We’re in a particular season of March Madness that isn’t all that “Mad” and as such, isn’t all that interesting, because the plucky, hardscrabble mid-majors for whom we used to cheer and which we previously used to mastermind our brackets, have all lost.
And yet, when Clark joins the WNBA after this year’s March Madness tournament—likely as the top overall pick, which belongs to the Indiana Fever—the 6-foot guard’s net worth will go up only slightly: Clark is presently earning $818,000 thanks to NIL deals with such brands as Nike and Gatorade.
But basketball fans who may not appreciate the dance craze should brace themselves for the inevitable: March Madness will feature more than one student section doing the Harlem Shake.
Watching the University of Florida fans and players celebrate their men’s NCAA win, spectators saw a combination of talent, hard work, smart coaching, and the luck inherent in advancing through the March Madness bracket. Racial preferences played no part.
As my Federalist colleague John Daniel Davidson recently wrote, Boasberg is a “virulently anti-Trump judge with a long history of questionable judicial activism” who did the bidding of far-left lawfare groups in issuing his temporary restraining order against the Trump administration’s efforts to deport gang members and terrorists. In this mad March, expect the leftist referees to have the biggest impact on the games.
March Madness is an informal term that refers to the NCAA Division I men’s and women’s basketball championship tournaments and the attendant fan interest in, and media coverage of, the events.
Each tournament is a single-elimination competition that, beginning in 2027, will feature 76 teams. Teams qualify either by winning their conference title or by being chosen as an at-large entry by the NCAA’s selection committee. March Madness is hugely popular, with millions of people completing brackets and participating in office or online pools.
Maryland head coach Brenda Frese, center, and assistants draw up a play against North Carolina during the second half in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 22, 2026, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina
The live NCAA bracket for March Madness, which includes links to watch every game live, tournament scoring, Bracket Challenge game, statistics and seeds.
The official YouTube page of March Madness and the NCAA men's and women’s basketball tournaments providing highlights, analysis and historical recaps of all the greatest moments from college basketball's premiere showcase.
Complete March Madness NCAA Tournament coverage at CBSSports.com. Stay connected with the latest news, scores, stats, highlights and March Madness live.
March Madness is one of the most anticipated and watched events in all of sports. Here’s everything you need to know about the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, which has been played since 1939.
march madnesshttps://api.search.brave.com/res/v1/web/search?q=march%20madness&goggles_id=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/natejacobson/scopes/main/counterbalance.goggle&offset=0&summary=1offset is 0