Arizona’s Caleb Love took flight on maybe the best college hoops dunk of the season

CALEB LOVE ARE YOU SERIOUS

Arizona guard Caleb Love is one of the most electric college basketball players in the country, and he might have put down the dunk of the year so far against Utah on Saturday night.

On a stunning jump from just behind the free throw line, Love leaped into the air and slammed down a basket as the broadcast crew couldn’t believe how the Arizona star pulled it off.

The former North Carolina standout has never hurt for highlights, but this might be one of the best of his career. It’s easily one of the best, if not the best, dunks of the college hoops season.

We have no idea how Love got so much air on that leap, but his finish on the dunk was as impressive as how he got there.

Arizona has to be thrilled to have Love in tow this season, and we’re all counting down the days to March when we can all enjoy Love and the Wildcats in March Madness.

Marquette’s Shaka Smart was egregiously playing defense on the court vs. Creighton and didn’t get T’d up

Shaka Smart got a little too into the action on Saturday

No. 10 Marquette picked up a massive conference win on Saturday, defeating Big East rival No. 22 Creighton, 72-67, at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee.

But it wasn’t just a homecourt advantage that helped the Golden Eagles put away the Bluejays. It was some elite defense by one of the most unexpected figures in the program: head coach Shaka Smart.

Smart has always been animated on the sidelines during games but he took that way too far during a Creighton offensive possession in front of the Marquette bench in the first half. While attempting to instruct his players on how to defend, he ended up jumping into the play on the court.

Plenty of criticism goes to Smart here, but don’t let the officials off the hook, either. This should’ve been an easy technical foul on the head coach. Instead it goes down as a successful defensive stop for Marquette.

Fans couldn’t believe Smart got away with this.

Only 13 college basketball teams are still undefeated, including Houston and South Carolina

Here’s an up-to-date-list of the 13 remaining undefeated teams in Division I college hoops.

College basketball isn’t even eight weeks into the season, but chaos happens daily. Somehow, several teams have survived the madness, including Dawn Staley’s young South Carolina team and the Houston Cougars — yes, THE HOUSTON COUGARS.

Upets, court stormings and huge shots have defined a wild college basketball season. There are some impressive talents on the men’s side (hello, Zach Edey, Caleb Love and Kyle Filipowski) and even more gritty players on the women’s side (like this year’s freshmen class) tearing up the courts. Yet, the most impressive thing has been the resiliency of the undefeated teams.

For context, on the women’s side, Uconn completed their perfect season during a 2015-2016 run, and the only team to come close since that moment is South Carolina, who fell to Caitlin Clark and Iowa earlier this year. Men’s basketball hasn’t seen a perfect season since the 1975-1976 season when Indiana went 32-0.

If you’re wondering what teams are still defeated in Division I hoops, here is the list as of December 24, 2023:

Undefeated Men’s College Basketball Teams

  1. No. 3 Houston (12-0): Next game is Penn on Saturday, Dec. 30
  2. No. 20 James Madison (12-0): Next game is Texas State on Saturday, Dec. 30
  3. No. 25 Ole Miss (12-0): Next game is Bryant on Sunday, Dec. 31


Undefeated Women’s College Basketball Teams

  1. No. 1 South Carolina (11-0): Next game is at East Carolina on Saturday, Dec. 30
  2. No. 2 UCLA (11-0): Next game is USC on Saturday, Dec. 30
  3. No. 3 NC State (12-0): Next game is at Virginia on Sunday, Dec. 31
  4. No. 5 Texas (12-0): Next game is Jackson State on Wednesday, Dec. 27
  5. No. 6 USC (10-0): Next game is at UCLA on Saturday, Dec. 30
  6. No. 10 Baylor (11-0): Next game is at Texas on Saturday, Dec. 30
  7. No. 18 Marquette (12-0): Next game is at UConn on Sunday, Dec. 31
  8. No. 25 TCU (13-0): Next game is BYU on Saturday, Dec. 30
  9. Oregon State (10-0): Next game is Morgan State on Thursday, Dec. 28
  10. West Virginia (11-0): Next game is at Kansas on Saturday, Dec. 30

No. 14 FAU trolled No. 4 Arizona with a perfect Festivus meme after 2OT comeback victory

Happy Festivus, from the FAU Owls

The No. 4 Arizona Wildcats will have plenty of grievances to air after Saturday’s loss to No. 14 FAU.

An NCAA tournament darling during its run to the Final Four last March, FAU proved it’s more than a one-hit wonder by pulling off a 96-95 double overtime victory in Las Vegas.

The Owls found themselves trailing by 14 points just seven minutes into the game, but Johnell Davis and Jalen Gaffney propelled FAU back into contention with 35 and 20 points, respectively. Seven lead changes and 11 ties later, Caleb Love missed a three-pointer at the buzzer to give Arizona the win and the Owls left the desert soaring.

They also took some time to celebrate Festivus — the annual holiday born from Seinfeld — on their way out of town.

As a general rule, it’s never good to be compared to George Costanza in any situation. Yet somehow that isn’t even the worst part of the Wildcats’ day. We’ll just assume playing a double overtime game counts as Feats of Strength.

Fox Sports broadcaster accidentally called Florida Atlantic’s Giancarlo Rosado ‘Rosario Dawson’

Rosario Dawson?!?!

During Saturday’s marquee college basketball matchup between No. 4 Arizona and No. 14 Florida Atlantic, Fox Sports broadcaster Casey Jacobsen had a very funny snafu while trying to refer to Owls forward Giancarlo Rosado.

While discussing something happening in the game, Jacobsen referred to Rosado as “Rosario Dawson,” the veteran film and television actress currently playing Ahsoka in the Star Wars universe.

Their names really aren’t that similar, but they’re just close enough to where you could see how Jacobsen’s hysterical flub could happen.

The viewers at home probably did a double take once they heard Dawson’s name referenced in the broadcast out of nowhere.

This was a very honest mistake for a game broadcaster to make, as Jacobsen’s words got caught up just enough for this unexpected mention.

While we’re not sure if Dawson and Rosado know who each other are, they might become very aware after this very fun college hoops blooper.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=462925]

Here’s where Oregon State and Washington State are headed as the Pac-12 legal battle ends

Oregon State and Washington State’s legal tug-of-war with the Pac-12 finally ends. Here’s what happened.

The Pac-12 legal tussle with Oregon State and Washington State ends amicably and comes with a West Coast Conference twist.

Per David Rumsey and Amanda Christovich of Front Office Sports, Oregon State and Washington State plan to settle a lawsuit from September with the 10 schools departing the Pac-12 in 2024.

Details are still being finalized, but the departing schools are expected to forfeit a portion of their conference revenue for the remainder of the 2023-24 season. These institutions will still have a say in revenue decisions until they exit, but OSU and WSU maintain control of the conference’s future.

The two remaining universities have also devised plans to keep their athletic programs afloat after the changes. Both schools will play football against the Mountain West Conference in 2024 and will be affiliate members in 12 sports as part of the West Coast Conference for two seasons.

Here’s how Twitter reacted to the news:

World Basketball Day was made for die-hard hoops lovers worldwide and should be celebrated

World Basketball Day is for hoopers big, little or small.

Happy Birthday, Basketball! It’s a day to celebrate hooping at its finest.

Thursday, December 21, 2023, is officially the inaugural World Basketball Day as designated by the United Nations and first proposed by NYU professor David Hollander.

It also makes 132 years since Dr. James Naismith created the game of basketball at Springfield College. A few years later, the first women’s game would be played at Smith College in Northhampton, Massachusetts, quickly becoming a global sensation.

As part of the UN’s efforts to recognize the day, Julius “Dr. J” Erving will lead a discussion in observance. Additionally, the Class of 2024 nominees for the Basketball Hall of Fame will be announced on Thursday in New York City.

(The final Class of 2024 inductees will be announced on Saturday, April 6, 2024, during the NCAA Final Four weekend, with enshrinement on Saturday, August 17, in Springfield, Massachusetts .)

Basketball has blossomed into one of the world’s biggest sports, producing global celebrities like LeBron James, generation talents like Iowa’s Caitlin Clark, and even a song by Kurtis Blow dedicated to how much fans love the sport.

For every hoops fan out there, here’s to the game you love. Cheers!

College hoops stars Isaiah Collier and Kiki Rice join ‘Beats Academy’ in new NIL deals with Beats by Dre

Isaiah Collier and Kiki Rice are “always on it” and in “super mode” in new Beats by Dre NIL deals.

Turn the Beats up! Isaiah Collier and Kiki Rice are joining Beats by Dre.

Beats by Dre isn’t afraid to connect with the best athletes. They already partner with 15 college football players, including Alabama’s Jalen Milroe, Washington’s Michael Penix Jr., Florida State’s Jordan Travis, Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders and Heisman winner Jayden Daniels.

Per Jeremy Crabtree of On3, the electronics company is back with two more athletes to add to its impressive roster: former 2023 No.1 recruit and USC freshman Isaiah Collier and former Gatorade Highschool Player of the Year and UCLA Bruins sophomore Kiki Rice.

In the latest videos promoting their NIL deals, Collier shows how his Beats allow him to be “always on it,” and Rice shows how hers help her go “super mode” to reach the top.

Bill Self’s locker room celebration after Kansas’ comeback win at Indiana will get you hyped

A March-worthy celebration in December

Kansas men’s basketball coach Bill Self often talks about how much value there is in winning ugly games — the games where the shots aren’t falling, the Jayhawks get into foul trouble early and the star players aren’t putting up numbers.

The games teams steal thanks to grit and a little luck. A game like Saturday in Bloomington, where the No. 2 Jayhawks trailed Indiana by 13 in the second half only to stun the home crowd with a 75-71 Kansas victory.

A game where Dajuan Harris played all 40 minutes, Kevin McCullar started the second half with with three fouls and Hunter Dickinson was jeered so badly he later quipped he could save a baby in Bloomington and Indiana fans would still boo him.

After beating the Hoosiers Saturday, Self showed just how much he loves winning those games, too — with an epic locker room celebration that feels more apt for March than December.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/C07UwGgAO8L/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

“It was just a hell of a team win,” Self said afterwards. “It was a great environment. What a place to play.”

Kansas already has wins over Kentucky and UConn this year, so while it’s easy to say the Blue Blood programs should play more non-conference games against each other, it’s also understandable that it may not be in the best interest of their team records.

Especially when a ho-hum game in December can get a Hall of Fame head coach as fired up as Self was on Saturday.

McNeese coach Will Wade, of LSU wiretap fame, went scorched earth on the NCAA after two-time transfer ruling

Will Wade delivered one of the most scathing critiques of the NCAA we’ve seen from a sitting head coach.

It’s been a bad week for the NCAA. And former LSU coach and current McNeese coach Will Wade offered his take on it.

On Wednesday, the association lost a case in federal court in which a temporary restraining order was issued that eliminated eligibility requirements for two-time transfers, clearing the way for them to play.

At least, in a 14-day window that runs until Dec. 27.

On Friday, that temporary restraining order turned into an injunction that will extend through the end of spring sports, and the NCAA has decided not to punish players who participate during that span period with the retroactive loss of eligibility should the ruling be overturned later, according to Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost.

However, the NCAA has already reversed course on this exact issue once, as outlined by Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger noted on Thursday night before the injunction extended the period beyond 14 days.

The uncertainty has created something of a limbo for many players who have been awaiting waiver decisions on their eligibility as two-time transfers. While they are technically permitted to play, they do so while taking the chance that the NCAA is operating in good faith and will not strip them of eligibility later.

It has led to a massive headache for players and coaches, including one of the latter who has a well-documented history with the NCAA, Will Wade.

LSU fired Wade in March of 2022 after the NCAA hit his program — and him, specifically — with multiple Level I violations stemming from paying players.

Wade, who was notoriously caught on an FBI wiretap discussing monetary offers for recruits, was hired at McNeese this offseason, where he was required to sit out the first 10 games of the season as part of his show cause. He now finds himself back in a dispute with the NCAA as he awaits a waiver for former Boston College and Florida forward C.J. Felder.

He took the opportunity to blast the NCAA at his press conference on Friday with one of the strongest statements we’ve seen from a sitting head coach in which he argued the NCAA will continue to take court losses until it fundamentally changes its revenue model.

“They just need to blow the whole thing up and come back with a new model and they need to collective bargain with the players,” Wade said. “It’s the only way they can make this thing work, and until they do that, they’re just going to get smacked in court.”

Wade didn’t hold back his frustrations with the NCAA, and he even addressed his own past experiences with the organization.

While Wade is certainly the most vocal critic we’ve seen so far, he’s certainly not alone in this opinion when it comes to coaches. And while the NCAA can hold the threat of lost eligibility over players and teams, that can only do so much in the face of its mounting legal issues.