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No. 6 Gonzaga wary of Saint Mary's as WCC rivalry winds down

NCAA Basketball: San Francisco at GonzagaJan 24, 2026; Spokane, Washington, USA; Gonzaga Bulldogs center Ismaila Diagne (24) celebrates after a game against the San Francisco Dons at McCarthey Athletic Center. Gonzaga Bulldogs won 68-66. Mandatory Credit: James Snook-Imagn Images

The rivalry between Saint Mary’s and No. 6 Gonzaga has been one of the most intense in the nation over the past two decades.

However, yearly multiple meetings are about to become a thing of the past with the Bulldogs moving into the Pac-12 next season. The first of this season’s two West Coast Conference regular-season meetings is Saturday night at Spokane, Wash.

Gonzaga has won 27 of the past 37 meetings, but that stretch includes the Bulldogs dropping six of the past 11 matchups. Gonzaga definitely would like to perform a bit better against the Gaels than it did last season.

The teams played three times in 2024-25, with Saint Mary’s winning both regular-season meetings before Gonzaga beat the Gaels in the WCC tournament championship game.

The Bulldogs (21-1, 9-0 WCC) have won 14 consecutive games, but coach Mark Few is expecting another tussle with Saint Mary’s.

“They’re just really, really, really solid,” Few said Thursday. “They do not beat themselves. They almost always stay between you and the baskets. You have to make shots over the top of them. It sounds simple, but they’re really, really solid there.

“They’re always a great rebounding team, and then you’re just going to face a lot of middle pick-and-roll and post-ups by their bigs.”

The Gaels (19-3, 8-1) also will pack plenty of confidence as they look to win in Spokane for a third straight season for just the second time in the history of the series. Saint Mary’s won three straight at Gonzaga from 1988-1990. The teams first met in the 1971-72 season prior to becoming WCC combatants.

Saint Mary’s is looking to clinch its 18th 20-win campaign in the past 19 seasons. The lone time the Gaels missed during the stretch was the abbreviated 2020-21 season that was plagued by COVID-19.

The Gaels have yet to be nationally ranked in a season in which coach Randy Bennett had to do some reloading. Saint Mary’s fell on neutral courts against then-No. 24 Vanderbilt and Boise State and dropped a road game against WCC rival Santa Clara 63-54 on Jan. 17.

Bennett has been pleased with the progress from the beginning of the campaign.

“Guys are growing up. Our young guys are growing up,” Bennett told the WCC Insider podcast. “We’ve kind of established our roles and rotations, which I mean in years past, it’s been in place earlier in the season, and this, we’re just kind of getting to it now, but they’ve done a good job.”

Saint Mary’s is led by Paulius Murauskas, who leads the WCC with a 19.3 scoring average. The 6-foot-8 Lithuanian also leads the Gaels in rebounding (7.5 per game), the third-best mark in the WCC.

“He grabbed the reins,” Bennett said. “I’m proud of him for it. He’s got to keep improving and finish the race.”

Murauskas had 24 points and nine rebounds last Saturday when Saint Mary’s posted a 75-69 road win against Portland.

Few is greatly concerned about Murauskas, but the Zags are about to get star big man Graham Ike (ankle) back after a three-game absence. Ike leads the club in scoring (18.1 ppg) and ranks second in the WCC in rebounding (8.8 rpg).

“He looks good to me,” Few said of Ike. “He’s practiced the last couple of days, so he’s back to moving around.”

The Gaels’ Andrew McKeever tops the WCC in rebounding at 9.4 boards per game.

Gonzaga remains without standout forward Braden Huff (knee), and not having either of its two stars almost cost the Bulldogs last Saturday.

Gonzaga led by 10 points with 1:45 left against San Francisco and narrowly escaped with a 68-66 home victory when a 3-point attempt by the Dons’ Junjie Wang bounced off the backboard and then the rim with less than two seconds left.

–Field Level Media

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Knicks and Nuggets Blow Big Leads: What Went Wrong in Game 2?

Roughly 5,000 feet of elevation separate Denver and New York City.

Still, gravity works the same regardless of where one stands. Just ask the NBA teams in both towns.

“You get too high, and you get, I don’t want to say cocky, but feeling yourself,” Nuggets guard Tim Hardaway Jr. said.

That sensation went south on either side of the country Monday night.

After squandering sizable leads that would have cemented commanding 2-0 advantages in their respective first-round playoff series, the Nuggets and Knicks now find themselves bracing for a fight.

Should their opponents ultimately have their number, Denver and New York will look back with disdain on 19 and 14. Those were the Game 2 cushions the teams coughed up as the No. 3 seeds in the Eastern and Western Conference.

“It’s a game we should’ve won,” Knicks guard Josh Hart said. “In the playoffs, we can’t give away games.”

Be that as it may, the Knicks did just that against the Atlanta Hawks. They controlled the outcome for much of the night and took a 12-point edge into the fourth quarter after leading by as many as 14.

Then New York shot 5-for-22 from the floor in the final 12 minutes compared to 10-for-15 for Atlanta. Fighting through vulgar chants from the Madison Square Garden faithful, Hawks star CJ McCullom scored six straight points down the stretch during one key sequence on the way to a game-high 32.

“In that fourth quarter, you could tell [the Hawks] were playing with a level of desperation,” Knicks coach Mike Brown said. “There were four 50-50 balls, and they got three of the four. We always use that stat to gauge the level of aggression in a game. In that fourth quarter, their aggression stepped up.”

New York’s melted at the same time. How many late possessions saw the Knicks pass or hold the ball around the perimeter before settling for subpar looks from 3-point range? The Knicks went 3-for-11 from deep as part of their flop.

Denver led the Minnesota Timberwolves by 19 points early in the second quarter before crumbling. The Nuggets still were ahead by three points to start the fourth quarter but a combined 2-for-12 shooting effort from pillars Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray in the final 12 minutes took a toll.

“I feel like we had the game in hand, and then we just didn’t make our shots,” Murray said.

As with the Knicks and Hawks, the reversal of fortunes stemmed both from the hosts’ miscues and an outstanding effort from a visiting player, as Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards had 30 points.

“Great leadership, positive,” Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said. “He recognized he needed to get into attack mode and get downhill a little bit more. He did that.”

The Knicks and Nuggets no doubt sensed the need to amp up their own urgency as things started slipping away Monday.

That neither could act upon it didn’t signal the end for either New York or Denver, of course. But now there’s unnecessary added weight for the climb back to the top.

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Pistons seek return to identity vs. Magic after Game 1 shocker

NBA: Playoffs-Orlando Magic at Detroit PistonsApr 19, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Pistons forward Tobias Harris (12) is defended by Orlando Magic guard Desmond Bane (3) in the second half during the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

After an exceptional regular season, this wasn’t the start to the NBA playoffs that the Detroit Pistons envisioned.

Reeling from a stunning Game 1 loss in which only two players reached double figures, the Eastern Conference’s top seed heads into Game 2 Wednesday against the visiting Orlando Magic facing early pressure to reset the best-of-seven series.

The eighth-seeded Magic controlled the opener from the start, never trailing and leaning on a balanced offensive attack. Paolo Banchero led the way with 23 points while Franz Wagner scored 11 of his 19 in the fourth quarter to help close out the 112-101 win.

For Detroit, the issue wasn’t just the loss — it was how it happened. The Pistons never established their defensive identity and struggled to find consistent offense beyond star guard Cade Cunningham, two areas that will be central entering Game 2.

“It starts, always, with us defensively,” said Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff. “When you go back and watch the film of that (game), we weren’t ourselves defensively. The telling tale is typically when we play them, they go to the free-throw line a ton.

“… We went 38 (times) but they went 19. So that means we weren’t playing our brand of basketball, being physical, being handsy, being aggressive. That kind of sets the tone for us.”

Offensively, the Pistons leaned on Cunningham, who scored 39 points, but got little other support — scoring their fewest points in nearly three months, since a loss to the Phoenix Suns on Jan. 29. Detroit will need more help from All-Star center Jalen Duren, who was held to just eight points and seven rebounds in Game 1.

“They came out ready from the jump,” Duren said. “We didn’t really meet their intensity. They’ve been playing with their backs against the walls the last few weeks, so they were already kind of already rolling. I think we just got to do a better job meeting that intensity.”

Duren said the Pistons remain confident despite the loss, which extended their home playoff losing streak to 11 games, the longest in NBA history.

“We know the type of team we are,” Duren said. “We feel like we’re the better team. We know that we’ve just got to make adjustments and come out smarter, come out playing harder.”

Orlando coach Jamahl Mosley said he has talked to his team about not becoming too overconfident coming off Sunday’s win.

“It’s one game at a time,” Mosley said of his message to the team. “It’s the reality that, yeah, you did get the Game 1 win, but now you have to go and figure out how to get a Game 2 (win). There’s going to be, obviously, the positive talk about what you’ve done, and thinking there’s reasons to celebrate, but at the end of the day, it’s one game, and that’s the most important piece that we’ve talked about: just taking it one game at a time.”

Banchero said the team has received the message, and he believes the key for the Magic is to play defense like they did in the opener.

“I thought we were on a string, just communicating, talking out coverages,” Banchero said. “I think it’s just going to continue to take that, being aggressive, being the aggressors on defense and just not trying to give them much. Obviously they’re going to make shots, but just not trying to give them any free looks.”

–Field Level Media

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Lynx star Napheesa Collier (ankle) targets June for on-court work

Basketball: Unrivaled:Semi-Finals Vinyl vs Phantom BCMar 2, 2026; Brooklyn, NY, USA; Unrivaled Co-founder Napheesa Collier at Barclay’s Center. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The Minnesota Lynx said Tuesday that star forward Napheesa Collier’s rehab from left ankle surgery is “progressing as expected,” and she could resume on-court activities in early June.

The team plans to release updates on Collier’s progress when available.

The timeline means Collier will miss, at minimum, the first month of the WNBA season, which begins May 10 for the Lynx.

Collier underwent surgery on her ankle on March 24 after sustaining a severe injury during the 2025 playoffs. Per reports at the time, she sustained a Grade 2 tear of three ligaments in the ankle and a muscle in her left shin on a collision during Game 3 of the playoff semifinal series vs. Phoenix.

Collier, 29, averaged a career-high 22.9 points and shot 40.3% from 3-point range to go with 7.3 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 1.6 steals and 1.5 blocks per game last year. The back-to-back WNBA Most Valuable Player runner-up, Collier is a five-time All-Star and earned MVP honors in the 2024 Commissioner’s Cup final and the 2025 All-Star Game.

–Field Level Media

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