
Louisville will begin its NCAA Tournament run without one of its most important players, as freshman standout Mikel Brown Jr. has been ruled out for both the first round and a potential second-round matchup due to a lingering back injury.
The sixth-seeded Cardinals (23-10) face 11-seed South Florida on Thursday at 1:30 p.m. in Buffalo, but Brown will not be available. “The goal was to have Mikel available for the NCAA Tournament; unfortunately that is not the case,” the school said, and also confirmed he would remain sidelined on Saturday if Louisville advances, extending his absence to at least five straight games.
Brown, a projected lottery pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, has been one of Louisville’s most impactful players this season, averaging 18.2 points and a team-high 4.7 assists per game. However, he hasn’t appeared in a game since Feb. 28 and has missed a significant stretch of the season due to recurring back issues—an injury that first surfaced in December and worsened after hard falls in a late-February loss at North Carolina.
Despite the setback, Brown had remained optimistic about his recovery, saying, “starting to get there. I’m slowly progressing; I’m slowly doing more day in and day out, just trying to get a feel for it. But, obviously, like coach said, the plan is: I’ll come back when I’m 100%.” When asked about a potential return timeline, he added, “Right now, I’m just focused on my rehab more than anything. When the time feels right, I’m going to talk to the coaching staff; and we’re going to come to an agreement.”
His absence presents a significant challenge for Louisville. The team has performed noticeably better with him on the floor, going 16-5 and averaging 88.1 points per game, compared to a 7-5 record and 81.7 points without him. Perimeter shooting also drops without Brown, highlighting his offensive importance.
Brown’s talent has been evident throughout the season, including a historic 45-point outburst in a February win over NC State. The performance tied a longstanding school record set by Wes Unseld and set a new ACC freshman single-game scoring mark. Louisville closed the regular season strong with three straight wins before falling to Miami in the ACC Tournament quarterfinals—a stretch Brown also missed.
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