Sports
Reports: Sacramento State joining MAC this year as football-only member
Sep 16, 2023; Stanford, California, USA; Sacramento State Hornets running back Elijah Tau-Tolliver (25) celebrates after a touchdown during the fourth quarter against the Stanford Cardinal at Stanford Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sergio Estrada-Imagn Images The Mid-American Conference is going far west to add Sacramento State as a football-only member starting with the 2026 season, according to multiple reports on Saturday night.
The MAC presidents, per reports, approved the addition of the California-based Hornets, a Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) program from 1993-2025. Sacramento State will pay an $18 million entry fee to the MAC and a $5 million fee to the NCAA to move to the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) level, according to reports.
With this addition, the conference will retain 13 football programs with the exit of Northern Illinois on July 1, which is leaving for the Mountain West Conference and paid a $2 million entry fee.
North Dakota State, an FCS power over the last 15 years with 10 national titles in that span, also is joining the Mountain West, per reports earlier this week.
According to ESPN, North Dakota State will pay roughly a $12 million entrance fee to its new league, as well as $5 million to the NCAA in order to move up to the FBS level. Per standard NCAA arrangement, the NDSU football team will not be eligible for a bowl or College Football Playoff berth until 2028.
Sacramento State is a geographic outlier for the MAC as its first program in the Pacific Time Zone. The other programs — not including Northern Illinois — are in the Eastern Time Zone.
The Hornets went 7-5 in 2025, 5-3 in the Big Sky Conference. They will be the first university on the West Coast to go from FCS to FBS in 57 years, following Fresno and San Diego State in 1969, Yahoo Sports reported.
During the 2026-27 academic season, all Sacramento State teams except football will move to the Big West Conference.
Last June, an NCAA Division I council denied a waiver for Sacramento State to move to FBS in 2026, a goal for the program since 2024. The original hope was to join a reconfigured Pac-12 Conference that was set to return to action in 2026 with five Mountain West Conference programs.
But the Hornets program did not receive an invitation for its football program to join an existing conference. Instead, the Hornets launched a plan to leave the Big Sky Conference for the Big West Conference in all sports but football and have its football team play as an FBS independent in 2026.
When the NCAA nixed that possibility last summer, the school planned on moving forward anyway.
“We still plan to be playing FBS football in 2026,” Sacramento State president Luke Wood posted on X after the NCAA denied the school’s waiver request.
“Sacramento State has met every meaningful benchmark for FBS membership, and we believe our university, our students, and the entire Sacramento region deserve major college football.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Honor Huff, West Virginia surge past UCF
Feb 14, 2026; Orlando, Florida, USA; West Virginia Mountaineers guard Honor Huff (3) shoots a three-point basket against UCF Knights guard Riley Kugel (2) during the first half at Addition Financial Arena. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images Honor Huff scored 18 of his game-high 21 points in the second half and visiting West Virginia rallied from a 14-point deficit to stop Central Florida 74-67 on Saturday night in Orlando.
Jasper Floyd added 17 for the Mountaineers (16-9, 7-5 Big 12 Conference), including a critical 3-pointer with 1:49 remaining for a 66-62 lead. Chance Moore came off the bench to chip in 12 points, while Brenen Lorient contributed 11 to go along with eight rebounds.
Huff applied the dagger by canning a 3-pointer with 59 seconds left to up the margin to seven. He added a pair of clinching free throws with 24 seconds on the clock.
Themus Fulks bounced back from a scoreless outing in his previous game in a loss at Cincinnati to lead the Knights (17-7, 6-6) with 19 points and seven assists before fouling out. Riley Kugel scored 13 points, while Chris Johnson and Jordan Burks added 10 apiece.
UCF owned a 52-38 advantage at the 11:27 mark after Fulks made a foul shot. But West Virginia rattled off the next eight points and took the lead for good on two foul shots by Huff with 2:37 on the clock.
Each team entered this game looking for answers after discouraging losses last weekend. UCF was hammered 92-72 on Sunday at Cincinnati, while West Virginia made only two of 22 3-pointers in a 70-63 home defeat against then-No. 13 Texas Tech.
The Knights came into the contest allowing 83.4 points per game in their last seven contests but clearly paid attention to the defensive end in the first half. The Mountaineers sank just 13 of 36 attempts from the field (36.1%), including a pitiful 1 of 12 on 3-pointers (8.3%).
UCF, however, managed only a 29-28 edge at halftime because it also couldn’t get going offensively. It was only 10 of 27 from the field (37%) and also got pummeled 24-16 on the glass, allowing a whopping 11 offensive rebounds.
Huff, who entered as West Virginia’s leading scorer, managed only three points on 1-of-5 shooting in the first half.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Men's hockey roundup: Slovakia wins Group B despite loss to Sweden
Feb 14, 2026; Milan, Italy; Slovakia players react after a Group B men’s ice hockey game during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: James Lang-Imagn Images MILAN, Italy — Slovakia lost the battle but won the war against Sweden on Saturday, as it clawed its way to the top of Group B on goal differential despite losing to the Nordic powerhouse 5-3, earning a bye into the men’s ice hockey quarterfinals.
In other group action, the United States recovered from a slow start to double up Denmark 6-3, Finland walloped Italy 11-0 and Latvia fought back to edge Germany 4-3 on the fourth day of the tournament.
Slovakia, Sweden and Finland each had two wins and a loss when the dust settled on the tournament’s most competitive group of the preliminary stage, but Slovakia scored in the final minute to ensure it could bypass Tuesday’s qualification round.
The winners of each of the three preliminary groups and the next best overall team automatically advance to the quarterfinals in Milan, while the remaining teams compete in a single-elimination qualification playoff.
Host Italy will go into the single-elimination playoffs after going winless through the group stage, while Groups A and C will conclude on Sunday.
SLOVAKIA VICTORIOUS IN DEFEAT
Elias Pettersson scored twice while forwards Joel Eriksson Ek, Adrian Kempe and Lucas Raymond each added goals for Sweden, the pre-tournament favorite to challenge Canada and the United States for the top of the podium.
Eriksson Ek nudged the puck over the line for a short-handed goal in the eighth minute at Santagiulia Arena but Slovakian star forward Juraj Slafkovsky leveled it less than two minutes later with a slapshot from the right wing.
Kempe scored four seconds into a power play midway through the second, putting the puck under the Slovakian goalie’s glove, but defenseman Martin Gernat answered less than three minutes later, sending the puck zipping by the Swedish goaltender’s right skate for the equalizer.
Pettersson made it 3-2 for Sweden with a five-hole shot late in the second and Raymond found Pettersson on the back post eight minutes into the third before burying one in the net himself.
Dalibor Dvorsky’s goal for Slovakia in the final minute of competition gave his side the goal differential upper hand.
Group B ended with bitter disappointment for Italy, as Finland set the tone with three goals in the first 10 minutes.
Carolina Hurricanes’ points leader Sebastian Aho, captain Mikael Granlund, Kaapo Kakko and Joel Kiviranta provided two goals each, and Miro Heiskanen, Artturi Lehkonen and Joel Armia also scored in the most lopsided win of the men’s tournament so far.
DENMARK PUSH UNITED STATES
Fans expected the favored United States to run up the score against Denmark on the penultimate day of the men’s preliminary stage. But the Danes showed they would not be bossed around in the Group C contest as they went into the locker room for the first intermission up 2-1.
Forward Jack Eichel got to work setting things back on track for the Americans in the second period, where he assisted on Brady Tkachuk’s second goal of the tournament before netting one of his own less than a minute later.
Eichel’s Vegas Golden Knights teammate Noah Hanifin made it 4-2 and, while Denmark’s defenseman Phillip Bruggisser trimmed the score with less than three seconds before the second intermission, the Americans kept them scoreless in the third.
“Give them credit, they played really hard, they were opportunistic,” said Eichel. “No game’s going to be easy, we realize that, and it was good of the group to continue to play our game for 60 minutes.”
The United States plays Germany and winless Denmark faces Latvia on Sunday in the final two Group C games.
LATVIA HOLDS OFF GERMANY
Latvia twice fell behind on goals from Lukas Reichel and Lukas Kalble, with Dans Locmelis evening the game both times.
Final-period goals by Eduards Tralmaks and Renars Krastenbergs had the Latvians cruising, until Tim Stutzle scored late for Germany.
Down 0-1, Latvia tied it with a power-play goal four minutes from the end of the opening period when Locmelis was hovering near the post and slammed home Zemgus Girgensons’ pass. Germany took just over a minute to regain the lead through Kalble. Playing with a 5-on-3 advantage, Locmelis equalized again, slamming the puck into the roof of the net, and Latvia went in front through Tralmaks just after killing a penalty. Krastenbergs gave Latvia a two-goal cushion with less than nine minutes remaining but had to hang on in the closing stages when the Germans pulled their goalie for an extra skater and Stutzle scored with over two minutes left.
Latvia wraps up the first round of its Milan campaign on Sunday with a Group C game against Denmark.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
Josh Hubbard, hot-shooting Mississippi State outlast Ole Miss
Feb 14, 2026; Oxford, Mississippi, USA; Mississippi State Bulldogs guard Josh Hubbard (12) drives to the basket as Mississippi Rebels forward Malik Dia (0) defends during the first half at The Sandy and John Black Pavilion at Ole Miss. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images Junior guard Josh Hubbard scored 32 points on 12-for-16 shooting and dished out a game-high six assists to lead the most accurate Mississippi State shooting performance of the season in a 90-78 win over host Ole Miss on Saturday night in Oxford.
Mississippi State (12-13, 4-8 Southeastern Conference) had shot better than 50% only four times all season but shot 62.1% (18-for-29) in the first half and finished at a season-best 56.9% (33-for-58) from the field. The Bulldogs also shot 11-for-24 (45.8%) from 3-point range, which tied the team’s season high for long-range makes and was the second-best accuracy from distance.
Hubbard scored 16 of his points in the first half when the Bulldogs built a 19-point lead, 47-28, after 20 minutes and helped them end a run of eight losses in their previous nine games. It was the fifth 30-plus scoring performance of the season for Hubbard, who had 31 points in a home loss to Tennessee on Wednesday.
State jumped out to a 13-3 lead in the first five minutes of the game, with Achor Achor scoring the team’s first 11 points and Hubbard dropping a jumper to end the run.
Ole Miss pulled within 24-21 on AJ Storr’s layup with 7:43 left in the half, but State responded with the next seven points, including a Hubbard 3-pointer. The Rebels closed within five, but the Bulldogs finished the half on a 16-2 run with seven more points coming from Hubbard. Ole Miss never pulled closer than 12 points in the second half.
Hubbard was joined in double figure scoring by Achor, who tallied 18 points on 6-for-8 shooting and also grabbed five rebounds. Jayden Epps added 12 points and seven rebounds.
Ole Miss (11-14, 3-9) has lost its last seven games and struggled to find offense aside from Malik Dia and reserve Storr.
Dia tallied 32 points on 11-for-20 shooting and pulled down seven boards. Storr scored 21 points on 8-for-16 shooting while grabbing six rebounds and dishing five assists. No other Rebel topped six points.
–Field Level Media
