Sports
Oklahoma State, Arizona State meet amid rigors of Big 12 season
Feb 7, 2026; Tucson, Arizona, USA; Oklahoma State Cowboys head coach Steve Lutz yells out to his players during the first half of the game against the Arizona Wildcats at McKale Memorial Center. Mandatory Credit: Aryanna Frank-Imagn Images In his second season in the Big 12 Conference, Oklahoma State coach Steve Lutz is getting accustomed to how the ball can bounce.
His Cowboys took down then-No. 16 BYU 99-92 last Wednesday. Three days later, they had to visit the No. 1 team in the country, and Arizona ran them out of the building, 84-47.
Oklahoma State completes a two-game stay in the state when it visits Arizona State on Tuesday in Tempe.
The Cowboys (16-7, 4-6 Big 12) are on the NCAA Tournament bubble with the weeks dwindling down in the regular season. The uncompetitive loss to Arizona could be excused at season’s end, but it didn’t help their case to shoot 15 of 61 (24.6%) while allowing 33-of-64 shooting (51.6%) and a 56-35 rebounding disparity.
“It’s tough in the Big 12. You’re talking to the wrong guy that’s gonna make excuses for my team, our team not performing (Saturday),” Lutz said. “We did not play our best, and Arizona had a lot to do with that, and that’s on us.
“But you know what, we gotta go across the state here in 2 1/2 days and we better be hooked up and ready to go because I’m sure that Arizona State’s not gonna take it easy on us. I watched both the games that (the Wildcats) played Arizona State. They gave you a game.”
To his point, Arizona State (12-12, 3-8) pushed Arizona to the brink on the road in an 89-82 loss back on Jan. 14 before losing 87-74 at home on Jan. 31.
The Sun Devils have dropped three of their past four games, most recently falling 78-70 at Colorado on Saturday. After the Buffaloes bullied Arizona State 40-26 on the boards, Sun Devils coach Bobby Hurley made his frustration clear in the postgame press conference.
“We got seven games left, so if we can’t rebound by now, then chances are we’re not gonna be able to rebound,” Hurley said.
Arizona State ranks dead last among Big 12 teams with an average of 32.8 rebounds per game and a minus-3.2 differential. Oklahoma State may have been outmatched by the Wildcats, but the Cowboys still get 38 rebounds per game, fifth in the Big 12.
Anthony Roy, who dropped 30 points on BYU and paces Oklahoma State with 17.8 points per game, was held in check by Arizona at 10 points (3-of-11 shooting, 3-of-10 success from 3-point range).
Maurice Odum leads Arizona State with 17.2 points and 6.2 assists per contest. He had 23 and five, respectively, in the Colorado game.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Knicks look to keep rolling vs. struggling Pacers
Feb 8, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) reacts after a play against the Boston Celtics in the second half at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images The last time the New York Knicks played a home game against the Indiana Pacers, both teams were on the verge of the NBA Finals.
More than nine months later, the Pacers are much further away from championship contention than the Knicks — even if New York’s ceiling remains uncertain despite a recent surge.
The Knicks will look to continue their solid play Tuesday night, when they host the Pacers in the second clash of the season between the longtime rivals.
Both teams were off Monday after playing road matinees on Super Bowl Sunday, when the Knicks cruised past the Boston Celtics 111-89 and the Pacers fell to the Toronto Raptors, 122-104.
The win was the ninth in the last 10 games for the Knicks, who moved into a tie with the Celtics for second place in the Eastern Conference, five games behind the Detroit Pistons before the Pistons’ game Monday night against the Charlotte Hornets.
It also continued a trend of dominant victories for New York. Seven of New York’s last nine wins have been by double digits, including five by at least 20 points and three by 30 points or more.
But the lone loss in the current stretch was a 118-80 loss to the Pistons on Friday night. Starters Karl-Anthony Towns and OG Anunoby sat out for the Knicks, as did new backup guard Jose Alvarado, who was acquired from the New Orleans Pelicans last Thursday.
Yet the Knicks had a full starting lineup in Detroit on Jan. 5, when the Pistons rolled to a 121-90 victory. The first loss to Detroit was one of the low points of a lengthy skid for New York, which went 2-9 from Dec. 31 through Jan. 19 while falling to the lottery-bound Sacramento Kings and Dallas Mavericks.
“Our group is resilient,” said Knicks head coach Mike Brown, who was hired after Tom Thibodeau was dismissed following a six-game loss to the Pacers in last season’s Eastern Conference finals — New York’s first trip to the conference finals since 2000.
“Sometimes things like (Friday) happen in Detroit. None of us like it. None of us want to go through it. Give Detroit a lot of credit, but we know it’s not who we are. We’ve played a lot better than that. We will.”
The Pacers’ hopes for the 2025-26 season likely ended in Game 7 of the NBA Finals last June 22, when star guard Tyrese Haliburton tore his right Achilles in the first quarter of a 103-91 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Indiana, which was seeking its first NBA title, has fallen to last place in the Eastern Conference without Halliburton, who will miss the season. The Pacers are 13-40 and on pace for the worst record in franchise history.
The loss Sunday may have been a particularly costly defeat for the Pacers, who have dropped four straight following a 7-5 stretch from Jan. 8-31. Second-year guard/forward Johnny Furphy suffered a right knee injury while landing awkwardly following a dunk in the third quarter. He was helped off the court before he took a wheelchair to the locker room.
MRI testing Monday reportedly revealed a torn ACL for the Australian native, who had recently shown considerable promise for the organization while starting 21 of his 35 regular-season appearances in his second season in the league.
The Pacers were already without Ivica Zubac and Kobe Brown, who have yet to play since they were acquired from the Los Angeles Clippers on Thursday. Zubac, who was on paternity leave at the time of the trade, is playing through a left ankle injury suffered in December.
“It’s kind of yo-yo’d a little bit,” Carlisle said of Zubac’s injury before Friday’s 105-99 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks. “My understanding from talking to him is that there’s still something there that’s not quite right. We’re not going to put him out there until he’s really ready.”
As eager as Zubac may be to get on the court, Carlisle said they’ll take their time with his return.
“He’s a guy that has played 94 or 95% of his games through his career and I’m presuming that’s because he’s always raring to go through things,” Carlisle said. “That’s not going to be an option here.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Ski Jumping: Germany’s Raimund soars to gold, Slovenia’s Prevc falls short
Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics – Ski Jumping – Men’s Normal Hill Individual – Final Round – Predazzo Ski Jumping Stadium, Predazzo, Italy – February 9, 2026. Philipp Raimund of Germany reacts after his run in the Final Round. PREDAZZO, Italy — Germany’s Philipp Raimund won the gold medal in the men’s normal hill ski jumping event as he soared ahead of Poland’s Kacper Tomasiak at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Monday.
The Pole had to settle for silver, while Japan’s Ren Nikaido and Switzerland’s Gregor Deschwanden shared bronze. Favorite Domen Prevc of Slovenia only managed sixth place.
Raimund claimed the title with a final jump of 106.5 meters as he reached 274.1 points, 3.4 points ahead of Tomasiak, while Nikaido and Deschwanden finished 8.1 points back.
The 25-year-old Raimund fired an early warning on a dark but clear night in the Italian Alps, soaring 102 meters in the first round to earn the final jump of the competition and then handled the pressure to fly to his first Olympic gold.
“I know there’s a lot of pressure from the media and outside but my coach, the whole staff, my girlfriend … they were taking all that off my shoulders so I could just concentrate on myself. I want to say thank you to everybody,” he said.
“I’m extremely proud of myself that I could do two amazing jumps and stand on top at the end.”
The 19-year-old Tomasiak was delighted with second place.
“It is a dream coming true. I wasn’t really expecting that at my first Olympics. I’m a little surprised, but very happy. I jumped really good,” he said.
Gold medal favorite Prevc endured a shaky start, finishing only eighth in the opening round after a 100-metre jump, with the World Cup leader looking disappointed as he realized he had landed too short to mount an early challenge for gold.
His 105-metre second-round jump bumped him briefly into first place but he ended up out of the medals.
“Already the small (normal) hill is difficult for me and there was a bit of back wind but, honestly, after yesterday’s training I did not expect too much,” he told Reuters.
Prevc added that he had approached the competition with the mindset that he would be satisfied with a top-10 finish.
“It’s on one hand success for me, but on the other hand I of course came here to win medals and, yeah, it’s a little bit (of a) salty feeling,” Prevc said.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
'No regrets': Lindsey Vonn speaks post-crash, needs multiple surgeries
Feb 7, 2026; Cortina d’Ampezzo, ITALY; Lindsey Vonn of the United States during women’s alpine skiing downhill training the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images Lindsey Vonn has a complex tibia fracture that will “require multiple surgeries to fix properly,” Vonn said in an Instagram post Monday.
The post is Vonn’s first public statement since her gruesome crash during Sunday’s women’s downhill skiing final at the Milan Cortina Games. Vonn had to be airlifted off the course after crashing in the first 20 seconds of her run.
“While yesterday did not end the way I had hoped, and despite the intense physical pain it caused, I have no regrets,” Vonn wrote. “Standing in the starting gate (Sunday) was an incredible feeling that I will never forget. Knowing I stood there having a chance to win was a victory in and of itself.”
“I also knew that racing was a risk. It always was and always will be an incredibly dangerous sport.”
Vonn, 41, had completely ruptured her ACL and suffered meniscus damage on the same leg in her final World Cup race before the Olympics on Jan. 30. She had decided to race on it anyway, but made it clear the ACL didn’t cause this crash.
“I was simply 5 inches too tight on my line when my right arm hooked inside of the gate, twisting me and result(ing) in my crash,” Vonn wrote.
Vonn was airlifted and treated nearby in the Ca’ Foncello Hospital in the northern Italian city of Treviso. She underwent surgery later that day and was in stable condition, U.S. Skiing as well as the hospital said in statements.
Vonn has had a history of serious injuries, so much so that it forced her to initially retire in 2019. A partial knee replacement in April 2024 helped her start her comeback to the sport and to compete in these Olympics.
“Similar to ski racing, we take risks in life. We dream. We love. We jump. And sometimes we fall. Sometimes our hearts are broken. Sometimes we don’t achieve the dreams we know we could have. But that is also the beauty of life; we can try,” Vonn wrote.
“I tried. I dreamt. I jumped.”
–Field Level Media
