basketball

March Madness 2026: NBA Champions Face Off from Far Flung Continents!

By Andy BackstromYahoo Sports

Wolverines star Yaxel Lendeborg said the loss to Purdue "definitely fuels us to make sure that we never lose again."

CHICAGO — The program that dethroned a historic Michigan team on Sunday is a reminder that the Big Ten tournament is hardly a forecast of NCAA tournament success. "Winning it our freshman year, we thought it was pretty cool," said Fletcher Loyer, Purdue's all-time leading 3-point shooter, "but then obviously we lost to a 16 seed. " It's obvious because it's unforgettable.

Five days after hoisting Big Ten hardware, the Boilermakers became the second men's team to ever fall to a No. 16 seed in March Madness in 2023. Fairleigh Dickinson was David, and Purdue was Goliath.

Without a player taller than 6-foot-6 taking the court, FDU slayed Purdue and its giant, Zach Edey, a 7-foot-3 consensus National Player of the Year. [ Yahoo Fantasy Bracket Mayhem: Make your picks for $50K in total prizes ] That jaw-dropping defeat left a mark that's since scarred. With distance from it and perspective gained from a prolific four-year career, Loyer reflected at his locker while processing his second Big Ten tournament title.

Wearing a championship hat sideways, with a piece of a cut-down net dangling by his calm eyes, he admitted that the year after that fateful loss to FDU, the Boilermakers "didn't care at all" about the conference tourney. "We won the regular season, that's what we wanted to do, but ultimately we wanted to get back to the NCAA tournament. Last year, once again, it was not on our mind at all.

Continue to the original source for the full article.