UConn and Kansas opened the 2024-25 season as the teams with the best odds of winning the 2025 NCAA Tournament. Those two programs were followed by Duke, Alabama, Houston to round out the top five. UConn currently has the 17th-shortest odds (45-1) to win the tournament,
No. 1 Auburn (19-1) did not play. Next: at No. 23 Mississippi, Saturday. No. 2 Duke (18-2) did not play. Next: vs. North Carolina, Saturday. No. 3 Iowa St. (17-3) did not play. Next: vs. Kansas St.
Sure, the win at Kansas is really the only marquee victory Houston has so far this season, but a 13-game winning streak with 11 double-digit wins over that stretch earns Kelvin Sampson's team a place in the top tier of the sport.
All Times EST No. 1 Auburn (18-1) at LSU (12-7), 7 p.m. No. 4 Alabama (17-3) at No. 14 Mississippi St. (16-4), 9 p.m. No. 6 Houston (16-3) at West Virginia (13-6), 7 p.m. No. 17 Wisconsin (16-4)
The race to grab one of the four top seeds in the NCAA men's tournament is heating up. Who's at the top currently and who is right behind?
Two people were found dead during a blaze that destroyed an Auburn house on Tuesday morning. Jeff Clark, assistant fire chief with the Auburn Fire Department, told The Citizen a call came in about ...
Texas Tech made its Top 25 season debut at No. 22 after beating Cincinnati and Oklahoma State to run its Big 12 winning streak to four games. Vanderbilt entered the poll at No. 24 for the first time since Dec. 7, 2015, as the women's team also cracked the poll this week for the first time since 2014.
After another big victory against a highly ranked team, no team can match the season Auburn is having. It was also a big weekend for Houston.
Auburn's Tahaad Pettiford was sent to the line, but he only knocked down one, giving Tennessee the ball back with 12 seconds to play. The Vols pushed to their side of the court, and Rick Barnes called a timeout to set up the final play down 53-51.
A look at where the Oregon Ducks have finished in every Associated Press poll since the 2000 college football season.
The last time we had two consecutive championship games without an SEC team was 2004 (USC-Oklahoma) and ’05 (Texas-USC), back when the Sooners and Longhorns competed in the Big 12.
From mounting pressure to coaching changes and roster shakeup, these college football teams cannot be ignored next season.