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Oklahoma stuns No. 15 Vanderbilt to end nine-game skid

NCAA Basketball: Oklahoma at VanderbiltFeb 7, 2026; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Oklahoma Sooners forward Mohamed Wague (5) blocks the shot of Vanderbilt Commodores forward Ak Okereke (10) during the first half at Memorial Gymnasium. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

Xzayvier Brown scored 20 points and Oklahoma led from start to finish and eventually held on for a 92-91 road win at No. 15 Vanderbilt in Southeastern Conference play at Nashville, Tenn., on Saturday afternoon.

The Sooners (12-12, 2-9 SEC) shot 53.4% from the floor and snapped a nine-game losing streak.

Brown canned a pair of free throws with 3.4 seconds left that turned out to be crucial when Tyler Tanner (37 points, nine assists) banked in a 3 at the buzzer for the Commodores.

The Sooners received 17 points from Nigel Pack and 14 from Tae Davis.

Vanderbilt (19-4, 6-4) got 18 points from Tyler Nickel and 13 from AK Okereke.

Vanderbilt shot 47.4% from the field.

Brown hit a lay-up off a Derrion Reid steal to put the lead over 20 (61-40) for the first time with 15:47 to play.

The Sooners milked the shot clock inside 10 seconds for much of the remainder of the game until it nearly backfired. They led 80-59 with 4:59 left until Tanner, who had 26 in the second half, led a furious comeback.

Oklahoma took a 48-34 halftime lead thanks to 58.6% to 38.5% edge in shooting as well as advantages in turnovers (8-6) edge in turnovers and rebounding (18-13).

Davis hit his first five shots and scored 14 points as part of the Sooners’ 24-8 lead in the game’s first 7:21. Oklahoma connected on 9 of its first 13 shots, four of them 3s.

Vanderbilt clawed within 33-27, but the Sooners put together a 9-2 run to go up 42-29 after Jones canned a corner 3, drew a third foul on Mike James and then hit the ensuing free throw.

Tanner played with his right (shooting) thumb taped in the second half. He was the only one of Vanderbilt’s point guards to play on Saturday as Duke Miles (16.6 ppg) and Frankie Collins (7.8) were both out again with injuries.

It was a Quad 3 loss for Vanderbilt, which hadn’t lost outside Quad 1 this season.

–Field Level Media

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Falcons, Yandex advance to quarterfinals at BLAST Slam VI

Syndication: Arizona RepublicA backlit keyboard is part of the gear online video game streamer Jordan Woodruff uses in his Gilbert home.

Jordan Woodruff

Team Falcons and Team Yandex each recorded a sweep on Saturday to punch their ticket to the quarterfinals of the BLAST Slam VI event.

Falcons posted a 2-0 win over Xtreme Gaming in their play-in game, courtesy of a 39-minute victory on red and 54-minute triumph on green. Team Falcons will compete again on Friday against the winner of Sunday’s clash between Team Liquid and GamerLegion.

Team Yandex notched a 2-0 win over Team Spirit in their play-in game on Saturday, courtesy of 38- and 52-minute victories on red. Yandex will be back in action on Friday against the winner of Sunday’s encounter between Tundra Esports and HEROIC.

BLAST Slam VI is a 12-team Dota 2 event that pays $300,000 to the winner and $1 million overall. The event opened with three days of group play — a round-robin, best-of-1 format in which each team played each other team once. The top two teams in the standings, Natus Vincere and OG, moved on to the semifinals of the playoffs.

The teams finishing third through eighth in the standings advanced to the play-in round — four best-of-3 matches in which the winners advance to the playoffs and the losers are eliminated. The teams finishing ninth through 12th in group play competed in the last-chance playoff, another best-of-3 format where the winners advanced to the play-in round and the losers went home.

The play-in matches will be contested Saturday and Sunday. The four winning teams will play in the quarterfinals on Feb. 13. The semifinals will be on Feb. 14 and the grand final on Feb. 15.

BLAST Slam VI prize pool

1. $300,000 (plus $100,000 in team earnings)

2. $150,000 (plus $50,000)

3-4. $60,000 (plus $29,000)

5-6. $35,000 (plus $15,000)

7-10. $22,500 (plus $6.250) — Team Spirit, Xtreme Gaming, TBD, TBD

11-12. $10,000 (plus $2,500) — REKONIX, MOUZ

–Field Level Media

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UCF to chase season sweep against reeling Cincinnati

NCAA Basketball: Central Florida at Iowa StateJan 20, 2026; Ames, Iowa, USA; UCF Knights guard Riley Kugel (2) is defended by Iowa State Cyclones guard Tamin Lipsey (3) during the second half at James H. Hilton Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Reese Strickland-Imagn Images

After seeing a three-game win streak come to an end, UCF aims to get back on track and bolster its postseason resume by hitting the road to take on fading Cincinnati on Sunday in Big 12 Conference play.

The Knights (17-5, 6-4 Big 12) were shut down Wednesday night and unable to get their offense going in a road loss at No. 8 Houston.

Cincinnati (11-12, 3-7) dropped a 59-54 decision at home to West Virginia on Thursday in a game it led by 14 points with 16 minutes remaining.

Sunday’s game is a rematch of a Jan. 11 meeting in Orlando won by UCF 73-72.

UCF will have to solve its offensive deficiencies that were heightened against defensive-minded Houston. The Knights did not have a player score in double figures, shot 30.8% from the field, committed 11 turnovers and were outrebounded 40-29.

A lone bright spot came at the free throw line as UCF made 17 of 20 attempts.

“They’re a terrific team,” UCF coach Johnny Dawkins said of Houston. “They play at such a high level that you have to be prepared to match their intensity, match their physicality, and we were not able to do that.”

Riley Kugel led UCF with nine points and tops the team in scoring at 14.5 points per game. Themus Fulks — second on the team at 13.9 points — led a group of four players with eight points apiece.

UCF’s NCAA tournament resume remains strong at No. 42 in the NCAA NET ratings.

Cincinnati has a losing record for the first time since March 4, 2021, and for the first time in coach Wes Miller’s five seasons as coach.

The Bearcats have lost their last two games and four of five. Big man Moustapha Thiam missed Thursday’s game with an ankle injury, while Shon Abaev has missed the last three games, also with an ankle ailment.

Miller refused to use injuries or the schedule as an excuse following Thursday’s collapse against West Virginia, instead addressing the Cincinnati fan base for the home loss.

“I want to apologize to our fans and all the people who support Cincinnati basketball. It’s not OK,” Miller said. “I don’t want for one second for people to think that I think it’s OK. It’s not OK. In this program, there’s a higher standard. There’s no excuse. None of the circumstances matter. We have to close games out.”

–Field Level Media

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Pitinos face off again as No.22 St. John's takes on Xavier

NCAA Basketball: Butler at St. JohnJan 28, 2026; New York, New York, USA; St. John’s Red Storm head coach Rick Pitino at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The last time Rick Pitino opposed his son Richard, the elder Pitino earned his 900th on-court win as St. John’s beat Xavier on Jan. 24.

Sixteen days later, Rick Pitino will be seeking another milestone at his son’s expense — as well as another opportunity to prove St. John’s is back not only as a title contender in the Big East but as a candidate to play deep into March.

St. John’s will look to continue surging Monday night, when the No. 22 Red Storm hosts Xavier at Madison Square Garden.

St. John’s earned its ninth straight win Friday night, when the host Red Storm snapped No. 3 UConn’s 18-game winning streak with an 81-72 victory.

Xavier hasn’t played since last Tuesday, when the visiting Musketeers fell to UConn, 92-60.

St John’s win Friday was the 903rd on-court win for Pitino, which ties him for third all-time in Division I with former Kansas and North Carolina coach Roy Williams. The NCAA recognizes him with 780 wins after Pitino was stripped of 123 victories due to violations at Louisville.

Mike Krzyzewski (1,202 wins) and Jim Boeheim (1,116 wins) are the only coaches with more on-court victories than Pitino and Williams.

Few of Pitino’s regular-season wins have been as energetic as Friday’s victory, when St. John’s (18-5 overall, 11-1 Big East) led by as many as 11 in the second half before holding off a UConn rally. The Huskies got within one or two points on four occasions, but the Red Storm scored on the subsequent possession every time.

Dylan Darling’s 3-pointer with 3:13 left extended the Red Storm’s lead to 72-67 and sparked a game-ending 12-5 run in front of a frenzied sellout crowd of 19,812 at Madison Square Garden.

“I use the expression ‘no fear of failure.’ I said it every single time out,” Rick Pitino said. “I said, whether we go up 12, they cut it to two — we have no fear.

“Every single player was honed in. They did a fabulous job of doing things down the stretch to help you win.”

The victory was the first for St. John’s over an opponent ranked in the top five since a 70-59 win over no. 3 Villanova on Feb. 3, 2021. The Red Storm pulled within a half-game of UConn (22-2, 12-1) with a rematch looming in Hartford on Feb. 25.

St. John’s dethroned UConn as the Big East regular season and tournament champion last year, when the Red Storm’s bid to appear in the Sweet 16 for the first time this century ended with a second-round loss to Arkansas.

“It was a meaningful game,” said St. John’s forward Zuby Ejiofor, who led the Red Storm with 21 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists, and three blocks on Friday night. “We knew exactly what we were playing for.”

Richard Pitino is looking further ahead than his dad as he rebuilds during his first year at Xavier (12-11 overall, 4-8), which is in a three-way tie for seventh place with Butler and DePaul.

Last year, the Musketeers made the NCAA Tournament for the second time in three years under Sean Miller but lost all but two players off the roster after Miller departed for Texas.

The loss to UConn marked the fourth time Xavier has lost a Big East game by at least 20 points. The Musketeers are also 2-4 in games decided by six points or fewer — including the 88-83 loss to St. John’s in which the Red Storm overcame a 16-point second-half deficit.

Three of Xavier’s four leading scorers — Tre Carroll, Roddie Anderson III, and Malik Messina-Moore — are seniors, though starters Jovan Milicevic and All Wright are both sophomores.

“In year one, when you’re starting from scratch, you want to win every game, but you don’t get consumed with that part of it — especially when you’re playing a UConn,” Richard Pitino said last Tuesday. “This is years and years in the making for UConn to build this type of program. I’m very, very confident we can get there.”

–Field Level Media

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