Sports
G2, Spirit move into upper-bracket final at IEM Krakow
YMCA member Austin Manengu works the keyboard as he plays a game of Fortnite during the unveiling of the new gaming lab at the Maplewood Family YMCA in Rochester Thursday, June 20, 2024. YMCA of Greater Rochester in partnership with Metro Sports & Entertainment Group will open two gaming labs for youth and teens this year. G2 Esports and Team Spirit advanced to the upper-bracket final of Group A on Sunday at the Intel Extreme Masters Krakow tournament in Poland.
G2 fought past FUT Esports 2-1, and Team Spirit beat Natus Vincere 2-0.
The lower bracket of Group A kicked off with FURIA and Astralis advancing by 2-1 decisions, while in Group B, MOUZ blanked NRG 2-0 and Aurora Gaming outlasted Team Falcons 2-1 in their openers.
The $1 million Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament started with 24 teams and is currently in a 16-team double-elimination group stage involving best-of-three matches. The group winners earn spots in the playoff semifinals, the group runners-up head to the playoff quarterfinals as high seeds and the third-place teams go to the playoff quarterfinals as low seeds.
The playoffs will consist of a single-elimination bracket of best-of-three matches until the grand final on Feb. 8, which will be best-of-five. The championship team will receive $400,000, and the runner-up will get $180,000.
On Sunday, FUT Esports opened with a 13-9 win on Mirage but G2 responded with 13-9 victories on Dust II and Ancient. Spaniard Alvaro “SunPayus” Garcia led G2 with 53 kills on a plus-14 kills-deaths differential.
The other Group A upper-bracket semi saw Spirit edge NaVi 16-14 in overtime on Mirage, then trounce them 13-3 on Dust II. Russia’s Danil “donk” Kryshkovets paced Spirit with 47 kills on a plus-17 K-D.
FURIA rallied past The MongolZ, absorbing a 13-11 defeat on Mirage by winning 16-12 in OT on Inferno and 13-2 on Nuke. Mareks “YEKINDAR” Galinskis of Latvia had 60 kills on a plus-15 K-D for FURIA.
Astralis defeated PARIVISION in three maps, as well. They opened with a 13-11 win on Overpass, fell 16-13 in OT on Dust II and bounced back for a 13-7 clincher on Ancient. Jakob “‘jabbi” Nygaard of Denmark racked up 70 kills on a plus-23 for Astralis.
MOUZ notched matching 13-9 victories over NRG on Dust II and Ancient. Israel’s Lotan “Spinx” Giladi led the way with 40 kills on a plus-14.
Finally, Aurora faced Falcons and sandwiched a 13-7 win on Anubis and a 13-8 result on Inferno around a 13-10 setback on Mirage. Turkey’s Caner “soulfly” Kesici and Ismailcan “XANTARES” Dortkardes had 52 and 51 kills for Aurora, both on plus-14 differentials.
The tournament continues Monday with six matches:
–Natus Vincere vs. FURIA (Group A lower-bracket semifinal)
–FUT Esports vs. Astralis (Group A lower-bracket semifinal)
–Team Vitality vs. 3DMAX (Group B upper-bracket semifinal)
–MOUZ vs. Aurora Gaming (Group B upper-bracket semifinal)
–BC.Game Esports vs. FaZe Clan (Group B lower-bracket quarterfinal)
–NRG vs. Team Falcons (Group B lower-bracket quarterfinal)
Intel Extreme Masters Krakow prize pool
1. $400,000
2. $180,000
3. $100,000
4. $60,000
5-6. $40,000
7-8. $24,000
9-12. $16,000
13-16. $10,000 — The MongolZ, PARIVISION, two teams TBD
17-20. $4,500 — GamerLegion, Ninjas in Pyjamas, Team Liquid, paiN Gaming
21-24. $2,500 — Passion UA, Legacy, B8, HEROIC
–Field Level Media
Sports
Eastern Conference contenders Pistons, Raptors meet for first time
Feb 9, 2026; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Charlotte Hornets forward Moussa Diabaté (14) and forward Miles Bridges (0) are ejected after a fight with Detroit Pistons center Jalen Duren (0) and forward/center Isaiah Stewart (28) during the second half at Spectrum Center. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images One team will enter the All-Star break on a three-game winning streak Wednesday night when the Detroit Pistons visit the Toronto Raptors.
The Pistons won their second straight when they opened a four-game road trip with a 110-104 victory over the Charlotte Hornets in a game marred by third-quarter fights.
Two players from each team were ejected from the game, including Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart of the Pistons.
The altercation started after Charlotte’s Moussa Diabate fouled Duren. After shoving, punches were thrown. When hostilities broke out again, Stewart came off the bench to defend Duren.
“Our guys deal with a lot,” Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “They are not the ones who initiate. They are not the ones who crossed the line tonight. … I hate that it got as ugly as it got. That is not something you want to see. But, if a guy throws a punch at you, you have a responsibility to protect yourself.”
“It was an overly emotional game with tempers flaring,” said Duren, who scored seven of his 15 points in the third quarter. “At the end of the day, we would love to keep it to basketball, but things happen. Everyone was playing hard. As the year has gone on, teams have tried to get into our heads.”
All-Star Game-bound Cade Cunningham had 33 points, nine rebounds and seven assists to help the Pistons end the Hornets’ nine-game winning streak.
“It says a lot about our grit and our resilience,” Cunningham said. “There was a lot of emotion to the game; fans were into it. For us to stay together and pull through, this is a great win for us.”
The Pistons and Raptors will be meeting for the first time this season. The Raptors won their second in a row by defeating the Indiana Pacers 122-104 Sunday to improve to 3-1 on their five-game homestand.
Trayce Jackson-Davis, acquired Thursday in a trade with the Golden State Warriors, made his Raptors debut and delivered 10 points and 10 rebounds in 15:31 off the bench.
“Trayce played well, and it gave us a good 15 minutes,” Toronto coach Darko Rajakovic said.
Jackson-Davis became the fifth player to record a double-double in his Raptors debut — the first since Kawhi Leonard (24 points,12 rebounds) in 2018 — and the first to do so as a reserve.
Rajakovic prefers to wait before assessing his new player.
“At this point, I just want to let him be,” he said. “I want to coach him. I want to help him. I want to build him and see where we go. I don’t want to, based on one good game or bad game, to pass any judgment on him. I want to see a chunk of 10-15 games and see how he grows with us.”
Jackson-Davis said that before the game Rajakovic told him to “play free” and not to worry about the plays, but to play hard and rebound.
“So I leaned onto that,” Jackson-Davis said. “And then I’m a rhythm player. So once you start getting rebounds, you start putting the ball in the hole, everything else goes your way.”
Toronto’s Collin Murray-Boyles left the game after the first quarter with a lingering thumb injury and will not play on Wednesday.
Brandon Ingram learned Tuesday he will participate in his second All-Star Game. The Raptors’ leading scorer (22.0 ppg) replaces the injured Stephen Curry. Scottie Barnes (19.4 ppg, 8.4 rpg, 5.6 apg) is Toronto’s other All-Star.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Ilia Malinin surges into lead with thrilling short program
Feb 10, 2026; Milan, Italy; Ilia Malinin of the United States of America competes in men’s singles short program during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images MILAN — American figure skater Ilia Malinin delivered his best performance of the Milan Cortina Games on Tuesday, landing two quadruple jumps and even throwing in a backflip in an electrifying men’s short program to take the lead.
Malinin posted 108.16 points, more than five clear of Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama (103.07), with France’s Adam Siao Him Fa third with 102.55.
Malinin, the heavy favorite for the men’s title, did not showcase his full repertoire in his two outings during the team event but still did enough to help the United States grab gold on Sunday.
He looked far closer to his peak on Tuesday, feeding off a loud contingent of American fans as he flaunted the technical arsenal that has helped draw new attention to the sport.
“I want to call it Olympic pressure,” he told reporters.
“Going out there the first time, hitting that Olympic ice and feeling the atmosphere. I didn’t expect it to be so much, and it took me a little while to understand what really happened, but now that I understand it, I took a different approach today,” he said.
“Really just take things nice and calm, nice and slow, just relaxed, and really just pushed the autopilot button and let it cruise.”
Kagiyama paid the price for a stumbled landing on his triple Axel, while Siao Him Fa produced a confident and clean skate to boost his hopes of making the podium on Friday.
“I was a bit frustrated with the triple Axel… my goal now is to perform a free skate that I’m happy with,” Kagiyama, who had upstaged Malinin with his short program in the team event, told reporters through a translator.
“I’m trying to… add more quadruple jumps and increase my offensive power… and hopefully the result will come along,” the 2022 Beiling Olympics silver medalist added.
Many present at the Milano Ice Skating Arena were buzzing in anticipation that Malinin would unleash a quadruple Axel — a four-and-a-half-rotation jump that only he has landed in competition — as it was published on his list of planned elements.
But he told reporters that he never intended to attempt the jump on Tuesday, saying he forgot to change the list ahead of time.
He opted instead for a quadruple flip, then scored heavily for a quadruple Lutz-triple toeloop combination.
He also threw cold water on the likelihood of performing a quad Axel in Friday’s free skate, saying he was prioritizing “health and safety.”
The Virginia native is one of the biggest attractions of the Winter Games and shouldering a heavy weight of expectation after winning 14 competitions in a row and going undefeated since November 2023.
The first-time Olympian looked more comfortable on Tuesday, raising his arms to soak in the roar of the crowd when he was introduced ahead of his program. He then threw some boxing punches towards the camera as he skated off the ice.
NAUMOV HONORS PARENTS
Earlier, Malinin’s teammate Maxim Naumov skated with a heavy heart in his Olympic debut, delivering an emotional performance a little over a year after his parents were killed in a plane crash near Washington, D.C.
“I felt like I was guided by them today,” Naumov, who held up a childhood photo of himself holding hands with his parents following his performance, told reporters.
“With every glide and step that I made on the ice, I couldn’t help but feel their support. They were guiding me from one element to another.
“At the end, I finished on my knees, and I didn’t know if I was going to cry, smile or laugh, and all I could do was look up and say, ‘Look what we just did.'”
Naumov scored 85.65 points and sits in 14th place.
In a lighter moment, fan favorite Tomas-Llorenc Guarino Sabate of Spain laid down his short program to music from the “Minions” film franchise while dressed as one of the animated characters in a yellow T-shirt and blue overalls.
Guarino Sabate earned global headlines when he was told shortly before the Games that he would not be allowed to use the music for copyright reasons, but Universal Studios eventually gave him the green light.
The six-time Spanish champion from Barcelona stumbled on his first jump, a triple Axel, but received encouragement from fans clapping along to the song.
Unfortunately, he narrowly failed to make the cut for Friday’s free skate after finishing 25th, one place below the qualifying cut-off.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
Australian snowboarder airlifted to hospital with broken neck
Feb 7, 2026; Livigno, Italy; A detail view of Olympic rings during slopestyle freestyle skiing qualification during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Livigno Snow Park. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images MILAN — Australian snowboarder Cameron Bolton has been airlifted to the hospital after breaking his neck in a training mishap at the Winter Olympics.
The Australian Olympic Committee (AOC) said the 35-year-old snowboard cross specialist had suffered a serious fall at training on Monday and reported worsening neck pain on Tuesday.
A scan at the Olympic Polyclinic identified two stable neck fractures, and Bolton had been transferred to a Milan hospital for further imaging and assessment, the AOC said in a statement.
Bolton took silver in the mixed team snowboard cross with Mia Clift at last year’s world championships in Engadin, Switzerland.
The AOC said it had enacted the Late Athlete Replacement option, bringing Olympic debutant James Johnstone onto the team alongside Adam Lambert and Jarryd Hughes for the men’s snowboard cross qualifying on Thursday.
Australia’s snowboard halfpipe entrant Misaki Vaughan was also ruled out of the Olympics after suffering a head injury during training on Monday and failing a head impact assessment on Tuesday, the AOC added.
No athlete will replace Vaughan, with Australia to be represented by Amelie Haskell and Emily Arthur in the women’s halfpipe qualifying later on Wednesday.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
