Sports
Women's Top 25 roundup: No. 8 Michigan downs No. 13 Ohio State in OT
Ohio State Buckeyes guard Chance Gray (2) drives past Michigan Wolverines guard Syla Swords (12) during the NCAA women’s basketball game at the Jerome Schottenstein Center on Feb. 25, 2026. Olivia Olson scored a career-high 31 points and hit the game-winning jumper as No. 8 Michigan edged No. 13 Ohio State 88-86 in overtime in a Big Ten classic in Columbus, Ohio.
Olson also had nine rebounds while Syla Swords added 22 points for the Wolverines (23-5, 14-3 Big Ten), who moved ahead of Iowa for second place in the conference behind UCLA.
Swords’ 3-pointer with 10 seconds left in regulation seemed to decide it, but a foul by Brooke Daniels with no time left saved the Buckeyes. Jaloni Cambridge (22 points) sank three straight free throws to force the extra session.
Ohio State (23-6, 12-5) then forged an eight-point lead with 1:40 left in overtime before the Wolverines came all the way back. Macy Brown scored eight straight for Michigan, including two triples, to tie it 86-all with 15 seconds remaining and set up Olson’s game-winner.
No. 11 TCU 83, Cincinnati 70
Marta Suarez exploded for a career-best 32 points and added nine rebounds and four steals as the Big 12-leading Horned Frogs controlled the host Bearcats.
With her team trailing 29-23 at half, Suarez went to work, scoring 15 in the third quarter and 11 in the fourth as TCU (26-4, 14-3) outscored Cincinnati 60-41 over that stretch. Donovyn Hunter added 16, Olivia Miles had 15 and Kennedy Basham grabbed a game-high 10 rebounds.
Mya Perry scored 27 points and Caliyah DeVillasee added 20 for Cincinnati (11-18, 6-11).
No. 14 Maryland 79, Northwestern 57
Oluchi Okananwa scored 25 points and the Terrapins never trailed in a comfortable Big Ten win over the Wildcats in College Park, Md.
Maryland (23-6, 11-6) forced 21 turnovers, turning those into 24 points in a game played primarily in the paint. The Terrapins outscored their opponent 54-38 down low.
Northwestern (8-20, 2-15) had a lone double-digit scorer, Grace Sullivan, who had 23. Maryland countered with Okananwa, Yarden Garzon (11), Addi Mack (10) and Kyndal Walker (10).
No. 17 West Virginia 74, UCF 62
A dominant 31-9 third quarter propelled the Mountaineers past the Knights in Orlando, Fla.
West Virginia (23-6, 13-4) shot 13 of 17 from the field in the third period, including a perfect 3 of 3 from 3-point range, in seizing a 56-36 advantage going into the fourth.
Gia Cooke led the Mountaineers with 19 points. Jordan Harrison added 16. UCF (10-18, 2-15) was paced by Khyala Ngodu’s 21 points and Kristol Ayson’s 12.
Kansas 68, No. 20 Texas Tech 59
S’Mya Nichols notched 19 points by going 15 of 17 at the free-throw line, and the Jayhawks upset the Lady Raiders in Lawrence, Kan.
The teams were tied with 3:29 to play, before Kansas (18-11, 8-9) outscored Texas Tech 12-3 down the stretch. Reserve Laia Conesa topped things off with the final five points on a 3-pointer and two made free throws.
Texas Tech (24-6, 11-6) was outscored 24-5 at the charity stripe. Sarengbe Sanogo was the team’s top scorer with 16 points.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Tage Thompson, Peyton Krebs lead Sabres past Devils
Feb 25, 2026; Newark, New Jersey, USA; Buffalo Sabres center Tage Thompson (72) celebrates his goal against the New Jersey Devils during the second period at Prudential Center. Mandatory Credit: Ed Mulholland-Imagn Images Tage Thompson and Peyton Krebs each had a goal and an assist for the Buffalo Sabres in a 2-1 win against the host New Jersey Devils on Wednesday.
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen made 27 saves for the Sabres in his return after missing five games with a lower-body injury.
Timo Meier scored and Jake Allen made 28 saves for the Devils, who have lost four straight and six of seven.
Thompson gave Buffalo a 1-0 lead at 8:10 of the second period. Krebs collected a chip pass from Bowen Byram in the neutral zone to create a 2-on-1, carrying it to the top of the left circle before sending it under Brett Pesce’s stick over to Thompson. The center received it inside the right circle, dragged it to the slot and fired a wrist shot past Allen blocker side.
After a slow start to the period for the Sabres, Thompson’s goal gave them a jump in their step as they pressed to extend their lead on the following shift.
The Devils had their opportunities to equalize. Luukkonen got over to deny Dawson Mercer from the right circle on a 2-on-1 midway through the frame. Nick Bjugstad was alone in front, but the center’s shot deflected off Luukkonen’s mask and over the net. Nico Hischier missed wide on a short-handed breakaway with two and a half minutes left in the period.
Krebs made it 2-0 at 10:36 of the third period. Jack Hughes lost control of the puck inside his own blue line, and Thompson, his Team USA teammate at the 2026 Winter Olympic Games, poked it away to take it himself. Thompson sent a short feed to Krebs, who settled the bouncing puck and roofed it over Allen’s right shoulder and under the bar.
With Allen pulled for the extra attacker, Meier cut the deficit in half at 17:30. After Hughes intercepted a clearing attempt at the right point, New Jersey kept the play going in the zone. Hughes put a shot on goal from down low, and Meier jammed it in from in front.
–Field Level Media
Sports
CONCACAF Champions Cup: FC Cincinnati cap 13-0 series rout
Feb 25, 2026; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; FC Cincinnati midfielder Stiven Jimenez (37) celebrates his goal with midfielder Stefan Chirila (19) in the second half against O&M FC at TQL Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images Kenji Mboma Dem scored twice as FC Cincinnati routed visiting O&M FC 9-0 on Wednesday, completing a 13-0 aggregate victory in a first-round CONCACAF Champions Cup series.
Cincinnati posted a 4-0 win at Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic on Feb. 18. The dominant series performance sends the Orange and Blue into a Round of 16 matchup against Mexico’s Tigres UANL.
Mboma Dem opened the scoring in the 18th minute on Tuesday. An entry pass from Obinna Nwobodo send Mboma Dem in alone in front of O&M goalie Iraitz Gelbentzu. Mboma Dem fired in a right-footed shot from 8 yards out.
The score on the night was 4-0 by halftime, as tallies from Gerardo Valenzuela (27th minute) and Tom Barlow (35th) sandwiched an own goal from O&M’s Gabriel Castillo.
Ademar Chavez (48th minute), Mboma Dem (58th minute), Stiven Jimenez (68th minute), Alvas Powell (78th minutes) and Stefan Chirila (86th minute) rounded out the scorer.
Making a rough night worse for the visitors, second-half substitute Hector Ramirez received a straight red card for a tackle in the 82nd minute.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Out-of-sync offenses collide as Suns host Lakers
Feb 24, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) shoots against Orlando Magic forward Jonathan Isaac (1) during the second half at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images Two teams in varying states of offensive dysfunction will meet when the Phoenix Suns host the Los Angeles Lakers on Thursday.
The Suns enter the matchup after their two lowest-scoring games of the season, a 92-77 loss to Portland and a 97-81 defeat to Boston. Phoenix was unable to generate consistent looks without top scorers Devin Booker and Dillon Brooks.
The Lakers return after an uncomfortable 6.7 seconds, when they misfired on an inbounds play in a 110-109 loss to Orlando on Tuesday. It was their second straight loss after a 111-89 defeat to Boston two days before.
“We’re a work in progress,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said.
Redick drew up an inbounds play to get Luka Doncic a shot in the final seconds of the Orlando game, but Doncic turned down an open but longish 3-point attempt before being swarmed. He passed to a surprised LeBron James, whose attempted game-winner was not close.
“Obviously, you have to ask Luka what he saw on that,” James said. “I thought he had a good look, and it looked like he kind of just lost his balance. Didn’t have the rhythm of the ball, whatever the case may be.
“I was kind of off-balance when he gave it to me. I thought he had a great look, but that’s my POV.”
Doncic, who had 22 points and 15 assists but was 8 of 24 from the field, said he could have done things differently.
“I knew it was open, but I thought it was a little bit far,” Doncic said. “I tried to get one dribble closer. I thought it was enough time to get a better look. Probably shouldn’t have picked up the ball. Should have attacked. That’s on me.”
The Lakers and Suns are straddling the line that separates the top six in the Western Conference from the play-in round as the stretch approaches.
L.A. (34-23) is sixth in the West, two games ahead of seventh-place Phoenix (33-26), and neither team has been able to make up ground recently.
The Lakers were 4-4 on an extended but testing homestead. They have lost four of the last six, including to top contenders Oklahoma City, San Antonio and Boston.
“We’ve got to be more consistent,” Doncic said. “There’s been a couple of games we should have won.”
The Suns have lost four of five and seven of 10. They have shot below 40% from the field in each of the last four games and are shooting 41% in that 10-game stretch.
Booker (24.7 points per game) has missed seven games and Brooks (20.9) has missed three. Reserve guard Jordan Goodwin (calf) has missed the last two, while guards Grayson Allen and Jalen Green have been in and out due to injury.
Green has started the last four while working into form following an extended absence due to hamstring and hip injuries. He is averaging 17 points in those starts but shooting only 33.7%.
“(Booker) has said it since Day 1 — when you have five guys that are threats on the court, that’s when it feels right and you can just play basketball,” Suns coach Jordan Ott said. “It’s a rhythm to the game.
“Right now, we cannot find it, but we’re going to keep trying. This is going to be a huge part of our season, us breaking through this little rough patch. We have to do it together.”
–Field Level Media
