
College basketball tournament ditches new glass floor for hardwood after a player gets hurt
NBC News
The Big 12 Conference is ditching its slippery new glass floor for a hardwood court for the final two days of the tournament.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Big 12 Conference is ditching its slippery new glass floor for a hardwood court for the final two days of the tournament.
"After consultation with the coaches of our four semifinal teams, I have decided that in order to provide our student-athletes with the greatest level of comfort on a huge stage this weekend, we will transition to a hardwood court for the remainder of the tournament," Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark said in a statement Thursday night. "We look forward to a great semifinals and championship game."
Numerous players have slipped when trying to plant. On Thursday, Texas Tech guard Christian Anderson strained a muscle slipping in the No. 16 Red Raiders' 75-63 loss to No. 7 Iowa State.
"Obviously, the floor is a bit slippery," Anderson said. "I think I just kind of mis-stepped or did a movement that caused me to slip."
The Big 12 announced last month that it would play the men's and women's tournaments on the ASB GlassFloor-made court that has been used at the NBA All-Star Game and in Europe but never before during an official U.S. competition.

NEW YORK — As a man wearing a neon-blue jellyfish hat fought off draping tentacles to scroll through his phone and find the latest message from his personal AI assistant, three people wearing Pegasus wings flitted through a sweaty Manhattan apartment-turned-ballroom trying to recruit users for their latest AI solution.“It’s getting hot, and the lobster is getting warm,” said Michael Galpert, one of the hosts of the event, encouraging the thousand-plus crowd to settle down so the evening’s presentations could begin.

U.S. women's hockey gold medal-winning captain Hilary Knight revealed Monday in a television appearance that she played in Milan with a torn medial collateral ligament in one of her knees."I'm not walking around the best, and I'm missing a few games for the (PWHL's) Seattle Torrent," Knight said on "CBS Mornings.""To be able to play through injury was definitely a mental sort of gymnastic challenge for myself and also physical, but we've got some amazing support staff that did their best to get me out there and perform at my best — as best as I could."Knight, playing at what she said was her final Olympics at 36, tied the final against Canada with just over two minutes left in regulation.











