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Iran wants to move its World Cup matches from US to Mexico. FIFA is sticking to its schedule

GENEVA (AP) — The public wrangling between Iran, FIFA and U.S. President Donald Trump over the narrative of playing at the World Cup in June shifted on Tuesday to Mexico where its diplomats suggested Iran's soccer team could play its games.

Associated Press FILE - Irans's players pose for a team photo before an Asian group A qualifying soccer match against North Korea for the 2026 World Cup, June 10, 2025, at Azadi Stadium in Tehran, Iran. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi, file) FILE - President Donald Trump stands on stage next to the FIFA World Cup after receiving the FIFA Peace Prize during the draw for the 2026 soccer World Cup at the Kennedy Center in Washington, Dec. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

Iran-US-Trump-World Cup

The Iranian ambassador and embassy in Mexico City said the country was negotiating with FIFA to move Iran's three group-stage matches from the United States to Mexico after Trump last weekdiscouragedthe team from attending the48-nation tournament, citing safety concerns.

It was already unclear whether such talks were even happening before FIFA said such unprecedented changes in World Cup history were not planned to a match schedule agreed three months ago.

In a statement, FIFA said it is "in regular contact with all participating member associations, including (the Islamic Republic of) Iran, to discuss planning for the FIFA World Cup 2026. FIFA is looking forward to all participating teams competing as per the match schedule announced on Dec. 6, 2025."

The Feb. 28 start of U.S. and Israeli bombing of Iran that killed the Islamic republic'sSupreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khameneiand senior officials immediately cast doubt on the national soccer team going to play at least three World Cup games in the U.S., which is co-hosting the most watched global sports event with Mexico and Canada.

Iran's soccer federation has not canceled its World Cup entry with FIFA, though official comments have variously suggested the U.S. is unable or unwilling to ensure the delegation's secure arrival and accommodation.

Since last week, Trump has variously said "I don't really care" if the Iran team comes, that it was welcome and would be treated like all players as stars, and that the players' safety was at risk.

In comments posted late Monday on the embassy website, Iran's Ambassador to Mexico Abolfazl Pasandideh urged FIFA to move the team's games to Mexico, saying the U.S. was not cooperative on visas.

"We love the Mexican people very much and for us, the best situation is for our games to be held in Mexico," he was quoted as saying by state-run news agency IRNA.

An Iranian government spokesman andthe team itselfhave said in recent days it is up to FIFA and the U.S. to keep the team safe during the World Cup. The Iran team's planned training camp is in Tucson, Arizona.

Pasandideh's embassy in Mexico City also posted astatementattributed to national soccer federation president Mehdi Taj saying Iran wants to move its group-stage matches out of the U.S.

"When Trump has explicitly stated that he cannot ensure the security of the Iranian national team, we will certainly not travel to America," the statement said. "We are currently negotiating with FIFA to hold Iran's matches in the World Cup in Mexico."

Iran is scheduled to play New Zealand on June 16 and Belgium on June 21 in Inglewood, California, before finishing group play in Seattleagainst Egypt on June 26.

Moving the games would be remarkable less than three months before the World Cup and risks being judged a failure in the history of tournament hosting.

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It also is not envisaged by Iran's first opponent.

New Zealand soccer federation chief executive Andrew Pragnell said on Monday "I also don't foresee it as remotely feasible" to move scheduled games to another country. Tens of thousands of tickets have been sold for Iran games, including to visiting fans who have booked flights to the U.S.

"By trying to move the match schedule, you actually create more problems down the track," Pragnell told New Zealand media outlet Stuff, adding "I don't think it'll happen."

The Belgian soccer federation declined to comment on Tuesday.

Trump said last week that the Iran team was welcome at the World Cup despite the ongoingwar in the Middle Eastbut "I really don't believe it is appropriate that they be there, for their own life and safety."

Iran's mixed signals includesports minister Ahmad Donyamalitelling state TV last week that it was not possible to play "due to the wicked acts they have done against Iran."

But after Trump's post thenational teamsaid on Instagram that "no one can exclude" it from the tournament and a government spokesman in Tehran stressed it was theresponsibilityof FIFA and the U.S. as a co-host nation to keep players safe and secure.

"FIFA is the organizer of the World Cup," Iran Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said. "When warnings are issued at the highest level about the environment being unsafe for Iranian football players, this indicates that the host country apparently lacks the capacity and ability to provide security for such an important sporting event."

Soccer is followed passionately in Iran, a nation of more than 90 million people which has qualified for seven men's World Cups and each of the past four editions. The team is ranked No. 20 in the world by FIFA and behind only Japan from Asia.

FIFA has not commented in recent days beyondan Instagram postby president Gianni Infantino last week that he'd received assurances from Trump that Iran was welcome at the tournament.

Pye contributed from Brisbane, Australia. Amir-Hussein Rajdy in Cairo also contributed.

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Iran wants to move its World Cup matches from US to Mexico. FIFA is sticking to its schedule

GENEVA (AP) — The public wrangling between Iran, FIFA and U.S. President Donald Trump over the narrative of playing at th...
March Madness 2026 picks: Predictions, odds, lines, schedule for Tuesday's First Four games

For the rest of history UMBC being in the NCAA tournament will bring up good memories — unless you're a Virginia fan.

Yahoo Sports

In 2018, the University of Maryland, Baltimore County pulled off an upset that was thought to be close to impossible for years. The Retrievers became the first No. 16 seed to beat a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. They not only won, but they beat Virginia by 20 points. In 2023, Fairleigh Dickinson repeated the feat by beating No. 1 seed Purdue, but UMBC will always be associated with the No. 1 vs. No. 16 upset. And now the Retrievers are back in the tournament, looking to get another shot at a No. 1 seed.

Here are the picks for the First Four games on Tuesday, with all oddsfrom BetMGM:

UMBC (-1.5) over Howard

Both of these teams played well late in the season. UMBC won 15 of its last 16, while Howard won 14 of 16 to finish.

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Howard lives on its defense, which is very good at forcing turnovers and missed shots, and UMBC has a solid offense. One difference here might be that UMBC doesn't turn it over. It's 27th in college basketball in turnover rate,according to KenPom.That could mitigate one of Howard's biggest strengths.

UMBC's Josh Odunowo holds the trophy after beating Vermont in the America East tournament final. (Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

As the spread shows, this should be a competitive game to get the tournament going. The pick is UMBC, which is far better at making shots.

NC State (+1.5) over Texas

NC State was a hot team during the offseason. It hired Will Wade, a good coach who was run out of LSU due to controversy over paying players (kind of funny now, isn't it?), went to McNeese and built a program there that won an NCAA tournament game last season. NC State did well in the transfer portal, in particular landing coveted forward Darrion Williams from Texas Tech. But the results didn't follow the hype. NC State is 20-13 and went an ugly 2-7 down the stretch.

Picks by region:East|South|Midwest|West

Texas is in Dayton for the First Four for a reason, too. It's a mediocre Longhorns team that lost five of its last six, including an opening-round loss at the SEC tournament to a bad Ole Miss team.

Even though both teams stumbled to the finish, it should be an entertaining game. Both teams are strong on offense and match up well. In a tight matchup, here's the deciding factor: NC State shoots 3-pointers very well, ranking 10th in the nation, and Texas doesn't cover the perimeter that well. The Longhorns are 299th in 3-point percentage allowed. One of these teams has to break a bad late-season slump.

March Madness 2026 picks: Predictions, odds, lines, schedule for Tuesday's First Four games

For the rest of history UMBC being in the NCAA tournament will bring up good memories — unless you're a Virginia fan....
Muskets crack, drums echo as Boston marks 250 years since British evacuation

BOSTON (AP) — Reenactors in 18th-century military coats and tricorn hats filled the pews of one of the nation's oldest Catholic Churches on Tuesday before firing muskets outside and marching through neighborhood streets, marking the 250th anniversary of the day British forces evacuated the city.

Associated Press

Men, horses and even cattle moved through South Boston's hills in the morning wind as residents watched from stoops — some in pajamas and wrapped in blankets, appearing to have been awakened by the sound of drums and bagpipes.

Evacuation Day commemorates March 17, 1776, when British troops withdrew from Boston. The breakthrough came when Gen. George Washington fortified Dorchester Heights with artillery hauled from Fort Ticonderoga by Col. Henry Knox, prompting the British evacuation.

The event marked the Continental Army's first major victory of the Revolutionary War, ending an 11-month siege of Boston and securing the city for the American cause.

The anniversary also traditionally falls on St. Patrick's Day, a pairing that has shaped Boston's celebrations for decades and was marked again with a combined parade in South Boston last weekend.

The ceremony Tuesday began at St. Augustine Chapel and Cemetery, where participants gathered for Mass in the 1818 building before forming a procession that moved through South Boston toward Dorchester Heights, the hill where colonial forces positioned artillery overlooking the harbor. A monument there, recently renovated through a $37 million project, has reopened to the public.

Ronald White of Milton, dressed in colonial attire, stood with reenactors firing replica muskets in the church's graveyard following the service and said the anniversary carries personal meaning.

A member of the New Hampshire Sons of the American Revolution, he traces his lineage to an ancestor who fought in the war. His eyes teared up Tuesday talking about how inspired he feels by the nation's founders.

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"To think that 250 years ago Henry Knox made such a courageous stand, I get choked up thinking about it," White said. "They really were going up against a force — it was kind of a suicidal idea to stand up against Great Britain. And we did it. Here we are remembering it."

Richard Vige, who lives in a Boston suburb, said he came to Dorchester Heights for the first time to mark the 250th anniversary, despite a lifelong interest in American history.

"I've always been interested in history, really since grade school," he said. "I've visited many of the sites along the Freedom Trail, but I had never been here before. I wanted to take advantage of the 250th to see what was going on."

He said attending the commemoration offered a chance to reflect on how far the country has come since its founding — from a cluster of colonies along the Atlantic to a nation of more than 340 million people.

Greta Gaffin, a Boston University theology student studying American religious history, said the Catholic service struck her as historically ironic.

Holding a Catholic Mass to mark the anniversary is a scene the nation's founders might not have imagined. Colonial Massachusetts long restricted Catholic worship, and churches did not take root in Boston until after the Revolution, as religious freedoms expanded and Irish immigration reshaped the city.

"I'm here because I think having a Catholic Mass in honor of Evacuation Day is conceptually absurd," she said. "They would have hated this — I had to see it.

"And I love parades," she added.

Anti-Catholic sentiment was widespread in colonial New England, though it had begun to shift by the Revolutionary War, when the American cause relied in part on Catholic France. The Quebec Act, which protected Catholicism in neighboring Quebec, was seen by some colonists as a threat and is reflected in grievances in the Declaration of Independence.

Muskets crack, drums echo as Boston marks 250 years since British evacuation

BOSTON (AP) — Reenactors in 18th-century military coats and tricorn hats filled the pews of one of the nation's oldes...
Ranking 8 most likely March Madness upsets in NCAA Tournament first round

There's nothing — not even the champion who cuts down the nets on the first Monday night of April — that defines theMen's NCAA basketball Tournamentquite like an upset.

USA TODAY Sports

The 68-team event is designed to set aside spots for teams from the smallest schools and conferences in the sport and give them an opportunity to take on some of college basketball's biggest juggernauts on the brightest stage the sport has to offer.

While a healthy percentage of those games are blowouts, others produce the kinds of results and moments that are only possible inMarch Madness. Over these next three weeks,Cinderella storieswill be crafted andunlikely heroes will emerge.

March Madness expert picks:Bracket predictions for 2026 NCAA Tournament

March Madness Cinderella predictions:VCU, Akron top NCAA Tournament upset picks

One of the many quandaries facing the millions of people filling out brackets across the country ahead of the2026 NCAA Tournamentthis week are identifying those underdogs and trying to correctly guess what seemingly overmatched teams will topple their favored opponents.

<p style=VCU Rams (27-7)
VCU closed the season with a 21-3 record over the final 24 games and won 16 of its last 17 games. A matchup against No. 6 North Carolina in the first round, before a potential matchup against No. 3 Illinois, sets up the Rams as well as an 11-seed can be set up.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Miami (Ohio) RedHawks (31-1)
With 90.7 points per game, Miami was second in the nation in points per game, trailing only Alabama, while leading the nation with 52.4% shooting from the field.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=South Florida Bulls (24-8)
South Florida enters the NCAA Tournament on an 11-game winning streak. winning the American Conference tournament championship game 70-55 over Wichita State.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Troy Trojans (22-11)
Troy could be the biggest Cinderella this year after winning back-to-back Sun Belt tournament titles.  Nebraska is officially on upset alert with a matchup against Troy.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Saint Louis Billikens (28-5)
Saint Louis can light up the scoreboard, averaging 87.2 points per game, and ranking among the national leaders in 3-pointers per game.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=High Point Panthers (30-4)
The Panthers offense is explosive enough to threaten any higher seed it faces. They average 90 points per game shooting 49.1% from the field.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

March Madness bracket busters eye the next big upset

VCU Rams (27-7)VCU closed the season with a 21-3 record over the final 24 games and won 16 of its last 17 games. A matchup against No. 6 North Carolina in the first round, before a potential matchup against No. 3 Illinois, sets up the Rams as well as an 11-seed can be set up.

To help with that task, and to offer up some advice that surely won't backfire, here's a look at the eight most likely upsets for the 2026 NCAA Tournament:

March Madness upset predictions

For this exercise, 7-versus-10 and 8-versus-9 games were not considered, as the seed-line difference in those matchups is relatively negligible.

1. No. 11 South Florida over No. 6 Louisville

This one's a trendy pick for a reason. Louisville and South Florida are stylistically similar, with both squads employing up-tempo, 3-point-heavy offenses. That would seem to favor the more talented Cardinals, but there are a number of factors that should make the Bulls bullish. For one, there are lingering questions around Louisville freshman star point guardMikel Brown Jr., who has dealt with persistent back issues this season and whose playing status for the NCAA Tournament is unclear. With Brown, the Cardinals are 16-5. Without him, they're just 7-5. Even if the projected NBA draft lottery pick is available — and if he is, he's unlikely to be 100% — Louisville's underwhelming group of big men may struggle with 6-10 South Florida forward Izaiyah Nelson, the American Conference player of the year who averages 15.7 points and 9.6 rebounds per game.

The Bulls are one of the hottest teams in the country, riding an 11-game win streak into the tournament, and that could very well continue, even as their level of competition ramps up.

2. No. 11 VCU over No. 6 North Carolina

North Carolina's another ACC program dealing with an injury to a superstar freshman, though the Tar Heels' outlook is more definitive. They'll be without standout forward Caleb Wilson,who is sidelined for the rest of the seasonafter undergoing surgery on a broken thumb. Since Wilson's injury, coach Hubert Davis' team is 5-4 after a 19-4 start. It has picked up some impressive wins in that time, beating tournament teams like Louisville and Clemson, but it will get a formidable challenge in the Big Dance from a VCU squad that has won 16 of its past 17 games — with the only loss coming on the road at Saint Louis in a game in which the Rams led for much of the night.

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3. No. 11 Texas over No. 6 BYU

BYU still has its transformative freshman, A.J. Dybantsa, healthy and available, but it's missing another critical piece in standout guard Richie Saunders, an 18-point-per-game scorerwho's out for the season. The Cougars are 5-5 since Saunders went down, but even before he tore his ACL on Feb. 14, his team was starting to slip, with a 2-5 mark after a 16-1 start. It's a group that could struggle with Texas, which fits the time-honored mold of a talented power-conference squad that underachieves in the regular season before getting hot in March. The Longhorns have a bona fide stud in guard Dailyn Swain and a coach in Sean Miller who has experience advancing past the first week of the tournament.

This upset, of course, would require Texas knocking off NC State in a play-in game. And while Dybantsa has the talent and drive to single-handedly guide BYU on a deep tournament run, his team's one of the more vulnerable top-six seeds heading into March Madness.

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4. No. 13 Hofstra over No. 4 Alabama

This upset pick was already generating traction shortly after the bracket was revealed, but it has become even trendier after Aden Holloway, Alabama's No. 2 scorer, wasarrested Mondayand charged with two felony drug offenses. The university said Holloway has been removed from campus and won't be with the team while his case is investigated, making a return for Friday's game unlikely. The Crimson Tide shoot 3s at a higher rate than anyone else in Division I, making them an explosive squad offensively, but also making them more prone to an upset on an off shooting night and without Holloway, the team leader in made 3s, things get even more precarious.

Hofstra, meanwhile, has two road wins this season against power-conference opponents, Pitt and Syracuse, and has one of the country's top scorers in guard Cruz Davis (20.2 points per game). The Pride are also third nationally in 2-point field goal percentage defense, according to KenPom, meaning they can neutralize Alabama inside the arc and hope its attempts from deep don't connect.

5. No. 12 Akron over No. 5 Texas Tech

The Red Raiders have been a top-20 team throughout the season and were a popular Final Four pick as recently as a month ago, but once All-American forwardJT Toppin was lost for the seasondue to a torn ACL, Texas Tech's outlook changed dramatically. Since Toppin went down, the Red Raiders are 3-4 and, making matters worse, have more injury concerns after star guard Christian Anderson suffered what appeared to be a groin injury in the Big 12 tournament (the program has said Anderson will be available for the NCAA tournament).

It's a less-than-ideal situation heading into a matchup against a battle-tested Akron squad appearing in its fourth NCAA tournament in the past five years and boasting one of the best scorers in the country in guard Tavari Johnson (20.1 points per game). If the Zips — who have won 19 of their past 20 games and are 32nd in the country in tempo, according to KenPom — can dictate the pace of the game, watch out.

6. No. 11 SMU over No. 6 Tennessee

Like Texas-over-BYU, this is more of a matchup-dependent prediction, as Miami (Ohio) would have a much tougher time against a bigger, more talented Tennessee team should it continue its magical season with a First Four victory. SMU, though, could cause the Vols some problems. The Mustangs have one of the nation's best backcourts in Boopie Miller, Jaron Pierre Jr. and BJ Edwards, who combine to average 49.5 points per game and could win a track meet against a Tennessee team that occasionally struggles to score.

7. No. 13 Troy over No. 4 Nebraska

Nebraska's the only program from a power conference that has never won an NCAA tournament game, a drought that appears likely to end this year with a squad that went 26-6 in the regular season. The Cornhuskers stumbled down the stretch, though, going 6-6 in their final 12 games and could encounter some issues against a tough-minded Troy team that has a road win against San Diego State and a one-point, triple-overtime road loss to USC. This season, the Trojans are holding opponents to 31.3% on 3s, which could be a problem for a Nebraska team that makes its living beyond the arc.

8. No. 12 High Point over No. 5 Wisconsin

This one's probably the least likely upset of all the games listed, if only because the Badgers are 15-5 since Jan. 6 and have as good of a guard tandem as there is nationally in Nick Boyd and John Blackwell, who combine to average 39.6 points per game. Still, High Point is far from your typical team from a one-bid conference, with a roster reportedly worth more than $4 million. The Panthers are 30-4 and have won their past 14 games, the longest active streak in the country. If nothing else, it wouldn't be the first time in the past few years that Wisconsin has lost as a No. 5 seed to apurple-clad mid-major in the first round of the tournament.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:March Madness upset predictions: Ranking most likely first round surprises

Ranking 8 most likely March Madness upsets in NCAA Tournament first round

There's nothing — not even the champion who cuts down the nets on the first Monday night of April — that defines theM...
Retired US Air Force major general missing for weeks: What we know

Authorities in New Mexico are conducting an extensive search for a retired U.S. Air Force general who disappeared from his home nearly three weeks ago.

USA TODAY

Retired Maj. Gen.William "Neil" McCasland, 68, was last seen on the morning of Feb. 27 at his residence in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office said ina statement. His wife reported him missing later that day after returning home from a medical appointment to find he was gone, leaving behind his phone, glasses, and other personal items.

Following McCasland's disappearance, local authorities issued aSilver Alert, which is an advisory for a missing person who is 50 or older and has an "irreversible deterioration of intellectual faculties," according to the New Mexico Department of Public Safety. The sheriff's office initially reported that the alert was issued for McCasland due to unspecified "medical issues."

During anews conferenceon March 16, the sheriff's office said the Silver Alert remained in effect and had been issued because McCasland previously reported that he was experiencing a "mental fog." But Lt. Kyle Woods of the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office underscored that investigators do not believe McCasland was cognitively impaired at the time of his disappearance.

"There's no indication, and we are not putting forward that Mr. McCasland was disoriented, confused," Woods said. "Arguably, he would still be the most intelligent person in the room that any of us would be in. Highly intelligent, highly capable, but that information was given to us early on, and out of an abundance of caution, we escalated to a silver alert to try to garner as much public attention as possible to try to help locate him as soon as possible."

The sheriff's office said there were still no confirmed sightings of McCasland and reiterated that there is currentlyno evidence of foul play. The case remains an active missing-person investigation.

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Timeline of William McCasland's disappearance

A repairman interacted with McCasland at his home at around 10 a.m. local time on Feb. 27, according to atimeline released by the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office.

McCasland's wife, Susan McCasland Wilkerson, left for a medical appointment at about 11:10 a.m. and returned shortly after noon to find him gone, the sheriff's office said. He left behind his phone, prescription glasses, and wearable devices at the residence.

After attempting to contact family and friends, McCasland Wilkerson reported him missing at about 3:07 p.m., and the investigation began immediately, according to the sheriff's office.

Investigators later determined several items appeared to be missing from the residence, including his hiking boots, a wallet, and a .38-caliber revolver with a leather holster, the sheriff's office said. Investigators believe he may have been wearing a light green long-sleeve outdoor shirt at the time of his disappearance.

On March 7, a gray U.S. Air Force sweatshirt was discovered about 1.25 miles east of the home and prompted additional search efforts in the area, the sheriff's office said. Authorities said the sweatshirt has not been confirmed to belong to McCasland, and initial testing detected no blood.

William Neil McCasland

FBI joins in search for missing retired US Air Force general

The Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office said investigators have conducted extensive search operations involving drones, helicopters, K-9 teams, and volunteer search crews.

Investigators have also expanded a neighborhood canvass to more than 700 homes while requesting security camera footage that could help determine whether McCasland left the area or indicate a direction of travel, the sheriff's office said.

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Despite those efforts, investigators have not identified any confirmed sightings or videos showing McCasland "leaving the area or indicating a direction of travel," according to the sheriff's office.

The sheriff's office described McCasland as an avid outdoorsman who frequently hikes, runs, and cycles in Albuquerque's Northeast Heights and the Sandia foothills. McCasland is 5 feet, 11 inches tall and weighs about 160 pounds. He has white hair and blue eyes.

Investigators are asking residents and local businesses to review security camera footage from Feb. 27 and Feb. 28, particularly from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Feb. 27, and submit any possible sightings. They are also asking hikers and others who were in the Sandia foothills during that time to review GoPro or cellphone recordings that might have captured McCasland.

Anyone who believes they see McCasland is urged to call 911 immediately, authorities said. The FBI's Albuquerque field office is assisting the investigation, though the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office remains the lead agency in the case.

New research:SETI thinks it could have missed calls from aliens. Here's why

McCasland's Air Force career and Wright-Patterson role

McCasland was the commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, according to his Air Force biography. He managed a $2.2 billion science and technology program, as well as $2.2 billion in additional customer-funded research and development.

He joined Wright-Patterson in 2011 andretired in 2013, reported theCincinnati Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network. The Dayton Air Force base was home to Project Blue Book in the 1950s and 1960s, according to "The Air Force Investigation into UFOs" published by Ohio State University.

During that time, it logged 12,618 UFO sightings, with 701 of those remaining "unidentified." The U.S. government created the project because of Cold War-era security concerns and Americans' obsession with aliens.

Because of McCasland's leadership role at Wright-Patterson, his disappearance has prompted speculation online about possible connections to classified programs,according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Earlier this month, McCasland Wilkersonshared a statement on social mediato "dispel some of the misinformation circulating" about her husband and his disappearance. She said after his retirement, McCasland briefly worked on UFO-related projects by Tom DeLonge, a UFO researcher and guitarist for the band Blink-182.

"It is true that Neil had a brief association with the UFO community through Tom DeLonge, former frontman for Blink-182 and founder of the organization To The Stars,"McCasland Wilkerson wrote. "Neil worked with Tom for a bit shortly after his Air Force retirement as an unpaid (Neil's choice) consultant on military and technical/scientific matters to lend verisimilitude to Tom's fiction book and media activities."

She also noted that McCasland did not have "any special knowledge about the ET bodies and debris from the Roswell crash stored at Wright-Patt" and that it "seems quite unlikely that he was taken to extract very dated secrets from him."

Contributing: Chad Murphy, Cincinnati Enquirer

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Retired US Air Force major general missing for weeks: What we know

Retired US Air Force major general missing for weeks: What we know

Authorities in New Mexico are conducting an extensive search for a retired U.S. Air Force general who disappeared from hi...
Undefeated in the regular season, Miami (Ohio) is now the ultimate March underdog

Over the last half-century, only a few handful Division 1 basketball teams have finished the regular season undefeated. The list includes some of the most memorable teams in the history of the sport — Larry Bird's 1979 Indiana State team, the 1991 Runnin' Rebels of UNLV and John Calipari's 2015 Kentucky team full of future NBA stars.

NBC Universal UMass v Miami (OH) (Dylan Buell / Getty Images file)

This year, they were joined by ... Miami (Ohio), a midsized public school in Oxford, tucked in the southwest corner of the state. The RedHawks play in the Mid-American Conference, with schools such as Bowling Green and Ball State. Their roster is not stocked with high-profile recruits or players with NBA upside.

But Miami finished the regular season a perfect 31-0, jumped into the Top 25 rankings and became the talk of college basketball — until it stumbled Thursday in the MAC Tournament. The RedHawks lost to UMass, a middling team with a 17-16 record, blowing their chance at a guaranteed spot in the NCAA Tournament.

On Sunday, the RedHawks had to watch the March Madness Selection Sunday show, like everyone else, to learn their fate. They ended up making the tournament as a No. 11 seed, but there was a catch. They have to play SMU on Wednesday night in one of the "First Four" games, to determine which of the two made the full field.

In other words, despite Miami's historic regular season, it had been one of the last teams picked and had squeaked into the tournament. Such is the plight of the mid-major school in today's college basketball landscape.

"I felt we were in when we finished 31-0," David Sayler, Miami's athletic director, told NBC News. "At the end of the day, just being in is all that matters. Having a seat at the table."

UMass v Miami (OH) (Dylan Buell / Getty Images file)

Sayler tried to look at the positive. The SMU game will be played in Dayton, about an hour up the road. "My phone has not stopped buzzing for ticket requests," he said Sunday night.

To Miami's students, alumni and boosters, it has been a Cinderella season, probably the best in school history. Miami made the Sweet Sixteen in 1999, powered by future NBA great Wally Szczerbiak. But over the next 25 years, the RedHawks made the tournament once, a first-round exit in 2007, and had been largely irrelevant.

"There were, like, 200 people" for his first game at Miami in 2022, coach Travis Steele recalled. Official attendance was listed around 2,000, but Millett Hall, the team's arena, can hold 10,000 people. On the court, you could basically hear the person talking in row 15.

"The atmosphere was the worst in our league, and I would tell you, it was probably the worst I've seen in college basketball," Steele said. "I mean, it was horrendous."

Steele had spent the previous 14 years at Xavier, a Jesuit university known for its basketball prowess, less than an hour away from Oxford in Cincinnati. Steele worked there as an assistant when the Musketeers were fixtures in the Sweet Sixteen, and he was elevated to head coach in 2018.

But Steele couldn't continue his predecessors' success. In four seasons, he went 70-50, never made the NCAA Tournament and was ultimately fired. "You're going through a lot of emotions — angry, sad, frustrated," Steele said. "I had been there forever."

Soon, Sayler, the Miami athletic director, reached out about its open job. The RedHawks had never really been consistent winners, but Steele was intrigued. At Xavier, he felt he couldn't really change the culture, how things had been done before. At Miami, Steele could "knock down the house," he said, "and build from scratch, build it exactly like I wanted to build it."

In discussions with Sayler, Steele mapped out a plan. While other schools (with bigger budgets) recruited players in the transfer portal, he'd focus on high school students, focus on coaching them up, getting them better and creating an environment in which they wouldn't want to transfer if bigger schools with bigger budgets came calling.

"I told him I think there's good enough players within a five-hour radius of Oxford in order to win championships and get this thing to the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament," Steele said. "And I have the connections to do that in this region," from his time at Xavier.

"I thought that was the right recipe for [Miami]," he added. "While everyone was zigging, we were zagging."

By year three, last season, the RedHawks won 25 games, a school record at the time. In the MAC championship game, Miami led Akron by nine points with under nine minutes to play, only to slowly let the lead slip away. Akron ended up winning on a last-second push shot to secure the conference's only berth in March Madness.

A few days later, Steele met with his players one by one. In today's college basketball landscape, players are threats to transfer every year. Steele needed to pitch them to stay and not leave for bigger schools.

"You've got to figure out who's on the ship and who's not," he said.

Like a scene out of "Rudy," one by one, the players told him they would stay — all of the RedHawks' top underclassmen except one who bolted for Georgia Tech and another to Kentucky. Most players decided to "run it back again," said Brant Byers, a RedHawks guard, "just the way last year ended. ... We got that close and just fell short."

During offseason workouts, Steele noticed the players were putting in extra effort, had a chip on their shoulder. "I basically had to tell these guys, listen, slow down a little bit," he said. "They're diving on the floor for a loose ball in three-on-three in April."

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The RedHawks seemed poised for a great year; there was just one problem — nobody wanted to play them.

Each March, the NCAA selection committee evaluates prospective at-large teams, the teams that won't get automatic bids, using advanced analytics that consider details like strength of schedule. In this system, Miami didn't have much standing. That meant if a bigger program played the RedHawks and won, it wouldn't help their résumé that much in the eyes of the selection committee.

"It's a lose-lose for them to play us," Steele said. "It's a numbers game."

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Miami reached out to more than 70 schools, trying to schedule games. Matt Brown, a journalist who covers sports on the website "Extra Points," filed an open records request and obtained internal emails showing the length to which the RedHawks went. It turned out they had tried contacting some of the best teams in the country: Wisconsin, Michigan State, Ohio State, UCLA, Kansas, BYU, Florida, Illinois and Nebraska.

Of all the requests, "half of them didn't even bother to respond," Sayler said. "The others responded with 'Sorry, we just can't work it out.' Then a couple of them, who they're good friends, would call and say, 'Sorry, dude, you guys are too good.'"

Steele typically leaves scheduling to one of his assistants. This time, he got involved. He reached out to friends in the sport, tried calling in favors, even resorted to begging.

"I was like, coach, play us!" Steele said. "Why are you scared about us? You've got 15 million [in NIL money] in your team. You're scared to play Miami?"

As one might expect, Miami's schedule this season wasn't very good. It included little-known schools like Indiana University East, Milligan and Trinity Christian. The analytics website Kenpom now ranks Miami's strength of schedule 269th in the country.

The RedHawks went undefeated in the regular season thanks in large part to their balanced offensive attack. They have six players averaging more than 10 points per gameandall six shot better than 34% from 3-point range. They score 90.7 points a game, the second-most in the nation. "The go-to guy for us is the open guy, not one specific player," Steele said, "which makes us very hard to prepare for."

At the start of the season, the RedHawks' home games were still sparsely attended. But as the season went on and the wins piled up, students and alums took notice. By February, Miami was selling out Millett Hall with 10,000-plus crowds. Szczerbiak and Ron Harper, another Miami legend, attended games. So did the Cleveland Browns' Myles Garrett and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine.

Travis Steele holds his chin while watching a basketball game from the sidelines. (Frank Jansky / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

"Tickets were going for, like, $300 on StubHub," Steele said. "Like, are you kidding me? At Miami? It's never been that way. Ever."

But as the NCAA Tournament approached, critics started poking holes in Miami's résumé. The loudest might have been Bruce Pearl, the former coach-turned-TV commentator. Pearl said the RedHawks were "not built for the grind" of a bigger conference, like the Big Ten or the Big East. He suggested they would make the NCAA Tournament only if they won their conference tournament for an automatic bid.

To some, Pearl had a point. Even with a weak schedule, the RedHawks nearly lost several games. They hadeightwins decided by three points or fewer. Their defense seemed vulnerable, too; they allowed 75.3 points per game, which ranked 220th in the country. Plus, Miami had lost its starting point guard, Evan Ipsaro, to a torn ACL in December.

Amid some backlash, Pearl changed his tune. He interviewed Steele on TNT and said, "I kind of feel like you're Cinderella and I'm the ugly stepmother."

Then Miami lost to UMass, and the RedHawks' magic moment lost some of its shine. Now they'll play SMU on Wednesday in Dayton, just to get the chance to play No. 6 seed Tennessee on Friday in Philadelphia. The Volunteers happen to be one of Pearl's former teams.

In the meantime, Sayler, the athletic director, is trying to keep the good times rolling. He recently persuaded the school's Board of Trustees to approve $281 million for a new arena. He also offered Steele a contract extension that would tie him to the school for eight years.

Steele hasn't reviewed the contract in detail yet. He will when the season ends. By January, agents and other schools had already begun contacting him, asking whether he had interest in higher-profile jobs. He figured his players were being contacted, too, and so he made a pact with them then "to wait until the offseason to deal with stuff," he said.

Steele knows how that looks, delaying signing the extension. But he points out that his wife has strong ties to the Cincinnati area, not far away, and the Steeles still live in the same house they did at Xavier. "I would tell you we're very happy here at Miami," Steele said.

Still, Sayler said he had to "always be on alert" that another school would poach his basketball coach or the players who changed the course of the program.

"The system is just so tilted toward those schools with the big money," Sayler said. "They can schedule how they want. They can pick players how they want to come replace their other players. Then, at the end, when they don't think you measure up, they can say, 'Well, you don't have good enough metrics.' Well, that's because you didn't let us! You wouldn't play us."

In his public comments recently, Sayler has been citing Yoda from the "Star Wars" franchise. He said it felt like Miami was "fighting the Evil Empire," fighting for "the heart and soul of March Madness. It's Cinderella. It's great stories."

"That's why this team is so special," he added. "It's what college athletics is still supposed to be, even though people don't think it can happen anymore. It's happening in Oxford, Ohio."

Undefeated in the regular season, Miami (Ohio) is now the ultimate March underdog

Over the last half-century, only a few handful Division 1 basketball teams have finished the regular season undefeated. T...
Record-breaking temps, wind and rain follow bizarre weather across US

A deep freeze across the South, a spreading heat wave in the West and a trail of high winds and downpours leaving the East are in the forecast on March 17 after a weekend of bizarre weather across the country.

USA TODAY

On the heels of amajor storm that delivered downpours, high winds and thunderstormsalong the U.S. East Coast, the National Weather Service is predicting a "quieter" period of weather for many. Still, an early heat wave is making it feel like summer in Southern California, and temperatures in the triple digits will spread across the Desert Southwest by the middle of the week.

"Temperatures this hot so early in the year could shatter high temperatures records by as much as 10 degrees," the weather service said.

As the heat dome spreads, over 70 million people could be impacted and put a strain on water resources, reported AccuWeather.

The extreme opposite is happening in the Deep South the morning of March 17: More than 53 million Americans awoke to a freeze warning blanketing states in a stretch from east Texas to South Carolina.

Tornado touches down in Charlotte after warnings across the East

Thesevere weather outbreak on March 16knocked power out for hundreds of thousands of people and prompted flight cancellations, school closures and early closures of government offices. Tornado watches blanketed much of the East Coast.

A tornado was confirmed to have touched down in Charlotte, North Carolina, the morning of March 16, according to the weather service office for Greenville and Spartanburg. The EF-0 tornado with estimated peak wind speeds of 85 mph touched down at around 9:39 a.m. and stayed on the ground for almost a mile and a half, the office said. No injuries or deaths werereported.

The weather service said the morning of March 17 that a "deep cyclone" and a cold front were moving through New England before exiting up into Canada later in the day. In the meantime, gusty winds, downpours and falling temperatures are continuing.

A school bus drives through a flooded lane on March 16, 2026, in Cabin John, Maryland. Severe storms brought high winds, thunderstorms and tornado warnings to parts of Washington, D.C., and Maryland.

Temperature extremes across the US: Record lows and highs possible

Low temperatures across the South the morning of March 17 were expected to be in the 20s and 30s, with lower temperatures at higher elevations and wind chills in the teens. Record lows are also possible overnight into the morning of March 18 across the region, the weather service said.

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Across the Desert Southwest, widespread high temperatures in the 90s are expected, with several major cities expected to reach triple digits this week, AccuWeather reported. Extreme heat warnings were in place on March 17 across Southern California, southern Nevada and much of Arizona.

Phoenix could see highs of around 106 degrees from March 19 through the weekend, which would be 20 to 30 degrees above the historical average for this time of year, the outlet reported. Las Vegas could hit 100 degrees this week, weeks ahead of the usual timing.

Los Angeles could challenge its all-time March record of 99 degrees this week. Even San Francisco could reach the low 80s, breaking decades-old records.

"Record highs are likely or possible from California to the Rockies, including Salt Lake City, Albuquerque and Denver," AccuWeather reported.

Kona storm devastates Hawaii with deluge of rain, winds

A dayslong "kona storm" caused heavy rain, flash flooding and damaging windsacross much of the Hawaiian Islands through the weekend, with the southern parts of Maui and Big Island hit the hardest, the weather service in Honolulu said.

Homes and businesses were flooded and roads were closed. In Kihei, Maui County, a video showed homes partially collapsed from flooding. Downed trees and power lines caused power outages and damage to roofs, the weather service there said.

Between March 11 and March 15, feet of rain fell, with the highest recorded totals around 4 feet on the Island of Maui in the Kula area. Summits across the islands saw the highest rainfall totals.

These were the highest recorded wind gusts:

  • Kaiaulu Puu Waawaa, Big Island: 135 mph

  • Mauna Kea Summit, Big Island: 110 mph

  • Kula, Maui: 108 mph

  • Waimea, Kauai: 96 mph

  • Makapuu Beach, Oahu: 81 mph

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Record-breaking temps, wind and rain follow bizarre weather outbreak

Record-breaking temps, wind and rain follow bizarre weather across US

A deep freeze across the South, a spreading heat wave in the West and a trail of high winds and downpours leaving the Eas...

 

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