Sports
Kentucky overcomes 14-point deficit vs. No. 25 Tennessee
Feb 7, 2026; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats guard Otega Oweh (00) scores a layup during the first half against the Tennessee Volunteers at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-Imagn Images Otega Oweh scored 21 points to help Kentucky rally for a 74-71 victory over No. 25 Tennessee in Southeastern Conference play Saturday in Lexington, Ky.
Denzel Aberdeen added 16 points and Malachi Moreno scored 10 for the Wildcats (17-7, 8-3 SEC), who trailed by 14 before winning their eighth game in nine tries. Saturday marked Kentucky’s second comeback win over the Volunteers, after rallying from 17 down on Jan. 17.
Nate Ament’s 29 points led Tennessee (16-7, 6-4), while Ja’Kobi Gillespie added 15 and J.P. Estrella scored 11. Bishop Boswell scored 10 and DeWayne Brown II pulled down 12 rebounds for the Volunteers, who saw their four-game winning streak snapped.
After trailing by 14 at halftime, Kentucky cut the deficit to eight on Aberdeen’s triple with 15:16 left.
A pair of Boswell free throws pushed the visitors’ lead to 10 before Kentucky went on an 8-0 run, holding Tennessee scoreless for 5:37.
From there, Oweh’s back-to-back layups gave Kentucky a 61-60 lead with 6:18 remaining — the Wildcats’ first lead since the 17:21 mark of the first half.
The Volunteers answered with five straight points, going ahead by four on Ament’s three-point play.
Moreno’s hook shot trimmed Kentucky’s deficit to 67-66 with 2:13 left before Aberdeen’s free throws pushed the Wildcats ahead by one.
With just under a minute left, Ament glided to the basket for the go-ahead layup. After a Kentucky timeout, Collin Chandler drilled a 3-pointer with 32.4 seconds remaining, giving the hosts a 71-69 lead.
Ament then missed a turnaround jumper and Moreno split a pair of foul shots. Tennessee took a timeout with 8.6 seconds left. Kentucky fouled J.P. Estrella, who made both free throws.
Chandler missed the front end at the line, but Mouhamed Dioubate grabbed the offensive rebound and kicked it out to Aberdeen, who made two foul shots with 3.7 seconds left.
Gillespie’s ensuing halfcourt shot rimmed out as time expired.
Neither team took a lead larger than four until Ament’s personal 8-0 run gave Tennessee a 22-14 edge.
Ament’s fourth 3-pointer of the first half gave the Volunteers a 35-25 lead with 4:48 left.
After Chandler’s triple and Trent Noah’s free throws pulled the Wildcats within six, Ament scored five of Tennessee’s 7-0 spurt, giving the Volunteers a 43-30 lead.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Speed skater Gina Lollobrigida wins Italy's first Gold of home Games
Feb 7, 2026; Milan, Italy; Francesca Lollobrigida of Italy reacts after racing in the women’s speed skating 3000m during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Speed Skating Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images MILAN, Italy — Francesca Lollobrigida powered to victory in the women’s 3,000 meters speed skating on Saturday, bringing Italy its first gold medal of the Milan Cortina Games and ending Dutch dominance marked by three straight Olympic titles at the distance.
Norway’s Ragne Wiklund and Canada’s Valerie Maltais joined her on the podium as the speed skating program got under way at the Milano Speed Skating Stadium.
Lollobrigida tore around the oval to smash the Olympic record, stopping the clock at three minutes and 54.28 seconds – 2.26 seconds clear of Wiklund – to secure Italy’s first-ever women’s speed skating Olympic title.
It was the 35-year-old’s first Olympic gold, adding to the 3,000m silver and mass start bronze she won in Beijing in 2022.
Competing in her fourth Olympics – and doing so on her birthday in front of a roaring home crowd – Lollobrigida turned the weight of expectation into fuel.
“This medal means a lot, but also a demonstration – the fact of not giving up, to start a family, to become a mother and to come back to race,” she said.
EMOTIONAL LOLLOBRIGIDA CELEBRATES WITH SON
Drawn in the eighth pair alongside Maltais and starting in the outer lane, she went toe-to-toe with the Canadian before pulling decisively ahead.
Upon realizing her triumph, an emotional Lollobrigida wrapped herself in the Italian flag and sprinted to celebrate with her two-year-old son.
The Italian – great-niece of the late film icon Gina Lollobrigida and cousin of Italy’s Agriculture Minister Francesco Lollobrigida – soaked in the moment as the stadium erupted around her.
“Being in Italy, knowing my son, my husband, my mom, my dad, my sister, all my friends were here … I was really happy,” she said.
“I did it for myself, but also for all those who have always believed in me.”
The Italian’s victory ended a formidable Dutch legacy in the 3,000m. The Netherlands famously swept the podium at PyeongChang 2018, while Irene Schouten won gold at Beijing 2022 before retiring.
In Milan, Joy Beune and Marijke Groenewoud were again seen as leading Dutch contenders to extend that dominance, as was Wiklund, but Lollobrigida had other ideas.
Beune finished fourth and Groenewoud eighth, while Canada’s Isabelle Weidemann – a triple medalist in Beijing – was fifth.
Greta Myers was the only U.S. entrant, a late addition due to an injury withdrawal, and finished 20th.
The Netherlands remains the sport’s powerhouse, with a record 48 Olympic gold medals – well clear of the U.S. (30) and Norway (28). Lollobrigida’s victory was Italy’s third Olympic gold in speed skating.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
Report: WNBA owners present modest CBA changes to players
Aug 31, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Golden State Valkyries guard Kaitlyn Chen (2) holds a ball as the WNBA logo appears on the ball and shorts before the game against the Indiana Fever at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images The WNBA has at long last presented a CBA proposal to players, according to a report from Front Office Sports.
Following a six-week period of silence with no reported movement, league representatives met with players earlier this week to renew talks.
That Monday meeting, lacking from the players’ perspective due to the absence of a prepared counter-proposal from the league, apparently moved the ball forward enough to result in a proposed deal sent to the players Friday.
“They volunteered that they did not have a proposal prepared at the top of the meeting,” Seattle Storm forward Nneka Ogwumike said earlier in the week. “That kind of set the tone for the conversation because we were hoping to hear otherwise.”
Now a deal has been sent, but the concessions within the new document are deemed modest.
The changes include small shifts to the previously suggested revenue sharing percentage, along with the move to initiate team-provided housing for the players who need it, as well as an agreement allowing two developmental roster spots per team.
At last report, the two sides remained far apart on overall money. The players association’s proposal called for players to earn an average of $800,000 per year, while the WNBA proposal came in at about $530,000 per year. The latest reporting did not reveal whether the two sides have inched closer.
The owners and players have been in negotiations on a new labor deal since late June, with multiple deadlines having been passed and extended in the meantime.
The regular season is supposed to begin in May, yet the league schedule requires that an expansion draft — the WNBA has added the Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire — and free agency must occur beforehand. Furthermore, the league needs to conduct its amateur draft, currently scheduled for April 13, and take a break for the FIBA World Cup that takes place in September.
Free agency typically begins in early January. The current best-case scenario being outlined now points to March, though that is contingent on a deal being reached in the coming weeks.
The WNBA has never lost games to a work stoppage in its 29-year history.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Speed skater Francesca Lollobrigida wins Italy's first gold of home Games
Feb 7, 2026; Milan, Italy; Francesca Lollobrigida of Italy reacts after racing in the women’s speed skating 3000m during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Speed Skating Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images MILAN, Italy — Francesca Lollobrigida powered to victory in the women’s 3,000 meters speed skating on Saturday, bringing Italy its first gold medal of the Milan Cortina Games and ending Dutch dominance marked by three straight Olympic titles at the distance.
Norway’s Ragne Wiklund and Canada’s Valerie Maltais joined her on the podium as the speed skating program got under way at the Milano Speed Skating Stadium.
Lollobrigida tore around the oval to smash the Olympic record, stopping the clock at three minutes and 54.28 seconds — 2.26 seconds clear of Wiklund — to secure Italy’s first-ever women’s speed skating Olympic title.
It was the 35-year-old’s first Olympic gold, adding to the 3,000m silver and mass start bronze she won in Beijing in 2022.
Competing in her fourth Olympics – and doing so on her birthday in front of a roaring home crowd – Lollobrigida turned the weight of expectation into fuel.
“This medal means a lot, but also a demonstration — the fact of not giving up, to start a family, to become a mother and to come back to race,” she said.
EMOTIONAL LOLLOBRIGIDA CELEBRATES WITH SON
Drawn in the eighth pair alongside Maltais and starting in the outer lane, she went toe-to-toe with the Canadian before pulling decisively ahead.
Upon realizing her triumph, an emotional Lollobrigida wrapped herself in the Italian flag and sprinted to celebrate with her two-year-old son.
The Italian – great-niece of the late film icon Gina Lollobrigida and cousin of Italy’s Agriculture Minister Francesco Lollobrigida – soaked in the moment as the stadium erupted around her.
“Being in Italy, knowing my son, my husband, my mom, my dad, my sister, all my friends were here … I was really happy,” she said.
“I did it for myself, but also for all those who have always believed in me.”
The Italian’s victory ended a formidable Dutch legacy in the 3,000m. The Netherlands famously swept the podium at PyeongChang 2018, while Irene Schouten won gold at Beijing 2022 before retiring.
In Milan, Joy Beune and Marijke Groenewoud were again seen as leading Dutch contenders to extend that dominance, as was Wiklund, but Lollobrigida had other ideas.
Beune finished fourth and Groenewoud eighth, while Canada’s Isabelle Weidemann – a triple medalist in Beijing – was fifth.
Greta Myers was the only U.S. entrant, a late addition due to an injury withdrawal, and finished 20th.
The Netherlands remains the sport’s powerhouse, with a record 48 Olympic gold medals – well clear of the U.S. (30) and Norway (28). Lollobrigida’s victory was Italy’s third Olympic gold in speed skating.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
