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
Surging Flyers, Sidney Crosby-led Pens bring rivalry back to playoffs
Mar 31, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Evgeni Malkin (71) and center Sidney Crosby (87) talk on the ice against the Detroit Red Wings during the first period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images For the first time in eight seasons and the eighth time overall, the Pittsburgh Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers will meet in the Stanley Cup playoffs, with the opening game of their first-round series taking place Saturday night in Pittsburgh.
The latest chapter of the Battle of Pennsylvania features a couple teams ending lengthy postseason droughts. The Penguins last made the playoffs in 2022, but beyond that, the franchise’s last series win came in 2018 against the Flyers.
Philadelphia last made the playoffs in 2020. However, Travis Konecny, Sean Couturier and Travis Sanheim are the only players remaining from that squad.
This Flyers team surprised some by reaching the postseason, but they earned their spot thanks to their strong play down the stretch. Coach Rick Tocchet’s club went 18-7-1 after the Olympics, going from sixth in the Metropolitan — eight points back of the then-third-place New York Islanders — to leapfrogging the Washington Capitals, Columbus Blue Jackets and Islanders for the division’s final playoff spot.
The Flyers may be the third-youngest team by average age in the postseason, according to EliteProspects.com, but Tocchet said the past few weeks have been a playoff-like atmosphere. Now, the question becomes how much slack the coach gives his younger players when the pressure increases, especially when playing a veteran-laden group like the Penguins.
“I don’t want these guys to be nervous if they make a mistake,” Tocchet said. “Then I’m not doing my job if I’m making these guys nervous.”
One young player who has stood out is Porter Martone, who joined the club in late March. He scored 10 points (four goals, six assists) in the Flyers’ last eight games, with points in each of the last six.
Tocchet has already made his choice in goal in Dan Vladar, who played six straight games earlier this month and went 5-1 with a .921 save percentage. He allowed a total of six goals in the five wins and will making his first career playoff start.
The Czech goalie has played the Penguins six times in his career. He is 2-3-1 with an .899 save percentage and a 3.10 goals-against average.
Pittsburgh does have a question of who will be its netminder. Arturs Silovs and Stuart Skinner shared that role during the regular season. Skinner, acquired during the season from Edmonton for Tristan Jarry, has made back-to-back Stanley Cup Final appearances, but Silovs also has postseason experience from his time in Vancouver.
While Skinner has more experience, both have fared well against the Flyers. Skinner is 5-1-2 in eight games with a .913 save percentage and a 2.45 GAA, while Silovs is 1-0-1 with a .944 save percentage and a 1.92 GAA.
While the Flyers have youth, the Penguins have a core of 30-somethings looking to make one last run to the Cup. Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin have three titles in their nearly two decades together in the Steel City. Despite being 38 and 39, respectively, they continue to lead; Crosby put up a team-hgh 74 points in 68 games, while Malkin had 61 in 56.
First-year coach Dan Muse said that leadership has its advantages.
“I don’t have to say anything,” Muse said Friday. “I know for sure that the guys that have the significant playoff experience … are going to be playing a big role there in just terms of helping along the guys that this is their first time.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Jon Rahm overcomes rocky start to take LIV Golf Mexico City lead
[US, Mexico & Canada customers only] Feb 6, 2026; Riyadh, SAUDI ARABIA; Jon Rahm in action during the third round of play at LIV Golf Riyadh at the Riyadh Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters via Imagn Images Jon Rahm used a strong back nine during Friday’s second round to take a narrow lead at the halfway point of LIV Golf Mexico City in Naucalpan, Mexico.
Rahm — who backdoored his way into a top-40 finish last week at the Masters by shooting 4 under in the final round to finish at 1 over — overcame a rocky front nine to shoot 4 under on the back nine, post 67 at Club de Golf Chapultepec and sit at 10-under-par 132.
The Spaniard was in second place after the opening round at 6 under. He’s now one stroke clear of Matthew Wolff, Tom McKibbin of Northern Ireland and Harold Varner III, who are all tied at 9 under.
“I was even par on that 9th tee, and I thought, ‘Well, if I hit a good tee shot on 9, I’m going to give myself a birdie chance,'” Rahm said after the round. “If I keep hitting good drives like I’ve been doing so far, I was going to give myself really good chances at 10, 11 and 12, so I think I told (caddie) Adam (Hayes), ‘If we can get one or two before we get to the par-5s, I think we’re in a good spot,’ and kind of took it that way.”
Rahm, who started on the first tee at the shotgun-start event, opened with a bogey, which set the tone for an even-par front nine with three birdies and three bogeys. That included a ball into the water at No. 8, which led to a second consecutive bogey.
He changed the tune by starting his back nine with a birdie on the par-4 10th hole, kicking off a bogey-free final half of his round. Rahm racked up four birdies to put himself in pole position as he seeks his second 2026 win and sixth straight top-five finish to begin the season.
Wolff, McKibbin and Luis Masaveu of Spain (who is in fifth place at 8 under) each shot 6-under 65 to shoot up the leaderboard.
Wolff navigated a number of tough situations with par saves to come away with a bogey-free round.
“I was a bit all over the place, to be honest. I told my caddie after I finished up, I said, ‘I would have never guessed that that round would be bogey-free.’ I feel really good with the putter, so I think that helped a lot,” Wolff said. “… Overall, obviously I’m really happy, but definitely would like to tighten the ball-striking up a little bit. But it’s day by day. Hopefully I can leave that bad ball-striking behind and hit it good the next few days.”
Australia’s Marc Leishman had the low round of the day, posting a 7-under 64 to move past his 3-over opening round to move into a tie for 11th at 4 under. He eagled Nos. 7 and 12, finishing 5 under at the three par-5 holes during his Friday round.
First-round leader Victor Perez of France followed up his career-best 9-under 62 by shooting 2 over on Friday. He’s tied for sixth at 7 under along with Canada’s Richard T. Lee and England’s Tyrrell Hatton.
Bryson DeChambeau, aiming to become the first player in LIV Golf history to win three straight individual events, posted his second straight even-par 71 and is in a tie for 31st.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Scott Hend, Brian Gay share lead at Senior PGA Championship
Scott Hend from Australia watches his tee shot on the 10th hole. The first round of the 2026 Senior PGA Championship was held Thursday, April 16, 2026 at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Florida. Scott Hend has won everywhere from Asia to Canada to his native Australia in his long, workmanlike golf career. Now he is in position to contend for his first major championship.
Hend posted a 7-under-par 65 on Friday, the lowest round through two days of the Senior PGA Championship, to share the 36-hole lead with Brian Gay at Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Fla.
Hend was 2 under for his day when he made the turn, but climbed the leaderboard quickly when he got birdies to fall at Nos. 11, 12 and 13. Hend added back-to-back birdies at Nos. 16-17 to shoot 5-under 31 coming in.
He and Gay sit at 10-under 134 at Concession — the new host of the major through 2028 – though both believed they could have been even better.
“I was disappointed in yesterday’s two double bogeys on the back nine, so I wanted to play that nine a bit smarter and a bit better today,” Gay said. “So I didn’t short-side myself as much as what I did yesterday, and it seemed to work out quite well.”
Hend has traveled Asia, collecting 10 wins on the Asian Tour from 2008-19. He has won three times since joining the European Senior Tour. He knows that the leaderboard is packed with challengers who have experience under the brightest lights.
“I haven’t got any majors in my back pockets, so the guys who have majors should be the ones that are favorites,” Hend said.
That includes Stewart Cink and South Africa’s Retief Goosen, who share third place at 8 under par with Ben Crane. Cink shot a 67 Friday while Crane and Goosen posted 69s.
Cink made an impressive eagle at the par-5 17th on a long, uphill putt. That pushed him to 9 under, but he bogeyed his final hole.
“Two bogeys today. You know, obviously you’d like to clean those up,” said Cink, who has won six times since joining the PGA Tour Champions and twice this year but is searching for his first senior major.
“But you know, all in all it was pretty good golf, and I would take days like today pretty much every day for the rest of my career and be happy, because there’s going to be some days that yield some low scores on days like this, and there’s not going to be too many over-par rounds.”
As for Gay, he is in the same bucket as Hend, seeking his first career major of any kind. An eagle at the par-5 seventh was counteracted by his double-bogey 7 at the 17th.
“Another pretty good day. A little volatile. Pretty similar to yesterday, except I butchered a couple of par-5s. Two of them with one bad tee ball, two good tee balls, but other than that, I putted well again.”
Argentina’s Angel Cabrera, the defending champion, went 9 over through 36 holes and missed the cut by seven strokes.
–Field Level Media
