Sports
Pistons launch tough road trip with test vs. Nuggets
Jan 25, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Sacramento Kings guard Dennis Schroder (17) defends against Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) during the during the second half at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Reginek-Imagn Images The slog of an 82-game schedule becomes tough in January, when winter has settled in and injuries add up.
The Detroit Pistons are feeling it as they embark on a three-game road trip Tuesday night at the Denver Nuggets.
All-Star Cade Cunningham is dealing with a wrist injury that sidelined him for three games and limited him for most of the month but he had a breakout game in a win over Sacramento on Sunday.
“It’s been hard. It’s been a battle as far as mentally, as far as figuring out how I can help us while not liking how I felt shooting, and just constantly flinching when I was shooting because I didn’t know how it would feel. It was hurting sometimes, sometimes I’d be able to release and the ball would come out fine,” Cunningham said after a 29-point, 11-assist performance against the Kings.
Cunningham is the best player on a deep team that leads the Eastern Conference. He averages team highs of 25.4 points and 9.7 assists. Jalen Duren averages a team-high 10.6 rebounds and is second in scoring at 17.8 points per game, while Tobias Harris ranks third on Detroit with 13.3 points.
Detroit got off to a 15-2 start to take control of the conference race and has held that spot for most of the season. This road trip will be a test for the Pistons, who face three tough teams — Denver, Phoenix and Golden State.
The Nuggets have dealt with significant injuries all season, yet they are third in the Western Conference. They had to deal with another snag this weekend when the winter storm that hit much of the country disrupted their travel.
Denver won road games in Washington and Milwaukee on consecutive nights and then flew to Memphis right after the win over the Bucks on Friday night. The league postponed Sunday’s game and the Nuggets couldn’t fly home until Monday morning.
The extra days of rest were welcomed after Aaron Gordon worsened his right hamstring injury on Friday night. Gordon, who averages 17.7 points per game, previously missed 19 games earlier in the season with the same issue and has been sidelined for injury management.
“I feel for him,” coach David Adelman said. “He’s optimistic it’s not as bad as it was, the last one. But we won’t know until we get it actually tested.”
Jamal Murray is also dealing with a tight hamstring that sidelined him Friday night.
The biggest question is when Nikola Jokic will return from his hyperextended left knee. Jokic, who leads Denver in scoring (29.6 points per game), rebounding (12.2) and assists (11.0), has not played since Dec. 29 and is within the four-to-six-week window for his return.
He was on the recent trip and warmed up on the court pregame, sporting a sleeve over his left knee.
Murray, averaging a career-best 26.0 points, and Peyton Watson, whose 14.5 ppg are also a career high, have been instrumental in Denver staying near the top of the competitive Western Conference.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Bucks bring season-long win streak into 2-game set at Magic
Feb 6, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks guard Kevin Porter (7) looks for a shirt against Indiana Pacers forward Jarace Walker (5) in the fourth quarter at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images Now carrying a smidge of success after a recent drought, the Milwaukee Bucks travel to Orlando to take on the Magic Monday night for the first of two games between the teams in three days.
Milwaukee enters with star Giannis Antetokounmpo still ailing, but riding a three-game win streak, its longest of the season.
“I made that comment 100 years ago: winning is like a deodorant. It covers a lot of things that stink at times,” Bucks coach Doc Rivers said after Friday night’s win over Indiana. “When you start winning games, the ball goes in, you feel better, you want to come to practice. When you lose games, you dread watching film, everything is a big deal, the shots get tighter. Now you can see our guys are playing loose, they’re playing free. It’s nice.”
“It feels good,” Bucks guard Kevin Porter Jr. added. “We haven’t had this feeling and been in this situation as much this year as we wanted. We’re going to live in the moment and try to make it an everlasting one and continue to get these wins and stack them up.”
The Bucks are still on the outside looking in for a play-in spot and have been without Antetokounmpo, who has not played since Jan. 23 with a calf injury but was not traded ahead of Thursday’s deadline. Milwaukee is 6-14 this season without the “Greek Freak.”
“He’s gonna play when he’s healthy, we just gotta make sure he’s healthy. He’s getting close,” Rivers said on Friday. “Like, he’s working out, he looks good. So, I would say hopefully sooner than later.”
Orlando, currently nestled at seventh in the Eastern Conference, is riding a modest two-game win streak and has been without leading scorer Franz Wagner (22.2 points per game) with an ankle injury since Jan. 18.
He was upgraded to questionable for Monday’s game and could return after missing the last nine games.
Paolo Banchero has picked up the scoring slack, as has Desmond Bane, who has averaged 21.8 points over his last five games and has made at least one three in his last 12.
Orlando trailed the Jazz by 17 points on Saturday night but rallied for a 120-117 win. Magic coach Jamahl Mosley pointed out plenty of mistakes made by his team afterwards, but said his team showed courage.
“You have to battle through adversity, I don’t care who you play, it’s a game of runs and how you handle that in a game,” Mosley said. “Down 17, you just go for those mini goals. We said let’s get it down to 10 (by the end of the third quarter) and we got it down to seven. Those are the small things guys can grab a hold of and not try to go for the home run but win the small battles.”
Monday will be the first meeting of Magic and Bucks this season. Orlando guard Jalen Suggs had a career-high 32 points against the Bucks when they met in December 2024. Milwaukee won three of four meetings last season.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Kings hope to avoid unfortunate franchise history against Pelicans
Feb 7, 2026; Sacramento, California, USA; Sacramento Kings guard-forward Daeqwon Plowden (29) reacts after getting charged for a foul against the Cleveland Cavaliers during the third quarter at Golden 1 Center. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Lee-Imagn Images The Sacramento Kings are looking to avoid setting an ignominious franchise record when they face the host New Orleans Pelicans on Monday evening.
With a 132-126 defeat to the Cleveland Cavaliers on Saturday night, the Kings lost their 12th straight game. That equals the mark held by the 1997-98 team for the most consecutive losses since the franchise moved from Kansas City to Sacramento ahead of the 1985-86 season.
Nique Clifford had a career-high 30 points on 12-of-19 shooting followed by Russell Westbrook with 21 points and nine assists, as Sacramento was without four of its leading scorers in Malik Monk, Zach LaVine, Domantas Sabonis and Keegan Murray. Clifford and Westbrook each made five 3-pointers.
“I got some good looks (Saturday), and my teammates were finding me, putting me in good positions to score the ball, and the shots were falling for me,” Clifford said.
The rookie first-round pick out of Colorado State is emblematic of coach Doug Christie’s pivot towards a youth movement as the Kings, who have made the playoffs just once in the last 19 seasons, attempt to alter their fate.
“The name of the game is to win the game, so that part hurts, but to watch these guys begin to find their way, find their rhythm and compete against some really good teams and put themselves consistently in position to win the ballgame (is encouraging),” Christie said. “Now, there’s a learning curve of how to do it, and it’s difficult. It’s difficult to win in our league.”
Second-year guard Devin Carter scored 18 points, and two-way player Daeqwon Plowden had 16 points, six rebounds and four assists. Rookie center Maxime Raynaud had 14 points and seven rebounds. Undrafted rookie Dylan Cardwell had a double-double off the bench with 12 points and 11 rebounds.
Monday night’s clash is the first of three games with the Pelicans this season and the only one in New Orleans.
Saddiq Bey had 30 points, including two free throws with 10.8 seconds left, and Zion Williamson added 29 points, highlighted by a critical three-point play with 35.5 seconds to play, as the Pelicans defeated the Minnesota Timberwolves 119-115 to end a three-game losing streak and conclude a 1-3 road trip.
Bey, who is averaging 16.7 points per game, has three 30-plus-point games so far in 2026 after he had none in the first three months of the season.
“In general, we followed and executed the gameplan, the task, especially defensively. … Our guys battled, got stops when we needed to,” New Orleans coach James Borrego said. “Saddiq made huge plays. … We understand we’re going to have to win clutch games to win games. We’re learning how to close.”
Trey Murphy III had 26 points and six rebounds, while Derik Queen had 17 points and eight rebounds in the win over the Timberwolves. A rookie center who had just 10 3-pointers on 47 attempts coming into the contest, Queen went 4-for-4 from beyond the arc.
The Pelicans shot 44.1% (15 for 34) from 3-point land in the game.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Ilia Malinin rises to pressure of Team USA's golden hopes
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 stepped onto the ice knowing figure skating’s Olympic team event hinged on him – and then delivered just enough to haul the United States past Japan and onto the top step of the podium at the Milano Cortina Games.
Italy, feeding off a roaring home crowd, claimed a hard-earned bronze.
The U.S. and Japan were deadlocked heading into the men’s free skate on Sunday night, leaving the 21-year-old double world champion shouldering the Americans’ golden hopes.
A day earlier, he had stumbled to a surprise second place in the short program.
“Being a tie, I was like, okay, I’m the deciding factor,” Malinin said. “I need to just do what I need to do, go out there, but also test the ice again, just to see how it feels, to really prepare myself for my individual event,” he said.
“But it really came down to the energy, the support, the passion for my whole team. Without them, I don’t think we would have gotten this medal.”
As the first skater ever to land seven quadruple jumps in a program, many at the Milano Ice Skating Arena anticipated a repeat performance on Sunday.
Instead, the self-named “Quad God” looked unusually mortal.
He landed four of his seven planned quad jumps cleanly. He turned two — including the quadruple Axel, a jump only he has ever landed in competition — into triples, and bobbled the landing on another in a program that looked, for a moment, as though it might unravel.
His 200.03 points were nearly 40 off his best, yet still untouchable for Japan’s Shun Sato, who scored 194.86.
His unique free program had the crowd roaring. Entitled “A Voice,” it features his own voice playing over the soundtrack, with philosophical lines such as “The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing” and “Embrace the storm.”
Fitting, considering Malinin, who has appeared so carefree throughout his meteoric career, said he underestimated the enormity of the Olympic stage.
“I didn’t really understand the impact of the Olympic environment,” he said. “I was kind of more in shock of really just being at the Olympics for the first time.
“So I really just told myself, okay, now you’ve experienced it for the very first time. So, now the long program, you can come in with a different mindset, a different energy.”
Malinin was also thrilled by the presence of tennis great Novak Djokovic, who leapt to his feet when the American unleashed his trademark backflip, an element that receives no marks but delights the fans.
“I did see Djokovic there, and it was, honestly, just so unreal,” Malinin said, with a wide grin. “I’ve heard from everyone that after I landed my back flip, he (was) standing there with his hands on his head.
“Like oh, my God. That’s incredible. That’s like a once-in-a-lifetime moment just seeing a famous tennis player watching my performance.”
The young skater has little time to rest, with the short program of the individual event on Tuesday, followed by the free skate on Friday.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
