Sports
FC Dallas outlast Houston with late winner in Texas tussle
Mar 21, 2026; Frisco, Texas, USA; Houston Dynamo forward Ezequiel Ponce (10) attempts a bicycle kick as FC Dallas midfielder Ramiro (17) defends during the first half at Toyota Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images Logan Farrington scored twice in the opening 14 minutes, Petar Musa scored a late winner in the 86th minute in a rare appearance off the bench, and FC Dallas earned a 4-3 victory over the 10-man Houston Dynamo on Saturday night in Frisco, Texas.
Musa also helped create the second-half equalizer — an own goal off Houston’s Duane Holmes — after his halftime entrance for Dallas (2-1-2, 8 points), which earned its first win since its season opener on Feb. 21.
Guilherme scored his fourth goal and assisted tallies from Erik Sviatchenko and Lawrence Ennali for Houston (2-2-0, 6 points) in its first road match of the season.
But Sviatchenko was dismissed in the 68th minute for his second booking, becoming the fourth Dynamo player to receive his marching orders this season.
After scoring five times in Dallas’ first four matches, Musa was not listed on the league’s availability report for the weekend yet began the night unexpectedly outside the starting lineup.
And while it worked out well early, by halftime Dallas manager Eric Quill found his side trailing 3-2 and summoned his Croatian striker.
He immediately provided an impact, helping Dallas pull level in the 54th minute.
Herman Johansson took down a bouncing ball on the right flank, then played the ball up the side for Musa to run onto. Musa dribbled into the box and then tried to drag a cross toward the penalty spot, one that caromed off Holmes and over the line.
The goal was originally ruled offside, but was overturned following a video review.
Just under a half-hour later, Musa showed up again on the same right side, this time to finish off Joaquine Valiente’s tantalizing inswinging service at the back post with a one-touch volley after outmuscling his defender.
Guilherme helped turn Houston’s two-goal deficit into a one-goal advantage in the space of four minutes.
In the 29th minute, he intercepted Dallas goalkeeper Michael Collodi’s wayward pass and turned it into a simple finish before the goalkeeper could recover.
In the 31st, his outswinging corner found Sviatchenko at the back post for a clear header Collodi had little chance of saving.
He capped off the remarkable individual stretch in the 33rd when he found Ennali running in behind around the edge of the Dallas back line with a perfect throughball.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Expect a grind when No. 2 UConn, No. 7 UCLA face off in East Region
Mar 20, 2026; Philadelphia, PA, USA; UConn Huskies forward Tarris Reed Jr. (5) reacts in the first half during a first round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images PHILADELPHIA — Sweat, spittle and even a tooth flew Friday night in UConn’s and UCLA’s NCAA Tournament openers, setting up a second-round battle of blue bloods.
Two no-nonsense head coaches in Dan Hurley and Mick Cronin are preparing their teams for another tough battle Sunday night when No. 2 seed UConn and No. 7 seed UCLA play for a Sweet 16 berth out of the East Region.
The programs are on opposite ends of the blue-blood spectrum: UCLA has a record 11 national championships, but only one (1995) since the end of the John Wooden era. UConn is the newest member of the club with six national titles since 1999 under three head coaches, including Hurley in 2023 and ’24.
Their only meeting on the court came in the Elite Eight in 1995, when the Bruins prevailed 102-96 on their way to the title.
Don’t expect Sunday’s meeting to see either team touch triple digits, not with the way the defenses have been playing. Per BartTorvik.com, UConn ranks 15th in adjusted defensive efficiency since Feb. 21, while UCLA’s defense has risen steadily over the course of the winter.
The Bruins finished with nine blocks and 13 steals while holding 10th-seeded UCF to 37.5% shooting on 2-pointers in Friday’s grimy 75-71 win.
“We pushed a lot of buttons schematically,” Cronin said Saturday. “But generally, our care factor has been much better. Defense and rebounding are more effort than anything else.”
Skyy Clark showed how much he cared when he lost part of a tooth from an opponent’s inadvertent elbow late in the UCF game. Clark stayed in the game before going for some after-hours dental work.
“(The dentist) shot me up with anesthesia. He had to take the nerve out, take the root out, shave my tooth down to a nub, put in a new one, and it was like new,” said an appreciative Clark.
UConn’s 82-71 win over No. 15 Furman, which didn’t tip till 10:30 p.m. local time, was all about Tarris Reed Jr., who owned the paint as he went for 31 points (12-of-15 shooting) and 27 rebounds, both career bests by a mile.
Reed will have a much different task against UCLA. Leading scorer and usual starting center Tyler Bilodeau, whose strength is in his 46.4% 3-point shooting, was held out against UCF as he recovers from a right knee sprain sustained in the Big Ten tournament. Xavier Booker, a more traditional center at 6-foot-11, had 15 points, eight rebounds and four blocks.
“They have a very good and tall, elite frontcourt,” Reed said. “We have to set the tone from the jump knowing the stretch shooting, they have fives that can really step out and shoot it. I mean, me, (Eric Reibe) and (Alex Karaban) have been comfortable guarding guys who can step out and shoot.”
Hurley and Cronin are both demonstrative on the sideline and have drawn their share of criticism from onlookers.
Both dismissed the idea that they should be anything different.
“When I look at Mick and coaches like Mick, they’re all the coaches I have either modeled myself after or admired, the ones who can balance holding their players to the highest standard where the players have that respectful fear of their coach, and they love playing for their coach, you know?” Hurley said. “I think it takes a special coach to pull that off.”
Or, as Cronin put it, “You want to win big? But you think Coach Hurley is not supposed to be intense, but you want to win? Come on, man. We’re not coaching little league, buddy, everybody doesn’t get an at-bat.”
–Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media
Sports
LaMelo Ball, Hornets continue strong stretch, roll past Grizzlies
Mar 21, 2026; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Memphis Grizzlies forward GG Jackson (45) drives to the basket past Charlotte Hornets guard/forward Kon Knueppel (7) during the first quarter at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Brian Westerholt-Imagn Images LaMelo Ball’s 29 points led to another big offensive output for the Charlotte Hornets in their 124-101 victory against the visiting Memphis Grizzlies on Saturday night.
Brandon Miller poured in 22 points for the Hornets (37-34), who have won five of their last six games. Charlotte also received contributions from Miles Bridges with 13 points, Coby White with 12 points, eight rebounds and seven assists in 19 minutes off the bench, Moussa Diabate with 11 points and 14 rebounds and Ryan Kalkbrenner with 10 points.
GG Jackson led Memphis with 19 points, while Javon Small provided 17 points and a team-high seven rebounds, Taylor Hendricks had 14 points and Walter Clayton Jr. notched 11 points.
The Grizzlies (24-46), who didn’t have a double-figure scorer in the first half, have lost 10 of their last 11 games.
Led by Ball with seven 3-pointers and Miller with five 3s, the Hornets made 18 shots and shot 41.9% from beyond the arc even with usual-sharpshooter rookie Kon Knueppel going 1-for-6 from deep.
Knueppel was the only Charlotte starter who didn’t shoot better than 47.4% from the field, with Bridges, Diabate and Miller combining to make 19 of 26 shots. The shooting issues for the Hornets popped up at the free-throw line, where they were 16-for-24.
The Grizzlies had widespread 3-point production with four players each hitting three 3s. Still, Memphis fell to 11-24 in road games.
Charlotte handled business on the boards with a 49-34 rebounding edge. Six of Diabate’s rebounds came at the offensive end. That helped the Hornets overcome 18 turnovers.
The Hornets have won three straight to begin a seven-game homestand, putting together some huge second-half production in doing so. Ball has led Charlotte in scoring in two of the last three games.
The Hornets built a 59-47 halftime lead and took a 22-point margin into the fourth quarter.
Cedric Coward, normally a starter for Memphis, missed his second game in a row because of personal reasons.
–Field Level Media
Sports
From First Four to Sweet 16: No. 11 Texas stuns No. 3 Gonzaga
Mar 21, 2026; Portland, OR, USA; Gonzaga Bulldogs forward Graham Ike (15) passes against Texas Longhorns forward Camden Heide (5) in the first half during a second round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Moda Center. Mandatory Credit: Craig Strobeck-Imagn Images PORTLAND, Ore. — Matas Vokietaitis and Jordan Pope scored 17 points apiece and Camden Heide came off the bench to hit a key 3-pointer with 14.7 seconds left to lift No. 11 seed Texas to a 74-68 victory in second round of the NCAA West Region on Saturday.
With the Longhorns leading by one after a dunk by Gonzaga’s Graham Ike, Texas called a time out with 32 seconds left and inserted Heide, whose 3-pointer from the right corner pushed the lead to 72-68.
Mario Saint-Supery missed a desperation Gonzaga 3-pointer and Vokietaitis hit a layup to close the scoring.
West Coast Conference Player of the Year Ike had 25 points and Jaden Warley had 10 points, eight rebounds and five assists. Saint-Supery had nine points and five assists.
Texas is the first First Four winner to win at least three games in the tournament since 11th seeded UCLA won five straight to reach the 2021 Final Four.
The Longhorns (21-114 face a potential SEC rematch in the Sweet Sixteen in San Jose on Thursday, where they will face the winner of the Arkansas-High Point game to be played later Saturday.
Gonzaga (31-4), the first No. 3 seed to lose in the tourney, had won at least two games in the NCAAs in nine of the previous 10 seasons. The Bulldogs were making their 27th straight NCAA Tournament appearance.
Ike played with four fouls in the final six minutes. He picked up his fourth on a Nic Codie on a put-back attempt. Codie’s two free throws made it 59-56, and after an Ike miss, Pope made a 3-pointer to give the Longhorns their largest lead to that point, 62-56.
Ike brought Gonzaga within 66-64 when he followed his own miss with three minutes left. Pope followed with his third three to make it 69-64.
Saint-Supery made two free throws and Ike’s dunk with 40.3 seconds remaining brought Gonzaga within one, 69-68.
Codie had 12 points and Dailyn Swain had 11 points, six rebounds and six assists. Vokietaitis had nine rebounds.
–Jack Magruder, Field Level Media
