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Anton Lundell has big night as Panthers edge Bruins

NHL: Boston Bruins at Florida PanthersFeb 4, 2026; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Boston Bruins left wing Tanner Jeannot (84) and Florida Panthers left wing A.J. Greer (10) fight during the first period at Amerant Bank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Anton Lundell came off the injured list and provided one goal and two assists in regulation and also scored in the shootout as the host Florida Panthers defeated the Boston Bruins, 5-4, on Wednesday night in Sunrise, Fla.

Brad Marchand also scored in the four-round shootout. Victor Arvidsson scored for Boston.

The Panthers, who snapped a season-high-tying four-game losing streak, also got two other players back from the injured list: Marchand and Sam Bennett.

Other prominent Panthers still injured are center Aleksander Barkov and defensemen Seth Jones and Dmitry Kulikov.

The Panthers also got goals from Eetu Luostarinen, Uvis Balinskis and Matthew Tkachuk. Sergei Bobrovsky made 25 saves for his first win since Jan. 24.

Boston, playing its final game before its Olympic break, got two goals from Michael Eyssimont. Prior to Wednesday, he had scored just once since Nov. 17. The Bruins also got one goal each from Mark Kastelic and Casey Mittelstadt.

Joonas Korpisalo added 22 saves as the Bruins lost consecutive games for the first time this calendar year.

Bennett appeared to open the scoring just 84 seconds in, but the goal was wiped out on review due to offsides.

The Panthers made it 1-0 — for real this time — as Boston’s Morgan Geekie fanned on a clearing attempt, and that led directly to Luostarinen scoring from the right circle.

However, Boston closed the first period with a 2-1 lead as Eyssimont scored with 12:42 left and again with 7:17 remaining.

On the first goal, Alex Steeves earned the primary assist as he won a puck battle and made a blind pass to Eyssimont, who was in alone on Bobrovsky. On the second one, Eyssimont scored on another breakaway, faking out Bobrovsky before stuffing the puck just inside the right post.

Florida took a 4-2 lead in the second period, scoring twice on its power play and once short-handed.

First, Tkachuk, operating from behind the goal line, tossed a pass to Balinskis, who scored from the slot. Then, less than three minutes later, Florida struck again as Tkachuk made two more great passes before scoring himself, banking the puck in off the back of Korpisalo.

Both times, the Panthers scored within the first 30 seconds with the man advantage.

Florida then added a short-handed goal as Sam Reinhart came up with a steal and then put the puck on Lundell’s stick for a tap-in tally.

However, Boston tied the score 4-4 with third-period goals by Kastelic and then Mittelstadt. First, Kastelic scored on a deflection off a pass from Charlie McAvoy. Then, with 9:30 left in the third, Mittelstadt scored on a rebound, just nine seconds into Boston’s sixth power play of the night.

–Field Level Media

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Thomas Detry caps sparkling LIV debut with share of Riyadh lead

PGA: FedEx St. Jude Championship - Third RoundAug 9, 2025; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Thomas Detry plays his shot from the 18th tee during the third round of the FedEx St. Jude Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

Newcomer Thomas Detry launched himself into the international LIV conversation quickly by claiming a share of the first-round lead on Wednesday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, during his first circuit as a member of LIV Golf.

The 33-year-old Belgian, whose most recent win came at the PGA Tour’s Phoenix Open last February, became a full-time member of Dustin Johnson’s 4Aces GC this offseason.

Detry shot a bogey-free, 7-under-par 65 at Riyadh Golf Club to tie RangeGoats GC’s Peter Uihlein for the lead.

“First day on the job, so a little bit of a change for me, so a bit nervous,” Detry said. “I drove it so well out there, it made my job pretty easy.”

Detry grabbed birdies on Nos. 1, 5, 6, 8, 13, 14 and 18.

Uihlein countered with an eagle on No. 13 as the pair built a one-stroke lead on the rest of the 57-man field.

The season-opening event marked LIV Golf’s switch from a 54-hole format to 72. Uihlein welcomed the addition of a fourth round.

“I’m not scared of a blowup every now and then on a hole in particular, so now I have more holes to make it up,” Uihlein said. “I think it’s going to benefit me long-term, which is nice.”

Australia’s Elvis Smylie, another rookie, found himself alone in third place with his 6-under round.

“I think there were a little bit of nerves and excitement, but I think I showed what I’m capable of today – or tonight, I should say,” Smylie said.

Six golfers are tied for fourth place at 5 under: South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen, South Korea’s Byeong Hun An, Talor Gooch, England’s Tyrrell Hatton, Colombia’s Sebastian Munoz and Spain’s Jon Rahm.

Munoz’s day helped Torque GC take the team lead at 15 under. Southern Guards GC (13 under) owns second while Legion XIII (11 under) sits third.

4Aces GC (10 under) is tied for fourth.

–Field Level Media

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Tyler Perkins, Villanova keep Seton Hall at bay for season sweep

NCAA Basketball: Seton Hall at VillanovaFeb 4, 2026; Villanova, Pennsylvania, USA; Villanova Wildcats guard Bryce Lindsay (2) reacts after the game against the Seton Hall Pirates at William B. Finneran Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

Tyler Perkins tallied 18 points, Malachi Palmer had a career night with 15 points and six rebounds and host Villanova never trailed in a 72-60 victory over Seton Hall on Wednesday.

Duke Brennan chipped in 12 points and 10 rebounds as the Wildcats (17-5, 8-3 Big East) picked up their third win in four games and a season sweep of their conference rivals. Villanova head coach Kevin Willard went 2-0 against Seton Hall, one of his former stops, in his first season back in the Big East.

Villanova’s Acaden Lewis went for 11 points and a game-high six assists. The Wildcats outrebounded the Pirates 37-27 and overcame 15 turnovers thanks to Seton Hall’s inability to capitalize.

Adam “Budd” Clark led Seton Hall (16-7, 6-6) with 18 points and AJ Staton-McCray added eight points and eight boards, but the Pirates shot a miserable 2 for 17 from 3-point range. Seton Hall has dropped five of seven.

Perkins’ four straight points gave the Wildcats a 19-11 cushion at the midway point of the first half, but they went without another field goal for the next 3:37. Seton Hall cobbled the next six points to draw within a bucket before Bryce Lindsay’s triple ended the drought.

Seton Hall was within six before Villanova surged into the locker room on an 11-2 run. Palmer knocked down a pair of treys during the stretch and Perkins added five points, including a lightning-quick fastbreak layup off a Pirates miss.

That put Villanova ahead 40-25 at the half, and it was 47-27 in short order before Seton Hall made its run. Tajuan Simpkins had five points in a 9-0 run, capped with a fastbreak layup when Staton-McCray and Clark forced a steal.

After Brennan’s one free throw ended Villanova’s brief scoring rut, Palmer buried his third 3-pointer. He was left open on the next Wildcats possession and drained another with his foot on the line, making it 53-36 with 12:37 left.

The Pirates were only able to claw within 10 points late as the Villanova shooting cooled off, but Lewis and Brennan combined for five free throws in the closing minutes to put it away.

–Field Level Media

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Late first-half rally and bench strength pulls Louisville past Notre Dame

Syndication: The Courier-JournalLouisville Cardinals forward Sananda Fru (13) blocks the shot of Notre Dame Fighting Irish guard Sir Mohammed (13) in the first half at the KFC Yum! Center Wednesday night Feb. 4, 2026

The evening didn’t start well for Louisville, but a late first-half run and solid bench play led the No. 24 Cardinals to a 76-65 home win over the Fighting Irish on Wednesday.

Louisville (16-6, 6-4) fell behind 10-2 to open the game and saw starting guard J’vonne Hadley exit due to an apparent aggravation of a back injury after playing just three minutes.

Louisville led 30-28 with two minutes to go in the first half but an 8-0 run over the next minute opened up a margin the Cardinals wouldn’t relinquish. A dunk from Sananda Fru, a lay-up from Adrian Wooley and then a 3-pointer and a free throw from Isaac McKneely gave Louisville a 38-28 edge with 1:01 before halftime.

Notre Dame pulled within three points on a couple occasions early in the second half, the last coming at 45-42 on a Carson Towt lay-up with 15:33 to play.

The Irish were still within five points at the eight-minute mark, but a late Louisville run finished the matter.

McKneely led the Cardinal attack with 13 points, including 4-for-8 3-point shooting. Fru added 12 points, five rebounds, and three blocked shots. Ryan

Conwell also scored 12 points but shot just 4-for-14. Khani Rooths added a second consecutive double-double off the bench with 12 points and 12 rebounds.

Louisville’s bench tallied 33 points in all. Kasean Pryor notched 10 points on 5-for-6 shooting and grabbed five rebounds in the most playing time he’d seen since before Christmas (15 minutes).

Notre Dame (11-12, 2-8) lost for the eighth time in nine games. The Irish season has been a struggle since the loss of Markus Burton to injury in early December.

Guard Cole Certa paced the Irish with 18 points, including 5-for-14 3-point shooting. Brady Koehler tallied 11 points and four steals. Jalen Haralson added eight points, seven rebounds, and five assists.

The Irish shot just 38.7% for the game (24-for-62) and connected on just 6 of 14 free throw attempts (42.9%).

–Field Level Media

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