No. 25 Alabama edges No. 20 Arkansas 117-115 in 2OT

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Houston Mallette hit a 3-pointer with 51 seconds remaining in the second overtime and No. 25 Alabama survived one of the best single-game performances of the season to edge 20th-ranked Arkansas 117-115 on Wednesday night.

Arkansas freshman Darius Acuff Jr. scored 49 points — the second most in college basketball this season — while playing all 50 minutes. But Acuff missed jumpers at the end of both extra frames that would have given the Razorbacks (19-7, 9-4 Southeastern Conference) a short-handed road victory.

Arkansas used a seven-man rotation throughout regulation but had four players foul out in overtime. That forced coach John Calipari to turn to two guys who had played a combined 35 minutes all season.

It was the opening the Crimson Tide (19-7, 9-4) needed to pull out a game that will go down as an instant classic.

Labaron Philon Jr. scored 35 points and Aiden Sherrell added 26 — both career highs — to help Alabama win its fifth consecutive game.

Arkansas, meanwhile, lost for the first time in four games. Acuff’s 49 points are the second most by an Arkansas player and the most by an Arkansas player in SEC play.

Alabama trailed by 14 in the second half, but an 18-4 run tied the game. They moved in front in the waning seconds of regulation — until Acuff’s 3-pointer tied the game at 95 and sent it to OT.

Meleek Thomas (24) and Billy Richmond III (20) also scored in double figures for the Razorbacks before fouling out.

NO. 4 ARIZONA 75, NO. 23 68

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Anthony Dell’Orso scored a season-high 22 points after coming off the bench, Ivan Kharchenkov added 18 and Arizona bounced back from its first two losses of the season by beating BYU.

Arizona (24-2, 11-2 Big 12) started the season with 23 consecutive wins, spending nine straight weeks as the nation’s No. 1 team before losing back-to-back games to No. 9 Kansas and No. 16 Texas Tech.

Dell’Orso — a 6-foot-6 Australian — helped the Wildcats get back in the win column after shooting 8 of 15 from the field, including 4 of 8 on 3-pointers.

BYU (19-7, 7-6) was led by freshman star AJ Dybantsa, who finished with 33 points on 12-of-27 shooting. The 6-foot-9 forward topped 30 points for the sixth time this season.

The Cougars were playing their first game without starting guard Richie Saunders, who tore his ACL in a 90-86 overtime victory against Colorado on Saturday. He’s out for the rest of the season.

Arizona never trailed in the second half and slowly pulled away, taking a 66-50 lead on Dell’Orso’s 3-pointer with 6:40 left. BYU cut the deficit 73-68 with 1:05 remaining but couldn’t get any closer.

CREIGHTON 91, NO. 5 UCONN 84

STORRS, Conn. (AP) — Josh Dix scored 13 of his 21 points in the second half, Nik Graves added 18 points and Creighton beat UConn to spoil former Huskies star Emeka Okafor’s number retirement.

Creighton (14-13, 8-8 Big East) handed UConn (24-2, 14-2) its first conference home loss of the season. Creighton coach Greg McDermott became the first coach to beat a Dan Hurley-coached team four times on the road.

Okafor became the third UConn men’s basketball player to have his number retired, with the Huskies honoring the 2004 NCAA champion and national player of the year at halftime. Ray Allen and Richard Hamilton are the only players to have their numbers retired.

The Huskies led by seven points early in the second half, but shot 34% in the half.

Braylon Mullins led UConn with 25 points. Silas Demary Jr. added 17 points and nine assists. Tarris Reed Jr. had 15 points and 11 rebounds, but had just two points in the second half.

Fedor Zugic added 14 points for Creighton, which outscored UConn 27-11 at the foul line.

NO. 8 KANSAS 81, OKLAHOMA STATE 69

STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) — Freshman Darryn Peterson scored 20 of his 23 points in the first half, sparking Kansas to a win over Oklahoma State.

Peterson, a guard who is expected to be among the first picks in the NBA draft later this year, had shot 13 for 36 from the field combined in his previous three games. He made 7 of 12 field goals against the Cowboys, including 6 of 10 3-pointers.

Tre White scored 16 points and Elmarko Jackson added 14 for Kansas. Bryson Tiller had 10 points, 11 rebounds and seven assists and Flory Bidunga added eight points, 11 rebounds and four blocks for the Jayhawks (20-6, 10-3 Big 12), who made 11 of 24 3-pointers and bounced back from a blowout loss at Iowa State last Saturday.

Parsa Fallah scored 21 points and Anthony Roy added 16 for Oklahoma State (16-10, 4-9), which lost its fourth straight since a win over BYU.

NO. 14 VIRGINIA 94, GEORGIA TECH 68

ATLANTA (AP) — Thijs De Ridder scored 22 points, Malik Thomas added 17 and Virginia won its seventh straight game and eighth in a row on the road, beating Georgia Tech.

The Cavaliers (23-3, 11-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) raced to a 42-9 lead in the opening 13:24. Virginia’s 59-27 advantage at the half was its largest in an ACC game since February 2001.

Jaeden Mustaf led Georgia Tech (11-16, 2-12) with 18 points. Baye Ndongo had 13 points and eight rebounds. The Yellow Jackets have lost eight straight.

Virginia was 36 of 79 from the field and 14 of 37 from 3-point range. Georgia Tech was 24 of 64 from the field and 4 of 19 on 3s.

Cavaliers forward Devin Tillis had six points and a rebound before leaving in the second half because of a lower-body injury.

NO. 17 ST. JOHN'S 76, MARQUETTE 70

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Bryce Hopkins had 23 points and 10 rebounds as St. John’s defeated Marquette to earn its 12th straight victory and move atop the Big East standings.

St. John’s (21-5, 14-1) rallied from a six-point deficit in the second half after squandering an 11-point lead. The Red Storm took over the conference lead from No. 5 UConn, which lost 91-84 at home to Creighton earlier Wednesday.

UConn (24-3, 14-2) hosts the Johnnies on Feb. 25 in the second meeting between the teams. St. John’s beat the Huskies 81-72 at Madison Square Garden on Feb. 6.

St. John’s has won its last 11 Big East road games dating to last season.

Marquette freshman Nigel James Jr. made a three-point play that cut the St. John’s lead to 72-70 with 27.5 seconds left, but Zuby Ejiofor and Hopkins each made a pair of free throws to seal the victory.

James had 18 of his 25 points in the second half for Marquette (9-18, 4-12). Royce Parham added 13 for the Golden Eagles, who have lost three straight.

Oziyah Sellers scored 12 and Ejiofor added 10 for St. John’s.

MISSOURI 81, NO. 19 VANDERBILT 80

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Jayden Stone had 19 points, Trent Pierce and T.O. Barrett each added 16 and Missouri held off Vanderbilt after squandering a big lead.

Anthony Robinson II scored 13 points, and Mark Mitchell had 11 points and a career-best nine assists for Missouri (18-8, 8-5 Southeastern Conference). The Tigers have won four of five and improved to 9-0 against Vanderbilt in Columbia.

Tyler Tanner scored 27 points for Vanderbilt (21-5, 8-5), which entered play having won five of six. Devin McGlockton added 13 points.

Vanderbilt’s Tyler Nickel hit a 3-pointer with two seconds remaining after Barrett hit a pair of free throws. Tanner then intercepted Mitchell’s inbound pass and heaved a half-court shot that rattled around the rim and bounced out.

Vanderbilt rallied after falling behind 66-45 with 8:43 remaining after McGlockton was called for his second flagrant 1 foul. Tigers coach Dennis Gates used a challenge to review contact on a rebound on Vanderbilt’s offensive possession after Tyler Harris was called for a foul on Mitchell as he attempted a layup. Vanderbilt coach Mark Byington unsuccessfully challenged that Missouri’s Anthony Robinson II committed a flagrant foul on the same play.

Hubbard hits program-record 10 3s, scores 46 as Mississippi State blows big lead, beats Auburn

STARKVILLE, Miss. (AP) — Josh Hubbard made a program-record 10 3-pointers and scored a career-high 46 points Wednesday night as Mississippi State blew an 18-point lead and then rallied to beat Auburn 91-85.

Hubbard, a 6-foot junior, broke the previous mark of eight 3s (done six times) before halftime, making 9 of 12 from behind the arc and scoring 35 points, two more than Auburn (33), as the Bulldogs took a 16-point lead into the intermission.

Hubbard, who has scored at least 30 points in three consecutive games, also set the Mississippi State (13-13, 5-8) record for points in an SEC game, breaking Bailey Howell’s mark of 45, set against LSU on Feb. 22, 1958. Howell also holds the record for points in a game with 47 against Union on Dec. 4, 1958.

Auburn (14-12, 5-8) has lost five games in a row.

Keyshawn Hall led the Tigers with 29 points and 10 rebounds. Tahaad Pettiford scored 21 and Kevin Overton added 15 points.

Hubbard made a layup with 1:11 left and, after Hall made 1 of 2 free throws, hit a corner 3-pointer that gave Mississippi State an 85-83 lead 27 seconds later. Achor Achor blocked consecutive shots by Hall, Ja’Borri McGhee made two free throws, and Jamarion Davis-Fleming blocked a layup attempt by Overton with 14 seconds left.

KeShawn Murphy put back his own miss to give Auburn its first lead at 64-63 with 8:50 remaining.

The Bulldogs scored the first seven points and Hubbard had 13 — which included back-to-back-to-back 3s — as they jumped to a 21-6 lead about eight minutes into the game.

Up next

Auburn: Hosts Kentucky on Saturday.

Mississippi State: Plays Saturday at South Carolina.

___

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Darius Acuff Jr. points today: Arkansas G has record game in loss to Alabama

Darius Acuff Jr. turned in one of the best performances of the 2025-26 college basketball season — and in Arkansas men's basketball history.

However, that was not enough for Razorbacks, who lost 117-115 to Alabama in double overtime at Coleman Coliseum in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, on Wednesday, Feb. 18.

Acuff scored 49 points on 16-of-27 shooting from the field for the Razorbacks, marking the second-most points scored in a game this season. Only Radford's Dennis Parker Jr., who scored 53 points on a 19-of-24 shooting performance on Dec. 14, 2025, against Coppin State, has topped Acuff's single-game scoring output this season.

The points are the most by an Arkansas player in SEC play.

Acuff, who played all 50 minutes in the game, scored 22 points in the first half for Arkansas. He then followed it up with 19 points in the second half, including a 3-pointer that sent the game to overtime with 11 seconds left in regulation. He scored eight more points in the second overtime period, including three free throws to give the Razorbacks a 113-112 lead with 1:31 left in the game.

Mississippi State's Josh Hubbard also scored 46 points in a 91-85 win for the Bulldogs over Auburn on Feb. 18.

Here's a look at Acuff's full stats against Alabama on Wednesday:

Darius Acuff Jr. points today

Here's Acuff's full stat line from Wednesday's double overtime loss to the Crimson Tide:

  • Points: 49
  • Shooting: 16-for-27 (59.3%)
  • 3-point shooting: 6-for-10 (60%)
  • Free throw shooting: 11-for-12 (91.6%)
  • Rebounds: 5
  • Assists: 5
  • Steals: 1
  • Blocks: 1
  • Turnovers: 1

Highest scorers NCAA in 2025-26 basketball season

Here's a look at the top 10 scoring performances in the NCAA during the 2025-26 college basketball season.

  • 1. Dennis Parker Jr., Radford: 53 points (Dec. 14, 2025)
  • 2. Darius Acuff Jr., Arkansas: 49 points (Feb. 18)
  • T-3. Dominique Daniels, Jr., California Baptist: 47 points (Jan. 24)
  • T-3. Javontae Campbell, Bowling Green: 47 points (Jan. 3)
  • T-3. Paul McNeil, NC State: 47 points (Dec. 17, 2025)
  • T-6. Josh Hubbard, Arkansas: 46 points (Feb. 18)
  • T-6. Dontae Horne, Prairie View A&M: 46 points (Feb. 14)
  • T-6. Keaton Wagler, Illinois: 46 points (Jan. 24)
  • 9. Mikel Brown Jr., Louisville: 45 points (Feb. 9)
  • 10. Lamar Wilkerson, Indiana: 44 points (Dec. 9, 2025)
  • T-11. A.J. Dybantsa, BYU: 43 points (Jan. 24)
  • T-11. David Coit, Maryland: 43 points (Jan. 18)
  • T-11. Michael Eley, Hampton: 43 points (Jan. 8)

Most points scored in an Arkansas game

Acuff made history on Feb. 18 with not only the highest scoring output of any Arkansas freshman ever, but also the second-most points in a single game in Razorbacks history.

According to Arkansas' record book, Acuff's 49-point outburst trails only Rotnei Clark's 51-point performance vs. Alcorn State on Nov. 13, 2009. His 49 points are also the most by an SEC player since Clark's 51-point game, according to the SEC basketball media guide.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Darius Acuff Jr. points today: How Arkansas star fared in loss to Alabama

Martinelli's 29 points lead Northwestern over Maryland 78-74

EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) — Nick Martinelli scored 29 points to lead Northwestern to a 78-74 victory over Maryland on Wednesday night to end a five-game losing streak.

Northwestern (11-16, 3-13 Big Ten) led 35-34 at halftime and took control midway through the second half with a 16-3 run fueled by four 3-pointers from Jordan Clayton and Jake West. The surge turned a 50-44 deficit into a double-digit lead and gave the Wildcats control for the final 12 minutes.

Maryland (10-16, 3-12) stayed within striking distance behind Andre Mills, who scored 22 points in the first half and finished with a career-high 39. The Terrapins cut the deficit to three when Mills hit a 3-pointer with one second remaining, but Northwestern sealed the win with a free throw on the ensuing possession.

Clayton added a career-high 20 points for Northwestern on a career-best 6 of 7 from 3-point range. Angelo Ciaravino scored 16 points and the Wildcats made 12 of 21 from beyond the arc while assisting on 20 field goals.

Martinelli moved into eighth place on Northwestern’s career scoring list in the first half, surpassing 1,588 career points.

Solomon Washington added 14 rebounds and 11 points for Maryland, which held a 36-24 rebounding advantage but committed 15 turnovers.

The game marked another close finish for Northwestern, which has played 26 games decided by two possessions or fewer since the start of last season, tied for the most among major conference programs.

Up Next

Maryland: hosts Washington on Saturday.

Northwestern: at Indiana on Tuesday.

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Thursday's Time Schedule

All Times EST

Thursday, Feb. 19

NBA

Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.

Brooklyn at Cleveland, 7 p.m.

Houston at Charlotte, 7 p.m.

Indiana at Washington, 7 p.m.

Detroit at New York, 7:30 p.m.

Toronto at Chicago, 8 p.m.

Phoenix at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.

Boston at Golden State, 10 p.m.

Orlando at Sacramento, 10 p.m.

Denver at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.

T25 WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

No. 2 UCLA vs. Washington, 10 p.m.

No. 3 South Carolina at No. 25 Alabama, 8:30 p.m.

No. 4 Texas at Arkansas, 7:30 p.m.

No. 7 LSU at Mississippi, 9 p.m.

No. 9 Duke vs. NC State, 7 p.m.

No. 11 Oklahoma at No. 24 Georgia, 6:30 p.m.

No. 13 Iowa at Purdue, 7 p.m.

No. 21 Tennessee vs. Texas A&M, 6:30 p.m.

No. 22 North Carolina at Virginia Tech, 6 p.m.

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Grizzlies say Morant's still feeling elbow discomfort and Caldwell-Pope will have finger surgery

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant will miss at least two more weeks as he continues his recovery after spraining the ulnar collateral ligament in his left elbow on Jan. 21.

The Grizzlies announced Wednesday that the two-time All-Star is progressing in his rehabilitation but continues to feel discomfort. The Grizzlies said Morant will be re-evaluated in two weeks.

Grizzlies officials also said guard Kentavious Caldwell-Pope will undergo surgery Thursday to address misalignment of his right pinky finger. A timeline on his recovery will be announced after the procedure.

Morant, 26, has appeared in just 20 games for the Grizzlies this season. He is averaging 19.5 points, 7.4 assists and 4.6 rebounds.

Although Morant’s name came up in plenty of trade rumors over the last month, the Grizzlies kept him at the trade deadline and instead sent two-time All-Star Jaren Jackson Jr. to the Utah Jazz.

Caldwell-Pope, 33, has averaged 8.4 points, 2.7 assists and 2.5 rebounds in 51 games.

__

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Lehkonen Delivers Again, Rallies Finland to Overtime Thriller in Olympic Quarterfinal

MILAN — Artturi Lehkonen’s timing has become a storyline of its own.

When the stakes rise and the clock tightens, the puck seems to find his stick — and more often than not, history follows.

That script played out again Tuesday at Rho Arena, where Lehkonen delivered another signature moment, scoring 3:32 into overtime to lift Finland to a stunning 3–2 comeback victory over Switzerland in the quarterfinals of the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026. The breakaway winner propelled Finland into the semifinals of an Olympics featuring NHL players for the fifth time in six appearances.

Lehkonen’s flair for decisive goals is hardly new. He scored four game-winners during the Stanley Cup run with the Colorado Avalanche in 2022, including the goal that clinched the Cup and another that sent Colorado to the Final. The year before, he buried the overtime winner that carried the Montreal Canadiens into the Stanley Cup Final. His résumé of pivotal strikes has quietly grown into one of hockey’s most reliable trends.

Against Switzerland, Finland needed every ounce of that pedigree.

Trailing 2–0 with just over six minutes remaining in regulation, Finland’s tournament appeared to be slipping away. Switzerland had dictated the pace early and defended with composure, frustrating a Finnish roster composed entirely of NHL talent.

Switzerland seized control in the first period with two goals in 72 seconds. Damien Riat opened the scoring at 14:14 after Ken Jäger intercepted a pass behind Finland’s net and fed him for an easy finish into an open cage. Moments later, Nino Niederreiter doubled the advantage, stepping into a one-timer from the left circle off a pass from Pius Suter that sailed over Juuse Saros’ glove, with Niko Mikkola screening his own goaltender.

From there, the Swiss leaned into structure and discipline, protecting the lead with poise and forcing Finland to chase.

Finland finally broke through at 13:54 of the third period when Sebastian Aho snapped a wrist shot past Leonardo Genoni to cut the deficit to one. With Saros pulled for an extra attacker late, Miro Heiskanen tied the game at 18:48, firing a shot from the point that deflected off Swiss defenseman Jonas Siegenthaler and into the net. The equalizer, scored with 1:12 remaining, marked Finland’s latest game-tying goal in Olympic play during the NHL era.

The momentum shift was unmistakable.

Overtime required only one mistake — and one moment of instinct.

Anton Lundell carried the puck cleanly out of Finland’s zone and threaded a pass ahead to Lehkonen, who slipped behind defenseman Dean Kukan. Alone on a breakaway, Lehkonen glided in and snapped a wrist shot past Genoni, sealing yet another chapter in his growing catalogue of clutch performances.

Saros, who surrendered two early goals, steadied thereafter and finished with 21 saves. Genoni turned aside 28 shots in defeat as Switzerland — which dressed eight NHL players — came within six minutes of reaching its first Olympic semifinal.

Finland now advances to face Canada in Friday’s semifinal (10:40 a.m. ET; Peacock, USA [JIP], ICI Télé, CBC Gem, CBC [JIP], SN [JIP], RDS2), turning its attention toward another medal opportunity.

The Finns enter the next round seeking to defend the gold medal they captured at the 2022 Beijing Games, an Olympics held without NHL participation. In previous Olympic tournaments featuring NHL players, Finland has claimed three bronze medals (1998, 2010, 2014) and one silver (2006). Now, with another Lehkonen dagger etched into memory, the pursuit of a second straight Olympic title remains alive.

When the margins disappear and the pressure peaks, Finland has learned a simple truth: if the puck finds Artturi Lehkonen, the ending rarely stays uncertain for long.

Suarez leads No. 12 TCU women to 72-50 win over Houston

HOUSTON (AP) — Marta Suarez scored 21 points with the help of 5-for-10 shooting from 3-point range and No. 12-ranked TCU throttled Houston 72-50 on Wednesday night.

Olivia Miles scored 18 points and reserve Veronica Sheffey 11 for TCU (24-4, 12-3 Big 12), which shot just 39% (26 of 66).

Kyndall Hunter scored 20 points for Houston (7-19, 1-14) which struggled shooting even more than TCU, finishing at 23% (14 of 60) including 13% (2 of 15) from beyond the 3-point line.

TK Pitts grabbed 11 rebounds for Houston.

TCU built an 11-6 lead through the midway the first quarter and never trailed. The Horned Frogs led 19-8 at the end of one and 41-19 at the half. Houston produced its best offensive quarter in the third shooting 6 of 16 but were still outscored 22-18.

The Horned Frogs are trying to become the first program in conference history to win two straight regular season championships within three seasons of finishing in last place.

Houston has lost five straight and 14 of its last 15.

Up Next

TCU: Hosts Iowa State on Sunday.

Houston: Travels to face Arizona State on Saturday. ___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP women’s college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketball

Wake Forest jumps out early, beats Clemson 85-77

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — Juke Harris scored 20 points to lead five Demon Deacons in double-figure scoring, and Wake Forest jumped out early and cruised past Clemson 85-77 on Wednesday night.

Clemson trailed by as many as 20 points midway through the first half and were down 13 at halftime. The Tigers opened the second half on a 9-1 surge to pull to 46-41 but didn’t get closer.

Sebastian Akins added 16 points for Wake Forest, which shot 55% (28 of 51) overall. Myles Colvin made four 3-pointers and scored all 14 of his points in the first half for the Demon Deacons. Mekhi Mason finished with 13 points and Tre’Von Spillers scored 10.

Wake Forest (14-12, 5-8 Atlantic Coast Conference) has won three consecutive games since ending a five-game skid. Clemson (20-7, 10-4) has lost three straight.

Jake Wahlin made three 3-pointers and scored 17 points to lead Clemson. Carter Welling and Ace Buckner added 13 points apiece.

Wake Forest took the lead for good about two minutes in and used a 22-8 opening run to help build a 45-32 halftime lead. The Demon Deacons had their largest lead, 45-25, with 2:27 left before halftime. Wahlin scored nine first-half points for Clemson.

Wake Forest shot 67% (18 of 27) overall in the first half and made 6 of 12 from long range.

Up next

Clemson hosts Florida State on Saturday.

Wake Forest is on the road Saturday to face Virginia Tech.

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Agee's 17 point, 10 rebound double-double helps Texas A&M beat Ole Miss 80-77, snap four-game skid

COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Rashaun Agee had 17 points, 10 rebounds and five assists, Zach Clemence and Marcus Hill scored 14 points apiece, and Texas A&M erased a 13-point second-half deficit Wednesday night to beat Mississippi 80-77 and snap a four-game skid.

Ole Miss (11-15, 3-10 SEC), which had lost four in a row by double figures, has now lost eight straight.

Ruben Dominguez had 13 points and five assists for Texas A&M (18-8, 8-5).

AJ Storr scored 16 of his 21 in the second half and Malik Dia — who left the game due to an apparent ankle injury with almost three minutes remaining — had 20 points on 10 of 14 shooting for the Rebels. Ilias Kamardine added 12 points and Patton Pinkins had 11.

Ole Miss took its biggest lead of the game at 63-50 when Dia threw down a dunk with 11:46 left in the game. He followed with another dunk son after to make it a 10-point lead with 7:06 left. Texas A&M closed the game on a 19-6 run and held the Rebels scoreless for the final 3 1/2 minutes. Dominguez sparked the spurt with a 3-pointer, added three free throws and hit another 3. Clemence had six points before Agee scored the last four of the game.

Texas A&M shot 61% (19 of 31) in the second half.

Agee made a driving layup that capped a 10-2 run and gave the Aggies a 78-77 lead — their first since 18-17 — with 1:58 left.

The Rebels had a season-high 23 fast break points and scored 20 points off 13 Texas A&M turnovers.

Up next

Ole Miss: Hosts No. 12 Florida on Saturday.

Texas A&M: Plays Saturday at Oklahoma.

___

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Ament matches career-high 29 points, leads Tennessee over Oklahoma 89-66

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Nate Ament matched a career high with 29 points to lead Tennessee to an 89-66 victory over Oklahoma on Wednesday night.

Tennessee (19-7, 9-4 Southeastern Conference) never trailed and held a double-digit lead for most of the second half. The Volunteers have won three straight and seven of their last eight.

Ament shot 9 of 17 from the floor, 8 of 8 from the free-throw line and made three of the Volunteers' five 3-pointers. Felix Okpara made five dunks and finished with 18 points for Tennessee. Ja’Kobi Gillespie added 16 points and DeWayne Brown II chipped in with 13 points off the bench.

The Volunteers shot 52% (33 of 63) overall and scored 31 points from 15 Oklahoma turnovers.

Nijel Pack made four 3s and scored 20 points to lead Oklahoma (13-13, 3-10), which ended its two-game win streak. Tae Davis added 12 points and Derrion Reid scored 10.

Ament scored 12 points and Gillespie added nine to help Tennessee build a 45-36 halftime lead. Pack and Davis scored eight points apiece in the first half for the Sooners, who shot 52% from the floor and hit 5 of 12 from long range.

Up next

Oklahoma hosts Texas A&M on Saturday.

Tennessee plays at No. 19 Vanderbilt on Saturday.

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Collins scores 23 points leading No. 20 Texas Tech women to drubbing over No. 15 Baylor 87-56

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — Reserve Snudda Collins scored 23 points on 9-for-15 shooting and 20th-ranked Texas Tech waylaid No. 15 Baylor 87-56 on Wednesday night.

Bailey Maupin scored 22 points with the help of 4-of-7 shooting from 3-point range and Gemma Nunez and Sarengbe Sanogo scored 10 apiece for the Lady Raiders (24-4, 11-4 Big 12).

The Lady Raiders shot 56% (34 of 61) overall.

Taliah Scott and Darianna Littlepage-Buggs each scored 13 for Baylor (22-6, 11-4), which shot 36% (20 of 55).

Texas Tech built a 12-6 lead by the midway point of the first quarter and never trailed. Collins made a 3-pointer and followed with a layup to give Texas Tech a 22-12 lead. Scott ended the quarter with a 3 for Baylor.

A 10-2 run highlighted by a pair of Maupin 3s to start the second quarter pushed the advantage to 32-17 with 7:54 left before halftime. Texas Tech went to the half up 48-28.

Despite missing their first five shots to start the third, Texas Tech ended it converting 5 of 6 and led 67-44 at the end of three.

The win marks Texas Tech's first season sweep over Baylor since the 2003-04 season.

Texas Tech beat Baylor 61-60 in the conference opener for both team on Dec. 21. It ended the Bears' 31-game win streak over the Lady Raiders going back to 2011. That was Tech’s first win in Waco since Feb. 8, 2004.

Wednesday's win was Texas Tech's first in Lubbock over Baylor since Jan. 15, 2006.

Baylor leads the series 56-49.

Up Next

Baylor: Hosts Arizona on Saturday.

Texas Tech: Travels to face Colorado on Saturday.

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A final look at the Jeremy Sochan era of Spurs basketball

SAN ANTONIO, TX - SEPTEMBER 10: Jeremy Sochan #10 of the San Antonio Spurs looks on during the flood relief event on September 10, 2025 at the College Park Center in Arlington, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

After the rumors of a potential trade before the deadline, Jeremy Sochan’s time in San Antonio ended with even less fanfare than expected. Sochan was bought out and joined the Knicks, and the Spurs used their open roster spot to sign Mason Plumlee to bolster their center depth. It was a banal ending to what once was an exciting partnership.

Sochan was the first lottery pick of the tank era, which started with the Derrick White trade. He was a charismatic, flawed, intriguing first piece, and fans understandably latched on to his development while looking for hope in those early days. The attachment to Sochan continued even as his minutes dwindled and his importance to the rebuild declined, so it’s sad to see him go.

The question is, what went wrong? Sochan thinks it was a lack of opportunities from a coach with whom he didn’t see eye to eye. It was clear since Mitch Johnson took over that he wasn’t as high on Sochan as Gregg Popovich. But what happened before that is as important to understanding why a former lottery pick ended up waived before his rookie contract expired, and why it wasn’t that big of a surprise.

Under Gregg Popovich, the Spurs tried extremely hard to make things work with Sochan, but failed

Any discussion about Sochan has to start with the inconsistency in roles and positions he faced. Most people, myself included, hated the Point Sochan experiment for good reason: the skills to make it work just weren’t there, at least then. Sochan was a solid ball handler and passer for his position, but he wasn’t suited to be an on-ball creator, especially with the supporting cast he had around him. It seemed like they were setting him up to fail. As it was happening, it made no sense.

Looking back, it was probably done to find a way to keep Sochan on the floor even after his rookie year convinced the decision-makers that he wouldn’t be able to excel as a regular power forward. The most likely explanation for the seemingly nonsensical experiment is that it was an attempt to hide him on offense at one of the few positions/roles in which a consistent three-pointer is not a must: primary ball handler. (It’s also the likely reason why the Spurs are running their offense through Stephon Castle now, despite having De’Aaron Fox around.) The explanation that it was done to help develop his floor game is debunked by the way they used him next.

After their failed primary ball handler experiment, the Spurs moved Sochan to the only other role in which a complementary guy can survive without having to shoot: rim-running center. The fit was better with Sochan as an off-ball finisher. He set good screens and dived, roamed the baseline for dumpoffs, and crashed the offensive glass when the help defender overcommitted. As Victor Wembanyama developed as a shooter, he was able to space the floor for Sochan, and they switched positions on defense, with Victor patrolling the paint and Sochan hounding ball handlers. It worked for Sochan on offense, and it allowed the coaching staff to have their best perimeter defender on the floor.

The problem is that it makes no sense to build a team around Sochan. He’s simply not a star, and his skills weren’t unique enough. When there were no better options, the coaching staff made the pieces fit as well as they could, but when Stephon Castle replaced the perimeter defense he provided, and Keldon Johnson and Luke Kornet supplied the energy and offensive rebounding he used to deliver, Sochan’s minutes dwindled. Yes, Mitch Johnson could have made some room for Sochan next to Wemby and next to Kelly Olynyk, something he tried a few times, but with a potential replacement in place with similar defensive upside and no broken shot in Carter Bryant (coincidentally starting his rookie contract as Sochan’s ended), the coaching staff focused on the future.

The Spurs could have tried to just let Sochan succeed or fail by playing him exclusively at power forward. But they correctly realized that without a shot, the latter was the most likely outcome. There’s a reason very few players who approximate Sochan’s skill set get consistent minutes on good teams.

Maybe Sochan will make the Spurs look silly in a few years, but it doesn’t feel likely

Does that mean Sochan has no place in the NBA? Of course not, as the Spurs themselves proved. There’s a simple recipe that makes him useful: slot him at center on offense next to a perimeter-oriented big man, have him guard perimeter scorers on the other end, and enjoy his intensity and edge. You don’t build a team around Sochan or bend over backwards to find him minutes when you have better options, but if you already have a roster in which his skill set makes sense, he can contribute. The Knicks are such a team. Karl-Anthony Towns got Jarred Vanderbilt, one of the players most similar to Sochan, an extension when the two were in Minnesota, and he could do the same now.

There is a chance Sochan is in the league for 10 more years, even if the shot never develops much, but his other skills do. Derrick Jones Jr. and Toumani Camara, to name a few, have gotten just good enough at shooting that they can leverage their athleticism and defense into playing time and eight-figure deals. Sochan is only 22, so the shot might eventually become viable, and his career prospects would improve massively if that happens. Reaching the PJ Washington/Santi Aldama tier is not out of the question for him. There is a reason most teams don’t end up waving young players they drafted in the lottery, and it’s not just them falling for the sunk cost fallacy.

So maybe the Spurs will miss out on a solid role player, but after three and a half seasons, it doesn’t feel like they are missing out on the next Aaron Gordon or Draymond Green. They seem convinced that he’s simply not special on the court, which at this point is a safe bet. It might seem harsh to say this, but he’s no longer necessary, not because he’s replaceable, but because he has already been replaced.


It’s always hard to say goodbye to homegrown talent that represented hope during dark times. Sochan’s personality, feistiness, and commitment to doing whatever was asked of him to improve make moving on even more difficult. Those who were fans of his and think he was wronged will be hurt and need their time to mourn. But hopefully, they will eventually find solace in the fact that even without Sochan, the Spurs seem on their way to reaching the goal they set for themselves the year they drafted him.

Steph Curry out tomorrow vs. Celtics

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 14: Stephen Curry #30 of Team USA Stripes poses for a portrait during the NBA All-Star Game Portraits as part of NBA All-Star Weekend on Saturday, February 14, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Zach Barron/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

After hopes that Steph Curry will be rested and ready in time for the Golden State Warriors’ first post-All-Star-break game against the Boston Celtics, those hopes were quickly dashed.

Still bothered by what was diagnosed as “patellofemoral pain syndrome,” or commonly known as “runner’s knee,” Curry will miss tomorrow night’s game against the Celtics, his sixth consecutive missed game.

Furthermore, it will be the 17th game of the season that Curry will miss. Any more will automatically disqualify him for regular-season awards.

Curry and the team’s training staff held Curry back from team activities and workouts, reportedly because Curry felt that his knee wasn’t ready.

Furthermore, per Steve Kerr, there is a chance that Curry will undergo another MRI on his injured knee.

LaMelo Ball car crash in Charlotte: What we know

Charlotte Hornets star LaMelo Ball was involved in a car accident Wednesday afternoon in Uptown Charlotte in which his custom 2022 Hummer struck a gray Kia sedan, reports and online video of the incident appears to show.

WSOC-TV published footage of the wreck on its website.

According to WSOC, the collision happened when Ball's vehicle — driving west on Trade Street — attempted to make a left turn onto Tryon Street and crashed into the gray Kia, which was going east on Trade.

One person had minor injuries, and witnesses reportedly saw Ball hop out of the Hummer and into a Lamborghini.

Footage and photos of the incident can be seen below:

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: LaMelo Ball car crash: What we know about Hummer wreck in Charlotte