Kim Mulkey Coverage Blocked as 'Browser Not Supported' Message Prevents AP Poll and Bracketology Access
Attempts to retrieve recent coverage of LSU women's basketball, including where the team ranks in the latest Poll, WBB Bracketology seeding scenarios and a Tiger Rag Radio discussion about Kim Mulkey’s ability to earn a No. 1 NCAA Tournament seed, were obstructed when the host page displayed a "your browser is not supported" notice. The interruption matters because it left readers and analysts unable to view three specific pieces that speak directly to seeding and perception of Kim Mulkey's Tigers at a critical point in the season.
Poll and WBB Bracketology pages rendered inaccessible
The attempted access targeted three named items: "Where LSU women's basketball ranks in latest Poll, " "WBB Bracketology: LSU's seeding scenarios become clear, " and a Tiger Rag Radio segment titled "Can Kim Mulkey’s Tigers Earn A No. 1 Seed In NCAA Tournament?" Instead of the expected rankings, analysis and discussion, the page presented a message stating the site had been built to take advantage of the latest technology "making it faster and easier to use, " followed by the clear instruction: "your browser is not supported" and an appeal to download one of the site's supported browsers for the best experience.
Because the message explicitly linked the problem to browser compatibility, the immediate cause is technical incompatibility between the visitor's browser and the site's updated platform. The effect was straight-forward and measurable: three targeted editorial items could not be viewed during the access attempt, preventing immediate confirmation of rankings and seeding scenarios that feed both fan conversation and bracket analysis.
Kim Mulkey discussion on Tiger Rag Radio left unreachable
One of the blocked items centered on Kim Mulkey and whether her team can secure a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament — a subject that typically drives both listener interest and bracket projections. The Tiger Rag Radio discussion was among the trio of pieces that failed to load, the same browser-incompatibility notice appearing in place of audio or analysis. That single technical barrier therefore stopped access to commentary and context that could shape short-term seeding narratives for Mulkey's program.
What makes this notable is how a front-end compatibility decision can immediately disrupt distribution of three distinct types of coverage—poll placement, bracketology analysis and a radio discussion—each serving a different part of the public conversation about the same team and coach. For reporters, bracketologists and fans attempting to reconcile placement with seeding scenarios, the inability to consult those items introduces a gap in the factual record available at that moment.
The item set credited to LSU Wire and the Tiger Rag Radio segment were subject to the same technical constraint, indicating that the limitation was applied at the publishing platform level rather than to a single piece of content. The page’s language emphasized modernization as the rationale—upgrading the site "to take advantage of the latest technology"—which in turn created the incompatibility displayed as the "your browser is not supported" notice and the recommendation to download a supported browser.
Operationally, the cause → effect pattern is clear: site modernization led to tighter browser requirements (cause), which manifested as an explicit unsupported-browser message (effect one), and that message blocked access to three named editorial items about LSU women’s basketball and Kim Mulkey (effect two). The immediate remedy implied by the page was to use a supported browser, a step the notice framed as necessary "for the best experience. "
Until those technical barriers are resolved or readers switch to compatible software, the three pieces remain unavailable to those encountering the message, leaving a temporary void in publicly accessible reporting on Poll placement, seeding scenarios and the Tiger Rag Radio take on Kim Mulkey’s No. 1 seed prospects.