Sports
Jason Pierre Jr. leads SMU past slumping Notre Dame
Feb 7, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; SMU Mustangs center Samet Yigitoglu (24) and Pittsburgh Panthers forward Cameron Corhen (2) take the opening tip-off during the first half at Petersen Events Center. Mandatory Credit: Philip G. Pavely-Imagn Images Jaron Pierre Jr. scored 22 points, all but four of them after halftime, as SMU defeated slumping Notre Dame 89-81 on Tuesday in an Atlantic Coast Conference game in Dallas.
SMU (17-7, 6-5 ACC) led by six points at halftime after an 18-point first half by Boopie Miller and 57.1% shooting from the floor. The Fighting Irish owned the first five minutes of the second half and swept to a brief lead before the Mustangs swung back with 14 straight points as part of a 19-2 run that netted it a 64-50 advantage with 10:46 to play.
Notre Dame (11-14, 2-10) responded, drawing to 76-70 after Logan Imes’ fast break layup with 4:42 left. But that’s as close as it would get as SMU added to the margin with a driving layup by Corey Washington and three free throws by Pierre and strolled to the finish line.
Miller finished with 20 points while Washington had 14 and Samet Yigitoglu racked up 11 points and 10 rebounds for the Mustangs, who have won two games in a row.
Notre Dame’s Jalen Haralson led all scorers with 23 points. Braeden Shrewsberry and Cole Certa had 16 each and Brady Koehler hit for 11 points for the Fighting Irish, who have dropped five straight games and are tied at the bottom of the ACC standings.
The Mustangs led by as many as 10 points early on before Notre Dame chipped away and a free throw by Shrewsberry with 3:01 left in the half tied the game at 34-34. SMU built the lead back to six points when Miller produced six straight points, the latter a 3-pointer with 30 seconds remaining. The Mustangs finished the half with a 43-37 lead.
Miller’s 18 first-half points led all scorers. It included a 6-of-7 showing from the floor and making all four of his jumpers from beyond the arc. Haralson paced the Fighting Irish with 10 points at the break.
Notre Dame took the lead on Carson Towt’s layup with 15:54 to play and was up 48-45 after Shrewsberry made a 3-pointer 46 seconds later. SMU went on its run shortly after.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Heat, Pelicans bid to enter All-Star break on high note
Feb 9, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Heat forward Andrew Wiggins (22) looks on against the Utah Jazz during the third quarter at Kaseya Center. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images The Miami Heat will be short-handed again when they face the host New Orleans Pelicans on Wednesday in the final game before the All-Star break for both teams.
Miami used its 19th different starting lineup of the season and had just 11 available players in Monday’s 115-111 home loss to the Utah Jazz.
The Heat were missing guards Norman Powell (back tightness), Pelle Larsson (right forearm strain) and Tyler Herro (ribs). Powell and Larsson have been ruled out for Wednesday’s contest, while Herro will miss his 15th straight game.
Miami is also monitoring the status of forward Andrew Wiggins, who is listed as questionable with toe inflammation.
With a limited bench against Utah, the Heat were outscored 54-30 in the paint and lost for the third time in their last four games.
Wiggins led Miami with 26 points, while Bam Adebayo added 23 points and 11 rebounds. Rookie guard Kasparas Jakucionis made six 3-pointers and finished with 20 points off the bench.
Jakucionis is shooting 46.8% from 3-point range this season for Miami, which allowed Utah to win for just the fifth time in its last 23 games.
“Gotta figure out how to consistently win games,” Adebayo said. “Doesn’t matter if it’s a back-to-back. Four games in five nights, whatever it is, we gotta find a way to win, even against teams that are, I guess you could say, trying to lose.
“Gotta look in the mirror. That’s the biggest thing, that we don’t look in the mirror enough to see what we can do better, day in, day out. We kind of go with the flow, then when we get behind, it’s kind of when we want to, like, tap in. It’s like we’ve got to have that urgency from the jump and a lot of times, we don’t have that.”
Miami has won 10 of its last 11 meetings with New Orleans, including a 125-106 home victory on Jan. 4.
The Pelicans are looking to build on an impressive 120-94 home win over the Sacramento Kings on Monday.
Trey Murphy III scored 21 points to lead New Orleans. Jeremiah Fears added 20 and Zion Williamson finished with 18 points and six assists.
The Pelicans recorded their largest margin of victory this season while scoring 34 fastbreak points.
“If we’re getting stops on defense and we’re disruptive on the defensive end, that’s going to lead to good transition for us,” New Orleans interim head coach James Borrego said. “This is really good evidence that if you play good defense, it leads to good offense.”
Murphy is shooting 57.5% (23 of 40) from 3-point range over the last three games for the Pelicans, who have won five of their last nine games.
“Our intensity has picked up,” Fears said. “We’ve started playing more as a team, moving the ball. Our chemistry has gotten better along the way.”
The Pelicans are 27th in the league in 3-pointers made per game (11.2), but Murphy’s recent surge is forcing opponents to defend the perimeter.
New Orleans shot 41% (16 of 39) from beyond the arc in the win over Sacramento, and Murphy’s 23 made 3-pointers over a three-game stretch is a franchise record.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Prospering Providence eager to extend Seton Hall's skid
Dec 19, 2025; Providence, Rhode Island, USA; Seton Hall Pirates guard Adam Clark (0) drives to the basket against Providence Friars guard Jr. Corey Floyd (14) and guard Jaylin Sellers (2) during the second half at Amica Mutual Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn Images Providence is basically out of time to make a push for an NCAA Tournament at-large bid, but at least the Friars can say they’re healthy and remembering how to win again.
Providence chased a four-game losing streak with back-to-back home wins and heads to Newark, N.J., to challenge plummeting Seton Hall on Wednesday.
The Friars (11-13, 4-9 Big East) vanquished Butler 97-87 in double overtime last Wednesday before turning back DePaul 90-72 on Saturday. They know they can be competitive in any Big East game, as seven of Providence’s nine conference losses have come by six points or fewer.
It helps to have their star scorer back in the lineup. Jason Edwards (plantar fasciitis) had missed seven games before returning against DePaul and picking up where he left off. He scored 25 points and shot 5 of 8 from 3-point range in 24 minutes.
“It was eating me alive watching them play and I wasn’t there,” Edwards told reporters. “I wanted to be out there, I wanted to help the guys, I wanted to help Coach Kim. It was a tough time, but I put in a lot of work to get back healthy in terms of my recovery.”
Jaylin Sellers added 21 points and Oswin Erhunmwunse provided 10 points, 13 rebounds and four blocks to the cause. Sellers, Corey Floyd Jr. and freshman standout Stefan Vaaks all played after being banged up.
Edwards leads Providence at 17.1 points per game. But on Dec. 19, he was held to 10 points and 1-of-6 shooting from deep when Seton Hall prevailed 72-67 at Providence.
The Pirates (16-8, 6-7) have dropped six of eight, most recently last week’s critical Quad 1 opportunities at Villanova and Creighton. They frittered away a 63-53 lead with 3:30 to go at Creighton and Nik Graves hit a 30-footer in the final seconds in the Bluejays’ 69-68 stunner.
“Is this disappointing? Yes. Does this mean our season is over? No,” Seton Hall assistant coach Corey Lowery said in a postgame radio interview. “We’re going to battle. Does this hurt? Yes, it’s supposed to hurt.”
Though considered one of the best defensive teams in the country — 12th-best in defensive efficiency according to KenPom.com — Seton Hall has been getting exploited from outside. The Pirates held Providence to 5 of 23 from the arc in December, but in their past three games opponents have made 33 of 78 from deep (42.3%). Meanwhile, the Pirates made just 11 3-pointers in the same span.
Adam “Budd” Clark scored 20 against Creighton to lead Seton Hall for the third straight game. He has a team-high 11.9 points per game average as seven players average at least 6.3.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Report: Winter Olympics off to best ratings start in 12 years
[US, Mexico & Canada customers only] Feb 10, 2026; Milan, Italy; Ann-Renee Desbiens (35) of Canada gives up a goal to Caroline Harvey (not pictured) of the United States in women’s ice hockey group a play during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: David W Cerny/Reuters via Imagn Images Fresh off a 30-year low in television ratings, the Winter Olympics is seeing much better early returns in 2026, reports The Hollywood Reporter.
The Beijing Games in 2022 had low ratings across the board, including a 15.9 million viewer count for the opening ceremony, marking a three-decade low. Overall, it was the least viewed Winter Olympics NBC had ever broadcast. That performance lowered expectations for Milan and Cortina, Italy, this year.
Instead, the first two days of the Games have resulted in significant gains for NBCUniversal. Preliminary Nielsen ratings, combined with Adobe Analytics streaming data, indicate that viewership has increased by more than 60% compared to four years ago during the same two-day period, when the company averaged 11.4 million viewers in primetime.
The broadcasting networks — NBC, Peacock, CNBC, and USA — reached a peak of 28.5 million viewers on Day 2, marking the largest audience for any day of Winter Olympics coverage since 2014.
The star-studded event on Friday night attracted over 5 million more viewers, totaling 21.4 million, bringing the numbers closer to those of previous Olympics. For example, during the last Winter Olympics in Italy in 2006, NBC drew 22.2 million viewers for the opening ceremony.
Peacock saw an average of 4.1 million viewers on the first Saturday, with over 1.3 billion minutes streamed. That puts the streaming platform on track to surpass 2022’s record of 4.3 billion minutes for the entire Games.
The rebound aligns with NBC’s performance at the 2024 Summer Games in Paris, which also experienced a significant ratings increase. The broadcast plan this year is nearly the same, with Peacock providing live streams for every event, the Gold Zone whip-around show airing daily on the same platform, and NBC, CNBC and USA offering live daytime coverage, with NBC rebroadcasting key moments during primetime.
–Field Level Media
