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Mar 20, 2026; St. Louis, MO, USA; Santa Clara Broncos guard Sash Gavalyugov (2) and the Kentucky Wildcats bench react to the game-tying shot by guard Otega Oweh (00) as time expires in the second half of a first round game of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Le-Imagn Images | Jeff Le-Imagn Images
Friday gave us an absolute classic, and … well, an absolute classic and some other kind of cool stuff.
Let’s dive in.
The 3 Best March Madness Games Of Day 2
1. (7) Kentucky 89, (10) Santa Clara 84 (OT) (Midwest)
If you’re going to have a full day of first round games where only one of them is super competitive, that one super competitive game had better be an absolute banger. This was an absolute banger.
For 40 minutes, Kentucky and Santa Clara went shot-for-shot before ending regulation with one of the greatest back-and-forth sequences in the history of the tournament.
With three timeouts remaining, Santa Clara head coach Herb Sendek frantically tried to use one of them, but was not seen by an official.
“I unequivocally called timeout,” Sendek said after the game. “But they didn’t grant it. I think the video evidence is clear, and anybody’s able to pull it up.”
Kentucky’s momentum from the end of regulation carried over into the extra frame, where the Wildcats ended the game by making their final five shots from the field to polish off the dramatic victory.
Oweh finished the game with a career-high 35 points, in the process establishing himself as an all-time villain for a Santa Clara program that was making its first appearance in March Madness since 1996.
Kentucky will look to make it back-to-back trips to the Sweet 16 in its first two seasons under head coach Mark Pope with an upset of second-seeded Iowa State on Sunday.
2. (9) Utah State 86, (8) Villanova 76 (West)
I’m gonna be honest here: The pickins after UK-Santa Clara are realllll slim.
You’ve got two games (this one and Miami vs. Missouri) where the final score doesn’t accurately reflect how competitive the game was for most of the 40 minutes. You’ve also got two other games (UCLA vs. UCF and Iowa vs. Clemson) where the final score makes the game look more competitive than it actually was.
We’re going with Utah State-Villanova, which was a delightfully entertaining 8/9 matchup before the Wildcats kind of forgot how to play basketball down the stretch and the Aggies refused to stop missing shots.
BREAKAWAY DUNK BY MJ COLLINS AND THE COWS GO WILD!!! 10-point lead for the Aggies with just a minute left!!!@mid_madnesspic.twitter.com/lRTbM2yg9J
— unprofessional sports journalist (@garrettcarrot12) March 20, 2026
MJ Collins Jr. — seen dunking in the video above — scored nine points over the game’s final three minutes as Utah State went on a game-defining 14-1 run. Jerrod Calhoun’s team missed just two field goal attempts over the game’s final 12:45, largely because of how often they were able to get to the free-throw line.
The wildest stat from this game: Villanova went 14-for-30 from three and limited Utah State to just 2-of-16 from beyond the arc … and still lost by 10. The only other team to lose like that in tournament history also somehow found a way to lose by exactly 10 points.
Villanova became just the second team in NCAA Tournament history to lose a game where they made 14+ threes and the opponent made 2 or fewer.
Joining Indiana’s 90-80 loss to Gonzaga in the 2006 Round of 32. https://t.co/cj92p4xznJ
— Matthew Winick (@matthewwinick) March 20, 2026
A huge upset of top-seeded Arizona on Sunday would sent Utah State to its first Sweet 16 since 1970.
3. (3) Virginia 82, (14) Wright State 73 (Midwest)
For much of the afternoon, it looked like Wright State might give us the “teen seed” stunner this tournament has been lacking for a couple of years now. Instead, Virginia pulled away late to advance in the Big Dance for the first time since its 2019 national championship run.
Jacari White was the hero for the Hoos. The North Dakota State transfer hit 6-of-8 three-pointers on his way to a season-high 26 points. The performance thrilled the UVA fans in the crowd who dress in green fatigues and refer to themselves as “The Jacarmy.”
Jacari White misses the line stamping UVA into the next round on the bracket at first…
A teammate shouts, “That’s the first time I’ve seen him miss.”
THE VIRGINIA HOOS CELEBRATE! pic.twitter.com/6CrABxbWWw
— Vince Wolfram (@vincewolfram15) March 20, 2026
The win snapped an embarrassing stretch for the Virginia program that had seen them lose first round contests to 13th-seeded Ohio (2021), 13th-seeded Furman (2022) and 10th-seeded Colorado State (2024).
The victory also marked the first in the tournament for new UVA head coach Ryan Odom since his 2017-18 UMBC team became the first 16-seed to ever beat a No. 1 seed when they stunned … I mean, you know who it was. Well-known stories can still be cool stories. Grow up.
The 5 Teams That Won It The Best
1. Tennessee
The Volunteers didn’t just end the season of America’s newest college basketball darling, it crushed Miami University’s spirit in the game’s opening moments and never looked back.
Tennessee hit 12 of its first 19 shots and Jakobi Gillespie made five first half three-pointers as the Volunteers opened up a 20-point first half lead that seemed to put the game out of reach almost as quickly as it got started. Gillespie finished with six three-pointers and a game-high 29 points.
UT head coach Rick Barnes was quick to dismiss the notion that Miami’s second loss of the season being so lopsided was the simple product of the Redhawks finally having to play one of the sport’s better teams.
“It took maybe our best half of the year to beat them today,” Tennessee coach Rick Barnes said. “The start of the game beat them today, but any team that wins that many games can really play.”
2. Florida
A No. 1 seed trouncing a 16-seed typically isn’t going to get recognition in this space. When that trouncing is the second-largest victory in the history of the tournament? Well, we can make an exception.
Florida just pulled off the second-largest win in the history of the men's NCAAT.
Greatest ever:
1963: Loyola Chicago over Tennessee Tech (69)
TONIGHT: Florida over Prairie View A&M (59)
1998: Kansas over Prairie View A&M (58)
2009: UConn over Chattanooga (56)
— Matt Norlander (@MattNorlander) March 21, 2026
Prairie View A&M actually held an early 18-13 lead before Florida went on a 45-3 run to end the first half. That’s not a typo. FORTY-FIVE to THREE run.
Every national champion since 2014 has won its tourney opener by at least 15 points, a bar the Gators, uh, safely cleared here.
The chase to have back-to-back back-to-back national champions is officially on.
3. Texas Tech
The combination of the Red Raiders struggling at the end of the regular season, losing All-American JT Toppin, and drawing the apparent strongest 12-seed in the field had more than a few people predicting that Grant McCasland’s team wouldn’t be long for this tournament.
Instead, they won their tourney opener by 20.
The game was largely won on the perimeter, where Texas Tech shot 11-of-20 from three and limited Akron to only five makes on 19 attempts from deep. The Red Raiders are now one win away from their fifth Sweet 16 appearance since 2018. Not bad for a program that had graced the tournament’s second weekend just five times in its existence before this run of success.
4. St. John’s
From the opening tip, Rick Pitino’s team had the look of a squad that was furious about the fact that winning back-to-back Big East regular season and tournament titles didn’t earn them more than a 5-seed in the Big Dance.
St. John’s made its first five shots and scored the game’s first 13 points, quickly building an 18 point advantage before the game was eight minutes old. Missouri Valley champion Northern Iowa, meanwhile, missed nine of its first 10 shots and never really seemed to find its footing on offense.
The fast start and terrific defense had the typically fuming Pitino displaying more of a stoic demeanor on the sidelines.
Just kidding, he was mother effing his team up and down before the game’s second TV timeout.
Rick Pitino let his team have it despite St John's 20-3 start against Northern Iowa ️pic.twitter.com/woQnY2jJFa
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) March 21, 2026
The Johnnies will face Bill Self and Kansas in what figures to be the glamor game of Sunday.
5. Iowa State
We’re all proud of Purdue for not giving Boilermaker fans an unnecessary scare in the first round, but it was Iowa State which was the day’s most dominant 2-seed.
Even with Second Team All-American forward Joshua Jefferson going down with an ankle injury in the game’s opening minutes, the Cyclones never blinked. They ripped off a 23-0 run immediately following Jefferson’s injury, and rolled to a 108-74 thrashing of 15th-seeded Tennessee State.
“I think it’s just an ankle sprain right now, but that’s all I got,” Jefferson said after the game. “It was a good feeling, knowing it wasn’t nothing serious and that it’s just sprained. So, I can deal with a sprain. I can get that back going so I can try to play.”
Iowa State set three different NCAA Tournament game school records on Friday: Assists (24), points in a half (55) and points in a game (108). They get Kentucky on Sunday.
The 5 Biggest Disappointments
1. Akron
The only single-digit seeds that lost on Friday lost to other single-digit seeds, so we’re going to have to be a little creative (read: mean) in this section today.
Akron already made history this March by becoming the first Mid-American Conference team to ever claim the league’s auto-bid in three consecutive seasons. The history the Zips really wanted — the school’s first ever win in the Big Dance — will have to wait for another year.
After a 20-point beatdown at the hands of Texas Tech, Akron is now 0-8 all-time in the NCAA Tournament. Their three first round losses over the last three years have come by a combined 65 points.
2. Hofstra
I think I speak for all of us when I say that I really thought we had something here.
The Pride were playing right with an Aden Holloway-less Alabama team that missed 13 of its first 16 three-point attempts. leading by as many as eight in the first half and trailing by just two at the break. Then Labaron Philon got going, the flood gates opened up a little bit, and the last eight minutes or so of the game weren’t even mildly interesting.
The loss dropped Hofstra to 0-5 all-time in NCAA Tournament games.
3. Prairie View A&M
You lost by 59.
I’m sorry. Don’t lose by 59.
At least this happened:
"We need some help from the lord"
Prairie View coach Byron Smith told @AJRoss_TV they need some help against Florida pic.twitter.com/a4iLEVvDrO
— CBS Sports College Basketball (@CBSSportsCBB) March 21, 2026
Between this and a First Four win that netted $2 million for the SWAC, still a pretty damn good March for the Panthers.
4. UConn
Sure, the Huskies were playing without both Silas Demary Jr. and Jaylin Stewart, but they still seemed to be going through the motions for stretches of time during their 82-71 win over 15-seed Furman.
This isn’t the time to be playing with your food, something Dan Hurley — the engineer of two of the most dominant runs to the national championship that we’ve ever seen — knows better than anyone.
5. Clemson/Villanova
You guys were the only two teams that lost to worse-seeded opponents, soooo … we kinda have to put you on here.
Don’t lose to worse-seeded opponents.
5 Day 2 Cheers
1. Every angle of the Otega Oweh shot
You simply cannot see it enough.
Just an insane sequence. You’ll be seeing that Oweh shot for decades. pic.twitter.com/hwSon805s7
— Steven Peake (@StevenPeakeKSR) March 20, 2026
Full Kentucky sequence.
Just stadium sound.
Chills@MarchMadnessMBBhttps://t.co/lwVfFSHFsbpic.twitter.com/jkO2HgbNs5
— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) March 20, 2026
“OTEGA OWEH HAS JUST ETCHED HIS NAME INTO MARCH MADNESS LORE!”
Spero Dedes and Jim Spanarkel were ready for the madness during the thrilling finish of Santa Clara vs. Kentucky. pic.twitter.com/btsHjDPAau
— CBS Sports (@CBSSports) March 20, 2026
Mark Pope's reaction to Otega Oweh's sensational game-tying shot @KentuckyMBBpic.twitter.com/hn3Kh9L97c
— CBS Sports College Basketball (@CBSSportsCBB) March 20, 2026
Here’s the full cut:
Oweh layup. Graves 3. Oweh bank-in 3.
A mad sequence to end regulation in Kentucky’s OT win over Santa Clara. https://t.co/vBc57dtyLdpic.twitter.com/6RDQru1TK6
— Cameron Drummond (@cdrummond97) March 20, 2026
We’ve rarely seen a better end-of-game sequence in this tournament.
2. Dudes makin’ shots
Scoring has been booming across college basketball all year, with more teams breaching the 100-point mark in games than in any season since 1989-90.
Naturally, the first two days of the tournament have followed suit.
There have been six 100-point games thus far in the tournament. The last time there were more than six was 1992, when there were seven. For further perspective, there were a total of 10 100-point games from 2010-2023.
— David Worlock (@DavidWorlock) March 21, 2026
This is the first time since March 16, 2007 that 3 teams scored 100+ points. Tennessee, Florida and Kansas last did it, while Saint Louis joined Michigan and Illinois in hitting the century mark today. The record is 5: Iowa, NC State, K-State, Jacksonville, UCLA on March 14, 1970
— David Worlock (@DavidWorlock) March 20, 2026
If you despised the clutch-and-grab, first to 55 wins style of the aughts, it seems like your time has come.
3. Favorites
Friday featured only two seed-line upsets: 9-seeds Utah State and Iowa taking down 8-seeds Villanova and Clemson.
From a betting perspective, there were no upsets.
Point spread favorites were a perfect 16-0 on Friday, also going a stellar 12-4 against the spread.
Favorites finish Friday 16-0 SU and 12-4 ATS — 2nd undefeated day for favs in Round 64 and 1st since 1992 — best four years below….
• A 16-team ML parlay was about a 33-1 ticket
• Last 2 yrs of NCAA Tournament, favs of 6+ pts are now 52-4 SU pic.twitter.com/r2Cg89hgpO
— Evan Abrams (@EvanHAbrams) March 21, 2026
If you bet on boring reigning supreme for a second straight year, your bracket is probably still in pretty good shape through round one.
4. Eddie Munyak
Long Island sophomore walk-on Eddie Munyak didn’t appear in a single game as a freshman in 2024-25. He had appeared in just one game before Friday, and he had never attempted a shot.
Now, for the rest of his life, he’ll be able to tell every stranger he meets that he scored in an NCAA Tournament game.
First career shot
First career points
In the closing seconds
Of March Madness
Eddie Munyak pic.twitter.com/MzfeTuh5ga
— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) March 20, 2026
Arizona closes out LIU, but not before a truly awesome moment. Reserve guard Eddie Munyak banked in a 3 for the Sharks’ last points, and the crowd ERUPTED. First points of his NCAA D1 college career. Here’s the aftermath after I could get my camera up @mid_madness@LIUAthleticspic.twitter.com/LHyAuIX5iB
— unprofessional sports journalist (@garrettcarrot12) March 20, 2026
Odds of a “One Shining Moment” appearance are currently set at 1/2.
5. Kentucky fans across the state reacting to Otega Oweh’s miracle
I don’t care that we’re drinking from the same well twice in one section. It’s the moment of the tournament so far and easily the biggest thing to come out of Friday’s 16 contests.
Plus, just look at this …
All time work security camera footage.
: Silent Guard/Facebook pic.twitter.com/1YbG2Yjwei
— Karl Townes Van Zandt (@Karl_Townes) March 20, 2026
My 5th graders. They went nuts when Oweh’s shot went in. pic.twitter.com/OpO0ZfRitt
— Eric Chumbler (@EricChumbler) March 20, 2026
The same but with 2nd-4th graders in Knottsville, KY. pic.twitter.com/27uO9jYTRz
— Jesse (@jesscott44_g) March 21, 2026
Thank you, Otega Oweh for this Kentucky Basketball memory with my Dad. Thank you, Work Security Cam footage. Went back and added the Tom Leach & Goose Givens call. GO CATS! pic.twitter.com/qRni3JsLAj
— Kentucky Gameday (@TheKYGameday) March 21, 2026
Woodford Christian School in Versailles was all in pic.twitter.com/VKgY2QYpWl
— Cara Meadows (@PrincipalCara) March 20, 2026
That’s what it’s all about.
BONUS CHEER: 9-Seeds
How about a clean sweep for round one?
For the 6th time since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, the 9 seeds went 4-0 against the 8 seeds. It also happened in 1989, 1994, 1999, 2001 and 2019. 9 seeds are now 87-77 against the 8s.
— David Worlock (@DavidWorlock) March 21, 2026
See? That’s fun. Those are some upsets.
DOUBLE BONUS CHEER: Braden Smith
In Purdue’s 104-71 route of 15-seed Queens, point guard Braden Smith became the NCAA’s all-time assist record, breaking the longstanding record set by Duke great Bobby Hurley (who has had better months).
Smith now has 1,077 assists and counting for his career, a record that it’s hard to see being broken any time soon … if ever.
TRIPLE BONUS CHEER: This interaction
This interaction between Hassane Diallo and Olivier Rioux is amazing. pic.twitter.com/xhh05baHpD
— Gentry Hawk (@GentryHawkGC) March 21, 2026
If you think you would handle standing next to a 7’9 dude with more poise, you’re kidding yourself.
5 Day 2 Jeers
1. The lack major first round upsets … again
The notion that last year was not a one-off and that the ever-growing gap between the halves and the have-nots in the NIL era was going to make tournaments with a slew of crazy first round upsets a thing of the past is … well, it might be spot on.
The top four seeds in each region went 4-0 in the round of 64 for the second straight year and for the seventh time since expansion in 1985. The other times were 1994, 2000, 2004, 2007, 2017 and 2025.
— David Worlock (@DavidWorlock) March 21, 2026
Zero double-digit seeds won on Friday (just the second time that’s ever happened), and outside of 10-seed Santa Clara, none of them even really threatened to win.
Looks like we’re gonna get a total of 4 double digit seeds in the round of 32
– High Point (12)
– VCU (11)
– Texas (11)
– Texas A&M (10)
Would be the lowest total since 2007
5 total – ‘25, ‘23, ‘17, ‘15
6 total – ‘18, ‘11, ‘08
7 total – ‘22, ‘14
8 total – ‘24, ‘19, ‘13, ‘10,…
— Nick Bateman (CBB guru) (@nickbateman33) March 21, 2026
Fans who follow this tournament primarily for the chaos may need to start adopting the “at least these second round games look awesome” philosophy.
2. The ending of UCLA-UCF
If you were wondering why UCLA-UCF, a 75-71 game that actually wound up with the most narrow margin of separation of any game on Friday, didn’t make the “best games” list earlier, here’s the primary reason why:
Very interesting nugget from @mark_cooperjr:
UCLA/UCF final minute took *18* minutes. pic.twitter.com/GfEDiU2PWT
— Ira Gorawara (@IraGorawara) March 21, 2026
This was a BRUTAL watch, made even more frustrating by the fact that none of the other games going on at that time were even remotely competitive.
College basketball has taken some necessary steps over the last year to prevent the rash of seemingly interminable end of game situations, and for the most part, they’ve improved the issue. It’s still far from perfect though, and this was a prime example.
3. Skyy Clark’s tooth
Yuck.
Skyy Clark (@parkar_sopena) just lost a tooth pic.twitter.com/bHkupNcTnT
— NCAA Buzzer Beaters & Game Winners (@NCAABuzzerBters) March 21, 2026
UCLA guard Skyy Clark said he’s going to put his chipped tooth under his pillow tonight. pic.twitter.com/yiW1ROvgrR
— Justin Williams (@Williams_Justin) March 21, 2026
Eric Dailey – Great teammate
Trent Perry – The teammate you can’t trust
Eric Dailey says Skyy Clark has ‘aura’ in the locker room after losing his tooth
Trent Perry says ‘he’s got a little lisp too’ https://t.co/xkFxVAMHfB
— Adam Zagoria (@AdamZagoria) March 21, 2026
Jack Seidler – Also a great teammate
Andrew Catalon: "That's a good teammate right there. That is Jack Seidler, the junior from Marlboro, New Jersey, coming up with the tooth." ️ #MarchMadness#NCAATournamentpic.twitter.com/oksb7YW6Qr
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) March 21, 2026
Clark finished the game with eight points, two assists, a pair of steals and an extra $2-5 (if the going rate for a tooth at my house is any indication).
4. Clemson and Iowa’s complete unwillingness to push pace
Neither team should be allowed to advance if this happens.
0 fast break points in an entire 40 minute NCAA tournament basketball game
Has that ever happened before pic.twitter.com/Sxp596a6EB
— Nick Bateman (CBB guru) (@nickbateman33) March 21, 2026
Just kidding, I would never turn down the opportunity to watch Bennett Stirtz play more basketball.
5. The over-inflated tournament basketballs
I’ll stop putting it on the jeers list when it stops being a problem.
“That game ball was just a balloon, man.”
Inflated basketballs strike again in the NCAA Tournament.
Virginia’s Thijs De Ridder said it took some getting used to today vs Wright State. https://t.co/Rvaqql7HoEpic.twitter.com/hzkcKOOpjv
— Vince Wolfram (@vincewolfram15) March 20, 2026
It also seemed like there were even more improbably high dribbles on Friday than there were on Thursday.
Ridiculous.
All Day-2 Team
Tarris Reed, UConn
Reed was outrageously good in UConn’s win over Furman, scoring 31 points and grabbing 27 rebounds, the most of any player in an NCAA Tournament game since 1973. He also became the first player to post at least 31 and 27 in any college basketball game since 2015.
Labaron Philon, Alabama
Philon proved that ‘Bama is threat to play deep in this tournament with or without Aden Holloway by producing 29 points, eight rebounds, seven assists and three steals in the Tide’s 20-point win over Hofstra.
Otega Oweh, Kentucky
Oweh finds himself on the All Day-2 team for a second straight year, and not just because he hit the shot of the tournament. Oweh became the first player to post a stat line of 35 points, eight rebounds and seven assists in an NCAA Tournament since Larry Bird did it for Indiana State in 1979.
Killyan Toure, Iowa State
Speaking of stat-stuffing record performances, Toure became just the second freshman ever to notch 25 points, 10 rebounds and five assists in an NCAA Tournament game.
Ja’Kobi Gillespie, Tennessee
There were some absurdly good indiivdual performances that got left off this list, but Gillespie has to be included after torching Miami University to the tune of 29 points, nine assists, three steals and three rebounds.
5 Best Day 2 Dunks
There’s a super weird and consistent thing with this tournament where the dunks on day one are always way better than the dunks on day two. This year, unfortunately, is no different.
1. Dewayne Brown, Tennessee
DEWAYNE BROWN THREW IT DOWN pic.twitter.com/nqohR93uso
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 20, 2026
2. Blake Buchanan, Iowa State
BLAKE BUCHANAN REVERSE SLAM pic.twitter.com/Oy4V7AfNJJ
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 20, 2026
3. Brandon Garrison, Kentucky
4. Olivier Rioux, Florida
Only because he’s 7’9,
OLIVIER RIOUX HAMMER pic.twitter.com/nXm1DqbcX8
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 21, 2026
5. Drake Allen, Utah State
Drake Allen with the SLAM #MarchMadness@USUBasketballpic.twitter.com/fL6rjFsLXQ
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 20, 2026
5 Best Day 2 Images
1. Cardiac Cats
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2. Sometimes the branding is almost too perfect
View Link
3. Dream crushers
View Link
4. King for just a moment
View Link
5. Dominique Daniels’ last dance
View Link
5 Notable Quotes From Day 2
1. “Well, we need some help from the Lord.” —Prairie View A&M head coach Byron Smith on how he hoped to slow down Florida
2. “I was just praying for him to make the shot, because I knew I was going to cry if it didn’t go in.” —Kentucky forward Mo Dioubate on teammate Otega Oweh’s overtime-forcing shot
3. “Sports is a tremendous vessel to enjoy relationships. My father was able to be in the stands with other family members, the relationships you have with your staff. The game is a vessel to accomplish that, and that’s what you take away. Any season, even ones where you don’t win as many, they have the same outcome ultimately.” —Santa Clara head coach Herb Sendek
4. “Miami should have been the darlings, the talk of the tournament. You win 32 basketball games—I don’t care what league you play in, what anybody says. They would win some games in our league. Make no bones about it.” —Tennessee head coach Rick Barnes
5. “My name is David, but my nickname is David.” —Illinois forward David Mirkovic talking about the difference pronunciations of his name (Dah-veed versus Day-vid)
Full Saturday schedule for 2026 men’s NCAA tournament
We’re still just getting started.
- (1) Michigan vs. (9) Saint Louis | 12:10 p.m. | CBS
- (3) Michigan State vs. (6) Louisville | 2:45 p.m. | CBS
- (1) Duke vs. (9) TCU | 5:15 p.m. | CBS
- (2) Houston vs. (10) Texas A&M | 6:10 p.m. | TNT
- (3) Gonzaga (11) Texas | 7:10 p.m. | TBS
- (3) Illinois vs. (11) VCU | 7:50 p.m. | CBS
- (4) Nebraska vs. (5) Vanderbilt | 8:45 p.m. | TNT
- (4) Arkansas vs. (12) High Point | 9:45 p.m. | TBS
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