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Texas-Ole Miss marks Chris Beard's first game back in Austin

Syndication: The Knoxville News-SentinelOle Miss basketball coach Chris Beard is escorted off the after being ejected for getting two technical fouls during an NCAA college basketball game against Tennessee on February 3, 2026, in Knoxville, Tennessee.

Texas will face its former coach Chris Beard when it hosts reeling Ole Miss on Saturday afternoon in a Southeastern Conference clash in Austin, Texas.

The Longhorns (14-9, 5-5 SEC) have won two consecutive games and three of their past four, with the most recent victory an 84-75 decision at home over South Carolina. Dailyn Swain amassed team highs of 22 points and 10 rebounds in the win.

Tramon Mark added 18 points for Texas in the win while Matas Vokietaitis and Camden Heide each had 12. The Longhorns earned a 40-25 edge on the glass and grabbed 17 offensive rebounds.

“It was great to see (Mark) step up and find his rhythm — we’re much more difficult to defend when he’s scoring as well,” Texas coach Sean Miller said. “And the other guy that’s just really playing well right now is (Heide). His ability to shoot the ball, his 3-point shots when South Carolina went to the zone, broke the game open.”

It will be the first trip back to Austin on the Ole Miss bench for Beard, who was fired at Texas in January 2023 after a domestic violence charge a month earlier.

“We expect to have a game against a really good team playing their best, prepared, and we have to be equally prepared and juiced up and ready to go and try to take advantage of our home atmosphere,” Miller said about Saturday’s game and Beard’s return.

With his Texas tenure in the rearview mirror, Beard’s focus these days is on getting his Rebels team back on track.

Ole Miss (11-11, 3-6) has dropped four straight games, most recently an 84-66 dismantling on the road by Tennessee on Tuesday. The Rebels got 15 points apiece from Patton Pinkins and AJ Storr while Ilias Kamardine added 11 and Eduardo Klafke had 10 in the loss.

Ole Miss trailed by just six points eight minutes into the second half before surrendering a run over the middle of the half that doomed its chances at a comeback.

Beard was not around at the end of the Tennessee game after being ejected with 6:15 remaining.

“All we ask for is a consistent whistle,” Beard said. “The free-throw differential in (the Tennessee) game and the foul differential is just frustrating from a coaching standpoint and a playing standpoint. At some point as a coach, you have to fight for your players.”

–Field Level Media

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No. 15 Vanderbilt hope to be healthier against struggling Oklahoma

NCAA Basketball: Mississippi at VanderbiltJan 31, 2026; Nashville, TN, USA; Vanderbilt Commodores guard Tyler Tanner (3) shoots the ball over Mississippi Rebels guard AJ Storr (2) during the second half at Memorial Gymnasium. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

No. 15 Vanderbilt looks to extend its three-game winning streak against visiting Oklahoma — losers of nine straight — in Nashville, Tenn. on Saturday afternoon.

The Commodores (19-3, 6-3 Southeastern Conference) had a needed week off after a 71-68 home win over Ole Miss. Tyler Tanner led all scorers with 24 points, AK Okereke tied a season high in scoring (17) and Mike James established season highs with nine points and nine rebounds off the bench.

“I knew we weren’t coming into this game at our best,” coach Mark Byington said afterwards. “Injuries, illnesses, fatigue, just a lot of things going on. Ole Miss fought really hard and we knew they were going to play that way. We just had to figure out somehow, some way, to be able to win that way.”

The Sooners (11-12, 1-9) come off a 94-78 loss at Kentucky on Wednesday. Xzayvier Brown’s 21 points led the Sooners, who allowed 1.44 points per possession (per Ken Pomeroy) while being outrebounded, 41-25.

“It’s … physicality, size,” coach Porter Moser said when asked about the rebounding differential. “We battled back. I think we cut (the lead) to eight at one point and then they got two or three offensive rebounds. When you’re trying to cut (the lead) those are just daggers, when you’re trying to get a stop and can’t finish the play with a rebound.”

Vanderbilt has been burdened by absences to guards Duke Miles (16.6 ppg) and Frankie Collins (7.8); Miles likely won’t play Saturday while Collins’ status is uncertain.

The Commodores have been hampered by illness — Jalen Washington (8.9 ppg) threw up in warm-ups last Saturday and played through it at less than full strength, while leading rebounder Devin McGlockton (6.8) had a season-low two points in 26 minutes.

Vanderbilt ranks 31st nationally in average offensive possession length (15.9 seconds) per Pomeroy, but played its slowest-tempo game of the year (64 possessions) against Ole Miss. The game before, the Commodores slowed the pace to a crawl in the second half of an 80-55 win over Kentucky to rest Tanner, who has played at least 33 minutes in every league game.

The Sooners take care of the ball (10 turnovers per game, ranked 35th in Division I) and have capable scoring threats in Brown (16.4 ppg), Nigel Pack (15.8), Tae Davis (12.7) and Derrion Reed (11.9). But they’ve leaked defensively, allowing 79 points or more in their last eight games.

Pack, a sixth-year player, had scored 22, 23 and 25 in Oklahoma’s previous four games before scoring just six on eight shots in Lexington.

The Commodores would like more from Tyler Nickel (14.5) than the five points (which tied a season low) he had against Ole Miss, which snapped a nine-game double-digit scoring streak. He’s had a pair of games in which he hit eight 3-pointers this season.

Vanderbilt is 14th in the latest NET rankings, and has a 6-3 mark in Quad 1. It drew a four-seed in Joe Lunardi’s projected NCAA tournament field of Feb. 3. Oklahoma (85th) is a Quad 3 opponent.

This is one of just four remaining home games for Vanderbilt. The Commodores are in a fourth-place tie in the SEC’s overall standings behind leaders Florida and Texas A&M (7-2).

–Field Level Media

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No. 1 Arizona chases another program record against Oklahoma State

NCAA Basketball: Arizona at Arizona StateJan 31, 2026; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Arizona Wildcats guard Brayden Burries (5) against the Arizona State Sun Devils at Desert Financial Arena. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Top-ranked Arizona will not have played in a week when the Wildcats host Oklahoma State on Saturday at Tucson, Ariz.

It will be the first game since the unbeaten Wildcats (22-0, 9-0 Big 12) achieved the best start in program history with an 87-74 win at Arizona State.

They will attempt to break the school record of 22 straight victories, achieved from 1914 to 1917.

“I’m looking forward to having a little break in our schedule, but I’m also cognizant that we got to keep getting better,” Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd said. “We got to make sure we stay sharp and have great rhythm.

“We got a tough couple games coming up. You got Oklahoma State coming, and then turn around and you got to play at Kansas (on Monday). Not easy.”

The Cowboys (16-6, 4-5) are coming off a 99-92 win over No. 16 BYU at Stillwater, Okla., behind a season-high 30 points from Anthony Roy.

The victory was the first of the season against a Quad-1 opponent for Oklahoma State, which some NCAA tournament prognosticators label as a team on the bubble.

Upsetting BYU prompted fans to storm the court.

“It was a heck of a night,” second-year coach Steve Lutz told reporters. “Obviously, we were able to get our first Quad-1 win against a team that I think can play for a national title. I’m proud of the guys. I think they did a fantastic job.

“They’ve done a much better job over the last couple weeks of being a good basketball team rather than a good group of individuals, and that’s paying dividends for us right now.”

After losing four of five games, including two defeats against Iowa State, Oklahoma State has won the last two games at Utah and against BYU.

Roy, a senior guard playing for his fourth program, leads the Cowboys with 18.2 points per game.

Formerly of San Francisco, New Mexico State and Green Bay, Roy is shooting 46.5% from the field and 44.8% from 3-point range.

Rebounding will be a concern for Oklahoma State, which has only one player averaging more than five per game — 6-foot-10 center Parsa Fallah (6.3).

Arizona deploys 6-8 power forward Tobe Awaka (9.8 rebounds a game), 7-2 post player Motiejus Krivas (8.3) and 6-8 forward Koa Peat (5.6).

The Wildcats are third nationally in rebounding margin at plus-13.1. Oklahoma State is No. 141 at plus-2.5.

Arizona counters Oklahoma State’s productive perimeter game that includes Roy and point guard Kanye Clary (5.0 assists and 2.1 turnovers a game) with Brayden Burries and Jaden Bradley.

Burries leads Arizona with 15.3 points per game. Bradley averages 4.5 assists to go with only 1.7 turnovers.

The Wildcats’ steady backcourt play is a significant reason Arizona has yet to lose.

“We value steadiness,” Lloyd said. “A lot of people talk about momentum, momentum, momentum. I understand what momentum is, but I think there’s way more value in being steady and consistent.

“From there, you’re going to get opportunities to create momentum. If you’re just worried about panic and having momentum, you really don’t have any substance to what you’re doing. We talk about just staying steady, steady, steady.”

–Field Level Media

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No. 19 Saint Louis faces La Salle ready to absorb more blows

NCAA Basketball: Saint Louis at DavidsonFeb 3, 2026; Davidson, North Carolina, USA; Saint Louis Billikens forward Ishan Sharma (9) handles the ball defended by Davidson Wildcats guard Parker Friedrichsen (5) during the second half at McKillop Court at John M. Belk Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images

No. 19 Saint Louis will be in search of a bit more edge as it tries to continue its Atlantic 10 Conference dominance at home against La Salle on Saturday.

Saint Louis (22-1, 10-0 Atlantic 10) will face struggling La Salle (7-16, 3-7) after it dodged defeat at Davidson on Tuesday night. The Billikens rallied from 13 points down in the first half to earn a 91-82 victory.

“We’ve certainly taken punches, and we know we’re going to take more,” Billikens head coach Josh Schertz said. “You can’t have a glass jaw and be a championship team. You know you’re going to get stood up, you’re going to get knocked down, but you build the muscle of getting back up. We’re building a muscle of resilience.”

The Billikens enjoyed a NET ranking of 15 this week. While any regular-season loss may diminish that ranking and cost them a place in the Associated Press Top 25, their real chance at making the NCAA Tournament will likely come in the conference tournament.

The Atlantic 10 sent just one team to the NCAA Tournament in each of the past two seasons, although that doesn’t lessen the importance of the regular season.

Schertz runs a nine-player rotation with six averaging double-figure points. The Billikens have multiple long-range shooters, giving the team plenty of scoring threats while creating a defensive nightmare.

Ishan Sharma poured in 29 points in a 35-point victory at St. Bonaventure two weeks ago. Trey Green scored 23 in victories over George Washington and Dayton at home last week. It was Brady Dunlap’s turn at Davidson, where he scored 22.

“It’s incredible,” Schertz said. “They really pull for each other. They want to be great themselves, but they’re not so small that their success would take the shine away from the other one. That doesn’t threaten them.

“When Ish did what he did against Dayton (18 points) and Brady wasn’t great (no shot attempts), Brady was incredibly happy. He was frustrated in his own situation, but he was incredibly happy for Ish.”

La Salle has struggled with injuries this season as 11 players have combined to miss 98 games. Forwards Jerome Brewer Jr. and Josiah Harris did not play at Loyola on Tuesday during a 71-61 loss.

Stepping up in their absence, Explorers guard Jaden Johnson played 37 minutes against the Ramblers and produced season highs with 16 points and eight assists.

Brewer and Harris combined for 34 points when La Salle lost to Saint Louis 84-72 at home on Jan. 10. The Billikens shot 10-of-23 (43%) from 3-point range.

La Salle coach Darris Nichols was frustrated with his team’s 3-point defense during the Explorers’ subsequent 67-58 loss to Saint Joseph’s at home on Jan. 31.

“The whole game plan was not to let them get 3s off,” Norris said. “They got 32 off. They made 10-for-20 at halftime. We didn’t execute the game plan.”

The Explorers allowed Loyola to launch 30 shots from 3-point range Tuesday and 10 were successful.

Defending the perimeter will be vital against the Billikens, who are shooting 40.7% from beyond the arc. That ranked fourth in Division I through Thursday’s games.

–Field Level Media

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