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  • Boys HS Basketball Playoff Fast Break: North Crowley handles L.D. Bell; more

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    North Crowley’s Trey Hall (11) goes up to block the shot of Hurst L.D. Bell’s Roman Washington, right, in a Class 6A Division I bi-district game on Monday, February 23, 2026 at Martin High School in Arlington, Texas.

    North Crowley’s Trey Hall (11) goes up to block the shot of Hurst L.D. Bell’s Roman Washington, right, in a Class 6A Division I bi-district game on Monday, February 23, 2026 at Martin High School in Arlington, Texas.

    Courtesy to the Star-Telegram

    Welcome to The Fast Break, boys playoff edition. A Star-Telegram series featuring the top Fort Worth-area high school basketball news, performances and results from the UIL bi-district round.

    North Crowley starts slow, blows past L.D. Bell

    Isaak Hayes and Trey Hall combined to score 40 points as North Crowley eliminated Hurst L.D. Bell 68-50 in a Class 6A Division I bi-district contest on Monday night at Arlington Martin High School.

    North Crowley (30-3), No. 2 in Class 6A according to the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches, will play El Paso Eastlake (29-8) in the area round. Eastlake beat Midland Legacy 66-42 on Tuesday night.

    North Crowley trailed 15-13 in the second quarter before going into the intermission with an 11-2 run and 26-21 lead. L.D. Bell’s Keyaun Williams made a three-pointer before the buzzer to help the Blue Raiders get within five.

    A three from Roman Washington, who led the Blue Raiders with 20 points, pulled Bell within 46-41 with under seven minutes to play in the fourth quarter, but Hayes hit a three on North Crowley’s next possession to spark a 22-9 run to end the game for the Panthers.

    Hayes led all scorers with 21 points while Hall added 19. Alex Barther II chipped in 14 points. Jesse Mikus scored 11 points for Bell and Williams finished with 10. L.D. Bell’s season ends at 23-8 which is the most wins in a season for the Blue Raiders since 2020.

    Martin rallies to edge Lake Highlands

    Arlington Martin rallied after halftime then held off Dallas Lake Highlands 62-57 in a Class 6A Division I bi-district game on Tuesday at Coppell High School.

    Martin (22-12) will move on to the area round and face Coppell (25-11) which defeated Plano East 69-56 on Monday. Lake Highlands’ season ends at (21-10).

    Martin led 12-9 after one quarter as Levi Moore scored 8 of his 14 points in the opening frame. But Lake Highlands rallied behind Quincy Perkins who hit 2 of his 3 threes in the second quarter to help put the Wildcats up 26-23 lead at the break.

    Steven Reynolds III, who led Martin with 23 points, and Jeremiah Ellis helped the Warriors regain the lead in the third quarter and hold off Lake Highlands after that. Reynolds, who went 9 of 11 from the free throw line, had 15 of his 23 points in the second half while Ellis scored all 10 of his points in the second half including a pair of threes in the third quarter.

    Eli Johnson helped keep it close for Lake Highlands by hitting 4 three pointers in the second half for 12 of his 14 points. Jaysean Wilkerson also chipped in 14 points with Uyiosa Osawemwenze adding 10 and Perkins finishing with 9 for the Wildcats.

    Jeremy Nyakundi added 11 points for Martin.

    Mansfield races past Byron Nelson after slow start

    Mansfield only scored 5 points in the first quarter, but outscored Trophy Club Byron Nelson by 33 the rest of the way as the Tigers drubbed the Bobcats 61-34 in a Class 6A Division II bi-district game on Tuesday at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City.

    Mansfield improves to 24-8 on the season and will meet El Paso Eastwood (20-13) in the area round. Eastwood downed Wolfforth Frenship 55-43 on Tuesday. Byron Nelson’s season comes to an end at 19-15.

    Mansfield, which trailed 11-5 after one quarter, got a game-high 17 points from Caden Shaver and 16 more from Zion Robinson as the Tigers turned up the defensive pressure from that point. Preston Jackson scored 10 points and Judah Charles added 9 for the Tigers.

    Tucker Turner led the Bobcats with 10 points.

    Eaton stuns No. 16 Lake Ridge

    Haslet Eaton jumped out to a 17 point lead in the first quarter and the Eagles never looked back in a 70-55 upset of 6A No. 16 Mansfield Lake Ridge in a Class 6A Division I bi-district game on Tuesday at the Arlington ISD Athletics Center.

    Haslet Eaton (27-7) will meet El Paso Franklin (24-9) in the area round after the Cougars downed Odessa Permian 53-42 on Tuesday. Mansfield Lake Ridge heads home with a 23-9 record.

    Caleb Harris led the way for Eaton with 28 points and Wesley Zennon added 16 as Eaton jumped out to a 20-3 lead at the end of the first quarter.

    Brewer gets past Colleyville Heritage, finally

    Carter Scott scored 9 of his game-high 22 points in the first quarter and Fort Worth Brewer knocked off Colleyville Heritage 67-51 in a Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Tuesday night at Justin Northwest High School.

    The Bears’ season ended against Colleyville Heritage the past two years. The Brewer (23-10) will play Arlington Seguin (24-8) in the area round after Seguin walloped Fort Worth Wyatt 94-38 on Tuesday night.

    Scott made 2 three-pointers and scored nine of the team’s 13 points in the first quarter as the Bears held a 13-11 edge. Brewer outscored the Panthers 19-12 in the second quarter and 20-13 in the third.

    Braelon Orr poured in 18 points for the Bears and Braylen Brown added 12. Scott also scored 9 points in the final stanza.

    Colleyville Heritage (22-11) was led by Grayson Eichinger’s 15 points while Sameer Johnson finished with 13.

    No. 6 Birdville takes care of Aledo to advance

    North Richland Hills Birdville, No. 6 in Class 5A according to the TABC, got 21 points from Sawyer Dotson as the Hawks downed Aledo 57-41 in a 5A Division I bi-district clash on Tuesday at Argyle High School.

    Birdville (28-5) will play Burleson Centennial (23-11) in the area round later this week. Centennial defeated Fort Worth Arlington Heights 77-65 on Tuesday. Aledo finishes at 26-7.

    Centennial downs Arlington Heights in bi-district

    Burleson Centennial had 4 players score in double digits as the Spartans handled Fort Worth Arlington Heights 77-65 on Tuesday in a Class 5A Division I bi-district tilt at South Grand Prairie High School.

    It doesn’t get any easier for Centennial (23-11) as the Spartans are scheduled to face No. 6 North Richland Hills Birdville (28-5) in the area round later this week.

    Levi Robinson led the Spartans with 19 points while Chaz Brown recorded a double-double with 18 points and 10 rebounds. Mason Williams and Creede Stafford added 13 and 10 points, respectively, for Centennial.

    Arlington Heights’ season comes to an end at 20-14.

    No. 13 Southwest gets battle from Eagle Mountain

    Fort Worth Southwest, ranked No. 13 in Class 4A by the TABC, trailed by 8 points at halftime, but rallied in the second half to down Fort Worth Eagle Mountain 53-46 in a Class 4A Di vision I bi-district contest on Tuesday at Fort Worth Brewer High School.

    FW Southwest (26-7) advances to the area round where the Runnin’ Raiders will face Stephenville (30-4), a 62-50 winner over Lubbock Frenship Memorial on Tuesday. Eagle Mountain’s season comes to a close at 19-15.

    Sophomore guard B.J. Baker provided the energy and scoring to ignite the comeback. Barker had 3 threes and 11 of his 16 points in the third quarter.

    King Taylor also had 16 points for Southwest. Evan Bosch led Eagle Mountain with 17 points.

    No. 10 Kennedale gets past tough first round, No. 22 Lincoln

    Kennedale got a tough draw in the first round as the Wildcats had to face No. 22 Dallas Lincoln. It was a close game throughout, but the Wildcats managed to squeak by Lincoln 82-71 in a Class 4A Division II bi-district game on Monday night at Duncanville High School.

    Kennedale (29-5) will face Van Alstyne (24-10), which defeated Arlington Summit International 91-21 on Monday, in the area round later this week. Dallas Lincoln’s season ends at 15-19.

    Trey Smith led Kennedale with a game-high 29 ponits, 19 of which came in the first half. Smith hit 13 of 15 free throws, all in the first half, as part of the Wildcats’ 20 of 24 performance at the stripe.

    Mason Forbes added 10 points (2 threes) for Kennedale with Jacoby Lovings pitching in 9. Lovings made 5 of 5 free throws including a clutch 4 of 4 in the fourth quarter.

    Jakorian Jackson led the Tigers with 24 points with Markeelyn Houston adding 17 and Zechariah Bennett tossing in 14. All 4 playoff qualifiers from Lincoln’s district, District 11-4A, are ranked in the 4A Top 25 including Dallas Carter (No. 1), Dallas Kimball (3) and Dallas Pinkston (22).

    No. 24 Brock gets past No. 14 Estacado in overtime

    In a see-saw affair by two ranked schools, Brock blew and early lead then had to rally from a late deficit to down Lubbock Estacado 80-72 in overtime in a Class 4A Division II bi-district contest on Monday at McMurry University in Abilene

    Brock (25-9), No. 24 in the state in 4A according to the TABC, advances to the area round and will face Fort Worth Dunbar (17-13) which defeated Bridgeport 87-66 on Tuesday. No. 14 Estacado’s season ends at 28-7.

    Brock jumped out to a 21-8 lead after one quarter and opened a 39-24 lead with 1:14 left before halftime on the strength of 4 three pointers. Will McGee had 4 of the threes, two in each quarter, and Eli Paez had the other.

    Paez led Brock with 24 points followed by McGee who finished with 21 including 5 threes. Shakure Wilbon, who poured in 42 points to lead all scores, helped the Matadors rally with 3 of his 7 three pointers in the third quarter to tie the game at 41.

    It was Estacado’s turn after that building a 60-49 lead early in the fourth quarter behind Wilbon, but Colt Matlock, who finished with 15 points, and McGee helped the Eagles battle back to tie it at 65 at the end of regulation.

    Brock outscored the Matadors 15-7 in the overtime period. The Eagles hit 12 of 14 free throws in the final 1:44 of overtime, including Matlock who made 6 of 6.

    Brady Williams added 13 points for Brock. Andre Langston and Jariel Hawkins chipped in 10 points each for Estacado.

    BOYS SCORES

    North Crowley 68, Hurst L.D. Bell 50

    Arlington Martin 62, Dallas Lake Highlands 57

    Haslet Eaton 70, Mansfield Lake Ridge 55

    South Grand Prairie 42, Richardson 39

    Mansfield 61, Trophy Club Byron Nelson 34

    Dallas Jesuit 71, Arlington Bowie 49

    Crowley 64, Southlake Carroll 62 (OT)

    Grand Prairie 75, Richardson Pearce 63

    NRH Birdville 57, Aledo 41

    Burleson Centennial 77, FW Arlington Heights 65

    Denton 56, FW Chisholm Trail 29

    Mansfield Timberview 81, FW Paschal 52

    FW Brewer 67, Colleyville Heritage 51

    Arlington Seguin 94, FW Wyatt 38

    Saginaw 69, NRH Richland 59

    Mansfield Summit 54, FW Polytechnic 20

    Burkburnett 77, FW Eastern Hills 59

    FW Southwest 53, FW Eagle Mountain 46

    Dallas Kimball 71, Alvarado 30

    Krum 87, Benbrook 58

    Brock 80, Lubbock Estacado 72 (OT)

    FW Dunbar 87, Bridgeport 66

    Dallas Carter 95, Godley 49

    Kennedale 82, Dallas Lincoln 71

    Peaster 66, Iowa Park 63

    Ponder 67, FW YMLA 31

    Keene 61, Clifton 48

    Grandview 77, McGregor 67

    This story was originally published February 25, 2026 at 1:11 AM.

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    Darren Lauber

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  • Harvard-Westlake basketball surges past La Mirada to win spot in Open final

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    STUDIO CITY — After a shoe malfunction, Harvard-Westlake’s Joe Sterling switched his sneakers at halftime and proceeded to dominate the third quarter along with Amir Jones. The Wolverines turned a two-point halftime deficit against visiting La Mirada into a 13-point lead.

Those eight minutes changed the momentum for good, as Harvard-Westlake finished with a 71-57 victory over La Mirada in the CIF Southern Section Open Division semifinals on Tuesday.

Harvard-Westlake, which won the Open Division title in 2024, will play in the championship game Saturday. It will take on Sierra Canyon at the Toyota Arena in Ontario at 6 p.m.

Sierra Canyon defeated Sherman Oaks Notre Dame, 70-46, in the other semifinal Tuesday night.

Sterling, a University of Texas commit, scored 10 of his game-high 25 points in the third quarter. Jones, a Georgia Tech commit, nailed two clutch 3-pointers during a quarter where the Wolverines outscored the Matadores 22-7. They limited the Matadores to just two field goals during the period.

Jones finished the game with 16 points.

La Mirada coach Randy Oronoz said his team didn’t meet the moment in a close game.

“Third quarters have been good for us all year. I was surprised, to be honest,” Oronoz said. “They hit two 3s to start the quarter and we didn’t defend very well. We started playing hero basketball and that’s why we only had seven points.

“The ball didn’t move well, and against a team like that you can’t take quarters off. This is the Open Division, you have to play four quarters to win games like this.”

Who knows if it was the sneakers, but clearly Sterling came out ready to make a statement in the second half.

“The bottom of my shoe, the sole, fully came off. It was in two pieces, I couldn’t wear them,” said Sterling, who missed the final minute of the second quarter with his shoe problem. “I changed it at halftime and then we came out hot in the second half.”

Sterling didn’t like how Harvard-Westlake played during the first 16 minutes of the game.

“We just wanted to come out strong in the second half and blow the game open,” Sterling said. “We knew it was too close in the first half and we could have played better. So, we wanted to come out with some energy and we got a big lead.”

The Matadores opened the fourth quarter with a 7-0 run to pull within six points, but the Wolverines countered with a 12-2 run and that was that.

Matadores junior Gene Roebuck finished with a game-high 29 points and Cisco Munoz finished with 12, but they couldn’t get a rhythm going in the second half.

Plus, the combination of Sterling and Jones, along with Cole Holden’s 14 points, were too much.

Harvard-Westlake coach David Rebibo thought it was simply a matter of details.

“I thought we settled in offensively and the ball started moving,” Rebibo said of his team’s play in the second half. “Defensively, we kind of settled in and made some catches difficult for their guys. It pushed them a little further out of position and made their shots a little different than they like to do and that helped us.”

The Wolverines held Roebuck to 12 points in the second half, and clearly made an effort to make him work for every shot.

“He’s a really good player, we tried to make his catches as difficult as possible,” Rebibo said. “I think we kind of wore him down a little. You’re not going to stop a guy like that, you’re trying to slow him down as much as you can.”

The Matadores (24-8) had a remarkable run in the Open Division. They were the 12th seed in the 12-team pool  and all of their Open Division games were on the road. They gave themselves a chance to reach the final before appearing to run out of gas.

La Mirada will now wait for the state playoffs to begin March 3.

“I want the guys to watch film of this game,” Oronoz said. “At times we played together and at other times we didn’t. If we’re going to have a chance in the state playoffs, we have to be better.”

For the Wolverines, it is kind of an unexpected trip to the finals. They finished fifth in the Mission League and were the No. 7 seed in the Open Division. But they have gone undefeated in the playoffs and now have a chance to win their second Open title in three years.

When they take on Sierra Canyon, it will be the first time two teams from the same league meet for the Open Division title.

Rebibo realizes they will be underdogs, but maybe the familiarity will help.

“It’s a testament to these guys, we’ve got a great group of young men who stayed the course,” Rebibo said of reaching the championship. “They handled adversity and they battled through it. We’re excited, we’re not surprised, we’re just happy for the opportunity (to play for the title).

There were seven lead changes in the first half.

The Matadores fell behind 14-9 after Holden buried a 3-pointer. But they didn’t let the Wolverines go anywhere. Roebuck got fouled on a 3-pointer and made all three shots.  That was followed by Tristan Partida’s 3-pointer to give the Matadores a 15-14 lead.

It went back-and-forth until Munoz’s lay-up tied the score 19-19 to end the quarter.

The Matadores scored the first seven points of the second quarter. Roebuck followed a driving lay-up with a 3-point play to give them a 26-19 lead. But just like the Matadores answered when they fell behind, the Wolverines did the same.

Holden scored five straight points to make it a two-point game. Even when Castro’s dunk gave the Matadores a six-point lead in the final minute, the Wolverines scored the final four points of the half to trim the Matadores’ lead to 36-34 at the break.

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Fred Robledo

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  • Girls HS Basketball Playoff Fast Break: North Crowley steam rolls Allen; more

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    Special to the Star-Telegram

    Welcome to The Fast Break, girls playoff edition. A Star-Telegram series featuring the top Fort Worth-area high school basketball news, performances and results from the UIL regional semifinal round.

    No. 2 North Crowley runs away from Allen to adavance

    North Crowley, No. 2 in Class 6A according to the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches, broke open a close game after one quarter to roll past Allen 79-39 in a Class 6A Division I regional semifinal on Tuesday at Grand Prairie High School.

    North Crowley (30-4) came at Allen (25-11) from all sides as 4 players recorded double-digit scoring for the Panthers. The Eagles trailed 18-13 at the end of the first quarter, but North Crowley went on a three spree in the second period to help boost the lead to 51-20 at the half.

    Sukari Kinney hit 2 threes in the second quarter and Sandy Cortez added another. Cortez finished with a team-high 18 points, 11 rebounds and 2 steals with Kinney, a freshman, tallying 14 points, 3 rebounds and 3 steals.

    Jamari Milton had a nice night for the Panthers with 16 points, 9 rebounds 5 assists and 3 steals. Eden Johnson chipped in 12 points while Mecca Crawford scored 5 points, but recorded 9 rebounds, 6 assists and 2 steals.

    Allen star Simone Richmond, who’s headed to Cornell in the fall, led all scorers with 22 points which included hitting 12 of 14 free throws on the night. Khy Johnson had 9 points for the Eagles with 5 rebounds and 2 blocked shots.

    North Crowley will meet Flower Mound (27-8) in the regional final later this week. Flower Mound downed Keller 47-33 on Tuesday.

    Keller can’t keep pace with Flower Mound

    Mia Arnold scored a team-high 13 points for Keller, but the Indians’ season came to an end 47-33 against Flower Mound in a Class 6A Division I regional semifinal on Tuesday night at North Richland Hills Richland High School.

    Keller finishes the season 25-8 and made the regional semifinals for the first time since 2023.

    Flower Mound (27-8) will play No. 2 North Crowley (30-4) in the regional final. North Crowley beat Allen on Tuesday night 79-39.

    The Indians trailed 26-13 in the second quarter before closing the period out with an 8-2 run that cut the deficit to 28-21 at the intermission. Audrey Heibel hit a three pointer to pull Keller within 28-24 early in the third quarter, but Flower Mound outscored the Indians 19-5 during the following nine minutes to pull away.

    Dahila Rebella scored 8 points for Keller and Heibel added 5. Brooklyn Gray and Maci Pringle led Flower Mound with 17 and 12 points, respectively.

    GIRLS SCORES

    North Crowley 79, Allen 39

    Flower Mound 47, Keller 33

    Little Elm Braswell 55, Trophy Club Byron Nelson 34

    Amarillo Tascosa 48, Joshua 37

    Denton Ryan 64, El Paso Americas 37

    Lubbock Monterey 43, Grapevine 35

    Argyle 59, Amarillo Palo Duro 43

    Decatur 47, Seminole 29

    Brock 52, Amarillo Randall 28

    Texarkana Liberty-Eylau 70, Ponder 59 (OT)

    Paradise 46, Hooks 23

    This story was originally published February 24, 2026 at 11:00 PM.

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    Darren Lauber

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  • CCS basketball playoffs: Friday’s scores, updated schedule

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    CCS boys basketball playoffs

    Open Division

    Pool A

    Friday’s games

    No. 1 Archbishop Riordan 80, No. 8 Serra 61

    No. 5 The King’s Academy 46, No. 4 Bellarmine 35

    Monday’s games

    No. 5 The King’s Academy (22-3) at No. 1 Archbishop Riordan (24-1), 7:30 p.m.

    No. 8 Serra (13-12) at No. 4 Bellarmine (16-9), 7 p.m.

    Wednesday’s games 

    No. 4 Bellarmine at No. 1 Archbishop Riordan, 7 p.m.

    No. 8 Serra at No. 5 The King’s Academy, 7 p.m.

    Pool B

    Friday’s games

    No. 7 Menlo-Atherton (21-3) at No. 2 St. Ignatius (21-3), 7:30 p.m.

    No. 6 Valley Christian (14-10) at No. 3 Archbishop Mitty (15-9), 7:30 p.m.

    Monday’s games

    No. 6 Valley Christian at No. 2 St. Ignatius, 7:30 p.m.

    No. 7 Menlo-Atherton at No. 3 Archbishop Mitty, 7:30 p.m.

    Wednesday’s games

    No. 3 Archbishop Mitty at No. 2 St. Ignatius, 7 p.m.

    No. 7 Menlo-Atherton at No. 6 Valley Christian, 7 p.m.

    Final

    Friday, Feb. 27

    Pool A winner vs. Pool B winner at USF, TBA

    Division I

    Friday’s first round

    North Salinas 52, No. 11 Salinas 47

    Los Altos 78, No. 10 Branham 61

    No. 12 Alisal 55, Hollister 44

    No. 9 Watsonville 62, Independence 61

    Saturday’s second round

    North Salinas (18-7) at No. 6 Homestead (11-13), 7 p.m.

    Los Altos (13-12) at No. 7 Mountain View (10-14), 7 p.m.

    No. 12 Alisal (11-14) at No. 5 Evergreen Valley (14-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 9 Watsonville (12-13) at No. 8 Sequoia (11-13), 7 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Carlmont (14-10), No. 2  Los Gatos (19-5), No. 4  Palo Alto (15-9), No. 1  Milpitas (23-1)

    Division II

    Friday’s first round

    No. 11 Woodside 57, Sobrato 45

    No. 10 Hillsdale 55, Lincoln 39

    Gilroy (11-13) at No. 12 Soledad (17-7), 7:30 p.m.

    No. 9 Lynbrook 56, San Mateo 51

    Saturday’s second round

    No. 11 Woodside (14-11) at No. 6 Monta Vista (14-9), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Hillsdale (14-11) at No. 7 Aragon (19-5), 7 p.m.

    Gilroy (11-13) or No. 12 Soledad (17-7) at No. 5 Burlingame (16-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 9 Lynbrook (19-6) at No. 8 Gunn (16-9), 7 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 St. Francis (9-16), No. 2  Christopher (18-6), No. 4  Westmont (20-3), No. 1  Willow Glen (21-2)

    Division III

    Friday’s first round

    Del Mar (12-10) at No. 10 El Camino (13-14), 7 p.m.

    No. 12 Overfelt 59, King City 34

    Pajaro Valley (11-12) at No. 9 Aptos (13-14), 7 p.m.

    Saturday’s second round

    No. 11 Mills at No. 6 Santa Cruz (11-14), 7 p.m.

    Del Mar (12-10) or No. 10 El Camino (13-14) at No. 7 Saratoga (15-9), TBA

    No. 12 Overfelt (13-9) at No. 5 Leland (16-8), 7 p.m.

    Pajaro Valley (11-12) or No. 9 Aptos (13-14) at No. 8 Live Oak (17-7), 7:30 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Pioneer (13-11), No. 2  Sacred Heart Cathedral (8-16), No. 4 Monterey (14-10), No. 1  Soquel (21-5)

    Division IV

    Friday’s first round

    No. 11 Gonzales 64, KIPP San Jose 17

    MacDonald (9-15) at No. 10 Harbor (13-11), 7 p.m.

    Design Tech (17-7) at No. 12 Gunderson (11-8), 7:30 p.m.

    No. 9 Monte Vista Christian 88, San Jose 45

    Saturday’s second round

    No. 11 Gonzales (13-12) at No. 6 Carmel (8-16), 7 p.m.

    MacDonald (9-15) or No. 10 Harbor (13-11) at No. 7 Jefferson (7-17), 7 p.m.

    Design Tech (17-7) or No. 12 Gunderson (11-8) at No. 5 Marina (17-7), 7 p.m.

    No. 9 Monte Vista Christian (19-6) at No. 8 Terra Nova (8-16), 7:30 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Menlo School (13-11), No. 2  Half Moon Bay (14-10), No. 4  Pacific Grove (12-12), No. 1  Sacred Heart Prep (13-11)

    Division V

    Friday’s first round

    No. 11 Pacific Collegiate 59, York 50

    No. 10 Basis Independent 74, Stratford Prep 28

    University Prep Academy 68, No. 12 Kirby Prep 35

    North Valley Baptist 68, No. 9 More 58

    Saturday’s second round

    No. 11 Pacific Collegiate (6-18) at No. 6 Summit Shasta (18-6), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Basis Independent (13-12) at No. 7 Eastside Prep (16-8), TBA

    University Prep Academy (18-7) at No. 5 Pinewood (15-8), 7 p.m.

    North Valley Baptist (18-6) at No. 8 St. Francis SCP (13-10), 7:30 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Oakwood (19-4), No. 2  Priory (17-6), No. 4 Crystal Springs Uplands (15-7), No. 1 Palma (22-2)

    CCS girls basketball playoffs

    Open Division

    Pool A

    Friday’s games

    No. 1 Archbishop Mitty 89, No. 8 Half Moon Bay 23

    No. 5 St. Francis 52, No. 4 St. Ignatius 49

    Monday’s games

    No. 5 St. Francis (19-6) at No. 1 Archbishop Mitty (23-2), 6 p.m.

    No. 8 Half Moon Bay (19-6) at No. 4 St. Ignatius (18-7), 7 p.m.

    Wednesday’s games 

    No. 4 St. Ignatius at No. 1 Archbishop Mitty, 7 p.m.

    No. 8 Half Moon Bay at No. 5 St. Francis, 7 p.m.

    Pool B

    Friday’s games

    No. 2 Priory 69, No. 7 Alisal 28

    No. 3 Archbishop Riordan 58, No. 6 Pinewood 46

    Monday’s games

    No. 6 Pinewood (20-5) at No. 2 Priory (20-5), 7 p.m.

    No. 7 Alisal (22-3) at No. 3 Archbishop Riordan (16-7), 6 p.m.

    Wednesday’s games

    No. 3 Archbishop Riordan at No. 2 Priory, 7 p.m.

    No. 7 Alisal at No. 6 Pinewood, 7 p.m.

    Final

    Friday, Feb. 27

    Pool A winner vs. Pool B winner at USF, TBA

    Division I

    Friday’s first round

    Palo Alto (18-7) at No. 11 Leigh (17-7), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Hollister 75, Santa Teresa 40

    Watsonville (11-13) at No. 12 Evergreen Valley (12-12), 7 p.m.

    Piedmont Hills 47, No. 9 Mountain View 33

    Saturday’s second round

    Palo Alto (18-7) or No. 11 Leigh (17-7) at No. 6 Carlmont (13-11), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Hollister (16-9) at No. 7 Fremont-Sunnyvale (12-12), 7 p.m.

    Watsonville (11-13) or No. 12 Evergreen Valley (12-12) at No. 5 Salinas (18-6), 7 p.m.

    Piedmont Hills (16-9) at No. 8 Cupertino (17-7), 7 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Homestead (20-4), No. 2 Los Gatos (18-6), No. 4  Los Altos (20-4), No. 1 Menlo-Atherton (18-5)

    Division II

    Friday’s first round

    No. 11 Leland 52, Lincoln-San Jose 43

    No. 10 Sobrato 52, Burlingame 38

    Woodside (16-7) at No. 12 Wilcox (12-11), 7 p.m.

    No. 9 Soledad 62, Overfelt 30

    Saturday’s second round

    No. 11 Leland (13-12) at No. 6 San Mateo (12-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Sobrato (14-8) at No. 7 Gunn (11-13), 7 p.m.

    Woodside (16-7) or No. 12 Wilcox (12-11) at No. 5 Willow Glen (16-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 9 Soledad (16-10) at No. 8 Christopher (10-14), 7 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Aragon (12-11), No. 2 Hillsdale (17-7), No. 4 Monta Vista (16-8), No. 1 Valley Christian (9-15)

    Division III

    Friday’s first round

    King City (16-8) at No. 12 Pajaro Valley (16-7), 7 p.m.

    Saturday’s second round

    No. 11 South San Francisco (12-11) at No. 6 Capuchino (19-2), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 El Camino (9-15) at No. 7 Del Mar (20-5), 7 p.m.

    King City (16-8) or No. 12 Pajaro Valley (16-7) at No. 5 Aptos (15-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 9 North Monterey County (16-7) at No. 8 Live Oak (17-7), 7 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Pioneer (14-10), No. 2 Santa Cruz (16-9), No. 4 Notre Dame-San Jose (10-14), No. 1 Mills (11-13)

    Division IV

    Friday’s first round

    No. 11 Gunderson 35, Mercy 31

    Design Tech (15-6) vs. No. 10 Jefferson (10-13) at Oceana High, 7 p.m.

    No. 12 Carmel 62, KIPP San Jose 22

    Harbor (7-16) at No. 9 Pacific Grove (7-17), 7 p.m.

    Saturday’s second round

    No. 11 Gunderson (17-7) at No. 6 Harker (8-14), 7 p.m.

    Design Tech (15-6) or No. 10 Jefferson (10-13) at No. 7 Stevenson (12-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 12 Carmel (11-11) at No. 5 The King’s Academy (17-7), 7 p.m.

    Harbor (7-16) or No. 9 Pacific Grove (7-17) at No. 8 Terra Nova (12-10), 7 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Sacred Heart Prep (14-7), No. 2 Scotts Valley (24-1), No. 4 Menlo School (15-9), No. 1 Notre Dame-Belmont (17-4)

    Division V

    Friday’s first round

    Cristo Rey San Jose (8-7) at No. 11 Santa Catalina (10-4), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Pescadero 40, Kehillah 25

    Basis Independent SV (9-14) at No. 12 Anzar (11-10), 7 p.m.

    San Francisco Christian 35, No. 9 Nueva 32

    Saturday’s second round

    Cristo Rey San Jose (8-7) or No. 11 Santa Catalina (10-4) at No. 6 St. Francis SCP (12-11), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Pescadero (14-7) at No. 7 Oakwood (21-2), 7 p.m.

    Basis Independent SV (9-14) or No. 12 Anzar (11-10) at No. 5 Crystal (11-7), 7 p.m.

    San Francisco Christian (11-4) at No. 8 Eastside College Prep (9-11), 7 p.m.

    Byes into Tuesday’s quarterfinals: No. 3 Summit Shasta (14-8), No. 2 Castilleja (10-10), No. 4 Pacific Collegiate (20-4), No. 1 Palma (21-3)

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    Darren Sabedra

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  • NCS Open Division: De La Salle survives buzzer beater, tops Moreau in overtime

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    De La Salle advances NCS Open Division semifinals with win over Moreau Catholic, will face Salesian on Wednesday


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    Nathan Canilao

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  • NCS basketball playoffs: The best of Wednesday’s opening round

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    Ronnie Selleaze notches triple-double to lead San Lorenzo past Heritage. Mission San Jose, Piedmont roll. Moreau Catholic girls cruise to second round.


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    Nathan Canilao, Darren Sabedra

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  • Fort Worth-area UIL girls high school basketball area-round pairings, results

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    Keller point guard Mia Arnold (2) drives to the net In front of L.D. Bell point Madi Capers (23) during the first half of a UIL girls basketball game between L.D. Bell and Keller at Keller High School in Keller, Texas, Friday Jan. 16, 2026

    Fort Worth-area UIL girls high school basketball area-round pairings. See start times, locations, opponents for local squads

    Special to the Star-Telegram

    The Texas UIL high school girls basketball area-round playoffs continue on Thursday and Friday. See where and when Fort Worth-area teams will play and check back for updates and results.

    Class 6A Division I

    North Crowley (28-4) vs. El Paso Franklin (22-10), 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Lubbock Christian University

    Keller (24-7) vs. El Paso Eastlake (19-13), 6 p.m. Friday at Lubbock-Cooper HS

    South Grand Prairie (22-12) vs. Flower Mound (25-8), 6:30 p.m. Friday at Coppell HS

    Class 6A Division II

    Trophy Club Byron Nelson (23-10) vs. El Paso Montwood (25-5), 4:30 p.m. Friday at Lubbock-Cooper HS

    Southlake Carroll (31-1) vs. Wolfforth Frenship (28-8),6:30 p.m. Friday at Abilene Christian University

    Arlington Bowie (22-12) vs. Frisco Rock Hill (21-13), 6:30 p.m. Friday at Flower Mound Marcus HS

    Class 5A Division I

    Aledo (25-7) vs. Joshua (34-4), 6 p.m. Thursday at Godley HS

    Denton Ryan (32-4) vs. Cleburne (26-8), 7 p.m. Friday at Arlington ISD Athletics Center

    Class 5A Division II

    Grapevine (20-12) vs. Everman (23-14), 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Haslet Eaton HS

    Argyle (29-5) vs. Mansfield Summit (23-10), 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Saginaw HS

    Class 4A Division I

    Decatur (32-4) vs. Lubbock Frenship Memorial (26-8), 6 p.m. Friday at Stamford HS

    Kennedale (15-17) vs. Prosper Richland (32-4), 6:30 p.m. Friday at Hebron HS

    Godley (23-11) vs. Frisco Panther Creek (17-16), 6:30 p.m. Friday at Thomas Coliseum, Haltom City

    Class 4A Division II

    Bridgeport (24-13) vs. Lubbock Liberty (28-4), 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Abilene Christian University

    Brock (28-5) vs. Krum (20-16), 6 p.m. Thursday at Saginaw HS

    Class 3A Division I

    Ponder (23-12) vs. Gunter (27-7), 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Sanger HS

    Grandview (20-15) vs. Fairfield (28-4), 6 p.m. Friday at Corsicana HS

    Class 3A Division II

    Tolar (24-9) vs. Wall (32-3), 6:30 p.m. Friday at Baird HS

    Paradise (30-4) vs. Commerce (20-8), 6:30 p.m. Friday at McKinney Boyd HS

    Keene (27-7) vs. Buffalo (30-4), 6 p.m. Thursday at Waco Midway HS

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    Darren Lauber

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  • NCS basketball playoffs: Tuesday’s first-round scores, updated schedule

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    Boys basketball

    Open Division

    Thursday’s opening round

    No. 1 Salesian (25-3), bye

    No. 2 Clayton Valley (25-3), bye

    No. 5 Moreau Catholic (23-3) at No. 4 De La Salle (22-6), 7 p.m.

    No. 6 Dougherty Valley (20-8) at No. 3 Marin Catholic (23-3), 7 p.m.

    Division I

    Tuesday’s opening round

    No. 1 Bishop O’Dowd 65, No. 16 Windsor 34

    No. 9 Acalanes 66, No. 8 Archie Williams 55

    No. 4 Liberty 62, No. 13 Freedom 59

    No. 5 Dublin 70, No. 12 Berkeley 64

    No. 2 Amador Valley 70, No. 15 Redwood 44

    No. 10 Livermore 83, No. 7 California 80, OT

    No. 3 Granada 62, No. 14 Campolindo 51

    No. 6 Monte Vista 50, No. 11 Alameda 47

    Friday’s quarterfinals

    No. 9 Acalanes (18-11) at No. 1 Bishop O’Dowd (20-7), 7 p.m.

    No. 5 Dublin (19-8) at No. 4 Liberty (24-3), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Livermore (18-9) at No. 2 Amador Valley (17-11), 7 p.m.

    No. 6 Monte Vista (17-11) at No. 3 Granada (19-7), 7 p.m.

    Division II

    Wednesday’s opening round

    No. 16 Pinole Valley (15-13) at No. 1 University-San Francisco (23-5), 7 p.m.

    No. 9 Lick-Wilmerding (17-11) at No. 8 Casa Grande (20-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 13 Urban-San Francisco (15-11) at No. 4 Piedmont (18-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 12 Ygnacio Valley (13-14) at No. 5 Albany (20-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 15 Justin-Siena (17-11) at No. 2 Cardinal Newman (26-2), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Heritage (15-11) at No. 7 San Lorenzo (16-10), 7 p.m.

    No. 14 Pittsburg (14-11) at No. 3 St. Mary’s-Berkeley (17-10), 7 p.m.

    No. 11 El Cerrito (22-6) at No. 6 McKinleyville (19-8), 7 p.m.

    Division III

    Tuesday’s opening round

    No. 1 Branson 71, No. 16 Napa 38

    No. 9 Marin Academy 67, No. 8 College Prep-Oakland 64

    No. 4 San Domenico 62, No. 13 Mt. Eden 55

    No. 5 Brave Christian 65, No. 12 St. Patrick-St. Vincent 55

    No. 2 Cornerstone Christian 75, No. 15 James Logan 53

    No. 7 Bentley 58, No. 10 San Rafael 48

    No. 3 St. Bernard’s-Eureka 73, No. 14 Miramonte 72

    No. 6 College Park 85, No. 11 Washington-Fremont 47

    Friday’s quarterfinals

    No. 9 Marin Academy (17-10) vs. No. 1 Branson (16-14) at College of Marin, 7 p.m.

    No. 5 Brave Christian (24-5) at No. 4 San Domenico (18-10), 7 p.m.

    No. 7 Bentley (22-6) at No. 2 Cornerstone Christian (21-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 6 College Park (16-12) at No. 3 St. Bernard’s-Eureka (24-3), 7 p.m.

    Division IV

    Wednesday’s opening round

    No. 16 Arroyo (11-15) at No. 1 San Marin (14-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 9 Head-Royce (13-13) at No. 8 Del Norte (19-10), 7 p.m.

    No. 13 Tamalpais (12-15) at No. 4 Mission San Jose (16-10), 7 p.m.

    No. 12 Tennyson (16-10) at No. 5 Bethel (13-13), 7 p.m.

    No. 15 American Canyon (15-13) at No. 2 Rancho Cotate (20-7), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Montgomery (13-14) at No. 7 Northgate (12-14), 7 p.m.

    No. 14 Analy (1413) at No. 3 Benicia (12-15), 7 p.m.

    No. 11 Ukiah (16-11) at No. 6 Alhambra (18-8), 7 p.m.

    Division V

    Tuesday’s opening round

    No. 1 Sonoma Academy 79, No. 16 Roseland University Prep 41

    No. 9 Middletown 55, No. 8 Swett 51

    No. 4 Drew 65, No. 13 Quarry Lane 43

    No. 12 Berean Christian 57, No. 5 Arcata 51

    No. 2 Eureka 72, No. 15 Hoopa Valley 51

    No. 7 Gateway 73, No. 10 Sonoma Valley 59

    No. 3 Redwood Christian 61, No. 14 Fort Bragg 41

    No. 6 Kennedy-Fremont 54, No. 11 International 38

    Friday’s quarterfinals

    No. 9 Middletown (19-8) at No. 1 Sonoma Academy (21-5), 7 p.m.

    No. 12 Berean Christian (11-10) vs. No. 4 Drew (19-10) at Booker T. Washington Gym in San Francisco, 7 p.m.

    No. 7 Gateway (16-12) at No. 2 Eureka (15-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 6 Kennedy-Fremont (14-13) at No. 3 Redwood Christian (20-9), 7 p.m.

    Division VI

    Wednesday’s opening round

    No. 1 St. Vincent de Paul (18-10), bye

    No. 9 Victory Christian Academy (12-11) vs. No. 8 Jewish Community (8-14) at Kezar Pavilion, 7 p.m.

    No. 4 Averroes (16-9), bye

    No. 12 Round Valley (7-12) vs. No. 5 Contra Costa Christian (12-12) at Power Sports Academy in Martinez, 7 p.m.

    No. 2 Mendocino (20-4), bye

    No. 10 Rio Lindo Adventist (13-8) at No. 7 Ferndale (5-10), 7 p.m.

    No. 3 San Francisco Waldorf (8-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 11 Trinity Prep (13-5) at No. 6 Point Arena (13-10), 7 p.m.

    Girls basketball

    Open Division

    Thursday’s opening round

    No. 1 San Ramon Valley (24-3), bye

    No. 2 Carondelet (23-5), bye

    No. 5 Bishop O’Dowd (15-9) at No. 4 Clayton Valley Charter (21-7), 7 p.m.

    No. 6 Cardinal Newman (21-7) at No. 3 Piedmont (19-3), 7 p.m.

    Division I

    Tuesday’s opening round

    No. 1 Redwood (22-6), bye

    No. 9 Maria Carrillo 45, No. 8 Dougherty Valley 40

    No. 4 Acalanes 51, No. 13 San Marin 34

    No. 5 Alameda 57, No. 12 Eureka 56

    No. 2 Dublin 53, No. 15 College Park 38

    No. 7 Heritage 55, No. 10 Windsor 44

    No. 3 Arcata 48, No. 14 Campolindo 37

    No. 11 Pinole Valley 54, No. 6 California 45

    Friday’s quarterfinals

    No. 9 Maria Carrillo (21-7) at No. 1 Redwood (22-6), 7 p.m.

    No. 5 Alameda (18-9) at No. 4 Acalanes (20-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 7 Heritage (21-6) at No. 2 Dublin (21-7), 7 p.m.

    No. 11 Pinole Valley (17-12) at No. 3 Arcata (18-4), 7 p.m.

    Division II

    Wednesday’s opening round

    No. 1 Salesian (18-10), bye

    No. 9 Pittsburg (18-8) at No. 8 American Canyon (21-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 13 Sonoma Valley (20-8) at No. 4 University-San Francisco (18-10), 5:30 p.m.

    No. 12 Monte Vista (12-12) at No. 5 Lick-Wilmerding (22-6), 7 p.m.

    No. 15 Fortuna (16-10) at No. 2 Moreau Catholic (20-6), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Ukiah (21-7) vs. No. 7 Marin Catholic at Ukiah(11-14), 7 p.m.

    No. 14 Washington-Fremont (16-10) at No. 3 Justin-Siena (23-5), 7 p.m.

    No. 11James Logan (14-11) at No. 6 American (16-9), 7 p.m.

    Division III

    Tuesday’s opening round

    No. 1 St. Bernard’s (20-7), bye

    No. 8 Liberty 32, No. 9 San Leandro 27

    No. 4 Miramonte 61, No. 13 Middletown 41

    No. 12 Archie Williams 55, No. 5 Saint Mary’s-Berkeley 51

    No. 2 Benicia 42, No. 15 Berkeley 32

    No. 7 Bethel 49, No. 10 Del Norte 41

    No. 3 Kelseyville 56, No. 14 Antioch 50

    No. 11 Mission San Jose 47, No. 6 Urban 46

    Friday’s quarterfinals

    No. 8 Liberty (16-11) at No. 1 St. Bernard’s (20-7), 5:30 p.m.

    No. 12 Archie Williams (15-11) at No. 4 Miramonte (15-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 7 Bethel (19-10) at No. 2 Benicia (18-9), 7 p.m.

    No. 11 Mission San Jose (16-11) at No. 3 Kelseyville (20-5), 7 p.m.

    Division IV

    Wednesday’s opening round

    No. 1 Rancho Cotate (14-12), bye

    No. 9 Vintage (13-12) at No. 8 St. Patrick-St. Vincent (10-17), 7 p.m.

    No. 13 Kennedy-Fremont (11-14) at No. 4 Las Lomas (14-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 5 Northgate (12-15) at No. 12 Vallejo (17-11), 7 p.m.

    No. 15 Hayward (10-10) at No. 2 Branson (16-12), 7 p.m.

    No. 10 Upper Lake (16-10) at No. 7 Santa Rosa (17-8), 7 p.m.

    No. 14 Livermore (11-16) at No. 3 St. Helena (17-6), 7 p.m.

    No. 11 Piner (8-6) at No. 6 Marin Academy (15-11), 7 p.m.

    Division V

    Tuesday’s opening round

    No. 1 The Bay School (14-5), bye

    No. 9 Gateway 60, No. 8 Berean Christian 34

    No. 4 Healdsburg 56, No. 13 Emerald 43

    No. 5 Credo 46, No. 12 Quarry Lane 34

    No. 2 Albany (15-9), bye

    No. 10 Sonoma Academy 42, No. 7 Calistoga 34

    No. 3 St. Joseph Notre Dame 43, No. 14 College Prep 31

    No. 6 San Domenico 45, No. 11 Redwood Christian 37

    Friday’s quarterfinals

    No. 9 Gateway (13-11) vs. No. 1 The Bay School (14-5) at Letterman Gym in San Francisco, 7 p.m.

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    Darren Sabedra

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  • VOTE: Boys’ Basketball Player of the Week. Which athlete had the best game?

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    Mansfield Timberview guard Jonathan Williams (2) turns the corner on Mansfield Summit guard Mason Williams (0) during the first half of a UIL boys basketball game at Mansfield Timberview High School in Arlington, Texas, Tuesday Feb. 10, 2026.

    Mansfield Timberview guard Jonathan Williams (2) turns the corner on Mansfield Summit guard Mason Williams (0) during the first half of a UIL boys basketball game at Mansfield Timberview High School in Arlington, Texas, Tuesday Feb. 10, 2026.

    Special to the Star-Telegram

    As the regular season draws to a close, plenty of Fort Worth-area boys basketball teams are making a push for the playoffs.

    Which athlete the best game? You tell us. Cast your vote for the Star-Telegram Boys’ Basketball Player of the Week.

    Voting will end at 11 a.m. Friday.

    See a strong performance from the final week of the regular season? Send a nomination for next week’s player of the week poll with a stat line to high school sports editor Charles Baggarly (cbaggarly@star-telegram.com).

    Nominations will be accepted until 11:00 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 22.

    Charles Baggarly

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Charles Baggarly is a high school sports editor and reporter for the Fort Worth Star Telegram. He graduated from TCU in 2023 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and served as TCU 360’s sports editor. Connect with Charles on Twitter or via email.

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    Charles Baggarly

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  • Girls HS Basketball Playoff Fast Break: UIL bi-district and TAPPS area

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    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail’s Kennedy Brooks (3) goes up in front of Grapevine’s Selah Stull (5), Adia Stull (14) and Ella Kamara (7) in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Grapevine defeated Chisholm Trail 56-47.

    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail’s Kennedy Brooks (3) goes up in front of Grapevine’s Selah Stull (5), Adia Stull (14) and Ella Kamara (7) in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Grapevine defeated Chisholm Trail 56-47.

    Eagle Mountain Saginaw ISD/Courtesy to the Star-Telegram

    Welcome to The Fast Break, girls playoff edition. A Star-Telegram series featuring the top Fort Worth-area high school basketball news, performances and results from the UIL bi-district and TAPPS area rounds.

    Grapevine rallies to advance over Chisholm Trail

    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail jumped out to an early lead, but Grapevine rallied with a superb night from the free throw line to defeat the Rangers 56-47 in a Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City.

    Grapevine (20-12) moves on to the area round and will face Everman (23-14) which defeated Fort Worth Wyatt 69-14.

    Chisholm Trail (20-13) went on a 9-0 run to start the game behind Jada Hill who scored 6 of her game-high 17 points in the first quarter. Grapevine trailed 12-3 to start the second quarter, but chipped away at the lead until CT’s Jayci Butler (12 points) hit a long three at the buzzer to give the Rangers a 19-13 lead at the intermission.

    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail’s Jayci Butler reacts after making a three pointer at the halftime buzzer against Grapevine in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Grapevine defeated Chisholm Trail 56-47.
    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail’s Jayci Butler reacts after making a three pointer at the halftime buzzer against Grapevine in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Grapevine defeated Chisholm Trail 56-47. Khampha Bouaphanh Eagle Mountain Saginaw ISD/Courtesy to the Star-Telegram

    A big third quarter by Grapevine, especially by Victoria Carnevali, saw the Mustangs finally take their first lead. Carnevali hit back-to-back threes, the first to tie the game at 27 and the second to give Grapevine its first lead at 30-27 with 1:59 left in the third.

    Grapevine would never trail again as the Mustangs out scored Chisholm Trail 43-27 in the second half and hit 14 of 16 free throws in the final 3:29 of the game. Grapevine was 25 of 29 from the line on the night with Myleigh Gomez (11 points) hitting 9 of 9 from the stripe including 8 of 8 in the fourth quarter.

    Carnevali finished with 16 points for the Mustangs with Selah Stull adding 10 points. Jayden Boyd scored 9 points, but was a fiend on the boards pulling down 13 rebounds.

    The Grapevine Mustangs pose with hardware after defeating Fort Worth Chisholm Trail in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas.
    The Grapevine Mustangs pose with hardware after defeating Fort Worth Chisholm Trail in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Darren Lauber Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    No. 5 Argyle storms past Saginaw

    Argyle, No. 5 in the state in Class 5A according to the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches, used a smothering defense to subdue Saginaw 88-22 in a Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City.

    Argyle (29-5) moves on to the area round and will face Mansfield Summit (23-10), a 100-13 winner over Fort Worth South Hills, later this week. Saginaw’s season ends at 16-16.

    Argyle had all but one player on its roster score points and saw 4 finish in double-digit scoring. Wrigley Green led the way with 16 points (2 threes) and 8 rebounds.

    Aoife Journagan had 14 points (2 threes), Emma King finished with 13 and Lexi Ehrhardt chipped in 10 for the Eagles. Brooklyn Monroe led Saginaw with 13 points including 2 threes.

    Joshua runs away from Paschal in 5A DI

    Joshua got 16 points from Elexee Ray and turned up the defensive pressure another notch in the second half as the Owls downed Fort Worth Paschal 62-29 in a Class 5A Division I bi-district clash on Monday.

    Joshua (34-4) will next face No. 14 Aledo (25-7) after the Bearcats defeated Colleyville Heritage 48-21. Paschal’s season ends one win short of 20 at 19-14.

    Hadley Soto added 12 points and Chloe Griswell chipped in 10 for the Owls. Victoria Hultgren led Paschal with 10 points and Audrina Bowers had 8 for the Panthers.

    Aledo thumps Colleyville Heritage, Joshua next

    Tiara Butler dropped in 13 points to lead Aledo to a 48-21 win over Colleyville Heritage in a Class 5A Division I bi-district playoff on Monday.

    Aledo (25-7), No. 14 in Class 5A according to the TABC, will meet Joshua (34-4) in a showdown on Thursday at Godley High School. The start time has yet to be determined.

    Elizabeth Griffin and Brooklyn Dempsey contributed 9 points each for the Lady Cats with Jaylee Owens chipping in 8. Colleyville Heritage’s season ends at 15-17.

    Everman’s balanced attack too much for Wyatt

    Everman got 15 points from Carsyn Smith and 12 more from Makhiya Dangerfield as the Bulldogs bowled over Fort Worth Wyatt 69-14 in a Class 5A Division II bi-district tilt on Monday.

    Everman (23-14) will meet Grapevine (20-12) in the area round on Thursday at a site and time to be determined. Jahzeriah Esters and Sa’riyah Fields had 9 points each for the Bulldogs with Harli Clark adding 8 and Madison Walker tossing in 7.

    The Chaparrals season comes to a close with a record of 15-12.

    South Grand Prairie smothers Richardson to move on

    South Grand Prairie got 19 points from Janae Johnson to lead the Warriors to a 41-26 drubbing of Richardson in a Class 6A Division I bi-district game on Monday.

    SGP (22-12) moves on and will face Flower Mound (25-8) in the area round at 6:30 p.m. on Friday at Coppell High School. Flower Mound downed No. 15 Plano East 50-44 on Monday.

    Richardson’s season comes to an end at 10-20.

    Top-ranked Decatur rolls over Carter-Riverside

    Decatur, the TABC’s No. 1 ranked team in the state in Class 4A, got the playoffs rolling with a 109-13 win over Fort Worth Carter-Riverside in a Class 4A Division I bi-district game on Monday.

    Decatur (32-4) moves on to the area round to face the winner of Friday’s matchup between No. 15 Lubbock Frenship Memorial (25-8) and Stephenville (20-12).

    The Eagles were led by Janie Holmes who poured in 22 points. Carter-Riverside’s season ends at 18-15.

    GIRLS SCORES

    North Crowley 83, Keller Timber Creek 42

    South Grand Prairie 41, Richardson 26

    Trophy Club Byron Nelson 52, FW Boswell 46

    Aledo 48, Colleyville Heritage 21

    Joshua 62, FW Paschal 29

    Denton Ryan 51, Granbury 19

    Cleburne 80, FW Arlington Heights 15

    Grapevine 56, FW Chisholm Trail 47

    Everman 69, FW Wyatt 14

    Argyle 88, Saginaw 22

    Mansfield Summit 100, FW South Hills 13

    Decatur 109, FW Carter-Riverside 13

    Bridgeport 90, FW Dunbar 23

    Brock 64, Levelland 35

    Krum 73, Benbrook 20

    Dallas Lincoln 82, Venus 27

    Jacksboro 39, Peaster 19

    Ponder 51, Dallas Life Oak Cliff 32

    Grandview 60, Whitney 36

    Tolar 44, Henrietta 39

    Paradise 79, Cedar Hill Trinity Leadership 4

    Keene 42, Clifton 36

    This story was originally published February 16, 2026 at 11:26 PM.

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    Darren Lauber

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  • NCS girls basketball playoffs 2026: What to know after Sunday’s seeding meeting

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    NCS basketball 2026: Top storylines from Sunday’s girls basketball seeding meeting.


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    Nathan Canilao

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  • Prep spotlight: Dougherty Valley gets what it wants. But can it beat DLS?

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    EBAL boys basketball powers De La Salle, Dougherty Valley set to meet in league title game Friday night. In girls soccer, St. Francis’ defense stands out. Plus, notes on Liberty, Pittsburg basketball, Palo Alto football.


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    Nathan Canilao, Christian Babcock

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  • Sierra Canyon girls basketball seizes control early against Oak Park

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    Oak Park’s Khali Mitchell and Sierra Canyon’s Jerzy Robinson scramble for control of the ball during a CIF-SS Open Division pool play girls basketball game at Sierra Canyon School in Chatsworth, Calif., on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026. (Photo by Mark Savage, Contributing Photographer)

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    CHATSWORTH — Balanced.

    It’s what the Sierra Canyon girls basketball team has been all season. It was no different against Oak Park on Thursday night in the first game of the CIF Southern Section Open Division girls basketball playoffs.

    Five Sierra Canyon players scored in double figures and the Trailblazers did not relinquish a double-digit lead after the first quarter as they defeated Oak Park 77-51.

    A trio of seniors led Sierra Canyon in scoring: Emilia Krstevski had 17 points, Jerzy Robinson scored 16 points and Payton Montgomery had 15 points off the bench.

    Montgomery, who has flourished as both a starter and a reserve this season, provided a spark off the bench for her team Thursday night.

    “She’s really sacrificed for the team. She should be a starter but we like her energy off the bench,” Sierra Canyon coach Alicia Komaki said about Montgomery. “We like her focus, we like what she brings no matter if she starts or doesn’t start.”

    Robinson, who will play at the University of South Carolina next year, started the night with a step-back 3-pointer for the first points of the game.

    She proceeded to find her teammates for easy buckets throughout the first quarter, smiling wide when one of her teammates would score.

    Robinson had five assists in the first quarter, threading the needle with her passes and finding her teammates in the right spots.

    “For me the biggest thing has been her growth,” Komaki said about Robinson. “We’ve talked a lot about getting joy out of other people’s success and finding your teammates. She’s going to be able to get a bucket anytime she wants, but she’s making those around her better and she definitely did that tonight.”

    Sophomore Rosie Oladokun scored 11 points and grabbed eight rebounds for Sierra Canyon. Her sophomore counterpart Cherri Hatter had eight points.

    Delaney White, who transferred from Oak Park to Sierra Canyon for her senior season, scored 10 points.

    “Passing the ball, moving the ball, we have multiple threats on different levels,” Oladokun said. “Anybody can score. We have so many advantages everywhere. We can’t be stopped.”

    After struggling for much of the first three quarters, thanks in large part to Sierra Canyon’s physical defense, Oak Park was able to knock down some shots in the fourth quarter.

    The Eagles scored 26 points in the final quarter after scoring 25 points in the first three quarters combined, but it was too little too late. Sierra Canyon’s lead was too big to surpass.

    Senior Karisma Flores led the way for Oak Park with 20 points, half of which came in the final eight minutes. Maya Deshautelle scored 10 points.

    Sierra Canyon and Oak Park will both face Corona Centennial, the third team in the group, to round out pool play.

    Oak Park will be on the road Saturday against Centennial and Sierra Canyon will be at home against the Huskies on Wednesday.

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    Dan Lovi

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  • Former Baylor, Texas Tech & TCU coach thriving at a Class A Texas high school

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    The widely accepted, and much bemoaned, premise is that a coach can no longer coach, but rather just gently guide a teenager, or college player, into doing anything while praying this neutered method nets wins.

    That the coach of previous generations would not last five seconds, much less five games or five years, trying to coach today’s high school or NCAA player.

    “I’ll say this — I haven’t changed the way I coach kids,” said 72-year-old Larry Tidwell, a veteran of 50 years of coaching basketball.

    “Kids adjust. Kids still want to be coached. I hold them to be accountable, and they want that. I am not going to sit here and say, ‘It’s OK’ when I know it’s not. As much as I get on them, I make sure to give them credit when they do the right thing. I’ve been coaching the same way for 50 years and I don’t plan to change now.”

    It can be done.

    Tidwell began his athletic career at TCU more than 50 years ago when he played on the football and basketball teams. He would transfer to play quarterback at Austin College, where his position coach was future Kansas State head coach Bill Snyder.

    “The man taught me about perfection,” Tidwell said.

    Since then, Tidwell lived the life of a wall-traveled women’s basketball coach who has coached everywhere, and knows everyone. Baylor. TCU. Kansas. Frisco High School, when it was the only high school in town. Lamar. UT-Rio Grande Valley. Mexia. Louisiana-Monroe. Schulenberg High School. Dallas Christian. Texas Tech. Tarleton State.

    Assistant coach. Head coach. Athletic director.

    This season, Bellevue. Not Washington. Bellevue, Texas, population 359 people. It’s approximately 80 miles northwest of Fort Worth, 30 miles south of the Oklahoma border, and just a few miles east of nowhere.

    Still a current resident of Fort Worth, Tidwell was recruited to come out of a potential retirement last summer to return to the bench to coach a team that had not a winning season since 2018-19. Today, the Class A Bellevue Eagles are 29-2, district champions for the first time since 2013, and will go to the state playoffs.

    Old-school coaching still works in school

    One of the major points of concern stressed by coaches is that they increasingly no longer feel like they are allowed the time, or space, to help develop a young person into becoming a contributing member of society as an adult.

    What once used to be a job requirement and mission has been replaced by an assortment of other priorities, namely playing time, addressing a list of parental concerns, and money.

    “I try to make a difference each and every day with the players,” Tidwell said. “Some of them accept that, and some don’t. The parents have been excellent here; I’ve had some ‘conferences’ but they’ve been excellent. Coaching is coaching.

    “I’ve learned in 50 years of coaching that you are only as good as your administration wants you to be.”

    At least on the high school and small college level, that last part is often a determining factor. As long as the “head of state” gives the coach room to be both a teacher and coach, there is space for that person to mentor and guide a young person beyond the game.

    The other determining factor remains the parent, which … who knows?

    At a high school like Bellevue, which has fewer than 200 students, Larry Tidwell has been given the full support to be Coach Tidwell.

    Why Larry Tidwell came back to coach one more season

    This time one year ago, Tidwell was coaching Schulenburg High School, and had every intention of staying for another season. But his mother became ill, and he returned to Fort Worth to be close to her after the season ended.

    In the spring, a friend from Bellevue inquired about his interest, and availability, to coach a girls basketball team that needed a coach. His mother died in the summer, and he was not quite ready to be done.

    “I really did want to get to 50 years,” Tidwell said. “I love the game. I still enjoy coaching. I do think I can help, and I try to make a difference for a young person.”

    On a varsity roster of 15 players, his tallest stands 5-foot-8. His team takes a lot of 3-pointers, and the ones they miss rebounding are the priority. He was able to “recruit” enough players out of the hallways for a junior varsity team, the only one in Bellevue’s district.

    The combined records of the varsity, JV and middle school teams at Bellevue is 49-6.

    The floor the team plays on is made of rubber that is more than 30 years old. He led a fundraising effort that now has brought in more than $250,000, which will be used for a wood floor in the gym with new bleacher seats.

    Tidwell is unsure whether he will return for another season, but in this one year at Bellevue he has proven that a person with his title doesn’t have to be a tour guide but can still coach.

    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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  • Brave new era: How a small East Bay school became a basketball juggernaut overnight

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    DUBLIN — The name on the jersey is new, but the ambition running through Brave Christian Academy’s gym feels anything but. 

    On any given night in the west Dublin hills, the noise is sharper, the roster longer and the expectations louder than anyone remembers when the school was called Valley Christian-Dublin. 

    What was once a small-school schedule filler has turned into one of the Bay Area’s most interesting stories – a team winning now, gathering talent boldly and thinking far bigger than its enrollment suggests. 

    Rebranded as Brave Christian, the boys basketball program has surged into relevance behind a roster reshaped by improved talent and elevated by two international players from the Ivory Coast – freshman star JP Oka and sophomore Adama Kone – who have quickly become among the area’s most intriguing talents. 

    Driving the vision is coach Joe Fuca, a former executive at DocuSign and basketball architect intent on building more than a winning season. 

    His goal is long-term and ambitious: Turn a small Christian school into a regional powerhouse.

    “We want to be a classic Christian school that you see on the I-680 corridor,” Fuca said. “You’re either going to go to Berean Christian or De La Salle, two great Christian schools. I feel like we can build our own little thing there in Dublin and have a really good success.”

    Brave Christian Academy’s Adama Kone (22) battles Vanden’s James Carraway (5) for a rebound in the third quarter of their Crush in the Valley tournament game held at Napa Valley College in Napa, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    Perfect timing

    Brave Christian has an enrollment of just under 200 students and offers 11 sports. The Lions have never been a basketball power even at the small-school level, having two winning seasons since 2004. 

    Fuca got involved with the boys basketball team in January of last year after a pastor from the school’s church asked him if he could try to revive the athletics department. 

    Fuca took on the challenge. 

    The tech executive already had a deep background in basketball as his sons were decorated players at nearby San Ramon Valley. Christian Fuca won a Division I state championship with SRV in 2015, helping the Wolves beat a Lonzo Ball-led Chino Hills team. Fuca’s other son, Joey, was the head coach of national prep school powerhouse Prolific Prep and runs a local Adidas Circuit AAU team called Lakeshow Basketball. 

    Despite making the North Coast Section Division VI playoffs, Brave Christian struggled last season, going 8-16. 

    For senior point guard Logan Reth, who transferred from nearby California, last season challenged him in ways he did not expect. 

    “I came here last year, the skill gap was a lot different. I was surrounded with a lot of great people, but just kind of beginners to basketball,” Reth said. 

    But Fuca credits Reth and other returners for getting into the postseason, which he believes built a foundation for this year’s team. 

    “There were seven basketball players in the school when I came in,” Fuca said. “I think some people who came to watch us at the end of last year were attracted to come here. So then we had a lot of kids transfer in the summer because they wanted to go to school at Brave.”

    Arrival of the stars

    The team started to take shape in the offseason as transfers were becoming eligible and the team started to mesh behind Oka and Kone – two players who were playing basketball together on the Ivory Coast just a couple of years ago. 

    Both were highly decorated international players. Kone came to Brave Christian in January of last season while Oka has been playing in the states for the last few years. 

    The duo presents nightmare matchups for opponents. Oka, a 6-foot-8 freshman, is a natural scorer who has a shifty handle and defensive tools to shut down any top player. At 6-4, Kone is a bouncy wing who overpowers defenders with brute strength and agile footwork. 

    Kone said he and Oka had a learning curve to try to get adjusted to the American game. 

    “Back home, we never play basketball inside, always outside,” Kone said. “The rules are kind of different. It’s a lot more physical back home where it’s more technical here.” 

    While their highlights make social media on a regular basis, it’s their chemistry on the court that really separates Oka and Kone from the rest.

    “JP is my homeboy from my home country,” Kone said. “He’s like a brother to me. So he knows me. I know him off the court, on the court. We just like playing together, sharing the ball with each other. If I score 20, he usually scores 20.” 

    Added Oka, “I’ve known him for two years, so it’s good to have him by my side.” 

    Brave Christian Academy's Adama Kone (22) goes up for a layup against Vanden in the fourth quarter of their Crush in the Valley tournament game held at Napa Valley College in Napa, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Brave Christian Academy’s Adama Kone (22) goes up for a layup against Vanden in the fourth quarter of their Crush in the Valley tournament game held at Napa Valley College in Napa, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    Turning heads

    While most people didn’t know who the Lions were before the season started, they knew exactly what they were capable of. 

    Once the team was finally together in the offseason, Brave Christian impressed at local summer league games and built up some hype at the start of the season after starting 7-1. The Lions participated at the Torrey Pines Holiday Classic in San Diego where they played the likes of St. Ignatius, Cathedral Catholic and Priory. 

    Though they didn’t come away with wins, their willingness to play high-level competition got attention from the basketball community. 

    “I have a lot of friends who play basketball and they watch us and they’re like, “Woah, where did you get those guys,’” Reth said. “I’ve heard so many people tell us that we look good and I know in a few years we’ll be a lot better.” 

    Games against higher competition have paid dividends when Brave Christian returned to the B Division of the Bay Counties League East. 

    Through 10 league games, Brave Christian has blown out every opponent with a point differential of plus-520. 

    The Lions have beaten teams by video-game like numbers. They defeated Fremont-Christian 78-8 and routed Making Waves Academy 101-31. 

    “We really just came to Brave Christian trying to change the culture,” Kone said. “We want to change everything about this school – academically and athletically.” 

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    Nathan Canilao

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  • Tuesday HS Basketball Fast Break: No. 14 Southwest boys win 12th straight, more

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    Fort Worth Southwest guard Orion Sylvestre (0) goes up for 2 of his game-high 21 points against Fort Worth Diamond Hill-Jarvis guard Anthony Elizondo (3) in a District 8-4A game on Tuesday, February 3, 2026 at Southwest High School in Fort Worth, Texas.

    Fort Worth Southwest guard Orion Sylvestre (0) goes up for 2 of his game-high 21 points against Fort Worth Diamond Hill-Jarvis guard Anthony Elizondo (3) in a District 8-4A game on Tuesday, February 3, 2026 at Southwest High School in Fort Worth, Texas.

    Leightvision Productions/Courtesy to the Star-Telegram

    Welcome to The Fast Break, a biweekly Star-Telegram series featuring the top Fort Worth-area high school basketball news, performances and results.

    BOYS

    No. 14 Southwest runs away from Diamond Hill-Jarvis

    Fort Worth Southwest, No. 14 in the latest Class 4A state poll according to the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches, had 5 players in double-figure scoring as the Runnin’ Raiders raced past Fort Worth Diamond Hill-Jarvis 102-37 in a District 8-4A contest on Tuesday night at Southwest High School.

    Southwest (22-7 overall, 9-0 district) started all seniors in the game and 4 scored in double digits led by Orion Sylvestre who poured in 21 points. Chandin Davis and Tyson Syon added 18 points each and Keylan Jones contributed 12.

    Diamond Hill-Jarvis (10-16, 1-7) jumped out to a 5-4 lead on three pointer by Elijah Hernandez and a basket by Anthony Elizondo, but Southwest went on a 36-1 run to pull away to a 54-12 lead at the intermission. Elizondo, who had a nice game all around, led the Eagles with 13 points including 2 threes.

    Hernandez (2 threes) and Marcus Zenteno added 8 points each for Diamond Hill-Jarvis. Junior Tevin Clayton was on fire for Southwest in the fourth quarter scoring all 14 of his points in the frame including 4 three pointers.

    Southwest won its 16th consecutive district game in the win. Diamond Hill-Jarvis is just 2 wins away from equaling the most victories (12) the Eagles have had in season in the past 20 years (2013, 2017).

    Denton Ryan pulls even with Colleyville Heritage with win

    Denton Ryan got a key victory in District 6-5A as the Raiders smothered Colleyville Heritage 46-25 on Tuesday night.

    Ryan (12-12 overall, 4-5 district) pulled even with Colleyville Heritage (20-9, 4-5) in the district standings. Both teams are tied for third, but just a game ahead of North Richland Hills Richland (19-9, 3-5) which had a bye.

    Sameer Johnson and Peyton Hines led the Panthers with 9 points each. Zylan Bernard led Ryan with a game-high 10 points with Lijah Brown adding 9.

    No. 2 Mansfield Summit cruises past Joshua

    Mansfield Summit, No. 2 in the state in Class 5A according to the TABC, used a balanced scoring attack to take down Joshua 53-26 in a District 8-5A game on Tuesday.

    Joseph Creel III led Summit (23-5 overall, 10-0 district) with 10 points with Emund Prichett Jr. adding 9. Mason Williams, Jaxon Sneed and Cade Tucker had 8 points each for the Jaguars.

    Joshua (14-15, 3-7) scored 18 of its 26 points on 6 threes. Jamarcus Fisher led the Owls with 7 points.

    GIRLS

    Keller holds on to second place in 4-6A, holds off Timber Creek

    Keller’s Dahlia Rebella scored 10 of her team-high 12 points in the third quarter as the Indians held off Keller Timber Creek 43-35 in a District 4-6A game on Tuesday.

    Keller (22-7 overall, 12-3 district) holds on to second place in 4-6A. Lila Russell added 10 points for the Indians with Mia Arnold chipping in 7.

    Lia Sumler had a game-high 13 points for the Falcons with Jillian Topping and Sara Kyne contributing 8 points each for Timber Creek.

    Timber Creek (17-12, 8-6) fell into a fourth-place tie with Hurst L.D. Bell with 2 games left on the schedule. The teams split games this season.

    Southlake Carroll keeps rolling, rips L.D. Bell

    Southlake Carroll, No. 6 in the latest TABC Class 6A state poll, remained unbeaten in District 4-6A with solid 63-36 win over Hurst L.D. Bell on Tuesday.

    Carroll (29-1 overall, 15-0 district) has already clinched the district title and will try to run the table when they travel to Keller Central on Friday. The Dragons jumped out to a 33-14 lead at the half and then coasted behind Whitney Jense who scored a game-high 20 points.

    Angelina Bouley added 15 points with Messina Tade chipping in 12 for Carroll. L.D. Bell (23-9, 8-6), which fell into a fourth-place tie with Keller Timber Creek, was led in scoring by Madi Capers with 11.

    Paschal keeps district slate clean, rips North Side

    Fort Worth Paschal remained unbeaten in District 7-5A play with a 51-16 victory over Fort Worth North Side on Tuesday.

    Victoria Hultgren led Paschal (18-13 overall, 11-0 district) with 12 points and Adeline Stults added 10. North Side (8-16, 2-8) was led by Samantha Martinez with 6 points.

    BOYS SCORES

    North Crowley 95, Mansfield Lake Ridge 73

    Mansfield Legacy 67, FW Boswell 47

    Crowley 87, Mansfield 75

    Trophy Club Byron Nelson 45, Justin Northwest 13

    Keller 61, Keller Timber Creek 53

    Hurst L.D. Bell 64, Southlake Carroll 57

    Haslet Eaton 67, Euless Trinity 49

    South Grand Prairie 52, Arlington Lamar 41

    Arlington Martin 66, Arlington Bowie 48

    Grand Prairie 73, Haltom 53

    FW Brewer 79, Granbury 44

    FW Chisholm Trail 40, Keller Fossil Ridge 32

    Aledo 71, Saginaw 55

    Denton Ryan 46, Colleyville Heritage 25

    Denton 53, Argyle 30

    NRH Birdville 56, Grapevine 26

    FW Paschal 67, FW North Side 25

    FW Arlington Heights 93, FW South Hills 39

    Mansfield Summit 53, Joshua 26

    Arlington Seguin 86, Burleson Centennial 60

    Burleson 44, Cleburne 35

    Mansfield Timberview 63, Everman 36

    Brock 57, Graham 49

    Stephenville 79, Brownwood 43

    Glen Rose 78, Mineral Wells 47

    Burkburnett 99, Bridgeport 56

    River Oaks Castleberry 50, Springtown 48

    FW Eagle Mountain 56, Decatur 32

    Krum 89, Lake Worth 64

    FW Southwest 102, FW Diamond Hill-Jarvis 37

    Alvarado 81, Venus 28

    Kennedale 78, Godley 54

    Ferris 48, Hillsboro 35

    Comanche 52, Millsap 49

    Peaster 67, Tolar 37

    Paradise 41, Ponder 40

    Boyd 59, Whitesboro 42

    Pilot Point 42, Valley View 41

    Grandview 72, Maypearl 53

    Keene 67, Blooming Grove 36

    Arlington Oakridge 58, Irving Cistercian 43

    Dallas Parish Epsicopal 78, FW Nolan Catholic 42

    Arlington Grace Prep 75, FW All Saints Episcopal 45

    Fort Worth Christian 59, Grapevine Faith Christian 51

    FW Lake Country Christian 52, Willow Park Trinity Christian 39

    Colleyville Covenant Christian 67, Carrollton Prince of Peace 34

    Pantego Christian 66, Plano Coram Deo 43

    FW Christian Life 51, Kennedale Fellowship 30

    FW Covenant Classical 77, Denton Calvary 40

    Decatur Victory Christian 51, FW Bethesda Christian 36

    GIRLS SCORES

    North Crowley 79, Mansfield Lake Ridge 46

    FW Boswell 80, Mansfield Legacy 59

    Keller 43, Keller Timber Creek 35

    Southlake Carroll 63, Hurst L.D. Bell 36

    Trophy Club Byron Nelson 67, Justin Northwest 45

    Haslet Eaton 37, Euless Trinity 36

    South Grand Prairie 43, Arlington Lamar 34

    Haltom 32, Grand Prairie 25

    Arlington 39, Arlington Sam Houston 20

    Arlington Bowie 45, Arlington Martin 21

    Granbury 54, FW Brewer 9

    Aledo 63, Saginaw 33

    FW Chisholm Trail 40, Keller Fossil Ridge 34

    Argyle 72, Denton 5

    Denton Ryan 65, Colleyville Heritage 30

    Grapevine 44, NRH Birdville 38

    FW Paschal 51, FW North Side 16

    Joshua 40, Mansfield Summit 32

    Cleburne 60, Burleson 21

    Burleson Centennial 57, Arlington Seguin 30

    Brock 63, Graham 19

    Glen Rose 40, Mineral Wells 11

    Brownwood 46, Stephenville 32

    Springtown 60, River Oaks Castleberry 9

    Bridgeport 43, Burkburnett 41

    Decatur 72, FW Eagle Mountain 29

    Krum 74, Lake Worth 25

    FW Eastern Hills 67, FW Carter-Riverside 38

    FW Dunbar 37, FW Western Hills 26

    Hillsboro 75, Ferris 30

    Comanche 83, Millsap 27

    Tolar 58, Peaster 17

    Whitesboro 43, Boyd 41

    Paradise 43, Ponder 41

    Grandview 57, Maypearl 32

    Scurry-Rosser 48, Palmer 31

    Keene 52, Blooming Grove 23

    FW Nolan Catholic 46, Dallas Parish Episcopal 39

    Grapevine Faith Christian 63, Fort Worth Christian 48

    FW Southwest Christian 45, Flower Mound Coram Deo 22

    Arlington Grace Prep 53, FW All Saints Episcopal 20

    FW Lake Country Christian 62, Willow Park Trinity Christian 18

    Plano Coram Deo 50, Pantego Christian 32

    FW Covenant Classical 37, Denton Calvary 32

    Keller Harvest Christian 37, Crowley Nazarene Christian 19

    This story was originally published February 3, 2026 at 11:25 PM.

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    Darren Lauber

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  • Piedmont to play home basketball game without spectators after fight with San Leandro

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    Piedmont’s league game Wednesday against Bishop O’Dowd will have no fans in the stands.


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    Nathan Canilao, Christian Babcock

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  • Friday HS Basketball Fast Break: Cleburne girls stay hot, dump Joshua, and more

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    Cleburne’s Lily Sheppard (1) drives to the basket against Joshua in a girls District 8-5A game on Friday, January 30, 2026 at Cleburne High School in Cleburne, Texas.

    Cleburne’s Lily Sheppard (1) drives to the basket against Joshua in a girls District 8-5A game on Friday, January 30, 2026 at Cleburne High School in Cleburne, Texas.

    David Beans Studio/Courtesy to the Star-Telegram

    Welcome to The Fast Break, a biweekly Star-Telegram series featuring the top Fort Worth-area high school basketball news, performances and results.

    GIRLS

    Cleburne swarms Joshua to stay unbeaten in 8-5A

    Cleburne, No. 21 in the latest Texas Association of Basketball Coaches Class 5A state poll, and No. 22 Joshua squared off on Friday at Cleburne and the game lived up to its billing. The Yellow Jackets played outstanding defense and both schools were very physical, but Cleburne managed to come away with a 40-26 win to stay undefeated in District 8-5A.

    Cleburne (22-8 overall, 11-0 district) was led by senior Lily Sheppard and Alyssa Franklin who had 9 points each, including 2 threes each. Sheppard was honored after the game for becoming a 1,000 point scorer, which she reached on Thursday against Burleson Centennial.

    “Lily is so special,” said Cleburne coach Tiffany Hill. “What makes her special is that her dad (A.J. Sheppard) is a football coach and this is her fourth school she’s attended in four years. You can only imagine how tough that is.”

    Sheppard started her career at Mansfield Lake Ridge then went to Euless Trinity. She followed that going to Mansfield Summit where she won a district title and then to Cleburne.

    “She’s been a big part in our success in what we’ve done here at Cleburne this year,” said Hill.

    Cleburne got a strong defensive performance from Franklin, Isabel Guadamuz and Arissa Turner. Guadamuz contributed 8 points for the Yellow Jackets.

    The Yellow Jackets are one team that Joshua (30-4, 8-3) hasn’t been able to solve. Of the Owls four losses, two are to Cleburne, one is to district mate Mansfield Summit by 3 points and one to Class 4A No. 2 Canyon.

    Joshua was led by Austyn Miller with 8 points and Elexee Ray who chipped in 7.

    Keller thumps Trinity to keep pace in 4-6A

    Keller broke open a close game at the half en route to a 59-25 win over Euless Trinity in a District 4-6A game on Friday. Keller, which remains in second place in district, led 19-14 at the intermission, but outscored the Trojans 40-11 in the second half.

    Keller (20-7 overall, 10-3 district) had 12 of its 13 players on the roster score points in the game. Audrey Heibel led the Indians with 10 points and Mia Arnold scored 9.

    Serenity Davis led Trinity (9-19, 3-10) with a game-high 14 points.

    Paschal remains perfect in District 7-5A

    Fort Worth Paschal kept its perfect district record intact with a 50-36 win over Fort Worth Wyatt in District 7-5A play.

    Paschal (17-13 overall, 10-0 district), which jumped out to a 28-15 lead at the half, was led by Audrina Bowers with 15 points while Victoria Hultgren tallied 8. Wyatt (12-11, 5-4) was led by Trinity Mitchell who had a game-high 19 points.

    Southlake Carroll jumps out quick, rolls past Northwest

    Southlake Carroll, TABC’s No. 6 team in the state in Class 6A, jumped out to a 26-point lead at the break then coasted to a 58-20 win over Justin Northwest in a District 4-6A game on Friday.

    Carroll (27-1 overall, 13-0 district) was led by Whitney Jense who poured in 24 points. Angelina Bouley added 12 points for the Dragons.

    Ryleigh Dryer and Lily Baker led Northwest (12-19, 2-10) with 4 points each.

    L.D. Bell downs Keller Central to keep pace in 4-6A

    Hurst L.D. Bell stayed on track for a playoff berth in District 4-6A as the Blue Raiders downed Keller Central 57-32 on Friday night.

    L.D. Bell (23-8 overall, 7-5 district) was led by Hannah Due with 19 points. Madi Capers and Maddison Rhodes added 14 and 13 points respectively for the Blue Raiders.

    Central (7-22, 0-12) was led by Ava Turner with 17 points.

    Arlington Bowie takes down Sam Houston

    Jordian Witherspoon scored 17 points and had 10 rebounds to lead Arlington Bowie (17-11 overall, 8-3 District 8-6A) to a 60-11 victory over Arlington Sam Houston (5-21, 0-11).

    Saginaw thumps Brewer in 5-5A

    Saginaw got 29 points from Shaniah Franklin and 25 more from Brookly Monroe as the Rough Riders ran rough shod over Fort Worth Brewer 73-34 in a District 5-5A contest on Friday night.

    Franklin surpassed 1,000 career points for Saginaw (16-12 overall, 7-2 district), which remained in solid position for a playoff berth. Brewer fell to 6-20 overall and 1-8 in district play.

    Everman outlasts Burleson, keeps playoff hopes alive

    Everman got 21 points and 19 rebounds from Carsyn Smith and 13 points and 6 rebounds from Jahzeriah Esters as the Bulldogs kept their playoff hopes alive with a 56-32 win over Burleson in a District 8-5A contest on Friday.

    Everman improves to 19-13 overall and 5-6 in district, a game behind Burleson Centennial who the Bulldogs will face on February 6. Burleson dropped to 2-9 in district and 16-17 overall.

    Benbrook downs Western Hills to stay in title race

    Benbrook (11-17 overall, 7-2 District 8-4A) got 14 points from Maddie Blocker and 10 more from Giuliana Lucero as the Bobcats remained in contention for a district title with a 38-14 win over Fort Worth Western Hills (2-19, 1-8).

    Layla James led the Cougars with 8 points.

    BOYS

    Haslet Eaton stays atop 4-6A, downs Byron Nelson

    Haslet Eaton remained on top of the District 4-6A standings, defeating cross-town rival Trophy Club Byron Nelson 55-39 on Friday at Eaton High School.

    Caleb Harris led Eaton (22-6 overall, 10-1 district) with 22 points and 6 rebounds, going 9 of 14 from the field. The Eagles have another tough game on Saturday, facing second-place Southlake Carroll.

    The Bobcats remained in solid contention for the final playoff berth in 4-6A. Byron Nelson dropped to 15-13 overall and 7-4 in district.

    Lake Ridge edges Mansfield in 3-6A showdown

    No. 18 Mansfield Lake Ridge got 27 points from Ashton Parker and 20 more from Onie Lewis as the Eagles held off No. 17 Mansfield 83-76 in a District 3-6A shootout.

    Lake Ridge improved to 19-7 overall and 5-2 in district while Mansfield fell to 21-6 and 6-2. Demetrius George added 18 points for the Eagles.

    Caden Shaver led the Tigers with 18 points with Chase Jackson chipping in 15 points. Zion Robinson and Preston Jackson added 13 points each for Mansfield.

    Joshua takes advantage of cold-shooting Cleburne

    Joshua took a leg up in staying in the running for the final playoff spot in District 8-5A with a 42-19 drubbing of Cleburne on Friday night at Cleburne High School.

    Joshua improved to 14-14 overall and 3-6 in district play, a game ahead of Cleburne, Everman and Burleson and a game behind Arlington Seguin for the final playoff berth. Addison Auvenshine paced the Owls with 19 points with Lamarcus Fisher finishing with 13 points.

    Parker Philips led Cleburne, which struggled shooting from the field all night, with 6 points.

    Covenant Classical routs Weatherford Christian

    Fort Worth Covenant Classical got 17 points from Tate Mitchell to lead the Cavaliers to a 84-32 victory against Weatherford Christian in a TAPPS 1-3A game on Friday.

    Covenant Classical improved to 16-11 overall and 7-0 in district play. Weatherford Christian (1-16 overall, 0-6 district) was led by K. Williamson with 15 points.

    Ellis Mitchell contributed 14 points and Austin Gray chipped in 13 for Covenant Classical. Jack Liebelt and Matthew belt added 11 points each for the Cavaliers.

    GIRLS SCORES

    Mansfield Lake Ridge 57, Mansfield 43

    Southlake Carroll 58, Justin Northwest 20

    Keller 59, Euless Trinity 25

    Hurst L.D. Bell 57, Keller Central 32

    South Grand Prairie 55, Arlington 27

    Arlington Martin 49, Grand Prairie 23

    Saginaw 73, FW Brewer 34

    Aledo 51, Keller Fossil Ridge 33

    NRH Birdville 62, NRH Richland 36

    Colleyville Heritage 55, Denton 18

    Denton Ryan 67, Grapevine 39

    Mansfield Summit 53, Burleson Centennial 28

    Cleburne 40, Joshua 26

    Brownwood 27, Glen Rose 23

    Brock 59, Mineral Wells 33

    Stephenville 42, Graham 27

    Burkburnett 75, Lake Worth 19

    FW Eagle Mountain 85, River Oaks Castleberry 19

    Decatur 98, Krum 33

    FW Dunbar 39, FW Southwest 37

    FW Carter-Riverside 37, FW Western Hills 15

    Hillsboro 62, Kennedale 53

    Waxahachie Life 48, Alvarado 33

    Lipan 69, Hico 45

    FW Nolan Catholic 74, Addison Trinity Christian 25

    FW Southwest Christian 54, FW All Saints Episcopal 23

    Lubbock Trinity Christian 48, Fort Worth Christian 41

    Arlington Grace Prep 45, Grapevine Faith Christian 36

    Pantego Christian 41, Dallas The Covenant 27

    Lubbock Christian 55, FW Lake Country Christian 48

    Kennedale Fellowship 41, Denton Calvary 33

    Dallas Episcopal 58, FW Trinity Valley 26

    BOYS SCORES

    Mansfield Lake Ridge 83, Mansfield 76

    Crowley 82, FW Boswell 41

    Weatherford 57, Mansfield Legacy 52

    Hurst L.D. Bell 66, Keller Central 40

    Keller 56, Euless Trinity 38

    Southlake Carroll 73, Justin Northwest 34

    Haslet Eaton 55, Trophy Club Byron Nelson 39

    Grand Prairie 60, Arlington Martin 52

    Arlington Lamar 49, Haltom 41

    South Grand Prairie 78, Arlington 28

    Aledo 62, Keller Fossil Ridge 56

    Denton 51, Colleyville Heritage 36

    NRH Birdville 61, NRH Richland 52

    Denton Ryan 38, Grapevine 20

    FW Wyatt 62, FW Paschal 54

    FW Trimble Tech 45, FW South Hills 34

    Mansfield Timberview 60, Burleson 45

    Arlington Seguin 63, Everman 50

    Joshua 42, Cleburne 19

    Brock 49, Mineral Wells 40

    Krum 88, Decatur 38

    Burkburnett 91, Lake Worth 27

    FW Southwest 66, FW Dunbar 55

    Benbrook 60, FW Eastern Hills 57

    FW Western Hills 55, FW Carter-Riverside 35

    Waxahachie Life 57, Alvarado 45

    Peaster 69, Millsap 52

    Tolar 61, Eastland 23

    Keene 66, Maypearl 45

    Perrin-Whitt 64, Newcastle 55

    Addison Trinity Christian 43, FW Nolan Catholic 37

    Arlington Grace Prep 64, Grapevine Faith Christian 47

    FW All Saints Episcopal 71, FW Southwest Christian 65

    Pantego Christian 56, Dallas The Covenant 43

    Dallas Episcopal 67, FW Trinity Valley 33

    FW Country Day 78, Irving Cistercian 35

    Arlington St. Paul’s 63, Weatherford Grace Christian 31

    FW Uplift Elevate 64, Arlington Newman International 57

    This story was originally published January 30, 2026 at 11:11 PM.

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    Darren Lauber

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  • Thursday HS Basketball Fastbreak: See roundups and scores from around the area

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    Welcome to The Fastbreak, a biweekly Star-Telegram series featuring the top Fort Worth-area high school basketball news, performances and results.

    BOYS

    Mansfield Summit’s second-half surge dooms Everman

    Everman jumped out early on Mansfield Summit, No. 4 in Class 5A in the latest Texas Association of Basketball Coaches state poll, but the Jaguars rallied then ran away in the second half for a 69-40 win over the Bulldogs in District 8-5A play.

    Everman (14-11 overall, 2-5 district) jumped out to a quick 8-0 lead but back-to-back threes by Summit’s Mason Williams started an 18-2 run by the Jaguars.

    Summit (22-5, 7-0) got a three-pointer at the halftime buzzer by Joseph Creal to lead 25-22. The Jags then outscored the Bulldogs 44-18 in the second half to pull away.

    Mason Williams hit 5 threes on his way to a team-high 17 points for Summit. Creal finished with 14 points, Jaxon Sneed had 11 and David Bardere contributed 10 for the Jaguars.

    Martin mauls Arlington in 8-6A

    Arlington Martin got 20 points from Steven Reynolds III and 18 more from Levi Moore as the Warriors blasted Arlington 92-46 in a District 8-6A game on Thursday.

    Jeremiah Ellis poured in 15 points and Jeremy Nyakundi added 10 points for Martin. Joshua Brown had 15 points and Jordan Johnson chipped in 11 for the Colts.

    Martin (15-11 overall, 5-2 district) remains in third place in 8-6A. Arlington dropped its 10th game in a row to drop to 4-21 overall and 0-7 in district play.

    Southlake Carroll takes road win over Keller

    Noah Johnson scored 16 with Riley McCoart chipping in 9 for Southlake Carroll as they go on the road to beat Keller 47-34 in District 4-6A play.

    The Dragons improved to 14-9 overall and 8-2 in district, good enough for a second-place tie with Hurst L.D. Bell, a game behind Haslet Eaton. Keller falls to 12-14 and 6-4 in district.

    GIRLS

    Summit edges Everman on last-second miss

    Everman had a chance to tie the game with 1 second left and send it to overtime, but the Bulldogs were only able to hit one of two free throws as Mansfield Summit escaped with a 48-47 win on Thursday in a District 8-5A game as Summit High School.

    Madison Jones had a game-high 20 points, 7 of which came in the fourth quarter, for Summit (17-9 overall, 7-2 in district) and Maya Williams chipped in 9. Jahzeriah Esters led Everman (17-13, 3-6) with 11 points (3-threes) and Makhiya Dangerfield added 9 (3-threes) for the Bulldogs.

    Southlake Carroll continues roll in 4-6A

    No. 6 Southlake Carroll continued its dominance of District 4-6A with a 58-44 win over Keller in a key game at Keller High School. Carroll (26-1 overall, 12-0 district) has already clinched a playoff berth.

    The Dragons were led by Whitney Jense who poured in 27 points. Mattie Renda added 16 points and Angelina Bouley chipped in 10.

    Keller (19-7, 9-3) remains in second place. The Indians were led by Mia Arnold with 20 points.

    Cleburne stays undefeated in district, romps Seguin

    Cleburne, No. 22 in the latest TABC Class 5A poll, got a game-high 21 points from Lily Sheppard to lead the Yellow Jackets to a 71-15 win over Arlington Seguin in District 8-5A play.

    Sheppard finished 5 of 5 from three-point range and 2 of 2 from the free throw line for Cleburne (20-8 overall, 9-0 district). Izzy Guadamuz added 15 points and Alyssa Franklin poured in 12 for the Jackets.

    Raisha Allen had 7 points to lead Seguin (6-22, 0-9).

    Burleson Centennial thumps Mansfield Timberview

    Burleson Centennial (17-12 overall, 6-3 district) kept pace for a playoff berth with a 47-23 win over Mansfield Timberview (6-19, 2-7). Jaliyah McNeal led the Spartans in scoring with 12 points and recorded 5 rebounds.

    Lyric Caldwell added 10 points and 2 assists for Centennial. Carly Reed finished with 9 points and 4 rebounds and Xeric Robinson had a team-high 7 rebounds.

    Paschal remains atop of District 7-5A

    Fort Worth Paschal kept its lead in District 7-5A with a 53-5 romp over Fort Worth Trimble Tech on Thursday. The Panthers improved to 15-13 overall and 8-0 in district play.

    Bella Zoll led Paschal with 12 points and Cate Werth added nine. Zaria Littles added 8 points and Audrina Bowers, Ashton Lynch and Julia Alvarado had 6 points each.

    Saginaw downs Granbury in 5-5A showdown

    The Saginaw girls lost to Granbury by 27 on Dec. 16, but the Rough Riders turned the tables by defeating the Pirates 46-33 in District 5-5A play on Thursday.

    Saginaw (14-12 overall, 5-2 district) was lead by junior Shaniah Franklin with 17 points with freshman Brooklyn Monroe pouring in 16. Jillian Williams had 13 points for Granbury which fell to 16-14 and 5-3 in district.

    Big first quarter lifts Country Day past Hockaday

    Fort Worth Country Day outscored Dallas Hockaday 21-5 in the first quarter then coasted to a 48-32 win in a Southwest Preparatory Conference Class 3A clash. Ryleigh Hall, a Stephen F. Austin softball commit, led all scorers with 22 points.

    Amelia Dickerson added 12 points for the Falcons. Hall surpassed the 1,000 career points mark on Jan. 13 against Arlington Oakridge.

    BOYS SCORES

    Mansfield Lake Ridge 90, FW Boswell 55

    Mansfield 95, Weatherford 88

    Crowley vs. North Crowley

    Keller Timber Creek vs. Trophy Club Byron Nelson

    Southlake Carroll 47, Keller 37

    Haslet Eaton 67, Keller Central 44

    Hurst L.D. Bell 77, Justin Northwest 47

    South Grand Prairie vs. Arlington Bowie

    Grand Prairie 60, Arlington Lamar 35

    Haltom 57, Arlington Sam Houston 46

    Arlington Martin 92, Arlington 46

    Granbury vs. Saginaw

    Keller Fossil Ridge vs. Azle

    FW Brewer vs. FW Chisholm Trail

    Argyle 38, Grapevine 32

    Denton 61, NRH Richland 42

    NRH Birdville 68, Denton Ryan 50

    FW Arlington Heights vs. FW North Side

    FW Paschal 69, FW Trimble Tech 46

    FW South Hills vs. FW Polytechnic

    Burleson vs. Joshua

    Arlington Seguin 71, Cleburne 42

    Mansfield Timberview 64, Burleson Centennial 46

    Mansfield Summit 69, Everman 40

    Glen Rose 76, Stephenville 60

    Graham 56, Mineral Wells 32

    Brock 96, Brownwood 47

    Bridgeport vs. Decatur

    Burkburnett vs. Springtown

    Krum vs. River Oaks Castleberry

    Lake Worth vs. FW Eagle Mountain

    FW Eastern Hills vs. FW Western Hills

    FW Carter-Riverside vs. FW Diamond Hill-Jarvis

    FW Dunbar vs. Dallas Uplift Heights

    FW Southwest 59, Benbrook 46

    Hillsboro vs. Waxahachie Life

    Ferris 59, Venus 32

    Alvarado vs. Godley

    Peaster vs. Early

    FW YMLA 56, Dallas Life Oak Cliff 32

    Paradise 70, Valley View 29

    Ponder 79, Boyd 34

    Palmer vs. Grandview

    Argyle Liberty Christian vs. Addison Trinity Christian

    Dallas Parish Episcopal vs. FW Nolan Catholic

    Midland Christian vs. FW All Saints

    FW Southwest Christian vs. Lubbock Trinity Christian

    Grapevine Faith Christian vs. Flower Mound Coram Deo

    Arlington Grace Prep 71, Fort Worth Christian 32

    Pantego Christian 65, Carrollton Prince of Peace 46

    Irving Ranchview 80, Arlington Summit International 27

    Crowley Nazarene Christian 62, FW Mercy Culture 54

    Keene Chisholm Trail 64, Lincoln (NE) College View Academy 46

    San Gabriel (CA) Academy 75, Keene Chisholm Trail 47

    FW THESA 68, Gainesville Red River 57

    FW THESA 84, Cleburne Johnson County Sports Association 18

    Dallas Thunder 82, Cleburne Johnson County Sports Association 32

    Westlake Academy 41, Gentry (AR) Ozark Adventist Academy 27

    Cleburne Heritage Christian 57, Weatherford Express 30

    GIRLS SCORES

    FW Boswell 56, Mansfield Lake Ridge 47

    Mansfield vs. Weatherford

    Crowley vs. North Crowley

    Keller Timber Creek 40, Trophy Club Byron Nelson 37

    Southlake Carroll 58, Keller 44

    Hurst L.D. Bell 56, Justin Northwest 30

    Haslet Eaton vs. Keller Central

    South Grand Prairie vs. Arlington Bowie

    Arlington Lamar 63, Grand Prairie 23

    Arlington Sam Houston vs. Haltom

    Arlington Martin 43, Arlington 36

    Saginaw 46, Granbury 33

    Keller Fossil Ridge vs. Azle

    FW Brewer vs. FW Chisholm Trail

    Argyle 62, Grapevine 25

    NRH Richland 50, Denton 34

    Denton Ryan 63, NRH Birdville 43

    FW Arlington Heights vs. FW North Side

    FW Paschal 53, FW Trimble Tech 5

    FW South Hills vs. FW Polytechnic

    Burleson vs. Joshua

    Cleburne 71, Arlington Seguin 15

    Burleson Centennial 47, Mansfield Timberview 23

    Mansfield Summit 48, Everman 47

    Glen Rose 34, Stephenville 33

    Graham vs. Mineral Wells

    Brock 43, Brownwood 40

    Bridgeport vs. Decatur

    Burkburnett 58, Springtown 32

    Krum vs. River Oaks Castleberry

    Lake Worth vs. FW Eagle Mountain

    FW Eastern Hills vs. FW Western Hills

    FW Carter-Riverside vs. FW Diamond Hill-Jarvis

    FW Dunbar 47, Dallas Uplift Heights 10

    Benbrook vs. FW Southwest

    Hillsboro 65, Waxahachie Life 51

    Ferris vs. Venus

    Alvarado vs. Godley

    Peaster vs. Early

    FW YWLA vs. Dallas Life Oak Cliff

    Paradise 69, Valley View 44

    Ponder 65, Boyd 24

    Palmer vs. Grandview

    Argyle Liberty Christian vs. Addison Trinity Christian

    Dallas Parish Episcopal vs. FW Nolan Catholic

    Midland Christian 46, FW All Saints 16

    FW Southwest Christian 53, Lubbock Trinity Christian 32

    Grapevine Faith Christian 55, Flower Mound Coram Deo 41

    Arlington Grace Prep vs. Fort Worth Christian

    Pantego Christian 42, Carrollton Prince of Peace 22

    FW Parker-Tarrant County Home School 72, Cleburne Johnson County Sports Association 13

    FW THESA 85, Cedar Hill DasCHE 31

    Wesley Chapel (FL) North Tampa Christian 62, Keene Chisholm Trail 25

    This story was originally published January 22, 2026 at 10:49 PM.

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    Darren Lauber

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  • MLK Classic: Salesian’s depth, defense wear down Modesto Christian in showcase win

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    MLK Classic at De La Salle: Salesian defeats Modesto Christian again behind stingy defense.


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    Nathan Canilao

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