Sports
No. 20 Clemson continues west coast road trip at Cal
Feb 4, 2026; Stanford, California, USA; Clemson Tigers forward RJ Godfrey (0) reacts after scoring and drawing a foul against the Stanford Cardinal during the second half at Maples Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: John Hefti-Imagn Images For 20th-ranked Clemson and unranked California, Saturday night’s clash between the teams at Berkeley, Ca. is a potential resume booster for both sides.
The Tigers (19-4, 9-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) enter the contest projected as a No. 6 seed by ESPN’s Bracketology and No. 32 in the latest KenPom rankings as of Thursday. Securing their 20th victory of the season would continue to solidify Clemson’s status as a tournament lock at the moment. A win at Cal (17-6, 5-5), which is ranked No. 55 in the NCAA’s latest NET rankings, would give the Tigers a Quad 1 victory.
Clemson has a No. 31 NET ranking as of Thursday, which would give the Golden Bears only a Quad 2 win if they win. But Cal could use it as it is currently considered a bubble team by most prognostications heading into its 11th conference game.
The Tigers are playing their second game on their ACC west coast swing, and coming off a 66-64 win at Stanford on Wednesday. The victory continued Clemson’s hot streak in recent weeks as the Tigers won their third in a row and for the 12th time in their past 13 games with the only defeat during that stretch coming in overtime, 80-76, at home against NC State on Jan. 20th.
California-native Nick Davidson led Clemson with 16 points on Wednesday, and shot 5 for 6 from the field while collecting seven rebounds.
“He handled it great,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said. “Not surprised that he played well and managed his emotions. He does have a lot of family here. I know he was excited for the trip, he and Blake Davidson both. I’m happy for him, though, that he played well.”
Davidson is the fourth-highest scorer on Clemson’s team (9.5 points per game) on a squad that has found balance on the offensive end with three players averaging double figures in scoring led by RJ Godfrey (11.8 points per game).
Cal, which has a No. 61 KenPom ranking as of Thursday, is also riding momentum heading into Saturday’s clash. The Golden Bears have won four of their past five games including a pair of wins by five points or fewer against Miami and Georgia Tech in their last two games.
Dai Dai Ames continues to pace the Golden Bears on the offensive end, averaging 17.7 points per game and Justin Pippen is averaging 15 points and a team-high 4.4 assists per game.
Cal has shown resilience of late despite some woes on the defensive end. The Golden Bears allowed Georgia Tech to shoot 48 percent and Miami to shoot 57 percent from the field, yet found a way to win both games despite allowing 85 points in each contest.
Ames finished with a career-high 29 points against Georgia Tech and hit four clutch free throws in the final minute.
“Dai Dai Ames has tremendous self-discipline,” Madsen said after the game. “So he’s a guy you can really trust. I knew it could go either way, but I knew the likelihood was he was going to have the composure and the discipline not to pick up that fifth foul. And he was great with that.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Michigan State G Divine Ugochukwu (foot) out for season
Michigan State’s Divine Ugochukwu passes the ball against Northwestern during the first half on Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026, at the Breslin Center in East Lansing. Michigan State guard Divine Ugochukwu will miss the remainder of the season due to a left foot injury, head coach Tom Izzo announced Friday.
Per Izzo, Ugochukwu will undergo surgery next week after sustaining the injury during the first half of the 10th-ranked Spartans 76-73 loss to Minnesota on Wednesday.
The setback was the second in a row for Michigan State (19-4, 9-3 Big Ten), which hosts No. 5 Illinois (20-3, 11-1) on Saturday in East Lansing, Mich. The Fighting Illini have won 12 in a row.
Ugochukwu averaged 5.1 points, 1.5 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 22 games (12 starts) this season with the Spartans. He transferred from Miami during this past offseason.
The loss of Ugochukwu leaves Michigan State with Jeremy Fears, Kur Teng, Trey Fort and Harvard transfer Denham Wojcik at the guard position.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Rockets crave greater ‘aggression’ against depleted Thunder
Feb 5, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Rockets center Alperen Sengun (28) on the bench during a timeout against the Charlotte Hornets during the third quarter at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Erik Williams-Imagn Images The last time the Oklahoma City Thunder hosted the Houston Rockets, the teams turned in an epic season opener.
The Thunder ultimately came out ahead 125-124 in double overtime Oct. 21.
The teams meet again Saturday in Oklahoma City.
The Rockets have dropped back-to-back games after winning five of their previous six, leaving Ime Udoka frustrated with his team’s performance in home losses to Boston and Charlotte.
“Teams basically looking like they’re coming in and playing harder and they’re looking at that mentality that, ‘If we play harder than them, we’ll beat them,'” Udoka said after Houston’s 109-99 loss to the Hornets on Thursday. “There’s no fight, there’s no aggression, just blank stares.
“In the past, if we didn’t win or weren’t going to win, at least we would get into it, do something about it. Right now, it’s the same mistakes over and over.”
Udoka said he needed to see a spark from the entire team, not looking specifically to leaders like Kevin Durant and Alperen Sengun to fix the team’s recent issues.
“The guys that are here have done it for the last few years,” Udoka said. “It’s not one guy, it’s the group in general. The players started the year doing it and, until recently, at least had that. It’s not like one guy’s going to do it, it’s collective.”
Sengun, who scored 39 in that season-opening loss to Oklahoma City, shot just 36.3% from the field over the last six games after shooting 51.8% through his first 37 games of the season.
Udoka said it wasn’t an issue of shot selection.
“Decent shots, the shots he’s made since I’ve been here. Getting good looks there,” Udoka said. “That’s not the problem. Players allow their offense to dictate their game in general and … give something away on defense when you’re not as engaged because you’re not scoring. It’s not just an Alperen thing.”
Thunder coach Mark Daigneault hasn’t worried about his team’s effort recently, especially in Wednesday’s 10-point loss in San Antonio.
The Thunder stayed within striking distance of the Spurs despite having none of their normal five starters available and dressing only eight players.
“They gutted it out and played hard, played their minutes hard,” Daigneault said. “There’s no moral victories there but there are things we can take from everything. … But certainly, we’re not content.”
One thing Daigneault said his team took from the game was working on Jaylin Williams’ conditioning.
Williams, who missed much of December and early January due to injury, scored 24 points in a career-high 40 minutes Wednesday.
“I was tired,” Williams said.
Though the Thunder figure to have some reinforcements back against the Rockets, they’ll still remain without two of their biggest pieces — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams.
Gilgeous-Alexander is out until after the All-Star break with an abdominal injury, while Williams hasn’t played since Jan. 17 after suffering a thigh injury.
Starters Chet Holmgren (back), Isaiah Hartenstein (eye) and Luguentz Dort (knee) also missed the loss in San Antonio, as did rotational players Alex Caruso (adductor), and Ajay Mitchell (abdomen).
Of that group, only Mitchell missed Tuesday’s 128-92 win over the Orlando Magic.
–Field Level Media
Sports
No. 10 Michigan State eager to end slide vs. No. 5 Illinois
Michigan State’s head coach Tom Izzo reacts after Jordan Scott scores during the second half against Michigan on Friday, Jan. 30, 2026, at the Breslin Center in East Lansing. No. 10 Michigan State is facing real adversity for the first time this season. A matchup against the hottest team in the Big Ten only adds to the Spartans’ concerns.
No. 5 Illinois rides a 12-game winning streak into Saturday’s clash versus Michigan State at East Lansing, Mich.
Michigan State (19-4, 9-3 Big Ten) lost last weekend at home to rival Michigan, then hit the road and wound up with a bad loss, falling to Minnesota 76-73 on Wednesday. The Golden Gophers snapped a seven-game losing streak.
Reserve guard Divine Ugochukwu suffered a left foot injury in the first half of that game. He was ruled out for the remainder of the season on Friday.
Star point guard Jeremy Fears Jr. continues to injure his reputation. Wolverines coach Dusty May called out Fears for making dangerous plays in last week’s game, including an apparently intentional effort to trip a Michigan player in the late going.
Fears was assessed a technical foul on Wednesday for making a kicking motion to the groin of Minnesota guard Langston Reynolds after Reynolds fouled him.
Head coach Tom Izzo threatened to pull Fears from the starting lineup on Saturday.
“I did not see what happened on the play,” Izzo said. “I saw him get pushed and I saw his leg come up and I didn’t think he hit anybody, but if he did, then he deserves it, I guess. But if he didn’t, I questioned it. So are they baiting him? Well, of course. And it’s his fault.”
Izzo needs to get his team refocused quickly after its clunker in Minneapolis. The Spartans trailed virtually the entire game. They nearly erased a 16-point deficit in the late going but their woeful start — 21 first-half points — doomed them.
“What a strange game,” Izzo said. “I can’t figure out why we started out so poorly. Disappointed in my upperclassmen, if I was to be honest. And the coach, because the coach has to get a team ready, and playing three games in a row now that we have not been there at the beginning.”
The Illini were dominant throughout their last outing, pounding Northwestern, 84-44, on Wednesday. The Illini (20-3) are 11-1 in Big Ten play for the first time since the 2004-05 squad won its first 15 league games as part of 29 straight victories to open the season.
A change in defensive strategy has helped to fuel the Illini run.
“We’re giving up more (three-pointers) because we’re trying to not give up as many twos and as many layups,” Illinois coach Brad Underwood said. “Those are 100 percent shots. … We’re going to give up some threes, but we’re going to count on not giving up twos and not giving up the 100 percent shots as much.”
The Illini barely gave up anything against the Wildcats, who went 19-for-65 from the field and just 4-for-25 from 3-point range. Northwestern coach Chris Collins heaped praise on the red-hot Illini afterward.
“They have tremendous length, so it’s really hard to score at the basket,” Collins said. “Their two-point defense is terrific. They’re doing such a good job eliminating your easy baskets. We took 25 threes. We needed to make double figures, and we only made four.”
Andrej Stojakovic had a team-high 17 points for Illinois against Northwestern.
–Field Level Media
