Sports
Suns, Sixers aiming for better finishing ability after close losses
Jan 20, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey (0) drives against Phoenix Suns guard Collin Gillespie (12) during the third quarter at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images The host Phoenix Suns and Philadelphia 76ers enter their game Saturday looking to regain their touch on the offensive end after near-misses Thursday.
The Suns scored only 15 points in the fourth quarter and could not hold a 14-point lead in the final 10 minutes of a 101-97 home loss to Golden State.
“We have to find a way to score more than 15 in the fourth,” Suns coach Jordan Ott said.
The 76ers led the Los Angeles Lakers by as many as 14 and nearly recovered from a 16-point fourth-quarter deficit before taking a 119-115 road loss.
“For 30 minutes of the game, we were really generating good offense,” 76ers coach Nick Nurse said. “Then it got a little bit tough and sticky and physical, and we couldn’t really generate great shots.”
The loss snapped the 76ers’ five-game winning streak as they prepare for the fourth of a five-game road trip that has included wins over the Los Angeles Clippers and Warriors.
The Suns have lost their last two at home, to the Clippers and Warriors.
Phoenix was outscored 25-7 after taking a 90-76 lead with 10:11 remaining and was scoreless in the final 3:55. The team missed its final six field-goal attempts, four by go-to guy Dillon Brooks.
Devin Booker and Jalen Green were again out because of injury, and Grayson Allen (right knee) walked off the floor with about three minutes remaining after a scramble under the Warriors’ basket and did not return.
Booker (ankle) has missed the last seven games and Green (hamstring, hip) has been sidelined for six of the last seven. Both are listed as questionable for Saturday’s game, while Allen has been ruled out.
“Where we’re at right now, every possession offensively we’re going to have to execute,” Ott said.
Brooks scored 24 points and the Suns made 16 3-pointers, but the ball stuck in the fourth quarter against an aggressive Warriors’ defense that hounded the 3-point line.
“Our second group found a rhythm by moving the basketball, and then it stopped,” Ott said. “It’s really hard to move it even late in the game. … We’ve got to find a way somehow to get a shot up on the rim and at least give us a chance.”
Suns center Mark Williams had 11 points and 10 rebounds but did not play in the fourth quarter, when reserve Oso Ighodaro played all 12 minutes and had four points.
“A little bit on both ends,” Ott said of the decision to stay with the more mobile Ighodaro. “Especially defensively, just our ability to be up and aggressive.”
The Suns are nearing the midway point of a stretch in which they play 16 of 19 games at home, a recipe to gain ground as they look to avoid the play-in round in the postseason. They are in seventh place in the Western Conference, one game behind Minnesota for the final guaranteed playoff spot.
The 76ers made a minor trade at Thursday’s deadline, sending Eric Gordon to Memphis in a deal that enabled them to convert Dominick Barlow’s two-way contract to a standard NBA deal.
Barlow is averaging a career-high 8.5 points and 5.0 rebounds in 41 games (34 starts). He had 13 points, three rebounds and two steals against the Lakers.
“He certainly more than deserved it, right?” Nurse said. “A two-way guy starting that many games out of the block for a team that’s got a winning record, I don’t know if that’s ever happened.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Reports: Paul Goldschmidt returning to Yankees
Sep 20, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; New York Yankees first baseman Paul Goldschmidt (48) hits a single during the eighth inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images The New York Yankees and first baseman Paul Goldschmidt are in agreement on a one-year extension to keep the veteran first baseman in the Bronx, according to multiple reports on Friday.
Contract details are currently unknown. Goldschmidt signed a one-year, $12 million deal with New York last offseason to be its starting first basement, but saw utilityman Ben Rice begin to split starts later in the campaign that even ran into the postseason.
Goldschmidt, 38, played his first season in the American League last season for the Yankees after 14 accomplished years between the Arizona Diamondbacks and St. Louis Cardinals. He was the 2022 National League MVP for St. Louis and he earned seven All-Star berths, three Gold Gloves and five Silver Sluggers.
Goldschmidt finished the 2025 season with a .274 batting average, 10 homers, 45 RBIs and 134 hits, numbers that has been slowly declining since his 2022 NL MVP season.
Over 2,074 career games, Goldschmidt has tallied 372 home runs and 1,232 RBIs.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Political tensions surface at slick Milan Cortina opening ceremony
[US, Mexico & Canada customers only] Feb 6, 2026; Milan, ITALY; Fabric pours out from three tubes of paint from above as performers walk on stage during the opening ceremony during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games. Mandatory Credit: Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters via Imagn Images MILAN/CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Italy launched the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics on Friday with a slick and colorful ceremony that celebrated the country’s history, arts and fashion but where global political tensions surfaced in the crowd reaction.
Italian President Sergio Mattarella formally declared the Games open at the main event in Milan’s San Siro stadium as part of an unprecedented show that also linked to celebrations in co-host Cortina d’Ampezzo, more than 250 miles away in the Dolomites.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio were among the crowd in the iconic soccer stadium for the performance entitled “Armonia” (Harmony) that lasted three and a half hours.
Vance, who has been strongly critical of Europe, drew jeers in the stadium when an image of him waving the U.S. flag appeared on a big screen.
The announcement of the Israeli team prompted some booing in Milan over the loud soundtrack, but there were cheers in Cortina. Israel has a team of 10 in Italy.
The group of five athletes from Ukraine in Milan drew huge cheers.
TWIN CAULDRONS LIT IN MILAN AND CORTINA
International Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry said the Games should bring people together.
“Let these Games be a celebration of what unites us — of everything that makes us human,” Coventry said.
“This is the magic of the Olympic Games: inspiring us all to be the best that we can be — together,” she added.
For the first time, two Olympic cauldrons, one of the symbols of the Games, were lit simultaneously and will burn throughout — one at Milan’s Arco della Pace (Peace Arch) and the other in Cortina’s Piazza Dibona.
Alberto Tomba and Deborah Compagnoni, two of Italy’s most successful Alpine skiers who both won three Olympic gold medals, lit the cauldron at the 19th century Milan monument.
Sofia Goggia, one of Italy’s top medal hopes for these Games, did the honors in Cortina. She became the first Italian woman to win an Olympic downhill gold at the 2018 edition.
MARIAH CAREY GOT THE PARTY STARTED
U.S. pop diva Mariah Carey had gotten the party started in a unique opening ceremony combining elements from the co-hosts, seeking to reflect both city and mountain life.
Carey performed the 1950s Italian song “Nel blu, dipinto di blu” (“In the blue, painted in blue”) with its famous “Volare” (“To fly”) refrain to cheers in the stadium.
Mattarella had been introduced to the fans via a recorded video clip in which the 84-year-old was seen traveling through the city on one of Milan’s historic trams.
The show also included a tribute to the late Italian fashion designer Giorgio Armani, who made Milan his base and died last September.
The ceremony celebrated the diversity of Italian life, from fashionable Milan to the smaller mountain towns in the Alps that host the outdoor events at the Games, which run until Feb. 22.
Athletes also paraded in the mountain venues of Livigno and Predazzo, in a Games spread over 22,000 square kilometers.
INITIAL CONFUSION IN CORTINA
There was some initial confusion over access in Cortina.
Loredana Vido, from Padova, owner of a second home in Cortina, was blocked at the start of Corso Italia, the town’s main street, and said: “We were not told that everything would be closed off. We were told it was free entry.”
But some competitors in Cortina were pleased to get a slice of the action without having to trek to Milan, and they mixed with one another after their parades.
“Do I wish I was at the full one? Kind of. Am I happy I don’t have to spend 10 hours on a bus that day? Yes,” said Austin Florian, part of the U.S. skeleton team.
In the outdoor event in Livigno, at the foot of the snowboard and freeski runs, a thin crowd of locals and tourists gathered to watch the main ceremony in Milan on screens, as athletes in the small Alpine town walked in the snow, in sync with delegations at the San Siro.
PROTESTS IN MILAN
A series of protests took place on Friday, with more planned over the weekend, in the Italian financial capital to oppose the presence of analysts from a department that falls under U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Italy’s government has said the controversy is unfounded, with ICE personnel not on the streets during the Olympics and only operatives from its Homeland Security Investigations in Italy working out of U.S. diplomatic missions.
The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee has also said no agents from ICE were providing security for Team USA.
More local issues such as the closure of schools and streets in the city have also irked some Milanese.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
Sports
Magic set sights on another convincing win vs. Jazz
Feb 5, 2026; Orlando, Florida, USA; Orlando Magic forward Paolo Banchero (5) passes against Brooklyn Nets center Day’ron Sharpe (20) during the second half at Kia Center. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images The Orlando Magic took a step forward in their first of four consecutive home games against opponents with losing records.
After cruising to a wire-to-wire win Thursday, Orlando will look to author another dominating performance against a sub-.500 team Saturday when the struggling Utah Jazz pay a visit.
Desmond Bane scored 23 points, Paolo Banchero had 22 and Jalen Suggs recorded his first career triple-double in the Magic’s convincing 118-98 victory over the Brooklyn Nets. Suggs finished with 15 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists to go along with a career-high four blocks and three steals.
“To be honest, I don’t even get into individual accomplishments and stuff like that,” Suggs said, per the Orlando Sentinel.
Said Magic head coach Jamahl Mosley of Suggs: “He was great tonight. His energy, his poise, his focus on the defensive end … It was beautiful basketball.”
So beautiful, in fact, that Suggs played a significant role in Orlando amassing a comfortable 23-point lead in the third quarter. The team put it on cruise control from there and snapped its minor two-game losing streak.
“I thought they did a great job of starting the game off holding them to 19 points in the first quarter, knowing that we set the tone with our defense and that’s what these guys did,” Mosley said. “There was a seriousness to them, a level of focus knowing what we needed to do because we’ve been with this team before and we’ve had big leads and we’ve given them away.”
The Magic, who will also host the underachieving Milwaukee Bucks on both Monday and Wednesday, shot 53.7% from the floor and enjoyed a 64-40 edge in points in the paint.
Bane capped a 32-point performance by making a layup with 0.9 seconds remaining in overtime to lift Orlando to a 128-127 victory the last time the Magic played Utah on Dec. 20.
Banchero collected 23 points, nine rebounds and nine assists in that game, and Anthony Black added 20, six and five, respectively.
Keyonte George, who recorded 27 points in that game for the Jazz, sat out his third consecutive contest Thursday with a left ankle sprain. He’s listed as questionable for the Orlando game.
Utah also played without recent trade acquisition Jaren Jackson Jr., who has yet to arrive from the Memphis Grizzlies.
The end result for the undermanned Jazz was their 17th loss in 21 games, courtesy of a 121-119 decision to the Atlanta Hawks.
Isaiah Collier followed up his 17-point, career-best 22-assist performance in Tuesday’s 131-122 win over the Indiana Pacers with a career-high 25 points and 11 assists versus the Hawks. He logged 48 minutes in both games.
“I’ve talked a lot about him playing off two feet, I think it’s allowed his decision making to be a lot cleaner,” Will Hardy said of Collier, per the Salt Lake Tribune. “Getting all the way to the rim in the half court in the NBA is hard to do. His decision-making has really improved since he started playing off two feet in the paint more. I also think that his general understanding of our team, our offense, where his moments are to be aggressive has improved as well.”
Hardy said he’s hopeful Jackson and the other players acquired in the deal will make their team debuts in Saturday’s game.
–Field Level Media
