Sports
No. 9 Illinois rallies past No. 5 Nebraska with big second half
Feb 1, 2026; Lincoln, Nebraska, USA; Illinois Fighting Illini center Tomislav Ivisic (13) and center Zvonimir Ivisic (44) celebrate after a shot in the first half against the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Pinnacle Bank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dylan Widger-Imagn Images Keaton Wagler scored 23 of his game-high 28 points in the second half as No. 9 Illinois rallied for a 78-69 Big Ten victory over No. 5 Nebraska on Sunday afternoon in Lincoln, Neb.
After going 2-for-9 from the field in the first half, Wagler canned 3 of 4 from 3-point range and 10 of 12 at the line in the second half for the Fighting Illini (19-3, 10-1 Big Ten), who won their 11th game in a row and pulled into a share of the Big Ten lead alongside Michigan.
Jake Davis scored 13 points, and Tomislav Ivisic added 12 points and eight rebounds as Illinois held a 40-27 edge on the boards and a 28-18 advantage in points in the paint.
Braden Frager came off the bench to score 20 points for the Cornhuskers (20-2, 9-2), who dropped their second game in a row despite hitting 15 of 35 from 3-point range. Pryce Sandfort scored 14 points and Sam Hoiberg added 13, but Rienk Mast, who missed Tuesday’s loss at Michigan due to the flu, hit just 2 of 10 shots and scored all five of his points in the final minute.
Similar to the teams’ meeting at Illinois, where Nebraska earned an 83-80 victory on Dec. 13, Sandfort buried two 3-pointers during the opening minutes to stake the Huskers to a 9-4 lead.
Wagler missed his first four shots, but his driving layup at the 12:46 mark gave Illinois its first edge at 10-9. This coincided with Illinois’ decision to switch to a Twin Towers lineup and a 2-3 zone that slowed Nebraska for several minutes.
Then Frager, playing for the first time since rolling his ankle Jan. 21 against Washington, swished three 3-point attempts in a 4:22 stretch to forge a 20-20 tie with 7:11 remaining in the half.
Illinois took a 31-25 lead late in the first half, but Nebraska answered with back-to-back 3-pointers by Sandfort and Sam Hoiberg. Worse for the Illini between those shots, Wagler took a blow to the midsection while trying to chase a loose ball.
With Wagler on the bench, Frager drilled a 3-pointer as part of Nebraska’s 11-0 run. The Huskers finished 11 of 20 from 3-point range in the first half to take a 39-33 lead into the break.
Illinois enjoyed an 11-2 burst early in the second half and seized a 46-44 lead on Tomislav Ivisic’s running lefty bank with 15:06 to play.
After the teams exchanged the lead, Illinois went on a 10-0 spree that began with a Davis 3-pointer and concluded with a Wagler 3-pointer to make it 63-52 with 6:45 to go. Nebraska never got closer than seven the rest of the way.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Bennett Stirtz excels as Iowa knocks off Northwestern
Feb 8, 2026; Iowa City, Iowa, USA; Iowa Hawkeyes guard Bennett Stirtz (14) is defended by Northwestern Wildcats guard Jake West (3) during the first half at Carver-Hawkeye Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images Bennett Stirtz scored a career-high 36 points and Tavion Banks added 13 as Iowa defeated visiting Northwestern 76-70 on Sunday in Iowa City, Iowa, to extend its winning streak to six games.
Iowa (18-5, 8-4 Big Ten) eclipsed last season’s total for overall and conference victories behind a plus-12 rebounding margin and a 16-point edge in points in the paint.
After leading by as many as 14 points after halftime, the Hawkeyes saw the Wildcats draw within three on Nick Martinelli’s jumper with nine minutes left to cap a 7-0 run.
Iowa limited Northwestern to four field goals the rest of the way.
Stirtz, who has scored at least 20 points in each game during the streak, consistently had the answer. He swished a stepback 3-pointer to push the advantage to nine points with 3:38 remaining, while his layup put the Hawkeyes up five with 1:40 to go.
The Wildcats (10-14, 2-11) cut the deficit to 74-70 on a Martinelli trey with 29 seconds left but Cooper Koch got open for a breakaway dunk off the ensuing inbounds pass.
Northwestern entered Sunday averaging 8.2 turnovers per game this season, fewest in NCAA Division I. The Wildcats had eight giveaways in the first half and 10 for the game
Martinelli paced Northwestern with 21 points. Freshman Jake West added a career-best 18 of 7-of-8 shooting, including a fast-break dunk over Alvaro Folgueiras, who stands seven inches taller. Tre Singleton chipped in 10 points for the Wildcats before fouling out.
Martinelli, the Big Ten’s leading scorer, and reserves Angelo Ciaravino and Arrinten Page each were whistled for three fouls in the first half.
Iowa took advantage, hitting 17 of 22 free throws en route to taking a 39-35 lead into halftime.
Stirtz shined in the closing minutes. His driving layup with 3:40 left in the first half ended a field goal drought of 3:53 and started a stretch in which he scored 10 successive Iowa points in less than two minutes.
Stirtz influenced the game even when he didn’t score, as Jayden Reid was called for a technical foul for trash-talking Stirtz after knocking the ball away on a layup attempt.
Banks grabbed a game-high seven rebounds while Ciaravino led Northwestern with five boards.
Iowa stretched its home winning streak against Northwestern to 11 games.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Ilia Malinin powers US past Japan to team figure skating gold in Milan
Gold medalist Ilia Malinin of the United States celebrates after winning the team figure skating event at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics MILAN, Italy — Ilia Malinin lifted the United States above Japan to the top of the podium of the figure skating team event at the Milan Cortina Games on Sunday, where home team Italy captured bronze.
With the U.S. and Japan tied going into the men’s free skate, the 21-year-old Malinin was not at his best but was still good enough to lead the U.S. to a second successive Olympic team title.
Malinin had been expected to perform seven quads in his free skate but ended up attempting only five, and even those were not flawless as he stumbled out of his quad Lutz. He turned two planned quads – including the quad Axel – into triples.
But he salvaged his program with a huge quad toeloop followed up by a quad Salchow, both in combinations.
His score of 200.03 was almost 40 points less than his season’s best but still good enough to defeat Japan’s Shun Sato, who went after Malinin but was unable to match his rival’s technical ability.
The U.S. finished with 69 points, one more than Japan, while Italy took bronze with 60 points.
JAPAN FIGHT BACK
Japan came into the final day of the team competition trailing the U.S. by five points but their gold medal hopes were given new life with stunning performances from Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara in the pairs and Kaori Sakamoto in the women’s free skate — leaving them tied with the U.S heading into the final men’s free skate.
The Japanese pairs world champions opened with a triple twist lift and Miura was left punching the air in delight as the duo closed their program with Kihara lifting her above him into their final pose — a performance that earned them a season-best 155.55 from the judges.
“We were trying to aim for about 145 or a little bit higher, and when we saw that it was 155, there was so much joy… we were overwhelmed with emotions,” a teary-eyed Miura told reporters following the rousing performance which left Japan trailing the U.S. by just two points with two segments to go.
Japan pulled into a tie with the U.S. when Sakamoto delivered a spellbinding performance that earned her top place in the women’s free skate with 148.62 points.
American Amber Glenn had to settle for third behind Sakamoto and Georgia’s Anastasiia Gubanova after she endured two botched landings at the start of her routine – a result which wiped out the United States’ lead heading into men’s free skate.
“I just physically didn’t feel great,” Glenn said.
“My legs were feeling heavy, I was tired. I just didn’t feel my best.”
U.S. hopes of defending their gold medal from Beijing then rested on the shoulders of self-described “Quad God” Malinin, who made up for his disappointing short program on Saturday by winning the point America needed to top the podium.
Malinin remains the runaway favorite to win gold in the individual event at his first Olympic Games.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
Scottie Barnes does it all as Raptors roll Pacers
Feb 8, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Raptors forward Scottie Barnes (4) dribbles downcourt against the Indiana Pacers during the first half at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images Scottie Barnes scored 13 of his game-high 25 points in the decisive third quarter and the Toronto Raptors defeated the visiting Indiana Pacers 122-104 on Sunday afternoon.
Barnes also led everyone with 14 rebounds and four blocked shots to help the Raptors sweep the four-game season series from the Pacers. After trailing by two at halftime, Toronto took over the game with a 44-26 advantage in the third quarter.
RJ Barrett contributed 20 points and Sandro Mamukelashvili added 17 points for the Raptors, who have won three of four on their five-game homestand. Brandon Ingram and and Immanuel Quickley each scored 13 points. Trayce Jackson-Davis had 10 points and 10 rebounds in his Raptors debut.
Pascal Siakam scored 18 points for the Pacers, who have lost four straight. Jay Huff added 15 points, Jarace Walker provided 13 points, Ben Sheppard scored 12 and T.J. McConnell and Andrew Nembhard each notched 10.
Toronto led 21-20 after one quarter, but lost starting center Collin Murray-Boyles to a left thumb injury. He had two points and one blocked shot before leaving for good with 3:47 left in the first quarter.
Jackson-Davis, obtained in a trade with the Golden State Warriors, entered the game in the second quarter and immediately got a steal and assisted on Barnes’ running layup.
Siakam’s layup gave the Pacers a six-point lead with 2:06 to play in the second quarter and they led 48-46 at halftime.
Toronto solved Indiana’s defense by getting out in transition and scored the first eight points of the third quarter. Barnes led the Raptors’ charge and his rebound was followed by a running two-handed dunk to boost the lead to 13 with 6:53 to play. Quickley padded the margin to 19 with two consecutive 3-pointers.
Indiana’s Johnny Furphy collapsed after his dunk with 2:57 left in the third quarter cut Toronto’s lead to 80-68. He was helped off the court before being taken to the dressing room in a wheelchair with what the team said was right-leg soreness.
Toronto led 90-74 after three quarters.
The lead reached 21 when Jackson-Davis converted a free throw with 7:58 to go in the fourth quarter. The Pacers never got closer than 16 the rest of the way.
–Field Level Media
