Connect with us

Sports

No. 1 Arizona looks to rebound against flashy No. 16 Texas Tech

Syndication: The Topeka Capital-JournalArizona Wildcats forward Ivan Kharchenkov (8) reacts after scoring against Kansas Jayhawks during the game inside Allen Fieldhouse on Feb. 9, 2026.

Top-ranked Arizona will look to bounce back after suffering its first loss of the season when it hosts No. 16 Texas Tech in a Big 12 game on Saturday at Tucson, Ariz.

Arizona (23-1, 10-1 Big 12) had a program and Big 12 record start of 23 consecutive wins snapped Monday with an 82-78 loss at No. 9 Kansas.

Texas Tech (18-6, 8-3) enters the game with wins over West Virginia and Colorado after losing against UCF and then-No. 11 Kansas.

A key matchup will be in the paint with Arizona’s Motiejus Krivas and reserve Tobe Awaka matching up against JT Toppin, who leads the Red Raiders with 21.5 points and 10.9 rebounds a game.

Krivas had 14 points, 15 rebounds and six blocked shots against Kansas, but Jayhawks post player Flory Bidunga countered with 23 points on 8-of-11 shooting from the field and had 10 rebounds.

Awaka got in early foul trouble and finished with only six points and a season-low three rebounds.

Texas Tech’s Lejuan Watts, a 6-foot-6, 225-pound forward, is second on the team with 6.4 rpg.

He will be matched against Arizona freshman Koa Peat, who averages 14.3 ppg but is coming off a six-point performance on 2-of-11 shooting from the field against Kansas.

“In this league, you don’t have time to feel sorry for yourself,” Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd said. “We played a tough game in a tough environment, but our focus has to be on the next one. Texas Tech is a disciplined, physical team that doesn’t beat themselves.

“We have to be better on the glass and more connected defensively if we want to protect our home court.”

Texas Tech head coach Grant McCasland, an assistant coach of Lloyd’s with the gold medal-winning Team USA U19 World Cup team last summer, also used the word “connected” when describing how his team must play against Arizona.

Keeping the teams connected could come down to the play of Texas Tech point guard Christian Anderson (19.1 ppg, 7.7 assists per game) and Arizona counterpart Jaden Bradley (13.5 ppg, 4.5 apg).

Bradley struggled at Kansas with a season-low six points on 2-of-8 shooting from the field and 2 of 4 from the free-throw line.

“The effort is matching the intelligence that we need to understand scheme and not just physicality or how hard you play,” McCasland said of the wins over West Virginia and Colorado. “JT Toppin and Christian Anderson are really the anchors to what we’re doing.

“Arizona is as talented as it gets. You can’t just play hard; you have to play smart, communicate, and stay connected for all 40 minutes.”

Anderson is coming off 11 assists against West Virginia and seven against Colorado.

Arizona freshman guard Brayden Burries had 25 points against Kansas, his eighth game with at least 20 points.

He leads the Wildcats in scoring at 15.7 ppg while shooting 50.8% from the field.

Both teams have an eight-player rotation with all but one player averaging double figures in minutes played.

Texas Tech has attempted 705 shots from 3-point range, while Arizona is at 395. The Red Raiders have made 276 (39.1%) while Arizona has converted 141 (35.7%).

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

Sports

Czech teenager Jilek outclasses strong field to take 10,000m gold

Olympics: Speed Skating-Mens 5000mFeb 8, 2026; Milan, Italy; Metodej Jilek of Czechia skates in the men’s speed skating 5000m during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Speed Skating Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

MILAN — Czech teenager Metodej Jilek produced the race of his life to beat a powerful field and seize gold in the 10,000 meters on Friday, delivering the Czech Republic its first speed skating title of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

Jilek was joined on the podium by Poland’s Vladimir Semirunniy, who claimed silver, while Dutchman Jorrit Bergsma took bronze.

Nineteen-year-old Jilek, who won bronze in the 10,000m at the 2025 ISU World Speed Skating Single Distances Championships, clocked 12 minutes 33.43 seconds to finish 5.65 seconds clear of Semirunniy, underlining his emergence as one of the sport’s most exciting prospects.

“I feel incredible,” Jilek said. “This gold medal represents all the training I’ve been doing for years — everything I’ve been working towards. It’s amazing.

“I knew even before I came to the Olympics that I could do really well in the 10,000m, that I could win it. It was just a matter of doing the lap times.

“I’ve done thousands of these lap times throughout the summer so I knew what it feels like, what I have to do. It was just about dialing it in.”

His victory made him the Czech Republic’s second Olympic champion of these Games, following Zuzana Maderova’s triumph in the women’s parallel giant slalom on Sunday.

It also marked the nation’s second speed skating medal in Milan Cortina, after Jilek claimed silver in the 5,000m on Sunday.

Competing in his first Olympics, Jilek faced a stacked field that included newly crowned 5,000m Olympic champion Sander Eitrem, France’s Timothy Loubineaud, Semirunniy and 10,000m world record holder Davide Ghiotto of Italy — all considered strong contenders after standout World Cup campaigns.

“Honestly, I wasn’t even that nervous before the race,” Jilek added.

“The only thing I was a bit nervous about is that I woke up a bit sick — I didn’t feel that good. I didn’t know how my body would react.

“Other than that, I knew I could do it. I was pretty confident.”

Drawn in the penultimate pair of the six-pair program, Jilek started in the inner lane alongside 2018 Pyeongchang 10,000 champion Ted-Jan Bloemen of Canada and quickly settled into a smooth, controlled rhythm.

He never looked in doubt and ultimately lapped Bloemen, who is two decades his senior.

Jilek had been forced to settle for silver behind Eitrem in the 5,000m, but there was no repeat of that heartbreak on Friday.

Russian-born long-distance specialist Semirunniy was congratulated by Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk.

“‘Poland welcomed me like its own child,’ said Vladimir Semirunniy recently, who won a silver Olympic medal for his new homeland today. A beautiful story. Bravo Wladek!” Tusk posted on social media platform X.

TIMELESS BERGSMA

Bergsma — the 10,000m champion at Sochi 2014, silver medalist at Pyeongchang 2018 and 5,000m bronze medalist in Sochi — turned back the clock with a performance full of his trademark composure and metronomic pacing.

The arena, awash in orange as Dutch fans filled the stands once again, roared the 40-year-old on with every lap as he battled alongside Ghiotto in the fourth pair.

Meanwhile, Loubineaud stayed patient as Eitrem set the early pace in the final pair, conserving energy before mounting a late surge. The Frenchman’s strong finish earned him fourth place once again, while Eitrem faded and ultimately slipped to seventh.

Italy’s Riccardo Lorello, the Milan-born skater who grew up minutes from the venue, missed the podium but impressed once more. The 23-year-old Olympic debutant posted the eighth-fastest time, backing up the bronze he claimed in the 5,000m.

Starting from the inner lane in the first pair, Lorello was greeted by a warm reception as Italian flags waved across the arena. Paired with Denmark’s Viktor Hald Thorup — a late replacement after American Casey Dawson withdrew — Lorello pulled clear early and skated alone for most of the race.

Thorup was unable to keep pace and later recorded a DNF due to cramping.

–Reuters, special to Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

After snapping 9-game skid, Oklahoma hosts reeling Georgia

NCAA Basketball: Florida at GeorgiaFeb 11, 2026; Athens, Georgia, USA; Georgia Bulldogs head coach Mike White reacts on the bench against the Florida Gators during the first half at Stegeman Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Georgia coach Mike White is counting on his team playing better from the jump Saturday than the Bulldogs did in their most recent game when they travel to Norman, Okla., to take on Oklahoma.

“We’ll do our best as a staff to figure out how we can get off to a better start and if that means playing the five guys that are going to bring the most energy – who look like they’ve got energy at the pregame meal – I don’t know,” White said. “But you’ve got to sprint up and down the court in this league to have success.”

The Bulldogs are coming off a 20-point home loss to Florida on Wednesday where they didn’t score until nearly six minutes into the game. Since their 16-3 start, they’ve lost four of their last five games.

There was one major bright spot in the Florida loss for Georgia. Freshman Kareem Stagg scored nine points in 16 minutes after scoring just six points in his first 10 SEC games.

“He grew up a little bit,” White said. “That happens with freshmen, and if you can string together two or three of those in a row (that’d be positive). There’s always a step or two backwards as these guys go through their process, but certainly he took a step forward.”

The Bulldogs (17-7, 5-6 Southeastern Conference) were without leading scorer Jeremiah Wilkinson in the loss to Florida. Wilkinson is dealing with a shoulder injury.

White said after that game there wasn’t a timetable for Wilkinson’s return.

The Sooners (12-12, 2-9) haven’t played since last Saturday’s 92-91 win at then-No. 15 Vanderbilt that snapped their nine-game losing streak.

“Obviously you wish they were playing on the road tonight in Alaska and flying home,” White quipped. ” … I’ve seen them just a few times live. Talented and versatile and fast and playing at home. We’ll have to play really well.”

The Sooners led by 21 points with less than five minutes left against Vanderbilt but the game still came down to the wire.

During their extended losing streak, Oklahoma dropped several games despite holding double-digit leads.

“We’ve played really good basketball and we just haven’t been able to finish them off,” Sooners coach Porter Moser said.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Team Peps completes comeback on Day 1 of OWCS Pre-Season Bootcamp

Syndication: Democrat and ChronicleYMCA member Austin Manengu works the keyboard as he plays a game of Fortnite during the unveiling of the new gaming lab at the Maplewood Family YMCA in Rochester Thursday, June 20, 2024. YMCA of Greater Rochester in partnership with Metro Sports & Entertainment Group will open two gaming labs for youth and teens this year.

Team Peps, Team Falcons, T1 and Virtus.pro won their opening games and moved into the quarterfinals of the Overwatch Champions Series Pre-Season Bootcamp on Friday in Seoul.

Peps outlasted Disguised 3-2 in a match that included a rare draw in the fourth round. Falcons swept VARREL 3-0, Virtus.pro did the same to All Gamers and T1 defeated Dallas Fuel 3-1.

Twelve teams are participating in the $25,000 event that kicks off the 2026 Overwatch Champions Series (OWCS). Teams from North America, the EMEA region, China, Japan and elsewhere in Asia were invited.

The single-elimination bracket saw teams seeded by regional and 2025 World Finals performance. All matches are first-to-three until Sunday’s grand finals, which are first-to-four.

On Friday, Disguised jumped out to a 2-0 lead on Peps, winning 2-1 on Ilios Control and 1-0 on Shambali Monastery Escort.

After Peps clawed one back on Esperanca Push, 89.03m-52.84m, the teams tied 3-3 on Midtown Hybrid. They continued on to New Junk City Flashpoint, where Peps took the momentum with a 3-0 win before sealing the comeback 2-1 on Watchpoint: Gibraltar Escort.

Falcons did not allow VARREL to score a point on any map, blanking them 2-0 on Lijiang Tower Control, 3-0 on Shambali Monastery Escort and 3-0 on Midtown Hybrid.

It was the same story for Virtus.pro, which shut out All Gamers 2-0 on Ilios Control, 1-0 on Eichenwalde Hybrid and 1-0 on Shambali Monastery Escort.

T1 opened its match against Dallas Fuel with a 2-1 win on Lijiang Tower Control and a 2-0 triumph on Midtown Hybrid. Dallas extended the match by taking Havana Escort 3-2, but T1 finished it off with a 3-0 result on New Junk City Flashpoint.

The tournament continues Saturday with the four quarterfinal matches:

–Crazy Raccoon vs. Team Peps

–Weibo Gaming vs. Team Falcons

–Twisted Minds vs. T1

–Team Liquid vs. Virtus.pro

Overwatch Champions Series 2026 Pre-Season Bootcamp prize pool

1. $15,000

2. $5,000

3-4. $2,500

5-8. No money

9-12. No money — Disguised, VARREL, Dallas Fuel, All Gamers

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading