Ok... Here goes:
I like this concept, but make it clear that this is time of day, not time on the game clock. A small 'pm' next to the number goes a long way.
Many National writers start to take notice, as the Bulldogs are one half away from ending the longest active streak in sports.
"Not in Mississippi" does NOT equal "National" and "media" does not equal "writers". Newy Scruggs is the sports guy on NBC5 here in Dallas-Fort Worth (where the Final Four took place). If you found a tweet from a name brand national SI, ESPN, Fox Sports, or even Yahoo Sports writer or media personality, this would have had more impact. You're trying to sell the idea that Mississippi State is shocking the world at that moment, but you use a name that few outside DFW know.
10:30: Mississippi State and the undisputed #1 team in the nation has only one quarter remaining to see, who will meet South Carolina in the National Championship Game.
Read the sentence in your voice in your head. My voice says "Mississippi State and the undisputed #1 team in the nation has only one quarter remaining to see (pause) who will meet South Carolina in the National Championship Game."
So, two things:
1. The comma is unnecessary.
2. "Mississippi State and the undisputed #1 team in the nation" form a plural, so "have" should be your verb or you could flip it to say "One quarter remains between..."
10:50: The offenses of both squads have regained composure and the Huskies have the lead with a slim two minutes remaining in the National Semi-Finals.
11:00: Morgan William misses a game winning lay up, and then Uconn misses a game winning 3/4 court heave to send the game to OT, Uconn had not won a game in OT since 2004. The game is tied 60-60 going to OT.
There is so much drama you're missing here. Basically, if I were to read "Uconn up by 1" and "Morgan William misses a game winning layup", this sounds like a story where State loses. How did we go from down one to a tie?
Same thing with your overtime coverage. We are literally living and dying with every single point scored after our 56th. Make us relive that.
Now... some overall advice...
1. Recruiting - Forget about it. This is what we would call a 'red water' market, where you have a crowd of media outlets fighting over the same content. Unless you're going to put in the same sort of hours that, say, Steve Robertson does to facilitate relationships with coaches, prospects, and other recruiting writers, you're not going to give us more than what a retweet from any 247/Scout or Rivals account already gives us. I'm not going to come to your site to get 'Breaking' news that Jalon Jones has committed because I already know.
2. Unique takes - I like the concept of the 'Reliving' UConn Final Four piece. In fact, it even came at a perfect time, well after we've had time to prcoess it, but close enough that it's fresh on our minds. Egg Bowl 2013 would be another great 'time-lined' emotional roller coaster. Your execution needs work, but the concept is there. I would go to your site to read another one of those.
3. Topics - Unless you have some contacts in the Football, Baseball, or Basketball programs, you're not going to give us anything new. Have you considered spending any time covering non-revenue sports? Since the SEC Network has started airing basically every Mississippi State sport, I find myself watching things I never would have considered 5 years ago (volleyball, softball, soccer, etc.). I watch them because they're Mississippi State. NOBODY outside hailstate.com is covering them though. For example, I've never been a big volleyball fan, but I can't help but become emotionally invested in an epic volleyball comeback against Ole Miss. I'm not saying you do that forever, but maybe use non-revenue to work up a following and work out some of the kinks in your writing. Even if your grammar and MLA styling is piss-poor, if you write any sort of content about the upcoming women's soccer season, it's by default going to be at least the second best thing written about the Mississippi State soccer season.
Think about d1baseball.com. It became a site because it filled a gap in sports coverage.
4. Player and/or coach profiles - I'm not sure how feasible this is, but I was thinking about it recently. Seriously think about how 17ing emotional the Chinwe Okorie story really was. Without the Women's Basketball team becoming a name brand, a lot of people would never have heard it. I have a feeling there are a lot of other stories across our programs that aren't being told. Why do walkons play at Mississippi State without a scholarship? Chloe Bibby hit a crucial 'and 1' vs Latvia in the FIBA U19 World Cup and scored 16 points in 14 minutes vs Mexico. What difference does that make to Mississippi State? There are stories out there. Which ones aren't being covered?