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Prediction: California Golden Bears VS Wake Forest Demon Deacons 2026-03-28

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TCU vs. Virginia Women’s Basketball & UCLA vs. Minnesota Preview: A Frothy Frogs Fiasco and a Gopher Gambit

Ladies and gentlemen, prepare for a double-header of chaos, because the NCAA Women’s Sweet Sixteen is here to remind us that March is the only month where a double-overtime win is considered a “routine” path to the regional semifinals. Let’s start with the TCU Horned Frogs (3) vs. Virginia Cavaliers (10) showdown. TCU’s Olivia Miles is a double-double machine, but Virginia’s Kymora Johnson just dropped 28 on No. 2 Iowa like she was ordering takeout. The Frogs? They’re fresh off an overtime victory against Washington, which is about as sustainable as a TikTok trend. Meanwhile, Virginia’s journey to Sacramento reads like a survival documentary: “First Four: The Movie – How We Beat Iowa in Double Overtime While Eating Granola and Whispering to the Ball.

The odds? TCU is a slight favorite, but Virginia’s underdog story is so compelling, they might win just by making the crowd feel guilty for not rooting for the team that’s actually trying to reach the Elite Eight since 1996. Imagine if a college basketball game ended with a walk-off three-pointer. No, Virginia won’t win that way. They’ll win by existing long enough for TCU’s players to ask, “Wait, what’s the score?”

Now, let’s pivot to UCLA vs. Minnesota. The Bruins are the definition of a Final Four favorite: 11th-time Sweet Sixteen, consecutive wins over teams named “Cal Baptist” and “Oklahoma State” (no, we don’t know what that means either). Minnesota, meanwhile, is making its first regional semifinal since 2005—long enough ago that their last appearance was filmed in VHS quality. The Gophers’ 65-63 win over Ole Miss was so nail-biting, it gave referees existential crises. UCLA’s defense is like a locked door at a frat party: you think you’re getting in, but the door’s just going to laugh at you.

The Verdict?
TCU and UCLA are the safer bets, but Virginia and Minnesota are the ones with heartbeats. If you’re betting on TCU, you’re investing in consistency. If you’re backing Virginia, you’re betting on a team that’s defying physics, probability, and the basic laws of NCAA basketball. As for Minnesota? They’re the underdog with the most to gain—and the most to lose if they start celebrating too early.

And if you’re confused why we’re talking about “double-overtime Granola Warriors,” you’re not alone. March Madness is a circus, and we’re all just here for the popcorn.


NCAA Baseball: California vs. Wake Forest
Ah, the Golden Bears vs. the Demon Deacons—a clash of left-handed pitchers, small-sample-size miracles, and a total line that’s conveniently 11.5 runs. Let’s break it down.

The Pitchers?
- California’s AJ Colarusso: A 4.08 ERA and 24 strikeouts in 28.2 innings. He’s the guy who’d strike out your dad in a backyard game but still let him win by hitting a home run off a wild pitch.
- Wake Forest’s Kyle Johnson: A Duke transfer with a 0.00 ERA… in one inning. That’s the baseball equivalent of acing a pop quiz but panicking during the final exam.

The Math?
Wake Forest is a massive -2.5-run favorite (decimal odds: 1.32, implied probability ~76%). California’s +2.5 (odds: 3.3, implied ~30%). The line screams, “Bet on Wake Forest,” but Johnson’s resume is thinner than a student’s wallet at tax time.

The News?
Wake Forest’s lineup is a “trust the process” story—Duke transfer magic, anyone? California’s AJ Colarusso is a seasoned vet, but his 4.08 ERA suggests he’s the type who’d dominate in practice but trip over his own spikes in a real game.

The Verdict?
Wake Forest should win, but the game might resemble a seesaw. Johnson’s one-inning perfection is a statistical mirage, and Colarusso’s ERA is a red flag. Bet on the Deacons, but keep a eye out for a California rally that feels like a Netflix series finale—surprising, frustrating, and over 11.5 runs.

Prediction: Wake Forest by 3, but the Over 11.5 runs is a lock. After all, this is baseball. Runs are just waiting to happen.

Created: March 28, 2026, 2:46 p.m. GMT

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