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The Throne National Championship teams, schedule, TV times — and more

The Throne National Championship teams, schedule, TV times

The Throne national basketball tournament is set for its fourth annual games. From March 19 to March 21, the premier postseason event will take place in East Rutherford, New Jersey, pitting 16 of the top high school basketball teams in a single-elimination tournament.

Eight boys teams and eight girls teams will play for their respective crowns in March Madness-style brackets at American Dream Mall, put on by the National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) and Gold Level Sports and Entertainment (GLSE). The teams will play under a club program name rather than the high school name itself, but all students on each team attend the stated high school, the Throne's press release said.

Games will be aired on NBA TV and the NBA App.

The NBPA Foundation will donate $25,000 to the athletic program of both championship-winning teams.

Here are the teams, tournament club names, seedings and schedule, with USA TODAY Sports Super 25 national rankings listed, where applicable (rankings as of March 2).

The Throne Rosters

Boys high school basketball teams

  1. Calvary Christian (Fort Lauderdale, FL) — Eagles (No. 4 in Super 25)
  2. Sunnyslope (Phoenix) — Vikings (No. 5)
  3. Rainier Beach (Seattle) — Beach (No. 21)
  4. Wheeler (Marietta, GA) — Wildcats
  5. Long Island Lutheran (Brookville, NY) — LuHi
  6. Bergen Catholic (Oradell, NJ) — BC Crusaders
  7. Columbus (Miami, FL) — Los Explorers
  8. Heritage (Frisco, Texas) — Coyotes

Girls high school basketball teams

  1. Etiwanda (CA) — Eagles
  2. Princess Anne (Virginia Beach, VA) — Cavaliers
  3. Long Island Lutheran (Brookville, NY) — LuHi
  4. St. John Vianney (Holmdel, NJ) — Lancers
  5. Tualatin (OR) — Timberwolves
  6. St John’s College (Washington, D.C) — Cadets
  7. Friends Central (Wynnewood, PA) — Phoenix
  8. St Frances Academy (Baltimore, MD) — Panthers

The Throne Schedule

Girls: March 19

  • Game 1 (10:00 a.m.): (2) Cavaliers vs. (7) Phoenix
  • Game 2 (11:40 a.m.): (3) LuHi vs. (6) Cadets
  • Game 3 (1:20 p.m.): (1) Eagles vs. (8) Panthers
  • Game 4 (3:00 p.m.): (4) Lancers vs. (5) Timberwolves

Boys: March 19

  • Game 5 (4:40 p.m.): (1) Eagles vs. (8) Coyotes
  • Game 6 (6:20 p.m.): (4) Wildcats vs. (5) LuHi
  • Game 7 (8:00 p.m.): (3) Beach vs. (6) BC Crusaders
  • Game 8: (9:40 p.m.): (2) Vikings vs. (7) Los Explorers

Girls bracket: March 20

  • Game 9 (3:00 p.m.): Winner Game 1 vs. Game 2
  • Game 10 (5:00 p.m.): Winner Game 3 vs. Game 4

Boys bracket: March 20

  • Game 11: (7:00 p.m.): Winner Game 7 vs. Game 8
  • Game 12 (9:00 p.m.): Winner Game 5 vs. Game 6

Girls Championship: March 21

  • Game 13 (1:00 p.m.)

Boys Championship: March 21

  • Game 14 (3:00 p.m.)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY High School Sports Wire: See the full schedule for The Throne National Championship

'Evolution, not revolution' required before 'season-defining' Chelsea game

Aston Villa fan's voice banner
[BBC]
Unai Emery reacts
[Getty Images]

Aston Villa have only won two of their past seven games. This is not the form of a team looking to secure Champions League football, nor one sitting third in the league for several months.

The team are looking sluggish, lacking in creativity and struggling to keep a clean sheet. Performances have been underwhelming, which has perhaps been more of a concern than the dwindling points tally.

The fixture against Chelsea at Villa Park on Wednesday is season-defining. A Champions League 'six-pointer' in which Villa could build a nine-point gap on the visitors, or the deficit between fourth and sixth could shrink to three points.

How can Unai Emery turn things around in a period of decline? It's time for something different - a fresh approach that will inject energy into a weary side creaking under the pressure.

The boss will never rip up his tactics sheet and start afresh, particularly in the final run-in of the season. But his team needs an evolution, not a revolution.

The easiest way for Villa to evolve is a change in starting personnel. Tammy Abraham has looked lively since his arrival, but has struggled to seize the shirt from Ollie Watkins. As Villa's record Premier League goalscorer struggles to net, the ex-Chelsea forward should be eyeing a start against his former club as an opportunity to stake his claim.

Meanwhile, youngster Alysson, who has had a stop-start beginning to his journey in claret and blue, has shown promise in his brief cameos so far. An energetic and physical attacker looking to impose himself on the Premier League feels exactly the type of player to fire Villa's frontline.

As the team look to spark the atmosphere at Villa Park, a refreshed performance will be the thing that really reignites belief and excitement among fans, who are longing to see the tide turn in a lengthy history of Villa falling at the final hurdle.

Find more from Hannah Gowen at UTV

Why NFL teams don’t use the transition tag over the franchise tag

SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 08: Kenneth Walker III #9 of the Seattle Seahawks celebrates with the Vince Lombardi Trophy after defeating the New England Patriots 29-13 to win Super Bowl LX at Levi's Stadium on February 08, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In just two days, we should know whether or not the Seattle Seahawks will stay true to form under John Schneider and not use either the franchise tag or transition tag. The only times they’ve ever used the franchise tag since Schneider became general manager in 2010 were Olindo Mare and Frank Clark, the latter eventually traded to the Kansas City Chiefs in lieu of playing on the tag. Clark signed his tag and got a contract from the Chiefs afterward.

The Seahawks have three high-profile free agents who could be considered tag candidates: Rashid Shaheed, Riq Woolen, and Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker III. It seems more likely that all three walk in free agency than any one get the franchise or transition tag.

Last week we had a post in The Feed from regular Field Gulls commenter Donut Receipt, which linked to The Ringer NFL podcast speculating that the Seahawks could use the less heralded transition tag on Walker. While it’s not an impossibility, it’s also both risky and extremely unlikely.

The key differences between the transition tag and franchise tag

Transition tags are cheaper than franchise tags

If the Seahawks wanted to franchise tag Walker, for example, then it would cost them $14,293,000 and immediately count against the salary cap whether he signs or not. Under the transition tag, Walker’s one-year deal would also be fully guaranteed and immediately count against the cap, but the salary would be “only” $11,323,000. Saving over $3 million sounds pretty good! Except…

There is no exclusive transition tag

An exclusive franchise tag means a player cannot negotiate with other teams, whereas a non-exclusive franchise tagged player can speak with other teams and receive an offer sheet.

Transition tags are only non-exclusive and therefore players are free to negotiate elsewhere and sign an offer sheet. Just like the non-exclusive franchise tag, the original team has five days to match any offer sheet. But here’s the problem…

There is NO draft compensation for losing a player on the transition tag

If an offer sheet to a non-exclusive franchise tagged player is not matched, then the original team receives two first-round picks as compensation.

If an offer sheet to a non-exclusive transition tagged player is not matched, then the original team gets nothing in return. Zip. Zilch. Nada. There are no draft picks coming back—tagging a player also negates the compensatory pick avenue—hence this is a riskier move that is seldom made.

Transition tag usage is very rare

Dating back to 2014, only six players have been given the transition tag, most recently Kyle Dugger in 2024 before he signed an extension with the New England Patriots (only to be traded to the Pittsburgh Steelers last year). For context, eight players had a franchise tag designation just in 2024.

An example of a team losing a player with no draft compensation in return is the Miami Dolphins, who transition tagged tight end Charles Clay in the 2015 offseason. The AFC East rival Buffalo Bills signed him to a five-year, $38 million contract and Miami opted not to match.

On the flip side, the Green Bay Packers gave Chicago Bears cornerback Kyle Fuller a four-year, $56 million offer while he was transition tagged back in 2018. Chicago matched the offer and he stayed with the Bears.

Let’s not go down the transition tag road as Seahawks fans

I know such clauses are now defunct, but the Seahawks know a thing or two about a transition tag gone wrong. Steve Hutchinson, “poison pill” language from the Minnesota Vikings, Super Bowl window immediately closes, and the rest is history. Seattle has not used the transition tag in the 20 years since then.


tl;dr:

  • Don’t tag, let them test the market = Possible compensatory draft picks in 2027 if they’re not re-signed
  • Non-exclusive franchise tag, let them test the market = Two first-round picks in compensation if an offer sheet is not matched
  • Transition tag, let them test the market = Nothing if an offer sheet is not matched

The Seahawks are unlikely to tag any of their free agents, but even less so with the transition tag.

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