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Balanced Cincinnati tramples UCF by 20

NCAA Basketball: Central Florida at CincinnatiFeb 8, 2026; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Cincinnati Bearcats center Moustapha Thiam (52) battles for the loose ball against UCF Knights center John Bol (7) in the first half at Fifth Third Arena. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-Imagn Images

Baba Miller scored 17 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead all five starters in double figures as Cincinnati controlled visiting UCF by a 92-72 count in Big 12 play on Sunday.

Moustapha Thiam posted 15 points and seven rebounds as he returned to action against his previous school after missing the last two games with an ankle injury.

Jizzle James scored 15 points and Jalen Celestine added 14 for Cincinnati (12-12, 4-7), which pulled away with a 14-2 second-half run and reached the 90-point mark for the first time in Big 12 play since a Feb. 5, 2025, win at UCF.

Chris Johnson and Jordan Burks each scored 16 points to lead the Knights (17-6, 6-5), who lost their second straight game by 20-plus points to scuff their NCAA Tournament resume after a three-game win streak.

Themus Fulks, UCF’s leading playmaker and second-leading scorer, was held scoreless and had just two assists in 19 minutes. He played just four minutes in the second half.

As they did against West Virginia on Thursday, the Bearcats were able to assume control in the opening 20 minutes.

Cincinnati took a 21-13 lead before UCF’s Jamichael Stillwell (14 points) knocked down a jumper with 5:30 left to cap a 6-0 run and forge a 26-26 tie. But Cincinnati caught fire and closed the half on a 14-2 run, highlighted by a pair of Celestine 3-pointers to end the half.

The Bearcats opened the second half by scoring the first nine points to take a 49-30 lead, capping a 23-2 run that seemingly gave Cincinnati control of the game with 18:13 to play.

UCF coach Johnny Dawkins removed Fulks shortly thereafter and he did not return until there was less than eight minutes left.

Meanwhile, UCF unleashed an 11-0 run that featured three straight 3-pointers — one by Chris Johnson and two by George Beale Jr. — to draw within 62-56 with 9:33 left.

Thiam hit a baseline jumper to end the UCF rally and James added a deep three from the left wing to spark a 9-0 spurt and restore Cincinnati’s lead to double figures at 71-56.

After a Stillwell jumper, Cincinnati scored seven straight points to push the lead back to 78-58 with six minutes remaining.

–Field Level Media

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Report: Bears to promote Press Taylor to OC

NFL: Jacksonville Jaguars at Philadelphia EaglesNov 3, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Jacksonville Jaguars offensive coordinator Press Taylor against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

The Chicago Bears are promoting passing game coordinator Press Taylor to offensive coordinator, NFL Network reported Sunday.

Once the deal is official, the 38-year-old Taylor will replace Declan Doyle, who accepted the same job with the Baltimore Ravens.

Taylor’s first NFL job came with the Philadelphia Eagles in 2013 when he was named offensive quality control coach. He rose through the ranks to quarterback coach and passing game coordinator, then became a senior offensive assistant with the Indianapolis Colts in 2021. He then spent three seasons as the offensive coordinator of the Jacksonville Jaguars before landing on Ben Johnson’s staff in Chicago.

Taylor likely will not call plays in Chicago for quarterback Caleb Williams. Johnson holds that role.

Taylor is the younger brother of Cincinnati Bengals head coach Zac Taylor.

–Field Level Media

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Knicks' OG Anunoby out, Karl-Anthony Towns to play vs. Celtics

NBA: New York Knicks at Washington WizardsDec 30, 2024; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) reacts with guard Josh Hart (3), and forward OG Anunoby (8) after a field goal during the fourth quarter against the Washington Wizards at Capital One Arena. Mandatory Credit: Reggie Hildred-Imagn Images

New York Knicks forward OG Anunoby has been ruled out of Sunday afternoon’s game against the host Boston Celtics due to a toe injury.

Anunoby joined center Karl-Anthony Towns (right eye laceration) in sitting out Friday as New York saw its season-best eight-game winning streak come to a halt with a 118-80 loss to the Detroit Pistons.

Towns, however, and guard Josh Hart (ankle) are available to play on Sunday against the Celtics.

All three players were listed as questionable on the injury report.

Anunoby, 28, is averaging 16.6 points and 5.5 rebounds in 41 games (all starts) this season.

Towns, 30, contributes 19.9 points and a team-best 11.9 rebounds in 48 games (all starts) in 2025-26.

Hart, 30, is averaging 12.1 points and 7.6 rebounds in 40 games (26 starts) this season.

–Field Level Media

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The UFC Heavyweight Division Is Broken — And UFC Vegas 113 Proved It

UFC Vegas 113 proved to be your typical UFC Fight Night, with the biggest standouts being main event and co-main event winners Mario Bautista and Kyoji Horiguchi, and even a last-second submission on the prelims. 

But there was a different kind of big standout – a different kind of big, and a really bad standout.

UFC Vegas 113’s main card featured a heavyweight matchup between Jailton Almeida and Rizvan Kuniev. It was a chance for Almeida to rebound from his title eliminator loss to Alexander Volkov and prove he’s still relevant in the heavyweight title picture. For Kuniev, competing for just the second time in the Octagon, it was a chance to make a quick jump in the heavyweight rankings and show off his full potential.

Instead, we got a matchup where Kuniev held Almeida against the fence for most of the fight.The two fighters combined for just 30 significant strikes landed through two rounds. It was a matchup that did not truly benefit either fighter.

What the bout did was expose Almeida as having not developed any answer for when his grappling gets stopped. Everyone who was familiar with Kuniev and sung his praises and power were left with nothing to say after the performance he had, even in a win.

The fans in the arena booed, the MMA community eviscerated the two to the point they called for their UFC releases, and it just adds another blow to what is already a weak UFC heavyweight division.

The top of the heavyweight division is even stagnant right now. There is no clear timeline on when Tom Aspinall will be ready to return after the eye injury he suffered in his no contest with Ciryl Gane at UFC 321.

That has also left Gane’s status in question on which will happen first – a title rematch with Aspinall or fighting someone for an interim heavyweight title.

UFC light heavyweight champion Alex Pereira has teased a move up to heavyweight to try and become the first UFC fighter to win gold in three weight classes during their career. But UFC CEO and President Dana White is hesitant on the idea.

Jon Jones? Who knows whatever is going on with him, in or out of the Octagon. Jones has previously advocated to compete on the UFC White House card but White supposedly wants none of it.

And look at some of the rest of the top 15. Alexander Volkov beat Almeida in a title eliminator, but the mess at the top of the division has put his title shot in limbo. Sergei Pavlovich lost to Aspinall and Volkov, but he is the lone blemish in Waldo Cortes-Acosta’s current upward trajectory, and WCA is the talk of the heavyweight town right now.

Curtis Blaydes? Lost to Aspinall and should have lost to a debuting Rizvan Kuniev. No thank you. Tallison Teixeira seemed to have potential even with a loss to Derrick Lewis, but his win over Tai Tuivasa at UFC 325 last week was a stinker. Lewis himself is a legend, but his days of seriously pursuing a heavyweight title are behind him.

Speaking of Tuivasa, can someone explain to me how this guy can lose five fights in a row and still be ranked?!?

The only hope outside the top five is Valter Walker, who has picked more ankles for submission wins than a little kid picks their nose.

The UFC heavyweight scene is dull, boring, and has very little signs of strong activity. It needs life injected to it. And that’s not Josh Hokit and his cringe-based promo skills or the political schtick we’ve already seen from Colby Covington.

When an (at least for now) unrealistic matchup between Jones and Pereira is the most enticing potential matchup at heavyweight, and nothing comes close, the division has problems.

The screams of “Shut down heavyweight!” won’t be answered. It’s unfair to those who can’t drop to 205, and combat sports has long had heavyweight as a “glamor division.”

But these calls, and the lack of talent in the fights, show the division has lost the support of the MMA fanbase. And that’s just a sad fact.

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