How the title game was built: No. 1 UConn outlasted Alabama, will face No. 1 Purdue

From four to two. Here’s how UConn and Purdue booked their spots for what will be a national championship game between two giants of this season.

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South Carolina's Kamilla Cardoso shoves LSU's Flau'jae Johnson sparking skirmish in wild end to SEC title game

The SEC Women’s Basketball Championship was already going to be a heated contest between the rivals South Carolina Gamecocks and LSU Tigers, but things went overboard during the game Sunday.

Gamecocks center Kamilla Cardoso and Tigers guard Flau’jae Johnson got into a skirmish in the fourth quarter after MiLaysia Fulwiley stole the ball from Johnson, who was later called for a foul.

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With the clock stopped, Johnson pushed away South Carolina’s Ashlyn Watkins after the sophomore forward began to celebrate in her face.

Cardoso came over and shoved Johnson to the floor, which sparked pushing and shoving between players as coaches began to break them up. At least one person came over the scorers’ table and onto the court to get into the brouhaha before getting whisked away by security.

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The incident caused a 19-minute delay in the game with the undefeated Gamecocks leading 73-66.

LSU’S LAST-TEAR POA STRETCHERED OFF COURT AFTER SCARY INJURY, SET TO MISS SEC TITLE GAME

Cardoso, who was the hero of the semifinal game for South Carolina, was ejected from the game. Both benches were ejected from the game as well. The game ended with 5-on-5 basketball.

Cardoso will likely have to miss South Carolina’s first game of the NCAA tournament because she was ejected for fighting.

South Carolina coach Dawn Staley apologized to the basketball community.

“You know, when you’re playing in championship games like this in our league, things get heated,” she told ESPN after the game. “No bad intentions. Their emotions got so far ahead of them that, sometimes these things happen. I want to apologize for us playing a part in that.”

South Carolina won the game, 79-72. It’s the eighth SEC Tournament Championship win for the Gamecocks in the last 10 seasons. Fulwiley led the team with 24 points.

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'I'm just itching to get another chance at it': Why Blues star Robert Thomas is ramping up his defensive game

Thomas lifted the Stanley Cup in 2019 as a rookie with the Blues. Now that he’s a team leader, he’s working to round out his 200-foot game.

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Bills fan killed in shooting outside Dolphins stadium after game, police say

A Buffalo Bills fan was shot and killed shortly after watching his team win the AFC East on Sunday night, police said.

Dylan Issacs, 30, was identified as the victim who died outside Hard Rock Stadium, where the Bills had just beaten the Miami Dolphins, 21-14.

Issacs, who was from Canada, attended the game that decided the division champion – Buffalo had clinched a playoff spot earlier in the day with the Jacksonville Jaguars’ loss, while Miami clinched weeks earlier.

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Police said Issacs was shot after he and a group of friends “had a verbal argument with the subject” while walking “through the traffic,” according to WIVB in Buffalo.

“The subject exited the vehicle and fired several rounds” before fleeing the scene “in an unknown direction,” police said.

Police have since recovered the vehicle from which the shots were fired, and a suspect has been located, Miami’s Local 10 reported. The car was found in West Palm Beach, but no arrests had been made as of Wednesday afternoon.

MICHELE TAFOYA RIPS JIMMY KIMMEL’S ‘PREDICTABLE’ RANT ABOUT AARON RODGERS

A GoFundMe has been launched to help his family with funeral fees and have him laid to rest in Six Nations, Canada.

“On behalf of Dylan’s family, we would like a moment to express our sincere and heartfelt gratitude to those who have donated, shared and sent prayers to us during this challenging and painful time,” the page read. “To the Bills Mafia, the Buffalo Bills as well as the Miami Dolphins and fans and to everyone across Turtle Island, thank you for coming together and showing up with so much love and support for us and our community. It has been truly inspiring to see the things we can do as human beings with empathy and compassion for one another.”

The GoFundMe also states that an “unknown male… tried to intentionally hit” the group with the vehicle.

“He always made people laugh,” Isaacs’ mother, Susan, told CBS News. “We are all hurting and he played an important part in everyone’s lives. Now we need help with burial expenses. I just need to pay for his funeral and his casket.”

“Conflicts are not worth a life,” she added. “I’m was just a game and people were mean. We are all here and we will never forget you. You will live forever in our hearts. He will not be forgotten.”

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On this day in history, December 28, 1958, Colts beat Giants for NFL title in 'greatest game ever played'

The Baltimore Colts stunned the New York Giants 23-17 in “sudden death” at the NFL championship game at Yankee Stadium before a mesmerized nationwide television audience on this day in history, Dec. 28, 1958. 

The event has gone down in American sports lore as “the greatest game ever played.”

The dramatic title tilt helped popularize pro football at a time when it ranked behind baseball and college football — even boxing and horse racing — in the national sporting consciousness. 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, DECEMBER 27, 1932, RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL OPENS AMID GREAT FANFARE IN NEW YORK CITY

“The game captured the collective attention of the nation and as a result, pro football exploded across the country in the following years,” writes the Pro Football Hall of Fame. 

“By the mid-1960s, professional football became the nation’s favorite sport to watch and has remained on top ever since.”

The nationally televised spectacle was highlighted by two dramatic late scoring drives engineered by an unheralded 25-year-old Colts quarterback named Johnny Unitas. 

The sports thriller capped a long Christmas weekend for millions of Americans who were tuning into pro football for the first time. 

They witnessed the first overtime game in pro football history; one of the first NFL games broadcast nationally; and an incredible galaxy of football legends on the field and on the sidelines. 

Among them: New York Giants stars Frank Gifford, Sam Huff and Pat Summerall; and Colts icons Raymond Berry, Art Donovan and Lenny Moore.

A total of 17 future Hall of Famers participated in the game as players, coaches or executives.

The Giants coaching staff included assistants Tom Landry and Vince Lombardi

No star shined brighter than that of Unitas, who emerged from the game an American legend.

A sandlot gunslinger playing for $7 a week just three years earlier, he marched the Colts from their own 14-yard line in the final two minutes to set up a game-tying 20-yard field goal with seven seconds left to play in regulation. 

“It was one of the most dramatic two minutes in the history of any sport,” former NFL executive, broadcaster and football historian Upton Bell told Fox News Digital. 

TIM TEBOW REVEALS HIS AFTER-CHRISTMAS CHALLENGE TO ALL, ‘EVEN IF IT FEELS SCARY’

“People in those days knew you couldn’t put together a scoring drive in two minutes.”

Bell’s father, the late Bert Bell, was the NFL commissioner at the time. 

The senior Bell had convinced team owners just a few years earlier to adopt a “sudden death” format in the event of a tie in the league championship game. 

In “sudden death,” the first team to score wins. 

Without it, the 1958 NFL championship game would have ended in a 17-17 tie. 

“I don’t think a lot of people realized historically at the time what sudden death meant,” said Bell, who was in the stands for the game.

“Many players on the field didn’t understand. People around me were ready to go home, thinking the game ended as a tie.”

MEET THE AMERICAN WHO WAS THE FIRST PAID PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL PLAYER: PUDGE HEFFELFINGER

The Giants failed to score on the opening drive of overtime. 

Unitas then led the Colts 80 yards on 13 plays for the game-winning score.

An estimated 45 million Americans gathered around the television for the final minutes of unprecedented sports drama. 

They watched as Colts running back Alan “The Horse” Ameche crashed over the goal line from one yard out for the winning score. 

The massive viewership shattered all known television audiences for football that had come before. 

Mayhem ensued on the field, as a sense of witnessing history rushed over the 64,000 fans in attendance.

Unitas completed 26 of 40 passes for 349 yards — startling numbers in that era. His teammate Berry caught 12 passes for 178 yards. 

Berry’s 12 receptions stood as an NFL championship game/Super Bowl record for 55 years. 

The previously unknown sports term “sudden death” entered the American vernacular that day, said Bell. 

It’s still commonly used in all sports to describe a contest that ends on the next score by either team.

Commissioner Bell, a pro football pioneer, broke down and cried after the game, realizing he had witnessed a landmark moment for a league that often struggled to survive since its 1920 founding. 

The game benefited from low ambient lighting and the sharply different white jerseys of the Colts and dark blue jerseys of the Giants. 

It gave the game a stark, thrilling palette that popped on black-and-white television.

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“Many of the viewers just beginning to tune in were not regular watchers of pro football and they were seeing something starkly different than the traditional college games played on sunny autumn afternoons,” author Mark Bowden wrote in his 2008 book, “The Best Game Ever: Giants vs. Colts, 1958, and the Birth of the Modern NFL.” 

He added, “This was more like mortal combat from some dark underworld. A master cinematographer could not have lit the scene more dramatically.” 

The massive interest in the game fueled the creation of the rival American Football League the following year. 

Eight AFL teams took the field for the first time in 1960. 

The two leagues merged in 1966 with the creation of the first AFL-NFL championship game, an event now known around the world as the Super Bowl. 

A behemoth of American sports culture, the Super Bowl was made possible by the drama of the 1958 NFL title game. 

A 2019 poll of dozens of football experts confirmed the status of the 1958 NFL championship contest as “the greatest game ever played.” 

The second greatest game on the list: the improbable 34-28 comeback win by Tom Brady and the New England Patriots over the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI.

It was the only other NFL championship game that went into overtime. 

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Kirby Smart pleads Georgia's case for College Football Playoff bid after losing SEC title game

For the first time in two years, the Georgia Bulldogs lost a football game Saturday.

The top-ranked, two-time defending national champions were upset in the SEC title game by No. 8 Alabama, creating chaos for the College Football Playoff committee.

Georgia was riding a 29-game winning streak entering Saturday afternoon, and its last loss came Dec. 4, 2021 in the SEC championship against Alabama.

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But that loss didn’t keep the Bulldogs out of the 2021 College Football Playoff. And Georgia got its revenge by beating Alabama in that season’s national championship.

Georgia coach Kirby Smart says Saturday’s loss shouldn’t keep his Bulldogs out this year either. 

“[Committee executive director] Bill Hancock said it’s not the most deserving,” Smart said after the game. “Simply, it’s the best four teams. You’re gonna tell me somebody’s sitting in that committee room and doesn’t think that Georgia team is not one of the best four teams? I don’t know if you’re in the right profession. 

“It’s a really good football team. It’s a really talented football team. It’s a really balanced football team. They have to make that decision, but it’s the best four teams.”

WASHINGTON HOLDS OFF OREGON TO WIN FINAL PAC-12 CHAMPIONSHIP, ALL BUT SECURING COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF SPOT

Georgia scored a touchdown on its first possession of the game, but the Crimson Tide earned its seventh conference title in the last decade.

It’s rare a team has made the CFP without winning its conference. But it happened with Ohio State in 2016, Alabama in 2017 and the 2021 Georgia team.

No. 7 Texas remains in the mix with its Big 12 title. At the time of publication, No. 4 Florida State looks like it will finish 13-0 with an ACC title, which still might not even be enough. And who knows what happens if No. 2 Michigan is upset by No. 19 Iowa in the Big Ten championship?

The Bulldogs will find out their fate Sunday afternoon.

Kent State's surprise onside kick to start game backfires in worst way possible

Kent State wanted to gain immediate momentum in their game Saturday afternoon – however, they got anything but.

The Flashes were set to kick to Eastern Michigan, but to the Eagles’ surprise, Kent State went for the onside kick instead.

It didn’t work out, as Eastern Michigan’s Kendric Nowling was able to recover it. And he gained possession of the ball standing up with room to run.

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So, he took off, and instead of what Kent State thought was the worst-case scenario in simply just playing defense at their own 45-yard line, Nowling took it all the way to the house for a game-opening kick return for a touchdown.

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NO. 7 WASHINGTON BEATS NO. 8 OREGON WHEN LAST-SECOND FIELD GOAL MISSES WIDE

That was the beginning of Kent State’s 28-14 loss to the Eagles, as they fell to 1-6 on the season.

Kent State was held scoreless until the end of the third quarter. In their first nine drives, they punted five times, turned it over on downs twice and fumbled once. The other was the end of the first half. The Flashes also lost fumbles on two of their three final drives as they tried to come back.

It was an ugly game in ugly weather overall, as both teams combined for 18 punts. Kent State actually outgained EMU, 343-218, but they were unable to fight back from their attempt at immediate satisfaction.

After their fourth consecutive loss, Kent State will host Buffalo next week. Saturday was Eastern Michigan’s second-straight win, and they will head to Northern Illinois next week.

Here Come the Pats! Plus: The “What’s Wrong?” Game, Taylor vs. Jake, and Guess the Lines With Cousin Sal

The Ringer’s Bill Simmons is joined by Cousin Sal to discuss the Patriots’ blowout win vs. the Browns, the Cowboys’ blowout win vs. the Falcons, a surprising Buccaneers loss to the Washington Football Team, a rocky first game back for Russell Wilson, Chargers-Vikings, Steelers-Lions, and more (2:38). Then they Guess the Lines for NFL Week 11 (40:38) before closing the show with Parent Corner (1:18:40).

Host: Bill Simmons

Guest: Cousin Sal

Producer: Kyle Crichton

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On this day in history, September 24, 1943, Babe Ruth plays his last game for the New York Yankees

Baseball legend Babe Ruth played his last game as a Yankee in New York on this day in history, Sept. 24, 1934. 

He was 39 years old. 

Only 4,000 fans were on hand for his finale at Yankee Stadium, which was against the Boston Red Sox, noted The Los Angeles Times. 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1806, LEWIS AND CLARK RETURN TO ST. LOUIS AS HEROES AFTER JOURNEY

Ruth was walked in the first inning. He was replaced by pinch-runner Myril Hoag, recounted the same source.

No one knew at the time that the day would be his last in pinstripes at Yankee Stadium. Ruth was traded in the off-season.

Remarkably, this day in history is “a double-landmark” day for Ruth — as Sept. 24, 1919, is the same date that he became baseball’s single-season home run record holder, according to the Los Angeles Times.

The two milestones were 15 years apart.

Only 24 years old in 1919, Ruth was both a pitcher and an outfielder for the Boston Red Sox. 

He was 9-5 and had a 2.97 earned-run average in the 17 games he pitched, according to the same source. 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, SEPT. 30, 1927, BABE RUTH SWATS RECORD 60TH HOME RUN, SHOCKS SPORTS WORLD

“He played in 130 games, batted .322 and drove in 114 runs. And on this date, he hit his 28th home run, breaking Ned Williamson’s single-season record. Ruth finished the season with 29 homers,” said The Los Angeles Times. 

The next year, Ruth would wear a Yankee uniform — and as a full-time outfielder he smashed 54 home runs.

On Aug. 11, 1929, as a New York Yankees slugger, Ruth became the first player to eclipse 500 career home runs, according to ESPN.

He was already baseball’s all-time home run leader to that point, and by a comfortable margin, according to multiple sources. 

It took until 1940 before anyone joined Ruth in the 500 home-run club, when Boston Red Sox first baseman Jimmie Foxx hit his just over 11 years later, noted ESPN. 

BABE RUTH GLOVE SELLS FOR RECORD $1.5 MILLION AT AUCTION

Across his first six MLB seasons as a member of the Red Sox, Ruth hit 49 home runs while also spending time as a pitcher. 

He exploded once he became a Yankee, though, blasting 467 home runs in the 1920s alone, the same source chronicled.

Interestingly, Ruth was walked more than any batter in history, 2,056 times, according to The Los Angeles Times. 

In 1923, he was walked 170 times — for another record. 

After his 54- and 59-homer seasons of 1920 and ‘21, his intentional walks skyrocketed. 

“In 13 seasons he was passed more than 100 times,” the same source noted.

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, MAY 25, 1935, BABE RUTH HITS HIS 714TH HOME RUN

Known as “The Bambino,” Ruth concluded his career with 714 home runs, an individual record that stood until Atlanta Braves outfielder Hank Aaron passed him in 1974. 

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San Francisco Giants outfielder Barry Bonds took over as the home run king in 2007, and he still has the most at 762, the same source stated.

Ruth was a member of the inaugural National Baseball Hall of Fame class in 1936.

He was honored along with Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, Christy Mathewson and Honus Wagner, according to several sources.

The seven-time World Series champion naturally has his No. 3 jersey retired by the Yankees. 

The first season the Yankees even wore jersey numbers was 1929, the same year Ruth hit 500 home runs, according to Sports Illustrated.

Ruth died of throat cancer at age 53 on Aug. 16, 1948, in New York City. 

His body lay in state at Yankee Stadium for two days. During that time, over 100,000 fans paid their last respects, according to History.com.

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