Sports
Overachiever vs. underachiever as Spurs, Rockets clash
Jan 28, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Rockets forward Tari Eason (17) and San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) battle for a loose ball during the fourth quarter at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images There is no doubt that the San Antonio Spurs are ahead of schedule in their move back into the upper echelon of the NBA, pushing their way toward the top of the Western Conference standings as the season turns toward its fourth quarter.
But what about the Houston Rockets, who were supposed to be contenders this season but have underachieved?
The disparity will be on display when the Spurs and Rockets square off Sunday in San Antonio in a clash between Lone Star State rivals.
San Antonio is in second place in the West, behind only defending league champion Oklahoma City. The team is 6 1/2 games clear of third-place Houston with 19 contests left to play.
The Spurs return to the court after a rousing 116-112 comeback home win over the Los Angeles Clippers on Friday. Playing the second game of a home back-to-back, San Antonio roared back from 25 points down in the third quarter and outlasted the Clippers in a contest that had seven lead changes over the final 7:11.
Victor Wembanyama racked up 27 points, 10 rebounds and four blocked shots in the victory, while Julian Champagnie added 20 points, 17 of them in the pivotal third quarter as the Spurs produced their largest comeback of the season, their third win in a row and their 14th victory in their past 15 games.
“(On the) second night of a back-to-back, guys are banged up,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said after the win. “The competitive response and the character the guys showed to really try to band together and fight through the mental, physical and emotional fatigue was commendable.”
“(My) favorite part is we faced some very different trials over these last two games, and we’ve been able to answer the call in every single one of them,” Wembanyama said.
De’Aaron Fox finished with 19 points for San Antonio (17 of them after halftime), with Devin Vassell scoring 11 and Keldon Johnson and Luke Kornet adding 10 each.
Coach Johnson lauded the efforts of Fox, whose leadership down the stretch helped the Spurs hold on. Fox played all 12 minutes of the final period, scoring 10 points and dishing out six assists without a turnover.
“(Fox) took over the game in terms of how he was managing and dictating,” Johnson said. “He was a monster at that.”
The Rockets have alternated wins and losses over their past five games and travel to the Alamo City after a 106-99 victory at home over Portland on Friday. Alperen Sengun scored a game-high 28 points on 11-of-15 shooting in the win, while Amen Thompson scored 26 points, made 11 of his 12 shots and fueled a critical fourth-quarter rally.
“Teams know I’m trying to get to the rim, so they back up,” Thompson said. “So, I’ve had to work at it. I feel like I’ve been good at getting to it. I’m not trying to force the issue and get to the rim. I’m just taking what the defense gives me.”
Kevin Durant added 20 points and eight rebounds, and Reed Sheppard had 17 points for Houston, which won the second game of a back-to-back that started with an overtime loss at home to Golden State on Thursday.
“We wanted to get that taste out of our mouth from (Thursday) night and at least play with the right effort, play with the right purpose and lock in on tendencies,” Houston coach Ime Udoka said.
The Spurs have won two of the first three games with Houston this season, most recently a 111-99 victory Jan. 28.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Trump order aims to keep Army-Navy in exclusive TV window
Dec 13, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Navy Midshipmen slotback Justin Brown (46) runs the ball against the Army Black Knights during the second half of the 126th Army-Navy game at M&T Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Danny Wild-Imagn Images President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Friday aimed at maintaining an exclusive time window in December for the annual Army-Navy football game.
Played on the second weekend of December since 2009, it is typically a standalone game on the college football schedule and followed by the Heisman Trophy ceremony later that night. However, discussion about a potential expansion of the College Football Playoff has included an additional round of games that would also be played the same weekend.
The current 12-team playoff has begun with first-round games taking place the following weekend for the past two years. If the CFP is eventually expanded to 24 games, at least one additional round of games will be required.
Complicating matters is that it is also the final weekend that the NFL is not allowed to schedule games on Saturday’s due to the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961.
“Such scheduling conflicts weaken the national focus on our Military Service Academies and detract from a morale-building event of vital interest to the Department of War,” Friday’s order read. “Accordingly, it is the policy of the United States that no college football game, specifically college football’s CFP or other postseason games, be broadcast in a manner that directly conflicts with the Army-Navy Game.”
Before 2009, the Army-Navy game had traditionally been played the final weekend of November or the first weekend of December. It was moved to the second weekend of December to avoid conference championship games and improve television ratings.
Whether Friday’s action is enforceable remains to be seen. Executive orders are only directives for federal agencies and the executive branch, and this order directs the FCC chairperson to work with the CFP committee, the NCAA and media partners to protect the exclusive Army-Navy window.
This year’s Army-Navy game is scheduled for Dec. 12 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. The first round of CFP games are scheduled to take place Dec. 18-19.
The Army-Navy game has taken place every year since 1930 and has been contested 126 times overall.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Sam Surridge nets hat trick as Nashville routs Orlando
Mar 21, 2026; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Nashville SC forward Sam Surridge (9) celebrates with his teammates after scoring a goal against the Orlando City during the first half at Geodis Park. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images Sam Surridge posted a hat trick and Cristian Espinoza had a goal and an assist as Nashville SC raced past visiting Orlando City SC for a 5-0 victory on Saturday.
Surridge, who had two hat tricks in a 24-goal season in 2025, scored once in the first half and twice in the second to help Nashville (4-0-1, 13 points) continue its unbeaten start. Brian Schwake (one save) tallied his third clean sheet.
Orlando (1-4-0, 3 points) mustered just one shot on target to Nashville’s nine. Goalkeeper Maxime Crepeau made four saves but allowed five goals in Orlando’s second 5-0 loss in the last three games. Saturday marked the club’s second game with interim head coach Martin Perelman after mutually parting ways with Oscar Pareja.
After Nashville’s Alex Muyl’s header was saved by Crepeau in the game’s opening minutes, Espinoza fired in his second goal of the season to give the hosts a 1-0 lead at the five-minute mark. Espinoza took a pass from Andy Najar and sent in a screamer from the right of the box over the outstretched Crepeau.
Nashville had three shot attempts before Orlando’s first — a Duncan McGuire shot 14 minutes in.
Following Nolan Miller’s yellow card for aggressive play, Surridge’s penalty kick doubled Nashville’s lead 28 minutes in.
Surridge and Patrick Yazbek each had chances to tack on, but Crepeau saved both shots to preserve the two-goal halftime deficit.
Surridge extended the lead to 3-0 10 minutes into the second half, as he rebounded a loose ball in the box, scoring a left-footed shot.
The Nashville star continued his dominant outing, getting a pass from Espinoza and scoring from the left of the box in the 67th minute to push the margin to four. Warren Madrigal’s second goal of the season gave Nashville a 5-0 lead in the 80th minute.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Fire earn road win as Union stay in Eastern basement
Mar 21, 2026; Chester, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Union forward Bruno Damiani (9) is tripped up by Chicago Fire defender Mbekezeli Mbokazi (4) while going for the ball during the first half at Subaru Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Jonathan Bamba scored his second goal early in the second half and the visiting Chicago Fire earned a 2-1 victory on Saturday against struggling Philadelphia Union.
Hugo Cuypers added his fourth goal late in the first half for the Fire (2-2-1, 7 points) who earned their first away victory of the season after leading the Eastern Conference with nine in 2025.
Chris Brady made three saves as Chicago avenged its elimination by Philadelphia in last year’s first-round playoff series and snapped a four-match winless run against the Union in all competitions.
Milan Iloski scored his first goal for Philadelphia just before halftime. But the Union (0-5-0, 0 points) extended the worst start for a reigning Supporters’ Shield holder, less than 72 hours after their elimination from the CONCACAF Champions Cup with a 1-1 draw at Mexico City’s Club America and a 2-1 aggregate defeat.
Bamba put Chicago in front in the 58th minute.
From near midfield, Cuypers spotted Robin Lod down the right. Lod eventually dribbled into the right edge of the penalty area on his right foot, before cutting back onto his left to cross.
With Cuyper in the center of the box, the cross sailed beyond just him, where Bamba connected with an excellent side-footed volley to beat Andre Blake inside the left post.
Philadelphia pressured for an equalizer, but Chicago came closest to scoring the game’s fourth goal. Maren Haile-Selassie missed narrowly wide on the break in the 63rd minute, then Lod rattled the crossbar from a similar attack in the 82nd.
Both teams scored during the more than seven minutes of first-half stoppage time.
First, it was Chicago through Cuypers.
Lod’s initial pass was deflected out wide, where Andrew Gutman reached it on the left flank.
Gutman drove forward and curled in an outswinging, left-footed cross. Cuypers ran between Philadelphia’s center backs to meet it with a powerful header past Blake from six yards out.
Philadelphia leveled from a long throw-in four minutes later. Alejandro Bedoya flicked on Frankie Westfield’s throw from the right, then Iloski won the second ball as he somehow generated enough power to loop his header over Brady and under the crossbar from near the penalty spot.
–Field Level Media
