Sports
Reports: Randy Bennett leaving Saint Mary's to coach Arizona State
Saint Mary’s head coach Randy Bennett walks in front of the bench in the first half during a first round men’s basketball game of the NCAA Tournament between St. Mary’s and Texas A&M, at Paycom in Oklahoma City on Thursday, March 19, 2026. After 25 seasons and 12 NCAA Tournament appearances as the head coach of Saint Mary’s, Randy Bennett is heading home to replace Bobby Hurley at Arizona State, multiple media outlets reported Monday.
Bennett, 63, is in the process of finalizing a five-year contract, ESPN reported.
Per Arizona Sports, Bennett — Arizona State’s top choice after 20 candidates were trimmed to three — will earn more than $3 million in his first season. He is a native of Mesa, a short drive from the Sun Devils’ Tempe campus.
Bennett, who reportedly informed the team of his decision at a meeting Monday morning, will be replaced at Saint Mary’s by associate head coach Mickey McConnell, per ESPN. McConnell, who turns 37 next month, has been on the Gaels’ coaching staff since 2019 and played for Bennett from 2007-11.
Under Bennett, who had one season remaining on a 10-year contract, Saint Mary’s reached the NCAA Tournament the last five seasons and has won at least a share of four straight WCC regular-season titles. In 2010 as a No. 2 seed, the Gaels reached the Sweet 16.
In this year’s NCAA Tournament, No. 7 seed Saint Mary’s was upset by No. 10 seed Texas A&M in the first round. Bennett finished his tenure with a 589-228 record.
Bennett takes over for Hurley, who did not have his contract renewed after this season. The former Duke star coached Arizona State to three NCAA Tournament berths in 11 seasons and left as the second-winningest coach in program history (185 wins).
–Field Level Media
Sports
Shakira Austin, Mystics gain road split against Storm
May 27, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Storm guard Flau’jae Johnson (4) guards Washington Mystics guard Cassandre Prosper (18) during the first half at Climate Pledge Arena. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images Shakira Austin had game-high totals of 18 points, 13 rebounds and five assists as the Washington Mystics defeated the host Seattle Storm 78-64 on Wednesday.
Michaela Onyenwere added 14 points, making three 3-pointers, and Kiki Iriafen had 13 points and nine boards for the Mystics (3-3), who snapped a two-game losing streak and avenged a 97-85 loss at Seattle on Sunday.
Jade Melbourne scored 15 points to lead the Storm (3-5), who had won their previous two games. Mackenzie Holmes added eight points and 10 rebounds.
The Mystics shot 42.4% from the field (28 of 66), including 7 of 21 (33.3%) from 3-point range. The Storm made just 34.9% of their field-goal attempts (22 of 63) and were 5 of 23 (21.7%) from long distance.
The Mystics, who trailed by as many as 26 points on Sunday, led by as many as 24 in this one, 74-49 with 7:33 remaining.
Washington scored the opening five points and never trailed.
Onyenwere made two 3-pointers and a jumper in the opening 1:53 as the Mystics took a 10-1 lead. They extended the margin to 23-9 before the Storm went on a 9-0 run.
The Mystics held a 28-20 lead after the first quarter as Onyenwere and Austin combined for 21 points.
The Storm pulled with six points early in the second before the Mystics answered with a 16-3 run on their way to a 48-29 halftime advantage.
Seattle scored the first eight points of the second half, but the Mystics were up 66-45 after three quarters.
Rookie centers Awa Fam of Seattle and Lauren Betts of Washington, the Nos. 3 and 4 picks in this spring’s WNBA draft, respectively, pretty much played to a draw. Both came off the bench. Fam had six points and five rebounds in 17:15 of playing time, and Betts had six points and three rebounds in 11:16.
The Storm played without center Dominique Malonga (concussion) and forward Ezi Magbegor (foot).
–Field Level Media
Sports
Shohei Ohtani (6 no-hit innings, homer) carries Dodgers past Rockies
May 27, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers left fielder Alex Call (12) hits an RBI single during the fourth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images Shohei Ohtani did not allow a hit over six innings on the mound and added a leadoff home run from the batter’s box as the Los Angeles Dodgers extended their winning streak to five games with a 4-1 victory over the visiting Colorado Rockies on Wednesday.
Ohtani and Will Klein held the Rockies without a hit through seven innings before Tyler Freeman singled to right field with two outs in the eighth against Tanner Scott.
Kyle Hurt finished off the combined one-hitter with a perfect ninth inning to earn his first career save.
Ohtani hit a leadoff home run during his second consecutive pitching start.
Freddie Freeman also went deep in the opening inning before Andy Pages homered in the eighth for Los Angeles, which has won 12 of 14 games overall.
Ohtani (5-2) battled his command, issuing four walks, allowing a run and plunking a batter, but he struck out seven in his 99-pitch outing. His season ERA rose from 0.73 to 0.82.
Rockies starter Tomoyuki Sugano (4-4) gave up three runs on six hits over 4 2/3 innings in a duel of Japanese-born starters. He struck out three and walked one. Colorado scored its lone run in the fourth inning on a groundout by Willi Castro en route to its fifth loss in a row.
After the Ohtani and Freeman home runs gave the Dodgers a 2-0 lead in the first inning, the Rockies halved the deficit in the fourth. The Dodgers countered with a run in their half of the fourth on an RBI single from Alex Call.
The Dodgers made it 4-1 in the eighth on a home run from Pages, his 13th of the season and third in his past four games. Los Angeles hit eight home runs in the final two games of the series while finishing off the three-game sweep.
The Dodgers received a trio of highlight defensive plays. Call made a diving catch in right in the second inning. Second baseman Alex Freeland dived to the first base bag to make a putout in the fourth on Castro’s RBI grounder, and left fielder Hyeseong Kim made a catch up against the railing in foul territory in the seventh.
Kim entered in the third inning as a replacement for Teoscar Hernandez, who departed due to a left hamstring strain.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Nyara Sabally's career-high 29 helps Tempo extend Sky's skid
May 27, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Sky guard Jacy Sheldon (0) defends against Toronto Tempo guard Kiki Rice (1) during the first half at Wintrust Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images Nyara Sabally scored a career-best 29 points Wednesday night to help the visiting Toronto Tempo defeat the Chicago Sky 111-104.
Sabally also had six rebounds, two steals and two blocked shots as the Tempo ended a two-game losing skid while extending the Sky’s losing streak to three.
Marina Mabrey added 24 points and seven assists for the Tempo (4-4). Brittney Sykes scored 20 points, Kiki Rice chipped in 14 and Maria Conde tallied 12.
Rookie Sydney Taylor scored a career-high 27 points off the bench for the Sky (3-4). Skylar Diggins added 23 points, nine assists and two blocks for Chicago. Natasha Cloud had 18 points and nine assists. Elizabeth Williams added 11 points, and Azura Stevens contributed 10.
The Tempo led by six points entering the fourth quarter. Taylor hit a 3-pointer with 8:42 to go in the fourth to cut the margin to four. Aicha Coulibaly’s putback layup brought Chicago to within 96-93 with 4:48 remaining. Sykes answered with a layup.
Taylor’s 3-pointer cut the lead to two with 3:33 left. Sabally nailed a 3-pointer after Mabrey’s steal to give Toronto an eight-point lead with 1:43 to play.
The Sky took advantage of four early Tempo turnovers to take a 10-5 lead. Toronto used a 14-4 run to take a 23-20 lead with 1:02 to play in the first quarter. Toronto led 25-22 after one quarter.
Mabrey opened the second quarter with a 3-pointer and hit another from beyond the arc to give Toronto an 11-point lead, 38-27, with 7:15 to go in the second quarter. The Sky rallied to climb to within five points on Cloud’s 3-pointer with 43 seconds remaining. Toronto led 55-48 at halftime.
Chicago continued to struggle from 3-point range despite getting some good looks, going 3-for-16 (18.8%) in the first half while Toronto was 6-for-15 (40%). The Sky took advantage of eight Toronto first-half turnovers for a 13-0 lead in fastbreak points.
Toronto worked the lead to 12 on Sabally’s cutting layup with 8:21 left in the third quarter. Sabally converted two free throws to bump the margin to 14.
The margin dwindled to four on Taylor’s 3-pointer with 1:48 left as the Sky capitalized on defensive stops. Toronto led 80-74 after three quarters.
–Field Level Media
