Turkish elections: Much at stake in Kurdish-majority southeast

Ankara, Turkey – As local election day looms on Sunday, voting for mayors and municipal councils has an added significance for one corner of Turkey.

The Kurdish-majority southeast has seen nearly a hundred mayors removed from office in recent years and replaced with government-appointed trustees known as “kayyum”.

While this move has widely been decried as an affront to democracy, some local residents have said the trustees have brought improved services and greater security to the region.

The disbarred mayors all belonged to the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) and were forced out after peace talks between the government and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) broke down in July 2015. Ankara claimed they were funnelling public resources to the group, which is deemed a terrorist organisation by Turkey and the West.

Hundreds of HDP officials have also been thrown in prison, including the party’s then co-leader Selahattin Demirtas.

‘Visible improvement’

Throughout the campaign for Sunday’s vote, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned that no candidates with links to terrorist groups would be allowed to take office, a threat widely seen as being aimed at the HDP.

“The kayyum has worked very hard here,” said one businessman from the southeastern city of Van. A supporter of Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), the main rival to the HDP in the southeast, he asked not to be identified for fear of being targeted by the PKK.

“There has been a visible improvement in services – cultural activities, roads, social activities, all kinds of things. Before, the HDP provided no services to us.”

While the HDP denies any link to the PKK, the claim that HDP-run councils lent support to the PKK was heightened in late 2015 when months-long curfews were imposed on cities, towns and villages as security forces sought to oust PKK fighters. According to the International Crisis Group, around 4,300 people were killed in the violence.

The government has alleged that the fighters used municipal diggers to build defences and plant IEDs.

“Everyone here knows what they did with the money,” said the businessman. “They brought people and companies in from other cities to do work we were capable of doing ourselves. Were they passing on funds to the terrorists? We don’t know but it seems likely.”

AKP officials in the region say their oversight of municipalities has seen a vast improvement in facilities for locals.

Akif Gur, the party’s branch chairman for the city of Batman, said those appointed by Ankara had created a greater impact than the HDP and its predecessors had since the late 1990s.

“In the last two-and-a-half years the kayyum has done more than they had done in the previous 20 years,” he said. “Services such as street-cleaning, parks and social centres have all seen major improvements. We built a new cultural centre in Batman.”

The new authority had also improved security for voters during election periods, Gur said. “Especially in the 1990s, there was a lot of pressure on people to manipulate their votes. Now they’re free to vote how they want.

Backtracking on Kurdish projects

“This election campaign has been much more comfortable. There’s no problem reaching people and there’s a sense of greater security. In the past the campaign with the opposition was more tense but now it’s about projects rather than ideology.”

Defending the removal of the HDP’s mayors, Gur said they had been shown to have spent resources on “criminal activities”. He added: “The same thing would happen anywhere else in the world, the result would be the same. Being an elected official does not give you immunity or the right to commit a crime.”

Others say the Ankara-appointed trustees have overseen a backtracking on Kurdish cultural and linguistic projects.

Deniz Tuzun, 28, was an actor with a municipal theatre group in Batman when a kayyum was appointed in November 2016 and the company was closed down.

“They’ve made cosmetic changes to the city but the deep-rooted problems haven’t been solved he said. “They haven’t created new projects, just completed the ones the HDP municipality was doing already.”

He will vote for the HDP’s candidate on Sunday and is hoping that if the AKP lose major cities in western Turkey “they will have a bigger problem” and not place a kayyum in office in the event of an HDP win.

Meanwhile, the pro-AKP businessman from Van says he has become disillusioned with the party in recent months. “I would prefer it if I could vote for the kayyum we have now rather than the guy they’ve got as a candidate,” he said. “In my heart I know the system isn’t democratic but when I look at what he’s done I would like the chance to vote for him.”

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Zion Williamson, RJ Barrett, Tre Jones Form New Big 3 to Help Duke Escape Upset

COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA - MARCH 24: Zion Williamson #1 of the Duke Blue Devils celebrates with RJ Barrett #5 and Tre Jones #3 against the UCF Knights during the first half in the second round game of the 2019 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Colonial Life Arena on March 24, 2019 in Columbia, South Carolina. (Photo by Kevin C.  Cox/Getty Images)

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

How and when did the Duke Blue Devils become the luckiest team on the planet?

Perhaps thousands of college basketball fans are asking that question after the top-seeded Blue Devils escaped another last-second shot to advance in the 2019 men’s NCAA tournament.

The Virginia Tech Hokies had a point-blank shot at the buzzer to force overtime in a thrilling Sweet 16 matchup, but Ahmed Hill’s two-foot attempt fell harmlessly to the floor.

NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

DUKE HANGS ON AGAIN! 😱

#MarchMadness | #Sweet16 https://t.co/2mz1EROJ4U

It was deja vu all over again.

During the second round, Duke squeaked past the UCF Knights when a last-second putback attempt skittered off the rim. Late in the regular season, the Wake Forest Demon Deacons somehow missed a similar shot.

Friday, Duke discovered that luck because of Tre Jones. Without him, the Blue Devils likely wouldn’t have been leading late in the game.

Since standout forward Cam Reddish was unexpectedly sidelined due to a knee injury, maybe it was fitting that Jones replaced his fellow freshman as the third member of Duke’s “Big Three” along with Zion Williamson and RJ Barrett.

Jones shattered his previous career high of two three-pointers, knocking down five trifectas in the 75-73 victory. The point guard chipped in eight assists and one steal, which led to the most impressive highlight of the nightnaturally, by Zion.

NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

ZION. SHOWTIME.

#MarchMadness | #Sweet16 https://t.co/6TBXnsToiM

Five days after being the undeniable weakness of the Blue Devils offense, Jones was the primary reason they survived. He reached the 20-point mark for the first time in college, finishing with 22.

Given that Jones entered the Sweet 16 shooting 23.2 percent from long range, what he accomplished is simply dumbfounding.

But the contributions of Williamson and Barrett were nothing new.

Zion gathered 23 points, six rebounds and three blocks, again serving as a force near the rim. In the process, he became the first Division I player since Kevin Durant in 2006-07 to amass 700 points, 60 steals and 50 blocks in a season, per CBS Sports.

Seriously, this guy is unreal.

NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

Zion got UP for the rejection! 😱

#MarchMadness | @DukeMbb https://t.co/73w96FdKZi

Barrett provided a consistent impact in two important ways. During the first half, the freshman dished seven of his career-high 11 assists. Following the break, Barrett scored 15 of his 18 points.

The tremendous duo has carried the Blue Devils through some mediocre performances on occasion. Superstar talent can atone for a whole lot.

Still, a little bit of luck never hurts.

We cannot stress enough the unlikelihood of Jones’ night. Duke ranked 331st nationally in three-point percentage entering the game, and the rest of the roster trudged to a 1-of-13 clip from outside. Barrett missed all seven attempts, and Alex O’Connellthe offense’s top perimeter weaponclanged four.

Jones saved the day.

NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

Tre Jones 👌 count:

👌👌👌👌👌

#MarchMadness | #Sweet16 https://t.co/iLWNk0HBmV

“These guys believed in me all year, especially after last game with me struggling from three,” Jones told reporters after the game. “They kept believing in me. Coach kept telling me to take the shots and these guys kept telling me take my shots, and they were able to fall tonight.”

Williamson and Barrett are the undisputed keys to Duke’s pursuit of the national championship. As long as the stars are producing, the Blue Devils will always put immense pressure on the opposition.

Even if Jones’ impact from the perimeter isn’t sustainable, he provided the stunning surge at the exact moment Duke needed it. For one essential night, Jones was a pivotal member of the Big Threeor maybe a Big Four, if we’re including friendly rims, too.

But Duke survived. Whether due to luck, talent or a combination of both, that’s what March is all about.

Recruiting information via 247Sports. Statistics courtesy of KenPom.com or Sports-Reference.com, unless otherwise noted. Follow Bleacher Report writer David Kenyon on Twitter @Kenyon19_BR.

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NCAA Tournament 2019: Power Ranking the Elite Eight Teams

0 of 8

    Ty Jerome and Zion Williamson

    Ty Jerome and Zion WilliamsonGerry Broome/Associated Press

    If you were among the many fans complaining about how boring (read: lacking in upsets) the first two rounds of the 2019 NCAA men’s basketball tournament was, here’s hoping you stuck it out to watch the Sweet 16. Those games were nothing short of incredible.

    Well, Texas Tech’s desolation of Michigan wasn’t all that entertaining, but, hey, seven out of eight isn’t bad.

    The wild thing is that in spite of the Red Raiders embarrassing a title contender en route to a third consecutive postseason win by at least 15 points, they still aren’t in the top half of our power rankings of the remaining teams.

    This tournament is loaded with talented titans, and any of the eight remaining teams could legitimately win it all. There are 16 possible ways Saturday and Sunday could still play out, and all 16 are equally plausible.

    These power rankings are based on a combination of regular-season success and how each team has looked thus far in the tournament, and it’s roughly a 50/50 split between those two categories. One factor not considered is the draw for each team. Rather, this should be considered a re-ranking of the field, and how we would seed teams for the Elite Eight if such a reseeding took place.

1 of 8

    Carsen Edwards

    Carsen EdwardsKevin C. Cox/Getty Images

    What We’ve Learned: Carsen Edwards still has it. Purdue’s lead guard went through quite the rough patch in February and had an awful showing (11 points on 17 shots, six turnovers) in the Big Ten tournament loss to Minnesota. The Boilermakers have been so tough to beat this season when “Good Edwards” shows up. But if you picked Old Dominion to upset these guys in the first round because you had seen too much of “Bad Edwards” heading into the tournament, you weren’t alone.

    Through three games, Edwards has been incredible. Ryan Cline’s shooting was the big story coming out of the Sweet 16, but let’s not overlook the fact that Edwards is averaging a sophomore-year Stephen Curry-like 32.3 points per game while shooting 43 percent from three-point range. If Purdue can get to the national championship game, Glen Rice’s record of 184 points scored in a single NCAA tournament is in danger of being broken.

    Most Outstanding Player Candidate: Edwards, of course. He lit up Villanova for 42 points in the process of destroying the defending national champions. He has led Purdue in scoring in seven of his last eight games, and there’s no doubting that he is going to continue taking at least 20 shots per game unless teams throw a Triangle-and-2 at the Boilermakers in which both man-to-man defenders are double-teaming Edwards.

    X-Factor: Matt Haarms. The hair-flipping, Ivan Drago-looking punchline of last year’s Big Dance has become an indispensable asset for the Boilermakers as of late. Haarms disappeared often in the first three months, but he has scored in double figures in eight of his last nine games, averaging 6.6 rebounds and 2.6 blocks during that stretch.

    With Tacko Fall and Christ Koumadje gone, Haarms (7’3″) and Virginia’s Jay Huff (7’1″) are the only remaining players taller than 7’0″. Teams are most worried about slowing down Edwards and Cline, but Haarms can take over a game with his size.

    Championship Blueprint: Keep shooting well. The 99-94 game against Tennessee notwithstanding, Purdue has been great on defense for the past several months. Haarms and Trevion Williams anchor a great offensive rebounding unit. And for as much as he is utilized in the offense, Edwards doesn’t commit many turnovers. If he and Cline continue to shoot as well as they did against Villanova and Tennessee, you might be looking at the first No. 3 seed to win the NCAA tournament since Kemba Walker and Connecticut in 2011.

2 of 8

    Cassius Winston

    Cassius WinstonPatrick Semansky/Associated Press

    What We’ve Learned: Sparty has depth. With Joshua Langford out for the year, Kyle Ahrens doubtful to return from a badly sprained ankle suffered in the Big Ten championship and Nick Ward still not looking quite right in his recovery from a broken handan injury he appeared to aggravate in the second half against LSUMichigan State entered the tournament with a bunch of question marks beyond Cassius Winston and Matt McQuaid.

    But in the Sweet 16, freshmen Gabe Brown and Aaron Henry both exploded for career highs. Brown entered the night having scored nine points in February and March combined, but he came off the bench for 15 points. Henry led the way with 20 points, eight rebounds and six assists. McQuaid and Ward combined for just 10 points, and yet the Spartans won by 17. If those young guys continue to contribute even half that much, the Spartans are going to be a problem.

    Most Outstanding Player Candidate: Winston. The junior point guard gets undervalued by a lot of people because his NBA potential isn’t anywhere near what it is for the likes of Zion Williamson or Ja Morant. Sleep on this stud at your own risk, though. He’s the closest thing we have to a Jalen Brunson this year. He can either shoot or set up teammates beautifully from anywhere within 24 feet of the hoop. There is no chance in hell this banged up Michigan State roster would be this good with anyone else running the offense.

    X-Factor: Turnovers. The Spartans did an incredible job of not only keeping turnovers under control but actually winning the turnover battle against an aggressive LSU defense in the Sweet 16. However, they were minus-16 in turnover margin in the second round against Minnesota, and you just get the sense that it’s eventually going to be a problem.

    Championship Blueprint: Limit turnovers and protect the paint. We’ll have to wait and see what Ward’s status is for the rest of the tournament, but the Spartans still have solid interior rebounders and defenders in Xavier Tillman and Kenny Goins. If they can continue to limit opponents to less than 42 percent shooting on twos, they’ll be tough to beat.

3 of 8

    Jared Harper

    Jared HarperRick Bowmer/Associated Press

    What We’ve Learned: Auburn’s run through the first two-plus weeks of March was no joke. After three months of inconsistent play and no quality wins, the Tigers caught fire for late wins over Mississippi State, Alabama and Tennessee. They proceeded to shoot their way through the SEC tournament and haven’t stopped yet.

    Auburn made a dozen threes in the opener against New Mexico State, followed that up with 13 against Kansas and exploded for 17 more against North Carolina. This has become the most unstoppable offense in the country.

    Most Outstanding Player Candidate: Jared Harper. It would’ve been Chuma Okeke if not for the knee injury he suffered against North Carolina. If he’s able to return, go ahead and swap that versatile, do-everything big man into this spot. Short of that, let’s go with Harper, since his combination of vision, passing, shooting and defensive presence is what makes Auburn’s steals and threes approach work so well.

    X-Factor: Rebounding. The Tigers did an unbelievable job on the glass in the Sweet 16 win over North Carolina. UNC finished plus-four in rebound margin, but given Auburn’s struggles in that department all season and the Tar Heels’ domination on the glass, that easily could have been a minus-30 for Auburn. If the Tigers can continue to keep that Achilles’ heel under control, it’s hard to see how anyone will beat these guys.

    Championship Blueprint: Don’t change a thing. Keep firing up threes. Keep getting blocks and steals. Live with whatever else happens. Auburn’s style is just so tough to stop. Like Villanova in recent years, you hope the Tigers will eventually shoot themselves into oblivion by going cold, but there are so many capable shooters on the roster that it’s a foolish thing to hope for.

    If Auburn continues to shoot at least 38 percent from three-point range and gets at least eight steals in each game, it won’t lose.

4 of 8

    Jarrett Culver

    Jarrett CulverHarry How/Getty Images

    What We’ve Learned: Those late defensive struggles were just a smokescreen. Texas Tech gave up 73 points to Iowa State in the regular-season finale and then let West Virginia put up 79 in the Big 12 tournament. For a team that only allowed 73 points (in regulation) twice in its first 30 games, it was weird to see the defense broken like thatespecially by a West Virginia team that struggled on offense all year and mustered just 50 points in a 75-possession game against the Red Raiders in February.

    That vaunted Texas Tech D is back, though. The Red Raiders held Northern Kentucky, Buffalo and Michigan to 53.0 points per game and an absurd 80.3 points per 100 possessions. Prior to C.J. Baird making a meaningless three as time expired, Michigan was 0-of-18 from downtown against this unyielding D. They now have an adjusted defensive efficiency of 84.4. That’s tied with 2014-15 (38-1) Kentucky for the second-best mark in KenPom history, just barely behind that of 2008-09 Memphis (84.2).

    Most Outstanding Player Candidate: Jarrett Culver. The soon-to-be lottery pick is a big part of TTU’s defensive prowess on the perimeter, but he’s also the most important offensive weapon. Culver has led the Red Raiders in scoring in all three rounds, averaging 22.3 points per game. He is only 10-of-39 (25.6 percent) from three-point range over his last eight games1-of-9 in the last two contests—but he is an ever-present threat to bury a dagger, scoring at least 15 points in 11 straight.

    X-Factor: Secondary scoring. Davide Moretti finally hit a few threes in the win over Michigan to end his tourney drought, but the big question all year for Texas Tech has been: Who shows up on offense aside from Culver?

    Moretti, Matt Mooney and Tariq Owens are each more than capable of putting points on the board. However, Moretti is threes-or-bust, and neither Mooney nor Owens has tallied more than 16 in a game since January. Texas Tech doesn’t need much scoring to support this defense, but it could win it all if those three secondary scorers reach double digits in each remaining game.

    Championship Blueprint: Do not let up on defense. Every red-hot offense eventually runs into an off night in the tournament, and that seems to be the case for elite defenses, too. Virginia immediately had its UMBC disaster in the first round last year. Gonzaga had a few let-ups in 2017. Even that incredible Kentucky team had a pair of less-than-stellar performances once it started running into great shooters in the Elite Eight.

    Just to reach the Final Four, Texas Tech will need to shut down a Gonzaga offense that ranks as one of the most efficient in KenPom history. After that, either Duke or Michigan State would be waiting with yet another sensational offense. And similar to the Michigan team that TTU just trounced, it doesn’t have the offensive firepower to win a game played in the 70s or 80s. If the Red Raiders can keep these games at their preferred pace, though, they have a shot.

5 of 8

    PJ Washington

    PJ WashingtonJamie Squire/Getty Images

    What We’ve Learned: PJ Washington is fine. Kentucky’s star big man missed the first two games with a foot injury that surfaced shortly after Selection Sunday, but he was back out there in the Sweet 16 win over Houston. Hard to imagine the Wildcats could have won that game without him, as he had 16 points in a battle that wasn’t decided until the closing seconds.

    With him back, Kentucky might be the favorite to win it all. The Wildcats beat a bunch of great teamsNorth Carolina, Auburn (twice), Tennessee (one out of three), Kansas, Mississippi State (twice), Louisville, etc.in the middle of the season with Washington leading the way. And on what was an awful night for both Keldon Johnson and Reid Travis against a great Cougars defense, Washington had some huge buckets to get the job done.

    Most Outstanding Player Candidate: Washington. He missed two games, but if he’s healthy for the Final Four, that’s all that matters for M.O.P. purposes. Let’s be sure to throw an honorable mention in Travis’ direction, though. The graduate transfer from Stanford has averaged 12.7 points and 10.3 rebounds through Kentucky’s first three wins. And though he doesn’t block many shots (none yet in the tournament), his physicality in the paint has forced Kentucky’s opponents from scoring with any regularity inside.

    X-Factor: Three-point defense. Kentucky’s biggest issue early in the season hasn’t been much of one yet in the tournament. Houston’s Armoni Brooks got hot for six treys Friday night, but opponents are just 20-of-70 (28.6 percent) from distance against the Wildcats. Factor in Kentucky’s typical, excellent interior defense, and how are teams supposed to score against the Wildcats? The answer: They can’t. Kentucky is allowing 52.7 points per game. 

    Championship Blueprint: Keep defending at a high level and ride Washington now that he’s back. The Wildcats have only made 11 threes in the tournament, but they’re so dominant in the paint that it hasn’t been a problem. We already know Kentucky can beat Auburn, and if they run into Virginia in the Final Four, the Wildcats can win that defensive grind, too.

6 of 8

    Zion Williamson

    Zion WilliamsonAlex Brandon/Associated Press

    What We’ve Learned: Tre Jones can shoot. Not so much in the opening weekend (1-of-10 from three-point range), but the point guard was Duke’s hero in the Sweet 16 against Virginia Tech. Jones drained five three-pointers Friday night after going more than four months since the last time he made multiple triples in the same game.

    With Cam Reddish missing the Sweet 16 game due to a knee injury, Duke desperately needed a third guy to step up alongside Zion Williamson and RJ Barrett to help carry the scoring load. He answered the call with a career-high 22. Just as important, he had eight assists without a single turnover. What a remarkable turnaround for a guy who was unable to capitalize on being left wide-open all night in the previous round against UCF.

    Most Outstanding Player Candidate: Williamson. Do we even need to justify this one? The no-brainer No. 1 pick in the upcoming NBA draft is 35-of-54 (64.8 percent) from the field in the NCAA tournament, and the high-flyer already has two blocked shots (and several dunks) that left the college basketball world stupefied by his athleticism. Williamson has scored at least 21 points in all six games since returning from the knee injury, as even the most creative defenses haven’t been able to slow him down.

    X-Factor: Free-throw shooting. Jones missed the front end of a one-and-one late in the game against Virginia Tech, leaving the door open for the Hokies to have a shot to win. And he is one of Duke’s best free-throw shooters. Both Barrett and Williamson connect on less than 67 percent of their freebies. If the Blue Devils keep playing nail-biters, that could be what eventually buries them.

    Championship Blueprint: Feed the big boys and hope the second half against Virginia Tech was some regression to the mean in regard to three-point defense. The Hokies started out 7-of-13 from distancethis after UCF shot 50 percent against Duke in the previous game. But the Hokies made just two of their final 13 attempts, which is more in line with what Duke’s defense had been doing all season. If opponents go back to shooting worse than 30 percent from distance against Duke, there’s no beating this team.

7 of 8

    Mamadi Diakite

    Mamadi DiakiteTimothy D. Easley/Associated Press

    What We’ve Learned: Virginia can win even when it can’t buy a bucket. Kyle Guy has been ice cold from three-point range (3-of-26) and the Cavaliers have yet to shoot better than 30.4 percent from distancea preposterous slump for a team that shot 40.9 percent prior to the tournament and did not have two consecutive games shooting below 33.3 percent.

    And yet, Virginia keeps winning with its typical defensive prowess. Two of its first three games were over by midway through the second half. And in the third game, Virginia held Oregon to seven points in the first 11 minutes and limited the Ducks to six points for a span of more than 10 minutes in the second half. Tourney opponents have averaged 52.0 points against the Cavs.

    Most Outstanding Player Candidate: Mamadi Diakite. Before the tournament, this dude probably would have been my seventh pick for Virginia’s most important player, but he has been huge for the Cavaliers during the first half of this dance. The redshirt junior has averaged 12.7 points and 9.7 rebounds in the tournament, and he had four combined blocks and steals in each of Virginia’s last two games. If Virginia is to win it all, Guy will probably snap out of his funk and become the star in Minneapolis. But the Wahoos would not still be alive right now if not for Diakite.

    X-Factor: Three-pointers. Not only is Virginia struggling to make shots, but it is allowing threes at a much higher rate than usual. Starting with the regular-season finale against Louisville, five of Virginia’s last six opponents have shot at least 36 percent from distance—a mark that was hit in only three of Virginia’s first 29 games.

    It’s incredible that the Cavs have been able to survive this long in spite of that sharp contrast in three-point luck, and they might just go on a rampage through the next three games if they can get back to shooting 40 percent while holding teams to 28 percent.

    Championship Blueprint: Don’t panic, and figure out a way to slow down RJ Barrett if there’s a third matchup with Duke in the national championship. Barrett averaged 28.0 points in the first two meetings, in large part because his ability to score in iso offense is the key to cracking this pack-line D. But with Diakite playing like this, UVA may have finally found its answer. Don’t go looking ahead to that matchup yet, though. Both teams have two more tough games before then.

8 of 8

    Brandon Clarke

    Brandon ClarkeJeff Swinger/Associated Press

    What We’ve Learned: This three-point defense is on point. Our biggest concern with Gonzaga coming into the tournament was its ability to slow down the opposing team’s perimeter game. The Bulldogs excelled in that department during West Coast Conference play, but Creighton, Tennessee and North Carolina each torched Gonzaga from distance in December. As such, there was cause for concern once the Zags started facing major-conference offenses again.

    Those fears can be laid to rest, though, because Baylor and Florida State shot a combined 7-of-41 (17.1 percent) from downtown against Gonzaga. Neither of those teams is elite from three-point range, but neither the Bears nor the Seminoles had shot that poorly in at least 20 games. Gonzaga has won all three tournament games by at least a dozen points.

    Most Outstanding Player Candidate: Brandon Clarke. The NBA scouts are more enamored with Rui Hachimura, but Clarke has been Gonzaga’s best player all season. He is averaging 21.0 points, 9.3 rebounds, 4.3 blocks. 2.3 assists and 1.3 steals in the tournament. As far as efficiency is concerned, his worst game was against Florida State in the Sweet 16. But he still had a double-double, a ridiculous putback dunk and five blocks in that contest. Clarke has scored in double figures in every game this season.

    X-Factor: Stopping the bleeding. Baylor and Florida State went on runs in the second half, turning a blowout into a two-possession game in the blink of an eye. Gonzaga recovered in both games by turning to Clarke for high-percentage shots, but they had big second-half letdowns in the loss to Tennessee and the close calls against Duke and Washington a few months ago. When that run comes in the next game(s), will the Bulldogs be able to extinguish it again?

    Championship Blueprint: Stick to what got them here. The Bulldogs have been arguably the best team in the country this season thanks to smart shots and minimal turnovers on offense and better-than-advertised play on defense. If Clarke is blocking shots and throwing down dunks, Hachimura is doing his mid-range thing, Josh Perkins is avoiding back-breaking mistakes and Zach Norvell Jr. and Corey Kispert are occasionally hitting threes, this team is almost impossible to beat.

    Kerry Miller covers men’s college basketball and college football for Bleacher Report. You can follow him on Twitter: @kerrancejames.

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Keldon Johnson, No. 2 Kentucky Beat No. 3 Houston, Advance to Elite 8 vs. Auburn

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MARCH 29: Tyler Herro #14 of the Kentucky Wildcats reacts against the Houston Cougars during the 2019 NCAA Basketball Tournament Midwest Regional at Sprint Center on March 29, 2019 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Kentucky is now one game away from the Final Four after the No. 2 seed earned a 62-58 win over No. 3 Houston Friday.

Tyler Herro had the biggest shot of the day, knocking down a go-ahead three-pointer with 25 seconds left after a PJ Washington block:

CBS Sports @CBSSports

PJ WASHINGTON BLOCKS. TYLER HERRO DROPS.

Kentucky up two. https://t.co/7yYtNJr4zQ

Herro finished with 19 points, including the game-sealing free throws to lead Kentucky to the Sweet 16 victory at the Sprint Center in Kansas City. Washington returned from injury and contributed 16 points to help the Wildcats reach the Elite Eight for the seventh time in 10 years under head coach John Calipari.

Armoni Brooks scored 15 of his 20 points in the second half to help take the late lead, but it wasn’t enough to keep Houston’s season alive after a program-record 33 wins.

This article will be updated to provide more information soon.

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Video: Warriors Lose to T-Wolves on Kevin Durant Foul After Clutch Steph Curry 3

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - MARCH 29: Andre Iguodala #9 of the Golden State Warriors reacts to a play during the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves on March 29, 2019 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images)

David Sherman/Getty Images

As the Minnesota Timberwolves held on for a 131-130 overtime win over the Golden State Warriors on Friday night, three stars rose to the occasion: Karl-Anthony Towns, Stephen Curry and the officiating crew.

The Warriors players were visibly upset after the game following a pair of controversial calls in the extra frame.

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

The ending of Warriors-Timberwolves was the most ridiculous thing you’ll see this regular season… https://t.co/40tV0xWncY

With Minnesota leading 130-127, the referees whistled Keita Bates-Diop for a foul on the floor as Kevin Durant nailed what looked like a game-tying three-pointer. Because there was no continuation, the decision wiped Durant’s shot off the board.

Mere seconds later, Curry hit an improbable three from the left corner to tie the score.

ESPN.com’s Nick Friedell shared Steve Kerr’s thoughts on the sequence:

Nick Friedell @NickFriedell

Kerr very disappointed with the officiating at the end. Called the foul on Durant on the floor “mind boggling.” Believes Curry’s shot never should have been needed because Durant should have been given a chance for a four point play.

And the drama wasn’t over. Durant held Towns on the ensuing inbounds play and was called for a foul, sending Towns to the charity stripe with 0.5 seconds left. The All-Star center hit the first of his two free throws to seal the victory.

By beating the Warriors, the Timberwolves denied Golden State an opportunity to clinch the Pacific Division.

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Auburn Upsets UNC

  1. Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Barkley’s Tigers upset Kenny’s Tar Heels 97-80 😱 https://t.co/qwhgxgsjDi

  2. Bleacher Report CBB @br_CBB

    Kenny is every UNC fan rn 🤣 https://t.co/MaNLY4QScf

  3. Justin Ferguson @JFergusonAU

    Welcome to the jungle. https://t.co/IXKSXRk5Zf

  4. NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

    Live look at Chuck… 😂

    #MarchMadness | @AuburnMBB https://t.co/oas6idIgW6

  5. Eric Troupe @King_Eric216

    @BleacherReport https://t.co/YcAKh0T0NP

  6. drew. @NBAYoungDrew

    https://t.co/sUDXrTBtwl

  7. Kevin McGuire @KevinOnCFB

    The sacrifices Charles Barkley made to see this Auburn run… https://t.co/NU6JzDuSeP

  8. Royce G @g_o_o_b_s

    Live look-in at Charles Barkley. https://t.co/8OtzpeGlDw

  9. SB Nation @SBNation

    Auburn defeats UNC

    Charles Barkley: https://t.co/Gs3TLnDYty

  10. Brad Smith @JiggaRay

    Auburn fans https://t.co/21nyoCA9it

  11. NunesMagician.com @NunesMagician

    Can’t help but feel absolutely terrible for North Carolina.

    PSYCHE! https://t.co/fAIpfRSaTB

  12. Jon Rothstein @JonRothstein

    This is ******* March.

  13. Complex Sports @ComplexSports

    BRACKET BUSTER!

    The first No. 1 seed to go down is UNC as Auburn blows out the Tar Heels by 17.
    #MarchMadness https://t.co/bQ5KFM1yfU

  14. CJ Fogler @cjzero

    UNC lost https://t.co/KnYSCSul5n

  15. Marko @MarkoVonBasten

    @BleacherReport https://t.co/Hmw6S8YPEe

  16. Jon Rothstein @JonRothstein

    Why does Auburn epitomize the NCAA Tournament?

    Tigers could have easily been eliminated if New Mexico State made a few free throws.

    Instead, they’re 40 minutes away from Minneapolis.

    Surprising?

    No.

    Why?

    March.

  17. Paul Finebaum @finebaum

    What an amazing win by Auburn. Truly stunning. What a job by Bruce Pearl.

  18. NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

    THE FIRST 1-SEED HAS BEEN DENIED! 🚫

    #MarchMadness | @AuburnMBB https://t.co/Cv8HoBsUCB

  19. Nicole Auerbach @NicoleAuerbach

    Auburn to brackets everywhere: https://t.co/inqXTt9cJb

  20. The Athletic CBB @TheAthleticCBB

    War Eagle For 3 more like it https://t.co/tR6H0F9W0Q

  21. Sean Eiler @SeanEiler

    Auburn 👀 https://t.co/jwPBCZhg64

  22. Large Tuna @Large_Tuna1

    Game. Blouses. #Auburn https://t.co/WsaR3fAQyT

  23. Alphonse Taylor @SHANKK50

    Auburn shooting the 3 in the 2nd half like… https://t.co/vTzgDufmFc

  24. kressie ♡ @kressiek

    Auburn fans right now with our 13 point lead https://t.co/5mG7cbQKwm

  25. Matt Schick @ESPN_Schick

    Live look at every Auburn player… https://t.co/ksIiu8nEEW

  26. Kelyn Soong @KelynSoong

    Some happy Duke fans crowding around the TV and cheering for Auburn at Capital One Arena https://t.co/JoH1fRpatT

  27. Rodger Sherman @rodger

    AUBURN’S GONNA WIN THE BASKETBALL GAME

  28. SI College Hoops @si_ncaabb

    Auburn’s three-point shooting in this half…🔥 https://t.co/ndId69UQAx

  29. Duke in the NBA | Tre Jones stan @DukeNBA

    https://t.co/rDzw7wA5lz

  30. B/R Betting @br_betting

    Auburn from 3 https://t.co/JXRKldPRB3

  31. Paolo Uggetti @PaoloUggetti

    War Three-gle

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Auburn Upsets UNC

  1. Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Barkley’s Tigers upset Kenny’s Tar Heels 97-80 😱 https://t.co/qwhgxgsjDi

  2. Bleacher Report CBB @br_CBB

    Kenny is every UNC fan rn 🤣 https://t.co/MaNLY4QScf

  3. Justin Ferguson @JFergusonAU

    Welcome to the jungle. https://t.co/IXKSXRk5Zf

  4. NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

    Live look at Chuck… 😂

    #MarchMadness | @AuburnMBB https://t.co/oas6idIgW6

  5. Eric Troupe @King_Eric216

    @BleacherReport https://t.co/YcAKh0T0NP

  6. drew. @NBAYoungDrew

    https://t.co/sUDXrTBtwl

  7. Kevin McGuire @KevinOnCFB

    The sacrifices Charles Barkley made to see this Auburn run… https://t.co/NU6JzDuSeP

  8. Royce G @g_o_o_b_s

    Live look-in at Charles Barkley. https://t.co/8OtzpeGlDw

  9. SB Nation @SBNation

    Auburn defeats UNC

    Charles Barkley: https://t.co/Gs3TLnDYty

  10. Brad Smith @JiggaRay

    Auburn fans https://t.co/21nyoCA9it

  11. NunesMagician.com @NunesMagician

    Can’t help but feel absolutely terrible for North Carolina.

    PSYCHE! https://t.co/fAIpfRSaTB

  12. Jon Rothstein @JonRothstein

    This is ******* March.

  13. Complex Sports @ComplexSports

    BRACKET BUSTER!

    The first No. 1 seed to go down is UNC as Auburn blows out the Tar Heels by 17.
    #MarchMadness https://t.co/bQ5KFM1yfU

  14. CJ Fogler @cjzero

    UNC lost https://t.co/KnYSCSul5n

  15. Marko @MarkoVonBasten

    @BleacherReport https://t.co/Hmw6S8YPEe

  16. Jon Rothstein @JonRothstein

    Why does Auburn epitomize the NCAA Tournament?

    Tigers could have easily been eliminated if New Mexico State made a few free throws.

    Instead, they’re 40 minutes away from Minneapolis.

    Surprising?

    No.

    Why?

    March.

  17. Paul Finebaum @finebaum

    What an amazing win by Auburn. Truly stunning. What a job by Bruce Pearl.

  18. NCAA March Madness @marchmadness

    THE FIRST 1-SEED HAS BEEN DENIED! 🚫

    #MarchMadness | @AuburnMBB https://t.co/Cv8HoBsUCB

  19. Nicole Auerbach @NicoleAuerbach

    Auburn to brackets everywhere: https://t.co/inqXTt9cJb

  20. The Athletic CBB @TheAthleticCBB

    War Eagle For 3 more like it https://t.co/tR6H0F9W0Q

  21. Sean Eiler @SeanEiler

    Auburn 👀 https://t.co/jwPBCZhg64

  22. Large Tuna @Large_Tuna1

    Game. Blouses. #Auburn https://t.co/WsaR3fAQyT

  23. Alphonse Taylor @SHANKK50

    Auburn shooting the 3 in the 2nd half like… https://t.co/vTzgDufmFc

  24. kressie ♡ @kressiek

    Auburn fans right now with our 13 point lead https://t.co/5mG7cbQKwm

  25. Matt Schick @ESPN_Schick

    Live look at every Auburn player… https://t.co/ksIiu8nEEW

  26. Kelyn Soong @KelynSoong

    Some happy Duke fans crowding around the TV and cheering for Auburn at Capital One Arena https://t.co/JoH1fRpatT

  27. Rodger Sherman @rodger

    AUBURN’S GONNA WIN THE BASKETBALL GAME

  28. SI College Hoops @si_ncaabb

    Auburn’s three-point shooting in this half…🔥 https://t.co/ndId69UQAx

  29. Duke in the NBA | Tre Jones stan @DukeNBA

    https://t.co/rDzw7wA5lz

  30. B/R Betting @br_betting

    Auburn from 3 https://t.co/JXRKldPRB3

  31. Paolo Uggetti @PaoloUggetti

    War Three-gle

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Bol Bol Declares for 2019 NBA Draft, Hires Agent After 1 Season at Oregon

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 16: Bol Bol #1 of the Oregon Ducks celebrates his three point shot in the second half against the Syracuse Orange during the 2K Empire Classic at Madison Square Garden on November 16, 2018 in New York City.The Oregon Ducks defeated the Syracuse Orange 80-65. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

Elsa/Getty Images

Oregon center Bol Bol is turning pro.

According to Nick DePaula of ESPN.com, Bol has hired an agent at CAA and will enter the 2019 NBA draft.

The 7’2″, 235-pound freshman center only played nine games but shined in his short tenure in Eugene, leading the Ducks with 21.0 points, 9.6 rebounds and 2.7 blocks.

Unfortunately, a left foot injury prematurely ended his season. Per James Crepea of the Oregonian, Bol missed four games before shutting down his year.

The big man announced that he was leaving school on Jan. 3:

Bol @bolmanutebol

Playing for my dream school under my favorite Coach Altman has been the Best part of my life and sadly it has come to end sooner than I would Like but thank you for all those who rocking with me & all Oregon fans 💚💛thank you #GoDucks https://t.co/qYnjKO0p6x

On the same day, Bol’s lawyer, Bryan J. Freedman, provided his client’s health update to Shams Charania of The Athletic and Stadium:

“Bol underwent surgery Thursday to repair non-displaced fracture of navicular bone in left foot,” Freedman’s statement read. “Bol begins rehab next week, will use crutches/boot for 8-10 weeks and return to basketball activities in summer.”

It remains to be seen whether this fracture affects his draft status, but 7’2″ centers who can shoot from long range don’t come along often. Freedman’s initial prognosis of Bol returning to basketball activities in the summer could have him ready for the beginning of the NBA season in mid-October as well.

Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report ranked Bol eighth on his NBA draft big board entering March and provided the following scouting report:

“He comes off as the textbook boom-or-bust prospect—a potential star for his 7’2” size, ball skills, shooting and scoring ability, but a major risk because of his skinny frame and limbs along with durability concerns.

If doctors deem Bol no riskier health-wise than any other big man, it becomes worth thinking about drafting him in the second half of the lottery based on his effectiveness in college (21.0 points per game) and projected NBA fit. His three-ball (13-of-25) looked convincing, while the flashes of ball-handling and post moves he displayed point to even more offensive upside.

He’ll need to strengthen his body and defensive motor, but with a 7’8″ wingspan along with the mismatch scoring, Bol becomes worth the gamble once the surer bets are off the board.

Bol is the son of former NBA player Manute Bol, the 7’7″ center who played 10 NBA seasons and averaged 3.3 blocks per game.

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Trump threatens to close border with Mexico next week

US President Donald Trump on Friday threatened to close the US southern border or large sections of it next week if Mexico does not halt undocumented immigrants from reaching the border “immediately”. 

“It could mean all trade” with Mexico, Trump said when questioned by reporters in Florida. “We will close it for a long time. I am not kidding around”.

Trump has previously threatened to close the border – including at a rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Thursday night – but this time was different as he gave a timetable.

In December, Trump threatened to seal the US-Mexico border “entirely” if Congress did not approve billions of dollars in funding for a wall. Instead, he allowed the government to shut down for a record 35 days. 

If he follows through on Friday’s threat, it would likely anger Mexican leaders and business owners and groups on both sides of the border.  

The White House did not immediately respond to questions from the Associated Press about whether Trump’s possible action would apply to commercial and air travel, but a substantial closure could have an especially heavy impact on cross-border communities from San Diego to South Texas, as well as supermarkets, factories, and other businesses across the country that rely on trade from Mexico.

“If Mexico doesn’t immediately stop ALL illegal immigration coming into the United States through our Southern Border, I will be CLOSING the Border, or large sections of the Border, next week,” Trump said in a tweet. “This would be so easy for Mexico to do, but they just take our money and ‘talk.’”

In response, Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said on Twitter on Friday that Mexico does not act on the basis of threats.

“Mexico does not act on the basis of threats. We are a great neighbor,” Ebrard tweeted. “[Ask] the million and a half Americans who chose our country as their home, the largest community of [Americans] outside the US. For them we are also the best neighbor they could have.” 

Adam Isacson of the Washington Office on Latin America said he did not take Trump’s threat very seriously.

“I can think of nobody in the US government, including White House staff, who would go along with closing all ports of entry, which would cost US businesses billions of dollars,” he told Al Jazeera.

‘We can do everything we can’

Trump’s declaration came a day after Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said his country was doing its part to fight migrant smuggling.

Criminal networks charge thousands of dollars a person to move migrants through Mexico, increasingly towards remote sections of the US-Mexico border in large groups.

“We are going to do everything we can to help,” Lopez Obrador said. “We don’t in any way want a confrontation with the US government.”

A senior Homeland Security (DHS) official on Friday suggested Trump was referring to the ongoing surge of mostly Central American families crossing the border from Mexico. Many people who cross the border between official ports of entry ultimately request asylum under US law, which does not require asylum seekers to enter at an official crossing.

The official said the US might close designated ports of entry to re-deploy staff to help process parents and children.

Ports of entry are official crossing points that are used by residents and commercial vehicles. The official, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity, did not specify which ports the administration was considering closing, but said only that closures were “on the table”.

Growing number of migrants

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) commissioner Kevin McAleenan said on Wednesday that 750 border inspectors would be reassigned to deal with the growing number of migrant families, and the DHS official said on Friday that the department was seeking volunteers from other agencies to help.

Rights groups and many Democrats have criticised Trump’s characterisation of the border as a “crisis”. Earlier this week, the Democratic-controlled House failed to get enough votes to override Trump’s veto of a bill that revoked the president’s national emergency on the border. Trump is using that order, which is also being challenged in the courts, to circumvent Congress to obtain the needed funds for his border wall. The president called on Congress to immediately change what he said were weak US immigration laws, which he blamed on Democrats.

The DHS wants the authority to detain families for longer and more quickly deport children from Central America who arrive at the border on their own. 

The department argues those policy changes would stop families from trying to enter the US.

March is on track for the highest number of monthly border crossings in over a decade, with more than 100,000 apprehensions and encounters of people deemed inadmissible at US ports of entry, CBP Commissioner Kevin McAleenan said.

CBP is also directly releasing migrants into the US when US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is unable to provide bed space to relieve overcrowding, McAleenan added.

*With additional reporting from Ola Salem in Washington, DC

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