They don’t call it March Madness for nothing
From The GIST (hi@thegistsports.com)
Welcome to our 1,000th newsletter!
Whether this is your first or 999th time catching up on sports news with us, thanks so much for being here and leveling the playing field.
- The best way to celebrate the milestone? Scrolling on, of course, but also entering our free-to-play NCAA women’s March Madness tournament challenge before the first game tips off today at 11:30 a.m. ET. Check out the latest injury report, then lock in those picks.
— No. 9 CanWNT head coach Bev Priestman, after her defending gold medal–winning squad drew hosts No. 3 France, No. 23 Colombia, and No. 28 New Zealand for the group stage of the upcoming Paris Olympics. Oui oui.
Men's March Madness
🎓🏀 Greatness is the Goal-ke
The GIST: More than 86.2% of brackets were already busted just two games into the men’s first round yesterday. Must be March.
No. 14 Oakland’s Jack Gohlke shoots to stardom: The grad student guard drained a jaw-dropping 10 three-pointers — tied for second-most in a men’s March Madness game — to down blueblood No. 3 Kentucky 80–76 in the tournament’s biggest upset so far.
- Up next for the Golden Grizzlies and their newly minted Madness legend? No. 11 NC State, who also stormed to an 80–67 upset win over No. 6 Texas Tech last night.
No. 11 Duquesne upsets No. 6 BYU: The Dukes held off a furious BYU comeback to secure their program’s first March Madness win since 1969. All nine players on Duquesne’s roster contributed on the 71–67 scoresheet, signaling that they might have the depth to make a true Cinderella run — if they can pull off another huge dub over No. 3 Illinois tomorrow.
No. 11 Oregon’s momentum carries them over No. 6 South Carolina: A monster 40-point performance from senior guard Jermaine Couisnard lifted the Ducks to the decisive 87–73 win over South Carolina, proving that the hype is very, very real. They’ll try to keep the vibes high against a decidedly tougher No. 3 Creighton squad tomorrow.
No. 7 Dayton survives No. 10 Nevada: With less than eight minutes on the clock, the Flyers roared back from a 17-point deficit — holding Nevada to a measly four more points — to avoid the upset and nab the 63–60 win. They’ll need a much hotter start to have a chance against No. 2 Arizona tomorrow.
- Also barely squeaking by? No. 4 Kansas, who fought off a never-say-die No. 13 Samford squad to seal the 93–89 dub in a wire-to-wire thriller that ended with a controversial, game-changing foul call. Still sweating.
No. 10 Colorado State tastes their own medicine: The Rams humiliated Virginia by holding them to just 14 first-half points in their 67–42 First Four dub on Tuesday… only to struggle even worse with just 11 first-half points in their 56–44 first-round loss to No. 7 Texas last night. March comes at you fast.
Shohei Ohtani scandal
⚾ What are the odds?
The GIST: MLB’s season-opening Seoul Series quickly became overshadowed by scandal after news broke Wednesday that LA Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani’s longtime interpreter and friend Ippei Mizuhara had been fired amid allegations he stole millions from Ohtani to pay off his gambling debts. Jaw-dropping doesn’t even begin to cover it.
The details: The scandal surrounds at least $4.5M in wire transfers that were sent from Ohtani’s bank account to an illegal bookmaking operation that’s under federal investigation. Mizuhara — who’s been by the three-time MVP’s side since 2013 — reportedly incurred the debts.
The twist: Tuesday, the day before Ohtani’s highly anticipated Dodgers debut, Mizuhara sat down with ESPN to discuss the allegations. In the 90-minute interview, he said that Ohtani transferred the funds to cover Mizuhara’s gambling debt and that the two-way star “had zero involvement in betting.”
- Then came the pivot. The next day, Ohtani’s attorneys disavowed Mizuhara’s account, releasing a statement saying, “Shohei has been the victim of a massive theft,” before calling for an investigation into the matter.
- Mizuhara himself recanted his original story before being fired on Wednesday. Hmm.
Zooming out: The change in story has unsurprisingly led to rampant speculation and conspiracy theories, but the whole saga has also thrust the impact of sports betting back under the microscope. This week alone has brought this latest Ohtani news, sports betting–NBA fans crossing the line, and insight into how the recent proliferation of sports betting is impacting player mental health.
Together With The GIST
🔥 The power of hiring women
Hiring? The GIST’s job board is your one-stop shop for sharing your open roles with women and nonbinary folks in the game.
Recruiting diverse candidates into the industry is one of the best ways to level the playing field. When you post your roles on the job board, you reach our unique GIST community that’s committed to changing the game.
Share your opportunities with GISTers today.
🎟️ Tickets to the April 20th game between PWHL Toronto and PWHL Montréal sold out in 20 minutes on Wednesday and the league is poised to break the women’s hockey attendance world record when the puck drops at the Bell Centre next month. Puck yeah.
🏀 UConn forward and Kingston’s very own Aaliyah Edwards declared for the 2024 WNBA draft yesterday ahead of her No. 3 seed Huskies tipping off the NCAA tournament against No. 14 seed Jackson State tomorrow at 1 p.m. ET. One last dance.
👀 On Wednesday, disgraced former Royal Spanish Soccer Federation (RFEF) president Luis Rubiales’ home was raided by police as part of a corruption and money laundering investigation into the RFEF.
🥌 Canadian skipper Rachel Homan and her squad are still undefeated at the World Women’s Curling Championship heading into this weekend’s playoffs and could play for the gold medal on Sunday. Rock on.
⛳ Quebec’s Maude-Aimée LeBlanc leads the field after the opening round of the LPGA’s Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship as the action continues from California through the weekend.
🏎️ Ahead of Sunday’s 12 a.m. ET Australian Grand Prix, three-time world champion Max Verstappen put the rumors to rest, confirming he intends to fulfill his contract with Red Bull through 2028.
⛸️ ISU World Figure Skating Championship — Today through Sunday — CBC Gem
- After Deanna Stellato-Dudek and Maxime Deschamps won gold in the pairs free program — Canada’s first win in the event since 2016 — last night, the team Canada medal-chasing continues into the weekend. The cold never bothered them anyway.
🏀 NBA: Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Toronto Raptors — Tonight at 7 p.m. ET — Sportsnet One
- The offseason can’t come soon enough for the ever-struggling Raptors, but first they’ll welcome in MVP candidate and Hamilton’s own Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for some Friday night hoops.
🏒 PWHL: Toronto vs. Ottawa — Tomorrow at 1 p.m. ET — TSN 5
- League-leading Toronto just passed the Maple Leafs for the longest winning streak in city history and though Ottawa sits in the middle of the standings, they could be Toronto’s kryptonite, having already beaten them twice this season. Icy and spicy.
🥅 NHL: Edmonton Oilers vs. Toronto Maple Leafs — Tomorrow at 7 p.m. ET — Sportsnet+
- After the Leafs lit up the Washington Capitals on Wednesday, there’s a clash of the titans on deck with goals leader Auston Matthews facing off against fellow center Connor McDavid and the Oilers. Buckle up.
Here’s what has GIST HQ buzzing:
🏀 What’s (still) top of mind
Mental Health in the NBA. DeMar DeRozan and Kevin Love continue to advocate for destigmatization in the NBA, and their passion is reshaping the league both on and off the court.
👑 Who’s crowning a new champion
Athletes Unlimited Pro Basketball. The fast-paced, month-long season ends this weekend. Who will claim the crown?
📺 What to watch
Matthew Stafford: Locked In. The new documentary focused on the NFL quarterback will give an all-access look at family life, the 2023 playoff push, and his return to Detroit and is set to debut on April 18th.
Take Your Pick
Happy official NCAA women’s basketball tournament start day! The opening matchup features two basketball-crazed schools: who do you think will still be dancing when the final buzzer sounds?
Today’s email was brought to you by Lauren Tuiskula, Alessandra Puccio, Marga Sison, Lisa Minutillo, and Briana Ekanem. Editing by Laura Pastore, Janine Kiefer, Emma Leishman, and Lindsay Jost. Fact-checking by Parul Kanwar. Ops by Briana Ekanem and Marga Sison. Ads by Katie Kehoe Foster, Alexis Allison, and Dee Lab. Managing edits by Lauren Tuiskula. Head of content Ellen Hyslop.