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TCU extends late-season surge with Kansas State defeat

NCAA Basketball: Texas Christian at Kansas StateFeb 28, 2026; Manhattan, Kansas, USA; TCU Horned Frogs guard Jayden Pierre (1) is guarded by Kansas State Wildcats guard David Castillo (10) during the first half at Bramlage Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Scott Sewell-Imagn Images

Xavier Edmonds scored 15 points with 13 rebounds and Tanner Toolson added 14 points as TCU continued its late-season surge with a 77-68 victory over Kansas State in Big 12 play Saturday at Manhattan, Kan.

David Punch scored 13 points and Liutauras Lelevicius added 12 as the Horned Frogs (19-10, 9-7 Big 12) won for the sixth time in their past seven games in a stretch that includes a victory over then-No. 5 Iowa State.

All nine of Edmonds’ double-doubles this season have come in the past 11 games.

P.J. Haggerty scored 18 points and Nate Johnson added 16 points with nine rebounds for the Wildcats (11-18, 2-14), who lost for the ninth time in their past 10 games. Kansas State fell to 1-3 under interim head coach Matthew Driscoll, who took after Jerome Tang was fired on Feb. 15.

Taj Manning had 10 rebounds for the Wildcats, who committed 18 turnovers that led to 28 points for the Horned Frogs.

TCU led by as many as seven points before the midway point of the second half but saw its advantage cut to 57-56 with 9:25 remaining. The Horned Frogs used a 9-3 run to take a 66-59 lead with 6:06 remaining after a jumper from Lelevicius that came after a 3-pointer from TCU’s Brock Harding.

Kansas State pulled back within 67-65 with 4:44 remaining after a three-point play by David Castillo.

The Horned Frogs took control with a personal 6-0 run from Edmonds for a 73-65 lead with 3:37 remaining. A basket from Harding gave TCU its first double-digit lead at 75-65 with 2:56 left.

TCU used an 8-2 run in the first half to lead 33-27 and was up 41-38 at halftime behind seven points and six rebounds from Edmonds. Haggerty led Kansas State with 14 points in the first half.

The Horned Frogs shot 45.7% from the floor in the first half and still led despite the Wildcats shooting 56.7% before the break.

–Field Level Media

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WTA roundup: Elena Rybakina continues sizzling start to 2026

Syndication: Desert SunElena Rybakina waves to the crowd after advancing to the quarterfinals after Sonay Kartal retired from their match at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, Calif., Wednesday, March 11, 2026.

Top-seeded Elena Rybakina continued her outstanding 2026 campaign by overwhelming sixth-seeded Mirra Andreeva 7-5, 6-1 on Saturday to reach the finals of the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart, Germany.

Rybakina, who represents Kazakhstan, will face No. 7 seed Karolina Muchova of the Czech Republic in Sunday’s final. Muchova pulled off a mild upset with a 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 victory over No. 4 Elina Svitolina of Ukraine.

Rybakina, who won the 2026 Australian Open and reached the finals at Indian Wells, exchanged breaks with Andreeva before winning four of five points on the Russian’s serve to capture the first set. She cruised in the second set, winning a combined 21 of 25 points on her first serves and Andreeva’s second service offerings.

The deciding set between Muchova and Svitolina looked to be going the distance, but the Czech won the final eight points of the match — four on her opponent’s serve in the ninth game — to set up the fourth all-time meeting with Rybakina. Muchova has won two of three prior matches, including a quarterfinal victory in January at Brisbane.

Rouen Metropolitan Open

Top-seeded Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine cruised past Germany’s Tatjana Maria 6-3, 6-0 to reach the finals in Rouen, France.

Kostyuk will take on teenage qualifier and countrywoman Veronika Podrez. She advanced in a walkover prior to her scheduled match against Romania’s Sonia Cirstea, who withdrew due to a leg injury.

Kostyuk, who will be trying to win her second WTA title and first since a 2023 championship in Austin, Texas, fended off all four break points in the match against the 38-year old German. Maria could not contain Kostyuk’s power, dropping 32 of 43 (74.4%) service points.

Podrez, 19, advanced to the semifinals with wins over Sloane Stephens, No. 7 seed Elisabetta Cocciaretto of Italy and Great Britain’s Katie Boulter.

–Field Level Media

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Dane Myers' hit in 9th lifts Reds past Twins

MLB: Cincinnati Reds at Minnesota TwinsApr 18, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Cincinnati Reds second baseman Sal Stewart (27) loses his helmet as he runs to third base against the Minnesota Twins in the second inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Blewett-Imagn Images

Pinch hitter Dane Myers’ bloop single scored Spencer Steer in the top of the ninth inning as the Cincinnati Reds rallied for a 5-4 win over the Minnesota Twins on Saturday in Minneapolis.

Kyle Nicolas (1-0) struck out all three batters in the eighth inning to earn the win. Tony Santillan pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the ninth and earned his first save of the season as the Reds won the first two games of the three-game set.

Minnesota manager Derek Shelton was ejected in the top of the seventh after Elly De La Cruz’s RBI single scored Rece Hinds to trim the Twins’ lead to 4-3. Shelton was upset De La Cruz was ruled to have checked his swing a pitch earlier.

An inning later, the Reds tied the game at 4-4 when Hinds’ sacrifice fly scored Eugenio Suarez. Cole Sands (0-1) allowed Myers’ game-winning hit in the ninth.

Minnesota took a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning. Austin Martin walked with one out and Josh Bell singled to right. Ryan Jeffers knocked them both in with a triple to the left field gap. Bell and Luke Keaschall each collected two hits for the Twins.

Tyler Stephenson’s sacrifice fly to center field scored Sal Stewart and cut the Twins lead to 2-1 in the top of the second.

In the bottom of the third, Martin reached on an error and was eventually plated on Keaschall’s line drive to shallow right field as the Twins led 3-1.

Cincinnati pulled within 3-2 in the top of the fourth. Suarez doubled with one out and moved to third on Nathaniel Lowe’s ground out. On an 0-2 pitch, Stephenson drove a hanging cutter into left field to score Suarez. Suarez and Lowe both had two hits.

Bell led off the bottom of the fifth with a single. After Abbott issued a two-out walk to Trevor Larnach, the Reds went to the bullpen. Reds reliever Sam Moll gave up an RBI single to Brooks Lee that scored Bell as the Twins led 4-2.

Reds starting pitcher Andrew Abbott gave up four runs (three earned), six hits, walked three and struck out three in 4 2/3 innings. Twins’ starter Taj Bradley allowed two runs, five hits, walked two and struck out five in six innings.

–Field Level Media

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NASCAR notebook: Denny Hamlin hasn't forgotten Chase Elliott's Kansas win

NASCAR: NASCAR Cup Series Playoff Race at KansasSep 28, 2025; Kansas City, Kansas, USA; Chase Elliott (9) celebrates his win at the NASCAR Cup Series Playoff Race at Kansas Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Kylie Graham-Imagn Images

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — No doubt a bettor brave enough to take Chase Elliott with one lap left in overtime in last year’s Sept 28 race at Kansas Speedway could have gotten long odds.

Elliott took the white flag in fifth place, behind the Toyotas of Bubba Wallace, Denny Hamlin, Chase Briscoe and Christopher Bell. Wallace pulled out to a lead of a half-car-length, with Hamlin in pursuit.

Hamlin steered his No. 11 Camry to the inside of Wallace’s car and forced Wallace wide through the final two corners. That allowed Elliott to dive to the inside of both Toyotas and steal the win for Hendrick Motorsports and Chevrolet.

“It certainly played a factor, kind of in the manufacturer battle as well, right?,” Hamlin said on Saturday before NASCAR Cup Series practice for Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas (2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). “I mean, you go from winning one to now your competition actually won.

“There were definitely a lot of negatives to the way that race ended, but it certainly was I just, I feel like, I was trying to go for it, certainly, and used a little bit too much aggression, for sure, in Turn 3.

“But overall, you’re going to have that in racing. When you have teammates, manufacturer guys that you all share information with, we’re going to always be right around each other. So sometimes those racing incidents happen in one out of 20 times.”

Hamlin heads the list of winners at Kansas with four victories, but he’s shocked at his recent failures to find Victory Lane.

“For the last six years, if someone else wins a Kansas race, I’m just trying to figure out how we didn’t win, because we’re always just so fast here,” Hamlin said.

“We found 10 to 12 different ways to not win here, and I thought I saw the stat this week that there has only been. … I think (Kyle) Larson’s been the only repeat winner here in the last 11 races, and it was like, the fact that we haven’t is just criminal. So, hopefully we can change that.”

Now a NASCAR Cup winner, Ty Gibbs wants to make racing more physical

At age 23, Ty Gibbs is feeling his oats after his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory, and he’d like to make the sport tougher and more physical.

“I think we should rip all the cool suits out of everyone’s cars and make it a more physical sport,” Gibbs said on Saturday. “I think that would be very entertaining and bring out more emotion, obviously…

“I think no cool suits — rip ‘em all out. I think, honestly, people would be pumped with that, ‘cause half the time they break on everybody and make it worse. I think we should rip all of it out, make it more physical.”

When cool suits are working properly, they compensate for high temperatures in a car’s cockpit. When they malfunction, however, the water flowing inside the suit can overheat and add to a driver’s discomfort.

Some drivers, such as Gibbs’ teammate Denny Hamlin, choose not to use cool suits at all.

Erik Jones: New LEGACY president should have significant impact

The new president of LEGACY Motor Club isn’t just an administrator, as driver Erik Jones made clear on Saturday at Kansas Speedway, site of Sunday’s AdventHealth 400.

With a background as chief operating officer at Joe Gibbs Racing and as vice president of engineering and R&D (as well as global sales and marketing) at automotive industry supplier Multimatic, Michael Guttilla brings a broad-ranging skill set to LEGACY.

“I didn’t know him beforehand, but I had a chance to sit down and spend some time with him in the last week and a half,” Jones said on Saturday at Kansas Speedway. “I think he’s a super impressive guy. His resume’s really strong, and he’s done a lot of things, in motorsports and in manufacturing and production cars.

“He has a pretty broad range of skills, and I think he has a lot of managerial skills. I think the role he’s in is great, obviously, but I think he can bring a lot to the table and a sense of understanding the engineering side as well. I don’t think he’s a guy that is just well-versed in business, but I think he’s well versed in competition and performance.

“I’m excited to have him. We’ve been kind of waiting to fill that role and find the right guy, and that’s been a role that wasn’t just randomly filled when Michael became available. It was something that’s been in the works, and we’ve been trying to find the right fit for a while. I was excited to do that, excited to have him, and see what he can bring. It’s still super early. It’s been a couple of weeks, but I really, I think his influence is already starting to be felt a bit.”

Female drivers make a statement in ARCA Menards Series race at Kansas

Gio Ruggiero won Saturday’s Tide 150 ARCA Menards Series race at Kansas Speedway, but there were significant stories that unfolded behind him.

Three of the four female drivers in the field finished in the top 10, with Lanie Buice running fifth, followed by Jade Avedisian in seventh and Dystany Spurlock in 10th. Avedisian was competing on a 1.5-mile intermediate speedway for the first time.

The fourth female driver in the race, Isabella Robusto, a former Kansas pole winner, was running just outside the top 10 when the engine in Cleetus McFarland’s car blew and spread oil on the track.

Robusto slid through the fluid, slammed into the outside wall and fell out of the race.

Daniel Dye finished second in his first race since his reinstatement from a suspension for inappropriate comments directed at IndyCar driver David Malukas.

–By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.

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