Sports
Women's NCAA roundup: TCU knocks off Virginia, next faces South Carolina
Mar 28, 2026; Sacramento, CA, USA; Texas Christian University Horned Frogs guard Olivia Miles (5) drives against Virginia Cavaliers guard Gabby White (3) during the third quarter in the Sweet Sixteen game of the Sacramento Regional 4 of the women’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Golden 1 Center. Mandatory Credit: Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images Marta Suarez scored a career-high 33 points, Olivia Miles added 28 in a near triple-double and third-seeded TCU ended Virginia’s magical NCAA Tournament run with a 79-69 victory in the Sweet 16 on Saturday in Sacramento, Calif.
Miles had 10 rebounds and eight assists and Suarez had 10 rebounds for the Horned Frogs (32-5), who will make their second straight Elite Eight appearance when they meet Sacramento Region 4 top seed South Carolina on Monday.
Miles’ two free throws with 26 seconds left for a 77-69 lead clinched it. She is one of four Division I players with at least 600 points, 250 rebounds and 100 assists in a season.
Paris Clark had 20 points and Kymora Johnson had 18 for the Cavaliers (22-12), the lowest seed to reach the Sweet 16 since 2022. Clara Silva had eight points and eight rebounds for TCU, which had a 38-27 edge on the boards and limited Virginia to 41% shooting.
No. 1 South Carolina 94, No. 4 Oklahoma 68
Ta’Niya Latson scored 28 points to help the Gamecocks defeat the Sooners in a Sweet 16 matchup in Sacramento.
Latson set the tone from the start, scoring eight points during the Gamecocks’ 10-0 run to start the game. South Carolina (34-3) will take on No. 3 seed TCU on Monday in the Elite Eight, seeking its sixth consecutive Final Four appearance.
Latson finished 7 of 11 from the floor with five assists. The Gamecocks shot 50.7% from the floor. Raven Johnson added 18 points on 8-of-11 shooting, and Tessa Johnson scored 14. For Oklahoma (26-8), which finished with a season-low nine assists, freshman Aaliyah Chavez led the way with 21 points.
No. 1 Texas 76, No. 5 Kentucky 54
Jordan Lee scored 18 and Madison Booker had 17 as the Longhorns knocked off the Wildcats in Fort Worth, Texas, and advanced to the Elite Eight for the third consecutive season.
Texas (34-3) will take on Michigan, the No. 2 seed in Fort Worth Region 3, on Monday with a Final Four berth on the line. The Longhorns got a scare in the opening quarter when starting point guard Rori Harmon suffered a jammed right middle finger and went to the bench for a stretch. She finished the game with 11 points, seven rebounds, seven assists and six steals with just one turnover.
Kentucky (25-11) was led by Clara Strack, who scored 16 points, and Asia Boone with 11. Teonni Key nearly chipped in a double-double with 10 points, albeit on 2-of-8 shooting, and nine rebounds.
No. 2 Michigan 71, No. 3 Louisville 52
Olivia Olson scored eight of her 19 points in the third quarter to help the Wolverines pull away for a win over the Cardinals in a Fort Worth Region 3 semifinal.
Syla Swords scored 16 points, Te’Yala Delfosse added 10 with eight rebounds and Brooke Q. Daniels added nine boards for Michigan (28-6), which has reached the second Elite Eight in program history.
Elif Istanbulluoglu scored 18 points with seven rebounds and Reyna Scot added nine points for the Cardinals (29-8), who were playing in their 15th consecutive NCAA Tournament.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Blues stay hot, crush Maple Leafs
Mar 28, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Toronto Maple Leafs right wing Easton Cowan (53) checks St. Louis Blues defenseman Logan Mailloux (23) during the first period at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images The St. Louis Blues continued their dominant March with a 5-1 thumping of the visiting Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday night.
The win marked St. Louis’ fourth in a row as they improved their March record to an NHL-best 10-1-2.
The Blues (31-30-11, 73 points) scored three in the third after Jake McCabe brought it back within one for the visitors. Dylan Holloway had a two-point game two nights after he scored the overtime winner against San Jose. Jake Neighbours, Jordan Kyrou and Robert Thomas also had multi-point games
Jordan Binnington stopped 12 of just 13 shots for the Blues while Joseph Woll turned away 33 of 38 shots for the Maple Leafs (31-30-13, 75 points).
Jimmy Snuggerud opened the scoring 5:21 into the second period, beating Toronto defenseman Morgan Rielly to Cam Fowler’s slick feed through the slot. The goal boosted Snuggerud to second in rookie scoring since the new year. Former Leafs defenseman Justin Holl nabbed his first as a Blues player about five minutes later, tipping Kyrou’s point shot past Woll through a high screen to make it 2-0.
McCabe brought it back within one early in the third, flicking a seemingly innocent snap shot from the sideboards past an unsuspecting Binnington. The goal extended an unlikely point streak to three games for the stay-at-home defenseman.
The Leafs had some cause for excitement after Blues defenseman Theo Lindstein took a penalty for holding just over a minute later. Pius Suter was quick to disrupt their momentum with a short-handed goal off a feed from Thomas. Toronto was caught flat-footed on its own power play, with three Leafs opting to challenge Thomas in the corner instead of Suter in the high slot.
Kyrou recorded a second assist two-and-a-half minutes later, sliding a pass under the stick of Jacob Quillan and onto the tape of Holloway, who wristed it past Woll blocker side. Philip Broberg then made it 5-1 late on the power play.
The Maple Leafs were awarded a four-minute power play in the first period when Jack Finley was issued a double minor for high-sticking Quillan. Toronto failed to capitalize on the opportunity and only managed four shots through the first 20 minutes.
Toronto’s best chance of the opening frame came off the stick of Matias Maccelli after William Nylander stripped Pavel Buchnevich of the puck to spark a two-on-one. Binnington came across just in time to thwart Maccelli’s five-hole tuck.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Stewart Cink leads at Hoag after albatross on 18
Stewart Cink’s ball hops on his putt on the 18th green during the first round of the Furyk & Friends PGA Tour Champions event held at Timuquana Country Club in Jacksonville, Fl., Friday October 3, 2025. [Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union] Stewart Cink ended the Hoag Classic’s second day with as great a flourish as possible, scoring a two-shot albatross on the par-5 18th, giving him a two-shot lead at 14 under at Newport Beach (Calif.) Country Club.
“It was a heck of a walk-off,” Cink said.
Cink nailed a great drive, then sank a 205-yarder using his 6-iron. The veteran golfer said later he knew he hit his second shot well, but he wasn’t sure on location until the crowd reacted.
Cink then reacted himself, posing to flex his muscles to cap off his 9-under-par 62.
“That’s not something we practice. That’s a rare thing that happens,” Cink said of his celebration following the conclusion of his round. “We try not to let the results matter, but when you get a result like that especially at the end of the day, I don’t have to hit another shot, I can’t mess up the next hole.
“So, that’s a cool moment to have happen right there on the 18th hole with the crowd. This is a great crowd here.”
Cink’s big moment overshadowed a great day overall for the five-time Champions tourney winner. Cink also had seven birdies while suffering a single bogey.
That left Cink two shots ahead of the field.
Closest in pursuit are Sweden’s Freddie Jacobson and New Zealand’s Steven Alker, who shot matching 66’s and are tied for second at 12 under.
“I love the course and I also love the area. It’s beautiful,” Jacobson raved about his surroundings. “Tried to swing down by the ocean, we might be looking at hopefully some surfing on Monday. Try to sneak that in.”
South Africa’s Ernie Els and Tim Petrovic each carded a 65 to remain tied at 11 under in fourth place.
Four golfers are tied for sixth at 10 under: David Toms (66), Australia’s Cameron Percy (66), Bo Van Pelt (67) and Brian Gay (69).
Day 1 leader Paul Goydos had a rough day, weathering four bogeys while netting a solitary birdie to settle for a 3-over 74, dropping him into a tie for 21st.
Reigning champion Miguel Angel Jimenez of Spain built off a 1-under 70 Friday to go 7 under on Saturday (64), lifting him into a tie for 12th at 8 under.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Cole Perfetti's late goal lifts Jets over Avalanche
Mar 28, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Winnipeg Jets center Cole Perfetti (91) shoots the puck in the first period against the Colorado Avalanche at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images Cole Perfetti scored a go-ahead goal with 5:11 left in the third period, Connor Hellebuyck made 21 saves and the Winnipeg Jets beat the Colorado Avalanche 4-2 in Denver to gain ground in the Western Conference playoff race.
Gabriel Vilardi had a goal and an assist and Cole Koepke and Kyle Connor scored for Winnipeg (31-30-12, 74 points), which moved within three points of Nashville for the second wild card.
Brock Nelson and Parker Kelly scored and Mackenzie Blackwood turned away 17 shots for Colorado (48-14-10, 106 points). The Avalanche’s lead over Dallas, which won at Pittsburgh on Saturday, was reduced to seven points.
Colorado, which had won four in a row, has a game in hand of the Stars.
The Jets were held without a shot for half of the third period but broke the tie late when Perfetti redirected Jacob Bryson’s shot from the point past Blackwood. The Avalanche challenged unsuccessfully that Jonathan Toews interfered with Blackwood.
Connor sealed Winnipeg’s victory with an empty-net goal at 17:51.
The Jets struck first when Vilardi deflected Josh Morrisey’s shot from the point at 3:51 of the first period. Colorado tied it on the power play when Nelson tipped Nazem Kadri’s shot over Hellebuyck at 8:59.
Cale Makar also assisted on the goal, his 52nd of the season and his 500th career point. He reached the milestone in his 467th NHL game, the fourth fastest by a defenseman in league history.
Koepke gave Winnipeg the lead again early in the second period. The Avalanche turned it over in the neutral zone, Koepke skated in on Blackwood, fanned on the shot from his backhand, but it slipped between the goaltender’s pads at 2:14.
Colorado got even again late in the second. Manson had the puck at the blueline, sent a shot to the net that Kelly redirected at 18:05. It was Kelly’s 17th of the season, further extending his career high.
The Avalanche carried the play for the first half of the third period and had several scoring chances on an extended shift, but Hellebuyck kept the game tied.
–Field Level Media
