Bill Murray cheers on coach son at thrilling UConn March Madness game

Comedy legend Bill Murray witnessed a scene of college basketball pandemonium on Sunday, cheering on his son's team to a miraculous March Madness victory.

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The "Ghostbusters" and "Groundhog Day" star was spotted supporting his son, Luke Murray, an assistant coach at the University of Connecticut, as Duke and UConn faced off in a stunning Elite 8tournamentgame, resulting in UConn advancing to the Final Four.

Patrick Smith/Getty Images - PHOTO: Actor Bill Murray looks on during the second half of a game between the UConn Huskies and the Duke Blue Devils in the Elite Eight of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, March 29, 2026 in Washington.

Bill Murraysported a dark blue hat and navy blue shirt at the game, which took place at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C.

After it seemed the Huskies' season was coming to an end, the team launched a miraculous second-half comeback, forcing a last-minute turnover before freshman Braylon Mullins launched a long-range three-pointer to advance UConn to the next round.

Videofrom the courtshowed Bill Murray celebrating with the UConn band after the game.

Luke Murray, the second son of Bill Murray and Margaret Kelly, has been an assistant coach at UConn since 2021, working under famed head coach Dan Hurley.

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Patrick Smith/Getty Images - PHOTO: Assistant coach Luke Murray talks with head coach Dan Hurley of the UConn Huskies during the first half of a game against the Duke Blue Devils in the Elite Eight of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, March 29, 2026 in Washington.

On March 26,Luke Murray was named the head coach of the Boston College men's basketball team, starting next season, marking his first position as a head coach in college basketball.

"I am deeply honored and incredibly grateful to lead the Boston College Men's Basketball program," Luke Murray said in statement included in areleaseannouncing his hire. "Boston College alumni and fans will find our program defined by a standard of excellence, and our team will play an unselfish, tough, and highly competitive brand of basketball. I am excited to get to work to build this proud program. Go Eagles!"

Emilee Chinn/Getty Images - PHOTO: UConn assistant coach Luke Murray hugs Alex Karaban #11 of the UConn Huskies after defeating the Duke Blue Devils 73-72 in the Elite Eight of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, March 29, 2026 in Washington.

Luke Murray has done rounds as a college basketball coach for nearly two decades, with stops at schools including Arizona, Towson, Rhode Island, Xavier, Louisville and more.

Bill Murray opened up about his son's successin an interviewwith The Big East Conference in 2023, during UConn's March Madness run that year.

Patrick Smith/Getty Images - PHOTO: Actor Bill Murray looks on prior to a game between the UConn Huskies and the Duke Blue Devils in the Elite Eight of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, March 29, 2026 in Washington.

"I'm very proud of this boy, and he's a wonderful kid, and he's worked very hard," he said at the time.

That same year, Luke Murrayposted a photoof him and his father standing side by side, celebrating an NCAA tournament win, along with photos of his children playing in the confetti.

Bill Murray is also a father to five other children.

Bill Murray cheers on coach son at thrilling UConn March Madness game

Comedy legend Bill Murray witnessed a scene of college basketball pandemonium on Sunday, cheering on his son's t...
Mullins' Miracle: How does his shot for UConn measure up to other famous ones in March Madness?

WASHINGTON (AP) — A couple of days ago, Braylon Mullins was a UConn freshman whose name carried weight mostly among the true diehards — college basketball junkies and Indiana high school hoops enthusiasts.

Associated Press UConn guard Braylon Mullins (24) scores the winning basket during the second half against Duke in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) FILE - Duke's Christian Laettner, center, celebrates his game-winning shot against Connecticut in the NCAA East Regional Final at East Rutherford, N.J., on March 24, 1990. In the background is teammate Bobby Hurley. (AP Photo/Susan Ragan, File)

APTOPIX NCAA UConn Duke Basketball

Now he's a part of NCAA Tournament lore. That's what can happen at this time of year.

"One of the most brilliant shooters you'll ever see shoot a basketball made an incredible, legendary March shot," Huskies coach Dan Hurley said.

Mullins'35-footer with 0.4 secondsremaining lifted UConn over Duke 73-72 in the Elite Eight on Sunday, and now that the dust has settled, it's time to evaluate just how legendary — as Hurley put it — this shot was.

The bar for last-second game winners is actually higher in the women's tournament, where North Carolina's Charlotte Smith once madea 3-pointer at the buzzerto win the national title game by one in 1994. And who can forget Notre Dame's Arike Ogunbowale winning boththe semifinaland finalin 2018 with tiebreaking jumpers?

On the men's side, it's a little more complicated. There are several factors to consider when determining the best of the best.

Time and score

Last-second shot means last-second shot. Michael Jordan'sgame winnerfor North Carolina in the 1982 title game was memorable because of who shot it, but it also left plenty of time for a very ill-fated Georgetown possession at the other end.

Still, Mullins' 3 doesn't lose any luster because there were 0.4 seconds left when it went in. It wasn't literally at the buzzer, but that's close enough.

Sports Reference helpfully compileda databaseof game-winning buzzer-beaters from NCAA Tournament history. The site requires a shot to be in the last 2.0 seconds to make the list — with some leeway for the era before the clock stopped after made baskets at the end. Only game winners are included. Tying the score and forcing overtime, with apologies toKentucky's Otega Oweh, isn't quite in the same category.

Mullins also gets bonus points because if his shot misses, UConn loses. As incredible asKris Jenkins' 3-pointerat the buzzer was when it won Villanova a championship in 2016, the game was tied at the time, so the worst-case scenario for his team was overtime.

Significance of the game

Buzzer-beaters are a big part of what makes March Madness special, but as much as the first couple of rounds create the tournament's charm, it's the second weekend and beyond when the national championship starts to feel within reach. So last-second shots take on added importance.

According to the Sports Reference list, prior to Mullins there were just 16 instances in the men's tournament — in the Sweet 16 or later — in which a team was trailing before winning with a last-second shot:

— Jack Shelton's shot for Oklahoma State to beat Wyoming in the 1949 quarterfinals.

— Pembrook Burrows' tip-in for Jacksonville against Iowa in the 1970 round of 16.

— Richard Washington's shot for UCLA to beat Louisville in the 1975 national semifinal.

— Danny Ainge goingcoast-to-coastfor BYU against Notre Dame in the 1981 round of 16.

— Mike Jones' shot from the perimeter to lift Wichita State over Kansas in the 1981 round of 16.

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— Kevin Gamble's jumper for Iowato beat Oklahomain the 1987 round of 16.

— Keith Smart'sbaseline jumperfor Indiana to beat Syracuse in the 1987 title game. This shot went through the hoop with around 4 seconds left, but a timeout didn't stop the clock until there was 1 second remaining.

— Anderson Hunt's 3-pointer that gave UNLV a one-point win over Arizona in the 1989 round of 16.

— Tate George'sturnaround at the buzzerfor UConn against Clemson in the 1990 round of 16. (Bookmark this one for now.)

— Christian Laettner'sshot at the buzzerfor Duke that beat UConn in the 1990 regional final.

— Laettner again,at the buzzerto beat Kentucky in the 1992 regional final.

— Cameron Dollar's shot for UCLA against Iowa State in the 1997 round of 16.

— Richard Hamilton'sfadeaway at the buzzer— after multiple offensive rebounds — that gave UConn a win over Washington in the 1998 round of 16.

— Chris Chiozza'srunning 3-pointerat the buzzer for Florida that beat Wisconsin in the 2017 round of 16.

— Kyle Guy makingthree consecutive free throwsfor Virginia with 0.6 seconds left to beat Auburn in the 2019 national semifinal.

— Lamont Butler'sjumper at the buzzerfor San Diego State to beat Florida Atlantic in the 2023 national semifinal.

You can see there aren't many 3-pointers on that list — but there are two other UConn players in George and Hamilton. Now Mullins joins them, and his shot came a round later.

Degree of difficulty

Mullins' shot wasn't quite as far as the midcourt heaves by U.S. Reed of Arkansas (1981 second round vs. Louisville) andPaul Jesperson of Northern Iowa(2016 first round against Texas). The more apt comparison, in terms of distance, is with Jalen Suggs'buzzer-beating bank shotfor Gonzaga against UCLA in the 2021 semifinal, although that game was tied before the winning play.

It's also worth considering the difficulty of the entire sequence. George's shot in 1990 required UConn to go the length of the court in 1 second, an impressive throw-catch-shoot sequence in which almost everything had to go perfectly. Baseball draft pick Scott Burrell made the long pass for the Huskies. Duke had 2.1 seconds to set up Laettner in '92, with Grant Hill throwing the ball down the court to him.

The legacy

The reason Laettner's shot in 1992 stood the test of time is because it was the defining moment of a second straight NCAA title run for Duke. And obviously, the game winners by Jenkins and Smart decided national championships on the spot. If UConn doesn't win it all this year, maybe Mullins' 3 falls back to a slightly lower tier, but if the Huskies do prevail in Indianapolis, it'll be their third national title in four years. That's something not even Duke has done before.

And it's only possible because of Mullins' Miracle.

AP March Madness bracket:https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracketand coverage:https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Mullins' Miracle: How does his shot for UConn measure up to other famous ones in March Madness?

WASHINGTON (AP) — A couple of days ago, Braylon Mullins was a UConn freshman whose name carried weight mostly among the ...
Meta, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube aren't fully complying with child account ban, Australia says

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australia'sonline safety watchdogsaid Tuesday it was considering court against Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube alleging they are not doing enough to keep Australian children younger than 16 off their platforms.

Associated Press FILE - A YouTube sign is shown near the company's headquarters in San Bruno, Calif., Wednesday, March 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, file) FILE - A car passes Facebook's new Meta logo on a sign at the company headquarters on Oct. 28, 2021, in Menlo Park, Calif. (AP Photo/Tony Avelar, File)

Social Media Kids Trial

Experts say the Australian courts could decide what steps the platforms can reasonably be expected to take underthe lawsthat took effect on Dec. 10 banning young children from holding accounts.

eSAfety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant on Tuesday released her first compliance report since those laws took effect demanding 10 platforms remove all Australian account-holders younger than 16.

While 5 million Australian accounts had been deactivated, a substantial number of Australian children continued to retain accounts, create new accounts and pass platforms' age assurance systems, the report said.

Inman Grant said in a statement her office had "significant concerns about the compliance" of half of those 10 platforms. Her office was gathering evidence against the five that they had not taken "reasonable steps" to prevent young children holding accounts.

Courts could order fines of up to 49.5 million Australian dollars ($33 million) for systemic failures to comply. eSafety would decide on whether to initiate court action against any platform by midyear.

Age-restricted platformsthat aren't under investigation are Reddit, X, Kick, Threads and Twitch.

Communications Minister Anika Wells said the five criticized platforms were deliberately not complying with Australian law.

"Social media platforms are choosing to do the absolute bare minimum because they want these laws to fail," Wells told reporters.

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"This is the world-leading law. We're the first in the world to do it. Of course they don't want these laws to work because they want that to be a chilling effect on the dozen countries that have come out since Dec. 10 to follow Australia's step," she added.

eSafety had identified "poor practices" such as platforms allowing unlimited attempts for a user to pass their age assurance methods and prompting the user to try to pass the age assurance method even after they declared themselves underage.

Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, told The Associated Press it was committed to complying with Australia's social media ban. "We've also been clear that accurately determining age online is a challenge for the whole industry," the statement said.

Snap Inc. said it has locked 450,000 accounts in compliance with the law and continued to lock more every day.

"Snapchat remains fully committed to implementing reasonable steps under the legislation and supporting its underlying goal of improving online safety for young Australians," a Snap statement said.

TikTok declined to comment on Tuesday and Alphabet Inc., which owns YouTube and Google, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Lisa Given, an information sciences expert at RMIT University in Melbourne, said she expected the courts will decide whether platforms have taken "reasonable steps" to exclude young children.

"If a tech company has said: look, we put in age assurance, we've done all these steps. That's reasonable. Even though the aged assurance technologies are flawed, whose fault is that? Should they be held accountable for a piece of technology that is not 100% and likely not going to be 100% foolproof any time soon?" Given said.

"That's really the crux of it: what the courts will deem reasonable," she added.

Meta, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube aren't fully complying with child account ban, Australia says

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australia'sonline safety watchdogsaid Tuesday it was considering court against Facebook,...

 

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