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support and well-wishes following princess kate announcement of her cancer diagnosis friday, a spokesperson from kensington palace says the couple is quote enormously touched by the kind messages from people here in the uk across the commonwealth and around the world in response to her royal highnesses message, they're extremely moved by the public's warmth and support and are grateful for the understanding of their request for privacy this time and quote in friday's video, pose, the princess said doctors discovered she had cancer after having abdominal surgery in january and she is now in the early stages of chemotherapy treatment i'm fredricka whitfield. thank you so much for being with me this weekend. the cnn newsroom continues with omar jimenez right now
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>> welcome everyone. >> urine she had a newsroom. i'm omar jimenez in new york. we begin with what could be not one, but two major legal blows for donald trump in less than 24 hours, the former president will have to post nearly half 1 billion dollars in bond money for his civil fraud judgment in new york or the state attorney general could begin seizing his assets and tomorrow, trump could also learn the new trial date for his criminal hush money case hatton, a delay, push the start date to mid april, at least cnn's national security reporter zachary cohen joins us with more details. all rights act. so how is trump responding to all this? and there is a lot to respond to here. >> there absolutely is. and we've getting some mixed messages from trump and his lawyers about whether or not he has the money to post bond for his civil fraud judgment. as you mentioned, he personally owes over 450 million as a result of that judgment, but ultimately, he's gonna have to put up the cash tomorrow but tomorrow's deadline or the attorney general in new york could start the process of
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seizing assets and that includes potentially trump's properties in new york. we've seen prosecutors in new york start to lay the groundwork potentially for that process to begin. but at the same time, there's also a key pretrial hearing tomorrow in trump's criminal case in new york. you'll remember that the trial, it's self was supposed to start tomorrow, but instead, trump's lawyers are going to have an opportunity to argue for postponement and argue for the case, even to be dismissed. that's an unlikely outcome, but we could get some clues as to when the judge in this case might set a trial date. the postponement due to discovery issues is expected to push this trial into about mid april. so what let's see you tomorrow, if we get more clarity around when a trial potentially trump's first and only pre-election trial could begin. >> of >> course, we're only talking about the state of new york. there, obviously down in georgia and the election subversion case, fulton county district attorney fani willis is still pushing for a summer trial day and she's also been out and speaking to some cameras at least our cameras this weekend as well. what does
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she been saying? >> yeah, omar fani willis, despite the fact that we've been talking about whether or not she could be disqualified from the georgia case, i'm saying yesterday that hurt case against trump and his remaining co-defendants is still on track and that she wants this trial to start before the 2024 election and confirming that she may ask the judge for a second time. to set a trial date for his early as august 5, 2024. she previously has asked the judge to put that on the calendar for the trial date to start on august fit that requests has gone on answered, but she told us yesterday exclusively that she may re-up that request, but with some additional caveats, take a listen to what she said. we asked her about the state of her case and a potential trial date. >> hamas also realistic that one of the defendants has multiple cases going on and some of them have trial dates that are ahead of ours. and so i'm always gonna be respectful of sister jurisdictions, but we plan to just continue to do. so if defendants come to us and they decide that they want to resolve their case, i'm always hoping my i didn't reasonable and we will listen to those
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explanations and i'll have conversations with people that are interested. now those conversations will be with me, not mr. wade. i hope that was good for everyone >> so at the end there you heard willis talking about the potential for additional plea deals with the remaining defendants in the georgia case. but it comes at a time when she could still technically faced the prospect of disqualificatio n and appeals court has about 45 days to decide whether or not it wants to review judge mcafee, the judge overseeing the case, his decision vision to allow fani willis to remain on the case, but she's making clear that she is moving forward. the judge in this case has made clear that he's not pausing things and he's moving forward even with the prospect of disqualification still hanging out there. and to remind everyone all the fani willis testimony we've seen at this point was just about whether she would remain on the case now that settled and now the actual case is moving forward, at least we will see how quickly that ends up happening. is that cohen. thank you so much for reporting. i appreciate it. >> i want to turn to some >> experts in the legal world for more on what all this means. joining me now is former federal prosecutor and host of
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the it's complicated podcast. we're not a mariotti and cnn legal analyst, norm eisen, he served as special counsel for the house judiciary committee majority during the first impeachment trial of former president trump. okay. and he's also don't want to cut you short here. also the new editor of a book that comes out next month called trying trump. the complete guide to the manhattan da's prosecution. yeah. cancel your short there. thank you both though, for joining me. first, we're not but i want to ask you about this bond deadline because i think everyone hears. all right. he owes half 1 billion that he's got to come up with by monday is there any chance that trump's team could still sway an appeals court to allow him to post a smaller amount or delay posting this payment until after the appeal i think it's highly unlikely obviously trump has been able to obtain some relief that the average person couldn't obtain but certainly feel who was one of my clients coming to me and
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asking whether or not they were going to get more time. i would say that's highly unlikely. get lost at trial you can you don't need to post a bond, but that's just going to mean that the plaintiff's going to come and try to collect their money and that's exactly what i expected to happen here. >> and of course, one of the major questions norm is how exactly the attorney general comes to collect whether it's whether it's bank accounts are going after properties and we know the ag has already filed the judgment with the clerk's office in westchester county earlier this month, specifically his golf course and private estate known as seven springs. but but what about trump's assets outside of new york like mar-a-lago, trump's doral golf club. >> could >> those species as well if he doesn't meet his bond deadline tomorrow? >> there are interstate proceedings that allow you to attach properties, but omar, the vast majority of trump's business career has been in new york. he has a lot of
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properties in new york and i think the ag has already made clear. she's going to start there both with filing that paperwork in westchester county, noting pointedly in an interview that she looks at 40 wall street, one of trump's buildings every day it's adjacent to her office that's just easier and there are valuable properties, bank accounts, and more in the state of new york at hand >> yeah. yeah. >> and look a lot of this is of course the mechanics of how this would actually unfold or doesn't unfold tomorrow. but on friday, renato, a trump win on truth social, as he has frequently over this past week to claim he has five hundred million dollars in cash that he would love to use on his campaign, but his lawyers quickly clarified saying no, he doesn't actually have that cash on hand. this case was part of was basically found him liable for inflating the value of his assets. so is he essentially repeating the same
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offense here while he's trying to avoid wait, paying his bond. and are there any additional penalties in a sense for sort of committing the very thing you were just found liable >> well he was found liable in this case. >> four >> inflating the values of his properties and making other false statements related to those properties in connection with obtaining in loans. that's obviously against the law here on truth, social, he was essentially lying to the public, which let's face it it's something he's done very frequently about the amount of money he had. the reason is lawyers jumped in quickly to clarify things is because they had previously told the court then he didn't have the money. so one, whether they were lying or was lying, and if it was them, they were gonna be taken to task by the court. and of course, it would actually undercut is requests for relief. we just you just to ask you about a moment ago as a practical matter, i really think that this statement that
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he made publicly is just gonna be used his by the attorney general to suggest that you can't really trust what trump and his team are saying about the impact that this is going to happen as businesses he's clearly making things up exaggerated the truth, making false statements in order to sensually create a narrative about this when in actuality this is a fairly routine occurrence when you lose a trial. certainly it's routine in the state of new york. >> yeah. yeah. >> norm, i wanted i want to turn staying in new york. i want to turn to the hush money case because in a series of filings thursday, the district attorney's office accused trump's its lawyers of a quote, grab-bag of meritless discovery arguments and said no further delay is needed in the trial. can you explain this discovery issue and why the prosecution believes the trump team can no longer delay this trial omar over a year ago the
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district attorney asked federal >> prosecutors in the southern district of new york for a bunch of information and documents, some of which they provided, some they didn't then our earlier this year really relatively late in the day, trump's subpoena that information and now a lot of additional documents have flooded in some of which in my view, should have been turned over much earlier, or terms should have asked for a much earlier there's a pattern with donald trump of these last-minute motions in order to delay cases, he's had some success success elsewhere, but i don't think it's going to work here because the district attorney is not to blame. there's plenty of time to look at the relative civilly small number of documents that the da says are relevant here and the delay game, just like it's run out, it appears on satisfying
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this judgment for civil fraud seems to be running out on these allegations, going to try file about a different kind of fraud, defrauding the voters by hiding information from them. in the last days of the 2016 election about a potentially damaging scandal. and then covering that up. so there's a through line here of does simulation and delay. i think this case it's very likely to go to trial in april. >> yeah. well, we will have a lot of answers by this 0.2 on how this is all going to unfold. but for now, we're not a mariotti norm eisen. thank you so much. >> thank you still ahead, missiles >> light up the ukrainian night sky after russia launches retaliatory attack while poland is demanding in an explanation after one of those russian missiles entered its airspace. plus mourners traveling up to
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1,000 miles after at least 137 four killed in a terrorist attack near moscow cnn was on the street as people gathered to pay their respects, you're in the cnn newsroom, stay with us vegas. >> the story of sin city, 109810 on cnn. >> so would you give to nashville hot tenders and three mandarin orange tenders? >> what about you? three classic? tenders for big butterfly shred for the current baby. >> i said, always a competition. you can't handle the shrimps. >> see about that. >> yeah, we will when you're the leader is disaster, clean up and restoration, how do you make like it never even happened, happened all right whatever comes your way. >> there's a pro for that.
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claims it struck two russian naval carriers in a huge overnight attack ukraine says it hit a key port that russia took from ukraine in 2014. >> meanwhile >> poland says a russian cruise missile entered its airspace for 39 seconds, causing the polish air force and its allies to scramble jets, pull and says it will, it will demand an explanation from moscow also, a national day of mourning. and russia today, massive crowds flooded the streets of moscow to remember the at least 137 killed and a terror attack, some traveled as far as the thousand miles to honor the dead. isis is claiming responsibility and posted a graphic video. they say shows its members ruthless rampage cnn is choosing not to show that video, but so far russian president vladimir putin has not named isis, only saying terrorists detained by russian security services, attempted to flee to ukraine this is, we got to look at some of the suspects arrested by police, blindfolded and being led into russian
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security services headquarters cnn chief global affairs correspondent matthew chance is in moscow with more >> will join me. i said the crocus city hall near moscow, where on friday night gunman killed at least 130 people inside that prominent concert hall. you can see thousands of people have now turned out from around russia to pay their respects, to lay flowers, cuddly toys as well add respect for the children who are affected. it really is a major event that is affected this country and it has fed feelings of instability amongst ordinary people. >> here so terrible about of the violence that exists in our world world. >> and in russia as well. do you feel, do you feel safe in russia? >> yes, i think so. not today because of this attacks attack
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can be in every country. and i think that it is a problem of all ones. >> do you feel safe in russia? you still feel safe. four is so many things happening. you feel a bit more insecure >> i don't know how to answer that question probably about i all i can say is that terrorist attacks, there will, there are worldwide problem. so this topic well, it's not safe to feel when there are terrorist in the whole world. so i should say, well this is part for broader, broader progress. yes >> you can see orthodox priests of comite to deliver prayers at this the morrill as well. as investigators inside the burned-out rubble of the
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concert hall are still going through the debris and are still saying that they're finding being bodies. and so the death toll could rise in terms of the investigations while you're 30, say at least 11 people have been taken into custody, including the fall suspects who they believe carried out the actual shootings inside the crocus city hall. of course, isis said they carried out this it's attack, but the russian president vladimir putin, who is vowing revenge, calling it a barbaric act, has said that it could be linked with ukraine, something thank ukrainian government has categorically denied. matthew chance, cnn, at the crocus city hall near moscow >> all right. are thank you to matthew chance near moscow there. now, joining me for is former longtime cnn moscow bureau chief, jill dougherty. jill so can you just put it in perspective for our viewers, the scale of the shock that this created for the russian people and for the government. and it didn't happen in a
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vacuum here yes. >> that's really true. i think is traumatizing for russians because you looked back, ever since vladimir putin was the president, which began 24 years ago, there have been a lot of terror attacks and after each one, there was an investigation and not clear what happened. and just looking at this literally days after putin was reelected for a fifth term i think they feel very, very insecure. and then the government, on the other side, and we can talk about that is trying to explain why this happened. and as matthew pointed out, apparently putin was worn by the united states about they're picking up intel, that there could be some type of attack. in fact, in a theater possibly. and he just dismissed it as blackmail and attempt to destabilise the country. so i think there are a
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lot of answers that russians we'd like to have that said, i think the government will try to divert them into paths of thinking that the government wants them to have a look at yeah, to your point, the united states, as it warned moscow of an impending attack, russia's ambassador to the us and washington is now denying receiving that warning, but it was a bullet ten that was out there publicly as has been described by our reporting i'm curious from your perspective, russia has said they've thwarted attacks like these in the past. how do you anticipate russia addressing the basic security failures that clearly happened here? >> well, i don't think they are going to address some quite honestly. i mean i covered so many attacks going way back to the end of yeltsin and the beginning of putin then all through putin. and there's always an investigation, there is always a big excitement about, we will get to the bottom of this they, never do. i have to be honest, they never
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do. they never quite come to the point of explaining exactly how these things happen. so i would presume that they will have another investigation and it will yield probably some examination, some conclusion, but i don't think they will explain even if they may know what the real purpose is and o'mara, one thing on the ambassador that statement did come out ambassador to the united states, but he is saying, we here at the embassy in washington, dc. nothing was passed. was he is not saying that the russian government it did not get this directly. and that's what the biden administration is saying. we warned russia or gave them that information directly. so they may not have talked to the embassy >> yeah. yeah. no, it's a very important distinction there. now, look it does appear because at the center of this this is a tragedy over 100 people killed here and then now comes the investigation and
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also the information stream that everyone is now trying to parse through what is real, what is propaganda, what is being used for political purposes? and it does appear vladimir putin it is trying to, at least in some ways use this attack for political purposes by implicating ukraine and trying to unite russians behind this ukraine war as he has been trying to do since this war began, what are the chances that that effort succeeds in the wake of this attack >> well, they have at their disposal all of the media, all the state media they already have population that is traumatized by the war. and has been already propagandize to believe that the west is out to get russia. it's the west is existential battle against the west. and so i think the kremlin will try to fold that into this narrative. that russia is under attack. they also will probably try to make common cause with terrorism
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everywhere. you heard that in some of the comments that were given to matthew in those interviews. so i think they would try, as i said, kind of derail any attempt by russians to really hold putin to account for this. what is obviously a security failure? >> yeah, jill jordi. thank you for your perspective, is always sure. still ahead. a top republican congressman said speaker johnson will move on a house vote for more aid to you crain soon, but johnson's job as speaker of the house is under threat from his own already knew cnn reporting on how democrats are willing to help say if johnson's job, but there's a catch will splaying coming up. you're in the cnn newsroom >> check who a year, nothing. >> the space shuttle accidents using one thing, it's a series of events >> is that part of the wing coming apart >> space shuttle columbia have final flight from your sunday,
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loved one have mesothelial will send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you, >> 808 to one the chair of the house foreign affairs committee, congressman mike mccauley says speaker mike johnson will move on. a house vote for more aid to ukraine soon his commitment is to put it on the floor after easter and we are working on this bill. i would like to be done as soon as possible. i think the situation ukraine is dire now ukraine aid was notably left out of the $1.2 trillion spending package the house passed on friday, but more aid for ukraine could be critical >> if johnson wants to keep his job as house speaker by supporting that spending bill johnson has upset many in the party, namely georgia congresswoman marjorie taylor greene she's filed a motion to oust it's tim. although she hasn't yet force a vote which would be a much more serious step multiple sources tell cnn that house democrats are
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willing to help save johnson's job if he comes up with a plan to help ukraine, cnn's chief congressional correspondent, manu raju, joins us with more mono omar speaker johnson may have to rely on democrats to save his job if marjorie taylor greene does, in fact carried through >> with her threat to oust him from the speakership. and there's some signs that this could be different than what we saw back in the fall when kevin mccarthy became the first speaker ever to be ousted. did by his own colleagues on a vote on the house floor, that that point rho democrats did not come to mccarthy's defense. in fact, they all voted to remove him. row eight republicans did as well. the question is, what do democrats do? now, i talked to a number of democrats over the last few days. they are telling me that they are willing to save mike johnson's job if he moves forward on ukraine aid. this has been stalled for months and there has been deep republican divisions over moving ahead, johnson has tried to see if
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there's a path for on a separate bipartisan plan that is emerging in the house. democrats have issues with that bipartisan bill, but there is the senate passed that gets i was approved last month as $95 billion in aid to ukraine, to israel, to taiwan. that does not have deal with the issues of the border because republicans were divided over that prospect, but because it is silent on border security, money or any verdict security provisions, johnson has said he would not move forward on that. however, democrats say, if he committed get to moving with a vote on ukraine aid on the senate package, they would come to save him. that's what the number of rank and file democrats indicated to me just a couple of days ago if he does the responsible thing which is allowing members of congress to vote on a bill that will pass and that is in our national security interests. and then some subsequent to that, a nonserious actor who doesn't want to govern brings a motion to vacate. yes, i would motion to table in that circumstance. >> i will make common cause with anybody who will stand up
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for the people of ukraine anybody who will get desperately needed humanitarian assistance to gaza in anybody who will work for a two-state solution >> the timing of this ammar though is a bit uncertain because marjorie taylor greene can call up this vote whenever she wants. the house is in recess for the next two weeks. they'll come back. she could decide to move them are late no, she's not saying that yet. then there'll be two legislative days to actually have that boat on the house floor. the first vote is expected to be a procedural one to essentially table or kill that resolution. that's the one democrats are weighing whether to vote for, whether to kill that on the floor that right. manu raju. thank you. still ahead. earth's freshwater supply is getting dirtier, saltier, and more scarce. none of that sounds good, but fromage let's sing technological solutions could be the answer to the global water crisis will explain, you're in the cnn newsroom
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>> on a planet of nearly eight billion people as aquifers are drained reservoirs evaporate and sea levels rise >> earth's >> freshwater supply is getting dirtier saltier and scarcer and while desalination keeps some wealthy nations alive, making saltwater sweet demands the kind of energy and infrastructure that's just out of reach for the most desperate society's. >> i really had a chance to teach in a rural area in china i was really shocked to see that how struggling de warde to get some clean water that's journey was like two hours every day. >> so it's no wonder that some of the most promising breakthroughs in water tech are coming from the melting pot laboratories of boston where mit's yang zhong and leaning zang invented a machine the size of a suitcase that mimics the circulation power of the ocean powered only by sunlight.
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they say their prototype can desalinate six liters and our at a cost cheaper than tap water. so for our device that has the footprint of a solar panel, this will cause around like 150 to $200 >> that's cheap. >> and then you don't have to plug it in. it doesn't need any external power source. it's just the sun above it >> just some niche were sunlight comes at carson bh slow painter battery >> that will be solvation yulia. >> meanwhile, a korean team from mit came up with a another potential game changer just three key, we just stand our most recent prototype to the us army that can produce ten liter per hour of the drinking water with a >> direct feed of the seawater. >> john, you tells me his startup icp water took is just getting its first millions and investment and after two students from india met as mit lab partners and set out to clean and recycled the dirtiest
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of industrial waste. their company gradient is the first in the sector to be valued at 1 billion a clean water unicorn, it just strikes me that these ideas are the result of immigrants coming from developing places who see the problem in a much more acute way than americans do, then mingling these ideas in a place like boston at mit, where the the dreamers and doers meet it's exciting to think about the possibilities of that combination. >> yeah, we're really the fortunate to be here and i might see an in boston because we are surrounded by a lot of resources. i'm right now and just like sponge on turning all these things, see is the most abundant resource, carving the earth. and solar is accessible everywhere. and then like, why not let mate? no, like combined >> then it can be very powerful tool, it's more like a portable resource to anyone anywhere and anytime that would
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really, that would change the world. i think pull that up though we're reporting. thank you for that. >> still ahead. march madness started with 68 teams. that number quickly going down soon. we're going to have a suite 16 are coy wire joints is ahead to talk about the day surprises and stomp downs. >> you're in the cnn newsroom on. >> the chasing life podcast dr. sanjay gupta goes inside the world of weight loss, the numerical drugs, and what we're really i'm so to matter, a health chasing life. dr. sanjay gupta listen wherever you get your podcasts in this market, you'll find fisher investments is different than other money managers. different how aren't we all just looking for the hottest stocks? nope >> we use >> diversified strategies to position our clients portfolios for their long-term goals. >> she's still sell investments and generate high commissions for you, right now. >> we don't sell commission products worth $1 obligated to act in our client's best interest so when did you make more money? >> only when your
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>> march madness started with 68 men's and women's teams, 28 remain on the women's side, 22 on the men's side, purdue as the second number one seed to reach the sweet 16 on the menn side crushing utah state, you who khan and houston maybe could join them. tonight's cnn's coy wire joins me now, i'm going to toss it over you guys in a march madness why i'm i had to throw this on just again, in the spirit and show where my allegiance is. >> let's go, don't think i didn't notice that purple tie even de listed purdue was only the second topsy to lose who's in the first round to a 16 seed last year, virginia had the same fate in 2018, and the next year they went on to win the national championship. so matt painter and company, hoping history can repeat itself. and his big man zach edey, is on a mission seven foot 4300 pound or towering over defenders, utah state was no match for him today, 23 points, 14 boards for the sun to be two time national player of the year boilermakers role 1, 667 their fans in
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nearby andy levin it for now, but they're going to have a tough test coming up friday against gonzaga, who are in the sweet 16 for the ninth straight year. also making this sweet 16 party market look out. the second seated golden eagles knocking out colorado, thanks to hailar colics. he missed six gains with an injured oblique but came back in time for friday is tournament oprah and ranch in this one around the buffaloes that foot mark get up for good, 21 points to lead seven assists with a two-time all american mu in this sweet 60 for the first time at 11 years, they got knocked out in the second round last year, coal luck in his teammates, they came back to exercise size those demons and he reminded them afterwards down the stretch there that the past wasn't going to dictate their future >> told them and i get the last word every time we go back to the bench, i told him spending on this is what's been an off night we just got to go after an attack and when i run it from my nightmares anymore what would those nightmares like i
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mean, playing with my guys. it doesn't beat him march. last year the season got cut short. we didn't do what we wanted to do in the tournament, but you don't. now it's survive an advance on a mission. all right. >> how about on the women's side, coach don staley, south carolina stomped north carolina by 47 to 41. my laser full wildly freshman fenon doing it now three still three blocks, even here when the ball gets knocked away, she says, give me that back and she is money for three over game-high 20 points here, like a locomotive on full steam downhill tracks they one by 52 points in their opener on friday and now they're going to advance their tenth street sweet 16. and in a tournament with very few upsets, we had a shocker in columbus seven seated duke rallying from sixth team down in the first half to beat second-seeded ohio state reagan richardson, leading the charge of 28 including this three point of it. you're going to see here it sparked the 13 to run, putting them up for good blue devils delivering big
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75, 63, they'll face you've khan or syracuse. next, gains are still going on but all night long you can see the men's games on our sister networks, tbs, tnt, trutv. and we have those northwestern wildcats taken a crack at uconn, the favorite team to win at all by omar, i know who you're rooting for big dog, show me that tai'an, that jersey >> yeah. yeah. we'll show it in a second. thank you. >> coy really appreciate it. oh, cats, we'll see what happens >> all right, everyone. no guesses to who i'm supporting this march madness right here. go cats. this is my logit game worn, lightly, sweat in jersey from my playing days, but it is a play in game or a game today as northwestern and so many other teams quite a their ticket to the sweet 16. so joining me now is michael will ban co-host of pardon the interruption on espn and longtime northwestern alum, who i should mention it he's joining us from northwestern pep rally sodas. it's loud in there to get everything we've
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got together for this match up with the one seed uconn. great to see you. >> i want to start just with a tournament in general, we've seen some pretty incredible mid major upset, upsets early on in the tournament. the college landscape is it just that different why does that upset dynamic? makes seem to be so prevalent this year >> well, the tournament's always had upsets, of course, what i think right now, you can expect to see more for all of them and they're not as shocking because we have so many themes that have players really good high school players, great high school players from all over the country. and if they're not happy where they are they can transfer they can go for whatever reasons they want, including name, image, and likeness, money. so there are a lot of reasons to go somewhere wait was sized for just one of the bluebloods. you don't need to sit on a bench for one of the great, great traditional programs when you can play wherever you want and threatened one one of those bluebook programs like kentucky, which has already lost and out of the tournament. so we've always had tournament
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up term, it upsets in march. but they're not as shocking an' gonna continue >> yeah. look, i had kentucky my final fours, so i got screwed over a little bit by that. but as you mentioned, it is more common that it's happening and maybe maybe, maybe it happens a little bit today because i want to talk northwestern for a bit because for those that don't know for the longest time, northwestern had never made an end and cwa tournament in its history, including when i played. but over the last seven years, this is now the third time making it the third time making it to the second round. what do you think has been so? critical and being able to take a program like northwestern to the next level athletically at a school that maybe has been more traditionally known for academics so continuity i'm having excellence at the top of any pyramid and being able to keep people there. >> chris >> collins and his staff, and emphasis on it from the rest of the university, no team, no athletic program can do it without a commitment from the
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school. we weren't committed to this sort of athletic interests. 40, 50 years ago, we just weren't it wasn't that important it is important and we see it's important to the entire university community, any university community and so at northwestern, we ought to be competitive, not just in classrooms, but also in gyms and on-field. if stanford can do this, if duke can do this why not us and there's been a lot of that as an attitude and net auto have existed long time ago, but it exists now. and so yeah, this is our third appearance. here's a tournament in seven years since 2017. here's what's even more important. 24 wins by the northwestern basketball team. the last two years is more more than any team in the big ten, except for purdue number one seed, purdue, and illinois, which is a 3d scene that's it. yeah, ohio state, not michigan, not even a great time is on michigan state. northwestern. we've got the third most
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victories in the big ten. bass men's basketball in that time. so yes, there's an importance of continuity. is it sustainable? yeah. it appears to be what you got to have the right people in place. you have to have constant traded support for those programs. we've seen that in our women's programs, you've seen it in lacrosse, were there eight national championships? if field hockey, where we recently won one on in the finals, 33 years in a row. we're seeing that more. we've seen in football, we're now seeing it men's basketball. and why not? why those schools? >> and look, you said the most critical thing, the critical three words. why not us, the odds are stacked against one word prediction, who you got today >> let's my heart. >> listen. i'm wearing, i'm wearing >> yeah, i'm gonna be out there rooting this uconn is probably the toughest draw that's the number one sees. we've already been purdue we've shown we can beat a
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number of top cedric team a number one rank team. we've already done that, so it's not beyond us. but uconn, who >> york city? >> yeah it's a tough call, is going to meet. i'm hoping we shocked the world today. not that would make me happier, michael. well, ban. thank you for taking the time, rep. in the purple. appreciate you for everyone out. i'll go cats and we'll be right back >> your favorite rock what teams are back for redemption? and a first-ever waterfront homeland animation showed. and i can do this. >> it's time to sink or swim. >> the log. all new monday night at nine on hgtv >> this is not just another e glass because it evolves with you it's absent. it is the first e glass made just for you this is not just design because you're the class, it adopt out it recognizes, understand you, thatfeel
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