The Utah Jazz just pulled off a tanking masterclass

It was a sight to behold.

Jaren Jackson Jr. in a beautiful purple jersey with”Utah” written out diagonally over a gradient mountain on his chest with a baby blue trim on the edges.

Quadruple J — Jazz Jaren Jackson Jr. — had finally arrived.

For days, fans across the NBA anxiously awaited to see how the Jazz’s big man lineup of Lauri Markkanen at the three, Jackson at the four and Jusuf Nurkic (next year this spot will be filled by Walker Kessler) would play together. Regardless of if you think it would work or not, if you like basketball you were at least curious to see how this lineup meshed.

And boy, did it mesh.

At one point late in the third quarter on Saturday, the Jazz led the Orlando Magic by 17 points. Jackson and Markkanen were incredibly efficient, scoring 49 points on 55.3% field goal shooting. There was even an awesome dribble-handoff action from Jackson that set up perfectly for a Markkanen 3-pointer. Just off of the starting lineup’s size alone, the on and off-ball screens set up so many great looks for Utah. More so than usual.

Utah also dominated the team rebounding battle, in large part to Nurkic’s 14 boards, which calmed any anxieties about Jackson’s rebounding abilities — or lack thereof.

The trade was a success! This team is good!

A little too good.

In the fourth quarter, “Tank Note” took over. Head coach Will Hardy — and likely Danny Ainge and Ryan Smith — had seen enough of this new look team. Hardy yanked Jackson, Markkanen and Nurkic in the fourth quarter. With Keyonte George going out earlier in the game with an ankle injury, the Jazz managed to only play one starter in the fourth quarter, rookie Ace Bailey.

The Jazz lost the game 120-117. Just how they drew it up.

Is it ethical? Maybe not. Is it necessary? Absolutely.

In 2021 and 2022, the Jazz learned a hard lesson: you have to have a top-five player to win an NBA Championship.

Take a look at the NBA champions since 2015. The list of best players goes as follows: Steph Curry, LeBron James, Curry/Durant, Curry/Durant, Kawhi Leonard, James, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Curry, Nikola Jokic, Jayson Tatum, SGA.

The only player on that list that is not definitive top-five is Tatum, and when healthy, he is no lower than seven in my mind. He also had an elite cast surrounding him, more so than Jokic’s in the year prior.

You can point to the 2024-25 Pacers as a team that doesn’t fit this mold, but by all means, they are an outlier. I’d rather have Jokic than try to find the perfect blend of 11 players, like the Pacers impressively did last season.

The entire point of the rebuild is to find that guy. A guy who can play on the same court as SGA or Luka Doncic or Victor Wembnyama, and have just as much claim to the NBA throne as they do. The easiest way to do that is to draft inside the top-five. You can’t do that if you give up your top-eight protected pick to the reigning champions.

Yes, this Jazz team is exciting. I get chills just thinking about the 2026-27 season. But imagine this team with Darryn Peterson or AJ Dybantsa. Doesn’t that excitement go up a level?

The Jazz are getting a lot of hate right now for their decision to not play their best players in the fourth quarter against Orlando, but a lot of that is coming from teams that are doing the same thing as Utah.

Washington traded for Trae Young and Anthony Davis midseason, and the two will likely not suit up in red white and blue any time soon. The Mavericks deliberately tanked after the whole Luke trade debacle just so they could get into the lottery last season, and somehow the Basketball Gods rewarded them with Cooper Flagg.

The Quad-J — I’m really hoping there’s something there with that nickname — era has gotten off to a fun start already, but there is still more to accomplish. More pieces to add.

The end of the tank is near, but make no mistake, it is still very much alive. It has to be.

Big 12 fines Oklahoma State for anti-Mormon chants against BYU

The Big 12 Conference announced it was fining Oklahoma State $50,000 for inappropriate chants from fans during a men's basketball game on Wednesday, Feb. 4.

The conference announced the fine against the Cowboys on Sunday, Feb. 8, citing its “Principles and Standards of Sportsmanship."

"In accordance with the Big 12 Conference Principles and Standards of Sportsmanship, the conference issued Oklahoma State University a $50,000 fine following its investigation into inappropriate chants that occurred during Wednesday's men's basketball game," the statement read. "The Big 12 will not tolerate any behavior that targets or demeans others."

OSU said in a statement that said the school “respects the Big 12’s decision and will not appeal the fine.”

“The university conducted an immediate investigation into the allegation that a group of students used an inappropriate chant during last Wednesday’s men’s basketball game between OSU and BYU,” the statement said. “It was determined that a derogatory chant followed a disputed call and referenced the Mormon faith in relation to game officials. The reference to religion did not meet our standards and expectations. Oklahoma State respects the Big 12’s decision and will not appeal the fine.

“The Cowboy Code calls us to treat others with respect and dignity. Oklahoma State University values the relationship we have with BYU and deeply respects its community and faith. We will continue to work to ensure that the atmosphere at our events reflects the values of the Cowboy family.”

Following the 99-92 win for Oklahoma State over No. 14 BYU, Cougars coach Kevin Young shared his disappointment about anti-Mormon chants coming from the student section.

"There were some 'F The Mormons' chants tonight by the student section that I heard," Young said in his postgame news conference on Wednesday. "It was a great win for Oklahoma State University. I think their fans should be proud, but it would be great if some class was warranted.

"I got four small kids at home, I'm a Mormon, and when I go home, they're going to ask me about it, the same way they asked me about it last year at Arizona."

This is at least the fourth incident in the past year with derogatory chants aimed at Mormons during BYU football or basketball games. Last season, Arizona apologized for the chant that happened during a BYU loss in Tucson.

Similar chants were also heard during BYU football games against Colorado and Cincinnati. The Buffaloes were fined by the Big 12 for $50,000 and issued a public reprimand.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Oklahoma State fined $50,000 by Big 12 for anti-Mormon chants vs BYU

The Pindown: Kevin Huerter & a New York-Sized Beatdown

What a week.

The Pistons traded Jaden Ivey to the Chicago Bulls in exchange for Kevin Huerter, Dario Saric, and a 2026 first round pick swap. They were blown out in embarrassing fashion by the short-handed Wizards. Then they turned around and took the Knicks behind the woodshed on the second night of a back-to-back! Wes and Blake break it all down, diving into the main takeaways from that trade deadline and the game against New York. They discuss if we are all looking at the deadline backwards, every other Eastern Conference team needs to catch Detroit, not the other way around, after all. They react to Kevin Huerter’s addition and early performances, and they take a look at Ausar Thompson’s Defensive Player of the Years odds as well.

We’ve got you covered for all this and more in this week’s episode!

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Inter Milan increases Serie A lead with 5-0 demolition of Sassuolo

ROME (AP) — Inter Milan routed 10-man Sassuolo 5-0 on Sunday to extend its Serie A lead to eight points over AC Milan, which didn't play this weekend because of the Milan Cortina Olympics.

Yann Bisseck and Marcus Thuram scored in the first half for Inter. Lautaro Martínez, Manuel Akanji and Luis Henrique added second-half goals to give Inter its fifth straight win in all competitions.

Federico Dimarco contributed with three assists.

Sassuolo was coming off two straight victories after a series of seven winless games. It played with 10 men from the 54th minute after Nemanja Matic was shown a second yellow card. The hosts, sitting in 11th place, had only one attempt on target.

Second-place Milan couldn't host Como this weekend after the San Siro stadium was used for the opening ceremony of the Winter Games. That issue had prompted Serie A to consider moving the match to Perth, Australia. The game will now be played on Feb. 18.

Juve equalizes late

Pierre Kalulu scored six minutes into stoppage time as fourth-place Juventus salvaged a 2-2 home draw with eighth-place Lazio after being two goals down.

Lazio went ahead with Pedro's goal in first-half added time, and doubled its lead soon after the break with Gustav Isaksen's goal in the 47th.

Juventus pulled closer with a goal from Weston McKennie in the 59th before Kalulu equalized with a header.

Juventus visits Inter on Saturday.

Other results

Christian Ordóñez scored a stoppage-time winner as 14th-place Parma won at 10th-place Bologna with both teams having a player sent off.

Bologna was a man down after Tommaso Pobega's dismissal in the first half, and Parma saw Mariano Troilo exit in the 79th.

It was the fourth consecutive league loss for Bologna. Parma hadn't won in four straight.

Lecce, in 17th place and just outside the relegation zone, ended an eight-game winless streak by beating ninth-place Udinese 2-1 at home thanks to Lameck Banda's 90th-minute winner.

On Saturday, Rasmus Höjlund scored a last-gasp penalty as 10-man Napoli won 3-2 at Genoa. Napoli is third, one point behind Milan.

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

Aday Mara scores career-high 24 points as No. 2 Michigan cruises past Ohio State 82-61

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Aday Mara scored a career-high 24 points, Morez Johnson Jr. and Yaxel Lendeborg had double-doubles and second-ranked Michigan rolled to an 82-61 victory over Ohio State on Sunday.

The Big Ten-leading Wolverines (22-1, 12-1) led throughout as they made 10 3-pointers — including nine in the first half — and dominated in rebounding. Michigan had 17 offensive boards and outrebounded Ohio State 44-31.

Johnson had 11 points and 12 rebounds and Lendeborg added 14 points and 14 rebounds for Michigan, which has won six of the past seven meetings.

Bruce Thornton led the Buckeyes (15-8, 7-6) with 16 points and Devin Royal scored 15. Ohio State has dropped two of three.

Michigan led 44-34 at halftime and was up by as many as 23 late in the game.

The Buckeyes were 8 of 25 from the field in the second half.

It was the worst loss by Ohio State to Michigan at home since Feb. 9, 1976, when the Wolverines rolled to a 90-66 win.

NO. 13 TEXAS TECH 70, WEST VIRGINIA 63

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — JT Toppin had 22 points and nine rebounds and Texas Tech broke a two-game losing skid with a victory over West Virginia.

Donovan Atwell added 15 points for the Red Raiders (17-6, 7-3 Big 12) and Christian Anderson had 13 points and 11 assists in his return from a one-game absence because of illness.

Brenen Lorient scored 20 points for West Virginia (15-9, 6-5), which lost for just the second time in 15 home games.

West Virginia scored the first four baskets after halftime, all on layups, to trim a 13-point deficit to 39-35, but the Mountaineers went the next four minutes without a basket and got no closer.

Texas Tech, which never trailed, kept distancing itself with a steady diet of 3-pointers. Jaylen Petty, Atwell and Toppin each hit from long distance in a span of less than two minutes, and the Red Raiders pushed their lead to 52-37 with 13:17 remaining.

Lorient scored nine points in the final four minutes, but West Virginia’s comeback bid came up short.

Sixers’ Tyrese Maxey to compete in NBA All-Star Three-Point Contest

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JANUARY 29: Tyrese Maxey #0 of the Philadelphia 76ers controls the ball against the Sacramento Kings at Xfinity Mobile Arena on January 29, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The 76ers defeated the Kings 113-111. 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 Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tyrese Maxey couldn’t be more deserving of his starting spot in this year’s NBA All-Star game, and now it’s been confirmed he’ll be giving us some extra entertainment in the Three-Point Contest as well.

Here’s the full lineup of who he’ll be taking on next Saturday:

While this year’s group is largely highly experienced veteran guards (credit to Bobby Portis, a 45.1 percent three-point shooter this season, albeit on far simpler/lower volume, for throwing himself in the mix) Kon Knueppel is a great inclusion to represent the rookie class. Knueppel is one of the NBA’s highest volume shooters, with his 7.8 attempts per game ranking 15th in the league, all while making them at a stellar 42.8 percent clip.

Jamal Murray’s weekend will be a memorable one too, what with him finally making his debut as an All-Star.

Damian Lillard is a surprising inclusion. He’s not even playing this season as he’s out for the year with an Achilles injury, but he’s clearly keen to go for his third win of the contest after taking home the trophy in 2023 and 2024.

Obviously it comes down to who gets hot on the night and can stay consistent, but Donovan Mitchell will likely be a big threat for Maxey with the way he’s shooting this season. The Cavs guard is taking more threes (9.7 attempts per game) than everyone bar Steph Curry and Luka Doncic, including a ton off the dribble as usual, and making 37.9 percent of them.

Even though Maxey’s three-point shooting has cooled off over the last few weeks (30.4 percent over his last 14 games), he’s still at 38.2 percent from deep for the season on a whopping 8.8 attempts per game, including tons of high-difficulty pull-ups and step-backs.

His range has continued to grow and he’s so comfortable attempting any kind of shot, whether he’s flying into a three running off movement, pulling up off deep ball screens, or creating space for himself.

It’ll be exciting to see if Maxey can get on a heater and take home the Three-Point Contest win.

Cavs’ star to participate in NBA’s 2026 3-Point Contest

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - FEBRUARY 16: Donovan Mitchell #45 of Team Chuck looks on against Team Shaq during the 74th NBA All-Star Game as part of NBA All-Star Weekend on Sunday, February 16, 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 the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Cleveland Cavaliers’ star Donovan Mitchell will participate in the 2026 State Farm 3-Point Contest. This will be Mitchell’s third time competing in the contest, second time as a member of the Cavaliers.

Mitchell is joined in this year’s contest by Devin Booker, Kon Knueppel, Jamal Murray, Tyrese Maxey, Bobby Portis Jr, Norman Powell and surprise candidate Damian Lillard, who hasn’t played in a game yet this season but could match the all-time record of three wins.

The 3-Point Contest will be the first event of All-Star Saturday night, marking a shift from recent years. This is a weird decision, in my opinion, as the contest has arguably become the most popular event of the weekend. So, make sure you remember this change so you don’t end up missing it.

Mitchell currently leads the NBA in total three-point makes with 180 threes in 49 games. Charlotte rookie Knueppel is third with 174 makes, while Maxey is right behind him at 169. Cleveland’s franchise record for three-pointers in a season is 245, set by Mitchell in 2023.

The Cavaliers last won the contest in 2013 when Kyrie Irving took home the trophy. Mark Price won back-to-back contests in 1993 and 1994. Other notable contestants include Darius Garland and Daniel Gibson.

Cleveland’s Sam Merrill isn’t in the contest despite being one of the league’s best three-point shooting role players. Merrill implied that he prefers golfing during the All-Star break in recent years, so perhaps that’s why. Either way, it makes sense for the league’s leading sniper, Mitchell, to get the nod. But it would have been cool to see multiple Cavaliers in the event.

Mitchell is also the only Cavalier who will be playing on All-Star Sunday. He’s had a career-year in Cleveland and carried this team when they struggled early in the season.

Feisty Jose Alvarado gives Knicks massive jolt in dominant bounce-back win over Celtics

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Jose Alvarado #5 of the New York Knicks knocks the ball away from Payton Pritchard #11 of the Boston Celtics during the second quarter on Feb. 8, 2026, Image 2 shows Jose Alvarado #5 of the New York Knicks drives to the basket against the Celtics on Feb. 8, 2026

BOSTON — Jose Alvarado officially arrived at the end of the third quarter.

The newest Knick was on defense and switched onto Celtics star Jaylen Brown, who saw the size mismatch and tried to back Alvarado into the paint.

Alvarado, generously listed at 6 feet, didn’t give an inch. He took the contact, waited for Brown to turn for a shot, stripped the ball clean and gave the Knicks bench a hometown flex. It was Alvarado’s first steal with the Knicks and the highlight of a successful debut, an 111-89 victory over the rival Celtics in Sunday’s pre-Super Bowl matinee.

Jose Alvarado #5 of the Knicks knocks the ball away from Payton Pritchard #11 of the Celtics during the second quarter on Feb. 8, 2026. Getty Images

The transition for Alvarado was seamless. At least in Game 1.

“It just feels like it was meant to be,” Alvarado, the Brooklyn product, said. “It feels like I’ve been part of it for a while, even though it was the first game. Like it felt like nothing. It felt like home. It felt like it was supposed to happen this way.

“And I’m glad I did.”

Alvarado finished with 12 points, two steals and six deflections in 25 minutes on 5-for-12 shooting. His other steal — this time in the fourth quarter — was also splendid. He airballed a 3-pointer from the corner, recovered to sneak behind Brown for a strip, then buried a layup before yelling at the Celtics bench.

Welcome to the Alvarado experience.

“[People on the Celtics bench] basically said, ‘You’re going to miss.’ And I said, ‘That’s how you get it back, you know what I’m saying?’ ” Alvarado said. “Who cares about the miss if you get it back.”

The 27-year-old ball of energy arrived as advertised, providing a feisty defensive presence to muck up the game and help Jalen Brunson, who pummeled the Celtics with 31 points in 33 minutes.

Jose Alvarado #5 of the New York Knicks drives to the basket against the Celtics on Feb. 8, 2026. NBAE via Getty Images

“That’s him,” Josh Hart said of Alvarado, who was earmarked by Mike Brown for 22 minutes but expanded it to 25. “He’s a really good on-ball defender, takes the challenge of being a great secondary ball handler for us, being able to playmake, get into the paint, handle pressure, so what you got from Jose today is the player he is.”

The victory moved the Knicks (34-19) into a tie with the Celtics (34-19) for second in the East.

And it was an impressive way to bounce back, especially without OG Anunoby (sore toe).

The Knicks were coming off a disheartening blowout defeat Friday to the conference-leading Pistons, who squeezed the breath out of New York’s offense.

It didn’t take long for it to come back to life in Boston. The Knicks scored 35 points in the first quarter, with Brunson contributing 15.

The Celtics cut the deficit to four early in the second half, but they never regained the lead after the first quarter.

“Our group is resilient,” coach Mike Brown said. “Sometimes like in Detroit, that happens. None of us like it. None of us want to go through it. Give Detroit a lot of credit, but we know it’s not who we are.

“We played a lot better than that. We will. But I do think this group is resilient because they’ve shown time and time again after tough losses or multiple losses playing the next game usually doing a pretty good job of playing again.”

Plus, they have a new plucky defensive guard to help.

“Obviously [my teammates] know my passion is defense and they trust in me and believe in me and they let me be myself,” Alvarado said. “They keep saying go out there and be yourself and everything will go the way we need it to go.”

In Boston, that’s exactly what happened.

Knicks pull away from Celtics in 111-89 victory

New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson drives past Celtics guard Baylor Scheierman on Sunday. | David Butler II-Imagn Images

Late in the fourth quarter Sunday, with the outcome of Celtics-Knicks decided, simultaneous “Let’s go, Pats!” chants and boos from Knicks fans echoed throughout TD Garden.

While Knicks fans enjoyed leaning into their cantankerous DNA for a moment, those boos quickly returned to cheers as the Knicks cemented a 111-89 victory over the Celtics (34-19).

The result snaps Boston’s five-game winning streak, as the Knicks (34-19) came out flying and never relinquished power.

Jalen Brunson led New York with 31 points and eight assists, Josh Hart added 19 and the Knicks shot 40 percent from 3-point range as a team.

Jaylen Brown paced Boston with 26, Baylor Scheierman added 10 points, 13 rebounds and 5 assists and Derrick White contributed 19 points, but the Celtics shot just 37 percent from the floor as a team.

While the Celtics looked disorganized and flat-footed at times, this one was more so about the Knicks beating the Celtics than the Celtics losing to the Knicks. New York was the more physical, skilled and organized team.

The Knicks jumped out to a 35-24 edge through 1, as Brunson made his mark early with 15 points and four assists. New York shot 63 percent from the floor, compared to 35 percent for Boston, and got out in transition in the opening minutes.

White and Brown responded to help the Celtics slice the deficit to 60-53 at halftime, but the Knicks finished the half at 60 percent and generated a steady stream of easy looks.

Scheierman gave the Celtics a lift in the quarter, showcasing his versatility as a playmaker and rebounder. Scheierman has now totaled 40 rebounds in his last four games following a career high Sunday.

The Knicks extended the margin to 85-68 following a terrific third quarter in which they held the Celtics to just 15 points. With Neemias Queta in foul trouble, Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla elected to go small with Brown at the 4 and the Knicks made them pay inside.

Hart made his presence felt in the quarter as New York turned defense into offense to seize command.

As they did two days prior against the Heat, the Celtics showed some fight; this time, however, there was no magical comeback. Scheierman buried a corner 3 to slice it to 12, then New York caught fire to pull away convincingly.

After holding their opponent to fewer than 100 points in each of the last five games, the Celtics let the Knicks get comfortable and couldn’t catch up. The game was closer than the score indicates, but the outcome was never really in doubt.

The Celtics have still won five of six, but Sunday wasn’t their best showing. New England fans will quickly forget about their shortcomings if the Patriots are able to win Super Bowl LX.

Adou Thiero assigned to South Bay Lakers as part of return from injury

TORONTO, ON - DECEMBER 4: Adou Thiero #1 of the Los Angeles Lakers dribbles the ball against the Toronto Raptors during first half action at Scotiabank Arena on December 4, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 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 Andrew Lahodynskyj/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s been a season of inactivity for Lakers rookie Adou Thiero.

While most young players may not play as they learn and develop in their rookie season, Thiero has been out for the majority of the year due to injuries, the most recent a right MCL sprain suffered on Dec. 30.

The team stated that he would be out for four weeks before being re-evaluated. The Lakers delivered some good news on the rookie on Sunday as they assigned him to practice with their G-League affiliate team, the South Bay Lakers.

Dave McMenamin of ESPN also reported that he played in his first full-contact stay-ready game earlier this week.

This is excellent news for Thiero, who has only played in 15 games this season.

Barring any setbacks, he should be made available to play sooner rather than later. The Lakers only have three games left to play before the All-Star break, so perhaps he can be available when LA takes on the Clippers after that break.

Regardless of when he returns, what matters is that he is progressing well. This is a developmental year for Thiero, but it’s hard to develop when you can’t practice or play.

Even in limited availability, Thiero has shown his ability to demolish the rim. He has had an impressive performance in South Bay against the Santa Cruz Warriors, where he scored 12 points in the team’s 108-105 win.

His raw athleticism has impressed Lakers head coach JJ Redick, and any basketball reps he can get are a net positive for him and the Lakers.

LA moved up twice in the 2025 NBA Draft to select Thiero, so they clearly value what he brings to the court. Hopefully, he can fully return soon and begin demonstrating his talent in games.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.

Big 12 issues $50,000 fine to Oklahoma State for anti-Mormon chants during game against BYU

IRVING, Texas (AP) — The Big 12 Conference announced Sunday it fined Oklahoma State $50,000 following an investigation into inappropriate chants referencing The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, widely known as the Mormons, during a men's basketball game against BYU last week.

“The Big 12 Conference will not tolerate any behavior that targets or demeans others,” the conference said in a statement.

BYU coach Kevin Young said after a 99-92 loss at Oklahoma State on Wednesday night that he heard “F--- The Mormons” chants coming out of the student section. BYU is the flagship school for the religion.

"The reference to religion did not meet our standards and expectations,” the university said in a statement. “Oklahoma State respects the Big 12’s decision and will not appeal the fine.”

It was at least the fourth time in a year that BYU teams had been the target of anti-Mormon chants.

The Big 12 fined Colorado $50,000 in September after football fans directed expletives and religious slurs at Mormons during a game against the Cougars in Boulder.

Similar incidents occurred at an Arizona men's basketball game last season and a Cincinnati football game in November. Neither school was fined.

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Alijah Arenas scores 11 of his 24 in final 4 minutes, USC beats Penn State 77-75

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (AP) — Alijah Arenas scored 11 of his 24 points in the final four minutes, including the go-ahead basket with 0.7 seconds left, to help USC beat Penn State 77-75 on Sunday. 

Freddie Dilione V made a layup for Penn State that tied it at 75-all with 12 seconds remaining. After USC called timeout to move the ball into the front court, Arenas took the inbounds pass, worked his way to the right block and kissed a layup high off the glass to cap the scoring. 

Kam Woods had 13 points, a season-high nine assists, five rebounds and four steals for USC (18-6, 7-6 Big Ten). Ezra Ausar added 13 points and Jacob Cofie had 10 points and seven rebounds. 

Dilione led Penn State (10-14, 1-12) with 23 points on 10-of-18 shooting. Josh Reed made 8 of 11 from the field and finished with 17 points while Ivan Juric scored 13 and Dominick Stewart added 11 points. 

The Nittany Lions have lost 10 of their last 11 games. 

Penn State scored 10 consecutive points before Woods made a layup that trimmed USC's deficit to 40-36 at halftime. The Nittany Lions opened the second half with a 10-2 run that culminated with a fast-break dunk by Dilione that gave Penn State its biggest lead of the game at 50-38 with 17:23 left in the game. 

The Nittany Lions went 0 for 8 from the field in a span of more than 8 1/2 minutes in the second half as USC used a 22-5 run to take a six-point lead with six minutes remaining.

Up next

USC: Plays Wednesday at Ohio State. 

Penn State: Visits Washington on Wednesday. 

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Highlights: Stephon Castle had a 40 point triple-double in Spurs win over Mavericks

Feb 7, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) goes up for a shot between Dallas Mavericks guard Max Christie (00) and forward Cooper Flagg (32) in the first half at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images | Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images

Coming off a road win versus the Dallas Mavericks, the Spurs traveled home for a rematch. Luke Kornet made his return from injury, so the Spurs were at full strength. After leading 39-32 at the end of the first quarter, the Spurs kept the pace high and outscored the Mavs 42-35 in the second to lead 81-67 at halftime. The 81 points at halftime was the Spurs’ highest scoring half since March 2022. The lead just kept growing, with the Spurs taking a 23-point lead into the fourth quarter. Thanks to a career performance from Stephon Castle and five other Spurs scoring in double figures, the Spurs ultimately won 138-125.

Stephon Castle dropped a historic triple-double: Career-high 40 points (15-19 FG, 3-5 3PT), 12 assists, and 12 rebounds to go along with three steals and a block. This is the third 40-point triple-double in Spurs history, with David Robinson providing the other two. This is also the first 40-point triple-double with 75% FG since Wilt Chamberlain. Steph started hot, scoring in double figures in each of the first two quarters on perfect shooting. Then, he fanned the flame and cemented his historic performance in the fourth. The former ROTY has always showcased his talent each game, but this performance puts his potential into another stratosphere!

ST3PH! Living up to his first name, Steph splashes home one of his three threes!

SHOWTIME! Steph picks Max Christie’s pocket and has himself a clear runway for the standing windmill slam!

40-BALL SECURED! Steph climbs the mountain off the missed Devin Vassell three for his 40th point!

Here are the extra highlights of his historic night!

Being the star of the night, it was finally Steph’s turn to lead the Frost Bank Center and the Spurs Jackals by banging the kettle drum after the win!

Devin Vassell dropped 17 points, six assists, four rebounds, and a block. Dev shook off the rust and looked like his usual self. His ability to create shots for himself is a real game-changer for this team. Besides the scoring, he is also gelling well in the offense by dishing out six assists. Look for him to continue fulfilling his role to the fullest.

Middy Magician! Dev takes the handoff from Luke Kornet and dribbles into a pull-up midrange jumper!

FOUR POINT PLAY! Dev drains the laser three and takes the contact from Christie for the and-one!

Victor Wembanyama dropped a double-double: 16 points and 11 rebounds to go along with three blocks and a dime. Vic did not have his best shooting night, but he did the dirty work on both ends for easy swats and buckets. (Although some might have been easy for Vic and not for average-sized NBA players.) He caught lobs from several different Spurs and was more than happy to take a backseat offensively.

W3MBY! Vic drains the open three from the wing, thanks to the Carter Bryant screen!

SPURS BASKETBALL! After Carter completely locks down Caleb Martin, the Spurs run out in transition, and the ball movement ends up in Vic’s hands for the easy slam!

NOT SO FAST! After Naji Marshall creates space, Vic uses his length to erase the shot attempt!

TRADEMARK WEMBY SEQUENCE! After Vic rejects Cooper Flagg, he creates a give-and-go with Dev on the other end for the lob slam connection!

De’Aaron Fox dropped 15 points (7-13 FG), five assists, and two rebounds. D-Fox struggled at first, but ended up draining buckets when the offense stalled. Just like Vic, he took a backseat offensively, but still managed to dish out some dimes. His unselfishness and willingness to be part of this offense, no matter who has the hot hand, show his adaptability to put the team in the best position to win.

FOX TO THE ALIEN! On the fastbreak, D-Fox catches the ball at the free-throw line and immediately lobs it up to Wemby, who throws it down with one hand!

Dylan Harper dropped 11 points (5-8 FG), five assists, four rebounds, a steal, and a block. Of the three star guards, Dyl played the least amount of minutes (23), but still filled the stat sheet. He got to the cup and showed off his elite finishing ability alongside his playmaking and defensive highlights. The rookie is a little more than halfway through the season and has already shown multiple glimpses of his potential.

HARP3R! Dyl knocks down the three from the wing off the Castle dime!

Carter Bryant dropped 11 points, five rebounds, and three blocks. In just 17 minutes, CB’s impact on both ends fueled the Spurs’ momentum, especially in the second quarter. He wowed with an alley-oop jam, drained three threes, and most of all, locked down multiple defenders. Throughout the season, he would get little spurts of action, but his playing time has gradually increased. With this added playing time, his confidence grows each game. This performance is just the appetizer for Spurs fans.

GET UP! On the fastbreak, Steph lobs it up for CB who throws it down with force!

CART3R! CB splashes home one of his three threes from the top of the key!

FUTURE ALL-NBA DEFENDER! CB’s blocks came in the form of chasedown, getting his fingertips on a three, and most of all, locking down Martin!

Keldon Johnson dropped eight points (3-5 FG) and four rebounds in 16 minutes. KJ struggled taking care of the ball with four turnovers, but still managed to get tough buckets in the paint. He provided offense when the shot clock was dwindling, and also grabbed boards. Look for him to have more playing time next game, with a side of 6MOTY energy.

TOUGH BUCKET. KJ battles his way into the paint and throws up a contested shot over P.J. Washington for the deuce!

Luke Kornet dropped six points (3-3 FG), four rebounds, and three assists in 16 minutes. Luke made the most of his playing time and did the dirty work for his teammates with screens. He continues to be a solid backup center for a team that desperately lacked one the last three seasons.

Johnny on the spot! Luke cleans up the missed D-Fox shot with a tip slam!

Give and go! Luke grabs the offensive rebound and sets up Dyl for a give-and-go alley-oop connection!

What more could one say about Stephon Castle? His performance was otherworldly, and allowed key players to take backseats. It is one thing to accomplish a triple-double; it is another to accomplish a high-scoring triple-double, but on this efficiency? His name being mentioned in the same breath as Wilt is an accomplishment in itself. As this team moves to 36-16, look for them to focus back on a pair of playoff teams out west this upcoming week.

Finally, here are the full game highlights.

The Spurs travel to Los Angeles for their fourth matchup with the Lakers this season on Tuesday at 9:30 P.M. (CST) on FDSN-SW.

NBA contenders at crossroads following trade deadline

When the Los Angeles Lakers played the Golden State Warriors on Saturday without Luka Dončić and Steph Curry, the most interesting drama happened off the court. 

Both teams’ general managers spoke to reporters before the Lakers’ 105–99 win. And with California’s NBA darlings both on the verge of major change, a lot of eyebrow-raising things came out of those conversations. 

Where do we begin? 

Golden State Warriors GM Mike Dunleavy Jr. talks to the media before the game against the Lakers on Feb 7. NBAE via Getty Images

First of all, Warriors’ GM Mike Dunleavy claimed Draymond Green wasn’t involved in trade talks for Giannis Antetokounmpo. “Draymond was not being shopped or talked about in deals,” he said. 

The problem?

That assertion was contradicted by Green himself Saturday morning on his podcast, “The Draymond Green Show,” when he said Dunleavy reached out to him before the trade deadline to say that he or Jimmy Butler would have to be included in a deal to match salaries. 

Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green said Dunleavy reached out to him before the trade deadline to say that he or Jimmy Butler would have to be included in a deal to match salaries. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“What is said to me in that moment was there’s a chance I may get traded for Giannis because he didn’t rule it out,” Green said on his podcast. “He didn’t say, ‘We’re not putting you in a deal.’ So I took that as, all right, it’ll probably be me.”

So, the Warriors not only missed out on acquiring Antetokounmpo — whom the Bucks decided not to trade despite Golden State opening up its treasure chest of first picks — but the organization is also trying to mop up the fallout that came out of those talks. 

Other interesting things that came out of his availability? Dunleavy expressed optimism that Kristaps Porzingis — whom the Warriors acquired in exchange for Jonathan Kuminga and Buddy Hield — will be healthy even though he has only played in 17 games this season because of postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) and left Achilles tendonitis. 

GM Rob Pelinka made it clear the Lakers are looking toward their future, when they’ll have three first-round picks and a heap of expiring contracts this summer. Getty Images

“We feel good about it,” Dunleavy said, before adding, in essence, that they had nothing to lose by taking that gamble. “We’re sending out a player in a similar boat who struggled to stay on the floor.”  

In other words, at least the Kuminga saga has finally come to an end. 

Dunleavy also made it clear that the Warriors are still open to putting everything on the line this summer to give Steph Curry another chance at winning a title, calling this a “win-now” window. 

As for this current roster? Dunleavy didn’t pull any punches.

LA’s LeBron James is doing things on the court previously considered undoable for a 41-year-old. NBAE via Getty Images

“It was pointed out to me today that over [the] last calendar year, we had the fourth-best record in the NBA from when Jimmy got traded to when Jimmy got hurt,” Dunleavy said, referencing Butler suffering a torn ACL last month. “Despite the idea that we’re not in the mix, we’re fading, all of this stuff, the reality is up until Jimmy got hurt, we were pretty good. And I think we were trending in the right direction. Now we’ve had to pivot a little bit. I think adding Kristaps can help. But this group is kinda what it is.” 

Not a shining endorsement of the Warriors’ roster. But if Porzingis can get and stay healthy, Golden State could make the playoffs. And if Butler weren’t injured, they could’ve really competed. But for now, the Warriors will look ahead, when they’ll once again try to use their stash of draft capital to make a big splash. 

“We’ve got the goods to make deals,’ Dunleavy said. 

Dunleavy said the Warriors are putting everything on the line to give Steph Curry another chance at winning a title.  Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

On the other side of Crypto.com Arena, Lakers’ president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka also spoke to reporters following the trade deadline. He addressed whether the Lakers were aggressive enough in pursuing deals, considering they have 26-year-old Luka Dončić playing at an MVP-level, Austin Reaves looking like an All-Star, and LeBron James doing things at 41 years old that were previously considered undoable. 

Pelinka, whose only move before Thursday’s deadline was to deal Gabe Vincent and a second-round pick for Luke Kennard, made it clear the Lakers are looking toward their future, when they’ll have three first-round picks and a heap of expiring contracts this summer.

“One form of being aggressive is saying no to moves,” he said. 

Pelinka also revealed that the Lakers intend to restructure their front office, emulating back-to-back World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers

In other words, change is going to come. A lot of change. For him, too. 

“When Mark [Walter] bought the team, Jeanie [Buss] and I did a really deep dive with him on sort of the areas he wants to grow and move into and get aggressive,” he acknowledged.

Both organizations are at a turning point.

The Lakers are trying to build around Dončić while he’s in his prime. And the Warriors are trying to stay relevant while 37-year-old Curry still looks like Curry. Neither team is a true contender this season. 
But both teams believe this summer, they can make the tweaks necessary to put their teams atop the league. 

So, while the basketball was fun Saturday (six Lakers players scored in double-digits, led by James’ 20-point, 10-assist and seven-rebound performance), the real intriguing stuff happened behind the scenes. 
We got a glimpse into how the two of the most important franchises in the league are thinking.

And it’s clear that this summer is going to be monumental.


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Adam Silver names Alperen Sengun to replace injured Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in All-Star Game

Reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous Alexander is out for the NBA All-Star Game next weekend in Los Angeles due to an abdominal strain (he has already missed two games and the Thunder lost both).

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver announced Sunday that Houston Rockets big man Alperen Sengun would replace Gilgeous-Alexander on the World Team in the All-Star Game (part of a USA vs. World format, more on that below).

Sengun was one of the most obvious snubs when the coaches picked the reserves. In his fifth NBA season, Sengu is averaging 20.8 points, 9.4 rebounds and a career-high 6.3 assists per game.

Sengun joins a stacked World Team roster that already includes Nikola Jokic and Victor Wembanyama at the five.

All-Star Game format

This year, the NBA All-Star Game returns to NBC and debuts on Peacock — and it falls right in the middle of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics, which are already underway. That was a perfect setup for the first-of-its-kind All-Star Game format, a USA vs. World showdown that fans and players have been asking for.

The 24 All-Star players have been divided into three teams, two USA teams — USA Stripes and USA Stars — and one World Team. Those three teams will compete in a round-robin tournament of four 12-minute games, each team playing at least two games.

At the end of the round-robin, the two top teams will play a championship game (the fourth 12-minute game of the day) for the title. (If there is a tie, it comes down to point differential.)

The 75th NBA All-Star Game will take place on Sunday, Feb. 15, at 5 p.m. Eastern, an earlier time than in previous years, leading into more coverage of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

How to watch NBA on NBC and Peacock:

Every moment of All-Star Weekend — the Rising Stars challenge on Friday. (Feb. 13), All-Star Saturday Night with the 3-Point Contest and Dunk Contest (Feb. 14), as well as the All-Star Game on Sunday, Feb. 15 — will be broadcast on NBC and Peacock.

The 75th NBA All-Star Game will take place on Sunday, Feb. 15, at 5 p.m. Eastern, a time earlier than in previous years, leading into more coverage of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game airs on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game airs on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.

Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

How to sign up for Peacock:

Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You'll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC & Bravo hits—Peacock is here for whatever you're in the mood for.