Women's March Madness Sweet 16: How to watch No. 2 LSU vs. No. 3 Duke

Women's March Madness continues with aNCAA TournamentSweet 16 matchup between No. 2 LSU and No. 3 Duke at 7 p.m. PT (10 p.m. ET) at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California.

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The No. 2-seed LSU Tigers are fresh from a landslide win against No. 7 Texas Tech. The final was 101-47. Flau'jae Johnson and Mikaylah Williams each scored 24. Amiya Joyner had herself a game with 11 points and 11 rebounds.

Jada Richard and Kate Koval had 10 apiece.

No. 3 Duke looks to continue their momentum coming off of a 69-46 win against No. 6 Baylor in the second round of theNCAA Women's Tournament.

Delaney Thomas led the Blue Devils with 17 points, swatted two shots and picked three steals. Toby Fournier added 15. Duke center Arianna Roberson recorded a double-double, 10 points, 10 rebounds. Ashlon Jackson had 12.

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Both teams are anticipating their rematch as Duke aims to avenge their 93-77 loss to LSU on Dec. 4, 2025. Jackson led Duke in their December outing with 16 points. Johnson led LSU in that with 18 on 7-of-11 shooting.

Here's how to watch No. 2 LSU and No. 3 Duke in the NCAA Women's Tournament Sweet 16 round:

<p style=Kamy Peppler #1 of the Green Bay Phoenix reacts against the Minnesota Golden Gophers in the third quarter during the First Round of the Women's NCAA Tournament at Williams Arena on March 20, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Golden Gophers defeated the Phoenix 75-58.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Audi Crooks #55 of the Iowa State Cyclones reacts during the second half in the first round of the 2026 NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament against the Syracuse Orange at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on March 21, 2026 in Storrs, Connecticut. The Vermont women's basketball team starters consoled each other as the Caramounts lost to Louisville at the 2026 NCAA Women's March Madness basketball tournament at the KFC Yum Center In Louisville, Kentucky, March 21, 2026. Rhode Island Rams head coach Tammi Reiss gives a hug to Rhode Island Rams guard Sophia Vital (15) in the waning moments of the Rams' loss to Alabama in the 2026 NCAA Women's March Madness basketball tournament at the KFC Yum Center In Louisville, Kentucky, March 21, 2026. Comari Mitchell #5 of the Jacksonville Dolphins reacts during the second half of the game against the LSU Tigers in the first round of the 2026 NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at Pete Maravich Assembly Center on March 20, 2026 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Bailey Burns #11 of the Jacksonville Dolphins exits the court after the game against the LSU Tigers in first round of the 2026 NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at Pete Maravich Assembly Center on March 20, 2026 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

March Sadness hits hard in the Women's NCAA basketball tournament

Kamy Peppler #1 of the Green Bay Phoenix reacts against the Minnesota Golden Gophers in the third quarter during the First Round of theWomen's NCAA Tournamentat Williams Arena on March 20, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Golden Gophers defeated the Phoenix 75-58.

What time is No. 2 LSU vs No. 3 Duke Sweet 16 NCAA game?

  • Date: Friday, March 27

  • Time: 10 p.m. ET (7 p.m. local)

  • Location: Golden 1 Center

The LSU Tigers face-off against theDuke Blue Devilsin the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Women's Tournament at 7 p.m. local time on Friday, March 27 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California.

No. 2 LSU vs No. 3 Duke: TV, streaming

Here's where you can find every Women's March Madness game including No. 2 LSU vs No. 3 Duke at 10 p.m. ET (7 p.m. local).

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How to watch LSU vs. Duke in Women's Sweet 16

Women's March Madness Sweet 16: How to watch No. 2 LSU vs. No. 3 Duke

Women's March Madness continues with aNCAA TournamentSweet 16 matchup between No. 2 LSU and No. 3 Duke at 7 p.m. PT (...
US House Transportation committee chair will not seek re-election, sources say

WASHINGTON, March 27 (Reuters) - House Transportation ‌and Infrastructure chair ‌Sam Graves will not ​seek re-election, joining dozens of other lawmakers who are ‌leaving ⁠Congress, sources told Reuters Friday.

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Graves ⁠has been a key lawmaker ​on aviation ​bills, ​including an ‌aviation safety bill that was unanimously approved on Thursday as well as ‌the 2024 ​reauthorization of ​the ​Federal Aviation ‌Administration. Graves told ​the ​Wall Street Journal earlier he ​does ‌not plan to ​run again.

(Reporting by ​David Shepardson)

US House Transportation committee chair will not seek re-election, sources say

WASHINGTON, March 27 (Reuters) - House Transportation ‌and Infrastructure chair ‌Sam Graves will not ​seek re-election, j...
Trump says he will pause attacks on Iran's energy plants

By Bhargav Acharya and Kanishka Singh

Reuters

WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday he was ‌pausing attacks on Iran's energy plants for 10 ‌days at what he cast as the Iranian government's request, and said talks ​with Tehran were going "very well."

"As per Iranian Government request... I am pausing the period of Energy Plant destruction by 10 Days to Monday, April 6, 2026, at 8 P.M., Eastern Time," ‌Trump said in a ⁠post on Truth Social.

"Talks are ongoing and, despite erroneous statements to the contrary by the Fake ⁠News Media, and others, they are going very well," he said.

"I gave them a 10-day period. They asked for seven," ​Trump later ​told Fox News' "The Five" show.

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Trump, ​who has offered shifting goals ‌and timeline for the Iran war, ranging from overthrowing Iran's government to destroying its military and missile capabilities, told Fox News he thinks the U.S. has won the war.

"In a certain sense, we have already won," Trump said.

Trump has said ‌Iran must make a deal or ​face a continued onslaught.

The war began ​on February 28 when ​the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran. Tehran subsequently ‌responded by launching its own ​attacks on Israel ​and Gulf states with U.S. bases.

Joint U.S.-Israeli strikes in Iran and Israeli attacks in Lebanon have killed thousands. ​The war has ‌also raised oil prices and shaken global markets.

(Reporting by ​Bhargav Acharya, Kanishka Singh and Jasper Ward; Editing by ​David Ljunggren and Bill Berkrot)

Trump says he will pause attacks on Iran's energy plants

By Bhargav Acharya and Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON, March 26 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thu...
ICE agents take a more active role in airport security, but long lines persist ahead of the weekend traveler rush

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrived at14 major US airportsfour days ago to assist Transportation Security Administration workers as Congress keeps haggling over how to end thepartial government shutdownthat has driven mounting TSA staffing shortages and the longest security wait times ever.

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But President Donald Trumpindicated Thursdayhe is instructing the Department of Homeland Security to "immediately pay" TSA agents in a bid to reduce long lines at airports.

Trump plans to pay TSA workers who are going without paychecks by using funding from the legislation he signed last year known as the One Big Beautiful Bill, according to two people familiar with the plans.

How soon TSA employees will get checks will depend on how quickly the internal review to pay them using funds from the bill can work, one person told CNN.

Shortly after Trump's announcement, the stalemate on Capitol Hill began to shift as the Senateunanimously agreedduring an overnight session to fund most of DHS, including the TSA.

The bill still needs approval from the House before shuttered agencies within DHS can reopen.

As the situation remains uncertain, ICE agents continue to direct snaking security lines and pass out water bottles to tired travelers. It's unclear whether the ICE agents deployed at Trump's request to help manage the chaos have made a significant dent as wait times begin to tick up again as the weekend nears.

ICE agents have started verifying travelers' IDs at some airports, DHS confirmed Wednesday. They have also been guarding entrances and exits, helping with logistics and crowd control after "receiving standard TSA training curriculum," DHS said.

ICE agents are not trained to do specialized security screening tasks, such as operating X-ray machines, White House border czar Tom Homan said Sunday. Instead, they take on simpler tasks, ideally freeing up more TSA employees to perform critical screening work.

It is difficult to measure how the presence of ICE agents has directly affected travelers. Many factors, including the number of travelers and available security checkpoints, impact wait times.

The White House press secretary said Wednesday the ICE deployment has been "yielding results."

"Wait times have improved since ICE arrived, and they are doing everything in their power to help their fellow federal service members," Karoline Leavitt said.

The middle of the week, however, is typically the slowest time for air travel, and Leavitt seemed to acknowledge there was room for improvement.

"We have seen wait times decrease – not as much as we'd like," she said.

ICE agents arrived at airports Monday during peak travel times. About 2.6 million people passed through TSA on Monday compared to 2.2 million on Tuesday,data from the agencyshows – and wait times ticked up at major travel hubs Thursday morning.

ICE agents hand out water bottles in TSA lines at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas, on Thursday. - Mark Felix/Bloomberg/Getty Images

DHS shutdown drags on

No significant progress on Capitol Hillhas been made on a dealto fund DHS, which includes the TSA, as lawmakers are set to leave Friday for a two-week recess. A new push for a deal is underway as airport officials warn of dire fallout if the crisis continues.

Without a funding solution, overwhelmed airports will go into the busy weekend travel days with spring break travel also in full swing and only a fraction of their security screening capabilities. TSA workers have been quitting or calling out in droves after going six weeks without pay.

More than 3,120 TSA officers did not show up to work Wednesday, according to TSA figures released Thursday. The callout rate of 11.14% is just below the record of 11.76% that was set on Sunday. Nearly 500 TSA officers have quit since the beginning if the shut down, according to DHS.

Scrambling to address traveler frustrations, airports have redirected employees from other departments, alerted travelers to arrive hours earlier than planned and brought in outside security personnel.

Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport – where wait times swelled tofour hoursagain early Thursday – has seensome of the most severe impacts, along with travel hubs in New York and Atlanta.

Passengers wait in a security checkpoint line at George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Wednesday in Houston. - David J. Phillip/AP Travelers line up at a TSA checkpoint on Wednesday at LaGuardia Airport in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura) - Yuki Iwamura/AP

"We worry conditions will only get worse at airports across the US until Congress ends this shutdown," Jim Szczesniak, director of aviation for the Houston Airport System, said in a recorded statement Wednesday.

TSA has sent 32 officers from its National Deployment Office to George Bush Intercontinental as of Thursday, the airport said in apost on X.

While passenger volumes in Houston declined somewhat Wednesday, the city's airports are expected to handle a significant number of travelers Thursday and Friday, in part because an energy conference there is concluding, and the city is hostingthree NCAA men's basketball tournament games, the city's airport systemsaid.

ICE agents check IDs at the security check point in Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport on Thursday. - Megan Varner/Getty Images

Jennifer Clark was in a long security line at George Bush Intercontinental Thursday hoping to get to her son's first flight as a flight attendant for United Airlines.

She and her family flew to Houston to watch her son graduate United flight attendant training, but Clark worried she wouldn't make it on time to board with him.

Clark said she'd be "a little heartbroken" if she doesn't make the flight, but fortunately was able to get through security in time to make it.

At New York'sLaGuardia Airporton Thursday morning, the wait time in one general security line was nearly two hours, CNN's Leigh Waldman reported from the site. The line doubled back on itself, filling the hall, video showed, and the TSA PreCheck line took just over 40 minutes to clear.

The PreCheck line Thursday morning at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport stretched out the door, CNN employee Jonathan Hawkins, traveling through the airport, said. To accommodate the mass of passengers, the line snakes through baggage claim and around the terminal.

"Atmosphere is largely good-natured. People seem to have arrived expecting a long wait," Hawkins said.

It took Hawkins about an hour to get to where the TSA PreCheck line normally starts, and 45 more minutes to get through security.

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A CNN crew at Hartsfield-Jackson saw three ICE agents checking IDs at security lines and moving people through the main checkpoints. Private security personnel were assisting at the bins.

The first time a traveler interacts with TSA in this line is at the metal detector, as TSA agents are still monitoring the X-ray machines.

Emergency response

When a man at Hartsfield-Jackson had a medical emergency near a Delta counter just before noon Thursday, ICE agents assisted him until Atlanta Police and Atlanta Fire and Rescue could take over.

Additionally, DHS said an ICE officer saved the life of a 1-year-old child at John F. Kennedy International Airport when the child was unable to breathe for almost two minutes.

The child's father was holding the child in his arms while in a TSA PreCheck line when the child became unresponsive, the agency said in a news release.

The agent heard the screams from the father and other passengers before "sprinting to the scene" and performing the Heimlich maneuver, officials said. The child started breathing again after a few seconds, was reassessed and determined to be healthy enough to fly.

"If our agent had not been there and stepped up, this would have been a tragic outcome," DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin said in the news release.

A surge of spring breakers

The middle of this week – again, typically the slowest time for air travel – offered some reprieve, as security wait times had returned to normal in several airports by Wednesday, with some exceptions.

George Bush Intercontinental in Houston reported a two-hour wait Wednesday afternoon, down from more than four hours earlier in the week. The airport can operate only about half of its 37 TSA checkpoints because of staff shortages, Szczesniak said.

"So that's 100% spring break loads going through the airport being processed through less than 50% of our TSA lanes," he said. "That is not sustainable."

Nearly 40% of the Houston airport's TSA officers called out of work Tuesday, DHS reported. The airport has redirected employees from unrelated departments to handle crowds.

People wait in long security lines at LaGuardia Airport on Wednesday in the Queens borough of New York City. - Spencer Platt/Getty Images A Department of Homeland Security officer directs passengers at Houston's Bush airport on Wednesday. - Antranik Tavitian/Reuters

"We've reassigned hundreds of employees from across our organization, from finance to IT to maintenance and more, to help manage lines and assist travelers," Szczesniak said.

Several airports have tried to mitigate long waits by asking flyers to arrive far ahead of typically recommended times.

Airports in New York and New Jersey have brought in civilian security and police officers from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees the region's major airports, the agency said. Still, those additional personnel may not operate security screening checkpoints and are only assisting with crowd control.

Farther south, security lines were long Thursday morning at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, the airport said ina post on X.

Officials told spring breakers to expect long lines through the weekend, encouraging travelers to arrive at the airport three hours early.

"Checkpoint wait times are generally at their worst in the morning with fluctuations throughout the day," the message states.

TSA agents near two missed paychecks

While travelers may feel inconvenienced by the delays, many unpaid TSA workers' lives have been overturned. They have reported empty fridges, eviction notices and overdrawn bank accounts.

"Officers are reportedly sleeping in their cars at airports to save gas money, selling their blood and plasma, and taking on second and third jobs to make ends meet, all while expected to perform at the highest level when in uniform to protect the traveling public," TSA Administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill said during a House Oversight hearing on Wednesday.

Tatiana Finlay, a TSA union member, told CNN, "At this point, it has come to the point of, like, having to skip meals because I have to make sure that my kids are fed."

Many TSA employeeslive paycheck to paycheck, making an average $35,000 a year, according to the American Federation of Government Employees union. If a funding solution isn't reached by Friday, workers will miss a second full paycheck.

In addition to those who have quit or called out, some TSA workers who do want to come to work are struggling to get there.

A TSA officer rests at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Monday as the passenger security line winds up and down the sidewalk behind him. - Megan Varner/Getty Images

"Just yesterday, I watched an officer receive a gas card from one of our partners," said Szczesniak, of the Houston Airport System. "They had tears in their eyes knowing that they could fill up their tank to get home and come back to work to help keep these lines moving."

Airport officials are providing meals to TSA workers as well as collaborating with the Houston Food Bank and other nonprofits, he said Wednesday.

CNN senior editor Joe Sutton, who was traveling from Hartsfield-Jackson Thursday morning, said the crowds and the partial shutdown were taking their toll on TSA workers.

"You could see they are tired and just look a bit defeated," Sutton said. "But trying to keep some energy."

A TSA officer checks passports as passengers wait in long TSA lines at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston on Wednesday. - Antranik Tavitian/Reuters

TSA union workers have said the assistance of ICE agents – who are getting a paycheck – is far from a solution. Finlay called it "unacceptable."

"That's like giving a person dying of pneumonia a teaspoon of cough syrup," said Everett Kelly, the AFGE's national president. "It doesn't address the problem and it's not gonna work."

This story has been updated with additional information.

CNN's Ed Lavandera, Kaitlan Collins, Ryan Young, Holly Yan, Aaron Cooper, Alexandra Skores, David Williams, Toni Odejimi and Cindy Von Quednow contributed to this report.

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ICE agents take a more active role in airport security, but long lines persist ahead of the weekend traveler rush

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrived at14 major US airportsfour days ago to assist Transportation Security ...
A Minneapolis woman recounts death of Alex Pretti as lawyers eye a class action lawsuit

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minneapolis woman who confronted federal immigration officers alongsideAlex Prettiin January was among a group of potential litigants who spoke out Thursday about alleged excessive force against people protesting or monitoring the enforcement surge in Minnesota.

Associated Press

Georgia Savageford, who introduced herself as Wynnie at a news conference, said she was inside an officer's vehicle when she saw federal agents shoot Pretti.

"That day has changed me forever," she said. "The trauma will haunt me for the rest of my life, and I will never be the same."

Savageford said she had been legally observing the actions of federal officers in Minneapolis ever since the shooting death ofRenee Goodby a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer on Jan. 7. She said she was doing so again on the morning of Jan. 24 when an agent pushed her twice and caused her to fall.

"As I was going down, three agents proceeded to tackle me and drag me face-down into the middle of the street. They knelt on my back, twisted my arms and my legs to the ground, and handcuffed me. The cuffs were so tight I lost feeling in my hands, which resulted in temporary nerve damage," she recounted.

Officials with the Department of Homeland Security and ICE did not immediately respond Thursday to emails seeking comment. Minnesota officials sued the Trump administration on Tuesday foraccess to evidencethey say they need to independently investigate the killings.

Savageford said Pretti recorded video of her arrest and yelled at agents to leave her alone.

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She said the officers put her in the back of a vehicle, from which she saw agents shoot and kill Pretti on the other side of the street.

"At that moment, I thought I was going to die too. I pleaded with the agents to understand why another life was taken, and to not take mine," she said.

She added that they told her to shut up and to stop being hysterical. She said they then took her to an ICE holding facility where she was held for 12 hours in a cold cell without ready access to food, water or the bathroom until she was released without being charged.

"I did not know him, but I knew he had my back," she said of Pretti. "I know the kind of heart he had. One that loves and protects without limits."

Savageford shared her story at a news conference wherecivil rights attorney John Burris, of Oakland, California, and other lawyers laid out how they're paving the way for potential class-action lawsuits over alleged excessive force used against protesters and monitors.

Burris, who specializes in police misconduct, helped win an $11 million settlement against the Oakland Police Department in 2003, and helped win a civil jury verdict of $3.8 million for the latemotorist Rodney King, who was beaten by Los Angeles police officers in 1991.

He said he and his colleagues have filed complaints with federal agencies involved in the Minnesota enforcement surge on behalf of 10 people, including Savageford, as the first step in a process that's likely to lead to a larger class-action lawsuit.

"We have many others that are under investigation that have not completed the process. But I thought it was important for us to start this process now. Put the government on notice that we're here," Burris said.

A Minneapolis woman recounts death of Alex Pretti as lawyers eye a class action lawsuit

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minneapolis woman who confronted federal immigration officers alongsideAlex Prettiin January was amo...

 

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