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Tag: Basketball

  • Brihanna Crittendon breaks CHSAA’s all-time basketball scoring record, passing Tracy Hill’s 43-year-old mark of 2,934 points

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    THORNTON — Brihanna Crittendon has rewritten Colorado hoops history.

    The Riverdale Ridge senior broke CHSAA’s all-time scoring mark on Saturday, passing Tracy Hill’s tally of 2,934 points that stood for 43 years. Crittendon scored a fast-break lay-up in the third quarter against Monarch to move beyond Hill, an ex-Ridgway star.

    When Crittendon banked in the decisive shot, Hill — who drove about six hours from the Western Slope to see the consequential game — sat courtside cheering her on. Then the two embraced at midcourt during the Riverdale Ridge timeout that followed, the scoring torch passing from one great to another amid a standing ovation.

    Riverdale Ridge senior Brihanna Crittendon (3) scores on a layup to become the all-time leading scorer in Colorado high school basketball history during a game against Monarch on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026, at Riverdale Ridge High School in Thornton, Colo. Tracy Hill held the previous record of 2,934 points for 43 years. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    “It’s exciting, it’s amazing, and the record is not necessarily something I’ve worked for, but it’s something that has been a result of all the work I’ve put in the last four years,” Crittendon said. “It’s really meaningful to add my name to the top of the list, because I never thought this would be a possibility when I first started my high school career.”

    Crittendon’s scoring feat marked the pinnacle of a prep career that’s lived up to the hype from the very start. In her high school debut on Dec. 6, 2022, the do-everything guard/forward scorched Severance for 32 points on 16 of 18 from the field.

    Deric Yaussi, the Severance coach at the time who is now at Loveland, recalled pulling out all the stops to limit the phenom freshman.

    None of it worked, a common theme for those who have coached against the University of Texas-bound superstar.

    “Coming into the game, I heard a lot about how good she was,” Yaussi recalled. “So I put my best defender on her the entire game. We double-teamed her, we had a third defender shadow her. But she didn’t flinch. She passed out of the double-teams. She looked like a senior out there, poised and controlled.

    “… To drop 32 in her first game, I knew she was going to be very special. And when we played her when she was a sophomore (and she scored 28), I laughed with my players afterwards like, ‘Hey girls, we held her under 30 points! We did it!’

    Crittendon lit up Class 4A in her first two seasons, a run that culminated with the program’s first state championship in 2024. Crittendon set the state scoring record for a freshman with 811 points, then set the state scoring record for a sophomore with 809 points.

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    Kyle Newman

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  • NCAA Women’s Committee’s 1st Top 16 Reveal: UConn, UCLA, South Carolina, Vanderbilt Are No. 1s

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    UConn, UCLA, South Carolina and Vanderbilt would be the No. 1 seeds in the women’s NCAA Tournament if it began now.

    The NCAA basketball selection committee did its first reveal of the teams in line for the top 16 seeds Saturday.

    Undefeated UConn was the overall No. 1 seed, edging UCLA.

    The committee uses 12 criteria to determine who belongs in the field and where teams should be seeded.

    “Some are subjective there and some data driven,” NCAA women’s basketball selection committee chair Amanda Braun told The Associated Press in a phone interview. “The overall record for UConn and the observable component are impressive. UCLA observable is also very strong as well.”

    Showing how fluid things are in seeding, the Commodores moved up to the 1-line after beating Texas on Thursday.

    “It was that close between the two of them that head-to-head made a difference. ”We were impressed by both teams.”

    The top 16 seeds in the 68-team field will host first- and second-round games, with the regional rounds being played at two neutral sites for the fourth straight year. Fort Worth, Texas, will host half of the Sweet 16, and Sacramento, California, will host the other eight teams.

    UConn and South Carolina were projected as the top seeds in the Fort Worth Regional, with UCLA and Vanderbilt in Sacramento. The Huskies were the overall No. 1 seed, meaning they would potentially have the Friday-Sunday games on the second weekend, allowing them an extra day of rest before the Final Four.

    Joining UConn in its bracket was No. 2 seed LSU, third-seed Ohio State and fourth-seed Oklahoma.

    The Bruins would have No. 2 seed Texas, No. 3 seed Duke and fourth-seeded Ole Miss in their region. The Longhorns were slotted there to ensure that the bracketing principle of keeping the top four teams in a conference in different regions was protected.

    The SEC and Big Ten each have six of the top 16 seeds.

    Joining the Gamecocks in Fort Worth would be No. 2 Louisville, No. 3 Iowa and No. 4 Michigan State. The Commodores would have No. 2 Michigan, No. 3 TCU and fourth-seed Maryland in California.

    “As we move down to the three’s and four’s there was a lot of discussion amongst the group,” Braun said. “You’re splitting hairs to move them up one or down one.”

    TCU is hoping to be in one of the Fort Worth brackets so that Horned Frogs wouldn’t have to leave home. The arena where the regional is being played is roughly 10 minutes from campus.

    Teams just outside the top 16 included Baylor and West Virginia.

    The Final Four will be played in Phoenix on April 3 and the NCAA championship game is two days later.

    The NCAA has been doing in-season reveals since 2015 to give teams an early idea of where they could be come selection night. Saturday’s reveal did not factor in the games scheduled for later that day, which included South Carolina visiting LSU.

    The NCAA will have one more reveal on March 1 before the real seedings are announced on March 15. For the first time, the selection committee will release the teams that will host the first two rounds in alphabetical order the day before the bracket is revealed. That gives those schools an extra day to sell tickets.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Feb. 2026

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    Associated Press

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  • Gibbs-Lawhorn, Williamson lead UNLV to 86-83 OT win over Boise State

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    BOISE, Idaho — Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn scored 36 points and Issac Williamson added three in the overtime as UNLV knocked off Boise State 86-83 on Friday night.

    Gibbs-Lawhorn made a 3-pointer with 38 seconds left in regulation to tie it at 77-all.

    Gibbs-Lawhorn shot 13 for 22 (6 for 12 from 3-point range) and 4 of 4 from the free-throw line for the Rebels (13-12, 8-6 Mountain West Conference). Kimani Hamilton scored 13 points while going 5 of 8 (3 for 4 from 3-point range). Tyrin Jones shot 5 of 10 from the field to finish with 12 points.

    Drew Fielder led the Broncos (15-10, 7-7) in scoring, finishing with 27 points. Pearson Carmichael added 16 points for Boise State. Dylan Andrews finished with 12 points and five assists.

    Gibbs-Lawhorn scored nine points in the first half and UNLV went into the break trailing 40-29. Gibbs-Lawhorn added 25 points in the second half.

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    The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

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  • Philly Special: V.J. Edgecombe Leads Team Vince to Victory at NBA All-Star Weekend’s Rising Stars

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    INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Philadelphia rookie V.J. Edgecombe led Team Vince to victory in the Rising Stars event at NBA All-Star weekend Friday night, scoring 17 points in the semifinal before hitting two free throws to end the final.

    San Antonio guard Dylan Harper ended the first semifinal in memorable fashion by scoring the game-winning bucket over Ron Harper Jr., his older brother.

    Dylan Harper then scored eight points in the final for Team Melo while teaming up with his Spurs teammate, Stephon Castle, last season’s Rookie of the Year.

    Castle made a putback dunk off Jeremiah Fears’ miss to pull Team Melo within one point of victory in the final, but Edgecombe drew a foul from Donovan Clingan and coolly hit both free throws to end it at 25-24. Edgecombe was named the Rising Stars MVP.

    The NBA’s rookies, sophomores and G League prospects opened the All-Star weekend at the Los Angeles Clippers’ Intuit Dome with this four-team tournament of three games played to a set point total.

    Dylan Harper called game in the first semifinal with a succession of moves that could have been learned on the driveway at home, bullying Ron Jr. into the paint before hitting a step-back jumper. Dylan stuck out his tongue in gleeful celebration of only his second basket in the semifinal, and their famous father laughed heartily at courtside.

    Edgecombe scored nearly half of his team’s 41 points — including the last 10 in a row — while winning the second semifinal to set up a showdown between the teams led by NBA greats Vince Carter and Carmelo Anthony.

    The Rising Stars game wasn’t a full showcase of the NBA’s top young talent because No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg dropped out of the game due to injury, as did Washington’s Alex Sarr and Memphis’ Cedric Coward.

    Edgecombe hit three 3-pointers during his scoring barrage in the first semifinal to win his duel with Charlotte’s Kon Knueppel, who scored just four points. The two rookies are the only serious contenders with Flagg for the Rookie of the Year award.

    The event got off to a rousing start when Clippers prospect Yanic Konan Niederhäuser dunked a lob from Ron Harper Jr. for the first basket of the night. The Swiss big man who was drafted last summer by the All-Star weekend hosts, got raucous cheers from the fans in The Wall, an extra-steep supporters’ section installed at Intuit Dome by Clippers owner Steve Ballmer.

    Niederhäuser led his losing team with 11 points in the first semifinal.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Feb. 2026

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    Associated Press

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  • Rome Flynn repeats as NBA All-Star Celebrity Game MVP and Team Giannis wins 65-58

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    INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Rome Flynn earned MVP honors for the second straight year in the NBA All-Star Celebrity Game on Friday night, scoring 17 points to lead a team coached by Giannis Antetokounmpo to a 65-58 victory.

    Actor-comedian Anthony Anderson coached the losing team, led by former 7-foot-6 NBA player Tacko Fall with 20 points.

    The game brought basketball back to the Forum, home of the Los Angeles Lakers’ “Showtime” era until 1999, when they moved 10 miles away to downtown Los Angeles. Now, it has a different sponsor name under Los Angeles Clippers owner Steve Ballmer and is mostly used as a concert and entertainment venue.

    K-pop made its debut at the game with boy group CORTIS performing at halftime.

    Victor Wembanyama tossed up the opening tip between Team Giannis’ Jenna Bandy and Team Anthony’s Adrien Nunez, who got control, was fouled and missed his first throw.

    Bandy was the only woman in either team’s starting lineup.

    Team Giannis had a huge advantage in the paint with Fall grabbing most of the rebounds. His dunk made it a one-point game in the third.

    Chinese actor-singer Dylan Wang garnered the loudest screams of the night, especially after he scored back-to-back baskets in the first quarter for Team Giannis.

    Two of the oldest guys on the court were Phoenix Suns owner Mat Ishbia (age 46) and Rick Schnall (50-something), who’s part of the Charlotte Hornets ownership group. Schnall fouled Ishbia in the first quarter, and Ishbia hit the free throws in a throwback to his Michigan State playing days.

    Los Angeles Chargers star Keenan Allen hit a long shot from the red, white and blue line that was worth 4 points for Team Anthony. It launched a flurry of points for the wide receiver in the second quarter and he finished with 18 points.

    Mascots from the Hornets and Mavericks alternated as sixth men restricted to playing in the backcourt for a bit in the third quarter.

    Sidelined since Jan. 23 with a calf strain, Antetokounmpo won’t be playing in the All-Star Game on Sunday.

    But the two-time MVP was assisted by his brothers Thanasis and Alex on Friday. Another assistant was Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts.

    Former NBA player Jeremy Lin credited Betts for an inspiring halftime speech. “He definitely knows a lot about basketball,” Lin said.

    The game marked the start of All-Star weekend, followed by the Rising Stars game down the street at Intuit Dome.

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    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

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  • Tennis legend John McEnroe raises alarm over affordability in youth sports

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    John McEnroe is talking about tennis, but he could as well be speaking about baseball, basketball, football, track, field or any other sport that requires a stick, bat, ball or puck.

    The retired tennis legend was in Frisco recently to promote the 2026 Nexo Dallas Open, and there are few current — or former — athletes who are any more fearless in front of a mic. Charles Barkley, Martina Navratilova, Pat McAfee, Johnny Mac … there are precious few.

    I asked McEnroe what single element of tennis he would like to change.

    “In a nutshell, because this has been an issue forever, since I was growing up. My father was a lawyer, became a partner in the law firm, and he needed some help in the early days for the cost of (tennis),” McEnroe said.

    John McEnroe’s dad was an attorney, and he needed to find the extra money to help pay for his son to play tennis.

    “So I recognize, and I think we all did, everyone did, that it’s too expensive,” McEnroe said. “Generally, there’s not enough people that have the chance to do something that I believe is a tremendous sport.”

    America’s youth sports revenue potential

    To play almost anything these days is to pay a wallet-crushing amount. The Winter Olympics is always fun to watch, and it features a menu of sports that can only be played by those with the financial resources.

    A study in 2024 by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) said that “70 percent of kids drop out of organized sports by age 13.”

    One of the primary reasons behind the surge in dropouts is the price. Tennis and golf have long been called “country club sports,” and carried a higher price tag. Now, way too many sports have moved into the same country club.

    “The parents seeing dollar signs. That’s a very troubling thing,” McEnroe said. “It’s gotten worse, than not better.”

    It’s gotten worse because America’s youth sports scene has become so profitable that private equity firms are reportedly showing an interest to join what previously had been a space for recreation, fun and life lessons for young people. A 14-year-old playing a baseball game in front of eight people is now a part of a billion-dollar industry.

    A parent’s ambition to provide an opportunity for their kid, and or vicariously live out their own athletic fantasy through their child, has proven to be a can’t-miss marketing march to the heart. It’s also a delicious profit margin for sports that hold virtually no commercial appeal.

    Why charge $10 when you can bill $100? Why do something to just cover the costs when you can make a real profit, and or potentially have a career and thriving business? The idealism of youth sports has been replaced by America’s preference for capitalism.

    Moms and dads are paying for all of this, up to and including the price of a ticket to attend a tournament that they are the ones funding through a series of fees that never ends.

    “(I’m) always trying to raise money to give more kids that can’t afford it, which unfortunately is like 99% of the population,” McEnroe said. “So maybe it’s slightly less, I hope, but I’m not sure it is. If anything, it has become more unaffordable since the ‘70s. So that would be the biggest thing.”

    How to play without taking out a second mortgage is hard

    Play rec. There are still recreational and school leagues for most sports where a kid can play without assaulting their parents’ bank accounts. The challenges associated with this path are everywhere; at a bigger school, there may be so many kids who try out for the team there are often not enough spots. At a smaller school, the team may not even exist.

    The drop in competition between rec league and the club team can be so noticeable that it’s discouraging to the player, or parent. It all contributes to the kid ending their playing career at a time when they should still be playing.

    Kevin Harvey was raised by a single mom, and was a three-sport athlete at Mineral Wells High School in the late ‘90s. He played on an AAU basketball team in middle school and high school.

    “To this day I still don’t know who paid for me to be on that team because I know my mom could not afford it,” said Harvey, who is the girls basketball coach at Nolan Catholic High School. He also coaches four to six AAU teams.

    If the player is talented, they can find a team that will cover the costs. In almost anything. Harvey, who played basketball in college, was one of those guys.

    The price can be depressing. For basketball, it can be $3,000 to $4,500 a season. That doesn’t include tournaments, and the costs associated with travel. For hockey, $1,200 a month. Not including equipment. One season of cheerleading can run $10,000.

    The startup cost to cover a kid’s first season of T-ball is around $600. A season of baseball can be as low as $2,000, to as much as $30,000. Soccer is in that same neighborhood.

    The ROI of youth sports is that it can be a life-improving opportunity for a kid, a bounty of lessons dressed as fun, complete with a final score.

    “I cannot imagine my life if I did not have sports,” Harvey said. “Basketball saved my life, and every day I thank God for basketball.”

    Whether it’s tennis, basketball or golf, those life-altering opportunities in America still exist, but they just cost a lot.

    This story was originally published February 13, 2026 at 6:00 AM.

    Mac Engel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Mac Engel is an award-winning columnist who has covered sports since the dawn of man; Cowboys, TCU, Stars, Rangers, Mavericks, etc. Olympics. Movies. Concerts. Books. He combines dry wit with 1st-person reporting to complement an annoying personality.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Mac Engel

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  • LeBron James becomes oldest player with triple-double

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    LOS ANGELES — LeBron James became the oldest player in NBA history with a triple-double when he put up 28 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 124-104 victory over the Dallas Mavericks on Thursday night.

    At 41 years and 44 days old, James broke the record held by Karl Malone, who recorded a triple-double for the Lakers when he was 40 years and 127 days old.

    James scored 14 points in a dominant first quarter, and had 22 points and 12 assists heading to the fourth. He grabbed his 10th rebound with 2:06 to play and checked out moments later, wrapping up another sensational game in his unprecedented 23rd NBA season.

    James is headed to the All-Star Game this weekend after being selected for the 22nd time. He got his most recent triple-double on Feb. 1, 2025.

    Naji Marshall and Max Christie scored 19 points apiece for the Mavericks, who lost their ninth straight to fall into their longest skid in 28 seasons.

    NBA scoring leader Luka Doncic didn’t suit up against his former team, missing his fourth straight game for the Lakers with a mild hamstring strain. Star rookie Cooper Flagg sat out with a sprained foot for Dallas that will prevent him from participating in All-Star weekend at nearby Intuit Dome.

    James and Austin Reaves sat out the Lakers’ loss to San Antonio on Tuesday for health maintenance, but both returned in a comfortable victory. Reaves had 18 points and six assists.

    Rui Hachimura scored 21 points for the Lakers, who have won seven of 11.

    Lakers coach JJ Redick said he expects Doncic to return after the All-Star break. Redick didn’t know whether the Slovenian superstar will play in the All-Star Game after leading the NBA in votes.

    Mavericks: At Minnesota on Friday, Feb. 20.

    Lakers: Host the Clippers on Friday, Feb. 20.

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    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/NBA

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  • Minnesota Timberwolves dominate Portland Trail Blazers 133-109; Randle scores 41

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    Julius Randle had 41 points and the Minnesota Timberwolves beat Portland 133-109 on Wednesday night to end the Trail Blazers’ winning streak at three.

    Randall, who also had seven rebounds, capped his night with a windmill dunk that put the crowd at the Target Center on its feet. Jaden McDaniels added 21 points for the Timberwolves, playing their final game before the All-Star break.

    Jrue Holiday scored 23 points for the Trail Blazers, who trailed by 28 points and were hurt by 25 turnovers. Scoot Henderson, playing just his third game back since missing the first half of the season because of a hamstring injury, finished with 18 points.

    Minnesota scoring leader Anthony Edwards was listed as questionable going into the game because of an illness but he started and finished with 14 points.

    Minnesota was coming off a 138-116 win at home over Atlanta that stopped a two-game skid.

    McDaniels’ floating jumper pushed Minnesota’s lead to 50-38 midway through the second quarter. McDaniels had 15 points in the opening half and the Timberwolves led 61-51 at the break.

    Edwards and Julius Randle hit back-to-back 3-pointers to go up 73-59 in the third quarter. Rudy Gobert dunked to cap a 16-2 run and gave the Timberwolves a 79-59 lead.

    Portland ended the third quarter on a 10-3 run to close to 96-82 but couldn’t find a rally down the stretch. All-Star Deni Avdija struggled with 11 points.

    The Blazers were without Shaedon Sharpe, who missed the third straight game with a left calf strain.

    Before Wednesday’s game, the NBA fined Timberwolves big man Naz Reid and Atlanta Hawks forward Mouhamed Gueye $35,000 apiece for their roles in a jersey-grabbing tussle.

    Both players were given technical fouls and ejected with 11:52 left in the fourth quarter Monday after Gueye pushed Reid from behind, drawing a foul. Reid approached Gueye, the players grabbed each other’s jerseys and struggled before being separated by officials, coaches and teammates. The Timberwolves won 138-116.

    Up next

    Trail Blazers: At Utah on Thursday night.

    Timberwolves: Host Dallas on Friday, Feb. 20.

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  • No longer losers, the Clippers still host NBA All-Star weekend amid a season of vintage team chaos

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    INGLEWOOD, Calif. — The Los Angeles Clippers’ days as the biggest losers in professional sports are long gone, and this NBA All-Star weekend was supposed to be a time to celebrate it.

    The team that spent its first four decades of existence as a punch line and a purgatory has now had 14 consecutive winning seasons with a succession of basketball greats wearing its uniform. After decades of playing in dingy gyms from Buffalo to San Diego to downtown Los Angeles, the Clippers now hold court in a lavish, futuristic new arena built by the richest owner in professional sports, Steve Ballmer.

    Yet perhaps it’s cosmically appropriate for this crowning All-Star moment to arrive in the middle of a profoundly chaotic season for the Clippers, whose newer fans have been getting a taste of the bad old days from a team that once spent almost every year mired in some kind of mess.

    “We’ve dealt with a lot this year,” Clippers guard Kris Dunn said last week. “Our whole mentality throughout the year has just been to try to find a way. It’s been tough.”

    The season began under the cloud of an NBA investigation into a suspicious endorsement deal for superstar Kawhi Leonard which might have been a way for the team to circumvent the salary cap — and which infuriated front offices around the sport, no matter what the league eventually decides. Leonard, Ballmer and president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank all deny wrongdoing, but the Clippers could face penalties if the league disagrees.

    The Clippers then got off to a shambolic 6-21 start during which they shockingly kicked franchise icon Chris Paul off the team just six weeks into the 40-year-old point guard’s much-anticipated farewell season.

    A couple of weeks after Paul’s banishment, coach Tyronn Lue’s Clips improbably started winning again, with James Harden and longtime center Ivica Zubac stepping up alongside Leonard to lead a 16-3 surge back into the playoff race.

    But then Frank blew up his roster last week, trading Harden to Cleveland and Zubac to Indiana. The moves likely improved the long-term outlook for a team that began the season with the NBA’s oldest roster, but they might have ended an era.

    “As hard as these moves are, we’re extremely excited about where we’re going,” Frank said. “We want to win now. We believe we are going to win now, and we’re going to do it by getting younger.”

    The Clippers’ current streak of 14 winning seasons was pretty much unthinkable only 15 years ago, when this franchise had managed only six winning seasons in 40 years. They’ve made the playoffs 12 times and won their first three Pacific Division titles in this stretch.

    But the Clippers’ past five months have contained enough drama for a decade around many clubs, and the All-Star weekend will be a welcome opportunity for the team and its fans to catch their breath.

    This is the first All-Star weekend hosted solely by the Clippers, who shared the honor three times previously with their eternal older brothers, the 17-time champion Los Angeles Lakers. The Clippers once had to cover up the Lakers’ banners when they both played at the former Staples Center, but they don’t have those problems in their new $2 billion palace that puts the Lakers’ aging arena to shame.

    And at least Clippers fans won’t have the bittersweet experience of watching Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who is injured and won’t play in Inglewood. The reigning league MVP and NBA Finals MVP began his career with the Clippers in 2018, only to be traded to Oklahoma City a year later along with a jaw-dropping bounty of draft picks for Paul George.

    The Clippers acquired Leonard and George together that summer, but both stars struggled to stay healthy. Although they made the Western Conference finals in 2021, the Clippers are still the oldest team in North American pro sports never to reach its league’s championship game or title series.

    The Clippers added Harden, Russell Westbrook and Bradley Beal in attempts to push them over the top, but it never quite worked. Just two players are now left on the roster from the end of the 2023-24 season: Leonard and backup guard Jordan Miller.

    Leonard has been healthy and outstanding in recent weeks, and he will be the Clippers’ only All-Star in their hometown game. He said the trade of Zubac “was like losing a brother,” but he understands why the moves “make sense.”

    The Clippers’ fundamental change of course actually began well before last week: They allowed George to walk in the summer of 2024 instead of locking themselves into another massive contract extension. They traded dependable scorer Norman Powell last summer despite his excellent play, and they also declined to give more guaranteed money to Harden, effectively encouraging his departure.

    While the trades of Harden and Zubac were painful, Frank believes they took the Clippers out of second-tier contender status — good enough to win, but not good enough to win it all — and replenished their stock of draft capital.

    What that means for Leonard is unclear, but Frank said he can see a future with the two-time NBA champion beyond this season, if Leonard wants it. Leonard said he isn’t thinking beyond this season.

    The entire future beyond All-Star weekend is murky for the Clippers, between the looming investigation and uncertainty across the roster. But after the league marvels at the wonders of Intuit Dome, Frank and the respected Lue will continue working to keep the good times going.

    “Yes, this is where I want to be,” Lue said. “Having an owner like Mr. Ballmer, who’s unbelievable, it does so many things for me. I trust everything we do, everything we decide to do. It’s a partnership. I want to be here.”

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    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/NBA

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  • David

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    David “Diggy” Coit scored 20 of his 28 in the final 13-plus minutes, including the game’s final seven points, to help Maryland beat Minnesota 67-62 on Sunday.

    Coit made 9 of 13 from the field, 4 of 7 from 3-point range, and hit 7 of 7 from the free-throw line. The 5-foot-11 senior outscored the Golden Gophers 13-9 after Langston Reynolds made back-to-back layups to give them a 53-47 lead with 9:43 left in the game.

    Cade Tyson hit two free throws to give Minnesota a two-point lead with 53 seconds left, but Coit answered 27 seconds later with a 3-pointer and then made four free throws in the final 11 seconds to cap the scoring.

    Andre Mills scored 12 points for Maryland (9-14, 2-10 Big Ten) and Darius Adams 11. Solomon Washington had 10 rebounds, nine points and three steals.

    Isaac Asuma hit a career-high six 3-pointers and finished with 18 points for the Golden Gophers. Tyson scored 12 points and Reynolds added 11. Minnesota (11-13, 4-9), which beat No. 10 Michigan State 76-73 on Wednesday to snap a seven-game skid, has lost eight of nine.

    Asuma made 4 of 5 from 3-point range and scored 12 first-half points to help the Golden Gophers take a one-point lead into the break. Bobby Durkin hit a 3-pointer that gave them a seven-point lead — tied for the biggest lead to that point by either team — with 1:34 left in the first half but Coit answered with a 3 and then converted a three-point play that trimmed Maryland’s deficit to 33-32.

    Up next

    Maryland: Hosts Iowa on Wednesday.

    Minnesota: Plays next Saturday at Washington.

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  • NYU women’s basketball team sets Division III record with 82nd straight win

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    NYU won its 82nd straight game to set the Division III record for consecutive victories by a women’s basketball team, beating Carnegie Mellon 69-58 on Sunday.

    The Violets (20-0) broke a tie with rival Washington University of St. Louis, which won 81 games in a row from 1998-2001.

    UConn holds the overall NCAA record for consecutive wins with a 111-game streak. The Huskies also have the second-longest streak, a 90-game run.

    Caroline Peper scored 27 points to lead the way for two-time defending national champion NYU, which had to work hard for the record-breaking win.

    The two teams went back and forth in the first half and NYU led 32-29 at the break on a 3-pointer by Brooke Batchelor a few seconds before the end of the second quarter.

    Peper and Batchelor hit consecutive 3-pointers early in the third quarter to start a 17-6 run to go up by double digits. The Tartans closed to within 56-51 midway through the fourth quarter, but Zahra Alexander, who scored all seven of her points in the final quarter, answered with consecutive layups to extend the cushion and make it 60-53 with 3:19 left.

    Peper then hit a 3-pointer just before the shot-clock buzzer with just over two minutes left to seal the win.

    Sunday’s game was a rematch from a week ago. NYU topped Carnegie Mellon (12-7) by just one point in that game. That had been the closest a team had come to defeat the Violets during this run. No team previously came within 12 points this season.

    During the historic streak, only three other teams have come within single digits of the Violets: U Chicago lost by six, Whittier by eight and Case Western Reserve by eight two days ago.

    Now with the record in hand, the Violets are focused on trying to win a fifth straight UAA Conference title and potentially a third consecutive national championship. Only Wash U has done that, when the school won four consecutive titles from 1998-2001.

    Peper is the only player on the roster to have lost a game in college at NYU. She was a freshman on the team that was beaten by Transylvania in the Elite Eight of the Division III NCAA Tournament.

    The Violets haven’t lost since.

    ___

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  • Rockets’ Alperen Sengun Apologizes Publicly for Directing Gender-Based Insult at Female Official

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    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Houston Rockets center Alperen Sengun publicly apologized for directing a gender-based insult at official Jenna Reneau during a loss Wednesday night to the Boston Celtics.

    Sengun was upset about non-call on a drive while the Rockets were on their way to a 114-93 home loss. He took his frustrations out on her, used the insult word multiple times and was ejected. He addressed the incident Saturday after having his 10th career triple-double in a 112-106 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder, saying said he went to her immediately after that game to apologize.

    “Sometimes, you can’t control yourself, but I should have known better,” he said. “But I fixed it, and then I went to the locker room and I apologized. I shake (her) hand and said that would never happen again. It just happened in the heat of the moment and she understood, and it was good by both ends.”

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Feb. 2026

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  • No. 17 Florida beats Texas A&M 86-67 in showdown for Southeastern Conference lead

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    COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Thomas Haugh scored 22 points and No. 17 Florida beat Texas A&M 86-67 on Saturday night in a showdown for the Southeastern Conference lead.

    The Gators (17-6, 8-2) started three players 6-foot-9 or taller against the Aggies’ four-guard lineup. Texas A&M’s tallest starter was Rashaun Agee at 6-8.

    Florida outscored Texas A&M 48-24 in the paint, blocked seven shots and limited the Aggies (17-6, 7-3) to making just nine makes on 25 layups.

    Texas A&M held its own on the boards against the Gators, the nation’s top rebounding team, but Florida still had a 50-43 advantage. The Aggies could only turn 19 offensive rebounds into 11 second-chance points.

    Marcus Hill and Pop Isaacs each had 17 points for Texas A&M.

    Isaiah Brown added 12 points for Florida, Urban Klavzar had 11, and Rueben Chinyelu and Xavian Lee each had 10.

    The Gators had a week off to prepare for the Aggies and have now won three straight games. A&M has lost two in a row.

    Florida: At Georgia on Wednesday night.

    Texas A&M: Hosts Missouri on Wednesday night.

    ___

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  • Duke’s Scheyer Says Staff Members ‘Got Punched in the Face’ During Court-Storming; UNC AD Apologizes

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    CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Duke coach Jon Scheyer said he had staff members “that got punched in the face” as North Carolina fans stormed the court to celebrate a late winning shot in the famed rivalry Saturday night, prompting UNC athletic director Bubba Cunningham to publicly apologize.

    The 14th-ranked Tar Heels stunned the fourth-ranked Blue Devils 71-68 on Seth Trimble’s 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left, a shot that originally appeared to come as time expired and had jubiliant fans rush the court in a chaotic celebration. Officials reviewed the play and determined time was left, so fans had to be cleared for Duke to get one final play before storming the court again when the clock officially hit zero.

    “For me it’s hard to talk about the game when I was most concerned just for the safety of our players after the game,” Scheyer said in his opening statement. “I don’t want to make it about that, because Carolina, they played a great game to win. And that’s a heartbreaking loss for our team.

    “I got staff members that got punched in the face. My family, pushing people away, trying to not get trampled. That’s not what this game is about.”

    Afterward, Cunningham said he apologized to Scheyer before he came in for this postgame news conference and referenced someone being injured. He didn’t have details on who was injured or how, and Duke program spokesman Kyle Serba didn’t immediately return a text message for comment.

    “When they rushed the court, a number of people got knocked over,” Cunningham said. “But then we had to clear the court again. So when we normally have something like just rushing the court and the game is over, we do have a line by the benches to get people off safely.

    “Obviously, if somebody got injured, that’s just really, really disappointing. We’ll do the best we can to make sure that doesn’t happen, but again, my apologies to Duke for that.”

    Cunningham said the school would look at video replays to determine exactly what happened.

    The safety of players and team staffers during court stormings has been a long-running topic of concern in college athletics. That included roughly two years ago after Duke’s loss at Wake Forest, when Blue Devils player Kyle Filipowski was shaken up after a Demon Deacons fan collided with him, while Jared McCain’s exit to the tunnel was briefly blocked by a Wake Forest fan. Filipowski had his right leg wrapped in plastic to fasten an icebag to his kneecap afterward.

    In the immediate aftermath of that 2024 incident, Scheyer asked: “When are we going to ban court-storming?”

    Asked Saturday night if he still feels court-storming should be banned, Scheyer said: “I think court-storming is fine, I don’t have any issue with court-storming.

    “Just shouldn’t have people getting punched in the face. Shouldn’t put our players in position where they’re face-to-face with people who can do anything at that time. It just takes one reaction. Even today, I had to push people away just to try to protect our players.

    “They won, they should celebrate,” Scheyer added. “They want to court-storm, court-storm. But just let’s get our guys off safely, that’s it. That’s where I’m at with that.”

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Feb. 2026

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  • Minnesota Timberwolves squander 18-point lead, fall to New Orleans Pelicans 119-115

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    Saddiq Bay scored 30 points, including two free throws with 10.8 seconds remaining, helping the New Orleans Pelicans overcome an 18-point second-half deficit in a 119-115 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves on Friday night.

    Zion Williamson added 29 points and Trey Murphy III scored 26 as the Pelicans snapped a three-game skid

    Minnesota took a brief one-point lead with 50 seconds remaining on a 3-pointer by Bones Hyland, but Williamson converted a three-point play to put the Pelicans up 117-115 with 35.5 seconds to play.

    Anthony Edwards’ shot fell short and Bey grabbed the rebound and was fouled by Julius Randle with 10.8 seconds to play.

    Edwards finished with 35 points in the loss, including 23 in the first half. Randle added 24 points, while Rudy Gobert grabbed 16 rebounds to go with his 12 points.

    Pelicans rookie Derik Queen scored 17 points and was 4 for 4 from 3-point range. He entered having made just 10 shots from deep all season.

    The Timberwolves led 77-59 early in the third quarter but watched that lead evaporate midway through the fourth. Murphy connected from 3-point range on consecutive possessions to briefly cut it to four points late in the third, and Bey scored five straight points to tie it at 102 in the fourth.

    Minnesota’s Jaden McDaniels was in foul trouble throughout. He picked up his third foul early in the second quarter and was whistled for his fourth early in the third. That forced Wolves coach Chris Finch to turn to a number of unique lineups, including a season-high 10 minutes for seldom-used Johnny Juzang.

    The Wolves struggled to slow Williamson in the paint. The Pelicans star connected on 11 of his 13 shots, all in the post.

    Up next

    Pelicans: Host Sacramento on Monday.

    Timberwolves: Host the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday.

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  • How to Watch Nuggets vs Knicks: Live Stream NBA, TV Channel

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    The Denver Nuggets (33-18) travel to Madison Square Garden to face the New York Knicks (32-18) in this Wednesday night NBA matchup.

    How to Watch Denver Nuggets vs New York Knicks

    • When: Wednesday, February 4th, 2026
    • Time: 7:00 PM ET
    • TV Channel: Altitude Sports Overflow, MSG, ESPN
    • Live Stream: Fubo (try for free)

    Denver takes a rare two-game losing streak into New York, looking to avoid their first three-game losing streak of the season. They are on the second part of a back-to-back, having lost 124-121 to the Detroit Pistons a night prior. Jamal Murray led the team in scoring against Detroit with 32 points and eight assists, while Nikola Jokic scored 24 to go with 15 rebounds, four assists, two steals, and a block. The Nuggets got as close as two points with 2:05 remaining after a Murray 3-pointer, but couldn’t close the gap any further.

    The Knicks are as hot as any team in basketball right now, having won seven in a row, with their last game being a 132-101 laugher against the Washington Wizards. The Knicks will also be on the second part of a back-to-back, which made the easy win against the Wizards more valuable. Only Jalen Brunson (21 points) played more than 27 minutes, as Mikal Bridges led the team in scoring with 23 points.

    This is a great NBA matchup that you will not want to miss; make sure to tune in and catch all the action.

    Live stream Denver Nuggets vs New York Knicks on Fubo: Start your free trial now!

    You can live stream NBA games all season long with Fubo, which offers a free trial. They carry all the channels you need, never to miss the action, including nationally broadcast channels like ESPN, ABC, and NBA TV, as well as local team coverage.

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  • Nuggets sit out Spencer Jones, play without a power forward in loss to Pistons

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    DETROIT — Both teams playing in the Motor City on Tuesday were maneuvering their rosters as the trade deadline loomed — one of them more quietly than the other.

    The Pistons were hosting, just a few hours after they sent Jaden Ivey to Chicago in a three-team deal that brought back Kevin Huerter, ex-Nugget Dario Saric and a pick swap. The Nuggets had not completed any trades, but they did have a business decision to make. Spencer Jones embarked on their three-game road trip this week with one game of eligibility remaining on his two-way contract and a back-to-back against two of the East’s best awaiting Denver.

    With Christian Braun returning from an ankle injury and supplying David Adelman with another body to work with in Detroit, the Nuggets elected to rest Jones on Tuesday and delay his last game 24 hours until New York, sources said. Jones told The Denver Post last week that the Nuggets’ front office has told him he might have to sit out games even if he ends up joining the 15-man roster on a standard contract this month.

    Without him, the Nuggets clawed back from a 20-point deficit to get within two late in the fourth quarter, but the Pistons held on for a 124-121 win at Little Caesar’s Arena. A fortuitous shooter’s bounce for Tobias Harris with 1:46 left stretched Detroit’s lead to 115-110 as Denver struggled to land the comeback’s final punch. Moments later, Peyton Watson was a millisecond late to block a Cade Cunningham layup off the backboard, a play that would’ve given Denver a chance to tie while down three.

    “The challenge for us right now is with all the things that are happening — people coming back, the minute restrictions — we have to avoid paying attention to that, and we just have to play,” Adelman said. “And deal with it as we go. We’re going to have some clunky moments. The rotation is different. We tried different things tonight. Just trying to fit people into the minutes that can play.”

    “It’s a little bit different for us right now,” Nikola Jokic said, “but I think it’s part of the (league).”

    The healthy scratch of Jones was essentially a money-saving tactic for Nuggets ownership. Players on two-way deals can be active for up to 50 NBA games in a regular season. Jones may be on the verge of a promotion that would dispense with that limit if the Nuggets can balance their books with a trade by Thursday afternoon. But their primary goal, to get under the luxury tax, is evident in that they’ve gone through half of the season with an open roster spot. Nothing in a rulebook would’ve prevented them from converting Jones’ contract on Tuesday (or earlier) if they wanted him available for Detroit.

    Instead, they were operating without a power forward. Aaron Gordon is also sidelined as he recovers from a hamstring strain. Adelman rolled out Braun, Peyton Watson and Jalen Pickett in the starting unit alongside his two stars, foreshadowing a night of finagling. He tried everything from four-guard lineups to a jumbo package.

    “I am feeling it out, man. Like, I’m feeling it out every game,” Adelman said. “We walk through stuff in a hotel room, and I pre-suppose lineups and put them out there in their sandals. And then we go play. Then you have to react during the game. And that’s part of the NBA, so there’s no excuses there, either. It’s just, I was trying to find a group that had some rhythm. We found a couple, but the end of the first half just killed us.”

    The Pistons (37-12) swept the season series and got under Denver’s skin in the process. Their frontcourt played its usual chippy style, and Nuggets center Jonas Valanciunas caused a brief skirmish in the first quarter by putting Isaiah Stewart in a headlock under the basket. Newly minted Pistons All-Star Jalen Duren exchanged shoves with Valanciunas. Both received technical fouls. Valanciunas also picked up a flagrant for the play on Stewart.

    By halftime, both head coaches and Pistons guard Duncan Robinson had been handed technicals as well. Jamal Murray and Stewart jawed back and forth a couple of times. Cade Cunningham got into foul trouble in the third frame but also earned 11 free throws himself — a stat that agitated Adelman after the game in contrast to Jokic’s three. In search of a bigger power forward, the first-year head coach started playing Jokic at the four in a double-big lineup with Valanciunas to match Detroit’s size and physicality.

    Both centers started the fourth quarter after Denver had trimmed a 20-point deficit back to 13. Julian Strawther chipped in as the rally intensified, lending support on the glass and pushing the pace.

    “He was playing aggressive and trying to force the issue a little bit,” Murray. “It was good to see him just get a flow.”

    The Nuggets couldn’t buy a bucket early. They missed their first seven 3s while falling behind by double digits and shot 31.8% from the field in the first half. But they were able to linger despite a “weird energy” that Adelman wasn’t pleased with, until a disastrous two-minute stretch to end the half. Three consecutive turnovers — two by Jokic — fueled a 10-0 Pistons run that pushed the lead to 69-50. Detroit scored 26 fast break points on the night, a “ridiculous” number, Adelman said.

    “They’re handsy,” said Jokic, who was visibly frustrated by non-calls throughout the night. “They have some really good personnel. … I think the second half was much better for us.

    “We had, I’m gonna say, like a good half of basketball.”

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  • Penn State ends eight-game losing streak, extends Minnesota’s skid to seven with 77-75 victory

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    Freddie Dilione V had 25 points and Kayden Mingo scored with one second left as Penn State snapped an eight-game losing streak by extending Minnesota’s skid to seven with a 77-75 victory on Sunday.

    Mingo buried a 3-pointer and Dilione had the final two baskets in a 9-0 spurt to give Penn State a 69-58 lead with 6:31 left.

    Cade Tyson made four free throws, Langston Reynolds sank a pair, and Grayson Grove tipped in a miss as the Golden Gophers used an 8-0 run to cut it to 71-70 with 2:31 remaining. Dilione and Reynolds traded baskets before Mingo turned a steal into a layup for a three-point lead with 49 seconds to go.

    Jaylen Crocker-Johnson had a layup and Reynolds made the first of two free throws with 31 seconds left to tie it 75-all. Mingo ran the clock down to eight seconds before beginning his game-winning drive to the basket.

    Dilione made 11 of 17 shots with a 3-pointer in the first winning effort in Big Ten Conference play this season for the Nittany Lions (10-12, 1-10).

    Josh Reed sank four 3-pointers — all in the first half — and scored 18 for Penn State. Mingo scored 14 on 6-for-17 shooting, while Dominick Stewart pitched in with 12 points.

    Langston Reynolds had 18 points and seven assists to lead the Golden Gophers (10-12, 3-8). Cade Tyson added 17 points, Bobby Durkin hit four 3-pointers and scored 16 and Isaac Asuma added 12 points.

    Reed had 16 points and Dilione scored 13 to guide the Nittany Lions to a 41-31 lead at halftime.

    Minnesota led just once at 3-2.

    Up next

    Minnesota: At Baylor on Wednesday.

    Penn State: At No. 7 Michigan State on Wednesday.

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  • What We Expect Athletes to Say Now

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    Just a few years ago, what athletes had to say about social issues reverberated beyond sports. Under some pressure—not only from events of the day but, it appeared, from the dominant culture—athletes were talking more and more about using their “platform” to fight injustice. Until this month, the last time a game had been postponed for reasons that intersected so directly with politics was in 2020, inside the N.B.A.’s bubble during the coronavirus pandemic, when members of the Milwaukee Bucks led a wildcat strike to protest police violence. That interruption had felt bold and clarifying—an extraordinary disruption of ordinary rituals, which seemed certain to have some effect. But that didn’t turn out to be the case. If anything changed, it was the perceived risk in making, and not making, political statements.

    These days, many athletes are slower to talk about politics, and leagues are more circumspect. Social media, it turns out, does not represent the views of the larger public, and it has become increasingly toxic. The platforms are mostly for performance. Even many progressives now seem to feel that professional athletes—who tend to be young, devote themselves single-mindedly to their sports, and as a rule loathe public distractions—don’t have any special authority or obligation to weigh in on world events. Anthony Edwards is a charismatic, hyper-talented basketball player who once posted a blatantly homophobic video on Instagram. He has been accused of pressuring a woman he impregnated to get an abortion. (In a subsequent statement, Edwards said, “I made comments in the heat of a moment that are not me, and are not aligned with what I believe and who I want to be as a man.”) He is not the person to look to for civic leadership or a discussion of federal policies.

    In some sense, athletes are freer to say what they really think—though, given the current government and corporate climate, there may be real costs to saying what’s on their minds. There are basketball players who spoke out about the killings in Minneapolis. Victor Wembanyama gave a passionate answer about how horrified he was by the news. Tyrese Haliburton plainly labelled Pretti’s death a murder. Larry Nance, Jr., wore an anti-ICE T-shirt, and the Players Association put out a statement in defense of civil liberties. Breanna Stewart carried an “Abolish ICE” sign during player introductions before an Unrivaled game (and many other women’s basketball players, as usual, waded more directly into political matters than their male counterparts did). But these were exceptions. The N.B.A. was silent, and so were many of its stars. At the end of last week, LeBron James, who once took a lead among athletes in decrying injustice, spoke out for the first time, sort of: he posted a new song by Bruce Springsteen, called “Streets of Minneapolis,” on Instagram. Despite his huge following, and however he feels, whether he denounces the actions of ICE or not probably makes little practical difference on the streets of Minneapolis. James knows, like the rest of us, that Donald Trump made it back to the White House even after James labelled him a clown.

    None of this means, of course, that the players and staff weren’t affected by what was happening in their city. On Sunday, Minnesota’s head coach, Chris Finch, talked about how heartbroken the team was, and said he was glad that they hadn’t played on the night of Pretti’s death. The N.B.A. did not present the postponement of the game as an act of protest; the league said it was done “to prioritize the security and safety of the Minnesota community.” Either way, Finch said, “playing basketball just didn’t feel like the right thing to do.” Sports seemed beside the point.

    In times of turmoil, what is the point of sports? I know plenty of people who would say there’s none—that professional sports are a bloated form of entertainment, a waste of time. An excuse to eat nachos and gamble. Are they merely an escape? Maybe. People want distractions from bad news. They want rituals. They want an occasion to drink beer and argue with strangers and friends. They want the reassuring rhythms of a long baseball season. They want examples of excellence. Some of them even want to watch the New York Jets. Of course, they don’t necessarily think about these things in terms of wanting. They don’t need sports to have a point. They care because they cared when they were young.

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  • Indiana tops UCLA 98-97 in double OT, ending Bruins’ 14-game winning streak at home

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    LOS ANGELES — Freshman Trent Sisley made the first of two free throws with less than a second remaining in a second overtime and Indiana outlasted UCLA 98-97 on Saturday.

    Nick Dorn hit six 3-pointers and scored a season-high 26 points for the Hoosiers (15-7, 6-5 Big Ten Conference) in a third straight victory following a four-game losing streak. Lamar Wilkerson added 24 points and eight rebounds.

    Indiana reserve Reed Bailey totaled 24 points before fouling out in OT. He made 6 of 7 shots and 12 of 13 free throws. His only miss at the foul line came with eight seconds left in regulation, leading to a 3-pointer by Trent Perry that forced the first extra period tied at 76.

    Perry made all 10 of his free throws and scored 25 to lead the Bruins (15-7, 7-4), who fall to 12-1 at home after winning 14 straight dating to last season. Donovan Dent totaled 24 points and 11 rebounds before fouling out with 0.3 seconds left, leading to the winning free throw. Tyler Bilodeau added 18 points and 11 rebounds before fouling out.

    It was UCLA’s first OT game at home in four years and their first double OT game there in 11 years.

    Perry had 11 points in the first half to help UCLA build a 38-30 advantage.

    Indiana played from behind until Dorn hit a 3-pointer to give the Hoosiers a 45-43 lead with 14:14 remaining. UCLA trailed by 10 before outscoring Indiana 15-5 over the final 1:50 to force OT.

    Indiana’s Sam Alexis had a layup to tie it 84-all with six seconds left, leading to a second extra period after Perry missed a jumper.

    Indiana: At Southern California on Tuesday.

    UCLA: Hosts Rutgers on Tuesday.

    ___

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