Monday, March 23, 2026
Demary guts out 22 minutes and plus-22 rating to help UConn reach Sweet 16: “I had to be out there”
Jayden Ross continues special March with one of his better efforts to send UConn back to Sweet 16
Karaban’s career night sends UConn back to Sweet 16 after Huskies lock down UCLA late
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Panthers prove worthiness in final bout as High Point pushes Arkansas to limit
“I’m really proud of our guys and how we competed,” said High Point head coach Flynn Clayman. “We showed out, we packed the house, we had fun, and we played with confidence. We were expected to be good, but I don’t think anybody expected us to do what we did here in winning 31 games, getting to the tournament, advancing, and pushing the SEC champs.”
Amid the six ties and 15 lead changes, the Panthers kept the entirety of the game against the Razorbacks within single digits. According to Will Warren, Saturday marked the first time in the round of 32 that a game involving a team seeded 12th or lower featured both teams scoring 85 or more points. HPU kept pace with the high-tempo Hogs on 3-point shooting as well as rebounding, finishing just one rebound shy of Arkansas’ total.
“(Rebounding) surprised me because I just wasn’t sure where we stood against this team physically,” said Clayman. “As we got going, I was like, man, we have the athletes and physicality to hang with the SEC champs.”
Projected NBA lottery pick Darius Acuff, Jr. led Arkansas with 36 points and set a NCAA Tournament record for most points scored by a freshman through two games with 58 total. Acuff’s brilliance was equally matched by High Point’s Rob Martin, who scored a season-high 30 points. Martin dazzled the crowd at the Moda Center all evening with acrobatic spinning layups and a 3-pointer that pinballed around the rim about six times before finally dropping, completing a stretch where three of his four highest scoring efforts came in the Panthers’ final three contests.
“I put so much work in, and I feel like it showed tonight,” said Martin. “Matching up with a (projected) lottery pick and showing the world that I can compete at a high level, I’m super proud of myself for my journey. All glory to God.”
Martin was joined in the scoring column by Cam’Ron Fletcher who tallied 25 points. Martin and Fletcher both hail from the St. Louis area and frequently competed against each other at Christian Brothers and Vashon High School, respectively. This season, the St. Louis duo shared the court as teammates for the first time which provided an eye-opening experience for both.
“I never would have seen myself playing with Rob because of how often we competed growing up and in high school,” said Fletcher. “It was a good feeling to have someone that close to me that I knew before going to High Point. I’m very grateful to be able to play with him this year. It meant a lot to me.”
Throughout the season, Fletcher struggled with injuries and personal matters that sidelined him for eight games total. No matter what he was going through, Martin was steadfast in his corner and had Fletcher’s back through it all.
“I’m super grateful to play with him and love his journey,” said Martin. “With how hard he worked, he put the work in, and it showed tonight. I’m super proud of Cam and what's next for him.”
Another person in the Moda Center who was familiar with Fletcher’s journey was John Calipari, who recruited Fletcher to Kentucky six years ago. Saturday’s game marked the first time the two had met against each other since their paths diverged from Lexington.
“To see him do what he did today, I was proud of him,” said Calipari. “He put his shoulder down and just did what he wanted to do. I'm happy that it’s turned out this way for him and for High Point.”
Calipari also offered high praise for High Point’s commitment to basketball success amid all the challenges of NIL and the transfer portal.
“If you want players to be empowered, they have to know that there’s a commitment to the players,” said Calipari. “We have that in Arkansas, and they have that in High Point. They are committed, which is why you have a chance to win championships. I bragged on High Point because they have a president that is about those students. Everything they do is about those students. It proves my point: Coaches win games, but administrations win championships.”
High Point’s all-in investment on basketball has led to a combined 87-20 record for the Panthers over the past three seasons with three Big South regular season championships, two tournament championships, and their first NCAA Tournament victory.
“Choosing High Point is the best decision I’ve ever made,” said HPU guard Chase Johnston. “The Lord opened so many opportunities for me here. It’s a season I’ll never forget. I’ll take so much from it.”
This season simultaneously proved to be the best but also most challenging for Johnston, who remained on the Panthers’ roster after last offseason’s coaching change. Johnston went from a starter to a reserve during the 2025-26 season, but he closed the Panthers’ final six games shooting 58.6 percent from 3-point range.
“Looking back, this season didn’t think it was going to go the way it went in the beginning,” said Johnston. “If (Flynn) rosters you, he trusts you and he's going to trust you not just in the highs, but in the lows. I’m just so grateful that I’ve been able to finish off my career here in March Madness sitting here with these guys.”
Clayman will look to rebuild the Panthers’ roster for next season in the coming weeks and months through the transfer portal. For now though, he’ll take a minute to appreciate the significance of what his team accomplished in this record-setting campaign.
“Ever since I set foot on High Point University’s campus, my life changed,” said Clayman. “With this being my first year (as head coach), I had a lot of ups and downs having to recruit a whole new team. My staff had my back, and I just couldn’t be more thankful for all these players that stuck with me. We made history.”
Mark Schmidt’s last gift to St. Bonaventure is the blessing of his 19-year tenure
The academic fraud scandal of 2003 left St. Bonaventure reeling. In the aftermath, a new coach was needed, one who could mend fences and change the public perception of St. Bonaventure, which at the time, was less than acceptable. The new coach would naturally be expected to improve the product on the court.
Schmidt signed on. Naysayers said that in three years, he would be selling insurance.
“This is not a graveyard,” Schmidt said when he came on board. “There is a proud tradition and history which just needs to be awakened.”
Off the floor, Schmidt quickly endeared himself and reached out to the student body and Olean-Allegany community. It was finals week, and students were pulling all-nighters and stopping in the dining hall for breakfast. Who was making breakfast sandwiches? Schmidt and university president Sister Margaret Carney, OSF.
After 19 seasons, the record was a gaudy 340-255, good enough for a .571 winning percentage. Beyond the numbers, Schmidt’s time at St. Bonaventure has been a remarkable story, or succession of stories.
The initial season brought an 8-22 record, 2-14 in Atlantic 10 play. Following an early-season win over Albany and coach Will Brown, Schmidt went into the locker room and high-fived everyone, managers included, while giving his opinion of “career suicide.”
The Bonnies started fast. They had a 17-point lead early in the second half. Xavier, to no surprise, made its run, cutting the deficit to two possessions. The Bonnies answered and went on to a 67-56 victory. Nicholson was named Most Outstanding Player by virtue of his 26-point, 14-rebound, eight-block performance. It was the Bonnies’ first A-10 tournament title, and a postgame celebration that lasted roughly 45 minutes.
In the NCAA Tournament, Bona dropped a tough 66-63 loss to ACC champion Florida State. Seminoles head coach Leonard Hamilton had the utmost praise for the preparation and gameplan put together by Schmidt and his staff. That 20-12 season and its finish had Bonaventure back in the public consciousness.
In 2016 the Bonnies were co-champions of the A-10, and were 30th in RPI. But on Selection Sunday, they were off the board, a decision that drew outrage from many in the game, including Saint Joseph’s coach Phil Martelli. Bona finished 22-9, following a first-round NIT loss against Wagner.
In 2018, the Bonnies were on the board on Selection Sunday. Their opponent was UCLA, in the First Four in Dayton. That matchup brought a wealth of pregame stories, one of which was written here.
In postgame interviews, Schmidt mentioned Bob Lanier and that 1970 team.
“They didn’t get their chance against UCLA,” he said. “So this win is dedicated to Big Bob and that team.”
The 2019 season was memorable on two counts. Schmidt surpassed Larry Weise as the all-time winningest coach at St. Bonaventure. In 12 years, Weise had a record of 202-90, which included a Final Four appearance in 1970. Schmidt broke the record with a 79-56 victory over George Mason in mid-February. Weise knew the record would be broken. The former coach was pleased it was by someone of Schmidt’s reputation and caliber.
In March, with four freshmen in the starting lineup, the Bonnies advanced to the championship game of the A-10 tournament. They faced a Saint Louis team they defeated eight days earlier. The Bonnies built a 15-point lead early that was still nine at the intermission. In the final 20 minutes, the Bonnies went cold, managing just 19 points. Still, they had one last shot. A corner three attempt rimmed out and the Billikens emerged a 55-53 winner. The team dejectedly walked off the court with sadness. Members of the cheer team were unsuccessful in trying to fight back tears. The season ended at 18-16, but the core of freshmen led by Kyle Lofton, Dominick Welch and Osun Osunniyi developed admirably.
COVID ended the 2020 season prematurely at 19-12 before a single postseason game could be contested in the A-10. A year later, those tears shed in Barclays Center were wiped away and replaced by smiles. The Bonnies earned their second A-10 postseason title, taking down VCU, 74-65, at UD Arena. The season ended at 16-5 following a loss to LSU in the NCAA Tournament.
That freshman core of 2019 were seniors entering 2021-22. The group, under Schmidt’s guidance, delivered a memorable year. Following a one-point loss to Saint Louis in the A-10 quarterfinals, the Bonnies accepted an NIT bid. They emerged quintessential road warriors.
The last four seasons have seen the Bonnies hit the 20-win mark twice and finish .500 twice as well. There have been changes Schmidt, and many other coaches, have had to deal with. The transfer portal and NIL have drastically changed the game. Those talented freshmen from 2019 staying four years is now a thing of the past. Rosters are overhauled yearly.
Despite these changes, Schmidt stayed true to the type of player he wanted, one who valued the classroom and the gym over social life. He was also very good with the media, not just cooperative, but generally engaging. At one A-10 media day a while back, at the Bonaventure table, colleagues Jason Schott, Jaden Daly and yours truly were having a discussion over soccer prior to formal interviews. Hearing this, Schmidt joined in, asking questions about the carding system and an explanation of the offsides rule. Classic Mark Schmidt.
Schmidt and his wife Anita have been involved with students, alums and reaching out to the local community in general.
“In addition to his great successes as a coach, Mark Schmidt does a tremendous amount of fundraising for Coaches vs. Cancer,” retiring A-10 commissioner Bernadette McGlade told The Bona Venture. “As far as the A-10, Bonaventure is a fabulous member and Mark has done everything anyone could have ever asked.”
Schmidt caught on and was immersed in the Bonaventure family from the beginning. He even likened it to a cult, but in a very positive way. Very down to earth, he was more comfortable breaking bread with alums over pizza and beer rather than in a fancy restaurant. If he heard a fan or alum was battling an illness or difficult time, Schmidt would be on the phone offering them encouragement. He went far beyond the job description of head basketball coach. Not surprisingly, a good representation of alums made the trip to Pittsburgh to watch Schmidt lead the Bonnies in his last A-10 tournament.
This past season ended at 17-17. An 11-2 preconference start gave hope to a run in the A-10. A list of close losses proved detrimental. In the A-10 tournament, the team, realizing this was Schmidt’s last go-round, rallied. The Bonnies defeated La Salle in the first round. The postgame belt, usually given to the player exemplifying toughness, was awarded to Schmidt by his players. The next day, a come-from-behind win over George Mason extended the season. That made the Bonnies the first 13th seed to reach the quarterfinals.
Schmidt’s final game ended in a hard/fought quarterfinal setback at the hands of Dayton in the A-10 tournament.
Schmidt has had other schools reach out to him over the years. He listened, but stayed at Bonaventure. In recent years, it was assumed by many that Bonaventure would be his retirement job. It turned out to be, just a little earlier than expected.
“Retirement,” or “relieved of duties?”
That, in itself, will be a daunting task for Beretta and the administration.
In the spring of 2007, I ran into Schmidt while covering a high school showcase at The College of New Jersey. I knew him from his Robert Morris days, but he was thrilled to hear I was a Bonaventure graduate. We discussed the program’s status quo, and when we were done, he said, “don’t worry, we are going to make you alumni proud again.”
He was true to his word, for what he accomplished both on and off the court. As one fellow alum noted, and many wholeheartedly agree, Bona’s was blessed to have him for 19 years.
Second comeback not to be as VCU falls to Illinois
Boozer’s big second half leads Duke to Sweet 16
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Two sons of coaches bring family intensity into NCAA Tournament showdown with spot in Sweet 16 at stake
By Jake Copestick (@JakeCopestick)
PHILADELPHIA — Dan Hurley and Mick Cronin are cut from a similar cloth.
On Sunday night in South Philadelphia, the two will face off against one another, a trip to Washington D.C. and the chance to play in the East Regional semifinals on the line. Ahead of their matchup, both Cronin and Hurley reflected on their similar upbringings, and the paths that they traveled to get to where they are.
The journey to get to Sunday started at a young age for the two mainstays in today’s coaching ranks. They’re both the sons of high school coaches, who spent their high school years playing for their fathers.
Cronin was coached by his father, Harold “Hep” Cronin, at La Salle High School in Cincinnati. Hep won over 400 games as a high school coach, then spent 30 years as a scout in the Atlanta Braves organization, when he closed the book on his coaching career. Hurley’s father, Bob Hurley, Sr., coached Dan and his brother Bobby at the now-defunct St. Anthony High School in Jersey City, where he was as decorated a high school coach as there ever was. The elder Hurley won over 1,000 games at the high school level, winning five national championships and 26 state titles during his tenure.
That’s a lot of wins that both Cronin and Hurley got to bear witness to, and a lot of knowledge that they absorbed in their younger years. The two coaches, now at the helm of two of the most storied programs in college basketball, grew up ingrained in the competition business, so much so that they thought their everyday lives were commonplace.
It wasn’t until Cronin got into coaching, and Hurley began his college career at Seton Hall under P.J. Carlesimo, that the two realized they were wrong. What was normal to them wasn’t that way for everybody. Spending all those hours in the gym with their fathers, things seemed to come naturally to them. They absorbed things that they didn’t realize were so important until their later years.
“I think it’s a huge advantage growing up the way we did in the gym, which you don’t realize until you go into coaching,” Cronin recalled. “Everybody has gotta learn things that you learn through osmosis. It’s not just your dad, it’s his friends that are coaches. Everything revolves around that.”
“Everybody’s dad is not Hep Cronin or Bob Hurley, Sr. You’re a kid, you think everybody knows what to do in late game situations, or how to run a practice. You realize everybody doesn’t. Everybody doesn’t have those dads.”
In Hurley’s first practice in South Orange, while the coaching staff was laying the foundation for Carlesimo’s Pirates, Hurley realized he was essentially an extension of the coaching staff. It’s like he came to college already with the answers to his first final exam.
“When I got to practice at Seton Hall my first year and we were installing things, we were doing defensive breakdown drills, we were doing offensive installation,” Hurley remembered. “I was completing the sentences of my college coaches. When you’re so well-coached as a high school player and the son of a hall of famer, I was finishing the sentences of my college coaches in my first college practice.”
The advanced basketball knowledge that Cronin and Hurley possess was a given when spending that much time around their fathers in the gym. The other part that came with all that time observing was the intensity and emotion that the pair exude, which is perhaps what they can be known more for in the public eye, as their old-school way of doing things can draw criticism.
Cronin and Hurley are brash, demanding, and straightforward. They’ll get on the officials and won’t be shy about it. They push their players to their limits. They’re fiery competitors, and often animated as they lead their teams into battle. What may look like being over the top is not a facade. That’s how they grew up. That’s how they saw their fathers coach. That’s all they’ve come to know.
The intensity that they carry themselves with is a part of them. Always has been. It’s 100 percent authentic. Regardless of what anyone has to say about it, their style works, and the results speak for themselves.
Cronin has over 500 wins at the Division I level, and made a Final Four in the 2020-2021 season. Hurley won back-to-back national championships in 2023 and 2024, and owns a .725 winning percentage in his eighth season as the head coach of the Huskies.
The profession that Cronin and Hurley chose to enter and make a career out of is one that comes with a lot of expectations. If you have lofty goals, then the emotions are a part of it. Cronin dismisses any criticism of how he and Hurley operate. He finds it foolish.
“You think Coach Hurley is not supposed to be intense, but you want to win?” said Cronin. “We’re not coaching little league, buddy. Everybody doesn’t get an at-bat, paying us a lot of money to win games.”
“If you don’t like me, you’d hate my dad,” joked Hurley. “I bet Mick would say the same thing. We’re coaches’ kids.”
There is a bit of a downside to the emotional aspect, though. The heat of competition is all-consuming. You can get lost in it. When the fire that they have gives them tunnel vision, it’s necessary to recenter and recalibrate. Cronin recalls an encounter with his father in high school that helped him put things in perspective, always falling back on remembering what is important, no matter how hard it may be.
“My first year, we lost in the city title game and I was distraught,” Cronin said. “My dad said, ‘I got bad news for you. It’s not going to be the last big game you lose.’ Did the kids learn? Did the kids get better? Did you enjoy it?”
“That is a fight,” Cronin stammered. “It’s a fight for all of us because you’re so competitive, that you have to step back.”
For Hurley, it can be tough to not be affected by what the scoreboard reads when the clock hits zero. When the game and his guys mean everything to him, and you’re New Jersey through and through, that emotion will come out one way or another.
“It’s so personal for coaches like me and Mick, which is where you see at times, emotional reactions to things that happen on the court because it truly feels like, personally, it’s your world, your team,” he explained. “The outcome of the game manifests itself sometimes in how we behave. For me, growing up in North Jersey, Jersey City, I coach the way my dad would be coaching, whether you like that or not.”
If you don’t like it, then good luck finding someone with the credentials of Cronin and Hurley to replace these regulars in the Big Dance. Cronin knows another line of work would be just as foreign to him, as the NCAA Tournament would be without he and Hurley, who have a combined 24 appearances in March Madness that span across five different programs.
“If Dan and I would have went into something else, we would have no idea what the hell we were doing,” said Cronin. “It’s tough because in the moment, the competitive spirit that you see out of Dan and myself is why we are where we are.”