Sports
No. 3 Houston, No. 5 Iowa State both begin series of Big 12 clashes
Iowa State Cyclones forward Milan Momcilovic (22) celebrates after winning 74-56 over Kansas in the Big-12 conference basketball showdown on Feb. 14, 2026, at Hilton Coliseum, in Ames, Iowa. Expect the fur to fly and defense to be front and center when No. 3 Houston and No. 5 Iowa State square off Monday in the latest of a series of titanic Big 12 Conference clashes in Ames, Iowa.
Monday’s game is the second of three contests in a row against ranked teams for Iowa State, and the first of a three-game stretch versus opponents ranked in the top 25 for the Cougars over an eight-day period.
The Cyclones (22-3, 9-3 Big 12) bounced back from a mid-week road loss to TCU with a dominating 74-56 win at home over No. 9 Kansas on Saturday. The 18-point margin in the victory was Iowa State’s largest in a win over the Jayhawks since 1973, and the win avenged a 21-point loss to Kansas on Jan. 13 that handed the Cyclones their first setback of the season.
Milan Momcilovic poured in 18 points for Iowa State in the win while hitting four 3-pointers. Joshua Jefferson, Tamin Lipsey, Blake Buchanan and Jamarion Batemon added 11 points each for the Cyclones, who held Kansas to 37.3% shooting from the floor and won for the sixth time in their past seven games.
“Our guys were really locked in,” Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger said. “I thought it was at a very high level in terms of how we pressured the ball, how physical we were, how we were ahead of plays in the first half to turn them. Our defensive intensity was at a very high level.”
Iowa State is a perfect 14-0 at home this year and 47-2 on its home court over the past three seasons. That streak will be tested — in a big way — by Houston’s visit.
“We have tremendous respect for their program,” Otzelberger said about the Cougars. “We know how good they are and the things that they can do, the problems they can pose. It’s always balancing the necessary amount of get rest and get your body to bounce back, come to practice with great mental focus and intent and get prepared to play a really good team.”
Houston (23-2, 11-1 Big 12) heads north after riding its defense to a 78-64 win at home over Kansas State on Saturday afternoon. Emanuel Sharp scored 23 points to pace the Cougars, who overcame a ragged first half in which they made just two of their first 15 shots before finding their stride. Houston held Kansas State scoreless over the final 5:24 of the first half, during which it turned a one-point lead into a 14-point advantage.
“Basketball is not a very complicated game — when you make shots, you look pretty, and when you miss them it’s ugly,” Houston coach Kelvin Sampson said. “I think we lead the world in ugly wins, but we are still 23-2, 11-1, so that’s pretty good.”
Milos Uzan and Kingston Flemings added 12 points each for Houston, which won its sixth straight game despite committing a season-high 15 turnovers.
“I won’t spend one minute tonight worrying about this game — not one minute,” Sampson said after Saturday’s win. “We’ll see if we can go and shock the world because that’s what it would be. Iowa State doesn’t lose at home. Neither do we. Neither does Kansas. Neither does Arizona.”
After Monday’s contest, Houston hosts No. 1 Arizona on Saturday and then travels to No. 9 Kansas on Feb. 23.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Italy's Federica Brignone wins giant slalom; Mikaela Shiffrin finishes 11th
Mikaela Shiffrin of the United States in action during her second run in the women’s giant slalom on Sunday in Belluno, Italy, at the Milan Cortina Olympics. She finished in 11th place, CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Italy’s Federica Brignone completed a golden double on home snow at the Winter Olympics on Sunday, adding the giant slalom title to the super-G won last Thursday, as U.S. Alpine ski great Mikaela Shiffrin again missed out on a medal.
Sweden’s Sara Hector, champion at Beijing 2022, shared silver with Norway’s Thea Louise Stjernesund with the pair astonishingly clocking identical times in both runs in a race of fine margins.
Italy’s Lara Della Mea finished fourth, missing out on the podium by an agonizing 0.05 of a second with Austria’s pre-race favorite Julia Scheib, the World Cup giant slalom leader, a further 0.02 behind in fifth.
Brignone, who only returned to the Alpine ski World Cup in January after a career-threatening leg injury, won by 0.62 of a second.
She dominated the first run in bright sunshine on the Olimpia delle Tofane piste and then took a safer approach with the medal beckoning.
“It was such an easy run, because the snow was so easy,” the 35-year-old, who now holds both the world and Olympic titles.
“I was almost too calm,” she said of the second run. “I was afraid of not being aggressive enough.”
No other female Italian Alpine skier has ever won two individual golds at the same Games. Brignone is now the oldest Olympic gold medalist in Alpine skiing as well as the oldest female medalist.
Shiffrin, seventh after the first run of a discipline she has found challenging since a nasty crash in 2024, missed out on an Olympic medal again after finishing 11th on a course set by her coach.
The most successful skier in World Cup history, with a record 108 wins, Shiffrin has not won an Olympic medal since 2018 after drawing a blank in Beijing and now has just the slalom remaining to end that drought.
She will be favorite for that title, having won seven of eight World Cup slaloms this season.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
Norway’s ‘King Klaebo’ reigns as greatest with 9 Winter Games golds
Johannes Klaebo of Norway celebrates with fans before crossing the finish line to win the Winter Olympics gold medal in the men’s 4×7.5 km relay on Sunday in Lago, Italy. TESERO, Italy — Norway’s Johannes Klaebo cemented his legacy on Sunday by winning a ninth Olympic cross-country gold to become the greatest Winter Olympian of all time.
Nine golds put him ahead of compatriots and fellow cross-country skiers Marit Bjoergen, Bjoern Daehlie and biathlete Ole Einar Bjoerndalen, who have eight Olympic titles each.
“It was good to share the top with them for a couple of days, but it feels even better to be on the top. It’s a big achievement and will take some time to sink in,” said Klaebo, who won the medal in the men’s 4 x 7.5km relay.
Klaebo’s ninth gold puts him level with six Olympic greats, including Finn Paavo Nurmi, a distance runner, and U.S. sprinter Carl Lewis. One more would lift him to second on the all-time list for any Olympics — Winter or Summer — but he would have some way to go to surpass American swimmer Michael Phelps, who towers above all with 23.
Klaebo could win his 10th in the coming days with a victory in either the men’s team relay on Wednesday or the 50km classic race next Sunday.
“He (Klaebo) is the greatest of all time. We knew that, and now it is also in the numbers,” Italian skier Elia Barp said.
The 29-year-old Klaebo, who lives in Trondheim, Norway, is competing in his second Olympics. His 83-year-old grandfather, who is also his coach, was sitting in the stands at the Tesero Ski Stadium when he won gold on Sunday.
“This is something he has really worked hard for,” Klaebo said. “He’s been my coach since I was 15, and we have really worked hard for it.”
Klaebo is No. 1 in the World Cup standings, and at the Olympics, he has beaten competitors with wide enough margins to casually cross the finish line and wave at the crowd.
The men’s 10km interval freestyle race had been seen as the best chance to knock him off the top of the podium, but he still managed to win that competition by nearly five seconds.
“It makes our job that much harder. Nine more golds until we can get in front of him,” joked U.S. skier Ben Ogden after Sunday’s relay race.
“It is pretty cool, and I like that he’s starting to get some really big recognition for how talented he is because it’s well deserved.”
Klaebo became a household name after a video of him running uphill in the men’s classic sprint went viral, putting the spotlight on a sport that lacks the Olympic fanfare of figure skating or Alpine skiing.
“I think he’ll go down as the greatest of all time. To be racing the same era as him — it is crazy to witness that and to fight against that,” said Canadian skier Remi Drolet.
–Reuters, Special to Field Level Media
Sports
Illinois G Kylan Boswell (hand) to return vs. Indiana
Jan 17, 2026; Champaign, Illinois, USA; Illinois Fighting Illini guard Kylan Boswell (4) drives the ball around Minnesota Golden Gophers guard Isaac Asuma (1) during the first half at State Farm Center. Mandatory Credit: Ron Johnson-Imagn Images Illinois starting guard Kylan Boswell is set to return for Sunday’s game against Indiana in Champaign, Ill., per the Big Ten availability report.
Boswell missed the last seven games for the eighth-ranked Fighting Illini since fracturing a bone in his right hand during practice on Jan. 19.
Illinois (20-5, 11-3 Big Ten) won the first five games in his absence before dropping a pair of overtime contests heading into Sunday’s encounter versus the Hoosiers (17-8, 8-6).
Boswell has averages of 14.3 points, 4.2 rebounds and 3.4 assists in 18 games this season while shooting 47.5 percent from the floor.
–Field Level Media
