Sports
Top 25 roundup: Wisconsin tops No. 10 Michigan St. for another upset win
Wisconsin forward Aleksas Bieliauskas (32) out rebounds Michigan State center Carson Cooper (15) during the first half of their game Friday, February 13, 2026 at the Kohler Center in Madison. Nick Boyd had 29 points and John Blackwell added 24 to pace Wisconsin to a dominant 92-71 victory over No. 10 Michigan State in a Big Ten Conference matchup Friday night in Madison, Wis.
It was the second consecutive top-10 victory for Wisconsin (18-7, 10-4 Big Ten), which won at No. 8 Illinois 92-90 in overtime Tuesday. The Badgers are also the only team to have beaten Michigan, currently No. 2 in the country.
Wisconsin’s Nolan Winter had 10 points and 11 rebounds for his 12th double-double of the season. The Badgers had 38 rebounds to match the Spartans, who entered second in the nation with a 13.1 rebound margin.
Wisconsin went in front 67-45 with 13:10 left on consecutive 3-pointers by Blackwell and Boyd. The Spartans (20-5, 10-4) got no closer than 17 points the rest of the way for their third loss in four games. Coen Carr had 19 points and Jeremy Fears Jr. added 14 points, along with 12 assists on Michigan State’s 24 field goals. Fears entered No. 1 in the country with 9.1 assists per game.
No. 18 Saint Louis 86, Loyola Chicago 59
Trey Green and Ishan Sharma each scored 14 points to lead the Billikens to a road win over the Ramblers, Saint Louis’ 18th consecutive victory.
Quentin Jones tallied 12 points and six rebounds while Amari McCottry added 11 points and seven rebounds for Saint Louis (24-1, 12-0 Atlantic 10).
Justin Moore led Loyola (6-20, 2-11) with 12 points. Daniil Glazkov added 11 points and six rebounds for the Ramblers, who lost for the 11th time in 12 games.
No. 23 Miami (Ohio) 90, Ohio 74
Brant Byers scored 21 points and Peter Suder added 20 as the RedHawks remained the nation’s only unbeaten team with a win over the archrival Bobcats in Oxford, Ohio.
Byers shot 13-for-16 from the free-throw line while Eian Elmer added 15 points for Miami (25-0, 12-0 Mid-American), which took the lead for good in the game’s first five minutes and never trailed the rest of the way. The 25-game win streak is the longest in the country to start a season since Gonzaga went 31-0 before losing the national championship game in the 2020-21 season.
Jackson Paveletzke had 22 points and Javan Simmons scored 12 for the Bobcats (13-13, 7-6), who had three early leads in the opening minutes. Luke Skaljac’s layup broke a 10-10 tie and gave the RedHawks the lead for good with 15:37 left in the first half.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Reports: RHP Zac Gallen returns to D-backs on 1-year deal
Sep 26, 2025; San Diego, California, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks starting pitcher Zac Gallen (23) throws a pitch during the first inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: David Frerker-Imagn Images After testing the open market, right-handed starting pitcher Zac Gallen is re-signing with the Arizona Diamondbacks on a one-year contract, multiple media outlets reported Friday.
According to The Athletic, Gallen’s deal is worth $22,025,000 — the same value of Arizona’s qualifying offer that Gallen rejected. The same report added that $14 million of the salary would be deferred.
Gallen, 30, was coming off his worst full season as a pro. He went 13-15 in 33 starts with a 4.83 ERA, 175 strikeouts and 66 walks. The losses, ERA and walks all marked career-worst numbers.
Gallen was an All-Star in 2023 and finished third in National League Cy Young Award voting after going 17-9 with a 3.47 ERA, a career-high 220 strikeouts and 47 walks in 34 starts (210 innings).
In 176 career major league appearances (all starts) for the Miami Marlins (2019) and Arizona (2019-25), Gallen is 66-52 with a 3.58 ERA. He finished ninth in NL Cy Young balloting in 2020 and fifth in 2022.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Swiss F Kevin Fiala (leg) stretchered off vs. Canada
Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics – Ice Hockey – Men’s Preliminary Round – Group A – Canada vs Switzerland – Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena, Milan, Italy – February 13, 2026. Kevin Fiala of Switzerland is stretchered off by medical staff after sustaining an injury IMAGN IMAGES via REUTERS/Geoff Burke Switzerland’s Olympic hockey tournament took a brutal turn Friday, when Kevin Fiala was helped onto a stretcher and taken off the ice in the closing minutes of a 5-1 loss to Canada.
Switzerland later announced the Los Angeles Kings winger suffered a lower-leg injury that will end his Games.
“Kevin Fiala was injured in the second group game against Canada and will miss the rest of the Olympic tournament,” the Swiss team said in a post to social media.
The incident unfolded with under three minutes left at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena, after Fiala got tied up along the boards with Tom Wilson and went down awkwardly. Fiala stayed on the ice as trainers rushed out, then was immobilized and transported for further evaluation.
“Obviously, it doesn’t look very good,” Switzerland coach Patrick Fischer said. “Tough, tough, tough moment for Kevin and the whole team, obviously.”
Wilson called it a routine battle that ended the wrong way. “It’s just unlucky,” he said. “It’s the Olympic Games, and I feel terrible that he may not be able to keep playing.”
Switzerland captain Nico Hischier echoed that sentiment, saying, “It seemed like an innocuous play. … It’s an unfortunate play and things like that happen.”
The loss is significant on its own — Connor McDavid scored as Canada stayed perfect in Group A — but the larger blow is what Switzerland loses going forward. Fiala logged just over 20 minutes before the injury and had already contributed an assist in Switzerland’s 4-0 opening win over France.
Fiala recorded 18 goals and 22 assists in 56 games for the Los Angeles Kings this season before the Olympic break. For his NHL career, the 2022-23 All-Star has 229 goals and 299 assists across 707 games.
Now the Swiss move on without one of their top creators, starting Sunday against Czechia, with the group standings and their medal path suddenly feeling secondary.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Minnesota, Washington chase reset as skids collide
Feb 1, 2026; University Park, Pennsylvania, USA; Minnesota Golden Gophers head coach Niko Medved reacts from the bench during the second half against the Penn State Nittany Lions at Bryce Jordan Center. Mandatory Credit: Matthew O’Haren-Imagn Images Minnesota will look to break out of a slump when it travels to Seattle on Saturday for a Big Ten tilt against Washington.
At this point, watching game film has left Minnesota coach Niko Medved feeling stuck in a loop.
Kind of like Bill Murray’s character, TV weatherman Phil Connors, in the 1993 classic “Groundhog Day.”
Only Medved is watching his Golden Gophers, a different type of burrowing rodent.
“It’s kind of the same movie,” said Medved, referring to a 67-62 loss to visiting Maryland last Sunday in which his team allowed the final seven points. “We just had to find a way to get a few more stops down the stretch, and we still would have found a way to get out of here with a win, and we just couldn’t.”
Minnesota (11-13, 4-9 Big Ten) has lost eight of its past nine games, the only win in that stretch a 76-73 upset of No. 10 Michigan State on Feb. 4.
“Just look at our entire schedule over the whole season,” Medved said. “The margin for error is really, really small. We have to play one way and have to play with a certain edge regardless of our opponent.”
Washington coach Danny Sprinkle can relate. The Huskies (12-13, 4-10) have lost three in a row, including a 63-60 decision Wednesday against Penn State — the Nittany Lions’ first Big Ten road victory of the season.
“It was a game that you have to win at home,” Sprinkle said. “We can’t have some of our best players playing like that from an energy standpoint and a production standpoint if you’re going to win. They made plays. We didn’t.”
Senior Cade Tyson leads Minnesota with 19.4 points per game and shoots a team-best 38.5% from 3-point range. Washington is paced by freshman Hannes Steinbach, who averages 17.6 points and 11.4 rebounds per game.
–Field Level Media
