Sports
SEC lead hangs in balance on No. 17 Florida's trip to Texas A&M
Florida guard Urban Klavzar (7) drives for the basket during the second half of an NCAA Mens basketball game at Steven C. O’Connell Center Exactek arena in Gainesville, FL on Sunday, February 1, 2026. Florida beat Alabama 100-77. [Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun] Sole possession of first place in the Southeastern Conference is on the line when No. 17 Florida travels to College Station, Texas to take on Texas A&M Saturday night.
The Gators (16-6, 7-2 SEC) are riding a two-game winning streak, including a 100-77 rout of then-No. 23 Alabama on Sunday. It marked the first time Florida has reached the century mark in league play as it dominated inside with 72 points in the paint.
Alex Condon starred with 25 points, seven rebounds and six assists. Thomas Haugh finished with 22 points, and Rueben Chinyelu had another balanced performance with 14 points and 17 rebounds.
Coach Todd Golden couldn’t have had higher praise for Condon, saying he looked like a “first-team All-American.”
“That’s a hell of a ball game, man,” Golden said. “I’m not sure you can ask for anything more out of him. I thought he was aggressive. I thought he was decisive and played with great physicality.”
Golden went on to say that he thought Chinyelu is “arguably the best defender in America right now.”
Chinyelu, who leads the SEC in rebounding with 11.3 per game, is a big reason why the Gators are the best rebounding team in the country, averaging 46.0 per game. They also have the third-best defense in the SEC, limiting opponents to 71.4 points per game.
The Aggies (17-5, 7-2), who are just outside the Top 25, will put the Gators’ defense to test. They have the third-best offense in the country, averaging 92.0 points per game.
A&M is coming off a 100-97 loss at Alabama on Wednesday, a contest that could have easily gone the other way. The loss snapped a four-game winning streak for the Aggies, but they are still in promising shape in Bucky McMillan’s first season.
“What if I said, ‘Hey, guys, we got the second round of the league coming up, nine games left, and we’re in first place.’ We’re in first place, and we got five of these games at home,” McMillan said. “We got the defending national champs coming in here, we can get sole possession and all the pressure is still on them.”
The Aggies are 12-1 at Reed Arena so far and have won their last three home games against the Gators. The last matchup in College Station was a 67-66 thriller on Feb. 3, 2024. Florida has won the last two games, though, including an 89-70 home victory last season.
For A&M to pull off the upset, it will need several standout performances. Rashaun Agee has been the most consistent scoring threat, leading the team with 14.2 points and 8.7 rebounds per game. Agee scored 21 points in the loss at Alabama on Wednesday, his fourth 20-point performance of the season. Rylan Griffen is coming off a 17-point performance, including a 3-of-5 night from deep. As a team, the Aggies knocked down 13 3s.
They will need a similar showing to hang with the Gators.
“We’ve just got to have everybody coming out guns blazing, fighting with this team, and whatever happens, happens,” McMillan said. “But good things happen when we usually have that mentality.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
LSU looks to build off OT win as Georgia chases SEC reset
Jan 31, 2026; Columbia, South Carolina, USA; Louisiana State Tigers head coach Matt McMahon directs his team against the South Carolina Gamecocks in the second half at Colonial Life Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Blake-Imagn Images Both Georgia and LSU have a lot of catching up to do as they begin the second half of the Southeastern Conference season against each other Saturday in Baton Rouge, La.
The Bulldogs (16-6, 4-5 SEC) have fallen to 11th in the conference after losing three straight games. The Tigers (14-8, 2-7) are in 14th place, but they got a win in their last game, beating South Carolina 92-87 in overtime on Jan. 31.
Georgia hopes to end its losing streak just as LSU ended a three-game skid when it beat the Gamecocks.
“Our guys are resilient,” Bulldogs head coach Mike White said. “We’ve got to clean up details, but this team really works. We’ll accept messages, we’ll learn from the film, we’ll have good practices.”
White is looking for his team to start better than they did in the last game. Georgia fell behind by as many as 20 points in the first half and lost to visiting Texas A&M 92-77. White called it “the worst start we’ve gotten off to in a long, long time.”
The Bulldogs shot 7 of 28 on 3-pointers, but guard Blue Cain didn’t dwell on just the outside shooting.
“We have a bunch of issues we have to address besides that,” he said.
LSU got off to a much better start than Georgia did in its last game, leading for all but 26 seconds in the first half, eventually prevailing in the extra period.
“We were ready to go from the opening jump,” head coach Matt McMahon said, adding that the Tigers “responded the right way” to “the poor performance” in an 80-66 home loss to Mississippi State three days earlier.
LSU managed without starting point guard Dedan Thomas Jr., who has been in and out of the lineup due to a lower leg injury. The week off between games could give him time to return against Georgia, though his replacement, Rashad King, played well against South Carolina, and the Tigers finished with 23 assists on 31 baskets.
“I loved our unselfishness,” McMahon said. “I thought the ball moved. That’s how we need to play moving forward.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Alabama tackles rival Auburn with Charles Bediako case pending
Feb 1, 2026; Gainesville, Florida, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide center Charles Bediako (14) reacts after a foul call by the referee against the Florida Gators during the second half at Exactech Arena at the Stephen C. O’Connell Center. Mandatory Credit: Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images Alabama split back-to-back games against Southeastern Conference co-leaders Florida and Texas A&M.
The Crimson Tide (15-7, 5-4 SEC) bounced back from a 100-77 thrashing at the hands of the host Gators to defeat the visiting Aggies 100-97 on Wednesday. That left them just two games behind the conference leaders as they visit Auburn on Saturday.
Head coach Nate Oats gave the players the credit for their response after their most lopsided loss of the season.
“I think some guys admitted their effort wasn’t where it needed to be (against Florida),” Oats said. “Their mind wasn’t where it needed to be, and we’ve got to turn this thing around. So I think it was more of an internal thing. We’ve got to get internal leadership from players.”
The Crimson Tide had six double-figure scorers and turned the ball over just six times after giving it away 18 times against Florida. They had 19 assists on 31 field goals and made 16 3-pointers in their third straight game with at least 14.
Oats said he wasn’t emphasizing scoring even though Alabama finished with its highest point total against an SEC opponent this season, reaching triple figures for the sixth time overall.
“We weren’t going to talk about scoring this game,” Oats said. “We were going to talk about our effort, our toughness and our playing for each other.”
As of Friday night, Charles Bediako remains eligible. On Friday, the NCAA requested that a court overturn Bediako’s temporary injunction that’s allowed him to return from professional to college basketball. The judge said he anticipates making a ruling “soon.”
Auburn (14-8, 5-4) has had a full week of preparation since a 77-69 loss at Tennessee on Jan. 31. Head coach Steven Pearl said the absence of a mid-week game came “at a great time” for a couple of “banged-up” Tigers.
Leading scorer Keyshawn Hall (20.9 points per game) played against Tennessee with three stitches in a finger on his shooting hand and scored 21.
“He’s one who is never going to complain about a little injury,” forward Sebastian Williams-Adams said of Hall. “Getting stitches is no joke, but he treated it like it was like a paper cut. He’s a warrior. We aren’t obviously in that game without Key.”
Auburn looks to get back on track after the loss to the Volunteers ended a four-game winning streak.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Elvis Smylie, Peter Uihlein tied for Riyadh lead heading to LIV's first-ever 4th round
May 16, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Elvis Smylie lines up a shot on the fifth hole green during the second round of the PGA Championship golf tournament at Quail Hollow. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images LIV Golf spent four seasons promoting 54 holes as a core part of its identity. On Friday in Riyadh, it revealed a new side as the third round concluded with a leaderboard that didn’t decide anything yet. This is the league’s first regular-season event staged over 72 holes, a notable change for 2026.
After three rounds at Riyadh Golf Club, new LIV player Elvis Smylie and original league member Peter Uihlein are tied at 16-under 200, with Talor Gooch a shot back and 19 players within six of the lead.
Under LIV’s old format, Smylie and Uihlein would’ve been headed to a playoff. Instead, they get 18 more holes.
“Yeah, thanks for bringing that up,” Uihlein said, smiling after his 6-under-par 66. “I feel like 72 holes fits me a little better. If you would have told me at the beginning of the week, ‘Hey, you’d be tied for the lead after 54 and you have a chance to win on Sunday,’ that’s where you’d want to be. So I’d take it.”
Smylie is making his first start with Ripper GC and doesn’t have any LIV history with the 54-hole rhythm. He played his way into a tie for the lead with a bogey-free 7-under 65.
“I want to prove my worth in this league,” Smylie said, “and I want to establish myself as one of the best guys in this league, and the best way to do that is by going out and making a statement this week, and that’s what I’m doing a really good job with so far.”
In the team competition, Torque GC moved to 46-under, two clear of Smash GC after matching 65s from Abraham Ancer and Carlos Ortiz. Smash GC is also trying to deliver a win in Gooch’s first event as captain, while Ripper GC sits one shot further back in third.
Ancer, who knows what it’s like to win in the shorter version of LIV, believes the longer tournaments can favor consistent golfers.
“I feel like 54 holes was good enough to figure out who’s playing the best golf. You just feel like it’s a little bit more of a sprint, have a little bit less time for you to make mistakes and come back from them,” Ancer said. “But then playing 72 holes, you feel like if you’re a steady player, that would maybe help you rise to the top of the leaderboard.”
That’s the new LIV reality. The league has added a fourth round. Now it’s about seeing who can handle it.
–Field Level Media
