海角社区app

Rick Barnes spurned Virginia years ago. The Cavaliers are in his way of taking Tennessee to Sweet 16

PHILADELPHIA (AP) 鈥 Rick Barnes had a choice to make in 1990.

He could remain at Providence after taking the program to consecutive in his first two seasons or potentially make the jump to the Atlantic Coast Conference at

Barnes met with the Cavaliers’ athletic director, toured the Grounds in Charlottesville and strongly considered it. Virginia administrators were convinced Barnes would accept their offer to replace Terry Holland, yet it was not to be 鈥 Barnes decided to stay at Providence and coached the Friars for three more seasons.

Barnes later coached at Clemson and Texas before he took over at in 2015 and turned the Vols into consistent winners in the Southeastern Conference.

He’s led the Vols to two Elite Eight appearances and a Sweet 16 over the last three seasons and is one win away from playing on the NCAA Tournament’s second weekend yet again.

All he has to do is get enough out Ja’Kobi Gillespie, J.P Estrella, Nate Ament and the rest of the sixth-seeded Vols (24-11) on Sunday when they play 鈥 yes, Virginia.

Barnes will spend more time watching video of the third-seeded Cavaliers (30-5) than he has thought over the last 36 years about his decision to spurn the program.

鈥淚 spent so much time recruiting that state and had the chance to go and did accept a job, and then decided it wasn鈥檛 the right time, the right thing to do,” Barnes said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I thought about it since.鈥

So many years have passed, so many big wins have been racked up at other jobs that it’s hard to imagine how the situation could have played out for Barnes or Virginia.

鈥淏elieve me, I made a lot of mistakes,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he Virginia thing wasn鈥檛 part of the plan.鈥

Virginia coach Ryan Odom took his first coaching job in 2015 at Division II Lenoir-Rhyne and formed a bond there with Barnes. Barnes played there in the 1970s and was there when needed to help Odom navigate the challenges that come with working as a head coach.

鈥淐oach Barnes has meant so much to the game of basketball, and he and my father are close and good friends,鈥 Odom said. 鈥淥ur families are close, and it鈥檚 just really neat to see the sustained success that he鈥檚 had and, he鈥檚 done it the right way at every spot. He鈥檚 won at every spot.鈥

He’s standing in Odom’s way as the Cavaliers try to advance to the Sweet 16 for the first time since they won the 2019 national championship.

Jacari White made six 3-pointers and scored 26 points in Virginia’s first-round win over Wright State.

鈥淵es, we won, we got the victory, but expectation for us is to keep winning, and we want to make a run in the tournament,鈥 White said.

Iowa State鈥檚 Jefferson is sidelined

Second-seeded Iowa State is unlikely to have for its game against seventh-seeded Kentucky on Sunday in St. Louis after the All-America forward sprained his ankle in the opening minutes of a first-round win over Queens.

Cyclones coach T.J. Otzelberger said 鈥測ou never want to rule out anything,鈥 but he also acknowledged the chances of Jefferson playing this weekend are slim. He was still in a boot and using crutches when he arrived for practice on Saturday.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got a deep team. Everybody can play basketball,鈥 forward Dominykas Pleta said. 鈥淓ven with a guy out, we can compete at a high level. So yeah, we鈥檙e not scared.鈥

Kentucky tries to move past its first-round thriller

Kentucky鈥檚 season looked like it was over when Santa Clara鈥檚 Allen Graves hit a go-ahead 3-pointer with 2.4 seconds left in the teams’ first-round matchup. But then answered with a buzzer-beater from just inside the mid-court line to force overtime, and the Wildcats pulled away for an 89-84 victory to set up a date with the Boilermakers.

The Wildcats acknowledged watching Oweh鈥檚 banked-in heave multiple times on social media. But they also understand that one of the defining moments of this year’s March Madness is meaningless if they can’t move past it.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had some wide swings this year and I think our guys are pretty adept at it, actually,鈥 Kentucky coach Mark Pope said. 鈥淲e talked about the highlight moments and enjoyed the emotion together, and then it was time to put that to bed, because we don鈥檛 want this to be the end of our journey.鈥

Alabama looks to make another Sweet 16

There’s a key reason Texas Tech is a betting underdog to fourth-seeded Alabama in a second-round matchup in Tampa, Florida.

Texas Tech just isn’t as strong without JT Toppin.

The All-America guard tore the ACL in his right knee last month, and injury could derail any hopes the Red Raiders had of playing deep into March.

Texas Tech’s 19-6 start turned into a 23-10 record 鈥 that includes a win over Akron in the first round 鈥 and the team has essentially been turned over to point guard Christian Anderson.

鈥淚t’s been difficult, obviously, without JT rebounding and him on defense in general,鈥 forward LeJuan Watts said.

The Crimson Tide are trying to make a fourth straight trip to the Sweet 16. Alabama rallied from an early double-digit deficit to in the first round.

鈥淲e were good enough in the second half to beat Hofstra,鈥 coach Nate Oats said. 鈥淚f we play the way we did against Hofstra tomorrow night, we won鈥檛 win the game.鈥

____

AP Sports Writer Dave Skretta in St. Louis contributed to this report.

___

AP March Madness bracket: and coverage:

Copyright © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

Federal 海角社区app Network Logo
Log in to your 海角社区app account for notifications and alerts customized for you.