Sports
Trey Green's 3-point display leads No. 21 Saint Louis over Dayton
Indiana State Sycamores head coach Josh Schertz is interviewed Wednesday, March 20, 2024, after the first round of the NIT at the Hulman Center in Terre Haute. The Indiana State Sycamores defeated the Southern Methodist Mustangs, 101-92. Trey Green had 23 points and shot 7-for-10 on 3-point attempts, helping No. 21 Saint Louis roll to a 102-71 victory over visiting Dayton in Atlantic 10 play Wednesday.
Ishan Sharma added 18 points on six made 3-pointers off the bench for the Billikens (21-1, 9-0 A-10), who extended their best start to a season in program history. Quentin Jones scored 18 and Dion Brown chipped in 13 points for Saint Louis, which made 17 of its 28 (60.7%) 3-point attempts in the blowout win.
De’Shayne Montgomery led Dayton (14-8, 5-4) with 23 points, while Amael L’Etang scored 12. Reserve Malcolm Thomas finished with 11 points for the Flyers, who dropped their fourth straight game after a 5-0 start in conference play.
Facing a 17-point halftime deficit, Dayton opened the second half on a 12-5 run, pulling within 10 on Bryce Heard’s mid-range jumper with 16:22 left.
From there, Saint Louis opened the lead back up as Green and Sharma drilled consecutive triples to stamp a 12-0 run, giving the Billikens a 63-41 edge.
Saint Louis continued the onslaught, as Green’s seventh 3-pointer pushed the advantage to 75-50 with 9:39 remaining.
Sharma gave the Billikens their largest lead of the game with the team’s 17th 3-pointer, putting Saint Louis ahead 97-62.
Robbie Avila opened the game with a triple before Green’s 3-pointer gave Saint Louis an 8-0 lead. Jaiun Simon’s layup cut Dayton’s deficit to 15-9, but another Green trey began a 7-0 spurt to give the Billikens a 22-9 edge.
After Sharma drilled a 3-pointer to put the Billikens ahead by 17, Dayton’s mini 4-0 run trimmed the deficit to 32-18.
With four minutes remaining in the opening half, Jones hit Saint Louis’ seventh 3-pointer, extending the lead to 42-18. Dayton finished the first half on a 9-2 run, trimming the margin to 17 at halftime. Saint Louis shot 63% (17-for-27) from the field in the first half and was led by Green’s 14 points. Javon Bennett and Montgomery paced Dayton with seven first-half points apiece.
–Field Level Media
Sports
No. 19 Vanderbilt takes down Texas A&M behind supporting cast
Feb 14, 2026; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Texas A&M Aggies guard Ali Dibba (6) fouls Vanderbilt Commodores forward Ak Okereke (10) during the first half at Memorial Gymnasium. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images Tyler Nickel, AK Okereke, and Devin McGlockton combined for 65 points to lead No. 19 Vanderbilt to an 82-69 victory Saturday over Texas A&M in Nashville, Tenn.
Nickel scored 25 points, while Okereke added 23. McGlockton posted 17 points and eight rebounds.
Nickel’s long-range shooting (five 3-pointers) and season-high scoring total from Okereke allowed the Commodores (21-4, 8-4 SEC) to win for the fifth time in six games.
Vanderbilt also got 11 points off the bench from Chandler Bing. The Commodores shot 56.5 percent in the second half and made 15 of 17 free throws in the final 8:20. Tyler Tanner, who leads Vanderbilt in scoring at 18.9 points per game, was held to four points. He had reached 20 or more points for three straight games.
Texas A&M (17-8, 7-5), which lost its fourth-straight game, got 20 points from Marcus Hill. No other Aggie scored in double figures. Zach Clemence finished with nine points, Ali Dibba added nine points and eight rebounds, and Rashaun Agee collected eight points and 11 rebounds.
Ahead by four at the half, Vanderbilt used a flurry of 3-pointers in the opening 4:26 of the second half to built a 50-39 advantage. Nickel dropped in three of the four 3-pointers during that span.
The Commodores extended their lead to 13 points with 13:04 to go on an Okereke jumper in the paint.
The Vanderbilt lead grew to 15 points in the closing two minutes following a corner 3 by Okereke. Okereke made eight of 10 free throws in the final 5:18 to keep the Aggies from coming back.
Vanderbilt trailed by five in the opening minutes but used a 10-0 run late in the opening half to grab a 25-19 lead. The Commodores missed 11 of their first 16 shot attempts before finding their range.
After the scoring run, the Commodores maintained a first-half advantage. Vanderbilt, behind 11 points each from Nickel and McGlockton, led 36-32 at the break.
–Field Level Media
Sports
No. 17 St. John's win over Providence marred by brawl
Feb 14, 2026; Providence, Rhode Island, USA; St. John’s University Red Storm forward/guard Bryce Hopkins (23) shoots during the first half of the game against the Providence College Friars at Amica Mutual Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: Natalie Reid-Imagn Images Dylan Darling scored 18 of his 23 points in the second half, leading No. 17 St. John’s to a 79-69 win over host Providence on Saturday afternoon in a game that included a benches-clearing altercation that led to six ejections.
The game changed for good with 14:25 left in regulation. Providence’s Duncan Powell committed a hard foul on former Friar Bryce Hopkins on a breakaway layup. Powell, Jaylin Sellers and Dillon Mitchell were ejected along with Kelvin Odih, Ruben Prey and Lefteris Liotopoulos, who left the St. John’s bench area.
Following a delay for video review and debriefing, the Red Storm sank three of the four ensuing free throws to start an 8-0 run and take a 47-40 lead. Darling finished that stretch with his first of back-to-back 3-pointers and stole an inbounds pass for a layup.
St. John’s outscored Providence 40-29 to finish.
Darling sank three 3-pointers, went 8 of 9 from the foul line and added eight rebounds en route to a season-best performance for the Red Storm (20-5, 13-1), who extended their win streak to 11 since a Jan. 3 home loss to Providence.
Zuby Ejiofor scored 14 points, Oziyah Sellers added 11 and Hopkins had nine points and nine rebounds to add to the St. John’s attack.
Stefan Vaaks had 20 points, Ryan Mela scored 14 and Jaylin Sellers added 13 for Providence (11-15, 4-11), which has lost six of its last eight.
Before the brawl, Providence had been on a 14-1 run dating back to the final minutes of the first half, with a Jaylin Sellers 3-pointer highlighting the spurt and kicking off a back-and-forth stretch during which the game was tied two other times.
After the altercation, Providence got within four after Vaaks’ outlet feed led to a Jamier Jones three-point play with 13:55 left, but got no closer as Darling scored the game’s next five points and Ejiofor responded to multiple Mela baskets midway through the half.
Oziyah Sellers’ midrange jumper with 5:52 left gave St. John’s a double-digit lead again as part of a 9-3 run that put the game out of reach.
The Red Storm stormed out of the gates, responding to Oswin Erhunmwunse’s opening layup with a 10-0 run. Two Providence turnovers extended the segment, with Hopkins scoring the first of back-to-back baskets off steals.
After Mela’s layup stopped the run, Stu Jackson sank a 3-pointer and turned another turnover into a dunk for a 15-4 St. John’s lead in less than five minutes. A 5-0 burst brought Providence within seven, but back-to-back 3-pointers by Darling and Joson Sanon gave the Storm a 13-point lead.
A Jones three-point play and a Vaaks trey bookended Providence’s longest first-half run, making it 25-20 with 7:09 to play. St. John’s answered a near six-minute field-goal drought with a 9-2 run including a Hopkins transition dunk, but five Jaylin Sellers points and a Powell triple ended the first half.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Milan Momcilovic, No. 5 Iowa State halt No. 9 Kansas' win streak
Feb 14, 2026; Ames, Iowa, USA; Iowa State Cyclones forward Milan Momcilovic (22) shoots over the hands of Kansas Jayhawks guard Elmarko Jackson (13) during the first half at James H. Hilton Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Reese Strickland-Imagn Images Milan Momcilovic scored 18 points and No. 5 Iowa State’s ferocious defense smothered No. 9 Kansas for a 74-56 Big 12 victory on Saturday in Ames, Iowa, to snap the Jayhawks’ eight-game winning streak.
Joshua Jefferson, Tamin Lipsey, Jamarion Batemon and Blake Buchanan added 11 points apiece for the Cyclones (22-3, 9-3 Big 12), who moved into a third-place tie with the Jayhawks (19-6, 9-3). Jefferson and Lipsey each added four assists while Buchanan grabbed six rebounds.
Iowa State made 11 of 30 (36.7%) from long range while forcing 13 turnovers and limiting Kansas to 37.2% percent shooting from the floor.
Melvin Council Jr. paced Kansas with 15 points, five rebounds, four assists and two steals. Flory Bidunga had 11 points and 13 rebounds, but prized freshman Darryn Peterson was limited to a season-low 10 points on 3-of-10 shooting in 24 minutes.
Kansas went up 6-2 during a rugged start as Bidunga, Peterson and Bryson Tiller made baskets, but the home crowd came to life when Buchanan threw down a vicious slam dunk off Lipsey’s missed layup at 12:11 to knot it 6-6. Killyan Toure then sank a 24-footer to cap a 9-0 run and give Iowa State its first lead at 11:43.
Council sparked the Jayhawks by canning a trio of three-pointers and adding an alley-oop assist on Bidunga’s dunk to give the visitors a 20-16 lead at the 6:41 mark.
With his team struggling from long range, Jefferson drove past Bidunga on one possession and Peterson on another to make layups while being fouled. Jefferson completed both 3-point plays to make it 29-22 with 3:37 left in the half.
Iowa State forced 10 first-half turnovers and closed the on a 21-7 run to take a 37-27 lead into the break.
Momcilovic, who made 4 of 9 3-point attempts for the day, connected on his first two treys in the opening 90 seconds of the second half before Lipsey hit two from deep for a 49-29 lead at 17:06.
When Momcilovic cashed the Cyclones’ fifth straight 3-point attempt to start the second half, Iowa State held a 52-32 lead with 15:56 to go.
Kansas got as close as 68-56 on Council’s jumper with 4:22 left, but the Jayhawks didn’t score again as Iowa State wrapped up its sixth win in seven games.
–Field Level Media
