Sports
No. 4 Duke cements ACC lead with win over No. 20 Clemson
Feb 14, 2026; Durham, North Carolina, USA; Duke Blue Devils forward Cameron Boozer (12) is greeted by forward Dame Sarr (7) after scoring a basket during the first half against the Clemson Tigers at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Rob Kinnan-Imagn Images Cameron Boozer (18 points, eight rebounds) and Isaiah Evans (17 points) led No. 4 Duke to a 67-54 victory against No. 20 Clemson in a key Atlantic Coast Conference matchup Saturday afternoon at Durham, N.C.
Cayden Boozer added 12 points for the Blue Devils, who pulled away early in the second half courtesy of a strong defensive performance. Duke (23-2, 12-1 ACC) has won back-to-back games since a last-second loss at rival North Carolina last weekend.
Carter Welling (12 points) and RJ Godfrey (10 points) paced Clemson (20-6, 10-3), which began the week with a chance to move atop the ACC standings. Instead, the Tigers lost two in a row after suffering an upset at home Wednesday vs. Virginia Tech.
Clemson shot 35.1% from the field, including 6-for-24 on 3-pointers.
Cooper Flagg, a star freshman from last season’s Duke team and now a rookie with the Dallas Mavericks, was among those in attendance at Cameron Indoor Stadium.
The Blue Devils made 10 shots from beyond the 3-point arc for their first double-figure total in that category since Jan. 10 vs. SMU.
Duke scored the first eight points — with five from Evans — of the second half for a 38-26 lead. The margin grew to 52-33, with Clemson shooting 3-for-16 in the first nine minutes of the second half.
Duke made five 3-point shots in the game’s first 15 minutes, while Clemson was 0-for-4 at that juncture. But the Blue Devils were aiming for perimeter production, taking 17 of their first 23 shots from beyond the arc.
Duke stretched its lead to 28-20 on Evans’s 3-pointer, with Clemson calling time-out. The Tigers were within 31-26 by halftime despite 1-for-9 shooting on 3s.
Duke center Patrick Ngongba II, whose status had been in doubt because of a wrist injury, started but played only four first-half minutes after picking up two fouls. He finished with six points in 19 minutes.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Australian takes gold, 2 US women medal in dual moguls
Jaelin Kauf of United States in action during the women’s dual moguls final on Saturday. She won the silver medal at the Milan Cortina Olympics. LIVIGNO, Italy — Australia’s Jakara Anthony won the gold medal in the women’s freestyle skiing dual moguls at the Winter Olympics on Saturday, redeeming herself after a disappointing loss three days earlier in the single-format moguls.
Anthony, 27, became the first Australian to earn two Winter Olympics gold medals when she overtook American Jaelin Kauf under heavy snow in the northern Italian town of Livigno. Kauf earned silver, and bronze went to fellow American Elizabeth Lemley.
“This one is really different to the last one because I picked this up after the heartbreak of the other day,” Anthony said of her new medal, which joins the one she earned in the single moguls in Beijing in 2022.
Dual moguls is a new sport at the Olympics, pitting skiers together in a head-to-head elimination format in which two competitors race side-by-side through parallel bump fields. Speed counts, but so do turns and aerial maneuvers.
Anthony crossed the finish line a fraction of a second before Kauf but had to wait for the judges’ final assessment. She smiled and pumped her arms in the air when she saw she had earned a score of 20, compared to Kauf’s 15. A throng of Australian supporters cheered and waved yellow inflated kangaroos on the side of the mountain.
At the medal ceremony, Anthony broke into a wide smile as she celebrated her historic second Olympic gold.
Anthony had been the favorite to win the singles but wobbled out of line in her second run to finish eighth. In the single moguls, riders tackle the course solo and the highest score wins.
Heavy snow fell throughout the women’s dual moguls finals, hindering visibility for the skiers.
Kauf’s second-place run gave the 29-year-old her third Olympic silver medal. She finished second in the singles at the Milan Cortina Games and at Beijing in 2022.
“I was really going for gold, but I guess ‘Silver Jae’ has a ring to it, so I’m living up to the name,” Kauf said.
The 20-year-old Lemley, the surprise gold medalist in the singles, made it to the podium in the dual moguls despite a crash in the semifinals. She hurt her elbow but was determined to keep going, she said.
“I was able to just push the pain out of my head and ski as if it was any other run,” she said.
Singles bronze medalist Perrine Laffont of France finished fourth in the dual event.
–Reuters, Special to Field Level Media
Sports
US speed skater Jordan Stolz wins 500m, sets Olympic record
Gold medalist Jordan Stolz of the United States won the gold medal in record time on Saturda in the men’s 500m at the Milan Cortina Olympics. MILAN — American speed skating phenomenon Jordan Stolz once again stole the spotlight on Saturday, rocketing to the men’s 500 meters title at the Winter Olympics and securing his second gold medal of the Milan Cortina Games.
Stolz already had met the towering expectations by winning the men’s 1,000m on Wednesday, the United States’ first speed skating gold of the Games.
On Saturday, he topped a podium completed by Dutchman Jenning de Boo with silver and Canada’s Laurent Dubreuil with bronze.
The 21-year-old Stolz, from Wisconsin, blasted to an Olympic-record time of 33.77, finishing 0.11 seconds clear of de Boo.
Drawn in the 13th of 15 pairs and starting from the inner lane, Stolz powered off the line before unleashing the explosive top-end speed that has become his trademark.
De Boo pushed hard to keep the American within reach, clipping the barrier after crossing the line as Stolz saluted a raucous crowd heavily dominated by Dutch supporters.
Earlier, Dubreuil — racing in the 10th pair — – broke the Olympic record with a time of 34.26, before Stolz shattered it minutes later.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
Report: Kevin Fiala's NHL season likely over after Olympic injury, surgery
Feb 5, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Los Angeles Kings left wing Kevin Fiala (22) warms up before a game against the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images Kevin Fiala underwent surgery on his left leg after being removed from the ice on a stretcher Friday from Switzerland’s preliminary round game in the Milan Cortina Olympics, and ESPN reported Saturday that the injury will likely end his NHL season with the Los Angeles Kings.
The Swiss Ice Hockey Federation announced the surgery on Saturday for Fiala and said he will miss the remainder of the Olympics.
The injury occurred late in the third period of Switzerland’s 5-1 loss to Canada on Friday in a Group A preliminary round game in Milan. Fiala got his legs tangled with Canada’s Tom Wilson with just less than three minutes left in the game. Fiala was unable to get to his feet and medical personnel attended to him after a stoppage in play.
“Obviously it doesn’t look very good,” Switzerland coach Patrick Fischer said after the game. “Tough moment for Kevin and the whole team, obviously.”
Fiala, 29, has recorded 40 points (18 goals, 22 assists) in 56 games this season with the Kings, who reside three points in back of the Anaheim Ducks for the final wild-card spot in the NHL’s Western Conference.
“We need that guy on my team back home, big time,” said Canada defenseman Drew Doughty, who plays for the Kings.
Another Kings’ teammate, Adrian Kempe, also lamented the loss after his Swedish team’s 5-3 win over Slovakia on Saturday.
“It’s really tough for him personally and for us as a team. You know how much he means to our team back home in L.A.,” Kempe said. “It’s just very unfortunate for him that it comes in a tournament like this that we’ve been looking forward to playing in for so long. I feel for him.”
For Fiala’s career, the 2022-23 All-Star has 229 goals and 299 assists across 707 games. He is in his 12th NHL season.
–Field Level Media
