The experts were right: favored Villanova defeated Michigan last night to win the NCAA men’s basketball championship. But they were wrong about how the Wildcats won their second title in three years.
“For someone so small, she often appears ubiquitous, showing up in the spaces she is most needed: ‘I love being with people, spreading God’s word. And you do that not by talking all the time, but just by your presence.'”
She and two other retired Sisters of the Charity of Blessed Virgin Mary are focused on the flat screen television in their apartment on the northwest side of Chicago, about nine miles from the campus that has become the center of the city’s attention — as much for a charismatic, feisty nun as the basketball team.
The NCAA March Madness basketball tournament begins this week, and the coach of number one seed the University of Virginia says biblical principles have played a major role in getting them to this point.
On March 25 in the Sweet Sixteen round of the March Madness college basketball championship, three-seed Baylor lost to seven-seed South Carolina, but in addition to the upset that occurred, viewers witnessed something else remarkable.
In discussing the possible return of some of his injured teammates, basketball star LeBron James stated that Jesus is the only person you can truly rely on.