Olatunji and Solns score goals for Real Salt Lake in 2-2 tie with San Diego

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Victor Olatunji scored in the 85th minute and Sergi Solans also scored a goal Sunday for Real Salt Lake in a 2-2 tie with San Diego FC.

Olatunji tapped in a cross played from the right side to the back post to cap the scoring.

Rafael Cabral had three saves for Real Salt Lake (3-1-1).

Juan Manuel Sanabria played an arcing ball to the center of the area and Solans went up high for a header that slipped inside the right post to open the scoring in the 17th minute.

Marcus Ingvartsen tied it a 1-1 in the 27th minute when he poked in a loose ball from point-blank range for his fourth goal of the season.

Anders Dreyer, on the counter-attack, took a pass from Amahl Pellegrino and took a couple touches before he chipped a shot over Cabral, who had charged off his line, into a wide-open net to give RSL a 2-1 lead in the 56th minute.

Dreyer, who was second in MLS with 38 goal contributions (19 goals, 19 assists) in 2025, has three goals and three assists this season.

Christopher McVey was shown his second yellow card in the 89th minute and San Diego (3-0-2) played a man down the rest of the way.

Seven of RSL's nine first-half shots came in stoppage time.

Duran Ferree had four saves for San Diego.

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

NBA expansion only works if the league fixes tanking first

Feb 14, 2026; Los Angeles, CA, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver speaks at press conference during the NBA All Star game at the Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Recently, it was reported that expansion is being discussed for the 2028/29 season. Would it be a good decision that elevates the game, or would it lead to a dilution of talent? 

Jacob Douglas: There is a surplus in NBA talent right now, but there is a lack of competent front offices and organizations that can capitalize on that talent. The league’s tanking problem makes it a tough time to support expansion. Do we really want to add two more teams that are getting blown out by 30-40 points in March while sitting their starters? That said, I hope that Seattle gets their team back in some capacity. The city has a rich basketball culture and needs a pro team to match it. 

Bill Huan: It’s absolutely a good decision. Every team in the league has multiple guys who can drop 40+ on any given night, assuming they’re actually fielding their best lineup. The bigger issue is tanking, and having more teams might mean that more front offices will deem it necessary to tank, but that shouldn’t stop the league from expanding. The quantity and quality of talent have never been higher, and it makes sense to showcase that skill in more places to grow the game. My only concern is the NBA prioritizing Vegas as a potential destination. The city isn’t the party hub it once was, and there are already countless pro sports teams there already. Wouldn’t it make more sense to give Vancouver another chance, so that they could create an instant rivalry with Seattle while growing the game in a country that’s producing more NBA talent than ever before? Or how about Mexico City, where there’s already a G League team in place? There’s enough interest in basketball in the States — if Adam Silver wants to maximize growth, he needs to consider America’s neighbors.

Devon Birdsong: I’m of the opinion that expansion is always the right choice when a league has the right mixture of appeal and finances, and I think the NBA is going to be hard-pressed to find a better time to do so. Growing up around and writing about the only “Big Four” professional sports team in the area has given me a lot of perspective regarding what that might mean for a city without multiple teams, so I’d prefer to see the second team go somewhere other than Vegas. As it is, there seems to be some conversation about the Grizzlies potentially moving to Nashville, and I’d really feel for Memphis fans if that came to pass. Expansion might forestall that. As for dilution of talent, that seems like a thin excuse not to. There are only 450 players on permanent rosters as is, and with two-ways, that approaches 500+, so I think it’s safe to say that there’s room for 30 more players out of that surplus without much issue. The bigger issue, in my view, is tanking. It doesn’t matter what the talent balance is if you have too many teams losing on purpose.

Jeje Gomez: The talent is there. The problem is how it’s spread around. There are no real superteams, and the draconian apron rules should lead to more player movement eventually, as some teams go back to prioritizing free agency when others simply can’t retain all their stars, an issue the Spurs might experience as their young players become more expensive. The problem is that, as long as rookie contracts and restricted free agency are in place, the best way to acquire cheap talent will be through the draft, which might lead to more teams tanking, which subsequently will give the illusion of dilution, even if there are more good players now than ever. An example of that are the Wizards, who traded for two All-Stars but don’t seem all that interested in playing them. The biggest battle the league will have to win when it comes to expansion is a battle of perception, since a lot of fans already think there are too many games and bad teams.

If Seattle and Las Vegas get the two expansion teams as reported, two Western Conference teams will have to move to the East. Which teams should go to the weaker conference?

Douglas: Minnesota, Memphis, and New Orleans could all easily be moved to the East. Minnesota would easily slot into the Central division with Chicago, Milwaukee, Detroit, Indiana, and Cleveland. Memphis could make sense in that conference, or in the Southeast with Charlotte, Atlanta, Miami, Washington, and Atlanta. New Orleans could go to the Southeast, but given their proximity to the Texas teams in the Southwest division, I’d keep them in the West. 

Huan: I agree with Jacob here: it should be Minnesota and Memphis given their proximity, and New Orleans can stay in the West since they’re already close to the Texas teams. Having young stars in Ant and whoever Memphis gets in the lottery this year will also be important to give the East more players to feature and market, and hopefully even out the talent across the two conferences some more. 

Birdsong: Geographically speaking, Minnesota is an obvious choice. I would also include Oklahoma City. Not as much because it makes sense as because I hate them. And also, I would like to avoid playing them on the Western side of the playoff bracket. Actually, if you were asking me to do this out of pure spite, I would also include either the Rockets or the Lakers alongside the Thunder. Maybe the Clippers as a third choice to atone for their multitude of sins. Much more satisfying if you ask me. I’d be the most beloved NBA commissioner in San Antonio history. 

Gomez: Minnesota and Memphis feel like the best answers, not only because of proximity but because moving the Pelicans to the East could create a future problem if the franchise moves. New Orleans can probably support a good NBA team and should get a chance to prove that, but they have struggled to consistently create one so far, and they seem like the type of franchise that could be relocated if the league eventually tries to go to Mexico or Canada. To avoid a new reshuffling in the future, keeping the Pelicans in the West might be the smart move, even though they would probably love to go to the weaker conference.

Expansion is not coming for a while, but if it were to happen this offseason, which eight players should the Spurs protect?

Douglas: This will probably change in a few years, but the score to keep around is Wembanyama, Castle, Harper, Fox, Vassell, Johnson, Bryant, and Champagnie. No offense to Kornet, who has been incredible this season, but we’ve seen quality big men picked up on cheaper deals by other teams in the last few seasons. I have confidence that San Antonio could find another quality big man if Kornet were to be drafted to Seattle or Vegas. 

Huan: Off the top of my head, it should be Wemby, Harper, Castle, Fox, Champagnie, Vassell, Johnson, and Bryant. Devon brought up the idea of leaving Fox unprotected, which will likely gain some traction, but I’d still avoid that. Yes, his contract isn’t the greatest, but we’ve seen star-level players get traded time and time again in recent years, even with questionable contracts. We can’t risk letting a talent like Fox go for free, and by the time the expansion teams come in, he’ll already be on the second-last year of his current deal. Even factoring a decline and the contract potentially becoming negative value, opposing teams are always willing to make deals with soon-to-be-expiring money. 

Birdsong: Based on the roster right now, I’d say Wemby, Castle, Harper, Vassell, Keldon, Kornet, Bryant, and Champagnie. My reason for not protecting Fox is largely strategic due to his contract. Expansion teams may be leery of taking on a max contract so early in their existence, and if not, it saves the Spurs having to figure out what to do with that contract if Fox begins to decline (and no, he is not currently). Of course, a lot of this depends on how the postseason goes. If the Spurs bring Larry home, I 100% stand by my order. If not…I may have to make changes to it. 

Gomez: Since we are talking about the upcoming season for this exercise, I’d go with Wembanyama, Fox, Castle, Harper, Vassell, Bryant, Johnson, and Champagnie. Kornet is in a great contract, but so is Champagnie, and he’s younger and plays a position that has more scarcity. Not protecting Fox and daring the expansion teams to take on his contract could be smart, but if they call the Spurs’ bluff, San Antonio would be losing a key player. If we are talking years down the line, the list would change and Fox would likely not be protected, but for now, he’s too important.

Lakers star Luka Doncic clear to play at Detroit after the NBA rescinds his 16th technical foul

Los Angeles Lakers star Luka Doncic is clear to play Monday night at Detroit after the NBA rescinded his 16th technical foul of the season.

Doncic and Magic center Goga Bitadze each received a technical foul with 1:19 left in the third quarter of Los Angeles' 105-104 win at Orlando on Saturday night. The players exchanged words while Doncic was at the free-throw line, and appeared to continue the conversation on the way down the court.

The NBA announced on Sunday that the technical on each player had been rescinded. A 16th technical foul triggers a one-game suspension.

The Lakers have won nine in a row going into the matchup with the Eastern Conference-leading Pistons. Doncic is averaging 40 points, 8.4 rebounds and 7.4 assists during the streak.

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

Well, it was fun while it lasted. No perfect men's March Madness brackets left after Tennessee win

Well, that's that.

No perfect NCAA Tournament brackets remained among the millions of entries in the ESPN bracket challenge and in the contests tracked on the NCAA's official website.

The end came Sunday night when No. 6 seed Tennessee beat No. 3 seed Virginia 79-72 in the 44th game of the tournament.

The day started with two perfect brackets left in the ESPN contest and four on the NCAA's site, which tracks the ESPN challenge along with six contests run by other outlets. ESPN had 26.5 million entries, and 36 million were tracked by the NCAA.

After a pair of No. 2 seeds eliminated No. 7s Sunday — Purdue beat Miami 79-69 and Iowa State topped Kentucky 82-63 — ESPN had two intact brackets and the NCAA had three.

When Dylan Darling's buzzer-beating layup gave No. 5 seed St. John's a 67-65 win over No. 4 seed Kansas, ESPN had one perfect bracket left.

The number of perfect brackets in the women's tournament dropped to 279 in the ESPN contest and less than 400 on the NCAA website after higher seeds won the first six games Sunday.

The closest women's games were 4-vs.-5 matchups. Minnesota beat Mississippi 65-63 on a last-second shot and North Carolina got past Maryland 74-66. The other four games were blowouts decided by no fewer than 23 points. No. 1 seed Texas and No. 2 seed LSU hit triple digits, with the Longhorns routing No. 8 seed Oregon 100-58 and the Tigers mauling No. 7 seed Texas Tech 101-47.

The odds of going 63-0 in a bracket contest are somewhere between one in 9.2 quintillion (for totally random guesses) or one in 120 billion (semi-educated ones).

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AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Hyo Joo Kim holds off Nelly Korda for a wire-to-wire win in the Founders Cup

MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) — Hyo Joo Kim held off Nelly Korda on Sunday at Sharon Heights to complete a wire-to-wire victory in the Fortinet Founders Cup.

Her opening five-stroke advantage gone after 10 holes, Kim regained the lead on the next hole and ended up with a one-shot margin after a closing bogey.

“I don’t think I was necessarily shaken up or my emotions were all over the place,” Kim said through a translator. “I was just trying to keep my focus on my shots and what I was doing.”

Kim shot a 1-over 73 for a 16-under 272 total. The 30-year-old South Korean player also won the 2015 event in Phoenix. She has eight LPGA Tour titles to go along with 14 KLPGA Tour victories.

Korda closed with a 69. The American won the season opener in Florida, then skipped the Asia swing.

“Obviously, something like 17 stings, so it is what it is,” Korda said. “It’s golf. It’s a quick turnaround. There is next week. So, just going to take all the positives.”

Earlier Sunday, brother Sebastian Korda beat top-ranked Carlos Alcaraz in the third round of the Miami Open tennis tournament.

Korda matched Kim with a bogey on No. 2, then birdied six of the next eight to tie for the lead. Kim pulled back ahead with a birdie on the par-4 11th, traded bogeys with Korda on the par-4 12th and took a two-stroke lead with a birdie on the par-4 14th.

Kim gave back the stroke with a bogey on the par-4 16th, then hit a flop from deep rough to 2 1/2 feet to save par after hitting long on the par-3 17th. Korda three-putted for bogey on 17, missing a 3-footer, to send Kim to 18 with the two-shot advantage that she ended up needing.

“I think just in the back nine my two par saves were probably the things I’m proudest about today," Kim said. "Just because my shots weren’t playing as well.”

Kim won for the first time in a year since the Ford Championship in Phoenix, the event that begins Thursday at Whirlwind Golf Club.

She started fast at challenging Sharon Heights, holing out for eagle on the eighth hole Thursday in a 63 that gave her a two-shot lead. She pushed the advantage to four Friday with a 70.

“I enjoyed every single day, but this course was pretty tough,” Kim

Korda parred the final hole.

“I wish I could have hit that drive into the fairway and given myself a better opportunity to press a little bit more,” Korda said. “But that’s just golf. Those are sports. Sometimes it’s on your side and sometimes it’s not.”

Sei Young Kim (67) and Jin Hee Im (69) tied for third at 11 under.

Top-ranked Jeeno Thitikul tied for 14th at 8 under after a 73.

The tournament began as a tribute to the 13 founders of the LPGA. It began in Arizona in 2011 and last year was played in Florida.

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

Brooklyn Nets drop back-and-forth battle to Sacramento Kings, lose 126-122

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 22: DeMar DeRozan #10 of the Sacramento Kings is guarded by Terance Mann #14 of the Brooklyn Nets in the second quarter at Golden 1 Center on March 22, 2026 in Sacramento, 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. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today is one of the biggest days of the season for the Brooklyn Nets for the lamest of reasons. As the regular season inches closer to its conclusion, all moves made in the “tank race” fall under increased magnification. With Brooklyn facing the Sacramento Kings, who sat just a half game behind Brooklyn entering tonight’s contest, the benefits of a loss and drawbacks of a win loomed larger than anything.

A few hundred miles away in the backdrop, Darryn Peterson’s collegiate career also came to an end, which also helped set the odd, enigmatic stage. Kansas loss to St. John’s at the buzzer means that of the top four prospects, only Cam Boozer of Duke remains. In addition to Peterson, A.J. Dybantsa of BYU lost earlier in March Madness and Caleb Wilson of North Carolina has been declared out with an injury.

At the end of the night, Brooklyn is now one and a half games ahead of the Kings and only two games behind the overall No. 1 held at the moment by the Indiana Pacers. In second, the Washington Wizards a half game ahead of the Nets.

Brooklyn started this one with Nolan Traoré, Drake Powell, and Danny Wolf for a fourth straight game. It was their first one, however, where Nic Claxton didn’t join them out there, as he sat for rest. Michael Porter Jr. (left hamstring strain) and Noah Clowney (right wrist sprain) joined him on the bench.

The advantages and disadvantages of going small were clear early on. Sacramento built up an early lead attacking the paint and dominating the glass in the first period 14-6. They ended up winning there 51-25 for the game. Brooklyn kept stride, stretching the floor and shooting 6-10 from deep in the first. Wolf, who led early with seven points on 3-5 shooting, nailed one, as did Traore.

However, it was the LIRR that brought Brooklyn to its first advantage tonight. The team’s G-Leaguers continued their impressive play up on the professional stage on the road this evening. Tyson Etienne and Malachi Smith each went 2-2 from deep in the first period. They helped fuel the 10-0 run in the heart of the opening frame that put Brooklyn in front.

“Yeah, they’ve done a great job,” Fernández said. “And once again, a lot of these guys, were giving them a look because they haven’t played enough, all their guys. As you guys know, we have young guys here that we need to see what we have, and I really like the competitiveness and how we fought all all the way through, second game in a row.”

But while small ball continued to bring the Nets positive returns, Brooklyn shrank beyond control in the second. A few minutes into it, Danny Wolf rolled his ankle after a finish inside. The Nets ruled him out for the game with a left ankle sprain a few minutes after they walked him back to the locker room.

And while Wolf’s health going forward was and surely remains Brooklyn’s primary concern, in the immediate, his injury left the team with little-to-no resistance against Maxime Raynaud and Precious Achiuwa anytime they rolled to the basket. Those two combined for 16 points in the period while shooting 7-11 from the field. Maxime finished the game with 22 points on 10-13 shooting while Achiuwa had a 14-point and 15-rebound game.

Still, Brooklyn was able to protect its lead through halftime. After committing 15 turnovers agains the New York Knicks and 23 against the Oklahoma City Thunder, they had just one in the first half tonight. They finished with just seven for the game.

“Our 30 assists to only seven turnovers is very impressive,” Fernández said. “So, that’s definitely a step forward for us.”

E.J. Liddell started for Wolf to begin the third, and with him being just six-foot-six, the Kings wisely stuck with what had worked. They got more points inside if not on their first try, than their second, eventually finishing with a +18 advantage in second chance points.

Who they couldn’t hang with, however, was Ziaire Williams. He did it all for Brooklyn in a game where they looked for a lot of different things in inauspicious places, especially in the third. While battling on the glass, shooting, defending the perimeter, and even playmaking on a few occasions, he finished with 18 points, three assists, two rebounds, two steals, and a block.

The Nets maintained a slight edge for the majority of the third, which became a far slower period than either of its predecessors thanks to a handful of reviews and scuffling between Terance Mann and DeMar DeRozan. However, a handful of swing plays ended in Sacramento’s favor in the period’s final few seconds, which was enough to give them a three point advantage entering the fourth.

There, we got more fun, back-and-forth action anyone bargained had for in a game between lottery-bound teams. Sacramento’s defense, devoid of speed and physicality, looked to be tailor-made for a crafty guy with good footwork like Ben Saraf, who had an easy time probing inside. He finished with a career-high 22 points on 10-20 shooting, along with five assists and a steal.

“Probably one of his best games at finishing at the rim,” Fernández said of Saraf. “I like how aggressive he was, five assists to two turnovers.”

Doug McDermott also reminded you he’s still in the league, plays for the Sacramento Kings, and that a shooter’s touch never ages. He splashed two threes in the fourth’s first three minutes to help build a six point lead, their largest of the game. Patrick Baldwin Jr. also caught the defense napping twice with two threes made.

But while were often more inspired by the unsung heroes, infatuated by young prospects, and impressed by gritty G-League products, in the end, games are won by teams with the better players, and Sacramento had the two best in DeMar DeRozan and Malik Monk. They also made it clear when it mattered most.

Out of a timeout after the Nets had cut it to two with a little under three to go, DeRozan hit the same buttery mid-range fadeaway he’s been burying for years to re-extend the lead. The Next two times down, Monk added five points after a near-poster on Malachi Smith and his seventh three of the game.

Brooklyn answered, but it was a hair too little, too late. The Nets put together a 7-0 run in the final minute to make it a 120-121 game, capped off after Achiuwa committed a goal-tending violation on a Traoré drive. However, the Kings pressed all the right buttons to seal the deal. They moved the ball well, hit their free throws, and unlike Santa Clara, knew it wasn’t 2007 anymore, and that you should always foul when up three.

Final: Sacramento Kings 126, Brooklyn Nets 122

Injury Report

The Nets tagged Wolf with a left ankle sprain when ruling him out tonight. He tried to walk off the floor on his own power, then got some help from some teammates and trainers, then needed to stop for a bit even with the assistance before getting to the tunnel. Jordi Fernández was unable to provide an update postgame, so we’ll wait and watch.

Milestone Watch

  • Malachi Smith scored a career-high 18 points today against the Kings on 7-9 FG, 3-4 3PT and 1-1 FT with four assists and two steals. On a 10-day contract, he is the fifth Nets rookie to score at least 18 points in their fifth career game or sooner since Kenyon Martin in 2000.
  • Ben Saraf joines Danny Wolf, Jeremiah Martin (2020) and Terrence Williams (2010) as the only Nets rookies with 20+ PTS and 5+ AST off the bench since Kerry Kittles in 1997.
  • With his first points of the game against Sacramento, Danny Wolf (501 career points) joined Egor Dëmin (536) as the first Nets rookie duo to each score 500+ points in a season since Stephen Jackson and Kenyon Martin in 2000-01. They are the sixth Nets rookie tandem to ever do so.
  • Malachi Smith’s 10-day is expiring Monday. The Nets can extend him for another 10 days, let his contract simple expire or sign him to a standard deal. The deadline for signing two-ways was earlier this month so that option is not open.

Next Up

Brooklyn’s final road trip of the season continues on Monday with a trip to Rip City. The Trail Blazers beat the Nets handily less than a week ago. This will be the final part of Brooklyn’s last back-to-back sequence of the season. It tips off at 10:00 p.m. ET.

Controversial call helps Tennessee beat Virginia, reach Sweet 16. Did refs get it right?

No. 6 seed Tennessee is head back to the Sweet 16 for the fourth year in a row following a 79-72 win over No. 3 Virginia in the second round of the NCAA Tournament on Sunday.

But do the Cavaliers have a legitimate gripe about a late call that didn't go their way?

With 27 seconds left, and the Volunteers leading 73-71, Virginia missed a short shot, and in the scrum for the rebound the ball was spiked by Tennessee's Nate Ament and bounced off some bodies before going out of bounds.

The officials gave the ball to Tennessee, which drew a coach's challenge from UVA coach Ryan Odom after replays seemed to suggest the ball was spiked off Vols guard Bishop Boswell's head and then out of bounds without a Virginia player touching it. UVA's Dallin Hall was close to the ball, but pulled his hands away and didn't seem to make contact with the ball, as it didn't change directions.

However, the refs stuck with the original call and gave Tennessee the ball. UT's Ja'Kobi Gillespie would add free throws, and down two possessions, the arithmetic changed and the game was ultimately affected.

Did the refs make right call in Tennessee-Virginia game? Take a look and decide for yourself:

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Controversial late call in Tennessee-Virginia game helps Vols reach Sweet 16

Iowa's Alvaro Folgueiras, Florida's Alex Condon get in tussle in March Madness game

In one of the final games of the first week of the 2026 NCAA Tournament, some sparks flew — and, by the looks of it, a balled-up fist.

With about nine minutes remaining in the first half of No. 9 seed Iowa’s game against No. 1 seed and reigning national champion Florida, Hawkeyes forward Alvaro Folgueiras collected a rebound off an Alex Condon miss, but Condon reached in, leading to a tie-up.

Shortly after a referee blew the whistle, signaling a held ball and the end of the play, Condon continued to pull at the ball and dragged Folgueiras to the court.

After the play, Iowa and Florida players rushed to the scene, with the two sides eventually separated. A replay on the TBS broadcast showed Folgueiras balling up his fist and throwing it in Condon’s direction, though it appeared that it was Folgueiras’ forearm, not his fist, that made contact with Condon’s chest, with the motion of his arm going in the direction of the tie ball.

The TBS announcers working the game initially speculated that Folgueiras, a Robert Morris transfer in his first season at Iowa, might receive a flagrant-2 foul and an automatic ejection, but upon video review, referees determined that it was a double technical foul.

Florida coach Todd Golden was incensed at the call, arguing with the officials after it was made. Following the altercation between Folgueiras and Condon, Golden was also seen shouting in the direction of the Iowa bench and first-year Hawkeyes coach Ben McCollum.

"I don't know, they were just going for the ball, and then everybody got all sensitive," McCollum said to TBS in a sideline interview at the next timeout. "Their people got sensitive. It's like, you're trying to play ball. It's whatever. We'll compete. We'll fight. We'll see what happens."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Iowa's Alvaro Folgueiras, Florida's Alex Condon get in tussle in March Madness game

'St. John's is going to the Sweet 16!' Dylan Darling buzzer-beater defeats Kansas

An NCAA tournament that’s been largely predictable near the end of the first weekend got some much-needed madness Sunday in one of the most anticipated games of the day.

After surrendering a late 13-point lead, Rick Pitino and St. John’s escaped with a 67-65 victory against Kansas in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Tournament thanks to some heroics from one of its less-heralded starters.

With the score tied at 65 with 3.9 seconds remaining, Red Storm guard Dylan Darling received the inbounds pass near midcourt and drove to the basket, getting by his defender and making a contested layup as time expired to give his team an anxiety-inducing win.

Darling said after the game that he had suggested the play to Pitino, believing there wasn't enough time to run the play his coach had originally had them set to run.

"I probably don't deserve this," Darling said in his post-game news conference. "I was pretty bad all night long, but my teammates held it down tonight. Everybody stepped up, including this dude right here (teammate Ian Jackson), and just happy to keep this thing rolling."

The shot sent St. John’s to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1999. There, it will take on No. 1 overall seed Duke.

The Red Storm largely controlled the game against the Jayhawks and potential No. 1 overall NBA Draft pick Darryn Peterson, leading for 93% of the contest and going up by as many as 14 in the second half. Until Darling’s layup, though, they had been outscored 20-7 in the final 6:29 of regulation.

The basket gave Darling his only points of the day on his only attempt from inside the 3-point arc of the afternoon. The 6-foot-1 junior had missed each of his previous four attempts from the field, all of which came from 3. He contributed in other ways, though, finishing with a team-high four assists and two steals.

And now, thanks to one determined drive to the bucket, he’ll live forever in St. John’s basketball lore.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: St. John's buzzer-beater vs Kansas sends Red Storm to first Sweet 16 since 1999

Steve Alker wins the Cologuard Classic with a playoff birdie for the second straight year

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Steve Alker won the Cologuard Classic with a birdie on the first hole of a playoff for the second straight year, beating Padraig Harrington with a 4-footer Sunday in mid-90 degree heat.

Last year at La Paloma, Alker beat Long Island club pro Jason Caron with a 12-foot putt on the first extra hole.

Alker won for the 11th time in 100 career starts on the PGA Tour Champions. The 54-year-old New Zealander was nine strokes back after opening with an even-par 71, then shot a 62 on Saturday to pull within two.

“I just made some simple mistakes the first round,” Alker said. “A couple three-putts and missed the odd green here and there, and it was kind of silly stuff. I tidied that up. I knew my game was in good shape.”

Alker closed with a 65 to post at 15-under 198. Harrington, playing behind Alker in the final group, hit his approach long and bogeyed the par-4 18th — missing a 10-foot comebacker.

Both players found the left side of the fairway on the 18th in the playoff, Harrington with a driving iron. The Irishman hit to the back of the green from 146 yards, leaving a 30-foot downhill putt that slid by on the right. Alker hit a gap wedge from 135 yards to set up the winning putt.

“Ultimately it all worked out,” Alker said. “One hundredth start, really special. I had no idea. It’s just gone so quickly, I’m having so much fun out here. To win here again is pretty special.”

Zach Johnson closed with a 67 to tie for third at 13 under in his second start on the 50-and-over tour. He won two weeks ago in Florida in his senior debut.

Tommy Gainey also was 13 under after a 68, Thongchai Jaidee (70) was 12 under. Sixty-eight-year-old Bernhard Langer (70) was another shot back with K.J. Choi (67), Thomas Bjorn (67) and Stewart Cink (67).

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

SB Nation Reacts: Do you expect Tari Eason back with the Rockets next season?

HOUSTON, TX - MARCH 20: Tari Eason #17 of the Houston Rockets arrives to the arena before the game against the Atlanta Hawks on March 20, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, 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 2026 NBAE (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Rockets fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Tari Eason turned down a big extension this offseason and then went out and had the worst overall season of his career. And with the recent success of the Rockets with Reed Sheppard in the starting lineup, he may have lost his starting job as well. It’s a far road from the $100 million extension the team offered him this past offseason, but those are the risks when you bet on yourself.

That bring us to this week’s question, on whether you expected Eason back with the Rockets next season. He’ll be a restricted free agent in the offseason, so Houston can match any offer he receives, but the team will obviously be weighing their options when the time comes. Do you think he’ll be back?

As you can see, only one-third of Rockets fans expect Eason to be back. I think it’s probably closer to 50-50 right now, but there’s no doubting it’s shrunk from where things were before the season.

Don’t forget, head on over to FanDuel, where you can pick up prop bets, parlays, and NBA Playoff winners. The Rockets have fallen all the way to +7500 to win the NBA Title, an almost 100 percent slip from just a few weeks ago, so if you have the faith they get it together, that’s a $7500 payout from just a $100 bet.

Be back soon with more Reacts!

Timbers play 70 minutes short-handed, still earn 1-1 draw with Galaxy behind James Pantemis

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Portland's Kristoffer Velde scored in the 13th minute and Timbers defender Kamal Miller picked up a red card seven minutes later, but James Pantemis surrendered only a João Klauss goal to help them hold on for a 1-1 draw with the Los Angeles Galaxy on Sunday.

Velde scored for the second time this season to give Portland (1-3-1) a 1-0 lead early. But things became difficult from the 20th minute on when Miller received his card for a foul on Klauss.

Antony Alves Santos notched his first assist this season on the score and Joao Ortiz picked up his second.

Klauss came up with the equalizer in the 30th minute with assists from Marco Reus and Gabriel Pec. It was the fifth goal for Klauss, who has certainly helped ease the loss of superstar Riqui Puig for a second straight season due to injuries. Klauss spent his first three seasons with St. Louis City, where he scored 25 goals in 79 appearances.

Reus earned his first assist this season after posting a career-best nine last year. Pec's helper was his third to begin the season.

Pantemis totaled six saves for the Timbers, including four in the first half.

JT Marcinkowski stopped two shots in his first start of the season for the Galaxy (1-2-2).

The Galaxy lead the series 14-12-11, but are 5-10-11 in Portland. The two clubs played to a 1-1 draw in Portland last season before the Timbers posted a 4-2 victory on the road.

Up next

Los Angeles: Hosts Minnesota United on April 4.

Portland: Visits the Vancouver Whitecaps on April 4.

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AP soccer: https://apnews.com/soccer

Kentucky paid for a Final Four. Not this. Mark Pope’s bluegrass honeymoon is over

ST. LOUIS – On the same afternoon Iowa State overcame the loss of an All-American to stamp its ticket to the Sweet 16 with a 19-point win, Mark Pope lamented the injuries that in his view kept his Kentucky team from realizing its promise this winter.

“I think we were disappointed we never got to run with the roster that we thought we had,” Pope, Kentucky’s second-year coach, said Sunday, following the Wildcats’ 82-63 season-ending second round NCAA Tournament loss. “These guys did an amazing job adjusting.”

Given the juxtaposition, that argument — however fair — will probably fall on deaf ears close to home. Because what might be the most expensively assembled roster in college basketball is going to spend the business end of its postseason watching. And Pope’s bluegrass honeymoon is probably over.

Punishing the Wildcats purely because of their price tag is unfair. There’s nothing wrong with an expensive roster.

It isn’t cheating, and it isn’t unimaginative. In the modern landscape, it’s a choice. A way to win. As much a means to the ultimate end as playing zone defense.

But it comes with greater expectation. When your base invests so directly in your success, its demand for return on that investment is magnified. And if that demand is not met, sympathy tends to be in short supply.

Kentucky offers promise early

For a while, anyway, Sunday did not look like going quite that way. Kentucky (22-14) began the game well. Gave itself hope. Flashed the idea of what it might be, before reverting to form to confirm just what it was.

Early on, Iowa State (29-7) looked like a team without two-way star Joshua Jefferson (ankle), sluggish offensively and a little disoriented at the other end. Like a band trying to play the song after naming someone else lead guitar.

“I credit these guys, they really paced our offense and made sure early that we didn’t score too many points and we didn’t make too many shots,” Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger said, tongue planted firmly in cheek.

Kentucky, meanwhile, appeared in the mood early to make the tough ones necessary to win. Denzel Aberdeen (20 points) led the way, Collin Campbell trailing behind him with two corner 3s.

But the Cyclones didn’t need Jefferson to sustain their pressure. Intensity underpins their identity. The erratic basketball forced out of the Wildcats — as has been the case far too often this season — is theirs.

“Iowa State was terrific,” Pope said. “They exert a ton of pressure. They’re very disruptive, and certainly they were very disruptive with us.”

Iowa State's intensity turned the game around

The further the game drifted away from Kentucky, the more ragged its performance became.

The early flow of turnovers did not stop — Kentucky finished with an eye-watering 20 for the game, the Wildcats’ 30.8% turnover rate basically double their season average. Just as damaging, as the game slipped away and a frustrating season wound down, there were aimless, unimaginative offensive possessions marked by a lack of ball movement and a perceptible loss of faith in the wider plan.

The tighter Iowa State squeezed, the more Kentucky came apart, first with sloppy offense and then with deconstructed defense. Otzelberger’s team shot 19 of 30 in the second half, averaging an even 1.5 points per possession after the break.

Where the Wildcats’ early punches seemed to harden undermanned Iowa State, the Cyclones’ response put Kentucky on its heels. Pope’s team never really got back on the front foot.

“We got a little disoriented the last eight or 10 minutes of the first half, and that’s what Iowa State does,” Pope said. “Their defense ratcheted up in the second half, and we had a tough time finding baskets, and more importantly, we had a tough time getting a stop.”

Otega Oweh finished with 18 points but did too much of his scoring once Iowa State led by double digits for his performance to really influence the game. Disparities in fouls and free throws told the story of which team was more aggressive. The sharper Iowa State became, the deeper that cut into whatever confidence and belief Kentucky had left.

Kentucky must find consistency, identity Iowa State enjoys

This was not entirely an indictment of the Wildcats. Iowa State served notice yet again that so long as Otzelberger walks their sideline — All-Americans be damned — the Cyclones are going to deliver these kinds of ruthless, relentless performances.

That’s what Kentucky expects, annually. And at least to a reasonable extent, it has the right to. At times, these Wildcats flirted with delivering something closer to it.

This was the team that swept Tennessee. That beat St. John’s and won at Arkansas. It was also the team that lost at home to Missouri, lost at Auburn and in the aggregate looked like its level would eventually even out roughly where it did.

The Wildcats were competent at many things but excellent at precious few. Per Bart Torvik, they were 9-12 against top-50 competition this season, with pedestrian adjusted offensive and defensive efficiency numbers. That’s about right for a 22-win team that doesn’t get out of the first weekend.

Time might prove Pope able to build the same sort of success in Lexington. But it’s possible to ask questions of why this season never really achieved lift-off, without that turning into a scathing and unanswerable indictment of his stewardship of his alma mater.

For example, whatever Iowa State’s concerns by comparison, Pope’s injury complaints aren’t entirely unfair.

Jayden Quaintance only appeared in four games this season. For Jaland Lowe, so good at Pitt in 2025, that number stopped at nine in 2026.

Lowe scored 13 points in Kentucky’s best win of the season, the 12-point victory over St. John’s in late December. But neither Lowe nor Quaintance has appeared in a game since Jan. 10.

“We didn’t get to play the way we planned to,” Pope said. “We didn’t get to play with the personnel we planned to. All of that changed, and I think our guys raised up and they made the very, very best of a complicated, difficult situation.”

Injuries won't change expectations in Lexington

It’s perfectly reasonable to accept the Kentucky team Pope built in his mind was never the one he got to put on the floor. That won’t change the proverbial indigestion resulting from a season that might have cost Kentucky as much as $22 million, just to end well short of the Final Four.

Tagging Pope with that reported number — one he did not accept but also did not necessarily refute Sunday afternoon — opts for lazy analysis when something sharper isn’t that hard to achieve. No amount of money could speed up Lowe’s recovery from a shoulder injury, but it also does not matter what costs what when the solutions to the problems that arise deliver little better than a team this limited.

Maybe Pope is right about his team’s alternate future. Maybe this roster, and by extension this season, would have been flawed anyway. Whatever the truth, none of it wins the argument with reality.

Kentucky fades into the offseason among college basketball’s big disappointments. And Pope, who provided such fresh air to the stale climate that preceded him in Lexington, enters that offseason fully informed about the weight of expectation on his job, and the price of failing to rise to meet it.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Kentucky basketball spent big on its roster, but Mark Pope came up short

Illinois State beats Wake Forest 78-75, winning twice in NIT for first time in 30 years

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — Ty Pence had 23 points, Johnny Kinziger scored 19, including a go-ahead 3-pointer with two seconds left, and Illinois State rallied to beat top seed Wake Forest 78-75 on Sunday in the second round of the NIT.

Fourth-seeded Illinois State (22-12) heads to No. 2 seed Dayton for a campus-site quarterfinal. The last time the Redbirds won twice in a NIT appearance was in 1996.

Illinois State trailed 53-44 with 11:28 remaining before rallying to tie it on Landon Wolf's 3-pointer with 6:29 to go and then taking the lead on a Pence 3-pointer on its next possession.

There were four lead changes and five ties from there — the final tie came on Tre'Von Spillers layup with 28 seconds left to set the stage for Kinziger.

Pence made 8 of 11 shots with three 3-pointers and all four of his free throws. Kinziger buried 5 of 10 from beyond the arc and added five assists. Chase Walker scored 15.

Spillers made all 11 of his shots and scored 24 to pace the Demon Deacons (18-17), adding eight rebounds. Juke Harris totaled 20 points, eight rebounds and four assists. Harris finished with 750 points this season — the second highest total in program history. Len Chappell set the record with 932 points during the 1961-62 season. Chappell had 745 points his prior season. Dickie Hemric scored 746 in 1954-55.

Omaha Biliew added 11 points and six boards for Wake Forest, while Myles Colvin scored 10 off the bench.

Cooper Schwieger's dunk for Wake Forest in the final minute tied it 32-all at halftime.

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Game Thread: Knicks vs Wizards, March 22, 2026

WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 3: Josh Hart #3 and Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks box out Kyshawn George #18 of the Washington Wizards during the game on February 3, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. 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 Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The New York Knicks (46*-25) host the Washington Wizards (16-54) tonight at Madison Square Garden. The Knicks aim to extend their five-game winning streak while the Wizards risk a 16th straight loss that would tie their franchise record for longest skid.

Tip-off is 7:30 pm EST on MSG. This is your game thread. This is Bullets Forever. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Treat each other respectfully. And go Knicks!

* Should be one more, but NBA Cups are for jock support, not record books.