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Joey Logano edges Ryan Blaney in OT to win Daytona Duel 1

NASCAR: Daytona 500 Media DayFeb 11, 2026; Daytona Beach, Florida, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver Joey Logano (22) speaks to the media during the Daytona 500 Media Day at Daytona International Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Mike Dinovo-Imagn Images

Joey Logano beat Team Penske teammate Ryan Blaney under caution in NASCAR overtime to win the first race of Speedweeks, the America 250 Florida Duel 1, at Daytona International Speedway on Thursday night in Daytona Beach, Fla.

Logano’s No. 22 Ford edged ahead of Blaney before Corey LaJoie, who restarted fourth and was in position to make the Daytona 500 field, wrecked on the backstretch to allow Casey Mears to roar past LaJoie’s No. 99 Ford from outside the top 10 and make the Great American Race.

Austin Dillon, John Hunter Nemechek and Brad Keselowski completed the top five.

Kyle Busch started the 60-lapper from the pole and led the 23-car field to green, but Ryan Preece, last Wednesday’s winner of The Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium, was first to the checkers on Lap 1.

Dillon, the 2018 Daytona 500 winner, found his way to the front, but the Fords of Blaney and Logano were soon in the mix.

However, the blue ovals belonging to RFK Racing — Preece, Chris Buescher, LaJoie and Keselowski — teamed up in the low line to take the first four positions on Lap 11.

One of the open drivers attempting to make Sunday’s field, Chandler Smith, moved his No. 36 Ford into seventh on Lap 33 as he needed to finish in front of LaJoie and Mears to start in the 500.

On Lap 39, the field turned its fastest lap with three-wide racing as the teams prepared to make their lone pit stop.

With all of the top nine cars sporting the Ford logo except Busch’s No. 8 Chevrolet and Nemechek’s No. 42 Toyota, the excitement began with 16 laps remaining as Mears and Noah Gragson spun together into the infield grass while coming to pit road.

That first caution allowed the first group who pitted to restart up front, and Logano led Blaney with six to go as the racing picked up. Busch fell to the back to protect his pole position for Sunday.

However, after Bubba Wallace, last year’s Duel 1 winner, passed Logano for the top spot with five to go, Dillon spun him entering Turn 3. Buescher, Smith and two-time defending 500 winner William Byron then wrecked together on the high side to set up overtime.

–Field Level Media

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Ilia Malinin making history with skating's first Olympic backflip in decades

Olympics: Figure Skating-Mens Singles Short ProgramFeb 10, 2026; Milan, Italy; Ilia Malinin of the United States of America competes in men’s singles short program during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena. Mandatory Credit: James Lang-Imagn Images

MILAN, Italy — When Ilia Malinin launched himself into a backflip at the Milan Cortina Olympics, it detonated through the crowd like a firecracker and even brought tennis great Novak Djokovic to his feet with his hands on his head in disbelief.

The 21-year-old double world champion landed the first legal Olympic backflip since American Terry Kubicka in 1976, when he helped clinch gold for the U.S. in the team event in Milan on Sunday.

The crowd will get another chance to see Malinin’s maneuver when he takes the ice for Friday’s men’s free program as the favorite for gold.

The backflip was banned for safety reasons after Kubicka did one at the 1976 Innsbruck Olympics.

The maneuver became known as the “Bonaly flip” after Surya Bonaly of France famously thumbed her nose at the International Skating Union’s restrictive rules at the 1998 Nagano Olympics.

Bonaly had sustained a groin injury the day before the free program and knew her quest for a medal was over, and so defiantly unleashed the jump with a one-footed landing.

The ISU removed the somersault ban in June 2024, saying in their meeting agenda: “Somersault type jumps are very spectacular and nowadays it is not logical anymore to include them as illegal movements.”

AERIAL SHOWMANSHIP

Malinin, the self-named “Quad God,” has drawn global attention for his aerial showmanship. He became the first skater to land seven quadruple jumps in a program at the Grand Prix Final in December. He is also the first to land the quadruple Axel in competition, considered the toughest jump in the sport.

The backflip carries no set point value, but it can contribute to Malinin’s component score – known under the old judging system as “artistic impression”.

It also gets a bigger roar from the crowd than his more technically demanding jumps because it plays to pure spectacle in a way quads simply cannot.

“It gets that audience applause, feels really suspenseful and I really just like doing it,” Malinin said last season when he began doing the maneuver.

His programs also include one-handed cartwheels and a “raspberry twist,” another zero-points move in which his body, much like a break dancer’s, rotates in the air horizontally to the ice.

However, the young skater has so far resisted the temptation to land the first quadruple Axel on Olympic ice, saying he is choosing caution over showmanship.

“I’m hoping that I’ll feel good enough to do it (on Friday),” he told reporters on Tuesday. “But of course, I always prioritize health and safety, so I really want to put myself in the right mindset where I’ll feel really confident to go into it and not have that as something that I’m going to risk.”

Malinin takes a score of 108.16 from the short program into Friday’s free skate. Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama is second on 103.07, Adam Siao Him Fa of France is third (102.55).

–Reuters, special to Field Level Media

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NBA suspends Suns F Dillon Brooks 1 game after 16th technical foul

NBA: Sacramento Kings at Phoenix SunsJan 2, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns forward Dillon Brooks (3) reacts after being issued a technical foul during the first half against the Sacramento Kings at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

The NBA suspended Phoenix Suns forward Dillon Brooks on Thursday for one game without pay after he received his 16th technical foul this season.

A player or coach is automatically suspended without pay for one game after a 16th technical foul in the regular season, per league rules. Every additional two technical fouls during that season results in the player or coach suspended without pay for another game.

Brooks, 30, was whistled for a personal foul and then a technical with 6:37 remaining in the second quarter of the Suns’ 136-109 home loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday.

He will serve the suspension after the All-Star break on Feb. 19 when Phoenix visits the San Antonio Spurs. He previously served one-game suspensions in May 2022, February 2023m, March 2023 (twice) and April 2025.

Brooks is in his first season with Phoenix and is averaging a career-high 21.2 points and career-high-tying 3.7 rebounds as well as 1.8 assists, 1.1 steals and 31.1 minutes in 49 games (all starts).

For his career, Brooks is averaging 14.8 points, 3.3 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 29.6 minutes in 541 regular-season games (514 starts) for the Memphis Grizzlies (2017-23), Houston Rockets (2023-25) and Suns.

He was All-NBA Defensive second team with the Grizzlies in 2022-23.

Houston selected Brooks in the second round of the 2017 NBA Draft out of Oregon and traded him the same day to Memphis for a second-round pick that became guard De’Anthony Melton.

–Field Level Media

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Italy under no pressure ahead of uphill battle against US women’s hockey

Justine Reyes, Italy celebrate goal during Milan Olympics women's hockey group playMilan Cortina 2026 Olympics – Ice Hockey – Women’s Preliminary Round – Group B – Italy vs Germany – Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena, Milan, Italy – February 10, 2026. Justine Reyes of Italy celebrates scoring their first goal with teammates

MILAN, Italy — Italy is prepared for an uphill battle after unexpectedly reaching the women’s Olympic ice hockey quarterfinals, but go into a clash with the heavily favored United States feeling no pressure.

The underdog hosts defied the odds and the doubters by winning two games, against France and Japan, which was enough to finish third in Group B and set up Friday’s meeting with the Group A winners.

The U.S. are two-time gold medalists and strolled to top their group on maximum points, beating defending champions Canada 5-0 along the way.

Italy coach Eric Bouchard was asked how difficult it was to prepare for the task ahead.

“It’s not difficult. I mean, it’s a challenge, but it’s a great one,” Bouchard told reporters after a practice session on Thursday.

“You have the chance to face the best hockey team in the world, and there’s no pressure on our shoulders right now. The only thing we can do is just go out there and perform,” he said.

“They might have a lot of talent, they have depth, but there’s something we control, and that’s the work ethic and the willingness to leave everything we have out there. That doesn’t require talent, and I think that’s the focus we have right now.”

Bouchard praised his players’ attitude in the days leading up to the game.

“They’re dialed in, honestly, this was our best practice so far,” he said.

“They were focused, they were on task, they wanted to prepare for tomorrow. They know it’s a huge challenge, but everybody’s excited.

“We’re playing for our country, and we want to make sure we play with pride for everyone who’s going to be watching out there.”

Italy was never supposed to make it this far, and goes into what most believe will definitely be its final contest of the Milan Cortina Games knowing that it will take something extraordinary in order to survive.

“We knew that we were coming in as the underdogs, the lowest-ranked team, but we also believed in ourselves,” Italy defender Jacquie Pierri said.

“It’s really cool to be here now a week later with what we’ve accomplished. And the next challenge we have tomorrow, we know we’re facing a huge uphill battle.

“Anything can happen on any given day,” Pierri said, “and we’re going to try our best to take advantage of whatever luck we get and make it as hard for them as possible, physically and mentally.

–Reuters, special to Field Level Media

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