Sports
Alabama moves on without Charles Bediako, faces rival Ole Miss
Alabama head coach Nate Oats reacts during the first half of an NCAA Mens basketball game at Steven C. O’Connell Center Exactek arena in Gainesville, FL on Sunday, February 1, 2026. [Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun] Two very motivated teams will take the floor on Wednesday when Alabama travels to Oxford, Miss. to take on Ole Miss in a Southeastern Conference match-up.
For the Crimson Tide (16-7, 6-4 SEC) and coach Nate Oaks, it’s about moving forward with the roster they started the season with and not the one that included big man Charles Bediako, who was shelved by Tuscaloosa Circuit Court Judge Daniel Pruet on Monday.
Pruet denied Bediako’s motion for a preliminary injunction to allow the former G League player to continue his season at Alabama. Bediako, who averaged 10.0 points and 4.6 rebounds per game in five outings with the Tide, was playing via a restraining order issued by judge James H. Roberts, after the NCAA denied his request to return to college basketball.
“Super disappointed,” Oats said on his Monday night radio show. He referenced many former professionals being eligible to play at the college level.
“I thought it was kind of a no-brainer with the NCAA. Then I didn’t think it would be that big of an issue.”
Bediako originally played two seasons at Alabama before declaring for the 2023 NBA Draft. He didn’t withdraw from the draft — a move that typically means a player has forfeited his remaining college eligibility — and went undrafted.
But the cupboard is hardly bare for the Tide, which have won five of seven. On Saturday, Alabama rallied to defeat Auburn, 96-92, led by Labaron Philon Jr.’s 25-point effort.
Philon averages 21.5 points per game to lead the SEC and rank 10th nationally entering play on Tuesday. He has hit 21 of his last 48 3-point attempts (43.8%).
“For our whole team, we’ve got to turn our focus back to the guys who are going to be on the floor,” Oats said. “We’ve got some very capable players (who) won some big games before Charles got here.”
For the Rebels (11-12, 3-7), the season has been a major letdown after a run to the Sweet 16 last year. They have dropped five straight, their longest losing streak since the 2022-23 season. But coach Chris Beard is confident the team turned a corner in their 79-68 loss at Texas on Saturday.
The Rebels rallied from an 18-point first half deficit to take a 68-65 lead with 3:35 remaining, but Texas finished the game on a 14-0 run.
Eduardo Klafke scored a career-high 16 points, his second consecutive game in double figures.
“We fought like we never fought before,” Klafke said. “We’re just trying to win this for Coach, but unfortunately, we ran out of time.”
Beard noted that the Rebels had just completed a weather-related four-game SEC road swing.
“We’re looking forward to getting back to the best college town in the country, Oxford, Miss.,” said Beard. “We’ve got a lot of basketball left. We’ve got some home games coming up and I still believe in this team, period.”
Ole Miss stunned then-No. 4 Alabama, 74-64, in Tuscaloosa last season, snapping a seven-game slide to the Tide. Malik Dia scored 23 points and added 19 rebounds for the Rebels.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Dodgers re-sign RHP Evan Phillips to one-year deal
Apr 20, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers relief pitcher Evan Phillips (59) pitches during the game between the Texas Rangers and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images The Los Angeles Dodgers re-signed right-handed reliever Evan Phillips to a one-year, $6.5 million contract Tuesday.
To make room on the 40-man roster, catcher Ben Rortvedt was designated for assignment by the Dodgers for the second time this offseason in order to accommodate a roster addition.
Phillips, 31, was limited to seven appearances and one save last season before undergoing Tommy John surgery. In a Los Angeles bullpen that did not have a set closer in 2023 and 2024, Phillips took advantage of the situation to record 42 total saves in two seasons.
Over eight major league seasons, Phillips is 16-12 with a 3.36 ERA and 46 saves for the Atlanta Braves (2018), Baltimore Orioles (2018-20), Tampa Bay Rays (2021) and Dodgers.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Italy's national mint to repair broken Olympic medals
Feb 8, 2026; Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy; Breezy Johnson of the United States celebrates on the podium with her gold medal in the women’s downhill alpine skiing race during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-Imagn Images After multiple athletes reported issues with damaged medals, Milan Cortina Olympic organizers confirmed Italy’s national mint will repair any faulty medal fixings for athletes at the 2026 Games.
Olympic organizing committee spokesman Luca Casassa said a “targeted intervention” was agreed to with the producer of the medals, Rome’s Zecca dello Stato (state mint), to resolve the problems, which reportedly involve ribbons and clasps, not the medal designs themselves.
“Athletes who have medals with problems are invited to give them back through the appropriate channels so that they can be immediately repaired,” Casassa said.
American skier Breezy Johnson displayed a cracked and chipped gold medal after her win in the women’s downhill Sunday. “I was jumping up and down in excitement, then it just fell off,” Johnson told reporters Sunday. “Don’t jump in them. … I’m sure somebody will fix it. It’s not crazy broken, but a little broken.”
German biathlete Justus Strelow also had his medal fall off his neck as he was celebrating a mixed relay bronze win with his teammates. Swedish cross-country skier Ebba Andersson also reportedly saw damage on her silver medal from the women’s skiathlon.
Andrea Francisi, the chief games operations officer for the Milan Cortina organizing committee, had responded to the damaged medal reports Monday promising a swift resolution.
“… Obviously we are paying maximum attention to this matter, as the medal is the dream of the athletes, so we want that obviously in the moment they are given it that everything is absolutely perfect, because we really consider it to be the most important moment,” Francisi said Monday.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Elizabeth Lemley wins gold, Jaelin Kauf nets silver in women's moguls
Feb 11, 2026; Livigno, Italy; Gold medalist Elizabeth Lemley of the United States celebrates during the freestyle skiing women’s moguls final during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Livigno Aerials & Moguls Park. Mandatory Credit: Jack Gruber-USA TODAY LIVIGNO, Italy — American freestyle skier Elizabeth Lemley won a surprise gold medal in moguls with two neat and quick runs at the Winter Games on Wednesday.
Her victory put an end to 2022 champion Jakara Anthony’s bid to become the first Australian to successfully defend a title at a Winter Games.
Anthony, who has dominated the discipline for the last four years, led from silver medalist American Jaelin Kauf after the first run but wobbled out of line on her second to finish eighth and last.
Kauf, who also finished second in Beijing four years ago, won her second silver with a score of 80.77, and Pyeongchang 2018 champion France’s Perrine Laffont clinched bronze with 78 points.
In her first run of the finals, under a bright and sunny afternoon sky in the narrow valley of Livigno, Lemley was in firm control of her skis, always pinned one to the other, and landed well after two big jumps.
In the second run — also known as the superfinal — the skier pushed on the speed, keeping her skis tight together and showing off great technique around the moguls and with a big grab on the bottom jump.
“I was trying to focus on trusting myself. I’ve been working on that this whole season … and right when I pushed out of the gate, I said to myself, ‘Let’s go!'” Lemley told a press conference after the medal ceremony.
Like other athletes at the Winter Games, Lemley’s medal fell apart as she was celebrating on the top of the podium just after she received it from Australian Olympic Committee President Ian Chesterman, who would have been hoping for a different outcome.
Anthony had a first fast, clean run for the finals, with smooth turns and a big grab on the bottom jump, but in the second she lost control in the middle section of the moguls, leaving her fall line, the straightest path down the hill.
Her 83.96 score on the first run would have been enough for gold had she reproduced it in the second, but only the final score counts and Lemley’s 82.30 secured the American her first global title.
Kauf, who got through to the final only hours before in the second qualifying round, delivered a fast first run down the hill, with tidy skiing through the moguls and strong jumps.
In the superfinal she was strong and quick, with a big top jump, crushing through the moguls and performing a grab in the bottom air.
“I definitely didn’t take the easy route into the finals… but I think everything happens for a reason,” Kauf said.
Despite scraping through to the second final round with a stylish technique but not so clean jumps, Laffont set a very high bar in the second run, showing off great precision and performing two big jumps with grabs.
Japan’s Hinako Tomitaka also scored 78 but Laffont took the bronze as she was awarded a better score — 42.6 to 42 — for her turns in the final run.
Asked what went through her mind when she saw her score was the same as Tomitaka’s, Laffont said: “Today was a real roller coaster. It is pretty hard to remember what I was thinking.”
Anthony was disappointed but was already looking ahead.
“I’m pretty bummed, to be honest,” Anthony said. “I definitely had what it took, but it is just not my day today sadly. Maybe in another four years’ time.”
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
