Marchand scores in shootout, Panthers beat Bruins, his former team, 5-4

SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — Brad Marchand scored in the fourth round of the shootout in his return to Florida's lineup after missing two games to give the Panthers a 5-4 win over the Boston Bruins, his former team, on Wednesday night.

Anton Lundell had a goal and two assists for his second three-point game of the season, while Matthew Tkachuk and Uvis Balinskis had a goal and an assist each as the Panthers ended a four-game losing streak. Sergei Bobrovsky made 25 saves.

Michael Eyssimont scored twice for the Bruins, who have lost two straight games in Florida in a shootout, including Sunday’s NHL Stadium Series game against the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Mark Kastelic and Casey Mittelstadt also had goals and Joonas Korpisalo had 22 saves.

The Panthers trailed 2-1 after the first period despite taking the lead on a goal from Eetu Luostarinen at 4:22.

Eyssimont scored a pair of goals on breakaways — including one when he came racing out of the penalty box and got Bobrovsky to go down, leaving the net open enough for him to be able to tuck the puck in.

Florida scored three goals on special teams in the second, two on the power play and one short-handed.

Balinskis tied the score 30 seconds into the period. Tkachuk made it 3-2 at 2:22 on a power-play goal and the Panthers made it 4-2 with 1:27 remaining in the second, Sam Reinhart feeding Lundell off the rush while Florida was killing off a penalty.

Boston pulled within one at 4-3 in third on Kastelic's goal and tied it when Mittelstadt collected a rebound off a David Pastrnak shot and lifted the puck over Bobrovsky with 9:30 remaining while on the power play.

Boston went 1 for 7 on the power play.

Up next

Bruins: Host Columbus on Feb. 26.

Panthers: Visit Tampa Bay on Thursday night.

___

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Canadiens beat Jets 5-1 to extend points streak to 5 games

WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — Brendan Gallagher and Josh Anderson each had a goal and two assists, Samuel Montembeault stopped 36 shots to earn his first win since Jan. 17 and the Montreal Canadiens beat the Winnipeg Jets 5-1 on Wednesday night.

Rookie Oliver Kapanen, Lane Hutson and Phillip Danault, also scored for the Canadiens, who are 4-0-1 during a five-game points streak and 6-2-1 in their last nine.

Montembeault, who made his first start since Jan. 24, had given up three or more goals in five of his six previous starts.

Kyle Connor scored for the Jets and Connor Hellebuyck made 22 saves.

Winnipeg took an early 1-0 lead when Connor scored his 25th goal on a one-timer during a power play at 6:07 of the first period.

Kapanen, who’s heading to the Olympics for Finland, got his 18th goal 10 minutes later when a rebound went off Jet Cole Perfetti’s stick right to him and he then flipped the puck past a sprawled Hellebuyck.

Montreal went ahead 3-1 at 6:44 of the second after goals 76 seconds apart by Anderson and Hutson.

The Jets missed a chance to pull closer then they hit a post and Montembeault later snagged a close-in shot by Dylan DeMelo. They were also stymied on four shots on goal during a power play early in the third.

Gallagher’s goal came with 3 seconds left on a power play at 10:57 of the third. Danault put the puck into an empty net with 14 seconds remaining to cap the scoring.

Up next

Canadiens: Host the New York Islanders on Feb. 26.

Jets: At Vancouver on Feb. 25.

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Dai Dai Ames scores career-high 29, Cal beats Georgia Tech after blowing 15-point lead

BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — Dai Dai Ames scored a career-high 29 points on 9-of-13 shooting and California blew a double-digit lead on Wednesday before the Golden Bears beat Georgia Tech 90-85.

John Camden had 15 points, Chris Bell scored 14 points, and Justin Pippen finished with 13 points, seven rebounds and six assists for Cal (17-6, 5-5 ACC). Milos Ilic had 11 points and nine rebounds.

Akai Fleming led Georgia Tech (11-12, 2-8) with 19 points, 15 in the second half, and Chas Kelley III scored 15. Jaeden Mustaf and Kam Craft added 14 points apiece and Baye Ndongo had 10 points, 12 rebounds, eight assists. Georgia Tech has lost three in a row and six of seven. Ndongo suffered an apparent non-contact injury to his left leg moments before he fouled out 43 seconds left.

Fleming scored eight consecutive Georgia Tech points — which included two 3-pointers — to cut the deficit to 80-77 with 1:08 to play. The Bears then made 10 of 12 from the free-throw line in the final 48 seconds to seal it.

Ames made back-to-back baskets before Ilic converted a three-point play that made it 7-0 a little more than two minutes into the game. The Bears took a 43-29 lead into the intermission.

Ames hit a 3-pointer 42 seconds into the second half that gave the Bears a 15-point lead, their biggest of the game. Craft then scored eight consecutive Yellow Jackets points in a 20-3 run that game them their first lead when Fleming's layup with 14:37 to play made it 51-49.

Mouhamed Sylla (ankle) and Peyton Marshall (right thumb) did not play for Georgia Tech.

Up next

Georgia Tech: The Yellow Jackets play Saturday at Stanford.

California: The Bears host Clemson on Saturday.

___

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Yessoufou scores 27, Baylor beats Colorado 86-67

WACO, Texas (AP) — Tounde Yessoufou scored 27 points, and Baylor rolled to an 86-67 win over Colorado on Wednesday in Big 12 play.

Baylor (13-9, 3-7 Big 12) dominated the first half, jumping out to a 45-21 lead behind hot shooting and a barrage of early 3-pointers. Yessoufou went 10 of 16 from the field and added seven rebounds as the Bears shot 53% overall and 42% from behind the arc.

Cameron Carr and Obi Agbim each scored 19 points for the Bears, combining for six 3-pointers. Carr added eight rebounds and six assists, while Agbim finished with six assists. Baylor made 20 of 25 free throws and outrebounded the Buffaloes 32-26.

Colorado (13-10, 3-7) never cut the deficit to single digits in the second half despite a late push from its bench. Ian Inman scored 10 points on 4-for-6 shooting, including a pair of 3-pointers, and Jalin Holland added 12. Barrington Hargress scored 11, and Isaiah Johnson finished with 10 points and four assists.

The Buffaloes shot 40% from the field and 41% from 3 but outscored the Bears 46-41 after halftime. Baylor answered every run, stretching the margin to 70-41 on a Carr jumper with 8:27 remaining and maintained control the rest of the way.

Up Next

Baylor travels to No. 7 Iowa State on Saturday.

Colorado hosts Arizona State this Saturday.

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Kingston Flemings leads No. 8 Houston to a 79-55 victory over UCF

HOUSTON (AP) — Kingston Flemings had 18 points and six assists, Chris Cenac Jr. added 14 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 8 Houston beat Central Florida 79-55 on Wednesday night.

Cenac and Flemings combined for 22 points on 10-of-17 shooting in the first half as Houston (20-2, 8-1 Big 12) took a 33-19 lead into halftime. The duo finished 15 of 25 from the field.

Milos Uzan scored 12 points for the Cougars, who shot 55% from the floor despite going 3 for 19 from 3-point range. Houston had a 40-29 advantage in rebounds and outscored the Knights 42-14 in the paint.

The Cougars won their 17th straight at home and have won 50 of their last 51 home games. Houston also won its 11th straight over UCF.

The victory gave the Cougars their 11th straight 20-win season under coach Kelvin Sampson.

Riley Kugel had nine points for UCF (17-5, 6-4), which had won three in a row. The Knights shot 31% and were 6 of 21 on 3-pointers.

The Knights fell to 2-3 this season against ranked teams and 4-5 in Quad 1 games as they look to shore up their NCAA Tournament resume.

Leading by one, Houston went on an 18-5 run over an eight-minute span to open a 27-13 advantage on Cenac's jumper with 3:50 left in the first half. UCF shot 2 for 13 during the Cougars’ spurt.

Houston's lead never dipped below double digits the rest of the way.

Up next

UCF visits Cincinnati on Sunday.

Houston plays at No. 16 BYU on Saturday.

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Aden Holloway, Latrell Wrightsell Jr. lift Alabama to 100-97 win over Texas A&M

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Aden Holloway scored 20 points, Latrell Wrightsell Jr. hit the go-ahead 3-pointer with about a minute left, and Alabama outlasted Texas A&M 100-97 on Wednesday night.

In a game that saw 28 lead changes and 13 ties, Wrightsell's 3-pointer gave the Crimson Tide a 97-95 lead with 1:11 remaining. Holloway’s layup made it 99-95 with 22 seconds left.

Later trailing 100-97, the Aggies had one last chance to tie, but Rylan Griffen missed a 3-pointer as time ran out.

Labaron Philon scored 17 points, Wrightsell 16, Amari Allen 12 and London Jemison 10 off the bench for Alabama (15-7, 5-4 SEC).

Rashaun Agee led Texas A&M with 21 points. Marcus Hill scored 18 points and Griffen added 17 for the Aggies (17-5, 7-2), who fell into a first-place tie with Florida, their next opponent.

Both teams rely heavily on the 3-pointer and there were 79 attempted 3s in the game. Alabama made 16 of 48 and Texas A&M hit on 13 of 31.

Jemison scored seven points in Alabama's 12-2 run that gave the Crimson Tide a 28-19 lead midway through the first half. The Aggies responded with two dunks by Jamie Vinson and 3-pointers from Griffen and Zach Clemence to take a 29-28 lead with seven minutes remaining in the half.

There were four lead changes in the next couple of minutes then Texas A&M went up by six on a 3-pointer by Vinson. Alabama hit three 3s in the final 3 1/2 minutes, the last from Wrightsell at the buzzer to tie the score at 46.

Up next

Texas A&M: The Aggies host No. 17 Florida on Saturday.

Alabama: The Crimson Tide visit Auburn on Saturday. ___

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Winners, Losers from shocking Anthony Davis trade to Washington

After months of "will they/won't they" speculation about the Mavericks trading Anthony Davis at the deadline, the buzz around a potential deadline trade had died down, and this looked like something pushed back into the summer.

Then a Davis to the Wizards trade came out of nowhere. It's a big trade, but was it a big win for any of the parties involved? Let's get into it.

Just as a reminder, the trade broke down like this:

Dallas receives: Khris Middleton, AJ Johnson, Malaki Branham, Marvin Bagley III, two first-round picks (2026 from Oklahoma City that will likely be the 30th pick, 2030 from Golden State but top-20 protected, then it converts to a second), three second-round picks.
Washington receives: Anthony Davis, Jaden Hardy, D'Angelo Russell, Dante Exum

Loser: Luka Doncic trade

We had deemed the Luka Dončić trade a loser when it happened, but this cemented its legacy as one of the worst trades in NBA history.

For the record, the Mavericks ultimately traded one of the top five players in the world entering his prime for Max Christie, three first-round picks, three second-round picks, and about $40 million in cap space. That's it.

To be fair, we should judge the new Dallas front office for what it did in this trade — they were not the architects of that mess. Still, Nico Harrison's mistake casts a shadow over everything.

Mavericks fans, just remind yourself you lucked into Cooper Flagg. Things could be much worse.

Mid: Dallas Mavericks

There are positives to this trade for the Mavericks — Patrick Dumont and Dallas ownership probably love it, this was an old-school salary dump that got them out of the luxury tax. And they don't have to pay Davis $58.5 million next season (with a player option for $62 million the following season).

It's just hard to get past how sad a return the team got for Davis.

To be fair, the Mavericks did about as well in this trade as they could considering how Davis and his contract are viewed around the league at this point. The reality is Harrison massively overvalued Davis — or, at least, only envisioned Davis as the healthy, best version of himself — and this season, with his injuries, knocked that value down. In that context, this trade doesn't deserve a failing grade, but the Mavericks didn't ace the test either. Hence, the "mid" grade.

What Dallas got was a massive cap savings this season and next. The Mavericks were up against the second apron, and now they are $7.5 million below the tax line. That is a colossal savings for ownership and the franchise, and going forward, the front office (whoever is ultimately hired to run it) has more flexibility and can even take on some salary.

Still, the return for Davis is laughably bad. Middleton is past his prime and maybe they keep AJ Johnson long term, but he doesn't exactly move the needle.

What the Mavs got were a couple of very late first-round picks, some seconds and a bunch of expiring or minimum contracts. It's hard to imagine there wasn't a better return out there, though this might be the return ownership prefers.

Winner: Washington Wizards

Welcome to Washington, home of the distressed asset.

Team president Michael Winger has been discount shopping, first getting Trae Young out of Atlanta for basically matching salary, and now gets Anthony Davis for what one scout texted me was "a bag of chips." Think of it this way: Washington ultimately turned Bradley Beal and Kyle Kuzma into Young, Davis and five pick swaps.

Are Young and Davis worth the money on the court at this point? No. Or, at least not consistently. That said, at the price paid, bringing in a couple of former All-Star players who have had playoff success — Davis has a ring, don't forget — to guide a young core of Alex Sarr, Kyshawn George, Tre Johnson, Bilal Coulibaly and Bub Carrington is not a bad thing.

The key is Brian Keefe and his staff making sure that having those stars does not mess with the developmental arc of the young core, plus whoever the team drafts in June.

This trade also doesn't alter Washington's tanking plans for the rest of the season; we will not see Young or Davis on the court for the Wizards until next season. This team is currently tied for the fourth-worst record in the NBA and should finish in that "top" four.

If both Young and Davis are healthy for a stretch of time next season, this will be an interesting team to watch (although how Alex Sarr fits as a stretch four is up for debate, but he's young and we're not putting him in a box).

This trade is not a home run for the Wizards, but it's a solid single. That can start a rally.

Loser: Whoever has to write out Wizards injury reports

Not everybody's job got easier with this trade.

Winner: Charlotte Hornets

Charlotte controls Dallas 2027 first-round pick (well, it's top-two protected, but with Cooper Flagg and probably Kyrie Irving, the Mavericks are not going to be that bad). Next season, the Mavericks are still going to be retooling the roster around Flagg — they are not going to be terribly good. Not tanking bad, but not top four in the West either. Which means there's a good chance Charlotte gets a solid first-round pick out of this.

The 2027 draft class is not considered as deep as this coming 2026 draft, but there will be a chance to draft a quality player, wherever Charlotte picks.

No. 14 TCU women stretch home win streak to 39 with 90-45 rout over Houston

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Olivia Miles scored 25 points, Marta Suarez had 24 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 14 TCU routed Houston 90-45 on Wednesday night for the Horned Frogs' 39th straight home win.

TCU (21-3, 9-2 Big 12) entered tied with Texas for the nation's longest home winning streak. The Horned Frogs' unbeaten run at home began on Feb. 24, 2024, with a 59-49 victory over Houston. It was TCU’s first of 32 double-digit home victories.

Suarez hit three of the Horned Frogs' seven 3-pointers and Miles had six of their 19 assists. Donovyn Hunter added 15 points for TCU, which shot 58% (34 of 59) from the floor.

TCU had a double-digit lead with Suarez’s driving layup two minutes into the second quarter, and the Horned Frogs built a 44-25 advantage at the break. TCU had a 30-point lead late in the third and outscored the Cougars 24-7 in the fourth.

Kierra Merchant scored 12 points on 6-of-13 shooting to lead Houston (7-15, 1-10), which has lost 10 of its last 11. Amirah Abdur-Rahim made Houston's only two 3-pointers. The Cougars were outrebounded 46-22.

Up next

Houston: hosts No. 18 Texas Tech on Saturday.

TCU: at Colorado on Sunday.

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Montana's Hauck says he's retiring because he doesn't like dealing with the changes in college game

MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) — Bobby Hauck, coach of perennial FCS power Montana and the Big Sky Conference's all-time wins leader, announced his sudden retirement Wednesday, saying he didn't enjoy his job anymore because of the changes in college football in recent years.

Bobby Kennedy, who finished his first season as receivers coach, will succeed Hauck. Kennedy and Hauck had worked together as assistants at Washington in 2002, and Kennedy also has been on staffs at Texas and three other power conference schools.

Hauck, 61, had two stints totaling 14 years with the Grizzlies and led the team to eight Big Sky championships, 13 playoff appearances and four national championship games. The 2025 team was 13-2 and reached the national semifinals.

The Missoula native and Montana graduate was 166-92 in 19 seasons as head coach at Montana and UNLV. He was the winningest active FCS coach with a 151-43 record with the Grizzlies.

“I want to enjoy my career and my job, and a lot of the head coach stuff in current-day Division I college football is not enjoyable,” Hauck said at a news conference. “I just think it's the appropriate time.”

Hauck said he didn't know what he would do next. He said he doesn't want to be a head coach again, though.

Hauck returned to Montana in 2018, and in 2021 new NCAA rules took effect allowing players to transfer without sitting out a season at their new school and to be compensated for their name, image and likeness. Revenue sharing with athletes began last year.

“Dealing with agents and the transient nature of this and the lack of forward thinking by young people, which has never been a strong suit for centuries for young people. ... But now when they've got adults pushing them and pulling them in different directions, I kind of got tired of that.”

___

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Taliah Scott scores 26 points and No. 15 Baylor women beat Cincinnati 76-70

CINCINNATI (AP) — Taliah Scott scored 26 points and made five 3-pointers, Darianna Littlepage-Buggs had 10 points and 12 rebounds, and No. 15 Baylor beat Cincinnati 76-70 on Wednesday night.

Baylor (20-4, 9-2 Big 12) secured its 26th consecutive 20-win season — the second-longest streak in Division I behind Connecticut. The Bears have also won 17 of their last 20 road games, dating back to the 2023-24 season.

Scott scored 11 of Baylor's 25 second-quarter points to go ahead 36-33 at the break. Then Jana Van Gytenbeek scored 11 of their 20 points in the third quarter, capped by a 3-pointer with 22 seconds left for a 56-54 lead.

Scott made a driving layup with 50.9 seconds left in the fourth to extend Baylor's lead to 72-65. She added two free throws with 33.6 left on their next possession to regain a seven-point lead.

Van Gytenbeek tied her career high with 19 points for Baylor, which won for the fourth straight time in the series. Bella Fontleroy added 12 points and eight rebounds.

Mya Perry led Cincinnati (8-15, 3-8) with 20 points. Caliyah DeVillasee added 14 points and Joya Crawford had 11.

The Bears entered as the top-ranked defense for 3-pointers after holding opponents to 22.9% shooting, including 21.8% in Big 12 play. Cincinnati went 6 of 18 from distance (33%) and shot 43% overall with 13 turnovers.

Neither team led by double figures.

Up next

Baylor: Returns home to play Arizona State on Saturday.

Cincinnati: Goes on the road to face Kansas on Saturday.

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It’s time for Basketball: San Antonio Spurs vs Oklahoma City Thunder

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - JANUARY 13: Julian Champagnie #30 of the San Antonio Spurs handles the ball in front of Jaylin Williams #6 of the Oklahoma City Thunder during the second half at Paycom Center on January 13, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 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. (Photo by Joshua Gateley/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to the Game Thread. Veterans of the Game Thread know how we do things around here, but for all you newbies we have a few rules. Our community guidelines apply and basically say be cool, no personal attacks, don’t troll and don’t swear too much.

This is it, folks, the game we’ve been waiting for, as the two best teams in the Western Conference fight it out for the final time in the regular season, and we expect to see a sparkling exhibit of the finest basketball the best league in the current solar system has to offer on national television. OHHHH, WAIT, hang on a second, the injury report for the Thunder just came in.

  • Caruso, Alex: Out Injury/Illness – Right Adductor; Injury Management
  • Dieng, Ousmane: Out Not With Team [traded]
  • Dort, Luguentz: Out Injury/Illness – Right Patellofemoral joint; Inflammation
  • Gilgeous-Alexander, Shai: Out Injury/Illness – Abdominal; Strain
  • Hartenstein, Isaiah: Out Injury/Illness – Right Eye; Corneal Abrasion
  • Holmgren, Chet: Out Injury/Illness – Low Back; Spasms
  • Mitchell, Ajay: Out Injury/Illness – Abdominal; Strain
  • Sorber, Thomas: Out Injury/Illness – Right ACL; Surgical Recovery
  • Topic, Nikola: Out Injury/Illness – N/a; Surgical Recovery
  • Williams, Jalen: Out Injury/Illness – Right Hamstring; Strain

So, seven guys who played last night are not available today. The last three players on the list have more long term injuries. Available to play are: Isaiah Joe, Cason Wallace, Aaron Wiggins, Kenrich Williams, Jaylin Williams, and the three two-way players. Jared McCain was acquired in a trade with the Sixers today, but he will not be available for tonight’s game. The available players are the bottom of the roster, but the Thunder roster is incredibly deep and these guys are all good NBA players, and the Spurs can’t take a win for granted tonight.

Honestly, this looks like a big night for Victor Wembanyama, who could have more space to work than he usually has since this lineup is seriously lacking in size. Branden Carlson (one of the 2-way players) is 7’0”, so he’ll be tested tonight. Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper are both listed as questionable, so it looks like it could be a big night for De’Aaron Fox, as the Spurs will try to put the game away early to give the Spurs backups time to work against the Thunder bench players who will be forced to play big minutes. I look forward to Keldon Johnson bullying some of the Thunder wings when he enters the game.

Tonight is the first night of a back-to-back for the Silver and Black as they travel to Dallas tomorrow to face Cooper Flagg and an improving game, with a rematch on Saturday in San Antonio. Those are both important games, but the team’s focus needs to be on tonight’s game. The remaining five games for the Spurs are all against Western Conference opponents, and doing well in those contests will keep the Spurs in the running for a top playoff spot and home court advantage in the playoffs.

The Spurs won 34 games in all of last season, and they can equal that total tonight with 32 games left to play. That’s going to be an amazing achievement if they can pull it off. LETS GOOO SPURS!!

Game Prediction:

Jared McCain tries to enter the game, but his Sixers uniform confuses the referees, who don’t know who to assign the technical foul to.

San Antonio Spurs vs Oklahoma City Thunder
February 4, 2026 | 8:30 PM CT
Streaming: ESPN
TV: ESPN/FanDuel Sports Southwest
Reminder: It is against site policy to post links to illegal streams in the comments.

Mavericks trade longtime Warriors nemesis Anthoyn Davis to Wizards

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - DECEMBER 25: Anthony Davis #3 of the Dallas Mavericks warms up before the game against the Golden State Warriors on December 25, 2025 at Chase Center in San Francisco, 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 Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Golden State Warriors’ first-round pick in 2030 is on the move. That is, as long as it falls between picks 21 and 30.

The Washington Wizards swapped the Warriors’s first-round selection, one they acquired in the Chris Paul trade/Jordan Poole salary dump in 2023, to the Dallas Mavericks. Oh, they also got 10-time All-Star big man Anthony Davis.

One year after trading NBA scoring leader and All-Star starter Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers for Davis, the Mavericks flipped The Brow for a package of expiring contracts and two low-quality first-round picks. The Warriors’ pick is four years out and protected for picks 1-20, while the other is the 2026 first-rounder of the Oklahoma City Thunder, currently projected to be the last pick of the first round.

The most prominent player switching teams is Khris Middleton, who’s likely to get a buyout from the Mavericks if he wants one. Also switching teams are Dante Exum, Jaden Hardy, AJ Johnson, and former Warriors great D’Angelo Russell. The most poetic outcome would be Russell taking a buyout and returning to the Lakers one more time.

Davis played only 29 games in his year with the Mavericks, plus two play-in tournament contests. He’s currently out with a hand injury, but that’s likely just fine with the Wizards, who need to draft in the top eight this June or they owe their first-round pick to the New York Knicks. They’ve shut down Trae Young with some questionable injuries since trading for him in January, choosing to build for next season around players like Alex Sarr, Tre Johnson, and Kyshawn George.

The Wizards joined the Utah Jazz and Chicago Bulls in using their massive salary cap space for this summer on trades, rather than free agents. The Jazz added Memphis Grizzlies forward Jaren Jackson, Jr., while the Bulls have picked up two impending free agents: Detroit Pistons guard Jaden Ivey and Boston Celtics guard Anfernee Simons.

What does that mean? It leaves the Los Angeles Lakers as the lone competitive NBA team with significant cap space next summer, provided LeBron James does not return and they sign Austin Reaves to a new contract after their other moves are done.

Even a year after they got Doncic for him, the Anthony Davis trade is still paying off for the Lakers. Dammit.

Jaxson Hayes suspended for shoving mascot before Lakers-Wizards game

Los Angeles Lakers big man Jaxson Hayes was handed a one-game suspension by the NBA "for pushing a Washington Wizards mascot during pregame introductions," the league said in a statement on Wednesday, Feb. 4.

Hayes shoved the Wizards' mascot, G-Wiz, during pregame introductions before the Jan. 30 game in Washington. The mascot had been running with a giant flag when Hayes, 25, made contact, sending the mascot careening into cheerleaders running onto the court, video of the incident shows.

The Lakers will be without Hayes for Thursday night's game against the Philadelphia 76ers.

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Okananwa's 23 points help No. 22 Maryland women upset No. 12 Michigan State women 86-70

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Oluchi Okananwa scored 23 points, and the No. 22 Maryland women pulled away in the second half for an 86-70 win over No. 12 Michigan State on Wednesday.

Maryland (18-6, 6-6 Big Ten) led 43-33 at halftime and broke the game open in the third quarter.

Okananwa went 8 of 13 from the field and added four rebounds, five assists and a steal as the Terps shot 49% as a team.

Yarden Garzon added 16 points and five assists, Kyndal Walker scored 14, and Saylor Poffenbarger finished with 13 points, eight rebounds and four steals. Maryland forced 20 turnovers, which led to 23 points, while holding Michigan State to 4 of 15 from 3.

The Terps pushed the margin to 72-55 early in the fourth on Poffenbarger’s 3-pointer. Okananwa scored seven straight points soon after, including a layup and a deep 3-pointer that stretched the lead to 84-68 with under two minutes left. Maryland never allowed the Spartans to get within single digits in the final quarter.

Grace VanSlooten led Michigan State (19-4, 8-4) with 19 points, nine rebounds and four blocks. Kennedy Blair had 15 points and seven assists, while Jalyn Brown scored 13.

Up Next

Michigan State: The Spartans play Saturday at Penn State.

Maryland: The Terrapins visit Nebraska on Saturday.

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Utah’s patient rebuild vs Washington’s hasty hyper-construction

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - JANUARY 08: Anthony Davis #3 of the Dallas Mavericks holds his left hand as he reacts to pain after injuring it against Lauri Markkanen during the second half of their game at the Delta Center on January 8, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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.(Photo by Chris Gardner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There exist two rebuilding forces in today’s NBA. Though similar in intent, they are vastly different in method. And thanks to the recent action on the trade block, two perfect anecdotal examples have surfaced in two of the league’s franchises.

The Washington Wizards and the Utah Jazz. Two teams united in purpose, but divided in execution.

Both teams have waded through the muck of the NBA Draft lottery for years in the fallout of failed championship contenders of yesteryear. The Wizards capped out with their backcourt dynamic of John Wall and Bradley Beal, and have failed to reach such highs since. Time has torn this franchise to ribbons — mere scraps of a competent basketball team remain. The Jazz hit their ceiling on the core of Rudy Gobert and Donovan Mitchell, and did not hesitate to hit the big red glowing self-destruct button on the corner of owner Ryan Smith’s desk.

Stripped to their parts, both franchises lingered at the floor of the NBA standings in hopes of securing a game-changing talent in the draft, and both franchises have yet to secure their sure-fire superstar to shepherd the flock from poverty.

So, with the Feb 5 trade deadline rapidly approaching, two muddying basketball teams saw an opportunity to change their fates and jumped at it.

First was the Jazz, a team intent on retaining its core of Keyonte George, Ace Bailey, Lauri Markkanen, and Walker Kessler, who shipped off three first-round picks and four replaceable players in return for a former All-Star and Defensive Player of the Year in Jaren Jackson Jr.

Next were the Wizards, caught in the frenzy and chomping at the first big fish they saw. Like JJJ, the newest Washington Wizard is also a former All-Star and DPOY, though with a much more accomplished career. This addition is Anthony Davis, and the Wiz dealt two first-round picks, three second-rounders, and (just like Utah) four easily replaced players to obtain his services.

On the surface, these moves appear incredibly similar. Two defensive specialists capable of producing on the offensive end are arriving at their new teams, ready to pull the plug on tanking practices and set their sights on winning basketball. In truth, these trades will produce drastically different results.

I’ve already shared my thoughts on Utah’s trade for Jackson. In short, I think his addition is a brilliant use of the Jazz’s embarrassment of assets. Carrying far too many draft picks than a single team could ever hope to utilize, Utah consolidated and returned an all-star caliber big man at 26 years of age without compromising their future (the Jazz still have at least one first-round draft pick in every future draft).

Utah retains flexibility in cap space and asset management while injecting their current plans with a complementary piece. This was a calculated deal initiated with the future in mind, not an all-in gamble made in desperation.

The Wizards’ acquisition of Anthony Davis is the very definition of haste. Davis, approaching his 33rd birthday, has a list of injuries longer than his accolades (which is saying a lot). He’s played at least 60 games just twice in his last seven seasons. His most recent team, the Mavericks organization that was so certain of his value that they traded Luka Doncic unprovoked, has parted ways with him after just 29 appearances in Dallas.

The Mavs couldn’t wait to get out of the Anthony Davis business, even with the sunk cost of Doncic in LA. That says a lot to me if I were an NBA executive.

Davis is on the decline, and for a player as injury-prone as he’s proved to be over his career, a bet on an aging Davis is a bet you’re likely to lose. No matter how optimistic one could be about the Wizards’ young core (Sarr, Carrington, George, Coulibaly, Johnson, etc.), it’s unlikely that Davis will be consistently available to lead on the court as the youth mature into their primes.

Especially considering the Trae Young acquisition, it feels like the Wizards are anxious to compete for the playoffs tomorrow.

A backcourt of Young and Davis is fascinating on paper. Young, one of basketball’s most prolific shooters (by volume, not efficiency) and distributors, paired with Davis, one of the most prolific rim protectors and an excellent supplement on the offensive end, is an awesome pairing.

But is it built to last? What’s this team’s potential as currently constructed? Time will tell, but there are far fewer sands left in this hourglass compared to that of their Utahn counterparts.

The Jazz move forward without torching their timetable. The Wizards cut out the waiting game and opted for a win-now solution. From my perspective, this is the difference between investing and gambling, and the latter is often far less friendly to its participants.


Calvin Barrett is a writer, editor, and prolific Mario Kart racer located in Tokyo, Japan. He has covered the NBA and College Sports since 2024.