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Men's college basketball rankings after Week 17: Updated Coaches Poll, AP Top 25

It's time for the penultimateUSA TODAY Sports Coaches Pollof the 2025-2026 college basketball season.

USA TODAY Sports

All the major conferences have one week left before their respective postseason tournaments. Arizona (Big 12),Duke(ACC), Michigan (Big Ten) and Florida (SEC) ― all ranked inside the top 7 of the Feb. 23 poll ―have claimed at least a share of their conference championship.

REQUIRED READING:March Madness bracket projection: Which teams could fight for No. 1 seed?

On Friday, Feb. 27, No. 3 Michigan earned a dominant 84-70 road victory over Illinois toclinch at least a share of the Big Ten, just two years after finishing dead last in the conference. Meanwhile, on Saturday, Feb. 28, Florida dismantled No. 17 Arkansas by a tune of 111-77 to clinch its first SEC regular season title since 2015.

No. 4 Iowa State, No. 8 Purdue, 9 Gonzaga, 11 Virginia and No. 14 Kansas all stumbled over the weekend, which could have an impact on this week's rankings. Just how much?

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Here's a look at the latest Coaches Poll and AP Top 25 for March. 2:

College basketball rankings

First-place votes in parentheses.

USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll

  1. Duke (28)

  2. Arizona (3)

  3. Michigan

  4. Connecticut

  5. Florida

  6. Houston

  7. Iowa State

  8. Michigan State

  9. Nebraska

  10. Texas Tech

  11. Illinois

  12. Gonzaga

  13. Virginia

  14. Purdue

  15. Kansas

  16. Alabama

  17. St. John's

  18. North Carolina

  19. Arkansas

  20. Miami (Ohio)

  21. Saint Mary's

  22. Vanderbilt

  23. Miami

  24. Saint Louis

  25. Tennessee

Other's receiving votes: BYU 35; Louisville 31; Wisconsin 23; Villanova 17; Missouri 10; Utah State 9; Clemson 8; Kentucky 5; UCF 3; Georgia 1.

AP Top 25

  1. Duke (55)

  2. Arizona (4)

  3. Michigan

  4. UConn

  5. Florida

  6. Iowa State

  7. Houston

  8. Michigan State

  9. Nebraska

  10. Texas Tech

  11. Illinois

  12. Gonzaga

  13. Virginia

  14. Kansas

  15. Purdue

  16. Alabama

  17. UNC

  18. St. John's

  19. Miami (Ohio)

  20. Arkansas

  21. Saint Mary's

  22. Miami

  23. Tennessee

  24. Vanderbilt

  25. Saint Louis

Others receiving votes: BYU 74, Kentucky 47, Louisville 47, Missouri 40, Wisconsin 27, Clemson 16, Utah St. 10, UCF 7, High Point 7, Dayton 5, Villanova 4, Navy 3, NC State 2, TCU 2, Ohio St. 1, Santa Clara 1.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Men's college basketball rankings: Updated Coaches Poll, AP Top 25

Men's college basketball rankings after Week 17: Updated Coaches Poll, AP Top 25

It's time for the penultimateUSA TODAY Sports Coaches Pollof the 2025-2026 college basketball season. All ...
Texas Tech student identified as victim in Austin bar shooting

One of the two victims in theAustin bar shooting early Sundayhas been identified as a Texas Tech University student, according to social media posts from his siblings and from a local politician.

NBC Universal Members of law enforcement patrol investigate after a mass shooting outside of Buford's bar in downtown Austin, Texas, on March 1, 2026. (Brandon Bell / Getty Images)

Ryder Harrington, 19, was killed in the shooting that unfolded just outside of a popular beer garden in downtown Austin that also left 14 others injured. The suspect, who was fatally shot by officers, had a history of mental illness, sources familiar with the investigation told NBC News.

"Ryder was the best mix of all the Harrington crew," his brother,Reed Harrington, wrote on Facebook in a post confirming his death.He said the entire family appreciates the condolences they have received.

Authorities have not yet publicly identified the other victims and are still working to determine a motive in the shooting, including whether it was an act of terrorism. The Austin Police Department is set to have a press conference this afternoon.

Ryder Harrington. (@reed.harrington via Instagram)

"It is unfair, to say the least, that my little brother was only given 19 years on this earth," Reed Harrington wrote. "Watching the man he had become, and seeing all the lives he touched, leaves me certain that this world was robbed of a great future."

The brother added, "I don't think life will ever feel normal again. I have no idea what I'm supposed to do, but I know you will always be there to guide me and be my mentor."

Harrington's sister,Reagan Harrington, called him her "best friend" in an Instagram postmemorializing him, adding, "I can't believe you aren't with me right now."

"Nothing would be enough to express how special you are to me," Reagan Harrington wrote. "I'm not sure how we're meant to work through this — all I can think about is seeing you again."

Ryan Harrington, the fourth of the siblings, alsoposted about Harrington's death on Instagram.

"I'm gonna miss my brother," Ryan Harrington wrote.

Harrington's death was also confirmed by his fraternity, Beta Theta Pi.According to the chapter's Instagram post, Harrington was a part of the Fall 2024 pledge class.

"From the moment he joined our brotherhood, he brought a light that was impossible to ignore," the Beta Theta Pi post read. "Ryder had a rare ability to truly enjoy life to make people laugh, to make moments feel bigger, and to make ordinary days unforgettable."

Beta Theta Pi will be hosting a candlelight vigil to honor their brother on Monday at 8 p.m., the post said. The chapter also started aGoFundMeto support Harrington's family.

Speaker of the Texas state HouseDustin Burrows posted about Harrington's passing on Xand said that the teen is the brother-in-law of one of his team members.

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"From all accounts, Ryder was exactly the kind of young man who made a difference without even trying — full of life, loyal to his friends, proud to be a Red Raider and a Texan, and someone who showed up for the people around him," Burrows wrote.

He added that he is praying for the Harrington family and "everyone who loved Ryder — the number appears to be countless."

Two killed in early Sunday shooting

Harrington was one of two victims killed in the shooting that broke out early Sunday morning outside of Buford's, a popular beer garden in downtown Austin. The other victim has not yet been identified.

Of the 14 injured, three were taken to the hospital in critical condition, said Robert Luckritz, chief of the county's emergency medical services. Their conditions were not immediately available as of Monday.

The shooter has been identified as 53-year-old Ndiaga Diagne. Officers shot and killed him shortly after the attack, police said.

Diagne was a Senegalese national and a naturalized U.S. citizen living in Pflugerville, Texas, four law enforcement officials told NBC News. At the time of the shooting, he wore a sweatshirt that said "Property of Allah," and a shirt underneath bearing an Iranian-flag theme.

Diagne appeared to have acted alone and had no ties to the state, according to sources who emphasized that the investigation is in its preliminary stages.

A Homeland Security official told NBC News that Diagne first entered the U.S. on March 13, 2000, on a B-2 tourist visa. He became a lawful permanent resident in 2006 based on marriage to a U.S. citizen and a naturalized citizen in 2013, the official said. He was arrested in 2022 in Texas for a collision with vehicle damage, the official said.

On Sunday, Alex Doran, a special agent with the San Antonio FBI field office, said, "There were indicators that on the subject and in his vehicle that indicate potential nexus to terrorism," but noted that it is "still too early to make a determination on that."

Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis said at a news conference Sunday that Diagne may have circled Buford's in his car before rolling his window down, striking patrons on the bar's front patio using a pistol.

He then parked the car, got out holding a rifle, and shot people who were walking by, Davis said. Officers encountered the man along West Sixth Street, which is when they shot him.

Buford's is 2 miles from the heart of the University of Texas at Austin campus and less than a mile from the Texas Capitol Building.

Other Texas officials offered their prayers and condolences for the victims, including Gov. Greg Abbott, who warned anyone who "thinks about using the current conflict in the Middle East to threaten Texans."

He appeared to be talking about the joint military operationsof the U.S. and Israeli governments against Iran, which killed the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Texas Tech student identified as victim in Austin bar shooting

One of the two victims in theAustin bar shooting early Sundayhas been identified as a Texas Tech University student, acco...
The hole in the sky: How Middle East airspace closures are reshaping global aviation

Open the airplane-tracking websiteFlightradar24right now and the change is unmistakable. Where one of the world's busiest aviation crossroads should be — a dense web of aircraft linking Europe, Asia and Africa — there is instead a yawning gap. A hole in the sky.

CNN Middle East airspace closures are forcing long-haul reroutes, increasing fuel costs and disruption, with potential knock-on effects for schedules and fares worldwide. - Flightradar24

As conflict escalates in Iran with knock-on effects across the Middle East, vast swaths of regional airspace haveclosed or emptied. And because this region sits at the center of modern long-haul travel, the disruption is rippling far beyond it.

For decades, Europe-to-Asia traffic has flowed straight through the Middle East. The region is home to some of aviation's most powerful megahubs — Dubai International Airport, Hamad International Airport and Zayed International Airport — and to carriers such as Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad Airways, whose business models are built on connecting East and West.

When that airspace closes, the consequences are immediate and global. Flights must reroute, often adding time, burning more fuel and creating knock-on complications for crews and aircraft — and higher costs.

Aircraft are displaced and crews stranded. As uncertainty mounts, there are implications for aircraft insurance, ticket prices and operational sustainability.

A collapsed bridge

Tony Stanton, consultant director of Strategic Air in Australia, describes Middle Eastern airspace as “a high-capacity bridge” between Europe and Asia. Pictured here: a plume of smoke caused by an Iranian strike is seen in the background as Emirates planes are parked at Dubai International Airport on March 1. - Altaf Qadri/AP

Tony Stanton, consultant director of Strategic Air in Australia, describes Middle Eastern airspace as "a high-capacity bridge" between Europe and Asia.

"When that bridge collapses, or the bridge closes, the traffic doesn't largely disappear," Stanton tellsCNN Travel."It tends to funnel either north or south into those two main corridors, and then what we see is those two corridors become very congested because they're narrow corridors."

The result: longer delays, more disruptions, greater uncertainty.

There's no room for improvisation. "Airlines can't just fly anywhere they like," Stanton says.

"They need permission to overfly each country's air space, and they can only route through airspace that's open and managed by air traffic control," he says. "They need to, obviously, get those permissions to overfly countries that they weren't overflying before."

Airlines do prepare for geopolitical volatility. Sophisticated risk-monitoring systems scan global flashpoints, allowing operations teams to model contingencies before closures actually happen.

New flight plans are calculated, fuel loads adjusted and crews repositioned — all through what Stanton says is a "well-oiled process."

But even this system can strain under prolonged disruption.

The current "hole in the sky" evokes earlier aviation shocks, including the months of paralysis during the Covid-19 pandemic, the days of transatlantic shutdown during the 2010 Icelandic volcano eruption, and the stillongoing rerouting caused by the Russia-Ukrainewar.

Japan AirlinesFlight JL43from Tokyo to London is a case in point. Before Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, it flew west over Russian territory. For the past three years, it has operated eastward over the Pacific, Alaska and Canada —addingup to 2.4 hours and burning about 5,600 extra gallons of fuel per flight, an increase of roughly 20%.

Long-haul aircraft already carry contingency fuel in case of last-minute route changes, but extended operating time can require additional crew members and costs. Pictured here: airplanes parked at the Dubai International Airport on March 1. - Altaf Qadri/AP

Those kinds of detours come at a cost.

Long-haul aircraft already carry contingency fuel in case of last-minute route changes, but extended operating time can require additional crew members — or even fuel stops if the new routing exceeds the aircraft's range.

"That also adds costs," Brendan Sobie, a Singapore-based aviation analyst and consultant, tells CNN Travel. "In some extreme cases, you might even need to have a fuel stop because the longer flight is out of the range of the aircraft that's being used. You add cost because you have to land to take off again. You have additional charges related to a refueling scenario."

Airlines will be covered, to some extent, by insurance, says Stanton.

"There is actually a thing called war risk insurance," he explains. That doesn't mean airlines will be monetarily unaffected. "If the insurers see the risk increasing, well, they'll seek to increase the premium."

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Meanwhile, oil prices, sensitive to Middle East conflict, add another variable.

"Airline stocks obviously took a little bit of a dive today because of the economic political uncertainty that can impact demand, sometimes, particularly short term," says Sobie.

In the short term, travelers are unlikely to see a sudden hike on flight prices.

But, says Stanton, if the Iran crisis becomes "a sustained international event, then airlines will then seek to incorporate their increased operating costs, their reduced effective capacity of the aircraft, back into ticket prices … Airlines will seek to and they'll have to recover their costs."

Misplaced crew and aircraft

The operational consequences go beyond fuel. Right now, many crew members and aircraft are stuck in affected regions — one of the reasons why travelers across the globe might experience knock-on flight chaos this week.

"You could be anywhere around the world, and you will likely be affected by what's going on at the moment," says Stanton. "An aircraft that currently is sitting in London — in the system the airline might have anticipated that being in Singapore or Brisbane or some other place."

Carriers do have contingency plans for this kind of scenario, activating reserve crews held on standby.

"Ordinarily, for when people call in sick, they'll activate the reserve crews," says Stanton. "They'll swap aircraft. They also have standby aircraft, and they'll even cancel flights to try and reset the network — that complicated, interconnected system."

Travelers and crew are stuck in affected regions and this has a knock-on effect across the global aviation network. Pictured here: people check a departure board displaying canceled flights to Middle East countries amid the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, at Heathrow Airport Terminal 4 on March 2. - Isabel Infantes/Reuters

Airlines house stranded employees in hotels as they wait to see when — or to what degree — airspace reopens and how the situation develops.

Emirates has alreadyannounced a limited resumption of some serviceson Monday evening.

As crew wait for updates, some airline employees have been posting updates on social media. Virgin Australia flight attendant Sarah Goodwin updated followers on TikTok, calling being stuck in the Qatari capital Doha "the craziest situation."

"I never, ever, in my life thought that I would ever be in a situation where I can hear missiles," shesaid.

The longer the disruption lasts, the longer the recovery times, says aviation analyst Brendan Sobie. Pictured here: Emirates Airlines plane is parked at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on March 1. - Michael Nagle/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Airlines' focus will be keeping crew safe, says Brendan Sobie.

"In this kind of crisis situation, obviously, safety is first and foremost … You try to look after your crew as best as you can," he says. "And then, once things improve, you try to restart things and move the crew back into position, get them back home and start to try to return to normal operations as quickly as possible, but obviously as safely as possible as well."

Austrian Airlines, part of the Lufthansa group, ran a crew evacuation flight to Muscat, Oman, returning to Vienna, Austia on Monday morning local time, a spokesperson for the airline told CNN.

When will flights return to normal?

The longer the disruption lasts, the longer the recovery times, says Sobie. "If everything completely reopens, that makes it easier than, say, a partial reopening where there's still a lot of limitations. So, it's really impossible to predict or forecast, in this case — or in any case, really — how long it will take for a return to normal operation."

But safety concerns beyond the affected region are unwarranted, Stanton adds. "Major airlines don't just make these decisions just by looking at Flightradar24 and going, 'All right. Everybody else is going to the north. Let's go north.'"

He reiterates that airlines "run really structured intelligence, informed risk assessments."

"They've got specialist security teams, flight ops teams, dispatch teams. They listen to government advice. They probably get some intelligence that we don't get, and they make very careful decisions about when they're going to operate," he says.

"Particularly the major airlines … I personally would be comfortable to jump on a British Airways or a Qantas or Emirates aircraft if that aircraft was operating, because I have comfort in the systems and the risk assessments that the airlines would be running in the background to operate their assets."

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The hole in the sky: How Middle East airspace closures are reshaping global aviation

Open the airplane-tracking websiteFlightradar24right now and the change is unmistakable. Where one of the world's bus...
New York City's tab for police misconduct settlements: Nearly $800 million since 2019

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City paid more than $117 million last year to settle police misconduct lawsuits in cases ranging from the violent arrests of protesters in 2020 to bad police work that led to wrongful convictions in the 1980s, according to a newly published analysis of city data. Nearly $800 million in payouts were made over the last seven years.

Associated Press

The largest settlements last year, totaling $24.1 million, went to two men who spent more than 20 years in prison after they were wrongly arrested and convicted for a fatal 1986 robbery in midtown Manhattan robbery. Another settlement, for $5.75 million, went to a man who said policeblinded him in his left eyewith a stun gun.

The analysis, released Monday by the nonprofit public defender organization The Legal Aid Society, comes as the nation's largest city faces a $5.4 billion budget shortfall. Along with broader cuts, Mayor Zohran Mamdani has proposed trimming $22 million from the NYPD's $6.4 billion budget as itcontinues to tout lower crime numbers. Settlements are paid out of a separate part of the city's budget. Elsewhere, they're paid directly from a police department's operating budget.

"This analysis is really about transparency around what the NYPD is costing us," said Jennvine Wong, the supervising attorney with the organization's Cop Accountability Project. "And from what we can tell here, I think it means that meaningful accountability has been lacking in the police department. It's a chronic problem that needs to be addressed."

NYPD says it's increasing accountability, helping right wrongs

In all, the city settled 1,044 police misconduct lawsuits in 2025, the most since 2019, when 1,276 were resolved. It was the fourth straight year with settlements exceeding $100 million. Last year's total was nearly double the $62.1 million the city paid in 2020 to settle 929 lawsuits. In 2024, the city paid $206.4 million in 980 lawsuits.

Those amounts are just a part of the city's overall police misconduct toll. The Legal Aid Society's analysis only includes lawsuit settlements, not claims that the city comptroller, the official in charge of financial matters, resolved prior to formal litigation.

Of last year's settlements, about $42 million were for wrongful convictions and $28 million — nearly a quarter of the payout total — involved incidents that occurred more than two decades ago. Such cases have also accounted for a substantial portion of the $796 million the city has paid to resolve police misconduct lawsuits since 2019, the NYPD said.

"While these cases are very important to address, they tell you nothing about the state of policing today," the department said in a statement.

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Under Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, the NYPD "has taken significant steps to increase accountability, compliance, and change outdated policies that might create greater risk," the statement said. The department said it also works closely with the city's district attorneys' offices, providing material to facilitate their review of cases involving wrongful arrest and conviction claims.

Multimillion-dollar payouts for wrongful convictions and brutality

The men wrongly convicted in the fatal 1986 robbery, Eric Smokes and David Warren, received $13 million and $11.1 million, respectively. In a lawsuit filed in 2024 in federal court, they alleged that a corrupt detective relied on the word of an emotionally handicapped and drug-addled 17-year-old who was seeking a way out of his own separate robbery rap. Three of the four witnesses who identified Smokes and Warren as the killers only did so after being threatened with criminal charges, the lawsuits said.

Another settlement, for $3.9 million, went to Steven Lopez,a sixth man arrested with the so-called Central Park Five, now known as the Exonerated Five, after their convictions in the 1989 rape of a female jogger were overturned. The Five went to trial but Lopez, under intense police and public pressure, pleaded guilty to a lesser charge that he mugged a male jogger the same night.

Other settlements included $1.7 million for four protesters who said officers beat them with batons or threw them to the ground during a June 2020 demonstration in Brooklyn over the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police.

The city paid $5.2 million to nine people who said they were framed in cases from 2014 to 2016 by two officers who were later convicted of falsifying testimony or paperwork.

Stop-and-frisk continues to be a concern, police monitor says

Last week, a court-appointed monitor criticized the NYPD for poorly supervising and underreporting officers' use of the tactic known as stop-and-frisk. In 2013, a federal judge ruled that the NYPD's frequent use of the tactic to search for guns and drugs violated the civil rights of Black and Hispanic New Yorkers.

Since then, the department has sharply cut down on stop-and-frisks, but continues to have "unacceptably low compliance rates" with constitutional protections, said the monitor, Mylan L. Denerstein.

The NYPD's staggering settlement costs suggest more needs to be done to drive down misconduct, and a "lack of accountability has continued to contribute to a culture of impunity," Wong said.

"These judgments and settlement costs are costing the city so much money and are costing the victims of police misconduct not just monetary losses and financial losses, but also causing real human trauma that they carry with them," she added.

New York City’s tab for police misconduct settlements: Nearly $800 million since 2019

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City paid more than $117 million last year to settle police misconduct lawsuits in cases ranging...
Chiefs reportedly plan to release lineman Jawaan Taylor before start of league year if they can't trade him

In an effort to get under the NFL salary cap ahead of the new league year, the Kansas City Chiefs are reportedly set to part ways with one of their starting offensive linemen. Jawaan Taylor was reportedly informed he would be cut if the team couldn't find a trade partner for Taylor, per ESPN's Adam Schefter.

Yahoo Sports

Taylor, 28, has proved extremely durable over his career, starting 111 games over seven seasons.

The move is essential for the Chiefs, who are currentlyestimated to be roughly $8.6 million overthe 2026 salary cap. The Chiefs can save roughly $20 on the cap by parting ways with Taylor.

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While Kansas City is set to lose a multi-year starter, it might be the ideal time for the team to make the move. Taylor ranked 80th among NFL tackles last season, per Pro Football Focus' metrics. He did miss time with an elbow injury later in the year, though it's unclear if that affected his play before he was lost for the season.

If Taylor can bounce back, he could prove to be a solid contributor with his next team. After being selected by the Jacksonville Jaguars in the second round of the 2019 NFL Draft, Taylor did not miss a single regular-season game in his first five seasons in the league. He missed one game with the Chiefs in 2024 before the elbow issue caused him to miss five games last season.

If the Chiefs are going to find a trade partner for Taylor, the team will need to act fast. The new league year is set to begin March 11, giving the team a little over a week to resolve the situation. Given that teams know Taylor is set to become a free agent soon, there might not be much interest in the tackle until he hits the open market.

Chiefs reportedly plan to release lineman Jawaan Taylor before start of league year if they can't trade him

In an effort to get under the NFL salary cap ahead of the new league year, the Kansas City Chiefs are reportedly set t...

 

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