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South Carolina womenâs basketball will have the No. 1 overall seed in the SEC Tournament thanks to a coin toss victory over No. 6 Texas after the teams ended the regular season in a tie.
The coin toss was only third on the list of tiebreak criteria. Thus, we were treated to a riveting 27 seconds of television during halftime of yesterdayâs LSU-Ole Miss game.
Gamecocks win the coin toss!@GamecockWBB will be the No. 1 seed in the SEC women’s tournament đ€ pic.twitter.com/ouJD6hkmVP
â SEC Network (@SECNetwork) March 2, 2025
SEC commissioner Greg Sankeyâs custom coin was a nice touch.
Other sports use a coin toss to determine seeding, but itâs further down the list of criteria. In the NFL, for example, itâs the 12th option in the procedure for divisional ties ahead of the playoffs; the NBA and WNBA also have several other criteria. So this brings us to our next Pulse Poll: Should sports be quicker to put seeding to a coin toss?
Jacob Robinson was on the ground at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis all of last week gathering insights for Scoop City. In his newsletter later this morning, heâll have an extensive look at risers and fallers after testing â and whether they really matter â but The Pulse got a sneak preview:
đ QB Brady Cook. No quarterback improved their prospects more than Cook, a projected Day 3 pick/UDFA from Mizzou who struggled with accuracy in college but impressed at the combine. His lower-body explosiveness was on display with a broad jump mark (128 inches) that rivaled Anthony Richardsonâs record (129 inches) in one of the most predictive metrics for future NFL production.
đ QB Tyler Shough. While Cookâs ceiling is limited, Shough showed well and could be an early-round pick. Heâs the prospect who might fall due to narratives like âtoo oldâ (turns 26 in the fall) and âinjury historyâ (three major injuries in seven college seasons). Given the recent success of older quarterbacks like Bo Nix, Shoughâs strong broad jump score and impressive touch could make him the first quarterback taken after Shedeur Sanders.
đ WR Matthew Golden. After Xavier Worthyâs record-setting 2024, a Texas Longhorn again led receivers in the 40-yard dash. Goldenâs 4.29-second dash suggests the current No. 30 prospect on The Athleticâs Big Board will go earlier in the first round.
đ OL Armand Membou, a 6-foot-3, 332-pound Goliath of an offensive lineman hit a top speed of 20.28 miles per hour during his 40-yard dash, where he set the best mark among all tackles (4.91 seconds) while letting out a primal scream. The speed (and maybe the passion?) vaulted yet another Mizzou kid into the conversation for first offensive lineman drafted.
đ S Nick Emmanwori. An unparalleled combine performance saw the 6-foot-3, 220-pound product of South Carolina (pictured above) post the best-ever Relative Athletic Score for a safety, ranking first among every safety to test since 1987. He went to the Bills at No. 30 in our pre-combine mock, but after leading the combine in broad jump (11 feet, 6 inches) and vertical (43 inches) while running a 4.38 40-yard dash, he should go higher in the first round.
Subscribe to Scoop City for plenty more. Onward:
Turnerâs perfect troll
New Blue Jays starter Max Scherzer is very vocally not a fan of the ABS (robo-ump) system thatâs being tested in MLB spring training, and Phillies shortstop Trea Turner â Scherzerâs former teammate â took note. Leading off their game yesterday, Turner challenged the first pitch he saw from Scherzer, a clear strike, just âto see his eyes roll.â Even the coaching staff and plate umpire were in on the bit. Five Pulse stars for Trea.Â
Messi hopefuls get ticket credit
The Houston Dynamo are offering ticket holders who planned to attend yesterdayâs matchup against Inter Miami a complimentary ticket to a future game, as Lionel Messi did not make the trip with his team. As of Friday, the âget-inâ price for the contest was more than $200 on the resale market. Itâs not the first time a host team has offered a credit to make up for Messi sitting out, but it remains so odd.
More news
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The Oscars were last night, and Pulse pop culture correspondent Hannah Vanbiber noted a few sports crossover moments for us:
In case you missed it: The big winner of the night was âAnora,â an independent film made for just $6 million. Thatâs kind of like if the âMoneyballâ Aâs won the World Series?
Thank you, Hannah!
đș NCAAM: Wake Forest at No. 2 Duke
7 p.m. ET on ESPN
The Blue Devils need a win to keep up their pursuit of the outright ACC regular-season title in their final home game of the season, while the Demon Deacons are on the bubble. Plus, Duke freshman Cooper Flaggâs college days are numbered â might as well catch him now.
đș NBA: Rockets at Thunder
8 p.m. ET on NBA TV
Just a solid matchup between two good, young Western Conference teams here. Should be fun.
Get tickets to games like these here.
đïž Will the Luis Rubiales trial have a lasting impact on womenâs sports. The Full Time crew discusses here. On Apple and Spotify.
You know those pre-snap QB soundbites you can so often hear on a broadcast, like âBlue 42â? Those phrases are called âcadences,â and Jayson Jenks and Rustin Dodd have a brief history of them out today.
Steph Curry dunked in a game for the first time in six years Saturday. He says he will not be doing it again â ever.
Charlotte Carroll and Zack Rosenblatt went deep on the Giantsâ interest in Aaron Rodgers and if thereâs any reason to think things could work out better for the Giants than they did for the Jets.
That viral Victor Wembanyama jersey swap in December has taken an unfortunate, litigious turn in recent weeks. Brooks Peck has a helpful explainer.
After our NHL staff got nearly 500 reader-submitted trade proposals, James Mirtle waded through the answers for a game of âWho says no?â
Philip Buckingham has an in-depth story today on the Wigan Warriorsâ trip to Las Vegas for rugbyâs first Super League game in the United States.
Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Bruce Feldmanâs story on South Carolina safety Nick Emmanworiâs all-time showing at the NFL combine.
Most-read on the website yesterday: For the second straight day, Dianna Russiniâs intel column from the combine.
(Top photo: Jacob Kupferman / Getty Images)