Former Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed quits international cricket

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Former Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed retired from international cricket on Sunday after leading the country in 100 international matches across multiple formats.

Associated Press

"I would like to thank the Pakistan Cricket Board for the trust they placed in me over the years," Sarfaraz said in a statement. "Pakistan cricket has always been very close to my heart and I will continue to support the game in every possible way."

The PCB has already included Sarfaraz in the revamped four-member men's selection committee after the disappointing T20 World Cup in which the team failed to make it to the semifinals.

Sarfaraz made his one-day international debut against archrival India in 2007, but had to wait for three years before playing his first test match against Australia at Hobart in 2010, which was followed by his first Twenty20 appearance against England at Dubai.

Sarfaraz scored 6,164 runs across multiple formats including six centuries and 35 half-centuries. He represented Pakistan in 54 test matches, 117 ODIs and 61 T20s. As a wicketkeeper, he held 315 catches and had 56 stumpings.

During his almost two-decade long international career, Sarfaraz led Pakistan to the Champions Trophy title in 2017 after beating India in the final. He also captained Pakistan to the Under-19 World Cup title in 2006.

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Sarfaraz captained Pakistan to 11 consecutive series victories in T20s that included clean sweeps against the West Indies, Sri Lanka, Australia, New Zealand and Scotland.

"Captaining Pakistan across all formats was a dream come true," Sarfaraz said. "I always tried to play fearless cricket and build a united team. Seeing players like Babar Azam, Fakhar Zaman … and others grow into match-winners during my captaincy is one of my proudest achievements."

Sarfaraz also holds the Pakistan record of 10 catches in a test matches, which he took against South Africa in Johannesburg in 2019. He is also the only Pakistan wicketkeeper-batter to score an ODI century at Lord's against England in 2016. His last international appearance came against Australia in a test match at Perth in 2023.

"It has been the greatest honor of my life to represent Pakistan," he said. "From leading the U-19 team to a world title in 2006 to lifting the ICC Champions Trophy in 2017, every moment in Pakistan colors has been special. I am grateful to my teammates, coaches, family and the fans for their unwavering support throughout my career."

AP cricket:https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

Former Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed quits international cricket

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Former Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed retired from international cricket on Sunday after leading the co...
Crazy or genius? A nuclear-powered solution to the West's water crisis

PAGE, Arizona ‒ In the middle of the desert sits a sign: "Caution docks may be slippery."

USA TODAY

They are not.

In fact, there's not a drop of water to be seen atAntelope Point Marina, which once sat near the shore of Lake Powell, the nation's second-largest reservoir. The sparkling Colorado River now laps at the Glen Canyon walls about 180 feet below, completely invisible from a dock that once floated atop the water.

The 710-foot-high Glen Canyon Dam that impounds the Colorado River is an important source of hydroelectric power in the area, generating 1,320 megawatts of power to serve upward of 1 million homes in the Southwest, although the amount of power the dam generates has been dropping along with the water levels in Lake Powell. The white A worker drains water from a kayak after a tour to Antelope Canyon on Lake Powell in February 2026 when water levels are very low. The 710-foot-high Glen Canyon Dam that impounds the Colorado River is an important source of hydroelectric power in the area, generating 1,320 megawatts of power to serve upward of 1 million homes in the Southwest, although the amount of power the dam generates has been dropping along with the water levels in Lake Powell. A person stands in a shade structure and looks at the Glen Canyon Dam holding back the Colorado River to create Lake Powell in this February 2026 image. The 710-foot-high Glen Canyon Dam that impounds the Colorado River is an important source of hydroelectric power in the area, generating 1,320 megawatts of power to serve upward of 1 million homes in the Southwest, although the amount of power the dam generates has been dropping along with the water levels in Lake Powell. A sign warns visitors not to walk on what would ordinarily be a floating dock on Lake Powell at Antelope Marina, but is instead hundreds of feet away from the water in this February 2026 image. A boat launch at Lake Powell ends well short of the water in this February 2026 image. The white ring on the rocks indicates where the water level once reached. A boat launch at Lake Powell ends well short of the water in this February 2026 image. The white ring on the rocks indicates where the water level once reached. Low water levels in Lake Powell are apparent in this February 2026 image showing the end of a floating dock hanging off a cliff at Antelope Marina in Page, Arizona. Workers carved a new path to the water through the solid rock. The Glen Canyon Dam holds back the Colorado River to create Lake Powell, as seen in this February 2026 image. An abandoned and once-sunken boat sits along the shoreline of Lake Powell in this May 2022 file photo. The white ring above shows how high the water level was when the lake was full. A powerboat passes the towering canyon wall containing Lake Powell in this May 2022 file photo. The white ring shows the height of the lake when it was last full. A buoy that once floated in Lake Powell's popular Iceberg Canyon sits high and dry in this May 2022 file photo.

Lake Powell water levels falling

Instead of reflecting the bright blue Arizona sky near the Four Corners region of the Southwest, the lake's water level reflects the dire reality that the Colorado River is running out of water. And the dock with the sign dangles off a 100-foot cliff, waiting for a refill that climatologists say will likely never come.

"Things are really, really rough on the Colorado River. It's ugly," said Eric Balken, the executive director of theGlen Canyon Institute. "Everybody is at a place right now where we're all asking, 'what the heck happens now? What are we doing?'"

Now, a public lands access group has proposed an eye-poppingly ambitious plan to build eight massive desalination plants off the California coastline, turning ocean water into fresh for farming, and reducing demand on the ailing Colorado River. To meet the energy demand, the plants might have to be powered with nuclear reactors.

Although desalination plants are widely used in the Middle East, they consume huge amounts of electricity to generate a relatively small amount of water. No country has ever tried something on this scale before.

The Colorado River basin ‒ and the seven states that depend on the river for water ‒ is facing significant shortfalls this summer following an unusually hot and dry winter. The plan's authors at the Idaho-based BlueRibbon Coalition say their $40 billion proposal offers a viable long-term solution at a time when PresidentDonald Trumpis slashing environment-based regulatory delays and encouraging the country to think big.

"At some point we're going to hit a hard reality there's no more water in the Colorado River," said Ben Burr, the coalition's executive director. "You can only squeeze so much more juice out of it."

Some critics say the plan is both utterly unaffordable and potentially catastrophic for the environment.

The BlueRibbon Coalition is undeterred, deliberately invoking the massive federal efforts that built theGlen CanyonandHoover damsand filled Lake Powell and Lake Mead with Colorado River water. Those reservoir projects allowed the United States to flourish in Arizona, Nevada and California, supercharging economic growth, powering cities and turning dusty desert into fertile farmland.

The group's plan is the newest ambitious idea to solve western water woes. Other proposals floated over the decades included towing icebergs from Alaska or Antarctica, diverting rivers from the rainy Pacific Northwest or even piping Great Lakes water thousands of miles west across the Continental Divide.

Peter Goble, the assistant state climatologist for Colorado, said the ongoing drought is increasing pressure on western states to find a solution. The West is warming faster than the country overall, which ultimately means even less water available for farmers, businesses and residents, he said.

"There's no way to look at the numbers and think the Colorado River is doing well right now," Goble said. "In a world that's warmer, all signs point to droughts that will be more intense and more frequent."

A sign warns visitors not to walk on what would ordinarily be a floating dock on Lake Powell at Antelope Marina, but is instead hundreds of feet away from the water in this February 2026 image.

Drought, squabbles among states threaten river's future

Seven states ‒ Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming ‒ collaboratively manage and use the Colorado River.

But the amount of water flowing downstream has been dropping due to a long-term drought at the same time, causing squabbles among the states over who gets how much for farming, drinking and industrial uses. And a certain amount of water must constantly flow out of the two dams so they can produce power for millions of households and businesses. Mexico and Native American tribes also have water-use rights and have a say in the management.

Although it's at the end of the river, California legally has the right to use more water than any of the other states, primarily to grow alfalfa to feed cattle. And although he has not endorsed this specific plan, California Gov. Gavin Newsom in a Feb. 11 letter to fellow Colorado River governors suggested that desalination and other "advanced technologies" may ultimately be necessary. Newsom's office did not respond to a request for comment specifically on the BlueRibbon plan.

"We welcome shared investments in infrastructure, from water reuse to desalination, that can reduce pressure on precious water supplies in Lake Powell and Lake Mead," Newsom wrote. "Our reality is clear. We need to manage with less rain and snow to provide water for our communities and farms each year. It is a shared reality that requires a shared solution."

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Burr said the plants could generate 7 million acre-feet of water. An acre foot of water, which is 325,851 gallons, is equivalent to about what two or three U.S. homes use annually. In comparison, growing a single acre of alfalfa consumes as much as 6 acre-feet of water each year, according to University of Arizona's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

What's in the $40 billion plan?

The BlueRibbon plan envisions:

  • Eight large desalination plants off the coast of California and Mexico, powered potentially by small nuclear generators of the kind championed by the White House. Electricity could also come from solar or wind farms, although President Donald Trump has repeatedly tried to kill such projects. Building the plants would cost about $40 billion, Burr estimated.

  • The plants would potentially be built in the Sea of Cortez and in federal enclaves on California's Pacific coast. Doing so would limit environmental roadblocks, speeding their construction. Desalination plants work by removing salt from ocean water, creating extra-salty water that would have to be diluted before being dumped back into the ocean, otherwise it might be toxic to aquatic life.

  • Fresh water would be pumped at least 100 miles inland to reach California's Imperial Valley, a vast desert that today is irrigated with Colorado River water to grow crops from alfalfa to lettuce and onions. The "new" water would allow California to give up some of its Colorado River allocations to other states to use.

Burr said he believes the plan, which could be privately or publicly funded, is being offered at the right time. He said the pendulum against over-regulation and environmentalism is swinging back in favor of ordinary Americans and business owners, and against the environmental groups that would otherwise have prevented the construction of Lake Powell or Lake Mead.

The BlueRibbon group's supporters include companies that would benefit from increased water levels in Lake Powell, and that have fought to maintain higher water levels.

"I think you're seeing that we're realizing as a country we have to be building real infrastructure and not just jobs programs for environmental lawyers," Burr said. "We need a new real water system."

A worker drains water from a kayak after a tour to Antelope Canyon on Lake Powell in February 2026 when water levels are very low.

Throwing seawater at the problem: 'That's just crazy,' one expert warns

Aaron Weiss, the deputy director of the Denver-based Center for Western Priorities, considers the BlueRibbon plan laughable. The center advocates for increased land and water conservation across the West, but is nonpartisan.

Weiss said the infrastructure necessary to move fresh water from the coast back uphill for farmers would bestaggeringly expensive, likely adding tens of billons of dollars to the overall cost.

"Their solution to the problem is throw seawater at it. And that's just crazy," Weiss said. "No one has ever considered desalinating water on this scale. It's not audacious. It's just stupid. Just based on what we know that it costs to desalinate water and move water, there's no way $40 billion is anywhere close to the actual price tag."

Among other countries, Israel depends heavily on desalination to meet its drinking and farm water needs. But that also consumes about 5% of thecountry's overall electricity, according to a study by Tel Aviv University.

Weiss said there's also significant uncertainty on how the desalination plants would handle the extra-salty water created by the process. Israel's plantsmix that water back into the Mediterranean, where it's diluted enough to not endanger aquatic life.

Like Burr, Weiss said the low snowpack levels across the West this winter are putting pressure on states to find some kind of solution. During the Biden presidency, the federal government paid farmers billions of dollars to stop growing crops like alfalfa, freeing up water for other uses. That funding was temporary, however, and the Trump administration has been pushing states to find a longer-term solution.

Federal forecasters are warning this could be one of the worst years on record for Lake Powell water levels, due to the poor snowpack and warm winter. As of mid-March, the lake's surface stood at 3,529 feet above sea level, down from 3,587 feet in 2024, its most recent high. Some forecasters worry the lake could lose so much water this year that it will reach what's known as "power pool," the minimum level necessary to continue generating hydroelectricity.

The lake reached its highest-ever level of 3,708 feet above sea level in 1983, and has never been full since. A white "bathtub ring" remains visible from that high-water mark.

Forcing farmers to use less water could raise food costs for Americans, although some environmental groups say the solution is to grow less alfalfa, which is often sold to China, Japan and Saudia Arabia for their herds, according to the University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources service. Burr said it's silly to pay farmers not to grow crops - wouldn't that money be better spent creating more water to use? he asked.

Weiss, however, said conservation is the fastest, easiest way to reduce water use. He said the BlueRibbon plan would take decades to complete ‒ and the Colorado River is in crisis now.

"At the end of the day, basic physics takes over," Weiss said. "Our only solution is to conserve our way out of this aggressively."

Balken, who runs the Glen Canyon Institute, has been pushing a plan to completely remove the 710-foot-tall Glen Canyon dam, or at least modify it so all the water in Lake Powell can flow downstream into Lake Mead. The institute ultimately wants to see the Colorado River returned to its natural state through the Glen Canyon.

"Given the low snowpack and given the heatwave that's about to zap the snowpack, we're probably looking at one of the worst runoffs in history, at one of the worst times. It's almost certain we will see some sort of crash soon at Lake Powell," Balken said. "This may be unprecedented, but it is the most predictable disaster of all time. We have known this moment has been coming for 20 years."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Colorado River water crisis and a $40B plan to solve it

Crazy or genius? A nuclear-powered solution to the West's water crisis

PAGE, Arizona ‒ In the middle of the desert sits a sign: "Caution docks may be slippery." They are n...
'We've got a live one.'

Jo, as he came to be known to the cybersecurity experts watching his every move, was a hard worker.

NBC Universal Photos of Jo, a North Korean operative for an employment scheme that infiltrated the United States.  (NBC News)

He rose early, usually by 5 a.m. ET, and worked late into the night, often six days a week. Jo juggled three jobs and constantly applied to more — sometimes as many as 50 a day. He needed the money. Always professional, he quickly moved on from rejection and followed up with recruiters whenever there was a lull in communication. His inbox was full of job matches and interview confirmations.

One of those interviews would lead a team of cybersecurity investigators to the inner workings of a vast North Korean employment scheme with national security implications.

On a Tuesday in June, Jo put on his headset and logged on to a call for a hard-to-fill artificial intelligence role with Nisos, a corporate security and investigations company headquartered in Virginia. Jo appeared on screen wearing an orange T-shirt in a beige room. He said he was in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

"I heard you guys had, I think, Hurricane George recently," Magen Gicinto, chief people officer for Nisos, inquired. "How was your house? How was Palm Beach?"

"How can I say?" Jo paused before replying while looking off-screen. "Luckily my place was fine."

Minutes later, when asked to share his screen, he hastily logged off.

Magen Gacino works in her home office in Liberty, Mo. (Arin Yoon for NBC News)

There had been no hurricane. And while there was an open job at Nisos, the company had no intention of hiring him. They had already begun to suspect that Jo wasn't exactly who he said he was.

For the past decade, North Korea has engaged in a wide-ranging effort to place remote workers at U.S. companies in order to funnel money back to its coffers and, in some cases, steal sensitive information. Those workers' salariesare used in partto evade sanctions and fund the communist regime's illicit programs, including its weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile efforts, according toU.S. government agencies. Last year, the FBI announced the schemes were becoming"increasingly malicious" and the Department of Justice declared the issue a "code red."

With Jo, Nisos' executives believed they had stumbled on one of these North Korean workers. Few outside of the government have gotten an inside look into the operation, so they decided to take a chance: "hire" Jo, ship him a laptop and gain as much information as possible.

It worked. Nisossharedwith NBC News its open-source intelligenceanalysis, as well as videos with Jo and technical findings, providing an unprecedented look at the human dynamics and inner workings of a suspected operative taking part in a sprawling international employment scheme that is estimated to include hundreds of American companies, thousands of people and hundreds of millions of dollars per year.

Jared Hudson, Nisos’ Chief Technology Officer, at his home in College Park, Ga. (Kendrick Brinson for NBC News)

"If you can think of a best-case scenario for an analyst that follows these things, this is a dream come true, because you never get this kind of access to what we assume is happening. Now we could actually see it happening in real time," said Jared Hudson, Nisos' chief technology officer.

Over a roughly three-month investigation, Nisos uncovered an apparent network of at least 20 North Korean operatives including Jo who had collectively applied to at least 160,000 roles. During that time, workers in the network — which some evidence showed were based in China — were employed by five U.S.-based companies and allegedly helped by an American citizen operating out of two nondescript suburban homes in Florida.

Monitoring the team's communications nearly 24/7 through its laptop, Nisos gained insights into what its analysts say was likely a Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) IT team, including how it functioned and how its members communicated with each other. Nisos gathered that the workers were likely based in China and used only each other as references in their job applications. And like many tight-knit workplaces, the team seemed to enjoy a collegial atmosphere. Jo and his colleagues exchanged Minion-themed GIFs and chatted, often in English, about getting drinks together, smoking cigarettes and playing the online gameskribbl.iotogether.

"We could see the coordination. We could see the facilitators. We could see the hierarchy of their cell," Hudson said. "It was the most insightful look inside an active DPRK employment fraud cell that I know of honestly."

Nisos says it coordinated with the FBI prior to mailing the laptop for the purposes of its internal investigation. It also worked with law enforcement to notify the individual whose identity was stolen by Jo.

"In keeping with Department of Justice policy, the FBI can neither confirm nor deny conducting specific investigations," an FBI spokesperson told NBC News.

At a press conference last July, Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, was direct in her messaging to American businesses: "Your tech sectors are being infiltrated by North Korea. And when big companies are lax and they're not doing their due diligence, they're putting America's security at risk."

Pirro's comments followed thesentencingof Christina Chapman, an Arizona resident who became the first American citizen convicted in the job schemes. Chapman received more than eight years in federal prison for helping North Korean IT workers generate over $17 million in illegal revenue. That operation infiltrated more than 300 U.S. organizations including government agencies using the stolen identities of 68 Americans — an operation the Justice Department called the largest identity-theft case of its kind.

"They are inside our house," Pirro warned.

Christina Chapman organized and stored U.S. company laptops in her home, and included notes identifying the U.S. company and identity associated with each laptop. (Dept. of Justice)

The stakes are high. Inone case, a North Korean worker stole sensitive information related to U.S. military technology, according to the Justice Department. Inanother,an American accomplice obtained an ID that enabled access to government facilities, networks and systems.At least three organizationshave been extorted and suffered hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages after proprietary information was posted online by IT workers.Last summer, a North Korean IT worker was charged with stealing over $700,000 worth of cryptocurrency assets from a Georgia-based company — evidence, investigators say, that the IT schemes are becoming more sophisticated and aggressive in their targeting of cryptocurrency companies.

Analysts warn that North Korean IT workers are targeting larger organizations, increasing extortion attempts and seeking out employers that pay salaries in cryptocurrency. More recently, securityresearchershave uncovered fake job application platforms impersonating major U.S. cryptocurrency and AI firms, includingAnthropic, designed to infect legitimate applicants' networks with malware to be utilized once hired.

The global cybersecurity company CrowdStrike identified a220% risein 2025 in instances of North Koreans gaining fraudulent employment at Western companies to work remotely as developers.

"This is where North Korea enjoys the benefits of having the resources of a state, but behaving like a nonstate criminal group," said Jenny Jun, an assistant professor of international affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology who has testified before Congress on North Korea's cyberoperations. "It would be like if they stole a bunch of jewels and then set fire to the museum to hide their trails. They do the equivalent of things like that in cyberspace."

The payoff flowing back to Pyongyang from these schemes is enormous. Some North Korean IT workersearn more than $300,000 per year, far more than they'd be able to earn domestically, with as much as 90% of their wages directed back to the regime, according to congressionaltestimonyfrom Bruce Klinger, a former CIA deputy division chief for Korea.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (Korean Central News Agency via AFP-Getty Images)

TheUnited Nationsestimates the schemes, which proliferated after the pandemic when more companies' workforces went remote, generate as much as $600 million annually, while a U.S. State Department-led sanctions monitoringassessmentplaced earnings for 2024 as high as $800 million.

The IT scheme proceeds, according to thereport, are used to evade sanctions and in part fund North Korea's weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs in what has been described in congressional testimony as one of the country's "cash cows."

Roman Rozhavsky, the assistant director of the FBI's Counterintelligence Division, said that the scheme has succeeded in part due to the broader move toward remote work sparked by the Covid pandemic.

"Covid definitely opened the Pandora's box to this, because every job became virtual, and it became a lot easier for them to get these jobs," Rozhavsky added.

"Hey, we've got a live one here," Jared Hudson messaged his Nisos colleague Magen Gicinto from his home office in Atlanta. "Let's see, maybe there's something we can do."

He had just finished his initial interview with Jo and thought something wasn't right.

Jo's command of English was poorer than expected, and Hudson thought he might have been reading AI-generated answers to his questions, pausing for an unusual amount of time before responding.

Jared Hudson, Nisos’ Chief Technology Officer, in his home office in College Park, Ga. (Kendrick Brinson for NBC News)

"It was very much like interacting with a politician reading off a teleprompter. I was like, 'This guy is reading and he's dynamically responding to my questions.' So that's where I was like, 'Yeah, he's using AI for sure,'" Hudson recalled.

After a deeper résumé review turned up more red flags, Hudson, Gicinto and the Nisos team devised a plan to bait Jo.

The team's suspicion grew stronger when Jo abruptly ended his second interview, logging off midconversation when prompted to share his screen. During the call, he did not provide a portfolio, something an engineer with over 15 years of experience would commonly be expected to have.

About two weeks later, Gicinto reached back out to Jo with an offer: a $5,000 retainer fee to help with what Nisos described as "urgent AI priorities." He responded right away that he was ready to work, providing a mailing address in Florida and bank information for an account in Missouri.

"Jo" on a call with Nisos. (Nisos)

"We know that most of their motivation is financially driven," Gicinto said. "I think that financial piece really hooked him back into the conversation."

In early August, after alerting the FBI, Nisos says it mailed a laptop enabled with monitoring software to a single-story home in Palm Bay, Florida. Once the laptop was delivered and plugged in, Nisos activated its web camera. Immediately they could see that there were 40 devices linked together on a shared network, 20 of which were likely part of a laptop farm.

"We're freaking out at this point. It's super exciting that we have access to an actual laptop farm," said Ben Racenberg, a former CIA target analyst who is the North Korea research lead for Nisos and helped devise its investigative plan.

Jo logged into Nisos' laptop, which gave the team tracking him access to the messaging platform that his suspected cell of North Korean workers were using to coordinate job applications among themselves. The workers managed job references for each other, interview schedules and updates on applications. They also tracked application totals and job status updates. Jo was curious about America, too. "What sports do Americans usually play?" Nisos could see he Googled one morning.

Nisos used the webcam on a laptop to view what was likely a laptop farm. (Nisos)

In order to learn more about where the workers were likely based, Nisos shared two documents with Jo that had a tool attached to determine the IP address and location of the user. Once Jo opened the document, Nisos detected the documents were accessed using a type of virtual private network frequently associated with North Korean IT workers based in China.

Nisos' access to Jo's email address indicated he was connecting from an IP address near Shanghai.

"We didn't expect them to sign into their command and control infrastructure on our laptop. But once they did that, we had full insight into everything," Hudson said.

Nisos also got a firsthand look at just how good the operation was at attracting employers. Last August, Jo's inbox populated with job prompts, matches and interview requests. Subject lines included "let's meet!" and "thanks for your interest," according to screenshots reviewed by NBC News showing the Gmail account used for applications.

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Nisos estimated that in about a year, Jo, who was likely a newer member of the team, applied to about 5,000 jobs. The group appeared to be sorted into four teams managed by captains who docked workers' salaries by $1 per mistake made on applications or for incorrect roles.

NBC News made multiple attempts to reach the suspected North Korean worker known as Jo, without receiving a response.

In Pyongyang, the cyberworkforce pipeline, including potential IT workers, begins at an early age. Promising math and science students are selected in elementary school and fast-tracked through computer science and hacking training before being placed into cyberunits under military and state agencies, according to arecent reportby DTEX, a risk-adaptive security and behavioral intelligence firm that tracks North Korea's cybercrime.

Nisos Threat Intelligence Services Leader Ben Racenberg. (Alyssa Schukar for NBC News)

"It's all super organized and very much metric-driven. It was applications, applications, interviews, interviews," Racenberg said.

And it was very, very human. Like any employee, Jo relied on colleagues for help. They, like him, were hardworking. They shared laptops and sometimes the jobs themselves.

"They attended interviews all day every day, and then once they secured a job, they would collect paychecks until they were terminated," said Hudson. "Just rinse and repeat. It was a volume game."

With the ability to see which other U.S. companies Jo and his team were working for — all remote technology roles — Nisos' CEO, Ryan LaSalle, began making calls to their security teams to alert them of the fraud.

"Most of the companies weren't aware of it, even if they had pretty robust security teams," LaSalle said. "It wasn't really high on the radar."

In September, without any assigned work or pay from Nisos, Jo returned the laptop. It was shipped from a different rental home, in Melbourne, Florida. By that time, Nisos was confident it had collected enough technical signals to confirm North Korea's role.

But Nisos still had questions. Racenberg recalls messaging his colleague Gicinto at the time, saying: "I cannot believe that we actually found a laptop farm, and now we want to figure out who is the person who is running this."

Magen Gicinto. (Arin Yoon for NBC News)

Jo may not have been in Florida, but Nisos found that he seemed to have had help stateside.

North Korean IT teams rely on an expansive global network of facilitators, often ranging from individuals in the U.S. recruited to run laptop farms to bank representatives and brokers based in China who help launder the proceeds through a complex web of cryptocurrency exchanges so they can be used to purchase real-world goods. In at least one case, a facilitator was recruited through a cellphone video game application, according to an interview with law enforcement cited in court documents.

An overview of DPRK IT worker operations. The cycle begins by building personas often using stolen American identities, then applying to and interviewing for U.S. remote jobs at scale. If an operator loses a job or the persona is exposed, IT workers begin the job search again by building new identities.  (Alejandro Escobar and Michael Basilico / NBC News) Once hired, U.S. companies send laptops to addresses provided by North Korean workers. Facilitators install software so that workers can remotely perform the jobs. Several laptops used for this purpose in a single location are called "laptop farms." FBI officials say it's difficult to estimate the total number of facilitators involved. Every laptop farm likely has multiple company devices being used by IT workers. Many workers use multiple identities and work more than one job at a time. (Alejandro Escobar and Michael Basilico / NBC News)

FBI officials say laptop farms are a crucial way North Korean IT teams trick U.S. companies into believing their remote workers are in the U.S. — providing both a physical address to mail laptops to and a U.S. internet connection. Once equipped with certain remote access software and tools, workers can log into those laptops remotely.

So far, at least 10 alleged U.S.-based facilitators have been federally charged, including one active-duty member of the U.S. Army, for their alleged roles in hosting laptop farms, laundering payments and moving proceeds through shell companies. At least six other alleged U.S. facilitators have been identified in court documents but not named.

In one instance, an American citizen, Kejia "Tony" Wang, traveled to China in 2023 to meet with co-conspirators and IT workers in Shenyang and Dandong, according to court documents. Laptops from over 100 U.S. companies, including a California-based defense contractor, were sent to Wang, who also set up shell companies to help route wages earned overseas. Wangpleaded guiltyto charges related to wire fraud, money laundering and identity theft and is awaiting sentencing next month.

"We believe there are many more hundreds of people out there who are participating in these schemes," said Rozhavsky, the FBI assistant director. "They could never pull this off if they didn't have willing facilitators in the U.S. helping them."

Once illicit money has been earned, it needs to be consolidated and converted to government-issued currency. North Korean teams typically rely on a maze of Chinese networks to launder it, according to industry reports.

"Every bad guy you can think of is using Chinese money launderers. Now, this is how money moves internationally," said Nick Carlsen, senior investigator on the global investigations team at the blockchain analytics company TRM Labs and a former intelligence analyst at the FBI focused on North Korea.

Since Kim Jong Un took power in 2011, North Korea has honed and expanded a portfolio of cybercrime operations beyond IT work — pulling in billions through cryptocurrency thefts including a record $1.5 billion heist last year, according to theFBI. Analysts say these operations have made Kim wealthier and more geopolitically relevant than ever before, validating his long-held view of cyberoperations as an"all-purpose sword."

In recent years, North Korea's partnership with Chinese money laundering networks has unlocked a new level of speed and efficiency that North Korean operators had not been able to achieve independently.

"The transformative element is the existence of these superliquid Chinese financial networks," Carlsen said. "They can absorb a lot of money, convert it and transfer it in whatever domestic currency you want. That's the big change."

North Korean IT workers in an undisclosed location.  (Dept. of Justice )

Most of these intermediaries operate across southern China and Southeast Asia including Myanmar, Hong Kong, Macao and China's Fujian province — rapidly moving cryptocurrency across blockchains using so-called "mixers" that break stolen funds into smaller pieces to obscure their origin. IT worker proceeds are typically smaller sums and involve fewer intermediaries, said Andrew Fierman, head of national security intelligence at the blockchain tracking company Chainalysis, while the larger crypto heist sums require complex, multilayered laundering chains.

Carlsen noted that funds from both IT worker schemes and crypto heists frequently end up with Chinese brokers tied to organized-crime syndicates. "You see overlaps withpig-butcheringscams and with drug cartels," he said. "These are the same networks absorbing this money." Cryptocurrencies have made that convergence easier. "It's the lubricant," he added. "The oil that allows all these gears to interact with each other."

The U.S. government has taken some steps to address North Korea's IT worker scheme, but experts warn the threat is intensifying as workers' use of AI continues to scale up around the globe.

Cybersecurity analysts say U.S. enforcement tools are struggling to keep pace with the scale and sophistication of Pyongyang's cyberoperations. Many of the individuals involved operate from countries that lack extradition agreements with the U.S., placing them largely beyond the reach of U.S. law enforcement.

"It's a whack-a-mole game. It's virtually impossible to fully disrupt this," Carlsen said. "It's just a never-ending process."

He argues the most effective strategy is to make schemes less profitable by cutting off the regime's ability to cash out through money laundering organizations.

The U.S. government has ramped up efforts to do that. On Thursday, the Treasury Departmentsanctionedsix individuals and two entities for their roles in DPRK government-orchestrated IT worker schemes, including facilitators based in North Korea, Vietnam, Laos and Spain.

Last fall, federal authorities announced a wave of criminal indictments, forfeitures, sanctions and asset freezes targeting North Korea's illicit cyber activity.

InOctober, the Treasury Department severed Cambodia-based Huione Group, a financial-guarantee network, from the U.S. financial system, alleging it laundered billions in illicit proceeds, including at least $37 million in cryptocurrency linked to North Korean operations. Weeks later, eight individuals and two entities, including North Korean bankers and institutions, weresanctionedfor laundering funds derived from cybercrime and IT worker fraud schemes.

North Korea, for its part, has denied any wrongdoing.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un participates in a photo session with soldiers who were involved in the construction of the a greenhouse farm in North Pyongan Province on Feb. 1, 2026.  (Korean Central News Agency via Getty Image)

Last year, following the Department of Justice's indictment of several North Koreans for their alleged roles in the scheme, the country's foreign minister condemned U.S. actions as "an absurd smear campaign" targeting the "non-existent 'cyber threat' from the DPRK," the Korean Central News Agency reported.

In response to questions about Chinese nationals' involvement in the scheme, Chinese Embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said, "We oppose false allegations and smears which have no factual ground at all."

The scheme itself is also becoming more complex. North Korean IT teams are now subcontracting work to developers in Pakistan, Nigeria and India, expanding into fields like customer service, financial processing, insurance and translation services — roles far less scrutinized than software development.

"Unless you have external information, you might not know they're North Korean," said Michael Barnhart, who leads nation-state threat intelligence at DTEX. "They're trying to move themselves into middle management, and it's working."

That expansion also means concerns that North Korean workers could cause real-world harm by jeopardizing lives, something Barnhart has seen up close.

In 2021, as part of awave of attackson NASA and military bases, a North Korean hacking team infected a Kansas hospital's computer systems with ransomware, crippling servers and demanding roughly $100,000 in bitcoin to restore their function. The hospital paid. Barnhart helped investigate the hack alongside the FBI, and it was that case that made clear to him the ways in which North Korea's malicious hacking teams sometimes cooperate with IT teams to support their missions, something that was not widely known at the time.

What he saw was a hacking operator engaged in IT work, including placing other IT workers in jobs. The income from those jobs supported the hacking unit's primary malware operations to commit computer intrusions against U.S., South Korean and Chinese government or technology victims.

"It started off as revenue generation, but the lines are getting blurrier and blurrier. If the time comes, they've got chess pieces inside organizations all over the world — and they'll start acting from the inside," he said.

Rozhavsky expressed similar concerns.

"Even if a company gets rid of them, we don't know what backdoors they could have left for access in the future," he said. "So it's definitely a ticking time bomb that could have negative consequences down the line."

Lawmakers are also seeking stronger defenses. Sens. Gary Peters, D-Mich., and Mike Rounds, R-S.D., introduced the Protecting America from Cyber Threats Act, which would renew key cybersecurity authorities for another decade and encourage private companies, like Nisos, to share information about cyberthreats with the federal government.

Still, thousands of workers, the driving force of the IT schemes, remain out of reach, the majority of whom are based in China.

"These are the smartest people in North Korea. That's kind of the tragedy of it," Carlsen said. "They've taken their best and brightest and made them criminals."

'We've got a live one.'

Jo, as he came to be known to the cybersecurity experts watching his every move, was a hard worker. He rose ea...
March Madness automatic bids 2026: What basketball teams won conference tournaments?

For weeks, the teams that make up the 68-teamMen's NCAA Tournamentbracket have been a source of constant speculation, prompting heated discussions revolving aroundNET rankings, Quad One games andWins Above Bubble.

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For nearly half of the field, though, there isn't a debate about whether they should be included.

March Madness bubble winners, losers:1 bid stealer lives, another fades away

The NCAA tournament rewards automatic bids to the champions of each of the 31 Division I conference tournaments. It's a setup from which much of March's madness comes, withsmall schools from the smallest conferencesearning a chance to try to stun national powerhouses on the biggest, brightest stage their sport has to offer.

In the two weeks leading up to Selection Sunday, schools from across the country compete in conference tournaments, with a spot in the Big Dance on the line. For many of those leagues, it's the only and only bid that's available.

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With the start of the tournament approaching, who has locked up those coveted spots? Here's a look at who has earned automatic berths to the 2026 men's NCAA Tournament:

Think you can beat our expert?Join USA TODAY's Bracket Challenge today!

Ready to win March Madness?Join USA TODAY's Survivor Pool today!

March Madness automatic bids 2026

Here's a rundown of the team that have won their conference tournaments and earned bids to the 2026 NCAA Tournament:

  • America East: UMBC

  • ASUN: Queens

  • ACC: Duke

  • Big 12: Arizona

  • Big East: St. John's

  • Big Sky: Idaho

  • Big South: High Point

  • Big West: Hawaii

  • CAA: Hofstra

  • Conference USA: Kennesaw State

  • Horizon: Wright State

  • MAAC: Siena

  • MAC: Akron

  • MEAC: Howard

  • Missouri Valley: Northern Iowa

  • Mountain West: Utah State

  • NEC: LIU

  • Ohio Valley: Tennessee State

  • Patriot: Lehigh

  • Southern: Furman

  • Southland: McNeese

  • SWAC: Prairie View A&M

  • Summit: North Dakota State

  • Sun Belt: Troy

  • WAC: California Baptist

  • WCC: Gonzaga

Here are the conferences whose championship games will play out on Sunday, March 15:

  • American: Wichita State vs. South Florida

  • Atlantic 10: Dayton vs. VCU

  • Big Ten: Michigan vs. Purdue

  • Ivy League: Yale vs. Penn

  • SEC: Arkansas vs. Vanderbilt

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:March Madness automatic bids 2026: Full list of conference tournament champions

March Madness automatic bids 2026: What basketball teams won conference tournaments?

For weeks, the teams that make up the 68-teamMen's NCAA Tournamentbracket have been a source of constant speculation,...
After quieter weeks, Taiwan reports large-scale Chinese military aircraft presence near the island

HONG KONG (AP) — Taiwan saw a surge of Chinese military planes near the island, its defense ministry said Sunday, aftera sharp dropin flights over the past two weeks had sparked discussions among observers.

Associated Press FILE - In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, fighter jets of the Eastern Theater Command of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) conduct a joint combat training exercises around the Taiwan Island on Aug. 7, 2022. (Gong Yulong/Xinhua via AP, File) FILE - In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, a video screenshot shot through window taken on April 8, 2023 shows a bomber of the Eastern Theater Command of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) conducting operations during the combat readiness patrol and military exercises around the Taiwan Island. (Yang Yang/Xinhua via AP, File)

China Taiwan Planes What to Know

The ministry detected 26 Chinese military aircraft around the island on Saturday, with 16 of them entering its northern, central and southwestern Air Defense Identification Zone. Seven naval ships were spotted around the island, it reported.

The increased number of aircraft came after the ministry reported a fall that left analysts scratching their heads about whatChina's militarymay be up to.

Taiwan didn't report any Chinese military planes that went beyond the median line and entered the zone for a week from Feb. 27 to March 5. After two were detected on March 6, the next four days had none. Such flights resumed in small numbers between Wednesday and Friday.

The drop coincided withthe annual meetingof China's legislature. While such flights have fallen in the past during major events and public holidays, this year's fall was more prominent than in the past.

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Analysts said the meeting could not be the sole reason behind the recent drop. Another potential factor could be a desire to calm the waters with Washington weeks beforea visitby U.S. President Donald Trump. The White House has said that Trump would travel to China from March 31 to April 2, though Beijing has not officially confirmed that.

Some observers also suggested the decline may be driven by a shift to a next phase in China's military training and modernization, with the army appearing to be exploring a new model for joint training between its forces.

China has vowed to seize the island, by force if necessary. Over the years,Beijing has sent warplanes and navy vesselstoward the island on a near-daily basis.

Taiwan's military previously signaled that it wasn't changing its defense posture because of the falloff in Chinese warplane activity.

Defense Minister Wellington Koo earlier noted that China's navy has remained active in nearby waters, even as military flights have fallen off.

China and Taiwan have been governed separately since 1949, when the Communist Party rose to power in Beijing following a civil war. Defeated Nationalist Party forces fled to Taiwan, which later transitioned from martial law to multiparty democracy.

After quieter weeks, Taiwan reports large-scale Chinese military aircraft presence near the island

HONG KONG (AP) — Taiwan saw a surge of Chinese military planes near the island, its defense ministry said Sunday, aftera ...
Will the price of plane tickets go up due to the war with Iran? Here's what to know

As the war with Iran continues, oil prices are soaring and airlines will see higher fuel costs – which could hit travelers around the world in their wallets.

CNN A plane departs from Los Angeles International Airport at sunset on January 29. - Kevin Carter/Getty Images

It will "probably start quick,"United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby told CNBClast week.

Crude oil prices surged after the US and Israel's strikes on Iran and hovered around $100 a barrel on Thursday, closing above $100 forthe first time in nearly four years, before closing the week slightly lower at$99 a barrel.

The war has also had massive operational impacts on airlines in the region, with nearly 50,000 flights canceled since February 28, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium.

Rob Britton is an adjunct professor of marketing at Georgetown's McDonough School of Business and a retired American Airlines executive. He said for now, the availability of petroleum has only been slightly disrupted, but oil prices have soared.

"If fuel prices remain high, fares will rise," Britton told CNN. "There's no mystery there … So just doing some simple math, one might expect ticket prices to rise almost proportionately."

Second to labor, an airline's largest cost is jet fuel. Dependent upon crude oil prices, it could be 20-30% of an airline's total expenses, Britton said.

"Historically, airlines have been prompt at raising fares when fuel prices spike," he said.

Yet, airlines often have trouble freely passing on cost increases, such as higher fuel prices, to passengers, even if it's costs being felt widely across the industry, said Zach Griff, author of an airline newsletter,From the Tray Table.

"There's so much more to flight prices than just the cost of fuel or even just the cost of operating a given flight," he said.

The demand for travel will have the greatest impact on fares that airlines can charge, Griff noted. If inflation or rising unemployment makes business and leisure travelers cut back on their plans this summer, the airlines won't have a lot of ability to raise fares, no matter their costs.

Fuel and oil "can be extremely volatile and unpredictable, and even a small change in market fuel prices can significantly affect profitability," Southwest Airlines' 2025 annual report noted. "Passengers often purchase tickets well in advance of their travel, and the Company may not be able to increase fares, impose fuel surcharges, increase revenues, or decrease other operating costs sufficiently to offset rapid or prolonged fuel price increases."

Kirby told CNBCthat fuel prices could have a "meaningful" impact on United's next quarter financial results.

"If it continues, we'll feel it in Q2 also," Kirby said after an event last week at Harvard's John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

At a Punchbowl news conference this week, Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy expressed optimism, predicting a "recovery in energy markets" and praising President Donald Trump's engagement in the conflict.

An oil tanker burns after being hit by an Iranian strike in the ship-to-ship transfer zone at Khor al-Zubair port near Basra, Iraq, on March 11. - AP

Airline cuts that could hurt passengers

Higher fuel costs have the potential to hurt passengers in another way – airlines may re-examine whether to keep some flights that were profitable with lower fuel prices but are now unprofitable.

With fewer choices for passengers, a reduced supply of tickets could itself be a factor that could raise fares.

"Airlines are going to have to keep very close tabs on costs if they want to have any semblance of a profitable summer," Griff said. "Marginal flights are absolutely on the chopping block."

Beyond fuel costs, airlines have already halted many of their flights to the Middle East while the war continues, losing several money-making, long-haul international flights due to safety concerns.

Griff said he's also worried what the fuel spike will do to the future of bankrupt low-fare carrier Spirit Airlines.

The airline, which had warned investors it could beforced to go out of business, recently reached a deal with lenders toemerge from its second bankruptcy, but Griff said the fuel spike could upend those plans.

"Reemerging from bankruptcy is something that is much harder to imagine in the current environment," he said. And if Spirit is taken out of the market, that would free other airlines to raise their fares due to the lack of low-fare competition.

Airlines try to protect from volatile energy prices

A long range version of theBoeing 777can hold more than 45,000 gallons of jet fuel, making even modest price increases shocking for airlines which operate thousands of flights.

There are several steps carriers have taken to try and insulate their massive fuel purchases from the volatile energy markets.

This week Qantas Airways, SAS Airlines of Scandinavia and Air New Zealand took the most direct action; hiking airfares, blaming the cost of fuel during the war, according to Reuters.

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Airlines cannot collectively agree to raise prices, according to Katy Nastro, a spokesperson for travel app Going.com, as that would violate laws against collusion, but nearly all carriers are dealing with the same market forces.

"After next week, we wouldn't be surprised if we started to hear more 'excuseflation' begin from one carrier to the next," she said, as they all cite the war as a reason to increase fares.

Some airlines, like SAS, Germany's Lufthansa and Ireland's Ryanair lock in fuel prices long before they need the fuel in a process called hedging. The financial contracts guarantee stability, but they require a lot of cash and when prices go down airlines end up overpaying.

Last year, the price of fuel was down and carriers could have lost money if they paid in advance.

For United Airlines, the cost of aircraft fuel actually decreased $360 million, or 3.1%, in 2025 compared to 2024, "primarily due to a lower average price per gallon of fuel,"according to the airline.

Carriers in the United States largely have stopped hedging fuel.

A fuel truck at William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, Texas, on March 9. - Mark Felix/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Southwest Airlines dropped the practice last year after using it for a half century, saying it had become too costly and wasn't delivering the results anticipated.

"The company believes its cost structure has historically provided it with an advantage over many of its airline competitors,"Southwest's 2025 annual results read. "The company remains focused on driving efficiencies to offset overall inflationary cost pressures."

Some airlines have taken steps to modernize their fleet with newer more fuel efficient aircraft, trimming their fuel bill.

According toAmerican's most recent annual results, the airline took delivery of five A321XLR, a longer-range version of the A321neo. The airline believes it will "serve transatlantic markets using an estimated 10% less jet fuel per seat than current widebody aircraft due to latest-generation engines, improved aerodynamics and lighter weight materials."

Other airlines are looking to use more sustainable aviation fuel to avoid the kind of shocks in oil prices going on right now.

United Airlines' 2025 annual reportstates, "The company believes that large-scale adoption of sustainable aviation fuel in its operations is critical to helping mitigate its exposure to volatile fuel prices and achieving its environmental goals."

Sustainable fuel sources can include waste oil and fats, municipal waste, and non-food crops, but it would take a "massive increase in production to meet demand," according to theInternational Air Transport Association.

The first biojet-fueled commercial flight in the world took off in 2008. By2025it represented .7% of worldwide aviation fuel consumption, according to IATA.

Unlike other airlines, Delta owns an oil refinery in Pennsylvania through a subsidiary named Monroe Energy. The plant allows them to make their own aircraft fuel, though they still have to buy the raw crude oil,Delta's annual results for 2025 read.

The refinery not only insulates Delta from some costs, but it ensures a supply of fuel into its LaGuardia and JFK International Airport hubs.

Next week, US airline chiefs are expected to speak at the JP Morgan Industrials Conference and discuss their financial outlook.

When will airfares go up?

Airfares aremostly determinedby the supply of seats and demand for tickets, which hasn't substantially changed since the war started.

Nastro said US airlines have not broadly or public raised fares, and we "haven't seen anything truly out of the ordinary in the way of higher fares in the short term."

Delta spokesperson Drake Castaneda said the airline was closely monitoring the situation in the Middle East, but is unable to speculate on potential impact to ticket prices.

"More broadly, Delta's fares can vary by market and over time and are influenced by a range of factors, including supply and demand, operating costs such as fuel, seasonality and competitive dynamics," Castaneda said.

Nastro said there's several things we still do not know that can potentially impact travelers, like how long the conflict might last.

"The longer it does, the higher the likelihood we see a negative impact for travelers in the way of higher fares," she said.

But Griff said summer fares are likely to be higher than those right now because that's the period that typically sees the strongest demand.

"For those folks who are traveling in June and July, if you haven't bought your tickets, now's the time to do it, buy a refundable or changeable ticket," he said, and if fares actually do drop, rebook.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Will the price of plane tickets go up due to the war with Iran? Here’s what to know

As the war with Iran continues, oil prices are soaring and airlines will see higher fuel costs – which could hit traveler...
Top 25 roundup: Duke, Arizona, St. John's nab conference tourney titles

Isaiah Evans scored 20 points and No. 1 Duke relied on various sources to beat No. 10 Virginia 74-70 and repeat as Atlantic Coast Conference tournament champion in a tense title game Saturday night at Charlotte.

Field Level Media

Cayden Boozer, the twin brother of the ACC Player of the Year, matched his career high with 16 points for the second straight night and Cameron Boozer had 13 points for Duke (32-2), which could be the No. 1 overall seed when the NCAA Tournament bracket is unveiled Sunday.

It's the first time a team has won consecutive ACC tournaments since the Blue Devils won three straight from 2009-11. Cameron Boozer was bothered by Virginia's defense, shooting 3-for-17 from the field, but he had eight rebounds and eight assists.

Malik Thomas poured in 18 points and Sam Lewis racked up 17 points for second-seeded Virginia (29-5), which was aiming for its first conference tournament title since 2018. Ugonna Onyenso blocked nine shots as part of a record-setting three-game stretch.

No. 2 Arizona 79, No. 5 Houston 74

Koa Peat scored 21 points before fouling out and Brayden Burries also had 21 as the top-seeded Wildcats defeated the second-seeded Cougars in Kansas City, Mo., to win the Big 12 tournament.

Jaden Bradley scored 13 points and Ivan Kharchenkov added 12 for Arizona, which won its ninth straight game. The Wildcats (32-2) are in the running for the No. 1 overall seed after winning their first Big 12 championship in their second year in the league, avenging last year's title game loss to Houston.

Joseph "JoJo" Tugler scored a career-high 20 points and grabbed 10 rebounds for Houston (28-6), which had a five-game winning streak snapped. Mercy Miller had 13 points and seven rebounds.

No. 3 Michigan 68, No. 23 Wisconsin 65

Big Ten Player of the Year Yaxel Lendeborg hit a 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left to lift the top-seeded Wolverines to a victory over the fifth-seeded Badgers in the Big Ten Conference tournament semifinals at Chicago.

Lendeborg finished with 12 points for ranked Michigan (31-2), which advances to the Sunday title game Purdue. Aday Mara racked up 16 points, eight rebounds and five blocks as the Wolverines defeated the only Big Ten team they failed to knock off during the regular season.

Austin Rapp paced Wisconsin (24-10) with 18 points. The Badgers rallied from a 15-point second-half deficit to take a four-point lead, but their five-game winning streak ended.

No. 22 Vanderbilt 91, No. 4 Florida 74

Tyler Tanner scored 20 points and dished out eight assists, Duke Miles scored 15 with seven assists and the fourth-seeded Commodores earned a victory over the top-seeded Gators in the semifinals of the Southeastern Conference tournament at Nashville.

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Vanderbilt (26-7) advances to the Sunday title game against Arkansas (25-8). Jalen Washington scored 17 points for the Commodores.

Thomas Haugh had 19 points and nine rebounds to lead the Gators (26-7), who saw their 12-game winning streak come to an end. Florida also received 15 points from Boogie Fland.

No. 13 St. John's 72, No. 6 UConn 52

Zuby Ejiofor totaled 18 points, nine rebounds, seven blocks and three steals as the top-seeded Red Storm started quickly, never let up and earned a victory over the second-seeded Huskies to win the Big East tournament title in New York.

St. John's (28-6) won its fifth conference tournament title and achieved the feat in consecutive seasons for the first time in school history. Bryce Hopkins scored 18 and Oziyah Sellers contributed 14 for the Red Storm, who scored the game's first 10 points.

UConn (29-5) missed its last 13 field-goal attempts over the final eight minutes. Tarris Reed Jr. led the Huskies with 17 points.

No. 17 Arkansas 93, Ole Miss 90

The third-seeded Razorbacks got 29 points from Meleek Thomas, 24 from Darius Acuff Jr. and double-doubles from Trevon Brazile and Malique Ewen to escape with an overtime victory over the 15th-seeded Rebels in the Southeastern Conference tournament semifinals at Nashville.

Ewen scored 14 and pulled down a game-high 13 boards while Brazile scored 16 with 10 rebounds for Arkansas (25-8).

Reserve AJ Storr scored a team-high 24 points for Ole Miss (15-20), which included a basket with one second left to send the game into overtime. Malik Dia chipped in 16 points for the Rebels, who nearly pulled off their fourth upset in as many days.

No. 18 Purdue 73, UCLA 66

Oscar Cluff had 17 points with 14 rebounds and the seventh-seeded Boilermakers advanced to the Big Ten Conference championship game with a semifinal victory over the sixth-seeded Bruins in Chicago.

Purdue (26-8) topped UCLA (23-11) behind two first-half runs as well as Cluff's dominant play in the paint over the closing five minutes. Fletcher Loyer scored 14 points for the Boilermakers, and Trey Kaufman-Renn totaled 12 points and 10 rebounds.

Trent Perry scored 15 points and had a career high-tying nine assists for UCLA. Tyler Bilodeau, who injured his right knee in the Bruins' Friday win, did not play, and Donovan Dent exited in the first half with calf injury.

--Field Level Media

Top 25 roundup: Duke, Arizona, St. John's nab conference tourney titles

Isaiah Evans scored 20 points and No. 1 Duke relied on various sources to beat No. 10 Virginia 74-70 and repeat as Atl...

 

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