
Most scores are reported through the Associated Press and the MHSAA. To add your missing score, email japurcell@mlive.Com with the outcomes. Stats from the game are accepted too. The list may be updated periodically. BOYS BASKETBALL SUMMARIES Ecorse 83 Cristo Rey 65 Malik Olafioye led Ecorse with 31 points, 5 rebounds and 4 assists while two teammates registered double-doubles as Dakario Valentine had 14 points and 12 rebounds while Derrick Kemp had 12 points and 10 assists. Kenneth Morrast Jr. Also had 18 points and 5 assists. Taylor Trillium Academy 56, Ann Arbor Father Gabriel Richard 46 Trillium was led by way of a strong performance from senior Ronald Raybon, who finished with 15 points and 13 rebounds. Sophomore Damaryon Fishburn added 11 points and 8 rebounds for Tillium as well. SCORES Detroit Martin Luther King 50, Detroit Henry Ford 43 Grosse Ile 56, Milan 33 Harper Woods Chandler Park 60, Detroit Edison 45 Hazel Park 79, Clinton Township Clintondale 35 Madison Heights Madison 58, Marine City 41 Novi Christian Academy 53, Whitmore Lake 49 Redford Thurston 62, Dearborn Heights Robichaud 27 Romeo 64, Warren Woods Tower 48 Romulus Summit Academy North 57, Warren Michigan Collegiate 35 Taylor 62, Lincoln Park 57 Walled Lake Central 43, South Lyon East 42 Walled Lake Northern 70, Waterford Mott 47 GIRLS BASKETBALL SCORES Birmingham Seaholm 43, Oak Park 41 Canton Prep 39, Livonia Clarenceville 34 Clarkston 52, Birmingham Groves 49 Clarkston Everest Collegiate 37, Bloomfield Hills Academy of the Sacred Heart 27 Dearborn Heights Crestwood 41, Garden City 20 Farmington 52, Ferndale University 23 Flat Rock 53, Monroe St Mary Catholic Central 25 Howell 49, Dearborn 43 Lake Orion 47, Berkley 26 Livonia Franklin 43, Canton 28 North Farmington 53, Bloomfield Hills 37 Northville 49, Livonia Stevenson 34 Riverview 47, Grosse Ile 13 Romulus 69, Dearborn Heights Annapolis 41 Troy Athens 60, Auburn Hills Avondale 33 Westland John Glenn 50, Salem 46 White Lake Lakeland 57, South Lyon 33 Note to readers: in the event that you purchase something through one of our affiliate links we may earn a commission.
SportsPulse: It's time to complete your bracket and our college basketball guru Scott Gleeson is here to supply you four potential Cinderellas that will either bust your bracket or assist you to rise above the others. USA TODAY INDIANAPOLIS ? At some point on Friday, the faculty kids playing free of charge will deliver an incredible basketball game that captures the country?s attention and many folks will log onto Twitter to type a lot of exclamation points about how exactly great it really is that the NCAA Tournament is back after a lot more than 700 days. Within Indianapolis where the NCAA is wanting to accomplish this tournament in the middle of a pandemic, NCAA president Mark Emmert and company will exhale because - for a moment, anyway - it'll change the subject from just what a disaster this week has been for the business?s reputation. In the week-long lead-up to the tournament, three dominant storylines have emerged: ? Six referees were sent home because they went out to dinner and one of them tested positive for COVID-19, a break of protocol that has been rooted partly in the NCAA?s failure to execute an orderly check-in procedure. ? Several players in the men?s tournament started a social media movement round the hashtag #NotNCAAProperty, slamming the NCAA for its failure so far to implement new rules that could allow college athletes to profit off their name, image and likeness. ? Then on Thursday, images emerged from the ladies?s tournament bubble in San Antonio showing a weight room - when you can call it that - that was really nothing more than a rack of light dumbbells. In comparison with the extensive and sophisticated weight room that has been create for the men, it looked like a clear inequity, prompting NCAA vice president for women?s basketball Lynn Holzman at fault insufficient space in a statement that acknowledged the problem but wasn?t exactly a mea culpa. Other than that, things are going great! BRACKETS: Start to see the 64-team fields for the men's and women's tournaments. Plus, expert picks. WE'RE NO. ...2? Vice President Kamala Harris jabs husband for picking No. 1 seeds MARCH MADNESS: Why holding an NCAA Tournament office pool is more important than ever before Fans watch as UCLA and Michigan State square off throughout their NCAA Tournament First Four game at Mackey Arena in West Lafayette, Ind. (Photo: Nikos Frazier, IndyStar) To be fair, it?s an enormous undertaking what the NCAA is attempting to accomplish this month. The logistics of gathering 68 men?s teams in Indianapolis and 64 women?s teams in San Antonio in a COVID-safe environment are beyond a lot of people?s ability to comprehend it. There are likely to be some transportation problems, some meals that might get cold, some resort rooms that aren?t ready on time. It happens. However the NCAA?s ability to perfectly execute on every detail of this event isn?t the problem. It?s having less common sense. The NCAA is really good at the symbolic stuff like putting John Thompson?s autobiography in the swag bags which were waiting for players in their rooms. It?s really bad at doing the substantive items that inform you they consider players essential parts of their money-making machine. And, as always, it leads to a completely unnecessary problem blowing up within their faces, making us question why this organization even exists if its primary function these days - gaining championship tournaments - is this half-assed. That?s not an exaggeration, by the way. Had COVID-19 not cancelled the 2020 tournament, this would be the fourth since the FBI uncovered massive corruption in college basketball. Not a single high-profile coach or school implicated in the scandal has been punished up to now, this means the NCAA has failed in its responsibility to provide justice. After a decade of kicking the can down the road on the inevitable push for name, image and likeness rights, the NCAA is currently getting whacked around by state legislatures and the U.S. Congress, failing to self-govern on the biggest existential problem of this generation. Meanwhile, Emmert has all but turned the job of NCAA president into a highly-paid irrelevance, his decade-long tenure having accomplished little aside from ceding even more control over the future of college sports to the commissioners of the five richest football conferences. At this stage, the NCAA exists mostly to host championships. Plus they start their marquee events this weekend looking sub-standard even at that. A boxed meal that doesn?t look particularly appetizing isn?t the end of the planet, and the players who compete in the tournament are likely to leave here thankful for the opportunity to be part of an event they have been watching their whole lives. The problem is the inability to admit that minus the players, there is absolutely no billion dollar contract for an NCAA Tournament. It?s easier for that fact to go unnoticed in a standard year. However when this isn?t a really fun experience, once the athletes are unable to move around the city because they please or even leave their hotel floor for most of the day, getting deodorant and a jigsaw puzzle left within their room seems less such as a gift and more as an insult. Not to mention they?re going to say it out loud because they know, now more than ever, that being denied the proper to profit off their likeness is wrong. They understand that the NCAA failing to supply the proper training equipment to utilize is wrong. Because they build these bubbles for the next three weeks, the NCAA has proven that playing a tournament in a pandemic can be done. Nonetheless it?s also given everyone involved more reason to look under the surface, and they haven?t necessarily liked what they?ve found. Follow USA TODAY Sports' Dan Wolken on Twitter @DanWolken. Autoplay Show Thumbnails Show Captions Last SlideNext Slide
Since Michigan State lost to Maryland in the Big Ten tournament, players and coaches have been confined to hotel rooms, per the NCAA COVID-19 protocols. Following Selection Sunday, MSU moved from one hotel to the next, where they quarantined on Monday. Aside from team meetings, film study, meals, and practice, athletes spend the majority of the day in their rooms. "You can find worse things on the planet; people have been through greater than we have," Michigan State head coach Tom Izzo said. "At this time, it's just different. It's not necessarily a bad different." The longtime Spartan isn't complaining about the situation because he realizes all 68 teams face a lot of the same challenges. But it's still something nobody, including Izzo, has ever gone through, even with all his coaching experience. When MSU tips off against UCLA Thursday night, it will have played one contest in 10 days, that is the precise opposite of how Michigan State finished the regular season. "It's just been a strange time once you played so many games in two weeks, and now it looks like we haven't played one in two months," said Izzo. "That is the way it is." It's Game DayHappy March Madness!Starters Media Timeout: MSU 9 UCLA 7 15:58 left in the initial half. Joshua Langford missed a mid-range jumper after MSU opened 4-for-4, and UCLA pulled back within 2-points following a 4-0 run. Media Timeout: MSU 19 UCLA 15 10:02 left in the first half. Michigan State attempting to use its size with Bingham, Hauser, and today Sissoko who will check in following a media timeout. Media Timeout: MSU 28 UCLA 21 7:02 left in the first half. Malik Hall drives to the basket and is fouled underneath; basket counts. Free-throw pending after timeout, Spartans with a 7-point lead and shooting 60% from the field. Halftime Stats Media Timeout: MSU 48 UCLA 45 15:55 left in the second half. Michigan State's 11-point lead is right down to three following a big run by UCLA to start out the next half. Media Timeout: MSU 62 UCLA 55 9:20 left in the next half. UCLA is getting a lot of clean looks from deep, but Michigan State obtaining a few jumpers from Henry and Langford to keep a 7-point lead with less than 10-minutes left. Media Timeout: MSU 64 UCLA 62 6:50 left in the next half. UCLA pulls within two points thanks to Jaime Jaquez Jr., who continues to lead all scorers with 24-points. Media Timeout: MSU 72 UCLA 67 4:00 left in the second half. Overtime: MSU 77 UCLA 77 Michigan State Timeout: UCLA 81 MSU 78 1:23 left in overtime. Final: UCLA 86 MSU 80
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