Sports
No. 23 Miami (Ohio) stays unbeaten, edges Buffalo
Miami RedHawks guard Luke Skaljac (3) dribbles the ball in the second half of the NCAA Basketball game at Millett Hall in Oxford, Ohio, on Saturday, January 31, 2026. Luke Skaljac scored a career-high 19 points as No. 23 Miami (Ohio) remained unbeaten with a 73-71 victory over host Buffalo on Tuesday night in a Mid-American Conference contest.
Buffalo closed to 73-71 on a Noah Batchelor 3-pointer with 12 seconds to play and had a chance to win the game, but Ryan Sabol’s 3-pointer with 4 seconds left hit the front rim and bounced out.
Skaljac also had five steals, four rebounds and three assists. Miami (23-0, 11-0 MAC) received an 11-point performance from Brant Byers and 10 points, five rebounds and eight assists from Peter Suder.
Arizona (22-0) is the only other unbeaten Division I team in the country.
Buffalo’s Angelo Brizzi made nine of 14 field-goal attempts and scored a game-high 22 points. Daniel Freitag added 18 points, seven assists and four rebounds for the Bulls (14-9, 4-7).
Suder’s layup capped a 10-0 spurt that handed Miami a 48-37 lead with 17:56 to play. The RedHawks had their largest lead, 52-40, after Skaljac’s jumper with 16:01 left, but Buffalo scored the next nine points to pull within three. It was 62-62 after Brizzi’s 3-pointer with 6:39 remaining.
The teams tied twice more before the RedHawks opened a 72-66 advantage on Skaljac’s layup with 3:02 left and 18-foot jumper with 1:35 remaining.
Brizzi responded with a dunk with 1:20 to go before Justin Kirby made one of two free throws with 32 seconds left for Miami’s 73-68 lead.
The Bulls had a significant edge in the game at the free-throw line, where they made 14 of 18 attempts. The RedHawks didn’t attempt a free throw until 9:25 remained in the game. Miami was 3 of 6 at the foul line.
Neither team led by more than seven points in the first half. Buffalo had a 33-32 lead following a Batchelor 3-pointer with 4:07 left in the half before Miami gained a 38-35 by halftime.
The RedHawks shot 56.7% (17 of 30) from the field in the first half, while the Bulls shot 38.7% (12 of 31).
Miami earned a 105-102 overtime victory in the first meeting between the teams this season on Jan. 17 in Oxford, Ohio.
–Field Level Media
Sports
March Madness “Group of Death” East Region Delivers Must-Watch Sweet 16 Matchups
There’s a reason it will run you several hundred bucks if you want to catch some basketball in the nation’s capital later this week.
And it has nothing to do with the dreadful Washington Wizards.
The get-in price for the NCAA Tournament East Regional reportedly hit a Sweet 16 record of $482, with most tickets going for even more.
No wonder. The region went exactly according to plan.
Duke, St. John’s, UConn, Michigan State. Scheyer, Pitino, Izzo, Hurley.
You’ll hear the soccer term “Group of Death” thrown around in the months leading up to the World Cup. The selection committee absolutely devised a Group of Death in the top-left quadrant of your brackets this year. And it’s going to be scintillating cinema this Friday and Sunday.
This region also featured blue bloods Kansas and UCLA and would have held similar appeal if a few second-round games went the other way. But all due respect to Bill Self and Darryn Peterson, that fantastic ending to a sometimes difficult-to-watch St. John’s-Kansas game set us up for maximum drama.
“Bells (Dylan Darling) comes up to me, and says run (a play for me). So I walk away like, wait a second, he hasn’t scored a bucket and he wants to run a play for himself. And I’m thinking, ‘But he’s Bells!’” Pitino relayed after the Red Storm’s buzzer-beater.
“Bells” shot less than 40% from the field this year! Is Pitino just YOLO-ing it out here in his 200th NCAA Tournament?
Never mind, because it worked, and as a result we get Pitino vs. Duke on a Friday evening, a rematch of the Christian Laettner game in 1992. The other side pits UConn against Michigan State, with a coach in Izzo who may not have any more chances to go capture a second national title.
“When you have UConn, Michigan State, St. John’s now with Rick and how they’re playing, and Duke. I mean, that’s not a regional final, that a Final Four,” Izzo said this week.
The loaded regional certainly raised eyebrows. For one, it could produce Part IV of UConn-St. John’s, who split their regular-season series in dramatic fashion — including UConn’s absolute beatdown of St. John’s 72-40 just a month ago in Hartford — followed by the Johnnies’ 72-52 revenge in the Big East title game.
“Obviously, we both hoped for a fourth meeting in D.C. It stinks a little bit that they threw us both in the same region,” Hurley said. “It feels like the combination of St. John’s being under-seeded, as well as putting us both in the same region. …
“It’s pretty brutal on Twitter, I think, and socials between our fan bases, but I think we have to try to come together Friday night against our opponent so we can have a blood bath on Sunday.”
Any Elite Eight outcome is mouthwatering to college hoops heads. Duke-Michigan State? That would be a rematch of the 2019 Elite Eight in the same exact building, with the Spartans prevailing and ending Zion Williamson’s college career. St. John’s-Michigan State gives you probably the final meeting of the two old ball coaches still hanging on from their generation.
And of course, Duke-UConn — the traditional blue blood trying to find its first title post-Coach K, versus the program Bomani Jones aptly called nouveau riche, with six titles since ‘99 and going for an unbelievable three in four years.
The head coaches have five natties between them, not counting Scheyer’s as a player or assistant, and if you’re all being honest with yourselves, one of the main reasons you’ll tune in is that you hate at least one of them. It’s not my business who that is. Take your pick. But I’d guarantee these guys are going to produce the story of the regionals, if not the tournament writ large, and this Group of Death will be fantastic for the health of the sport.
Sports
Why the Denver Nuggets Are the Most Feared Team in the NBA Right Now
As we head down the home stretch of the NBA regular season, those who haven’t paid attention for five months all of a sudden have a need to know:
Who is the most feared team in basketball right now?
Ask 30 NBA coaches and I’m guessing you’d get three responses …
- A vast majority won’t want to be bothered by such nonsense in the middle of March and will take the no-brainer expressway: The defending champ who also has been the best team this regular season, the Thunder.
- Maybe a handful who have recently gotten bonked on the head by a Victor Wembanyama swat will consider it cool to pick the new kids on the block, the Spurs, failing to consider that the NBA playoffs take on a football persona and Wemby more closely resembles a figure skater.
- And then there’s the guy who’ll elicit a laugh by citing the UConn Lady Huskies, perhaps hoping the headlines will help continue to get Geno Auriemma to realize what a great thing he has when said NBA coach’s boss considers a replacement this off-season.
How can you dispute any of those? Well, here’s how …
Imagine if there were a team that’s a proven winner: A champion in 2023 who then came within one game of a second and third straight trip to the Western finals.
Imagine if that team were led by the dominant force in the league, a guy equally adept at scoring as he is assisting others. And he rebounds pretty good, too.
Imagine that superstar having a high-scoring sidekick who complements a two-man game the likes of which the league hasn’t seen since Stockton and Malone.
Imagine that dynamic duo playing alongside one of the best two-way forwards in the NBA, a guy who has played 1,500 fewer minutes this season than the guys against which he will be chasing down rebounds in April and May.
Imagine the league’s most perfectly molded trio getting help from two defensive-minded swingmen, one who has found time to make 40 of his last 68 shots, the other who has connected on 33 of his last 53.
Of course, we’re talking here about the Nuggets, Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray, Aaron Gordon, Cam Johnson and Christian Braun. And you know what they say about that team:
Take Jokic off the court and they go from the penthouse to the outhouse without a parachute.
Alas, that’s no longer the case …
Imagine the NBA’s most physically gifted reserve, a dunking, shot-blocking marvel who now all of a sudden can shoot (41% on 3’s this season).
Imagine the league’s best 3-point-shooting reserve guard as your seventh man.
Imagine a fellow veteran who has made 17 of his last 31 shots, and another defense-first guy who has drilled 18 of his last 30.
Imagine the best backup big man in the league, a guy who punishes his counterpart while the boss rests.
You heard that right: The Nuggets now employ what rates statistically as an average NBA bench. That’s a vast improvement, but that’s also misleading.
The aforementioned top five backups – Peyton Watson, Tim Hardaway Jr., Bruce Brown, Spencer Jones and Jonas Valanciunas – have been pressed into making 87 starts, leading to various rookies and two-way players watering down the reserves’ numbers.
If this team can stay healthy … that’s a big if. They were all out there Sunday night against the Portland Trail Blazers, giving their home fans – and the rest of the league – a glimpse into the future.
The Nuggets, who at this point barely know each other, dominated a pretty good Portland team in pretty much every aspect of the game. They shot well, passed well, defended well … and, oh yeah, had Jokic on the court.
The key is: They’re all healthy now, which makes those 42 games missed by Gordon, 36 by Braun, 26 by Johnson, 22 by Watson … even the 16 by Jokic blessings considering the gauntlet of the Western playoffs ahead.
And that’s yet another reason to fear the Nuggets.
The Eastern playoffs figure to be more competitive than ever this year, with the likes of the Hawks, 76ers, Magic, Heat and Hornets all fully capable of pulling first-round upsets.
The most feared team in the East? Your next playoff opponent.
The West isn’t as deep, but one team lurks in the shadow of the Thunder and Spurs – the Nuggets.
They could be the first-round opponent of a top-four team in the West. All that hard work and imagine that.
Fear the Nuggets. It’s just March, but already it’s building.
Sports
Syracuse hires former player Gerry McNamara as coach
Siena Saints head coach Gerry McNamara claps Thursday, March 19, 2026, during the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament first round game against the Duke Blue Devils at Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Greenville, South Carolina. Gerry McNamara, who led Syracuse to its lone national title in 2003 as the point guard, was named the school’s head coach on Tuesday.
McNamara, 42, was the head coach at Siena the past two seasons, guiding the Saints to the NCAA Tournament this season after winning the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference tournament. As a No. 16 seed, Siena gave top-seeded Duke a scare in the first round on Thursday before losing 71-65.
Before taking over at Siena, McNamara served as an assistant coach under Jim Boeheim and Adrian Autry for 15 seasons.
“I love this place. I love what Syracuse means: to the fans, to the players who have worn this jersey, to the people of Central New York. This program has given me everything, and I am ready to give everything back to it,” McNamara said. “College basketball has changed. How you build a program, recruit talent, compete for resources and win looks different than it did even five years ago. I know that. I’m ready for it. What hasn’t changed is what Orange Nation expects, and what this place deserves. We are going to build something special here.”
Along with helping Syracuse win the national title during his freshman season alongside Carmelo Anthony, McNamara holds the program records for 3-pointers (400), 3-point attempts (1,131), free-throw percentage (88.8%) and minutes played (4,799). An All-Big East honoree three times, he started all 135 games of his career from 2002-06. The school retired his No. 3 jersey in 2023.
National champion, program icon and No. 3 in the rafters.
Welcome home, Coach McNamara! ???? pic.twitter.com/Te5UfahJHE
— Syracuse University (@SyracuseU) March 24, 2026
McNamara returned to his alma mater in 2009 as a graduate assistant, then was elevated to an assistant in 2011 under Boeheim. He received another promotion, to associate head coach, when Autry was named Boeheim’s successor in 2023.
McNamara left for Siena in 2024, posting a 37-30 record in two seasons. Before this spring, the Saints had not made the NCAA Tournament since 2010. The team was 4-23 in the season before McNamara’s arrival.
“Gerry McNamara is who our storied basketball program needs at this important moment,” says Bryan B. Blair, incoming director of athletics. “In every conversation, his competitive fire and passion was undeniable — it’s simply part of his DNA. He returns to Syracuse as a proven Division I head coach who led a program through a turnaround and back to the NCAA Tournament. At every stop in his playing and coaching journey, he has elevated those around him — student-athletes, staff and the broader community — through his energy, his standards and his ability to connect.
“While Gerry’s deep connection to Syracuse is meaningful, it’s simply a bonus to what he brings as a coach and leader. He honors our past, but he is driven to build for the future. This is a critical moment for Syracuse basketball, and it will take all of us — everyone connected to Syracuse University, Syracuse Athletics and Central New York — locking arms and supporting this program like never before. We welcome Gerry home and can’t wait to see where he takes our program.”
Autry, also a former star player at Syracuse, was fired earlier this month after the Orange missed out on the NCAA Tournament in each of his three seasons at the helm.
Syracuse did not qualify for each of the last five NCAA Tournaments, which represents the school’s longest dry spell since 1967-72. From 1973 to 2021, the Orange participated in 39 of the 48 tournaments.
Siena praised McNamara in a statement issued Tuesday and said a national search for his successor would begin immediately.
“Gerry led our Saints with character, grace, and integrity, and built a basketball program that our community was proud of, while reinvigorating our fan base.” the statement read.
“While we would have loved for him to stay at Siena and build upon the success he created, we recognize the unique opportunity for Gerry to return to his alma mater, where he won a National Championship.”
–Field Level Media
