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Home Blog Page 8610

Seeding at stake as No. 11 Kansas State visits West Virginia


No. 11 Kansas State and West Virginia have a lot on the line when they finish the Big 12 regular season Saturday afternoon in Morgantown.

The Wildcats (23-7, 11-6) can wrap up the No. 2 seed in the conference tournament, while the Mountaineers (17-13, 6-11) can strengthen their push for an NCAA Tournament bid.

The two teams opened the Big 12 season with K-State’s 82-76 victory in Manhattan, Kan., on Dec. 31.

The Wildcats have won four straight games since hitting a lull in early February. They beat Oklahoma 85-69 on Wednesday night on the strength of a 28-8 run wrapped around halftime.

Not much was expected of K-State coming into the season. The Wildcats were picked 10th in the preseason poll and went 11-1 in the non-conference portion of the schedule, but there were few impressive wins in that mix.

When the Mountaineers arrived in Manhattan, they were the ranked team. K-State trailed No. 24 West Virginia by 11 at halftime but stormed back to send the game to overtime, where the Wildcats prevailed.

Markquis Nowell scored 21 of his game-high 23 points after halftime, coming three steals shy of the school’s first triple-double. He added 10 assists.

The Wildcats enter Saturday’s action in a three-way tie for second in the Big 12 with Baylor and Texas. The Wildcats split with Texas and swept Baylor, while the Longhorns and Bears split. If they all finish with the same record, K-State would own all tiebreakers.

The Wildcats have two of the top three scorers in the league with one game remaining. Keyontae Johnson is second with 17.6 points per game and Nowell is third at 16.8.

“It’s the habits that we created from Day One,” Nowell said about the team’s expectation to win, even when nobody else believed in them. “Just going 1-0, winning each day, doing everything possible to get better. And Coach (Jerome) Tang embodied that in us from the first time he stepped foot on campus.

“We just live by that each and every day. So now it’s a habit, we try to win everything that we do, win each game, win each media, win each day.”

West Virginia coach Bob Huggins was perturbed to put it nicely after the first meeting between the teams this season. After blowing a lead, the Mountaineers still had a chance to get the win but fell short. Huggins said it was time for self-reflection.

“To tell the honest to God’s truth, we did some really, really stupid things that enabled them to cut the lead to get back in the game to make it a situation where they were a couple possessions from tying the score or taking the lead, whatever,” he said Dec. 31. “I don’t know how you can consistently miss one-footers, which we did. I don’t know how you can consistently miss free throws when they’re asked to make 100 before they leave practice. Make 100, not shoot 100. Make 100. Which obviously, they’ve cheated on. It catches up with you man. I think in any walk of life, the more you try to cheat it, the more it comes back to bite you in the ass.”

The Mountaineers appear to have enough bit to make the Big Dance, but a fourth win this season against a Top 25 team wouldn’t hurt.

Many bracketologists had them either out of the field or in one of the last at-large spots in the field prior to a huge 72-69 win at Iowa State on Monday. The Mountaineers trailed by seven points in the second half before rallying.

With two bigs on the injured list and another (Tre Mitchell) ejected with a flagrant-2 foul, Huggins went to a four-guard lineup. That worked.

“We went small and offensively that really helped us,” Huggins said. “I thought, defensively, we had some guys that really did a good job for us that really haven’t played as much as they probably need to. Kobe Johnson was terrific defensively. He got up on (Gabe) Kalscheur and when we went real small, he guarded their post guy. He’s got the strength to do it.”

West Virginia is 12-4 at home this season.

–Field Level Media

No. 2 Alabama looks to finish strong at No. 24 Texas A&M


The top two teams in the Southeastern Conference close out the regular season when No. 2 Alabama visits No. 24 Texas A&M on Saturday afternoon in College Station, Texas.

There is not much at stake thanks to an incredible second-half rally Wednesday by the Crimson Tide (26-4, 16-1 SEC). They fought back from a 17-point deficit in the second half against Auburn by using a 16-0 run that started midway through the frame.

With Jahvon Quinerly leading the way with 24 points, Alabama coach Nate Oats saw his club win 90-85 in overtime and end up cutting down the nets to celebrate its second SEC regular-season title in three years.

It was the third consecutive close shave by the Crimson Tide and star freshman Brandon Miller. Alabama has won four straight, with the last three decided by a total of 10 points.

“Listen, I just couldn’t be more proud of this group,” Oats said after the Crimson Tide finished 15-0 at home, their first perfect showing since 2010-11. “… Winning the SEC is not an easy thing to do. I mean, look at the teams in this league. It’s a great league.”

Locked in as the No. 2 seed in the SEC tourney, coach Buzz Williams’ Aggies (22-8, 14-3) have been a large part of that greatness.

The Aggies’ breakout season has been the talk of the conference, but Alabama’s win over Auburn deprived them of a shot at splitting the crown with a home win Saturday. That was a real possibility with 10 minutes left in Tuscaloosa and the Crimson Tide down 66-49.

On Tuesday at woeful Ole Miss, which owns a 3-14 mark in conference play and relieved fifth-year coach Kermit Davis of his duties on Feb. 24, the home side gave the Aggies all they could handle from the opening tip.

Playing under interim coach Win Case, Ole Miss jumped out to a double-digit lead at 20-8. But the Aggies scratched back, took the lead for the second time on Wade Taylor IV’s trey at 4:06 of the first half and never trailed again in a 69-61 win.

“We went from (12) down to the lead by halftime,” Williams said. “We were able to change the rhythm to being more conducive for us and who we are.”

Though Alabama has shown signs of weakness recently — it is just 11 for 53 (20.8 percent) the last two games from long distance — Williams said his team will need a better effort against the newly minted champs.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do before Saturday,” said Williams. “I know they’ve got the best players. I know they’re No. 1 in the league in offense and defense. I haven’t had time to look at them yet, but I know that much about them.”

In a series that features just 22 meetings though it dates back to 1958, Texas A&M trails the Crimson Tide 10-12. However, the Aggies have won four straight and are 6-2 in the series on their home court.

–Field Level Media

No. 13 Virginia aims to pick up steam vs. Louisville


The COVID-19 pandemic not only forced the cancellation of the NCAA Tournament in 2020, it also threw a monkey wrench into another hallowed college basketball tradition: Senior Day.

With the NCAA granting athletes an extra year of eligibility because of the pandemic, there now are two types of seniors: those in their fifth year and those in their fourth who may opt to return.

When No. 13 Virginia (22-6, 14-5 Atlantic Coast Conference) hosts Louisville (4-26, 2-17) in the regular-season finale on Saturday, the Cavaliers will honor five seniors — including three who likely will play their final college game in Charlottesville.

Point guard Kihei Clark is the only player left from Virginia’s 2018-19 NCAA title team. Jayden Gardner and Ben Vander Plas are grad transfers from East Carolina and Ohio, respectively.

The trio of starters helped put Virginia in position to capture its sixth ACC regular-season title since 2014 before the team sustained road losses last week at Boston College and North Carolina.

The Cavaliers are tied for first place in the ACC with Miami and Pittsburgh. But those teams meet on Saturday, and both already own the tiebreaker with Virginia by virtue of head-to-head victories.

Virginia bounced back from a pair of losses with a 64-57 win over Clemson on Tuesday. Gardner, Armaan Franklin and Isaac McKneely scored 12 points apiece.

Virginia had been in an offensive slump, shooting less than 40 percent in three straight games. Tuesday wasn’t much better as the Cavaliers made 40.7 percent of their attempts, but they controlled tempo against a team that had scored at least 91 points in its previous three wins.

Clemson guards Chase Hunter and Brevin Galloway made only 4 of 17 shots, combining for 10 points as they struggled to get quality looks. Three days earlier in a win at North Carolina State, the duo combined for 43 points on 12-for-22 shooting.

“At this time of the year, you’ll never be successful if you don’t sit down and guard and make people earn,” Virginia coach Tony Bennett said. “Your offense can come and go, but the defense always has to be there.”

Virginia’s recent lackluster play can be traced to Feb. 15 when it struggled to a 61-58 win at Louisville, with El Ellis (21 points) nearly propelling the Cardinals to the upset.

Ellis, the second-leading scorer in the ACC, has been the shining light in a lost season for Louisville. In the Cardinals’ last win, Ellis scored 28 points in an 83-73 victory over Clemson.

Ellis took his flowers Tuesday when Louisville played its final home game, falling to Virginia Tech 71-54. But the senior guard could be back next season, depending on his NBA stock.

“My mindset right now is to test the waters,” Ellis said on Monday.

Louisville trailed throughout the second half against Virginia Tech. A pair of 3-pointers by 44 seconds apart by Ellis and JJ Traynor got the Cardinals close at 50-47. But aside from those two shots, Louisville missed its other 12 attempts from deep.

Afterward, frustrated Louisville coach Kenny Payne questioned his team’s effort.

“I ask these players every day, ‘Do you understand what it means to be in that jersey and what, fully, you have to sacrifice to be in that jersey?'” Payne said. “I don’t think a majority of them do.”

–Field Level Media

No. 20 Providence looks to bounce back vs. Seton Hall


No. 20 Providence looks to avoid back-to-back home losses Saturday when it closes out the Big East regular season against Seton Hall in Rhode Island.

The Friars’ 17-game home winning streak ended with Wednesday night’s 94-89 loss to No. 19 Xavier. Providence (21-9, 13-6) entered that game with a 15-0 record at home this season, including an 8-0 mark in the Big East.

“In our building, it’s probably the hardest place to win in college basketball,” Friars coach Ed Cooley said. “Give them (Xavier) credit — they made shots and they made us work for everything. The schedule says we have more games, we’ll coach them up, love them up — we’ll get better. It’s not the end of the world, but it’s late in the season.”

Providence never had the lead against Xavier and trailed by 22 points in the first half.

“When you lose, it stings,” Cooley said. “When you lose at home, I feel like somebody broke in. I feel like somebody came in, and took our toys from under the Christmas tree. I feel like somebody took our food. I feel like somebody broke our windows.”

Ed Croswell led Providence by scoring 17 points and grabbing 13 rebounds in the loss. It was his eighth double-double of the season.

Seton Hall (16-14, 9-10) is coming off Tuesday’s 76-72 home loss to Villanova. The Pirates have lost three straight and five of their last six.

Seton Hall was without point guard Kadary Richmond (back) against Villanova. His injury also prevented him from playing in the previous game, an 82-60 loss to Xavier on Feb. 24. Richmond ranks third on the team in scoring (10.1 points per game) and second in rebounding (5.2).

“We battled,” Seton Hall center Tyrese Samuel said. “That’s the point. One man goes down and we have to keep playing hard. I give credit to them. They made (22 of 23) from the free-throw line. It’s hard to beat a team that does that down the stretch.”

Pirates coach Shaheen Holloway offered no timetable for Richmond’s return.

“We get Kadary, it’s a plus,” Holloway said. “If he can’t come back we’re going to continue to battle hard and try to win these games.”

Richmond scored a game-high 28 points and collected nine rebounds when Providence won at Seton Hall 71-67 earlier this season. Seton Hall led by nine at halftime, but the Friars wrestled the lead away with an 8-0 run that made it a 62-57 game late in the second half.

Bryce Hopkins led Providence with 24 points and 10 rebounds in that victory. Croswell added 21 points and nine boards.

Hopkins is fifth among Big East players in scoring (16.4) and second in rebounding (8.8).

Seton Hall is ninth in the conference in field-goal percentage (43.5) and 11th in free-throw percentage (68.2). The Pirates will be the No. 7 seed for next week’s Big East tournament and will open the tourney against 10th-seeded DePaul on Wednesday.

–Field Level Media

Lakers begin critical home stretch vs. Wolves


Los Angeles Lakers coach Darvin Ham is adjusting on the fly minus star LeBron James, who is out for at least the next two weeks with a right foot injury, as his club continues its pursuit of a playoff bid.

Fortunately for the Lakers, center Anthony Davis will be back in the lineup on Friday when the team begins a five-game homestand against the Minnesota Timberwolves.

The short-handed Lakers beat the Thunder, 123-117 in Oklahoma City on Wednesday, for their fifth win in their last seven games.

Davis sat out the matchup against the Thunder as a precaution on the second game of a back-to-back. The eight-time All-Star missed 20 games earlier this season with a right foot injury.

“He’s frustrated as hell,” Ham said of Davis. “He wants to be out there, but he also understands the process of us managing his foot the right way. And again, it’s a stress reaction, so anything could set that thing off. The more stress you put on it, the more it’s gonna react. I’m not saying it flared up or anything. He’s absolutely playing pain free. It’s just something we’re monitoring that we want to be extra careful and cautious about.”

The Lakers have also been without point guard D’Angelo Russell, who is expected to miss his fourth straight game with a sprained right ankle.

With three key players missing, the Lakers used a collective effort to get past the Thunder. Dennis Schroder scored 26 points, Troy Brown Jr. added a season-high 19, and Austin Reaves also had 19.

Ham said multiple players will need to continue to step up in James’ absence.

“It’s not gonna be any one particular guy that carries that entire load that ‘Bron carries from game to game,” Ham said. “It’s gonna be by committee. We may have different guys step up on different nights, but to know that we have those guys available is comforting.”

Reaves made 5 of 5 field goals and 8 of 9 free throws in the win over Oklahoma City. The second-year pro has acclimated well to a larger role by scoring at least 17 points in three of his last four games.

Currently in 11th place in the Western Conference, the Lakers are chasing a number of teams for a spot in the play-in tournament, including Minnesota, currently in the No. 8 position. The seventh- through 10th-place teams in each conference play in the tournament for the Nos. 7 and 8 seeds in the playoffs.

The Wolves snapped a three-game losing streak on Tuesday with a 108-101 road victory over the Los Angeles Clippers. Six players scored in double figures for Minnesota, which outscored the Clippers 60-38 in the paint.

“Everybody played really well and that’s what we’ve been waiting for,” Wolves coach Chris Finch said. “We’ve been hit and miss with guys but we really needed an effort like tonight.”

Jaden McDaniels scored 20 points in the win and is averaging 15.4 over his past five games. The third-year forward also provided a stellar defensive effort against Clippers stars Paul George and Kawhi Leonard.

“I think we have the best perimeter defender in the NBA,” Wolves forward Austin Rivers said. “His ability to guard not only quick guards, but big guards, I don’t think there’s anyone that can do it better than him.”

Anthony Edwards is averaging 24.6 points on 45.8-percent shooting for Minnesota, which has won its last two meetings against the Lakers, including a 111-102 victory on Oct. 28.

–Field Level Media

Spurs beat Pacers in triumphant return home


Rookie Jeremy Sochan recorded his first career double-double with 22 points and 13 rebounds as the San Antonio Spurs beat the visiting Indiana Pacers 110-99 on Thursday.

Playing its first home game since Feb. 3, San Antonio won its second straight following a 16-game losing streak. Devin Vassell, Zach Collins and Devonte’ Graham each scored 18 points, and Keita Bates-Diop added 10.

Buddy Hield scored 27 points to lead Indiana, while Chris Duarte added 18 and Myles Turner had 14. The Pacers played without All-Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton, who is listed as day-to-day with right calf tightness.

Indiana, which leads the league in double-digit comeback wins, trailed by 18 midway through the fourth quarter before pulling within 10 on Hield’s trey with 5:34 remaining.

Graham made five 3-pointers for the Spurs, who did not allow the Pacers to get closer than nine points in the final minutes. San Antonio completed a two-game season sweep of Indiana while holding its second straight opponent under the century mark.

T.J. McConnell and Jordan Nwora scored 10 points apiece for Indiana, which owned a 29-21 advantage after the first quarter. Hield scored nine of the Pacers’ first 11 points and had 13 for the period.

Indiana stretched its lead to 11 midway through the second quarter before San Antonio cut the deficit to 54-52 at the break. Sochan and Collins scored a combined 19 points for the Spurs, who were 2 of 15 from 3-point range for the half.

San Antonio moved ahead 67-57 after opening the third quarter on a 15-3 run. Vassell, who had been out since Jan. 2 while recovering from left knee surgery, scored 10 points in the period to help put the Spurs ahead 83-70.

San Antonio was without leading scorer Keldon Johnson, who sat out due to a sprained left foot. Spurs guard Doug McDermott exited the game in the third quarter with a right thumb sprain.

San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich missed the game due to non-COVID illness. Mitch Johnson served as the team’s acting coach.

–Field Level Media

Luka Doncic, Kyrie Irving combine for 82 as Mavs top Sixers


Luka Doncic amassed 42 points and 12 assists and Kyrie Irving scored 40 points to lift the host Dallas Mavericks past the Philadelphia 76ers 133-126 on Thursday.

The Mavericks improved to 2-4 with Doncic and Irving playing together.

Reggie Bullock added 15 and Christian Wood contributed 10 for the Mavericks, who had dropped five of their previous six games.

Dallas shot 25 of 48 (52.1 percent) from 3-point territory, with Doncic and Irving combining to go 13 of 21 (61.9 percent).

After the Sixers mounted a furious rally, Irving sealed the victory by making two free throws with 8.8 seconds remaining.

Philadelphia’s Joel Embiid returned from a one-game absence caused by left foot soreness to score 35 points and grab eight rebounds. Tyrese Maxey added 29 points. James Harden had 27 points and 13 assists, De’Anthony Melton put up 12 points and Tobias Harris had 10.

The Sixers ripped off an 11-0 run to get within 131-126 and nearly got closer, but Maxey missed a difficult layup with 12.2 seconds left to end the rally.

The Sixers opened the fourth quarter with a 15-0 run to cut a 19-point deficit to 110-106 when Maxey hit a runner in the lane with 9:22 left.

Irving responded with a three-point play and the Mavericks went ahead by seven.

The Mavericks regained their momentum and took a 122-108 lead on a 3-pointer by Bullock with 6:22 remaining.

In the second quarter, Josh Green dropped in a 3-pointer from the corner with 3:15 left as the Mavericks went ahead 65-60.

Embiid responded with a 15-foot jumper and Harden added a three-point play to tie the game at 65 with 1:52 remaining.

Doncic hit a short jumper with 0.8 seconds left and the Mavericks held a 71-67 advantage at halftime. Doncic led the way with 25 points before the break, and Irving added 20.

Harden produced a double-double by halftime with 19 points and 10 assists.

Irving split a double team and hit a difficult layup with 8:14 remaining to cap a 20-4 run to open the third quarter as Dallas pulled ahead 91-71.

Doncic knocked down a step back trey from 25 feet with 3:43 left in the third, and the Mavericks led 107-82.

Dallas shot 13 of 20 from the field in the third and held a 110-91 advantage at the end of the quarter.

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Reports: Willie McGinest facing 2 felony charges for Dec. fracas


Former New England Patriots linebacker Willie McGinest was charged with two felonies this week for his role in an incident that occurred at a nightclub in West Hollywood in December, TMZ and Fox reported Thursday.

Both outlets cited court records.

The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office charged McGinest with one count of assault with a deadly weapon, and one count of assault by means of force likely to cause great bodily injury.

Each charge carries up to four years in prison. McGinest’s arraignment has been set for April, per TMZ.

McGinest was arrested in connection with the Dec. 9 incident, turning himself in on Dec. 19, according to Fox.

TMZ obtained video purporting to show McGinest and other men approaching a man sitting at a booth. In the footage, McGinest punches the victim before the other attackers take their turns. McGinest is also accused of smashing the victim’s head with a bottle.

McGinest posted $30,000 bond and was released.

McGinest later apologized for the incident on social media.

“First and foremost, I want to offer my deepest apology for my lapse in judgment and behavior on December 9 at a restaurant in West Hollywood,” McGinest posted to Instagram later in December. “To my family, community, friends, and youth I mentor, please know I feel horrible for my actions and take full responsibility.”

NFL Network suspended McGinest from his role as an analyst.

McGinest, 51, played the first 12 seasons of his 15-year NFL career with the Patriots and was part of three Super Bowl-winning teams. He was a Pro Bowl selection in 1996 and 2003 and ranks second in Patriots history with 78 sacks.

In 15 seasons with the Patriots (1994-2005) and Browns (2006-08), McGinest played in 212 games (184 starts) and recorded 804 tackles and 86 sacks, as well as a league-record 16 postseason sacks.

–Field Level Media

Grizzlies out to prove themselves on road at West-leading Nuggets


The Memphis Grizzlies showed how dominant they can be when they beat the Denver Nuggets by 18 points Saturday in a matchup of the top two teams in the Western Conference.

If Memphis has any chance of getting to the top seed in the West, it’ll have to do so on the road. The Grizzlies snapped an eight-game road losing streak at Houston on Wednesday night but face a stern test when they play at Denver on Friday night.

It is the third and final meeting between the teams, with each having won at home.

The Nuggets lead Memphis by five games — four in the loss column — so getting a win Friday night seems more critical for Memphis. Should Denver win, the Nuggets would hold the tiebreaker and a commanding lead with a month left in the regular season.

The Grizzlies hope their victory at the slumping Rockets will carry over to Friday.

“Our focus was just trying to right the ship,” coach Taylor Jenkins said. “And any time you can start a road trip with a victory, it just gives you a different mentality for the rest.”

Memphis star Ja Morant is playing well despite a report that surfaced this week regarding an alleged incident he was involved in at a pick-up basketball game over the summer. A police report was filed but no charges were brought against Morant.

Morant had 39 points against the Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday and 20 against Houston.

The Nuggets have been playing dominant basketball for three months and are nearly unbeatable at home (28-4). They have lost just one game at Ball Arena since Dec. 6.

It helps that Denver has the two-time defending MVP in Nikola Jokic. If he captures the award again he would be the first player to win it in three straight seasons since Larry Bird in 1984-86. Jokic is averaging a triple-double — 24.6 points, 11.7 rebounds and 10.0 assists per game — while shooting 63.3 percent from the field.

He has been getting plenty of help now that the Nuggets are getting closer to full health. Jamal Murray, averaging 20.1 points per game, returned from a three-week absence to add more scoring punch and Michael Porter Jr. and Aaron Gordon are both averaging 17.0 points.

Denver’s offense is clicking as the regular season winds down and its defense has been one of the best in the NBA over the last 41 games. Some credit goes to the addition over the summer of Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, who can focus on one player to free up the rest of the defense.

“Every night he goes out there, he guards his matchup, guards the other team’s best player on the perimeter and does it with a tremendous amount of pride and urgency,” coach Michael Malone said. “Really, there’s nothing not to love about Kentavious Caldwell-Pope. He is a great two-way player and exactly what we needed.”

–Field Level Media

Kyle Kuzma scores 30 as Wizards drop Raptors


Kyle Kuzma scored 30 points and the Washington Wizards defeated the visiting Toronto Raptors 119-108 Thursday night.

Kristaps Porzingis added 25 points for the Wizards, who have won two in a row.

Daniel Gafford had 18 points for Washington. Bradley Beal scored 15 points, Corey Kispert scored 10 points and Delon Wright had seven points and 11 assists.

O.G. Anunoby had 26 points for the Raptors. Jakob Poeltl added 23 points and 13 rebounds. Fred VanVleet and Scottie Barnes had 14 points each, Pascal Siakam scored 13 points and 11 rebounds and Chris Boucher added 12 points.

Washington took an 11-point lead into the fourth quarter and scored the first eight points of the quarter.

Anunoby made a 3-pointer with 7:23 to play, cutting the deficit to 11. Poeltl’s layup cut the margin to nine with 5:25 left. Kuzma came back with a dunk and Porzingis hit a 12-footer to stretch the margin to 13 with four minutes remaining.

VanVleet made a layup to cut the deficit to eight with 1:56 to go, but Porzingis stretched the lead to 13 at 114-101 with a 3-pointer with 1:13 left. Anunoby’s 3-pointer cut the margin to nine but it was not enough.

Kuzma scored the first 10 points of the game and Toronto responded with an 18-2 run. Washington led 24-20 after one quarter.

Jordan Goodwin’s 3-pointer increased the lead to eight at 33-25 with 9:42 left in the second quarter. Wright’s driving layup gave Washington a 50-36 lead with 4:36 remaining, Toronto used a 10-0 run to cut the margin to four with 55.3 seconds left, but Washington scored the final five points of the first half to lead 59-50.

Washington shot 54.5 percent (24-for-44) in the first half, led by Kuzma’s 18 points. Toronto shot 41.3 percent (19-for-46), with Siakam scoring 13 points.

Washington led by 13 with 9:09 remaining in the third quarter after Porzingis’s layup and free throw. The lead reached 15 on Deni Avdija’s two free throws with 4:04 to go. Washington led 89-78 after three quarters.

–Field Level Media