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Seton Hall, Xavier both desperately seeking success

Syndication: The EnquirerXavier Musketeers guard Ryan Conwell (7) celebrates a three point basket in the second half of the 92nd Annual Crosstown Shootout NCAA basketball game between the Cincinnati Bearcats and the Xavier Musketeers at Fifth Third Arena on the UC campus in Cincinnati on Saturday, Dec. 14, 2024. The Bearcats won 68-65.

Xavier and Seton Hall are two of four winless teams in Big East Conference action. One of them will finally get a win on the board when the Pirates visit the Musketeers on Tuesday in Cincinnati.

Xavier (8-5, 0-2 Big East) has been sliding ever since opening the season 6-0. Its current three-game skid has come against Top 25 opponents: at Cincinnati, at UConn and against Marquette. The Musketeers took UConn to overtime before falling 94-89 and lost to then-No. 9 Marquette 72-70 on Dec. 21.

“Right now, I don’t even know if it’s trying to manufacture positives as much as just, we need a break and we need to come back,” Xavier coach Sean Miller said. “We’re playing short-handed. I wish I could help the guys a little bit more and I think it becomes our job to just do the best we can when they get back.”

The Musketeers haven’t won since leading scorer and rebounder Zach Freemantle (16.9, 7.7) suffered a knee injury that will sideline him indefinitely.

Without Freemantle, Jerome Hunter (6.6 points per game) leads a thinned-out frontcourt, while Ryan Conwell (16.2 ppg, 43.9 percent from 3-point range) must shoulder more of the scoring responsibility.

Seton Hall (5-8, 0-2) is in an even deeper funk, having lost four straight and five of six. When the Pirates hosted Georgetown on Dec. 22, they never held a lead but scored the final 10 points of the game and had a shot to win on the final possession before coming up short, 61-60.

“What lost the game for us was we can’t keep spotting teams. We’re spotting teams points in the first half, right?” coach Shaheen Holloway said. “Then we try to come back and we waste a lot of energy coming back, and guys are a little fatigued.”

Isaiah Coleman, one of the few players to return from last year’s NIT-winning team, shined with a career-high 25 points and nine rebounds — seven on the offensive glass.

Coleman has become Seton Hall’s leading scorer (13.9) and rebounder (5.0), with Chaunce Jenkins the No. 2 option (11.5, 4.2). But Holloway said he’s still looking for a closer to emerge.

“At the end of the games, there’s not too much coaches can do,” Holloway said. “And I’m not throwing my players under the bus, I’m just being totally honest right now. At the end of the game, the players gotta make plays, right? I gotta put them in position to make plays, so that’s on me, but we just need somebody that wants to be a closer and wants the ball.”

–Field Level Media

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Tundra Esports advances to grand final of DreamLeague Season 28 playoffs

Tundra Esports swept Team Liquid in the upper-bracket final on Saturday to advance to the grand final of the DreamLeague Season 28 playoffs.

The grand final on Sunday will pit Tundra Esports against the winner of the lower-bracket final earlier in the day between Team Liquid and Aurora Gaming in the double-elimination format.

The $1 million Dota 2 event began with 16 teams competing in a round-robin stage split into two groups of eight teams. All series consisted of two games, and the top four teams from each group advanced to Group Stage 2, a single round robin featuring best-of-three matches that ran through Friday.

The playoffs feature best-of-three matches until the grand final, which will be best-of-five.

The championship team will receive $250,000 in prize money and a $40,000 club reward. The runner-up side will get $100,000 and a $30,000 club reward.

Aurora Gaming opened play on Saturday with a 2-1 win over Xtreme Gaming in the lower-bracket semifinal. Xtreme Gaming opened with a win in 40 minutes on red before Aurora Gaming rallied to wins in 47 and 29 minutes, both on red.

Russia’s Egor “Nightfall” Grigorenko logged a 21-4-28 kill-death-assist ratio for Aurora Gaming, while teammate Artem “Lorenof” Melnyk of Ukraine post a 23-8-30 K-D-A over three games. Wang “Ame” Chunyu of China had a 23-9-13 K-D-A ratio for Xtreme Gaming, which finished fourth in the tournament.

Tundra Esports dispatched Team Liquid 2-0 in the upper-bracket final, winning in 46 minutes on red and 39 minutes on green.

Ivan “Pure” Moskalenko of Russia posted a 32-2-19 K-D-A ratio for Tundra Esports and teammate Neta “33” Shapira of Israel had a 24-5-30. Michael “MiCKe” Vu of Sweden posted a 13-10-6 ratio for Team Liquid.

Dream League Season 28 prize pool, with prize money and club reward

1. $250,000, $40,000

2. $125,000, $30,000

3. $80,000, $25,000

4. $60,000, $20,000 — Xtreme Gaming

5. $45,000, $15,000 — Team Falcons

6. $35,000, $15,000 — PARIVISION

7. $30,000, $12,500 — BetBoom Team

8. $25,000, $12,500 — MOUZ

9-10. $20,000, $10,000 — OG, Natus Vincere

11-12. $17,500, $10,000 — Team Yandex, Team Spirit

13-14. $15,000, $10,000 — paiN Gaming, GamerLegion

15-16. $10,000, $10,000 — Yakult Brothers, Execration

–Field Level Media

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LYON, Cloud9 in LCS Lock-In grand final

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

Jordan Woodruff

LYON knocked out Sentinels to earn a meeting on Sunday with Cloud9 in the grand final of the League Championship Series 2026 Lock-In at Los Angeles.

LYON won 3-1 on Saturday in the lower-bracket final, taking the first map in 31 minutes as Kim “Berserker” Min-cheol of South Korea posted a 7-0-1 kill-death-assist ratio. LYON won again in 37 minutes as Niship “Dhokla” Doshi, an American/Indian player, had a 7-3-6 K-D-A and Berserker a 5-0-6.

Sentinels stayed alive with a victory in 34 minutes in the third game as Ham “HamBak” Yoo-jin of South Korea recorded a 5-0-8 K-D-A.

But LYON wrapped up the match by winning the fourth game in 39 minutes on red. Berserker contributed a 6-3-7 K-D-A.

Following the eight-team Swiss stage in the League of Legends event, six teams competed in the double-elimination playoffs, with all matches best-of-five. The overall winner qualifies for the First Stand Tournament, while the second- and third-place teams will head to the Americas Cup.

Both of the latter two events will be contested in Sao Paulo.

Cloud9, which finished atop the Swiss stage standings with a 3-0 record, has moved through the playoffs by beating FlyQuest 3-0 in the upper-bracket semifinal and Sentinels 3-0 in the upper-bracket final.

LYON, who finished fifth in the Swiss stage, eliminated FlyQuest with a 3-0 victory in the lower-bracket quarterfinals, then a 3-1 triumph over Team Liquid in the bracket’s semifinal before Saturday’s victory.

2026 League Championship Series Lock-In at Los Angeles prize pool

1. TBD, qualifies for First Stand Tournament

2. TBD, qualifies for America’s Cup

3. Sentinels, qualifies for America’s Cup

4. Team Liquid

5-6. FlyQuest, Disguised

7. Dignitas

8. Shopify Rebellion

–Field Level Media

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OpTic Texas moves into first place in CDL Major 2 qualifying

Syndication: Democrat and ChronicleYMCA member Austin Manengu works the keyboard as he plays a game of Fortnite during the unveiling of the new gaming lab at the Maplewood Family YMCA in Rochester Thursday, June 20, 2024. YMCA of Greater Rochester in partnership with Metro Sports & Entertainment Group will open two gaming labs for youth and teens this year.

OpTic Texas defeated Los Angeles Thieves in a battle of 4-0 teams to move to the top of the standings in qualifying for the Call of Duty League Stage 2 Major on Saturday.

In other second-day action of Week 3 competition, G2 Minnesota edged Riyadh Falcons, Toronto KOI beat Miami Heretics and Carolina Royal Ravens defeated Vancouver Surge.

The 12 Call of Duty League teams are playing a full qualifying round robin to determine seeding for the second major of the season, to be held March 27-29 in Marston Green, England, as part of the DreamHack Birmingham event.

The top six teams in qualifying head straight into the Stage 2 Major playoffs, while the teams in seventh through 10th place will compete in a play-in round.

The Stage 2 Major champion will receive $150,000 and 100 Call of Duty League points, while the runner-up will get $90,000 and 75 CDL points.

After Los Angeles Thieves claimed an opening 250-238 Den Hardpoint victory, OpTic Texas won the next three to claim a 3-1 victory. A 6-2 Exposure Search and Destroy triumph was followed by a 4-2 Den Overload win before the result was clinched with a 250-173 Colossus Hardpoint triumph.

In Saturday’s first match, G2 Minnesota won the final two games to come away with a 3-2 win. Riyadh opened with a 250-229 Scar Hardpoint victory and took a 2-1 lead with a 5-0 Scar Overload win. G2 leveled it at 1 with a 6-1 Raid Search and Destroy win, tied it at 2 with a convincing 250-134 Colossus Hardpoint victory and won the deciding Colossus Search and Destroy game 6-3.

Toronto finished a sweep of Miami with 250-182 Hardpoint, 6-4 Search and Destroy and 4-2 Overload victories, all on the Den map.

Carolina also swept Vancouver for its second victory in as many days after a 1-3 start. After opening with a 250-186 Blackheart Hardpoint win and following with a 6-2 Den Search and Destroy victory, the team closed out the win with an 8-2 Exposure Overload win.

The weekend schedule:

Sunday

–Toronto KOI vs. Paris Gentle Mates

–FaZe Vegas vs. Boston Breach

–Miami Heretics vs. Cloud9 New York

–Vancouver Surge vs. OpTic Texas

Call of Duty League Stage 2 Major qualifiers standings (match record, map differential)

1. OpTic Texas, 5-0, +11

2. Los Angeles Thieves, 4-1, +8

3. Paris Gentle Mates, 3-1, +5

4. G2 Minnesota, 3-2, +1

5. Riyadh Falcons, 3-3, +2

6. Carolina Royal Ravens, 3-3, -1

7. FaZe Vegas, 2-3, 0

8. Toronto KOI, 2-3, -2

9. Miami Heretics, 1-3, -4

10.. Vancouver Surge, 1-3, -6

11. Cloud9 New York, 1-3, -7

12. Boston Breach, 1-4, -7

–Field Level Media

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