease tripped moving off the mound in an attempt to field Roman Anthony’s infield hit, a trickler near the first base line. Abreu lined an RBI double to right that Jesus Sanchez dropped at the warning track.  Boston took a 4-0 lead in the sixth. Mayer led off with a walk and took second on Ceddanne Rafaela’s single. A double-play grounder put Mayer at third, and he scored on Durbin’s soft single to left. Joe Mantiply then replaced Cease, who allowed four runs, seven hits, three walks and a hit batter while striking out five in 5 2/3 innings.  Toronto had only a walk before Sanchez led off the home sixth with a double past third base. Suarez escaped the inning with two strikeouts and a flyout.  Narvaez hit a homer to left-center with two outs in the eighth on a 2-2 sweeper from Chase Lee, who was recalled Monday from Triple-A Buffalo.  Toronto put Max Scherzer on the injured list due to tendinitis in his right foreman and inflammation in his left ankle.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Ranger #Suarez #Red #Sox #blank #Blue #Jays #win #straightApr 27, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Ranger Suarez (55) delivers a pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays in the second inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

Left-hander Ranger Suarez pitched eight innings of one-hit ball Monday night as the visiting Boston Red Sox defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 5-0.

Suarez (2-2) struck out 10 and walked one in the opener of a three-game series. Greg Weissert pitched around a double in the ninth to complete the shutout.

The Red Sox have won three in a row for the first time this season, the past two under interim manager Chad Tracy.

Carlos Narvaez hit a solo homer for Boston, and Marcelo Mayer and Wilyer Abreu each had two hits, a walk and an RBI.

Boston opened the scoring in the fourth inning against Dylan Cease (1-1). Willson Contreras led off with a single, took second when Abreu walked with one out and scored on Mayer’s two-out single to center.

The Red Sox scored twice in the fifth.


Caleb Durbin walked with one out and was forced at second on Jarren Duran’s grounder to second. Contreras was hit by a pitch, and the runners advanced when Cease’s pickoff throw to second sailed into center field.

Duran came home when Cease tripped moving off the mound in an attempt to field Roman Anthony’s infield hit, a trickler near the first base line. Abreu lined an RBI double to right that Jesus Sanchez dropped at the warning track.

Boston took a 4-0 lead in the sixth. Mayer led off with a walk and took second on Ceddanne Rafaela’s single. A double-play grounder put Mayer at third, and he scored on Durbin’s soft single to left. Joe Mantiply then replaced Cease, who allowed four runs, seven hits, three walks and a hit batter while striking out five in 5 2/3 innings.

Toronto had only a walk before Sanchez led off the home sixth with a double past third base. Suarez escaped the inning with two strikeouts and a flyout.

Narvaez hit a homer to left-center with two outs in the eighth on a 2-2 sweeper from Chase Lee, who was recalled Monday from Triple-A Buffalo.

Toronto put Max Scherzer on the injured list due to tendinitis in his right foreman and inflammation in his left ankle.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Ranger #Suarez #Red #Sox #blank #Blue #Jays #win #straight">Deadspin | Ranger Suarez, Red Sox blank Blue Jays, win third straight  Apr 27, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN;  Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Ranger Suarez (55) delivers a pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays in the second inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images   Left-hander Ranger Suarez pitched eight innings of one-hit ball Monday night as the visiting Boston Red Sox defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 5-0.  Suarez (2-2) struck out 10 and walked one in the opener of a three-game series. Greg Weissert pitched around a double in the ninth to complete the shutout.  The Red Sox have won three in a row for the first time this season, the past two under interim manager Chad Tracy.  Carlos Narvaez hit a solo homer for Boston, and Marcelo Mayer and Wilyer Abreu each had two hits, a walk and an RBI.  Boston opened the scoring in the fourth inning against Dylan Cease (1-1). Willson Contreras led off with a single, took second when Abreu walked with one out and scored on Mayer’s two-out single to center.  The Red Sox scored twice in the fifth.  Caleb Durbin walked with one out and was forced at second on Jarren Duran’s grounder to second. Contreras was hit by a pitch, and the runners advanced when Cease’s pickoff throw to second sailed into center field.   Duran came home when Cease tripped moving off the mound in an attempt to field Roman Anthony’s infield hit, a trickler near the first base line. Abreu lined an RBI double to right that Jesus Sanchez dropped at the warning track.  Boston took a 4-0 lead in the sixth. Mayer led off with a walk and took second on Ceddanne Rafaela’s single. A double-play grounder put Mayer at third, and he scored on Durbin’s soft single to left. Joe Mantiply then replaced Cease, who allowed four runs, seven hits, three walks and a hit batter while striking out five in 5 2/3 innings.  Toronto had only a walk before Sanchez led off the home sixth with a double past third base. Suarez escaped the inning with two strikeouts and a flyout.  Narvaez hit a homer to left-center with two outs in the eighth on a 2-2 sweeper from Chase Lee, who was recalled Monday from Triple-A Buffalo.  Toronto put Max Scherzer on the injured list due to tendinitis in his right foreman and inflammation in his left ankle.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Ranger #Suarez #Red #Sox #blank #Blue #Jays #win #straight

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