Connect with us

Sports

Oklahoma State, Utah look inward for more respectable defense

NCAA Basketball: Utah at Brigham YoungJan 24, 2026; Provo, Utah, USA; Utah Utes head coach Alex Jensen speaks to Utah Utes guard Obomate Abbey (21) forward Keanu Dawes (8) during the first half against the BYU Cougars at Marriott Center. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Baker-Imagn Images

Both Oklahoma State and Utah have had a full week to consider what they need to improve to save their seasons.

The answer, in both cases, ought to come down to defense.

The two most porous scoring defenses in the Big 12 Conference will try to plug their holes when the Cowboys visit the Utes on Saturday night in Salt Lake City.

Utah (9-11, 1-6 Big 12) is third-to-last in the conference standings and dead last in scoring defense at 81.5 points per game allowed. Oklahoma State (14-6, 2-5) ranks second-to-last in the category at 80.4 ppg allowed.

The Utes were sent packing by No. 13 BYU as their rivals won 91-78 last Saturday to sweep the season series. Star freshman AJ Dybantsa dropped 43 points on Utah by making 15 of 24 shots overall and 4 of 5 from the arc.

It was Utah’s third time allowing a team to score at least 90 points this season, which offset the offense’s season-best 13 3-pointers on 21 attempts.

“We shoot 60 percent from 3 and we still get beat pretty good,” Utah coach Alex Jensen said. “The problem is, I think as individuals in a group, you got to take pride in guarding the guy you have; regardless of what scheme we are in, you have to take pride in defense.”

The Cowboys also had to deal with a highly ranked opponent in their last game. No. 9 Iowa State ran roughshod over Oklahoma State to take a 51-21 lead into halftime in Stillwater last weekend. The Cowboys made the final margin a more respectable 84-71, marking their fourth loss in five games.

“The team showed in the second half what we can be,” Oklahoma State coach Steve Lutz said. “But it’s a 40-minute game. You’ve got to be able to do that from the opening tip.

“… If you can do that to the No. 9 team in the country, why can’t you do that consistently throughout?”

Oklahoma State’s leading scorer, Anthony Roy (17 ppg), was held to seven by Iowa State on 2-of-10 shooting. Kanye Clary and Jaylen Curry each had 19 points.

For Utah, Keanu Dawes scored 23 points and Terrence Brown supplied 22 in the loss at BYU. Brown ranks third in the Big 12 at 22.2 points per game. Dawes averages 12.4 points and 8.9 rebounds, the latter fifth among Big 12 players.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

'Underappreciated' Pistons open playoffs against Magic

NBA: Detroit Pistons at Denver NuggetsJan 27, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) and center Jalen Duren (0) react to a foul called in the first quarter against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

The Detroit Pistons had the best record in the Eastern Conference for most of the season. They ride into the playoffs as the conference’s top seed after winning 60 games.

There’s still plenty of doubt whether the Pistons can live up to that status. Boston, with star forward Jayson Tatum back in action after recovering from an Achilles injury, is favored to reach the Finals. Cleveland, Detroit’s potential second-round opponent, has the second-best odds of coming out of the East.

As for the Pistons, they’re third on the odds boards, just ahead of the New York Knicks. So, the Pistons, who begin their first-round series at home against No. 8 seed Orlando on Sunday, have a right to feel underappreciated.

Truth is, the Pistons like being in that role.

“It doesn’t affect us at all,” coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “And that’s the best part about it. Our guys don’t live and die by other people’s expectations and comments. Our guys show up and live and die by playing Pistons basketball. And that makes it easy.”

His players seem to feel the same way.

“Everybody’s got a right to their own opinion,” forward Ausar Thompson said. “We don’t really worry about that. We believe not only can we come out of the East but win it all. We just focus on that, focus on ourselves and let everybody on the outside say what they’ve got to say.”

Detroit comes into the playoffs healthy. Star guard Cade Cunningham returned during the final week of the season after recovering from a collapsed lung. Isaiah Stewart also appeared in some late-season contests after recovering from a calf strain.

The short order of business for the Pistons is to win their first playoff series since 2008. They qualified for the playoffs last season but were bounced as underdogs to the more seasoned Knicks in a hotly-contested series.

Detroit finished the regular season with the third-best field goal percentage, despite being 17th in 3-point percentage. The Pistons are even more formidable at the defensive end, leading the league in steals and blocks.

The Magic know they will have to scrap for everything they get in the series.

“There’s a physicality to this game that’s going to be real,” coach Jamahl Mosley said of playing the top seed. “There’s going to be a lot of aggression. There’s going to be a lot of physicality. It’s going to be a dogfight.”

Orlando’s road to the first round wasn’t easy. Philadelphia defeated the Magic 109-97 in the matchup of No. 7 and 8 seeds, forcing Orlando into a do-or-die matchup with Charlotte. The Magic pulled a surprise with a dominant 121-90 thrashing of the Hornets.

Orlando led by 35 points late in the first half.

Star forward Paolo Banchero led the way with 25 points and six assists, bouncing back from a poor shooting night against the Sixers.

“Great players, you got to respond,” Banchero said. “That’s what they pay you to do. You can’t just settle for subpar performances, especially in situations like this, do or die, win or go home, got to show up for your teammates and set the tone.”

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Phillies place closer Jhoan Duran (oblique) on injured list

MLB: Texas Rangers at Philadelphia PhilliesMar 28, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies relief pitcher Jhoan Duran (59) throws a pitch against the Texas Rangers in the tenth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

The Philadelphia Phillies placed closer Jhoan Duran on the 15-day injured list Saturday with a left oblique strain.

In a series of moves, right-hander Seth Johnson and utilityman Felix Reyes were recalled from Triple-A Lehigh Valley, while utilityman Otto Kemp was optioned and minor league outfielder Pedro Leon was released.

Duran’s move to the IL was retroactive to Wednesday. The 28-year-old right-hander is 1-1 with a 1.35 ERA and five saves in seven appearances for the Phillies this season. Over five major league seasons with the Minnesota Twins and Phillies, he has a 2.41 ERA and 95 saves in 253 appearances.

Johnson, 27, made one appearance with the Phillies earlier this season and has a combined 9.72 ERA in 12 appearances (one start) for Philadelphia over three seasons.

Reyes, 25, is set to make his major league debut after he batted .272 with 48 home runs and 247 RBIs over six seasons (374 games) in the Phillies’ system. Kemp, 26, was 2-for-20 in 10 games for Philadelphia this season.

Leon, 27, was batting .283 in 12 games at Lehigh Valley. He has seven games of major league experience with the Houston Astros in 2024.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Late goal helps Toronto FC salvage tie, point vs. Austin FC

MLS: Austin FC at Toronto FCApr 18, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Austin FC defender Jon Bell (15) passes the ball against Toronto FC defender Richie Laryea (22) during the first half at BMO Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images

Kobe Franklin delivered the game-tying goal in the 88th minute and host Toronto FC pulled off a 3-3 draw with Austin FC on Saturday afternoon in just the third-ever match between the sides.

Franklin was in the penalty area when Malik Henry ripped a shot off the right post and scored off the rebound to beat Austin goalkeeper Brad Stuver low to the right side and even the match.

The draw allowed Toronto FC (3-2-3, 12 points) to extend a six-match unbeaten streak, while outscoring opponents 11-8 during the 3-0-3 run.

After conceding the late goal, Austin FC (1-3-4, 7 points) remained winless since March 1 with an 0-3-3 record during the run.

Jon Bell scored Austin FC’s opening goal in the 29th minute while turning onto his left foot in traffic and beating Toronto keeper Luka Gavran. The score came off a feed from Guilherme Brio.

Myrto Uzuni tried to double the Austin FC lead with a shot in the 34th minute before Gavran made the save. Toronto FC’s Josh Sargent and Daniel Salloi responded with low-percentage shots that Stuver turned away.

Salloi tied the score 1-1 in the 52nd minute, running to the far post to volley home a pass from Sargent that deflected off an Austin defender and directly to the right knee of the Toronto striker.

Gallagher’s shot eight minutes later forced Gavron into a key save and kept the game tied. Richie Laryea’s goal in the 67th minute gave Toronto a 2-1 lead.

Austin FC tied the score 2-2 on a nifty Facundo Torres goal in the 75th minute off assists from Robert Taylor and Uzuni. Christian Ramírez gave Austin FC a 3-2 lead when he booted home a deflected shot by Torres in the 82nd minute.

That set stage for Franklin, who beat an Austin defender to Henry’s shot off the right post to produce the draw and earn Toronto FC a point in the standings.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading