Sports
No. 23 Miami (Ohio) rides high-octane offense into Buffalo
Miami RedHawks forward Antwone Woolfolk (13) handles the ball after making a steal in the second half of the NCAA Basketball game at Millett Hall in Oxford, Ohio, on Saturday, January 31, 2026. No. 23 Miami (Ohio) hopes to keep its perfect record intact when it visits Buffalo for a Mid-American Conference matchup on Tuesday night.
Offense has carried the RedHawks (22-0, 10-0 MAC), who lead the conference in scoring (93.7) and 3-point percentage (40.1). Top-ranked Arizona (22-0) is the only other unbeaten team in the country.
Buffalo (14-8, 4-6) threw a scare into Miami when the teams met in Ohio on Jan. 17. Miami won that game 105-102 in overtime after Peter Suder sank a 3-pointer with 1.4 seconds left.
Both teams shot the ball well in that contest. Miami was 38 of 66 from the field (57.6%) and 13 of 29 from 3-point territory (44.8%). Buffalo was 35 of 65 from the field (53.8%) and 13 of 26 on 3-point attempts (50%).
“I’d rather hold teams to 60 points and get the win than (when) we both score in the hundreds,” Miami forward Antwone Woolfolk said. “I think we can score with anybody, but if we continue to lock in on defense, the sky will be the limit for us.”
Buffalo is coming off Saturday’s 95-83 loss to Ohio, which dropped Buffalo’s home record to 6-5.
Daniel Freitag led the Bulls with 25 points. He is averaging 20.1 points per game, which ranks second in the MAC.
Ryan Sabol added 22 points, six rebounds and five assists in the loss. It was his fifth consecutive game scoring at least 20 points.
“I don’t think we brought the proper fight to this game — the proper focus,” Buffalo coach George Halcovage said. “We have to learn from that. We’ve done this to ourselves a number of times at our place. … Team makes a run, take that punch and punch right back.
“When you give up 13 turnovers and 13 offensive rebounds, you’re giving the other team a great chance to knock you off. We have to learn from that, grow from that and get better.”
It looked like Miami might suffer its first loss Saturday against Northern Illinois. The RedHawks trailed by five points with 15 minutes to play before outscoring the Huskies 38-9 the rest of the way to earn an 85-61 win.
Miami coach Travis Steele said his team still has plenty of room to grow at the defensive end.
“We have good spurtability. We do,” Steele said “We can score in bunches. But our defense is what allows you to get those big runs. That picture we had in the second half of our defense (is what) we need to see moving forward if we want to be able to continue to get the results we want and become the team that we want to become.
“The further you go, the harder it gets. (Our players) have to understand what’s going to win and separate us is on the defensive end. Our offense is elite. On the defensive side, I want to be elite too. That’s what great teams are.”
Guard Brant Byers is Miami’s leading scorer (15.4 ppg). Suder is next (14.3).
–Field Level Media
Sports
MLB Owners Are Killing the World Baseball Classic
The travesty unfolding with Team Puerto Rico in the upcoming World Baseball Classic originates from the same place as the impending work stoppage in Major League Baseball:
The cold hearts and fat wallets of MLB owners, who again choose hoarding cash in lieu of stimulating competition.
Officials from Puerto Rico said Saturday the national team might withdraw entirely from the WBC next month because as many as 10 of the players on the roster, which includes some of the biggest stars in the sport, have been denied insurance coverage due to injury risk.
New York Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor reportedly won’t play, and neither will Houston Astros third baseman Carlos Correa, though Correa’s case and others remain under review, The Athletic reports. Lindor had surgery on his elbow in October, but it was minor enough that he’s healthy now and ready to report for Spring Training for the Mets. Correa’s sordid health history is well known, but he also played 144 games in 2025. No matter: they’re denied.
Additional Puerto Rican players who have been denied coverage include Los Angeles Dodgers infielder Enríque Hernández and Toronto Blue Jays right-hander José Berríos. Overall, more than a third of the entire roster is impacted. Perhaps it’s just a coincidence that they’ve been hit so hard by the insurance premium bug, but Puerto Rico feels picked on.
Officials cite Puerto Rico’s small population (about 3.3 million) as a difficulty for adding viable ballplayers. That’s one issue. But the WBC is more, and should be more, than just finding bodies to fill out rosters. Puerto Rico typically has one of the best teams in the world. Lindor is one of the 10 best players in MLB, and Correa one of the two dozen best. Not only for their talent, but Puerto Rico’s enthusiasm for baseball, along with their historical influence, are well documented.
The Puerto Rican team is always among the top reasons to watch the WBC, a tournament in which MLB invests heavily and takes earnestly. But only to a point. Ensuring that Puerto Rico remains whole enough to field a competitive team is against league policy, so to speak.
Puerto Rico is not the only country affected by insurance roadblocks; Venezuela is too, with José Altuve and Miguel Rojas among the disenfranchised. Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani won’t pitch for Japan in the WBC in part because insurance won’t cover that half of his game.
If only MLB could do something to defray the cost of insuring those who remain uncovered. It is apparent they don’t want to, and neither do the individual teams. Mets owner Steve Cohen probably has WBC PTSD about 2023, when closer Edwin Díaz took a bad celebratory step and had his season ruined with an injury.
Freak injuries happen, but the WBC happening outside of the MLB season doesn’t reduce its importance to Lindor and players like him, who take competing in it no less seriously than they would the World Series.
But what else should we expect from this league of owners? They contorted themselves to give the Dodgers, of all teams, a more favorable financial situation with local TV revenue following former owner Frank McCourt’s bankrupting ways. And yet, while being cheap with revenue sharing, MLB owners still won’t take steps to regulate minimum spending standards. Owners of smaller-market teams like the Cleveland Guardians and Pittsburgh Pirates take advantage by pocketing the money, and their fans lose. Congratulations — on your tremendous savings.
Instead of just encouraging the league to be competitive in the standings, MLB owners circle their Gucci wagons and talk about greedy players who need to be restrained with a salary cap. No matter that players already get a smaller share of the pie than the owners, and that salaries have been dragging, in relation to inflation, for 20 years. Ah, who else can’t wait for the upcoming reports on collective bargaining talks? More fun than arguing over insurance claims.
MLB owners still have time to do the right thing by pooling some (some!) of their formidable resources for Puerto Rico and anyone else denied because of WBC insurance. The integrity of the entire tournament is at stake. The decimation of Puerto Rico’s roster matters not only to one team and country, but to all who participate.
Hiram Bithorn Stadium in San Juan hosts pool play in the WBC from March 6–11. Cuba, Panama, Colombia and Canada also are scheduled in Puerto Rico. Fans have bought tickets to see P.R. play them all. Puerto Rico’s best team should play if possible.
It is possible — if MLB does the right thing and shares.
Sports
Chicago Bulls Still Aren’t Contenders But They’re Finally Fun Again
The Chicago Bulls have been a play-in staple the last few years. From a lack of free agency moves, insignificant trades, and hit-and-miss draft picks, it doesn’t feel like the Bulls are doing a ton to change their image. Jerry Reinsdorf is one of the cheapest owners in sports, and as long as the Bulls continue to fill the United Center, I’m not sure a lot will change.
Fortunately, things have been a little better in Chicago this season. I don’t blame you if you haven’t kept up with the Bulls. They’re the 9 seed in a bad Eastern Conference, and their roster feels quite poorly constructed. They’ve got a plethora of guards to choose from, but lack size at both the forward and center positions.
Speaking of undersized players, the Bulls have recently added the shortest player in the NBA to their rotation due to injuries. Japanese sensation Yuki Kawamura stands at only 5’8” but is one of the most fun players to watch in the league. Had been in the G-League most of this season, but made his mark in his first piece of game action in 2026.
Yuki was hitting jumpers, causing havoc, and becoming the smallest player in NBA history to win a jump ball. I think he’s a perfectly symbozlies everything that is fun about the Bulls this year.
When he’s been healthy, Coby White continues to be one of the most underrated guards. When he’s been able to run the point for the Bulls, they’ve been one of the most efficient offenses around. When White is playing, the Bulls have a +7.8 plus/minus rating, an 88th-percentile points-per-possession rating, a 97th-percentile eFG%, and a 90th-percentile TOV%. Simply put, the Bulls are an elite offense when Coby White is active.
Matas Buzelis has also taken a leap forward offensively for the Bulls this season. Everyone knew Buzelis was going to be a bit of a project when Chicago drafted him last season. Fortunately, he’s already ahead of schedule on offensive development this year. He’s nearly doubled his points per-game, while becoming even more efficient from the field.
Nobody had Buzelis as much of a shooting threat while playing for the G-League Ignite. He shot just 26% from deep in his two years with the Ignite, but now he is shooting nearly 37% from deep on over 5 attempts a night. All of this while still delivering as promised on the defensive side of things.
The Bulls also have players like Josh Giddey and Ayo Dosunmu, who have had to increase their offensive roles and have seen comparable increases in production. Dosunmu becoming a 45% threat from beyond the arc has given the Bulls so much more to work with. He’s either increased his trade value or made other guards on the team that much more expendable.
Chicago won’t be playing for a title this year, but they’ve put together a core that is one of the most fun to watch as a fan of the league. Hopefully, they can add a true star to this core because they have a lot of young guys who thrive as solid role players.
Sports
Three Blockbuster NBA Trades We’d Love to See Before the Deadline
One of the NBA’s biggest names could be headed for a new home as the league works its way toward the trade deadline on Thursday.
The Milwaukee Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo has missed his team’s last three games because of a calf strain, but injuries in general — and calf issues in particular — are no reason to call off a deal.
In what has gone down as one of the most surprising trades ever, the Dallas Mavericks traded Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers last season as he sat out with a calf strain.
While the Dončić deal came out of nowhere, an Antetokounmpo trade seems inevitable. The 10-time All-Star and two-time MVP has not formally requested a trade, and the Bucks have not said they are looking to move on from their franchise player, but the sides seem to have come to an understanding that it is time for a change.
For Antetokounmpo, at age 31, there could be a desire to play for a different contender in a larger market. For the Bucks, they can see they are losing their grip as one of the top teams in the NBA.
A potential Antetokounmpo trade could be the one that starts a flood of player movement before the deadline.
Here are three trades we would like to see:
Antetokounmpo to the Warriors
A combination of Antetokounmpo and Steph Curry pulling from the same side of the rope is too irresistible to deny. It is likely going to take many first-round draft picks and players like Jonathan Kuminga and the injured Jimmy Butler to make it happen, but that Curry window is not going to stay open forever.
The reality is that Antetokounmpo to the New York Knicks would create an even bigger title contender, but the Warriors could end up offering more in order to shorten their longer championship odds.
Don’t count out the Houston Rockets, Minnesota Timberwolves and Miami Heat in making a push for Antetokounmpo. And did you hear the one about the Dallas Mavericks moving Cooper Flagg in a package to make a deal with the Bucks happen? Considering that Dallas is starting to fall deeply in love with Flagg, maybe a new heartbreak isn’t the best idea.
Ja Morant to the Timberwolves
Who were the top four teams in the Western Conference heading into play this week? If you said the Minnesota Timberwolves, it would be a reasonable assumption — but they were just on the outside looking in at teams who would have home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs.
Morant running the floor with Anthony Edwards and Julius Randle would add heat to the Minneapolis thaw this spring. Morant will be a hot commodity once Antetokounmpo is traded, so the Wolves will have stiff competition to get a deal done.
Because it was vague, Morant’s “time tells the truth” post on social media over the weekend read like more of a knock on the Grizzlies than a promise to dominate the league soon. Either way, it shows that whoever makes this acquisition will be getting a motivated player.
Anthony Davis to the Clippers
In an ordinary world, the Clippers would have set a course to tank the season right around the start of the new year to wring the most value possible from their next first-round draft pick. Except the Oklahoma City Thunder own the Clippers’ next first-round pick, so losing was not the preferred course of action.
Instead, the Clippers pushed oft-injured Kawhi Leonard to the front of their revamped offense, buckled down on defense, and have been the best team in the NBA over the past six weeks.
Without a first-round pick to look forward to, perhaps the Clippers roll the dice and move some expiring contracts for Davis, who has been a bust since the Dončić trade. The Mavericks would rather land a first-round draft pick for all of their trade troubles over the last year, but if they are out of options as the deadline ticks near, maybe salary cap relief wins out.
