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Graham Ike puts up 20 as No. 12 Gonzaga wallops Washington State

NCAA Basketball: Washington State at GonzagaFeb 10, 2026; Spokane, Washington, USA; Gonzaga Bulldogs forward Graham Ike (15) dunks the ball against Washington State Cougars forward Eemeli Yalaho (2) in the first half at McCarthey Athletic Center. Mandatory Credit: James Snook-Imagn Images

Graham Ike scored 20 points on 8-of-10 shooting from the field and added a game-high seven rebounds in just 23 minutes as No. 12 Gonzaga cruised to a 83-53 victory against Washington State on Tuesday in Spokane, Wash.

Freshman Davis Fogle came off the bench to score 17 points and Adam Miller and Mario Saint-Supery added 11 apiece for the Bulldogs (24-2, 12-1 West Coast Conference), who will play Saturday at Santa Clara in a first-place showdown.

Jerone Morton led Washington State (11-16, 6-8) with 15 points. Rihards Vavers added 14 and Ace Glass scored 12.

Gonzaga shot 54.8% from the field (34 of 62) while limiting the Cougars to 39.1% (18 of 46).

The Bulldogs had a 33-7 edge in bench scoring, 50-22 on points in the paint and 31-8 on points off turnovers.

After trailing by 27 at the half, the Cougars pulled within 54-33 on a 3-pointer by Morton with 13:33 remaining.

Gonzaga then went on a 15-0 run, with Emmanuel Innocenti making a dunk followed by a 3-pointer, to leave no doubt. That streak came to an end when Ike was called for a technical for hanging on the rim after a dunk, with Glass making both free throws.

The Bulldogs made almost as many field goals in the first half (21) as Washington State attempted (23) in building a 48-21 lead.

That’s because Gonzaga forced 11 turnovers while committing just three, leading to a 17-0 scoring advantage off miscues.

Miller scored all 11 of his points before the intermission and Ike added 10.

The Cougars tied the score at 6-all on a three foul shots by Morton before Gonzaga went on an 8-0 run, with Braeden Smith making two free throws and a pull-up jumper in the lane.

Another 8-0 run, which included a jumper and a driving layup by Saint-Supery, gave the Bulldogs a 29-13 edge.

And a 9-0 run late in the half, sparked by an Ike dunk, made it 44-19. Fogle completed a three-point play and Miller capped that stretch with a driving layup and two free throws.

The Bulldogs played their eighth straight game without injured forward/center Braden Huff (knee).

Gonzaga swept the regular-season series against the Cougars, also winning 86-65 on Jan. 15 in Pullman, Wash.

–Field Level Media

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Wake Forest, Georgia Tech face off with ACC tourney hopes on the line

NCAA Basketball: Clemson at Georgia TechJan 24, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets head coach Damon Stoudamire reacts after a play against the Clemson Tigers in the first half at McCamish Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Wake Forest and Georgia Tech have both had disappointing campaigns and both have to start collecting wins if they want to compete in postseason play.

With only 15 of the 18 Atlantic Coast Conference teams qualifying for the ACC tournament next month — and Wake Forest and Georgia Tech in the mix for one of those last spots — Wednesday’s matchup in Atlanta is one of the biggest down the stretch for two programs desperate for a win.

Georgia Tech, 11-13 overall, brings a 2-9 conference record to the game, currently putting them out of an ACC tournament spot. The Yellow Jackets have lost five in a row, including a 95-72 blowout loss Saturday at Stanford.

Leading scorer Kowacie Reeves Jr. (15 points per game) didn’t play against the Cardinal, but reports Tuesday night indicate that Reeves is expected to play against the Demon Deacons.

“It’s one of those things where I can sit up here and talk about what I don’t got, you know? I’m not going to do that,” Georgia Tech head coach Damon Stoudamire said. “That’s not the reason we lost. Did we miss the 16 (points)? Of course we did, but he didn’t play on Wednesday as well and we were right there to win.

“The reality of it is that we gotta do a better job because right now, what we’re doing is we’re good enough to stay in good, but just not good enough to lose the game as well and at the end of the day, we got to get over the hump whether Kowacie is available or not.”

Wake Forest is also on a five-game losing streak, which has seen their conference record plummet to 2-8. A loss by either squad will further sink them down in the standings, but a win could go a long way in helping them make the conference tournament with little more than a handful of games remaining in the regular season.

“I’m really disappointed that we lost the game,” Wake Forest head coach Steve Forbes said following an 88-80 loss to No. 24 Louisville on Saturday. The Demon Deacons fought back from a 15-point, second-half deficit to tie the game before faltering late.

“We fought so hard to get back in it, playing the right way, and then we quit doing things that got us back into the game.”

–Field Level Media

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Texas A&M out to regain swagger vs. surging Missouri

NCAA Basketball: Mississippi State at Texas A&MJan 21, 2026; College Station, Texas, USA; Texas A&M Aggies guard Pop Isaacs (2) defends during the first half against the Mississippi State Bulldogs at Reed Arena. Mandatory Credit: Maria Lysaker-Imagn Images

Texas A&M will try to avoid its first three-game losing streak of the season when it hosts improving Missouri on Wednesday in a Southeastern Conference game in College Station, Texas.

The Aggies (17-6, 7-3 SEC) most recently suffered an 86-67 loss at home to then-No. 17 Florida on Saturday. That was the first time in league play that Texas A&M lost by more than five points and the first time since November that it has lost back-to-back games.

Texas A&M’s shooting was the culprit in Saturday’s loss. The Aggies entered the contest averaging 92.0 points per game but shot just 30.6% from the floor and scored less than 70 points for only the second time all year. A&M made just one of its first 27 shots, including a stretch of 23 straight misses.

“We can learn more from this game than a lot of games,” Texas A&M coach Bucky McMillan said. “Just understand we’ve got to stay the course and not get too antsy. Our destiny is right in front of us.”

Pop Isaacs and Marcus Hill led the Aggies in scoring with 17 points apiece in defeat.

“I believe in this team,” Issacs said. “We did a good job staying together earlier in the year when we went through that adversity. I have no doubt this team will stick together, do this and find our swagger back.”

Missouri (16-7, 6-4 SEC) heads to Texas after a 78-59 romp at South Carolina on Saturday that produced the Tigers’ first two-game winning streak since the first week in January and snapped a three-game road losing skid.

Jayden Stone scored 22 points, Mark Mitchell added 20 points and 11 rebounds and T.O. Barrett hit for 14 points in the win, which improved Missouri’s chances of advancing to the NCAA Tournament for the third time in the last four years.

A win over the Aggies on the road would aid those chances even more.

“To be able to go on the road and never have a deficit in a game is tremendous,” Missouri coach Dennis Gates said after Saturday’s win. “Hats off to our team.

“We played a collective game from the beginning to the end,” Gates added. “Defensively, to be able to hold a team on their home court to 30% in the first half, 30% in the second and for the game 30%, that’s a remarkable accomplishment.”

The Tigers have five more Quadrant 1 games remaining on their schedule, including Wednesday’s clash in Aggieland. Three of those Quad 1 opportunities will be at home against Vanderbilt, Tennessee and Arkansas.

–Field Level Media

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DePaul tries to end 23-game skid vs. Creighton

NCAA Basketball: St. John at DePaulFeb 3, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; DePaul Blue Demons head coach Chris Holtmann directs his team against the St. John’s Red Storm during the first half at Wintrust Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

If DePaul is going to end its longest losing streak of the season, it must beat Creighton for the first time in more than a decade.

Losers of four in a row, the host Blue Demons try to avoid a 24th consecutive defeat to the Bluejays on Wednesday night in Big East action at Chicago.

League play hasn’t been easy for DePaul (12-12, 4-9 Big East), which last defeated Seton Hall at home on Jan. 24. The Blue Demons have averaged only 63.8 points and shot 42.3% in the past four games, and they were outscored by a total of 30 points in their last two.

Providence shot 58.9% overall and went 9 of 21 from 3-point range during Saturday’s 90-72 home win over DePaul.

“You’ve got to learn from every experience,” DePaul coach Chris Holtmann told WGN Radio 720.

DePaul’s CJ Gunn averages a team-leading 14.0 points, but has failed to score at least 10 in three of the last four contests. He posted nine in each of the last two on a combined 8-of-28 shooting.

Gunn averaged 13.0 points while the Blue Demons lost all three 2024-25 meetings with Creighton, which has won 28 of the last 29 matchups in this series. DePaul’s most recent victory over the Bluejays came 70-60 at Omaha on Jan. 7, 2015.

Creighton (13-11, 7-6) should feel more confident after ending its own three-game losing streak with Saturday’s 69-68 home win over Seton Hall. Nik Graves scored just seven points, but the final three came from his shot with 2.5 seconds left in regulation, securing the win.

“I think it can be a change in momentum for us,” Graves said of the last-second victory. “Just coming together, being able to win in that fashion. Coming back, fighting hard, playing together. I think we can build off of that.”

The Bluejays will now try to break a four-game losing streak on the road, where they have won 12 straight against DePaul dating back to a 72-57 loss on Nov. 30, 2005.

Creighton’s Josh Dix averages a team-leading 11.8 points, and scored 16 on Saturday, just days after his mother passed away. He had totaled 13 points in the three games prior.

–Field Level Media

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