Sports
Kayden Mingo's basket allows Penn State to beat Minnesota
Feb 1, 2026; University Park, Pennsylvania, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions guard Kayden Mingo (4) dribbles the ball as Minnesota Golden Gophers guard Langston Reynolds (6) defends during the first half at Bryce Jordan Center. Mandatory Credit: Matthew O’Haren-Imagn Images Kayden Mingo scooped in a layup with 1.4 seconds remaining to lift Penn State to a 77-75 win over Minnesota in a Big Ten matchup Sunday afternoon in State College, Penn.
Freddie Dilione V finished with 25 points on 11-for-17 shooting for Penn State (10-12, 1-10), which snapped an eight-game losing streak and won its first conference game in 11 tries. Josh Reed scored 18 points on 6-for-10 shooting, and Mingo contributed 14 points.
Langston Reynolds scored 18 points on 7-for-8 shooting to lead Minnesota (10-12, 3-8). Cade Tyson scored 17 points in his return from an ankle injury, and Bobby Durkin finished with 16 points on 6-for-11 shooting.
The score was even at 75 as Penn State had the ball in the final seconds. Mingo drove toward the paint and picked up his dribble, and after a moment where he appeared to be trapped, he used his pivot foot to make enough room for a left-handed scoop shot.
Moments later, the Nittany Lions stole the Golden Gophers’ inbound pass to seal the victory.
Minnesota nearly stormed back from a 10-point deficit with 4:44 to play. Penn State led 71-61 before the Golden Gophers went on a 14-4 run to even the score.
Mingo made a driving layup to put Penn State on top 75-72 with 49 seconds remaining.
Jaylen Crocker-Johnson made a layup on the opposite end to cut the deficit to 75-74 with 38 seconds to go. After Isaac Asuma stole the ball on defense, Reynolds made one of two free-throw attempts to tie it at 75 with 31 seconds left.
Penn State jumped to a 41-31 lead at the half.
Reed made a 3-pointer to give the Nittany Lions a 36-23 edge with 3:21 remaining in the first half. The 13-point advantage proved to be their biggest lead of the game.
Reynolds answered with back-to-back 3-pointers to cut Minnesota’s deficit to 36-29 with 1:40 to go in the first half.
The Nittany Lions built their lead back to 12 on a 3-pointer by Reed and a pair of free throws by Dominick Stewart, and Minnesota’s Asuma finished the first-half scoring with a layup.
-Field Level Media
Sports
Warriors upgrade G Pat Spencer to NBA deal for rest of season
Feb 5, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Golden State Warriors guard Pat Spencer (61) against the Phoenix Suns in the first half at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images The Golden State Warriors upgraded guard Pat Spencer from a two-way contract to a standard NBA contract for the remainder of the season as they square away their roster following this week’s trade deadline.
Spencer, 29, made his fifth start of the season during Thursday’s 101-97 road victory over the Phoenix Suns and contributed a career-high 20 points with six rebounds. He has averaged 5.8 points and 2.2 rebounds in 36 games (five starts) for Golden State this season.
Spencer played one season in Europe and four seasons in the G League after he went undrafted out of Northwestern. In parts of the past three seasons with the Warriors, he has averaged 3.8 points and 1.6 rebounds in 81 games (five starts).
–Field Level Media
Sports
US mixed doubles curling team takes first 2 losses after 4-0 start
[US, Mexico & Canada customers only] Feb 7, 2026; Cortina d’Ampezzo, ITALY; Cory Thiesse of United States in action against Great Britain during the curling mixed doubles round robin competition during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at the Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Issei Kato/Reuters via Imagn Images CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Britain’s Jennifer Dodds and Bruce Mouat beat Canada before ending the United States’ unbeaten run to clinch their place in the mixed doubles curling semi-finals at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Saturday.
Mouat and Dodds, who were world champions in 2021 and finished in fourth place at the Beijing Olympics in 2022, sit atop the round-robin standings after winning their first seven games in the competition.
They can no longer be caught by Canada or Switzerland, who are joint-fifth.
The British pair sealed a hard-fought win over Canada’s Brett Gallant and Jocelyn Peterman in the morning session, before returning to the ice and beating Americans Korey Dropkin and Cory Thiesse 6-4.
“It’s always a nice feeling to know you’re qualified, but we want to still continue to play well,” Dodds said.
“And today, those two games were definitely our A performances out there and we’ll need to continue that. So we’ll continue that into tomorrow and hopefully we can secure a top spot.”
It was a disappointing day for the U.S. pair. After entering the day as one of two remaining unbeatens with a 4-0 record, they also took a 6-5 defeat to South Korea’s
Jeong Yeong-seok and Kim Seon-yeong.
ITALY BEAT NORWAY, AGAIN
In the evening session, champions Italy beat two-time Olympic medalists Magnus Nedregotten and Kristin Skaslien of Norway 6-5 in a rematch of the final in Beijing four years ago.
In a close encounter, both teams appeared to struggle to get a read of the ice, with Norway’s Nedregotten miscalculating a shot in the final end which enabled Italy’s Stefania Constantini and Amos Mosaner to set up a steal and nab the win.
“Sometimes it’s the way the game needs to go, a couple of times we have been unlucky, and this time we were lucky, it’s always 50-50,” Mosaner said.
“Today we had some luck and we take it, to win a championship we need it.”
Italy’s win moves them up to joint-second in the standings, with Norway in joint-seventh.
Earlier on Saturday, Sweden’s Isabella and Rasmus Wranaa clinched a 9-4 win over Italy to boost their hopes of a top-four finish.
The Czech pairing of Julie Zelingrova and Vit Chabicovsky beat South Korea 9-4 to pick up their first win of the tournament.
Teams play nine times in the round-robin stage at the Cortina Olympic Curling Centre, with the semi-finals taking place on Monday and the medal matches scheduled for Tuesday.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
Women's Top 25 roundup: No. 1 UConn dominates Butler
Feb 7, 2026; Hartford, Connecticut, USA; UConn Huskies guard Kayleigh Heckel (9) drives the ball to the basket against Butler Bulldogs forward Mallory Miller (24) in the first half at PeoplesBank Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images Azzi Fudd’s 17 points led all five starters in double figures for top-ranked Connecticut in an 80-48 trouncing of Butler on Saturday at Hartford, Conn.
Serah Williams, Allie Ziebell, and Ashlynn Shade all scored 11 points, and KK Arnold had 10 points for the Huskies (25-0, 14-0 Big East). UConn made only five of 17 attempts from 3-point range. Reserve Jana El Alfy had 11 rebounds.
UConn played without sophomore Sarah Strong, who sat out for the first time in her career for what was termed an opportunity to rest. She was one of three Huskies who didn’t play, but they built a 44-19 halftime lead, with Fudd accounting for 15 points by the break.
Butler’s Caroline Dotsey had 13 points, but the Bulldogs (9-15, 3-11) committed 23 turnovers.
No. 12 Michigan State 81, Penn State 70
Grace VanSlooten scored 20 points, and the Spartans dug out of a 16-point deficit and used stellar second-half defense to avoid an upset despite Kiyomi McMiller’s 37-point outing at University Park, Pa.
Jalyn Brown’s 16 points, Rashunda Jones’s 14 points, and Kenndy Blair’s 12 points helped Michigan State (20-4, 9-4 Big Ten), which was 7-for-27 on 3s.
Miller made 16 of 33 shots from the field with three 3-pointers. Penn State (8-16, 1-12) poured in 28 first-quarter points and led 45-33 at halftime, but the Nittany Lions scored only 25 second-half points.
No. 20 West Virginia 87, Arizona 68
Kierra Wheeler’s 17 points came on 8-for-11 shooting, as the Mountaineers rolled at Morgantown, W. Va.
Sydney Shaw had 16 points, Jordan Harrison posted 14 points to go with eight steals, and Gia Cooke added 13 points for the Mountaineers (20-5, 10-3 Big 12), who led 50-26 at halftime. They shot 50% for the game from the field.
Arizona (11-12, 2-10) couldn’t overcome 29 turnovers, despite Tanyuel Welch’s 17 points and Daniah Trammell’s 15 points. The ball handling woes negated the Wildcats’ 51.7% shooting from the floor.
No. 22 Maryland 78, Nebraska 60
Isimenme Ozzy-Momodu racked up 16 points on 7-for-8 shooting to go with nine rebounds, as the Terrapins secured the victory at Lincoln, Neb.
Oluchi Okananwa had 14 points, reserve Rainey Welson notched 13 points, and Yarden Garzon added 11 points for Maryland (19-6, 7-6 Big Ten), which used a 30-point second quarter to build a 45-28 halftime lead.
Logan Nissley had 22 points, but Nebraska (16-8, 5-8) was stung by 22 turnovers and a 39-26 rebounding deficit. Nissley had six of the team’s nine 3-point baskets.
–Field Level Media
