Pens Points: A gutsy comeback falls short in the shootout

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA - MARCH 10: Carolina Hurricanes and Pittsburgh Penguins fight during the second period of the game at Lenovo Center on March 10, 2026 in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Photo by Jaylynn Nash/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are your Pens Points for this Wednesday morning…

The Pittsburgh Penguins traveled to Raleigh, North Carolina, on Tuesday night for a Metropolitan Division battle against the Carolina Hurricanes. Pittsburgh took a 2-1 lead into the third period, then Carolina roared back to take a 4-2 lead. Pittsburgh scored two goals in a frantic, gutsy comeback to force overtime, but dropped the shootout yet again. [Recap]

The Penguins should give defensemen Samuel Girard and Ilya Solovyov an extended look to see if their styles can mesh and stabilize the team’s otherwise inconsistent blue line. [PensBurgh]

The team received a few positive and negative injury reports from Tuesday morning’s practice. Most notably, Sidney Crosby took the ice once again, although skating on a separate pairing with the currently suspended Evgeni Malkin, meaning he is close but not 100% ready to return to game action. [PensBurgh]

How inconsistent is the NHL’s Department of Player Safety after Evgeni Malkin received a five-game suspension for slashing Buffalo Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin, while Tampa Bay forward Brandon Hagel was only fined for also attacking the defenseman? Malkin undoubtedly deserved the suspension, but how does Hagel get off with a lesser punishment while Malkin sits for five games? [Trib Live]

News and updates from around the NHL…

Washington Capitals and NHL icon Alex Ovechkin said his decision on when to retire will depend largely on his health and how his body holds up as he continues playing at or past 40. He said he still loves the game, but wants to avoid long-term injuries that could affect life after hockey. [Sportsnet]

Former Penguins netminder and current Seattle Kraken Matt Murray, 31, has been activated from injured reserve. He had been out of action since Nov. 15. [TSN]

Mountain West tournament bracket, scores: Players to watch, bubble scenarios

The 2026 edition of the Mountain West men’s basketball tournament will have something of a bitter-sweet feel, as it will bring to a close what has been a period of hardwood prosperity for the league.

Yes, the conference will still exist next year, but its makeup will look quite different as some of its more high-profile members will be off to the reborn Pac-12 at the conclusion of this academic term. We should enjoy this one, then, as it also promises to be a wide-open affair. There’s also quite a bit on the line, as there isn’t likely to be much of an at-large safety net for most of the participants this year.

Mountain West tournament schedule, bracket, scores

First round

Wednesday, March 11

  • Game 1: No. 8 UNLV vs. No. 9 Wyoming, 3 p.m., Mountain West Network
  • Game 2: No. 5 Nevada vs. No. 12 Air Force, 5:30 p.m., Mountain West Network
  • Game 3: No. 7 Colorado State vs. No. 10 Fresno State, 9 p.m., Mountain West Network
  • Game 4: No. 6 Boise State vs. No. 11 San Jose State, 11:30 p.m., Mountain West Network

Quarterfinal

Thursday, March 12

  • Game 5: No. 1 Utah State vs. Game 1 winner, 3 p.m., CBSSN
  • Game 6: No. 4 Grand Canyon vs. Game 2 winner, 5:30 p.m., CBSSN
  • Game 7: No. 2 San Diego State vs. Game 3 winner, 9 p.m., CBSSN
  • Game 8: No. 3 New Mexico vs. Game 4 winner, 11:30 p.m., CBSSN

Semifinal

Friday, March 13

  • Game 9: Game 5 winner vs. Game 6 winner, 9:30 p.m., CBSSN
  • Game 10: Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 winner, midnight, CBSSN

Championship game

Saturday, March 14

  • Game 11: Championship game, 6 p.m., CBS

How to watch Mountain West tournament

The Mountain West tournament first round will air on the Mountain West Network and the league's streaming site The quarterfinals and semifinals will be broadcast by CBS Sports Network. CBS will air the championship game.

Mountain West favorite

Utah State claimed the regular-season title and top seed for this event in Vegas, and it is the only team here that can be considered truly safe as far as the NCAA tournament is concerned. The Aggies, however, didn’t secure that top seed until the final day of the campaign. No. 2 San Diego State and No. 3 New Mexico are quite capable of hoisting the trophy, and we also shouldn’t sleep on fifth-seeded Boise State, which qualifies as the league’s hottest team entering on a five-game winning streak.

Mountain West top players

MJ Collins Jr., G, Utah State – The former Vanderbilt and Virginia Tech player found a good fit in Logan to conclude his collegiate career. He leads the Aggies in scoring at 17.6 points a game while connecting at a reliable 81.7% clip from the free-throw line.

Mason Falslev, G, Utah State – One of the top holdovers helping the Aggies to a fourth consecutive 25-win campaign, Falslev is a consistent shooter with 51.9% overall field-goal accuracy and 41.7% from the arc. He is averaging 15.9 points a game while also contributing 5.7 rebounds and 1.9 steals.

Reese Dixon-Waters, G, San Diego State – The Aztecs have several candidates who can score in bunches, but Dixon-Waters does so with the most frequency. He leads a trio of guards with double-digit averages, putting up 13.2 himself.

Jake Hall, G, New Mexico – The Carlsbad, California native quickly emerged in his freshman season as a perimeter threat for the Lobos. He leads the team at 16.3 points a game connecting on 44.4% of his three-point attempts.

Drew Fielder, F, Boise State – The Georgetown transer has played a big role as the Broncos have charged late in the season and become a threat to take home the title. He enters the tournament leading BSU in scoring (14.8) and rebounding (5.7).

NCAA tournament bubble storylines for Mountain West

Provided the seeds hold, the semifinal between San Diego State and New Mexico could serve as a de facto bubble eliminator. It’s possible both could sneak in if there is sufficient chaos among contenders from other power leagues, but both squads will play like their season depends on it. Should any team outside the top three seeds steal the automatic bid, it could be bad news for both.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mountain West tournament bracket, scores, schedule

'It's Wilt, me, then Kobe' – Adebayo scores 83 points

The Miami Heat's Bam Adebayo
Bam Adebayo is a three-time NBA All Star [Getty Images]

Bam Adebayo scored 83 points - the second highest number in an NBA game - as the Miami Heat beat the Washington Wizards 150-129.

The center said it was a "special moment" when he passed Kobe Bryant's 81-point tally, set in 2006.

Wilt Chamberlain's record of 100 points has stood since 1962.

Adebayo scored 36 of 43 free-throws - records for the most free-throws attempted and most free-throws made - at Kaseya Center in Miami.

"It's Wilt, me, then Kobe, which sounds crazy," he said.

The 28-year-old described it as a "special moment" and said he "really got emotional" when he realised the scale of his achievement.

"I wish I could relive it twice," Adebayo said.

Paying tribute to his family and trainers, he said: "They've seen me at the lowest, at the bottom of the bottom, trying to figure out how to really pick myself up.

"To have this moment and share it with all them, it's a pretty emotional moment."

The Los Angeles Lakers beat the Minnesota Timberwolves 120-106 at home thanks to Luka Doncic's 31 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists.

The Lakers climbed to fourth in the Western Conference, ahead of the Timberwolves on a tie-breaker as they both have 40-25 records.

Eastern Conference leaders the Detroit Pistons moved to 46-18 with a 138-100 win at the Brooklyn Nets as Jalen Duren scored 26 points.

Big East tournament bracket, scores: Players to watch, bubble scenarios

The Big East tournament should end with Connecticut and St. John’s meeting for the third time this season.

That’s if the Huskies can avoid another misstep after losing to Marquette in the regular-season finale to drop into second place in the final conference standings. That loss could cost UConn a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament.

Thanks in part to dismal seasons by Creighton and the Golden Eagles, the Big East is expected to send only three teams into this year’s tournament. Sending just three into the bracket in 2024 didn’t stop the league from making a statement; all three teams made the Sweet 16 and UConn won it all.

To make another March Madness splash, the Big East first needs UConn to shake off a lousy finish to the regular season. When it comes to St. John’s, the onus is still on the Red Storm to prove they can defeat elite competition after going 4-5 in Quad 1 games.

Big East tournament schedule, bracket, scores

First round

Wednesday, March 11

  • Game 1: No. 8 seed vs. No. 9 seed, 4 p.m., Peacock
  • Game 2: No. 7 seed vs. No. 10 seed, 6:30 p.m., Peacock
  • Game 3: No. 6 seed vs. No. 11 seed, 9 p.m., Peacock

Quarterfinals

Thursday, March 12

  • Game 4: No. 1 seed vs. Game 1 winner, noon, Peacock
  • Game 5: No. 4 seed vs. No. 5 seed, 2:30 p.m., Peacock
  • Game 6: No. 2 seed vs. Game 2 winner, 7 p.m., FS1
  • Game 7: No. 3 seed vs. Game 3 winner, 9:30 p.m., FS1

Semifinals

Friday, March 13

  • Game 8: Game 4 winner vs. Game 5 winner, 5:30 p.m., Fox
  • Game 9: Game 6 winner vs. Game 7 winner, 8 p.m., FS1

Championship game

Saturday, March 14

  • Game 10: Semifinal winners, 6:30 p.m., Fox

How to watch Big East tournament

  • TV: NBCSN, Fox Sports 1 and Fox
  • Streaming: Peacock and Fubo

The entire first round will air on NBCSN and simultaneously stream on Peacock. Likewise for the first two games of the quarterfinals, before the second pair of quarterfinal games shifts to Fox Sports 1 and streams on Fubo.

Fubo will also stream the semifinals and final, which will have a traditional broadcast on FOX.

Big East tournament favorite

The favorite is still UConn despite the late slide into second place behind the Red Storm.

St. John’s took the first meeting this season, topping the Huskies 81-72 at Madison Square Garden on Feb. 6. UConn avenged that loss with a dominant 72-40 win on Feb. 25.

The Red Storm are a difficult group to pin down because of the average mark against top-level competition. But St. John’s has often looked the part of a potential Final Four team.

Overall, UConn is the Big East’s most complete team and most dangerous NCAA tournament team after losing in the second round last March.

Big East tournament top players

Zuby Ejiofor, F, St. John’s — Ejiofor will deserve All-America consideration for his impact as a scorer (16.0 ppg), interior presence (2 bpg) and impactful post passer (career-best 3.5 apg).

Duke Brennan, F, Villanova — Brennan is hard to stop near the basket, making 66% of his attempts, and his 4 offensive rebounds per game leads the Big East and ranks eighth nationally.

Alex Karaban, F, UConn — The Huskies’ veteran forward has made 47.9% of his attempts from the field and an even 40% from deep to score in double figures (12.9 ppg) for the third year in a row.

Adam Clark, G, Seton Hall — A former Merrimack transfer, Clark is a pesky defender (2 spg) and capable distributor (4.7 apg) but has to limit his turnovers to help Seton Hall land the wins it needs to book a tournament bid.

Solomon Ball, G, UConn — Ball (13.9 ppg) hit a cold spell down the stretch of Big East play and was held below double figures in five of his past nine games. How far UConn goes this month might depend on whether he can flip the switch.

March Madness bubble storylines for Big East

The Big East has just three NCAA tournament locks in UConn, St. John’s and Villanova. The Huskies could rally back into position to secure a No. 1 seed by winning the conference tournament, depending on how things unfold with Florida in the SEC and Houston in the Big 12.

The Red Storm are currently hovering around the No. 5 line in large part. Villanova is solidly in the No. 7 range.

Seton Hall stormed out of the gate with a 10-1 mark in non-conference play but has dropped all six matchups against the Big East’s top three. That’s left the Pirates out of the NCAA mix and needing to win the conference tournament to punch their ticket to March Madness.

After placing five teams in last year’s bracket, the odds are the Big East has just three tournament teams unless an underdog wins the conference and steals a bid, which would complicate the at-large picture.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Big East basketball tournament bracket, scores, schedule, TV channel

Braden Smith has shot at NCAA assists record. He wants something bigger

Purdue Boilermakers guard Braden Smith (3) celebrates a referee call during the first half against the Wisconsin Badgers at Mackey Arena.

For more than 15 years, Matt Painter assembled Purdue teams where players of all shapes and sizes could win.

From the exceptionally tall Zach Edey to the mighty-mouse scoring sparkplug Carsen Edwards. From a bulldozer like Caleb Swanigan to lithe and agile Jaden Ivey.

Painter's Boilermakers have had it all — except an elite point guard.

Turns out, all he had to do was look about 50 miles southeast to find the one to change it all.

Westfield, Indiana's Braden Smith has gone from under-the-radar three-star recruit with offers from Montana and Appalachian State to Purdue's transcendent floor general. The All-American and 2025 Big Ten Player of the Year, Smith is in his final weeks with the Boilermakers. As the end approaches, he’s far from done.

NCAA history is in sight. So is that elusive national championship. Why not go for both?

Purdue Boilermakers guard Braden Smith (3) reacts to scoring during a foul during the second half against the Iowa Hawkeyes at Mackey Arena.

Smith enters March within striking distance of Bobby Hurley's Division I assists record. To get there, he will need a few extra games. And that might mean guiding Purdue down a short drive south on I-65 to Indianapolis for the Final Four.

“We've had good point guards,” Painter told USA TODAY Sports. “But we haven't had that elite player at that position like him.”

There wasn’t much time for the 2022 Indiana Mr. Basketball to settle, thrust into the starting lineup out of the gate. It helped having Edey as the star, able to dish it to the 7-5 behemoth to dominate games. 

It molded Smith as a premier passer, with assistant coach and former Purdue guard P.J. Thompson serving as a mentor. In his sophomore season, Smith's 7.5 assists per game were the second-most in the country for the eventual national runner-up. 

But with Edey gone, Purdue needed more from Smith his junior year. He didn’t really prioritize scoring, but he would have to, all while continuing to be one of the best passers in the game.

He stepped it up. Last season, he averaged 15.8 points with 8.7 assists per game, leading to a crowded trophy case.

“You add something to your game every year. You add more maturity to your game, more polish to your game,” Painter said. “We needed him to score, we needed him each year to grow. Every year, he got better.”

This season, Smith is Purdue's leading scorer at 14.9 points per game while averaging 8.7 assists a game, second-most in the nation. It’s been a remarkable offensive season for Purdue, on pace to be one of Painter’s best-scoring team of his tenure.

Smith can dissect things in multiple ways. Painter described his approach as “take what the game presents.” If teams are taking away passing lanes, then go score. If they are defending hard, make those passes for easy buckets.

“Just instinctively play the game. That's when he's at his best,” Painter said.

There will be nights where he scores 29 points, like he did against Alabama, or others when he’s reaching double-digit assists. When he’s getting double-doubles (he has eight this season), the Boilermakers are 6-2.

“I'm going to continue to shoot,” Smith said. “You still got to produce and do what you're going to do."

Braden Smith nearing Bobby Hurley's NCAA assist record

With 141 career games played, Smith is on the cusp of NCAA history, recently becoming the fifth men’s player to reach 1,000 career assists. At 1,029 total dimes, he is just 47 away from Hurley’s all-time record of 1,076 assists set in 1990-93.

Fans in black and gold have been following that chase all season, knowing there’s a realistic chance it could be broken. There’s even a website, bradenassists.com, dedicated to tracking it.

Bobby Hurley holds the Division I record of 1,076 career assists set in 1990-93.

Now in his 11th season coaching Arizona State, Hurley was made aware of the possibility before the year. He doesn't get to follow Smith heavily, but Hurley's appreciated what he's seen of him, including against his brother, Dan, and UConn in the 2024 title game.

"I've always admired how he plays and his vision and how he makes people better," Hurley told USA TODAY Sports. "Braden seems to be more of a throwback type of guard; just really unique vision and creativity with his passing and takes a lot of pride in it."

The record has stood for more than 30 years, with no real threat. North Carolina's Ed Cota (1996-2000) came closest with 1,030. Even though it hasn't really been challenged, Hurley figured "this moment would eventually happen," and "it might have happened sooner, actually."

He said he can't judge who is worthy of breaking the record, but Smith has all the traits to deserve it.

"To have someone that would take it down, he would be the type of person that I would really respect having the record," Hurley said.

Smith knows about the record. But does he care? Well, it depends, because there’s only one way it gets broken: Purdue keeps winning.

With the regular season complete, Smith and the Boilermakers are guaranteed at least two more games — one Big Ten tournament and one NCAA Tournament. Survive and advance to get 10 more games, the more chances to add assists. Hurley mentioned how playing those extra games en route to winning two national championships with Duke helped him reach his mark.

If Purdue plays the maximum 10 games left with a Big Ten final and national championship game appearance, he’ll just need to average 4.7 assists per game to break the record. The fewer amount of games played, the more assists needed per contest.

Already a guy that despises being taken out of games, don’t be surprised to see Smith play all 40 minutes, like he just did against Northwestern.

“The more he plays the game to win, the better chance he'll have to get the records,” Painter said. “The record is going to come because you get to the championship game of the Big Ten tournament, you get to the Final Four. That's when the record is gonna play out.”

Purdue needs deep March Madness run

That, of course, has been the conundrum for Purdue. Smith was a freshman on the team that became just the second No. 1 seed to lose to a No. 16 seed. He got to the championship game as a sophomore. Last season, the Boilermakers lost to Houston in the Sweet 16 on a last-second backdoor basket.

With Smith back for one last run, Purdue entered the season as national title favorites, the No. 1 in USA TODAY Sports preseason men's basketball poll. For much of the season, it played the part with a 17-1 start. 

However, things have gotten off track. The Boilermakers are 6-7 since then, suddenly looking like ghosts of March past are creeping up again.

Smith has still been producing for his team, but he believes any and all struggles “starts with me.” 

“Personally, that's how I am as a competitor and a person,” Smith said after Purdue lost to UCLA on Jan. 20. “I got to be better, and I got to learn from it.”

It’s made for frustrating times, and it only is heightened with the bumps and bruises Smith takes almost routinely in games, visibly upset with it. “I'm just so used to it at this point,” he said, feeling like he gets a different treatment of physicality.

Purdue Boilermakers guard Braden Smith (3) is recognized for all time career assists before the game against the Washington Huskies at Mackey Arena.

Painter understands it, but knows it’s the result of a high usage level. The more you handle the ball — and be a difference-maker with it — teams are going to hound you. That’s just the way it is.

Luckily, it gets the guard in a mindset his coach loves to see him in.

“A lot of it is that competitiveness comes out. You see him getting upset, you see him getting fiery, call it frustration,” Painter said. “But to me, I know he's dialed in. He wants to win. I'd rather calm somebody down like him than try to raise somebody else.”

That fire is what Purdue is going to need if Smith wants to end his decorated career on top. His name and number are bound to be displayed inside Mackey Arena permanently, but a championship banner is the top priority.

It pays to have experience in March, especially when that player has such high court IQ like Smith. That could be the difference from surviving and advancing or going home.

"I've seen some of his assists this year where he's able to look the defense off in such a creative way and someone's laying the ball in and the defense looks foolish," Hurley said. "That's what really great passers are able to do, just manipulate the defense and get the ball to someone where the defense or the casual fan watching goes, 'How did he see that?'

"Well, it's because he probably reads the game one or two seconds ahead of everybody else."

Record and title or not, Painter doesn’t think this is the end of the road for Smith; he believes a bright professional future is ahead for his star guard.

“Braden is a pro. I think he'll play 10 to 12 years in the NBA. I really believe that wholeheartedly,” he said.

But that’s something to look forward to in mid-April.

In an era of unrestricted player movement, Smith spent all four years with the Boilermakers, developing into a premier guard. He wants to bring glory to Purdue. 

“Our guys staying, really also had to do with unfinished business,” Painter said. “They want to win a national championship.”

The all-time assist record would just be the cherry on top.

NCAA career assists leaders

  1. Bobby Hurley, Duke (1990-93): 1,076
  2. Chris Corchiani, NC State (1988-91): 1,038
  3. Ed Cota, North Carolina (1997-2000): 1,030
  4. Braden Smith, Purdue (2023-26): 1,029
  5. Jason Brickman, Long Island (2011-2014): 1,007

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Will Braden Smith break Bobby Hurley assists record? He wants more

Why March Madness expansion would punish Cinderellas: 'It's not broken' — yet

PENSACOLA, FL – Why does March Madness expansion dialogue stubbornly persist? Because, power conferences want more participation ribbons.

Expansion would be a boon for power conference teams that barely finish above .500. Collect your ribbon, and head to the dance.

What, though, would growing the NCAA Tournament to 72 or 76 teams do for mid-majors?

Take it from a guy who’s spent most of his career coaching those teams.

“Tournament expansion probably ain’t going to help the Sun Belt Conference, unfortunately,” said coach Scott Cross, whose Troy Trojans are headed to the NCAA Tournament for a second straight year, after securing their conference's auto bid.

He’s right, of course, but you probably didn’t need Cross to spell it out. You can add two plus two and know it equals Power Four.

When was the last time a college sports evolution helped the little guy? This one wouldn’t, either.

The Sun Belt wouldn’t benefit from tournament expansion. Neither would the Southland, the conference where Cross used to coach. Wouldn’t help the Horizon, either. Or the Ohio Valley. I could go on, but you get the idea.

“I think the tournament is really special the way it is,” Georgia Southern coach Charlie Henry said, “so I would probably not be in favor of expanding.”

Henry’s Eagles won five games in five days to reach the Sun Belt tournament final before falling one win short of an auto bid. They won’t sniff an at-large selection to a 68-team bracket, and they wouldn’t at 76 teams, either. Expansion efforts aren’t designed to help their kind.

Don’t misunderstand what Cross and Henry are saying. Neither coach stumped for the Sun Belt to get a second bid. In fact, both coaches admitted their conference is a one-bid league. Just don’t expect them to support an expansion designed to benefit the 10th- and 12th- and 14th-place teams from the power leagues.

Tournament expansion would “allow more teams that are average at the Power Four level to get in,” Cross said. “I think the tournament is great the way it is.”

Amen, brother.

Most fans would agree. Too bad they aren’t calling the shots.

March Madness expansion all about the Power Four dregs

Greg Sankey, Tony Petitti, Brett Yormark and Jim Phillips are like the four horsemen of the 68-team tournament apocalypse. These Power Four conference commissioners just won’t let the expansion idea go. Expansion would carve out bids for the dregs of the mega conferences these commissioners created.

When you hear talk of a 76-team NCAA Tournament, understand it’s all geared toward rescuing teams like Auburn (16-15) and Indiana (18-13) from the NIT — or, declining an NIT bid, rather — and ushering them into the main event, courtesy of their repeated losses against better teams.

True, the expanded bracket would occasionally gift an at-large bid to a mid-major from an upper-middle class conference, but that’ll come at a cost.

For every 2024 Indiana State that’ll be buoyed by tournament expansion, there will be a half-dozen bids for teams like this year’s 14-loss Oklahoma Sooners.

The real travesty of tournament expansion wouldn’t even be the addition of more 14-loss teams from power conferences. That’s not great. This is worse: In a 76-team bracket, several additional low- and mid-majors could get relegated to play-in games.

That’s right, to be assured of a spot in the Round of 64, a mid-major might need to win its conference tournament and then also survive a game in Dayton, Ohio, or some additional site picked for the play-in carnival.

This, folks, is the real sucker punch.

Imagine the case of Cross' Troy Trojans. They won the Sun Belt's regular season. They won the conference tournament. They're headed to NCAA's first round — for at least one more year, anyway. In a 76-team bracket, they could be relegated to a play-in game. That's a slap of disrespect, and for what? So that a 12th-place power conference team can get a participation ribbon.

A bigger NCAA Tournament might shift more Cinderellas to play-in games

If a team wins its conference tournament to secure an auto bid, that ought to be good for a spot in the Round of 64 — the round most of us normies consider the real start to the tournament.

One 76-team format under consideration, according to On3's reporting last fall, would slot 12 auto-bid qualifiers into play-in games, as well as 12 at-large qualifiers into the play-in round.

In other words, say goodbye to at least six potential Cinderellas before we even reach those Thursday and Friday games we love so dearly. That means fewer small-conference underdogs permitted access to the Round of 64 to try to pull off what Saint Peter’s did to Kentucky or what Princeton did to Arizona or what UMBC did to Virginia or Farleigh Dickinson did to Purdue.

“Those are my favorite two days the entire year, those first two days,” Cross said.

He’s not alone in that feeling, and we don’t love those two days for the chalk. We love them because teams like Hampton and Norfolk State and Oakland can bounce a big boy and earn their “One Shining Moment,” before the bigger brands reclaim the spotlight in the tournament’s later stages.

“It’s not broken,” Cross said of the NCAA Tournament. “It’s one of the greatest sporting events, in my opinion, anywhere. I love it the way it is.”

We love it in no small part because of the bracket-busting havoc underdogs inflict on Goliaths awash in booster bucks. If the power conferences get their expansion wishes, that'll just mean more participation ribbons, at Cinderella's expense.

Blake Toppmeyer is a columnist for the USA TODAY Network. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Cinderellas wouldn't like March Madness expansion. Here's why

Inside Todd Golden's remarkable rise to top of college basketball

It has been 16 months since he was thrown into the guilty-until-proven-innocent social media wash cycle, buried by the anonymously wicked and willfully reckless sewer of discontent.

Now here we are, a world removed from it all for Florida coach Todd Golden, and the only question is what’s more unthinkable: How quickly we’ve forgotten what he endured off the court from a four-month Title XI investigation that cleared him of any wrongdoing

Or how he has since built the most dominant program in college basketball

“We’re playing really good basketball right now,” Golden said.

That’s the secondary now to the primary buildout of 16 months, one that has no peers in the eat-what-you-kill-world of the tenuous NIL era. 

Florida coach Todd Golden celebrates his 100th win and beating Mississippi State 108-77 at O'Connell Center in Gainesville, FL on , March 3, 2026.

The Gators are 61-10 over the past two seasons, including a 33-6 record against the best conference in college basketball. They won the national title last season with a revamped roster and elite player development — and did it by beating two No.1 seeds in the Final Four. 

Then started over again this season.

They lost the best backcourt in school history, three guards critical to the championship run now playing in the NBA. Lost another guard to Kentucky’s deep NIL wallet. Lost two assistant coaches to head coaching jobs. 

They’ve had to change offensive styles midseason, moving to inside-out bully ball while never wavering from Golden’s defense-first mantra. They’ve won 11 straight while beating the brakes off SEC competition, and head into next week’s NCAA Tournament as a likely No.1 seed — and the hottest team no one wants to play.

The transformation has been as remarkable as revealing. From defending himself from what he called — and an independent law firm hired by Florida later agreed — baseless allegations, to his program chasing immortality.

Only UCLA under legendary coach John Wooden has had multiple back-to-back national championships seasons. Not Duke or North Carolina, not Kansas or Kentucky or UConn. 

Florida — the football school —  is one postseason from joining UCLA as the only two-time, back-to-back national champions in the sport’s history. Which, of course, brings us to Golden’s biggest move of all. 

Surpassing the great Billy Donovan in all of four seasons.

The coach with his name on the court at the O’Connell Center. The coach who, over 19 seasons in Gainesville, changed the way they thought about basketball and became the best coach in any sport in school history. Better than Spurrier, better than Urb. 

Golden, 40, reached 100 wins at Florida in 139 games; Donovan hit the number in 154. Golden is on the verge of getting his second No.1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, Donovan had one in his career.

Donovan worked in an era of organically-developed rosters, where longstanding recruiting relationships and longterm player development bore the fruit of championship teams.

Golden works in the ever-changing, transitional now of college sports, where’s he’s constantly recruiting his own roster while adding impact pieces through the transfer portal — and mining high schools for philosophical fits who won’t leave after one season.

Every game is sold out in the 11,000-seat arena, and students camp out days in advance for tickets. Golden connects with fans and big-money booster like few do, promoting and defending this monster of a program he has built every chance he gets.

Florida Gators coach Todd Golden gestures with a Gator Chomp against the Kentucky Wildcats during the second half at the O'Connell Center.

He stomps around the court, and Gator chomps after wins. He bowed up to coaching legend John Calipari last month — Golden looks like a high school cross-country runner — after a 34-point emasculation of Arkansas, and jawed with a fan at Rupp Arena after yet another statement game of who runs the best conference in college basketball. 

He’s all ball, no nonsense — which is why he doesn’t even speak to the allegations of 16 months ago. No sense in giving something that isn’t true more oxygen.

He’s not trying to please social media scavengers and headline chasers. He’s coaching ball — and doing it better than anyone right now.   

“Didn’t lose in February,” Golden said. “Got to try not to lose in March.”

Golden lost 29 games in his first two seasons at Florida, an uneasy beginning that pointed to a prove-it season in Year 3. Now he’s six NCAA Tournament wins from coaching immortality, and dealing with the same things Donovan did over two decades. 

The blue-bloods will come calling, maybe even as soon as this offseason. The Kansas, Kentucky and North Carolina jobs could be available, so will many NBA jobs. 

Who knows if he would leave? For that matter, who cares?

Nothing he could do from here out will top this remarkable 16-month run. Not even a second national title.

But since they’re staring at it, why not embrace it? Take those three SEC tournament games this week, and the six NCAA Tournament games it takes to win it all — and leave no doubt.  

“An unrealistic level of self-confidence?” Golden said. “I hope so.”

There’s your social media story, scavengers. Run with that.

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Florida Gators coach Todd Golden's rise to top of college basketball

What is your confidence level in Monti Ossenfort?

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


For the Arizona Cardinals, in year four of the Monti Ossenfort era, with his second head coach, the question becomes how much faith do you have in the Arizona Cardinals GM?

That’s what we want to know heading into today, are you confident in Monti Ossenfort in year four of his tenure as the Cardinals general manager, and what level of confidence do you have?

We know some of the moves that should become official this afternoon for the Arizona Cardinals, but in three free agency periods and three drafts there has not been a whole lot to show for it.

So, will year four be the one that yields some better results for the team and individual players?

Or is the 2026 season going to be the third time in four years the Arizona Cardinals finish at the bottom of the league?

How backup freshman guard struck it rich on social media, can retire already

One of the most popular men’s basketball players in the Southeastern Conference recently bought a million-dollar lake house in North Carolina and has gotten so wealthy from his name, image and likeness he could retire from work now if we wanted, according to his father.

But this particular player isn’t a top NBA prospect like Arkansas point guard Darius Acuff or big Tennessee forward Nate Ament.

Instead, he’s a short freshman bench player on the 14th-place team in the league.

His name is Eli Ellis, a guard for South Carolina who has more than 2.1 million followers combined on social media, ranking him No. 5 nationally in Division I men’s college basketball, more than double of any other player in the SEC, according to NIL marketplace company Opendorse.

This means he’s already made a fortune off of his NIL.

“He actually could retire now,” his father and former coach Jeremy Ellis told USA TODAY Sports. “He’s been making a lot of money since really 10th grade. And he doesn’t spend it.”

This might even make him the business model of the future for college athletes — a social media entrepreneur who also happens to be a good player, too. He’s skilled at both. Not many are. And he’s only 20 years old heading into the SEC tournament this week in Nashville.

“Especially in my position, if you're at two million followers and you really know what you're doing, you can make seven figures,” Eli Ellis said in an interview with USA TODAY Sports.

How Eli Ellis built his social media following

Ellis by his own admission can’t dunk a basketball — or at least hasn’t in a game yet, he said. But he became such a highlight reel on the court over the years that his social media following just kept growing after getting his first iPhone in ninth grade.

Ellis traces it back to about 2021, when he and his younger brother Isaac led their Moravian Prep team in North Carolina to a win against top high school recruit Mikey Williams of Vertical Academy. The Ellis brothers combined for nearly 60 points despite being in ninth and eighth grade, raising eyeballs in the basketball world and gaining a follow from NBA star Kevin Durant.

A documentary show featuring the brothers followed in 2022 from the sports media company Overtime.

Now look at him. Ellis ranks No. 5 in men’s college basketball with 1.4 million followers on TikTok, 690,000 on Instagram and 6,400 on X, in addition to his 55,000 subscribers on YouTube.

The Top 5 most-followed men's college players

Here are the top five most-followed men’s players in Division I college basketball this season on TikTok, Instagram and X combined, according to data provided to USA TODAY Sports by Opendorse.

  1. Mikey Williams, Sacramento State guard, has 5.2 million followers combined, as of March 4. Williams was a middle school and high school basketball star who grew his own following with similar basketball highlight reels.
  2. Shaqir O’Neal, Sacramento State forward, has 4.26 million followers as of March 4. He is the son of NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal.
  3. Hansel Enmanuel has 4.23 million followers after starting the season at Austin Peay. He has gone viral for his basketball skills despite having only one arm.
  4. Bryce James, freshman guard at Arizona, has 2.9 million followers and is the son of NBA legend LeBron James.
  5. Ellis, whose team plays Oklahoma Wednesday, March 11, in the SEC Tournament.

How Eli Ellis makes his NIL money

Huge social-media followings appeal to brands, who want to market themselves to that audience. Ellis has gotten paid to promote brands such as Under Armour, Fortnite and Dr. Pepper.

Such deals also come with perks. A car dealership last year gifted him a new Chevrolet Traverse before his freshman year at South Carolina. Instead of buying jewelry, his father said Eli will do a deal with a jewelry company in which he’ll get paid with jewelry and cash.

In between those paid spots, Ellis posts relatable content about basketball and everyday life. On TikTok, 95 of his posts received at least one million views, including one last year that got nine million views. The latter video shows one of his younger brothers reacting with displeasure after his other brother takes a lick from the little brother’s ice cream cone.

“In the age of NIL, collegiate athletes need to cultivate brands that are authentic and resonate with fans,” said Natasha Brison, an associate professor at South Carolina with expertise in sports marketing. “Social media is an optimal way to leverage an athlete brand, maximize fan engagement, and attract potential sponsors. Given that Eli is only a freshman, he is the epitome of what an athlete should aim to be (and do) in athlete brand development.”

Eli Ellis has three jobs

He’s not ready to retire, even if he could. He is a basketball player, social media influencer and a businessman who runs a training academy for $189 per annual subscriber for those who want to improve their basketball and social media games.

He also recently started a podcast that is produced by The College Sports Company. His first guest was Gary Vaynerchuk, an entrepreneur and author who has taken Ellis under his wing.

"He is not a typical college athlete," said Russell Wilde Jr., chief operating officer of The College Sports Company. "He is a true creator who values his audience and understands the platform he has as a college athlete to grow his personal brand."

But one job is still more important to him than the rest.

“The biggest thing I've learned is keeping the main thing the main thing, and that's basketball,” Eli Ellis said. “That's how I got here. That's how I blew up.”

Sharing the wealth with teammates

Ellis' height is listed at 6-feet, though he said on the same podcast last week he’s 5-11. He enters the SEC tournament this week as his team’s fifth-leading scorer with 8.7 points per game for the Gamecocks, who finished the regular season with a 13-18 record. He played in 27 games as a freshman, all coming off the bench as he strives to realize the potential he showed while playing in high school for the YNG Dreamerz of the Overtime Elite league in Atlanta.

He won the league’s MVP award twice after scoring more than 30 points per game in consecutive years, helping rack up social-media highlights in the meantime. One thing feeds the other.

“I need to have a good year basketball-wise, and the social media stuff will follow if I'm playing good,” Ellis said.

He previously said he posted on social media two or three times per day and now only does it about twice a week during the season, all from his one phone. He  shares certain proceeds from it sometimes with teammates — including headphones or gift cards from restaurants where he has deals.

“Involving them helps a lot, especially with (how) I get a lot of attention,” he said. “I try to let everybody feel some of the love.”

He plans to keep it going as an influencer and entrepreneur whenever his basketball career ends. In the meantime, he just wants to keep his freshman season going in Nashville this week. .

“We have the opportunity to make a run for sure,” Ellis said.

The views surely will follow if they do.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Eli Ellis social media following leads to NIL riches for South Carolina freshman

Bangladesh wins toss, elects to field against Pakistan in 1st ODI

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — Pakistan awarded ODI debuts to four players and Bangladesh won the toss and elected to field Wednesday to open the three-match series.

Sahibzada Farhan, Maaz Sadaqat, Shamyl Hussain and Abdul Samad formed the new-look Pakistan top order. Farhan was rewarded for his outstanding performance at the T20 World Cup, where he scored 383 runs.

Both teams went with three fast bowlers in a hope the wicket will suit the pacemen. Bangladesh included Nahid Rana, Taskin Ahmed and Mustafizur Rahman, and Pakistan's pace trio had captain Shaheen Shah Afridi, Mohammad Wasim and Faheem Ashraf.

Bangladesh recalled Tanzid Hasan in place of Soumya Sarkar. Litton Das and Afif Hossain were included in the middle-order.

Pakistan dropped experienced Babar Azam and Saim Ayu b for the series after their disappointing T20 World Cup co-hosted by India and Sri Lanka.

Bangladesh was replaced by Scotland at the T20 World Cup after it refused to travel to India amid security concerns.

___

Lineups:

Bangladesh: Saif Hassan, Tanzid Hasan, Towhid Hridoy, Najmul Hossain Shanto, Litton Das, Afif Hossain, Mehidy Hasan Miraz (captain), Rishad Hossain, Taskin Ahmed, Nahid Rana, Mustafizur Rahman

Pakistan: Sahibzada Farhan, Maaz Sadaqat, Shamyl Hussain, Mohammad Rizwan, Salman Ali Agha, Hussain Talat, Abdul Samad, Faheem Ashraf, Shaheen Shah Afridi (captain), Mohammad Wasim, Abrar Ahmed.

____

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

Golden Knights host the Penguins on losing streak

Pittsburgh Penguins (32-17-15, in the Metropolitan Division) vs. Vegas Golden Knights (29-22-14, in the Pacific Division)

Paradise, Nevada; Thursday, 10 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: The Vegas Golden Knights aim to break their three-game slide when they take on the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Vegas has a 29-22-14 record overall and a 14-10-7 record in home games. The Golden Knights have allowed 201 goals while scoring 209 for a +8 scoring differential.

Pittsburgh is 32-17-15 overall and 16-8-7 on the road. The Penguins have gone 32-4-8 in games they score three or more goals.

The matchup Thursday is the second time these teams play this season. The Penguins won 5-0 in the last meeting.

TOP PERFORMERS: Mitchell Marner has 18 goals and 47 assists for the Golden Knights. Pavel Dorofeyev has six goals and four assists over the last 10 games.

Anthony Mantha has 24 goals and 24 assists for the Penguins. Bryan Rust has five goals and five assists over the past 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Golden Knights: 4-6-0, averaging 2.8 goals, 5.1 assists, 3.7 penalties and 8.9 penalty minutes while giving up three goals per game.

Penguins: 4-2-4, averaging 3.4 goals, 5.3 assists, 4.1 penalties and 10.2 penalty minutes while giving up 2.7 goals per game.

INJURIES: Golden Knights: None listed.

Penguins: None listed.

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Steve Borthwick’s England selection has the whiff of damage limitation | Robert Kitson

Unadventurous team will need to improve significantly on multiple fronts if they are to poop France’s potential title party in Paris

So let’s rewind for a moment. Just four weeks ago England had beaten Wales 48-7 in round one and were looking towards Scotland with a collective glint in their eyes. “The message to the players is: go out, move the ball, play fast, play brave,” Steve Borthwick said after announcing a pretty settled side for Murrayfield. “It suits the team we have.”

And now? Not unlike the Ashes cricket series in Australia this winter, the team sheet for the final game of an already torpedoed campaign is a case of too little too late. Similarly to the cult of Bazball, the bell is tolling for the Borthball era. Even if the head coach remains in post, it is inconceivable that England’s tactical approach can remain unchanged.

Continue reading...

Bam Adebayo and other elite fantasy basketball stat lines

Miami Heat center Bam Adebayo made history on Tuesday in the team's 150-129 win over the Washington Wizards. After scoring 31 points in the first quarter, a franchise record for points in a quarter, he also broke the Heat record for points in a half with 43.

By the end of the night, Adebayo had accumulated 83 points, nine rebounds, three assists, two steals, two blocks and seven three-pointers. Shooting 20-of-43 from the field and 36-of-43 from the foul line, Bam became the first player in league history to record at least 22 three-point and 30 free-throw attempts in the same game, and his 36 points from the foul line were also a league record.

Of course, Wilt Chamberlain is the only player in league history to have scored more points in a game, having put up 100, but Adebayo is now second on that list, jumping past Kobe Bryant's 81-point effort against the Toronto Raptors. Obviously, Adebayo's fantasy stat line was elite, but what were some of the other great nights in fantasy basketball history? Let's take a look at some other nights that would have, or did, set the fantasy basketball world on fire.

Hakeem Olajuwon, Houston Rockets (March 10, 1987 vs. Seattle)

Fantasy basketball may not have been the industry that it is today back in the 1980s, but Olajuwon was one of the players of that era who would have been an elite option, regardless of league format. On March 10, 1987, the Hall of Fame center produced a stat line the likes of which we have not seen since. Shooting 14-of-29 from the field and 10-of-14 from the foul line, Olajuwon finished the double-overtime defeat with a stat line that included a staggering 19 defensive contributions. He finished with 38 points, 17 rebounds, six assists, seven steals and 12 blocked shots.

Michael Jordan, Chicago Bulls (March 28, 1990 vs. Cleveland)

Considered by many to be the greatest of all time, Jordan could supplement high-scoring nights with excellent production across the entire stat line. That was the case in a March 1990 overtime loss to the Cavaliers. Shooting 23-of-37 from the field and 21-of-23 from the foul line, Jordan scored 69 points while also recording 18 rebounds, six assists, four steals, one block and two three-pointers. Also, he was responsible for just two turnovers while playing 50 of a possible 53 minutes.

David Robinson, San Antonio Spurs (February 17, 1994 vs. Detroit)

Shooting 12-of-20 from the field and 10-of-17 from the foul line, "The Admiral" recorded a 34-point quadruple-double in a win over the Pistons. In 43 minutes, he was also responsible for 10 rebounds, 10 assists, two steals and 10 blocked shots. Not a single fantasy manager would complain about the free-throw shooting after a performance of this caliber.

Kobe Bryant, Los Angeles Lakers (January 22, 2006 vs. Toronto)

The man whose point total Adebayo eclipsed on Tuesday, Bryant's 81-point night against the Raptors remains the stuff of legend. And who was defending him throughout the course of that game didn't matter. Playing 42 minutes, Bryant shot 28-of-46 from the field and 18-of-20 from the foul line. In addition to the 81 points, Kobe put up six rebounds, two assists, three steals, one blocked shot and seven three-pointers. Clearly, there have been more robust fantasy stat lines. But scoring 81 points efficiently can compensate for that.

James Harden, Houston Rockets (December 31, 2016 vs. New York)

While Harden has four 60-point games to his credit, those performances don't make the cut. What made the cut was the triple-double he recorded in a win over the Knicks on the final day of 2016. Shooting 14-of-26 from the field and 18-of-20 from the foul line, Harden scored 53 points while also recording 16 rebounds and 17 assists. He didn't record any steals or blocks, and there were also eight turnovers, but on some nights, the production is too good to overlook.

Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City Thunder (March 29, 2017 vs. Orlando)

During his MVP 2016-17 season, Westbrook recorded two 50-point triple-doubles in March. One was recorded during an overtime win over the Magic, with the point guard tallying 57 points (21-of-40 FGs, 9-of-11 FTs), 13 rebounds, 11 assists, three steals and six three-pointers. Like Harden, the turnover count was a bit high for Westbrook on that night, as he recorded seven. However, few will complain about that when the turnovers are part of a 50-point triple-double on efficient shooting percentages.

Joel Embiid (November 13, 2022 vs. Utah)

"The Process" appeared hellbent on winning Most Valuable Player from the start of the 2022-23 campaign, and he would achieve that goal. One of Embiid's best performances, and best fantasy stat lines, came in a mid-November win over the Jazz. He shot 19-of-28 from the field and 20-of-24 from the foul line, putting up 59 points to go along with 11 rebounds, eight assists, one steal, seven blocks and one three-pointer.

G Luka Dončić, Dallas Mavericks (December 27, 2022 vs. New York)

Dončić also put up some elite stat lines during that 2022-23 campaign. Having scored 50 points in a win over the Magic two days before Christmas, the then-Mavericks star was even better in an overtime win over the Knicks two days after the holiday. Shooting 21-of-31 from the field and 16-of-22 from the line, Dončić scored 60 points while also recording 21 rebounds, 10 assists, two steals, one blocked shot and two three-pointers. And he played 47 of a possible 53 minutes.

Donovan Mitchell, Cleveland Cavaliers (January 2, 2023 vs. Chicago)

On the second day of 2023, Mitchell torched the Bulls in an 11-point overtime victory. In 50 minutes, he put up 71 points, eight rebounds, 11 assists, one block and seven three-pointers. Mitchell was efficient, shooting 22-of-34 from the field, including a 15-of-19 night from two, and 20-of-25 from the foul line. Like the other players on this list, Spida was unstoppable on that night, much to the delight of fantasy managers who had him on their rosters.

Nikola Jokić, Denver Nuggets (March 7, 2025 vs. Phoenix and April 1, 2025 vs. Minnesota)

Jokić boasts a long list of stat lines that basketball fans can sift through to find some of his "greatest hits." But these two games, played within a month of each other last season, stick out. In the early March win over the Suns, the three-time league MVP scored "only" 31 points but also recorded 21 rebounds, 22 points, three steals and three three-pointers. Also, Jokić attempted only three free throws that day.

As for the April Fool's Day masterclass against the Timberwolves, Jokić recorded the first, and to this point, only 60-point game. Shooting 18-of-29 from the field and 19-of-24 from the foul line, The Joker finished with 61 points while also recording 10 rebounds, 10 assists, two steals and six three-pointers. He's one of three players in league history to have recorded a 60-point triple-double, with Harden and Dončić being the others.

Austin Reaves is back and he’s raising the Lakers’ ceiling

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 10: Austin Reaves #15 of the Los Angeles Lakers walks off the court after the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves on March 10, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

LOS ANGELES — The Lakers had plenty of excuses ready if they lost to the Wolves.

Minnesota entered the night as the third-best team in the West. The Lakers entered the night without their All-Star LeBron James for the thirdstraight game as well as bigs Jaxson Hayes and Maxi Kleber.

But they still had Austin Reaves.

Behind their budding star and the superhero of the night, the Lakers earned a hard-fought 120-106 win over Minnesota.

Reaves ended the night with 31 points, seven rebounds and eight assists. It was his second consecutive strong showing after scoring 25 in a win against the Knicks.

“Really it was [that] he was able to get downhill,” Lakers head coach JJ Redick said postgame. “I mean, that’s the biggest thing. That’s when he’s at his best. He’s a fantastic shooter, but he’s at his best when he’s touching the paint.

“I thought early on, him getting into the paint, getting fouled, seeing the ball go through the hoop [was good]. And then we saw him as the half wore on, he just got into his bag and a lot of those were on paint touches and he hit those non-rim paint two.”

Reaves’ big night wasn’t so great at the start.

In the opening quarter, his jumper was cold as he went 0-3 from the field. At the halftime break, he had just one made field goal and a sensational night seemed out of reach.

However, as the third quarter began, Reaves’ jumper began to warm up. He drove to the paint and converted on a layup. He found Luka Dončić for a floater, giving the Lakers a two-possession lead.

Then, Reaves’ confidence and productivity really ratcheted up.

First, heconverted on a four-point play. He followed that up with another deep make and then drove into the paint and scored on a foater. Suddenly, a close contest became a double-digit lead for LA.

“I think he’s just a great player,” Dončić said. “He’s very talented defensively. He gets to his spots, he tricks the defense, and that’s why he’s a great player.”

Reaves’ dominance continued in the fourth. He checked in with 10:38 left to play and immediately had another four-point play. After another lob connection with Deandre Ayton and a floater, LA had put the Wolves to bed with three minutes left on the clock.

In the NBA, things can change in the blink of an eye. After their tough loss to the Nuggets a week ago, the Lakers have bounced back with three straight wins and are now fourth in the West.

While Luka has been at the center of that streak, Austin hasn’t been far behind. He showed glimpses against the Pacers before really finding his groove in the last two games.

As a result, both he and the Lakers are on an upward trend now

“It feels like we’re trending in the right direction, just got to continue to stick to the plan,” Reaves said. “And continue to get better every single day and compete at a high level.”

For the Lakers’ to be at their best, Reaves must play his best against elite teams.

On Tuesday night, he did just that.

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

Defense, Luka Doncic 31-point triple-double lift Lakers to win over Timberwolves

LOS ANGELES — For the second straight game, we saw the vision of how the Lakers want to play around Luka Doncic starting to manifest.

There is Austin Reaves as the secondary playmaker, putting up 31 points on Tuesday night and getting downhill (plus having two four-point plays). Then, with LeBron James out again, the Lakers start Marcus Smart and Rui Hachimura as defense-first players who can space the floor — and they were dialed in on the defensive end. Then the Lakers got an engaged Deandre Ayton for a night.

And, for the second straight game, the Lakers beat a quality team, knocking off Minnesota 120-106.

The win moved the Lakers into fourth in the tight Western Conference, technically tied with the Timberwolves at 40-25, but the Lakers take the tiebreaker by sweeping the season series from Minnesota.

The way the Lakers looked against the Timberwolves, and how they played against the Knicks on Sunday, is the kind of team the Lakers want around Luka Doncic — the kind they need around him to be a threat in the playoffs. Why is it not always that smooth with LeBron on the court?

"It's what they're comfortable doing as basketball players..." Lakers coach JJ Redick said. "For one of those guys, having scored the most points in NBA history and doing it for 23 years, is to have the ball in his hands. For another guy who's had five First Team All NBAs — should make another First Team All NBA this year — it's having the ball in his hands... [Austin Reaves] ascending to an All-Star level. But the human struggle to want what you want while also having the emotional maturity and recognition that you got somebody next to you, it hasn't been as clean."

It was clean on Tuesday night, although it wasn't always pretty.

Having Luka Doncic put up a 31-point triple-double — 11 rebounds and assists — helps.

It also helped that the Timberwolves were just ice cold shooting the ball — give the Lakers defense some credit, but the Timberwolves also just missed shots they normally knock down. For the night, Anthony Edwards was 2-of-15, and made his first 3-pointer with 4:18 left in the third quarter, after missing his first nine.

But this is the second straight game in which a team with a good offense and an elite shot creator running the show has struggled against the Lakers.

"You can talk about schemes and rotation and low man, all that stuff, our guys have been a lot better just guarding the basketball…" Redick said of the last couple of games. "And when we were in rotation, we did a really good job. I thought, our attention to detail on the [Julius] Randle and Edwards coverage was really good. DA (Deandre Ayton) was fantastic tonight on that end."

This game was not pretty early.

The Lakers started 0-of-8 from the floor and that theme continued for the first 12 minutes — Luka Doncic and Anthony Edwards were 3-of-18 combined. It led to a low-scoring first quarter — 21-16 Timberwolves — in which Minnesota shot better at just 34.8%. The Lakers didn't hit a 3-pointer until Luka Doncic did with six minutes left in the first half.

"I think I think we started the game slow and sluggish," Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said. "That was my concern against the defense that they load so heavily. Wanted more pace early, wanted more quicker decision making early. And we just fell into a lot of iso basketball and then just everything was a beat late. We're very out of rhythm right now offensively, and we've gotta fix that."

Both teams shooting improved to decent in the second half, but neither side got hot or created much separation. A Rui Hachimura 3-pointer in the final five seconds tied the game up at 45-45 at the half.

That dynamic started to change in the third, when the Lakers started 6-of-10 and the Timberwolves remained ice cold, not hitting a bucket for the first six minutes of the half. Suddenly, the Lakers were up double digits, and that stretched to 19 on an uncontested Luke Kennard driving layup.

From there, Minnesota could never hit enough shots in a row to make it a game.