Sports
With high hopes for season, No. 12 Tennessee faces Gardner-Webb
Tennessee guard Zakai Zeigler (5) is guarded by Indiana guard Gabe Cupps (2) and center Oumar Ballo (11) during a college basketball exhibition game on Sunday, October 27, 2024, in Knoxville. Tenn. With one of college basketball’s top guards in Zakai Zeigler and a revamped supporting cast, No. 12 Tennessee will start working toward its first Final Four appearance in program history when it hosts Gardner-Webb in Knoxville, Tenn., on Monday night.
It will mark the season opener for both teams.
Tennessee, which last season reached the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament and finished 27-9, got a glimpse of what its new lineup will look like against strong competition when it hosted an exhibition game against 17th-ranked Indiana on Sunday.
However, the Volunteers struggled from the field in what ended up being a 66-62 loss to the Hoosiers, making just 18 of 59 shots (30.5 percent).
“Offensively, not very good. Had shots to start with, and to be honest with you, shots that we need to make,” Tennessee coach Rick Barnes said after the exhibition. “But, with that said, if we’re not making them, our defense kept us in the game. And it (always makes it) harder when you’re not making shots, but you got to have something that you can count on every night.”
Zeigler led the way with 13 points and eight assists. But Barnes said he was not happy with Zeigler taking a contested 3-pointer in the closing seconds, instead suggesting that a timeout should have been called.
The Volunteers fizzled out down the stretch, with their last made field goal coming with 3:50 to play.
Jordan Gainey got the start and finished with 12 points, while Chaz Lanier, who Barnes said came in off the bench because he had not practiced as much prior to the game, recorded 10 points.
Gardner-Webb enters the season with optimism after longtime assistant Jeremy Luther was promoted to head coach in late March. Luther, a former guard at Robert Morris and Liberty, inherits a squad that finished third in the Big South Conference last season with a 17-16 overall record and an 11-5 mark in league play.
The Runnin’ Bulldogs lost their top two scorers from a season ago, Julien Soumaoro and Caleb Robinson (both averaged 12.7 points per game), but they were still picked to finish sixth in the Big South in the league’s preseason poll.
Gardner-Webb will, however, get a boost from two players who chose to transfer back into the program after spending last season elsewhere.
Anthony Selden played for the Runnin’ Bulldogs for three seasons before spending the 2023-24 campaign at Rice, where he averaged 5.5 points and 2.4 rebounds in 29 games (six starts). Jamaine Mann also is back at Gardner-Webb following stops at Vanderbilt and Georgia State.
Mann came off the bench in all 18 games he appeared in last season for Georgia State. He averaged 5.9 points and 3.1 rebounds.
The Runnin’ Bulldogs’ matchup with Tennessee will be the first meeting of a challenging three-game road trip to open the season that also includes visits to North Carolina Central and Pitt.
“We couldn’t be more excited about the season. I have really enjoyed coaching this team through the summer and fall,” Luther said. “I love our chemistry and the passion the kids show up with every day. Seems like it was just yesterday that I was hired, and now the season is already here.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Sharks beat Oilers to halt five-game slide
Feb 28, 2026; San Jose, California, USA; Edmonton Oilers left wing Zach Hyman (18) scores a goal against San Jose Sharks goaltender Yaroslav Askarov (30) during the first period at SAP Center at San Jose. Mandatory Credit: Neville E. Guard-Imagn Images Shakir Mukhamadullin scored the game-winner on a slap shot midway through the third period as the San Jose Sharks defeated the visiting Edmonton Oilers 5-4 on Saturday.
Michael Misa had a goal and an assist, and 12 different players recorded points for the Sharks, who ended a five-game losing streak, their second longest of the season.
Connor McDavid, the NHL’s leading scorer, led Edmonton with three assists, while Evan Bouchard had a goal and two assists.
Macklin Celebrini opened the scoring 8:34 into the first period for San Jose. Oilers goaltender Connor Ingam, who made 28 saves, lost his stick on the previous sequence. He thought the puck had been cleared far enough away from his zone to retrieve it, but the Sharks’ Will Smith retrieved it and sent it over to Celebrini for his team-leading 29th of the season.
Misa and Barclay Goodrow also scored in the first period as the Sharks recorded three goals in the opening 20 minutes for the second straight time against Edmonton this season.
Last time, on Jan. 29th, the Oilers would score four unanswered goals, including an equalizer with 59 seconds left by Bouchard and the winner with 1:06 remaining in overtime by Zach Hyman.
Leon Draisaitl scored off an assist from McDavid on the Oilers’ league-leading power play in the first as Edmonton trailed by two goals heading into the second period.
Bouchard tallied his 17th goal of the season to get Edmonton within one in the second period, scoring off assists from McDavid and Mattias Ekholm.
The goal gave Bouchard 20 points in his last 10 games. The last defenseman to do that for the Oilers was legendary Paul Coffey in 1986.
Trent Frederic evened the game at 3 at 2:54 into the third on a wrister from Matt Savoie, who drove the puck all the way up the ice past Sharks goaltender Yaroslav Askarov before feeding the former Boston Bruin for the easy finish.
Askarov made 20 saves for San Jose.
The teams then traded goals, with San Jose first retaking the lead as Alexander Wennberg scored on a wrister less than three minutes after Frederic’s equalizer, with Jake Walman evening the game again for the Oilers less than two minutes after that.
The scoring frenzy concluded with Mukhamadullin’s winner at the 9:27 mark of the third period, after William Eklund found him at the point for the powerful slap shot.
The Oilers have scored 17 goals in three games since coming back from the Olympics but have now lost two of those contests.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Minnesota United holds off FC Cincinnati in historically cold matchup
Feb 21, 2026; Austin, Texas, USA; Minnesota United forward Kelvin Yeboah (9) stops during the first half against Austin FC at Q2 Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dustin Safranek-Imagn Images Kelvin Yeboah scored in the 66th minute and Drake Callender made four saves as Minnesota United presented Cameron Knowles his first victory as head coach with a 1-0 shutout of FC Cincinnati on Saturday afternoon in Saint Paul, Minn.
Roman Celentano finished with four saves for FC Cincinnati (1-1-0, 3 points).
Yeboah, who scored the tying goal in the 90th minute in Minnesota’s season opening 2-2 draw at Austin FC, headed in a rebound of a Tomas Chancalay free kick from the top left edge of the box for the game-winner. Chancalay’s shot caromed off the far right post into the middle of the box where Yeboah drilled in a hard header.
The score was set up when a free kick was awarded after Cincinnati’s Gerardo Valenzuela tripped Joaquin Pereyra just inches outside the penalty box.
Cincinnati, which opened the season with a 2-0 victory over Atlanta United, nearly tied it five minutes later on a curling left-footed shot from the middle of the box by Obinna Nwobodo that was heading for the right corner of the goal, but Callender made a diving one-arm save to knock it wide of the post.
Chancalay had a chance to extend the lead in the 83rd minute when he went in on a breakaway, but Celentano made a leaping two-hand deflection of his left-footed shot from the left side of the box that was ticketed for the top right corner of the goal.
Minnesota United (1-1-0, 4 points) moved into first place in the Western Conference with the win. Star striker James Rodriguez, who won the Golden Boot playing for Colombia in the 2014 FIFA World Cup, dressed but did not make his debut for the Loons.
The temperature at kickoff was 20 degrees with a wind-chill of 11 making it the coldest game played in team history for Cincinnati.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Shane van Gisbergen charges to victory in NASCAR O'Reilly Series race at COTA
Feb 28, 2026; Austin, Texas, USA; O’Reilly NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series driver Shane Van Gisbergen (9) with the trophy after winning the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Focused Health 250 at Circuit of the Americas. Mandatory Credit: Michael C. Johnson-Imagn Images AUSTIN, Texas — With a bold, brilliant move moments after the final restart of Saturday’s Focused Health 250 at Circuit of the Americas, Shane van Gisbergen once again exhibited his road course supremacy.
Taking the inside line into Turn 1 after the restart with five laps left, van Gisbergen made a four-wide pass for the lead from the sixth position and pulled away to win the fifth NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts race of his career, this time by 0.780 seconds over runner-up Austin Hill.
In a rough-and-tumble event with more than its share of contact, van Gisbergen led five times for 31 laps, including the last five after the decisive move, as then-leader and Stage 2 winner Sam Mayer ran wide in the first corner, clearing the inside lane for the winning pass.
“I was a bit unsure there, starting sixth on the outside,” van Gisbergen said. “I kind of got to the inside, which was good, and nosed in on the 41 (Mayer), and he reacted. When he reacted, I thought no way he’s stopping that, and he kind of pushed everyone wide, which was awesome, and it worked out for us.”
The win was SVG’s first at COTA in his second O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race at the track. He is winless in two NASCAR Cup Series starts at the Texas road course.
“I’ve always been fast here but never managed to win,” van Gisbergen said. “So I’m pretty stoked to finally get it done–pretty flawless day.”
Van Gisbergen’s victory was the 10th straight on road courses for JR Motorsports and the 106th for the organization overall.
Austin Hill’s runner-up finish was his third in five starts at the 2.4-mile track.
“I made a lot of mistakes out there today, but that’s going to happen on these road courses,” said Hill, the series points leader through three races. “Stage 2, I was struggling a little bit, just trying to figure out what I needed to be better.”
In a race billed as a matchup between van Gisbergen and pole winner Connor Zilisch, Sammy Smith finished third, followed by Jesse Love and Corey Day, as Zilisch suffered a litany of issues that dropped him to 21st at the end.
After Zilisch led 12 laps during the first stage, the left-rear brake rotor on his No. 1 Chevrolet sheared, and the 19-year-old prodigy quickly dropped through the field. After stopping for repairs to the rear brakes, Zilisch started the final stage in 29th but just as rapidly worked his way forward.
With fewer than three laps left, he had just cleared Day’s No. 17 Chevrolet for fourth, when contact from Day’s car sent Zilisch spinning and damaged his Camaro.
Seventeen-year-old Brent Crews finished sixth in his series debut after taking the lead on the Stage 2 restart. Crews is the first driver under 18 to lead laps in the series since Casey Atwood accomplished the feat in 1998.
William Sawalich, Justin Allgaier, Ross Chastain and Brennan Poole completed the top 10.
NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Race — Focused Health 250
Circuit of The Americas
Austin, Texas
Saturday, February 28, 2026
1. (2) Shane van Gisbergen(i), Chevrolet, 65.
2. (3) Austin Hill, Chevrolet, 65.
3. (10) Sammy Smith, Chevrolet, 65.
4. (11) Jesse Love, Chevrolet, 65.
5. (12) Corey Day, Chevrolet, 65.
6. (7) Brent Crews, Toyota, 65.
7. (15) William Sawalich, Toyota, 65.
8. (5) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 65.
9. (21) Ross Chastain(i), Chevrolet, 65.
10. (26) Brennan Poole, Chevrolet, 65.
11. (9) Sheldon Creed, Chevrolet, 65.
12. (14) Taylor Gray, Toyota, 65.
13. (28) Alex Labbe, Chevrolet, 65.
14. (8) Sam Mayer, Chevrolet, 65.
15. (4) Brandon Jones, Toyota, 65.
16. (18) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 65.
17. (24) Blaine Perkins, Chevrolet, 65.
18. (34) Jeb Burton, Chevrolet, 65.
19. (6) Carson Kvapil, Chevrolet, 65.
20. (32) Patrick Staropoli, Chevrolet, 65.
21. (1) Connor Zilisch(i), Chevrolet, 65.
22. (31) Lavar Scott #, Chevrolet, 65.
23. (16) Anthony Alfredo, Chevrolet, 65.
24. (35) Kyle Sieg, Chevrolet, 65.
25. (20) Nick Sanchez, Ford, 65.
26. (27) Dean Thompson, Toyota, 65.
27. (17) Preston Pardus, Chevrolet, 65.
28. (36) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 65.
29. (23) Harrison Burton, Toyota, 65.
30. (29) Parker Retzlaff, Chevrolet, 65.
31. (19) Rajah Caruth, Chevrolet, 65.
32. (30) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 65.
33. (13) Austin Green, Chevrolet, 65.
34. (33) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, 64.
35. (22) Sage Karam, Toyota, Suspension, 53.
36. (25) Josh Bilicki, Chevrolet, Suspension, 35.
37. (37) Baltazar Leguizamon, Chevrolet, Accident, 33.
38. (38) Austin J Hill, Chevrolet, Suspension, 7.
Average Speed of Race Winner: 70.411 mph.
Time of Race: 2 Hrs, 12 Mins, 56 Secs. Margin of Victory: .780 Seconds.
Caution Flags: 4 for 12 laps.
Lead Changes: 16 among 8 drivers.
Lap Leaders: S. Gisbergen(i) 1-5;C. Zilisch(i) 6-17;A. Hill 18-21;S. Mayer 22;S. Gisbergen(i) 23;C. Zilisch(i) 24;B. Crews 25-28;S. Gisbergen(i) 29-35;S. Mayer 36;C. Kvapil 37-38;S. Mayer 39-44;S. Gisbergen(i) 45-57;B. Crews 58;N. Sanchez 59;J. Allgaier 60;S. Gisbergen(i) 61-65.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Shane Van Gisbergen(i) 5 times for 31 laps; Connor Zilisch(i) 2 times for 13 laps; Sam Mayer 3 times for 8 laps; Brent Crews 2 times for 5 laps; Austin Hill 1 time for 4 laps; Carson Kvapil 1 time for 2 laps; Justin Allgaier 1 time for 1 lap; Nick Sanchez 1 time for 1 lap.
Stage #1 Top Ten: 21,41,7,20,2,91,17,87,88,9
Stage #2 Top Ten: 41,7,91,2,9,21,8,20,32,39
–By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
