Sports
Women's Top 25 roundup: Mikayla Blakes, No. 5 Vandy take down No. 4 Texas
Vanderbilt guard Mikayla Blakes (1) celebrates after defeating Florida at Memorial Gymnasium in Nashville, Tenn., Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026. Mikayla Blakes scored 34 points for her fourth consecutive 30-point performance and Aubrey Galvan added 18 points and eight rebounds to lead No. 5 Vanderbilt to a convincing 86-70 victory over No. 4 Texas on Thursday night in Southeastern Conference play at Nashville, Tenn.
Ndjakalenga Mwenentanda had 11 points and four steals and Sacha Washington added 10 points and nine rebounds for the Commodores (24-2, 10-2 SEC). Vanderbilt shot 50.9% from the field and has won four straight contests since its first two setbacks of the campaign.
Madison Booker recorded 20 points, eight rebounds and three steals for the Longhorns (23-3, 8-3). Breya Cunningham tallied 14 points and Jordan Lee added 11 for Texas, which had a five-game winning streak halted.
Vanderbilt sailed to a 47-30 halftime lead and led by as many as 26. The Commodores were 21 of 25 from the free-throw line — Blakes was 13 of 15 — while the Longhorns had just nine attempts, making seven.
No. 7 Michigan 80, Northwestern 58
Down by seven points in the third quarter, the Wolverines went on a 14-0 run and pulled away from the Wildcats in Evanston, Ill.
Ashley Sofilkanich scored six of her eight points in the decisive surge as Michigan (21-4, 12-2 Big Ten) bounced back from a loss to No. 2 UCLA on Sunday. The Wolverines’ Olivia Olson compiled 21 points, eight rebounds and seven assists. Syla Swords added 16 points and Kendall Dudley scored 12.
Caroline Lau amassed 16 points and six assists for Northwestern (8-16, 2-11), which lost its sixth game in a row. Grace Sullivan also scored 16 points while Tayla Thomas had 13. The Wildcats committed 20 turnover that led to 23 points for Michigan.
No. 9 Louisville 86, Wake Forest 67
Laura Ziegler scored 13 points and Tajianna Roberts added 12 on four 3-pointers as the host Cardinals defeated the Demon Deacons in ACC play.
Elif Istanbulluoglu added 10 points for Louisville (23-4, 13-1), which led 43-18 at halftime and never trailed. Reyna Scott contributed eight points, eight assists and six rebounds as the Cardinals won for the 16th time in the past 17 games.
Grace Oliver recorded 20 points and nine rebounds for Wake Forest (13-13, 3-11), which lost for the 10th time in the past 11 games. Milan Brown and Aurora Sorbye added 12 points apiece for the Demon Deacons.
No. 10 Oklahoma 81, Florida 74
Zya Vann made four 3-pointers while recording 18 points and four steals to help the Sooners pick up the SEC victory over the Gators at Norman, Okla.
Payton Verhulst had 16 points and nine rebounds and Aaliyah Chavez registered 16 points, seven assists, five rebounds and three steals for Oklahoma (18-6, 6-5). The Sooners rallied from a 13-point, second-quarter deficit and outscored Florida 27-17 in the fourth quarter to end a two-game slide.
Liv McGill had 29 points, seven rebounds and seven assists for the Gators (15-12, 3-9), who lost for the ninth time in the past 12 games. Me’Arah O’Neal had 14 points, seven rebounds and three blocked shots and Jade Weathersby had 11 points off the bench.
No. 14 Ole Miss 80, Arkansas 57
Cotie McMahon scored 21 points as the Rebels cruised past the Razorbacks in Oxford, Miss.
Denim DeShields hit one of her four 3-pointers in the final seconds of the first quarter to put Ole Miss on top 26-16, and Arkansas never got within single digits the rest of the way. Latasha Lattimore logged 17 points and 11 rebounds, DeShields scored 12 points and Sira Thienou had 11 for the Rebels (20-5, 7-3 SEC), who recovered from a loss to then-No. 21 Alabama in their previous game.
Arkansas (11-15, 0-11) took its 12th straight loss despite getting 16 points from Taleyah Jones plus 14 points and eight rebounds from Bonnie Deas.
No. 17 TCU 83, No. 12 Baylor 67
Olivia Miles established career highs of 40 points and 10 3-pointers to fuel the Horned Frogs past the Bears in Big 12 play at Waco, Texas.
Miles had seven 3-pointers and 23 points in her team’s 25-point third quarter as TCU (22-4, 10-3) won for the fourth time in six games. Marta Suarez added 27 points and made three 3-pointers as the Horned Frogs made 15 of 29 from distance.
Taliah Scott scored 22 points as the Bears lost for just the second time in 12 games. Jana Van Gytenbeek and Darianna Littlepage-Buggs had 14 points apiece for Baylor (21-5, 10-3).
No. 18 Kentucky 75, Texas A&M 55
Tonie Morgan had 19 points and eight assists and Asia Boone also scored 19 points as the Wildcats knocked off the Aggies in SEC play at Lexington, Ky.
Clara Strack added 17 points, 13 rebounds and three blocked shots for Kentucky (19-7, 6-6), which prevailed for just the second time in the past seven contests. The Wildcats owned a 52-32 rebounding advantage but shot just 36.1% from the field in a contest in which they never trailed.
Ny’Ceara Pryor recorded 21 points, eight rebounds and four steals for Texas A&M (9-11, 2-9), which lost for the seventh time in its last eight games. Janae Kent had 13 points and Fatmata Janneh added 10 points and eight rebounds for the Aggies.
No. 20 Maryland 81, Penn State 62
Yarden Garzon made five 3-pointers and scored 19 points and Oluchi Okananwa added 15 points, six assists and matched her career best of six steals as the Terrapins outclassed the Nittany Lions in Big Ten action at College Park, Md.
Addi Mack scored 13 points as Maryland (20-6, 8-6) won its third straight game. Saylor Poffenbarger had 10 points, 11 rebounds and five assists and Mir McLean added 10 points on 5-of-6 shooting.
Kiyomi McMiller scored 30 points for her third straight effort of 30 or more points for Penn State (8-17, 1-13). Gracie Merkle added 13 points off the bench for the Nittany Lions, who have dropped 16 of their last 18 contests.
No. 21 North Carolina 94, SMU 42
Lanie Grant scored 15 points and Indya Nivar added 14 while making all five of her shots to help the Tar Heels cruise past the Mustangs in ACC play at Chapel Hill, N.C.
Taliyah Henderson tallied 13 points on 6-of-6 shooting and Laila Hull added 11 points for North Carolina (21-5, 10-3). The Tar Heels shot 57.6% from the field and held a 50-20 rebounding advantage while notching their eighth consecutive victory.
Zahra King scored 15 points for SMU (8-17, 1-12), which shot just 23.1% from the field. The Mustangs have lost six straight games, including a 59-point loss to Duke on Sunday in the first contest of the two-game North Carolina trip.
No. 22 Tennessee 98, Missouri 53
Janiah Barker registered 22 points and eight rebounds to help the Lady Volunteers roll to the easy SEC win over the Tigers at Knoxville, Tenn.
Talaysia Cooper added 17 points and four steals and Alyssa Latham had 15 points for Tennessee (16-6, 8-2), which had lost three of its previous four games. Nya Robertson scored 14 points and Deniya Prawl added 13 points and 10 rebounds for the Volunteers, who held a 49-30 rebounding advantage.
Grace Slaughter scored 20 points for Missouri (16-11, 4-8), which lost two straight games and eight of its past 12. Shannon Dowell had 11 points for the Tigers, who shot 29.6% from the field and committed 21 turnovers.
–Field Level Media
Sports
After huge win, No. 9 Kansas hopes to take fight to No. 5 Iowa St.
Kansas Jayhawks forward Flory Bidunga (40) reacts after blocking a shot by Arizona Wildcats during the game inside Allen Fieldhouse on Feb. 9, 2026. Few teams in college hoops are hotter than Kansas right now, but the No. 9 Jayhawks may have to ramp up their game even more Saturday when they play No. 5 Iowa State in Ames, Iowa.
Kansas coach Bill Self’s club has spent all season trying to find its identity and somehow keep Darryn Peterson, a likely lottery pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, healthy and on the court as well.
In their last outing on Monday in the finale of a two-game homestand, the Jayhawks (19-5, 9-2 Big 12) discovered they could still win a massive game with Peterson on the bench, as he was ruled out with flu-like symptoms for their big tilt with top-ranked Arizona.
Short-handed, Self’s group went out and did the seemingly impossible — knocking off the Wildcats, winners of their first 23 contests — in an 82-78 thriller to record its eighth consecutive victory.
Big man Flory Bidunga was a key contributor, notching a double-double in a 23-point, 10-rebound performance. He shot 8-for-11 from the floor.
The Wildcats were ahead by as many as 11 points and led 71% of the game between the Big 12 powers, but Kansas sank all but four of its 25 free throws while the visitors made just 8 of 14 — a 13-point margin.
Bidunga, who produces 14.9 points per game on 68.6% field-goal shooting and team highs in average rebounds (nine) and blocked shots (2.8), made up for the absence of Peterson (20.5 points, 41.9% from deep).
“They have size, they’re strong,” Bidunga said after preserving the win with a swat of Arizona freshman star Brayden Burries’ try in the final seconds. “They got us beat (in) you know, the first half, I would say so. But we came out in the second half and then fought even harder.”
The Cyclones (21-3, 8-3) will be licking their wounds a bit after dropping Tuesday night’s 62-55 decision at TCU, snapping their five-game winning streak and allowing Kansas to stand alone in third place by one game. Arizona and No. 3 Houston are both 10-1 in conference play.
Perhaps worse than the loss to the Horned Frogs was the way it unfolded.
Iowa State led 55-50 following Nate Heise’s layup with 2:38 left, but the visitors would not score again. A 7 1/2-point underdog, TCU finished the upset on a 12-0 run.
The Cyclones did not shoot well, draining just 5 of 23 (21.7%) from distance in their second-worst showing thus far.
Another glaring problem was ball security: They committed 17 turnovers, their second-highest total.
“For us, we take so much pride taking care of the basketball, but it’s got to be something that really matters to us,” said coach T.J. Otzelberger, whose team is 13-0 at home. “We can’t have turnovers at a key part in the game. You know with the veteran guys we have out there and again, our guys really care, they’re about the right things, they do the hard work.”
Milan Momcilovic leads Iowa State with 18.4 points, while Joshua Jefferson scores 17 and grabs 7.7 boards.
Jefferson, a senior forward, was productive all around in the loss, notching 12 points, nine assists, eight boards, three steals and two blocks in 38 minutes.
–Field Level Media
Sports
No. 7 Nebraska deals with adversity, seeks salve in skidding Northwestern
Feb 7, 2026; Piscataway, New Jersey, USA; Nebraska Cornhuskers forward Pryce Sandfort (21) is guarded by Rutgers Scarlet Knights guard Harun Zrno (13) during the first half at Jersey Mike’s Arena. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images Seventh-ranked Nebraska clearly has commanded the fundamentals during a banner start, yet coach Fred Hoiberg still harps on the importance of pivoting.
That’s because he knows the Cornhuskers can’t focus on the past as they host slumping Northwestern on Saturday in Lincoln, Neb.
Tuesday’s 80-77 overtime loss to visiting No. 13 Purdue still gnawed at many Nebraska players as the week progressed. Hoiberg acknowledged the frustration as a former athlete before discussing the need to move forward.
“I told them … ‘We’ve done a really good job of putting big emotional wins behind us. Now here’s the flip side of it; you have to put the tough, emotional loss behind you now,’ ” Hoiberg said. “Really what will determine if you have success at the end of the year is how you handle those situations.”
Nebraska (21-3, 10-3 Big Ten) has seen its resolve tested more than ever since Jan. 27. After storming out of the gate with 20 straight wins, the Cornhuskers have lost to fellow ranked foes Michigan, Illinois and Purdue by a combined 15 points.
The Cornhuskers trailed Purdue by 22 points early in the second half and didn’t take their first lead until late in OT before falling 80-77.
One immediate area of focus: rebounding, especially the offensive glass. Nebraska finished minus-17 on the boards Tuesday while yielding 21 offensive rebounds.
“I know I’ve got to be better and more physical to not allow it,” said senior forward Rienk Mast, Nebraska’s co-leader in rebounds with 6.0 per game.
The Cornhuskers also hope to get a jolt from top scorer Pryce Sandfort (17.0 per game). After contributing at least 20 points in five straight games, Sandfort has scored 44 in his past three while shooting just 9-for-27 from deep.
Northwestern (10-15, 2-12) aims to stop a four-game losing streak, one off its season high.
Hosting second-ranked Michigan on Wednesday, the Wildcats built the largest lead against the Wolverines this season, 16 points, before fading during the final 14 minutes of an 87-75 defeat.
“I do feel like we’re getting better,” Northwestern coach Chris Collins said. “I feel like our spirit is still really good. … We’ve got guys diving for balls and battling. You saw the differential in size and athleticism. I mean, we’re competing. Man, we’re battling. So, I think there’s a lot of good stuff going on.”
While Big Ten leading scorer Nick Martinelli (22.5 ppg) regrouped with 18 points and eight rebounds, Jayden Reid paced all scorers with 20 points.
Reid provided just 25 points combined during the first three games of the skid.
Reid, a junior guard, has credited a growing chemistry with Jake West, a developing freshman guard, for helping to spark his game. Added athleticism also has sparked the defense, which forced 12 turnovers on Wednesday.
“Just having us both out there, it brings a different dimension to the game,” Reid said. “Because, obviously, we could both play off the ball and on the ball. We can guard both spots. It’s just fun being out there with Jake. It takes pressure off my hands.”
Nebraska has won three of the past four meetings with Northwestern, including a 77-58 road win on Jan. 17. Martinelli and Sandfort scored 22 points apiece for their respective squads.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Arianna Fontana’s silver lining: matching Italian medal record
Feb 10, 2026; Milan, Italy; Arianna Fontana of Italy celebrates after winning gold in the mixed team relay during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images MILAN — Italian short track skater Arianna Fontana had to settle for silver in the Olympic 500 meters on Thursday but was delighted to match the tally of Italy’s most decorated Olympian.
With 13 medals across six Games, Fontana is tied with fencer Edoardo Mangiarotti, who competed at five Olympics from 1936 to 1960, for the most Olympic medals by an Italian athlete.
Fontana, who has won the 500 meters at the last two Olympics, was upstaged Thursday by Dutchwoman Xandra Velzeboer.
“I’m very happy with this silver, it’s like a gold for me,” said Fontana, who suffered a torn quad last October.
She also said that she took inspiration from the victories of fellow Italians Federica Brignone in the Super-G and Francesca Lollobrigida in the 5,000 meters speed skating earlier Thursday.
“Federica (Brignone) moved me this morning, she was fantastic,” said Fontana.
“I saw Lollobrigida right before coming here and she gave me incredible energy, because when you see her — the grit she has in the final laps, what she did today, really, once again, hats off to her — so I had to keep up,” Fontana said.
Fontana is 35 and her Olympic career dates back to 2006, when Italy hosted the Games in Turin and she won her first medal.
“I try not to see my age as a number which defines me,” Fontana said, adding that her training is now tailored to ensure that she can keep up with younger rivals.
Fontana took gold with her Italian teammates in the mixed relay on Tuesday and will get a shot at another medal in the women’s relay next week.
–Reuters, special to Field Level Media
