STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Ebuka Okorie scored 34 points, his sixth 30-point game of the season, and Stanford rallied in the second half to defeat Pittsburgh 75-67 on Wednesday.
The Cardinal (17-11, 6-9 ACC) shot 50% from the field and overcame a 34-32 halftime deficit behind a 28-point second half from Okorie. He added six rebounds, six assists and three steals while going 9 for 9 from the free-throw line. Benny Gealer added 12 points, and Aidan Cammann finished with 11 as Stanford went a perfect 10-for-10 shooting at the line.
Pitt (10-18, 3-12) was led by Cameron Corhen's 22 points and eight rebounds, while Barry Dunning Jr. added 19 points on four 3-pointers.
Pitt built a 63-57 advantage with 7:08 remaining before Stanford answered with a decisive stretch. Okorie scored nine points during an 11-1 run that gave the Cardinal a 68-64 lead with 3:27 left, including back-to-back 3-pointers.
The Panthers cut the deficit to four on a Dunning 3-pointer with 1:44 remaining, but Stanford responded with a tip-in by Cammann and closed the game at the free-throw line, holding Pitt without a field goal over the final three minutes.
The win snapped a two-game losing streak for the Cardinal.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Defensemen Trevor van Riemsdyk and Rasmus Sandin ended long goal droughts and the Washington Capitals beat the Philadelphia Flyers 3-1 on Wednesday night, their fifth win in their last six games.
The Capitals now have 42 goals from defensemen this season, the second most in the NHL behind Columbus.
Aliaksei Protas scored an empty-netter for Washington with 26 seconds to play when the Flyers had a six-on-four for his 20th goal of the season, and Logan Thompson made 23 saves. Protas also had an assist.
Noah Cates scored for Philadelphia 29 seconds into the third period, his first goal in 19 games, and Dan Vladar made 26 stops as the Flyers lost for the sixth time in their last seven games to fall further out of playoff position.
After a scoreless first period, Sandin scored his third goal of the season and his first since Nov. 13 with 6:08 to play in the second. With an assist on the goal, Jakob Chychrun now has 11 points (3 goals, 8 assists) in his last eight games.
Cates tipped in a shot by Travis Sanheim early in the third to tie it at 1-1, but van Riemsdyk scored his second of the season with 5:52 to play to put Washington on top to stay. It was his first goal since Oct. 25, a span of 38 games.
The Capitals played without forward and Canadian Olympian Tom Wilson, who missed the game with an illness.
Up next
Flyers: Visit the New York Rangers on Thursday night.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 17: Luis Matos #29 of the San Francisco Giants during batting practice during San Francisco Giants Spring Training at Scottsdale Stadium on February 17, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Suzanna Mitchell/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The San Francisco Giants opened up the 2026 Cactus League with four straight victories, and they did it the old fashioned way: with pitching, defense, and small ball. After Hayden Birdsong got torched for five runs while recording just one out to open the spring, the Giants allowed just five runs over the next 35.2 innings … with only one pitcher on the 40-man roster ceding a run. They looked slick on defense. They had multiple outfield assists, and even turned a triple play. And they had more sacrifice flies in one game (three on Tuesday) than home runs in all four games combined (one, by Victor Bericoto on Monday).
Wednesday marked the end of that style of baseball, at least temporarily. The Giants pitchers traded in their donuts for traffic jams, while the batters traded in their sacrifices for big flies. And Tony Vitello traded in his undefeated record as a manager for a loss, as the Giants dropped an exceedingly Spring Trainingy game to the Milwaukee Brewers 13-12.
After falling behind 1-0 in the first inning, the Giants offense came roaring to life, behind some youngsters trying to make the team, and some veterans looking for strong 2026s. It started in the second inning, when designated hitter Luis Matos, hitting with the bases empty and no outs, took righty Carlos Rodríguez — who has a little bit of MLB experience — deep, hitting a cutter 99.7 mph over the left field wall.
It was great to see … or hear, as the case may be, since the game was once again not televised. Matos enters camp in a unique situation. San Francisco’s starting outfield is set, and Matos hasn’t displayed the defensive chops that the Giants are likely looking for from a fourth outfielder, especially given Heliot Ramos and Jung Hoo Lee’s defensive foibles a year ago. And he’s out of options, a casualty of his own success resulting in a need to protect him from the 2022 Rule 5 Draft … the same situation that led to Marco Luciano’s saddening exit from the organization a few months ago.
But he has the bat-to-ball skills that Buster Posey covets, and has shown flashes of excellence. He turned 24 less than a month ago, and you can see the Giants being hesitant to lose him, especially for nothing. So a case can be made that the Giants will be looking for a way to roster Matos come March 25, should he make a strong impression.
Wednesday was a strong impression. In his next at-bat, Matos came inches away from earning a second slow trot around the bases, instead settling for a 370-foot, 97.2-mph double that set the table for a huge fourth inning in which the Giants would bat around the order.
And hey, as long as we’re here, let’s talk about that fourth inning. We’ll go back and touch on the third in a moment. After Matos’ double, second baseman Casey Schmitt — another player seeking to prove he should be on the bench for Game 1, though with a more clear path than Matos — had his second phenomenal at-bat of the game. His first one was a fly out, but it came after forcing 11 pitches out of Rodríguez. As for his second? A blistered single that left the bat at a sizzling 109.3 mph. Fans of analytics will love the heat on that hit, though fans watching the scoreboard had to wait for some delayed gratification, since Schmitt hit the ball so hard that Matos had to hold up at third base.
It was no matter. Third baseman Christian Koss would be the copy to Schmitt’s cat, hitting a single so hard (104.4 mph) that his teammates could only advance one base each. For Schmitt, that meant stopping at second, but for Matos, that meant going as far as he could: home.
After shortstop Tyler Fitzgerald — we’re really seeing that trio move all around the dirt — lined out, the Giants new center fielder Harrison Bader stepped to the plate, with two on and two out.
Bader is in San Francisco (or, currently, Scottsdale) for his defense first, but there are reasons to be optimistic that he can be an offensive weapon for the Giants. Two reasons, primarily: he was great in 2025, when he had a 122 wRC+, and he has claimed that his success was due to some mechanical adjustments that enhanced his swing speed.
There are also reasons for pessimism: mainly that his 2025 success, statistically looking, appears quite unsustainable, and it followed three consecutive years of hitting well below league average.
His fourth-inning at-bat, then, gave a pretty strong data point that the glass is, indeed, half full. With two on and two out, and the game begging to be broken open, Bader fell behind in the count 1-2. Righty Garrett Stallings then tossed him a slider over the heart of the plate, and Bader positively crushed it for a three-run homer.
Home runs are swell, but even bad hitters achieve them, especially in the spring. There needs to be more, then, to warrant the type of optimism that I’ve been setting you up to have.
So here it is: Bader hit his big fly at 113.6 mph. Why is that a significant number? Because Bader has played nearly 1,000 Major League games, and the hardest he has ever hit a ball is … 113.6 mph. During his three-year run of hitting struggles from 2022 through 2024, his hardest-hit ball was 111.7 mph.
And if you think it’s just a case of a hot Statcast radar gun, well … maybe talk to Monica Godfrey, owner of the Cactus Bowls food truck parked behind the left field grass, which took a ball to the figurative dome. Thankfully, everyone was a good sport about it.
Matos and Bader provided the bread in the dinger sandwich, but the meat came from an exciting source: first baseman Bryce Eldridge. In the third inning, nestled tidily between the homers from the right-handed hitters, the powerful lefty put his preternatural power on display, hitting a fastball from righty Peter Strzelecki 101.3 mph the other way, clearing the left-center fence for a two-run blast.
It was the second jaw-popping opposite-field hit of the spring for Eldridge, who hit a double to the wall off of All-Star closer Andrés Muñoz in the Cactus League opener. He sure is making a mighty strong case for the Opening Day roster.
That string of dingers gave the Giants an 8-1 lead, but they would give it all back in the bottom half of the fourth. After the Giants bat around the order in the top half, the Brewers followed suit in the bottom, and it was here where the biggest negative of the day occurred for the black and orange.
Lefty Carson Whisenhunt made his spring debut in the third inning, and it was gorgeous. He set down the side in order with a strikeout, and threw nine of 13 pitches for strikes. His fastball velocity, which averaged 92.6 mph in his MLB debut last season, but has been notably up this spring, was sitting at 96. Life was good.
And then came the fourth inning. In a show of confidence, Whisenhunt became just the third Giants pitcher tasked with taking the mound for consecutive innings, following Logan Webb yesterday and Adrian Houser earlier in this game. And the wheels immediately loosened, and then fell off expediently.
Whisenhunt walked the leadoff batter on five pitches, then followed it up with a four-pitch walk. The third batter of the inning took a strike to open the count, then four consecutive pitches outside the zone. With just two strikes thrown, Whisenhunt had walked the bases full.
The trouble wasn’t over there. He then fell behind Joey Ortiz 2-0, before finding the heart of the zone with a get-it-in fastball, thrown softly over the middle and hit loudly in return, for a 107.5-mph RBI single. The bases remained loaded, and Whisenhunt showed some improvement by getting ahead of the next hitter 0-2. But the 0-2 pitch was a ball, as was the 1-2, the 2-2, and finally, the 3-2. And with that, Whisenhunt’s night was over, with his second inning of work resulting in four walks, one hard-hit single, and zero outs.
Perhaps more troubling was that Whisenhunt’s velocity fell a bit in his second inning of work. Part of the danger of analyzing pitchers this time of year is that most of them display enhanced velocity when limited to one or two-inning stints, rather than pacing themselves a full game (and that’s doubly true in the Arizona heat). Whisenhunt only needed two innings to lend that theory some fearful credence: in his first inning, Whisenhunt averaged 96.0 mph with his four-seam fastball, but in his second frame, averaged just 94.8. That’s something to keep an eye on his next time out.
Still, Whisenhunt had only allowed two runs despite that fiasco, and his ERA had a chance to be somewhat salvaged with some help from a teammate. That teammate, unfortunately, was not able to do so.
Tristan Beck — like Matos, a player out of options who is trying to earn a spot on the team — entered the game with the unenviable task of trying to escape from a bases-loaded, no-out situation that wasn’t of his own creation. He immediately fell behind Jackson Chourio 3-0, but then the two locked into a battle. Beck threw seven consecutive pitches that Chourio fouled off and finally, on the 11th pitch of the at-bat, Beck relented and went outside the zone, walking in a run.
The next at-bat wasn’t nearly as long. Brice Turang, who had homered in the first inning off of Houser, crushed a first-pitch slider 108.2 mph and 425 feet. It was, remarkably, the second grand slam that the Giants had allowed this spring. And it gave the Brewers a game-tying seven-run fourth inning, without an out yet recorded.
Milwaukee would take the lead in the sixth inning, when uber-prospect Jesús Made tripled off of José Buttó, and scored on a sacrifice fly. They added an insurance run in the eighth off Nick Margevicius when Greg Jones drew a walk, stole a base, and scored on a Made single.
It was nine straight runs and a 10-8 lead for the Brew Crew as we headed to the ninth inning. But the Giants, now with all their subs in, had some fight in them.
Left fielder Grant McCray had a mighty impressive swing, hitting a 108-mph leadoff single in an 0-2 count, then catcher Daniel Susac did something similar: a 106.6-mph single in a 1-2 count. Vitello, knowing that spring games can’t extend to extra innings, went all in, emptying his bench for every advantage: Susac left the game so that speedy right fielder Jared Oliva could pinch-run for him.
It paid dividends. Fellow right fielder Jerar Encarnación hit a grounder to third base, where Brock Wilken couldn’t handle it. The speedy McCray scored from second, and the speedy Oliva made it to third, where he represented the tying run. And Vitello, sticking with his plan, sent out Jesús Rodríguez (who would catch the ninth inning) to pinch-run for Encarnación.
That also paid dividends, with Rodríguez immediately stealing second base. And the next batter, Bericoto, tied the game with an RBI single, which moved Rodríguez — the go-ahead run — to third. That go-ahead run would score on a single by second baseman Nate Furman, and Bericoto would make it a four-run ninth when third baseman Parks Harber hit a 367-foot sacrifice fly. Suddenly the dream of an undefeated preseason lived on, as the Giants took a 12-10 lead to the bottom of the ninth.
But Margevicius had bent in the eighth, and he would break in the ninth. He opened the inning by allowing a double, a single, and a single, and suddenly both the tying and winning runs were on base, with no outs. Freddy Zamora would tie the game with a one-out single, and Jones would walk it off with a sacrifice fly.
And just like that, the Giants fell to 4-1 in a fairly silly baseball game.
A few other notes:
Houser made his Giants debut and pitched the first two innings. They didn’t go particularly well, as he gave up three hits — including a home run to Turang — and walked one batter, without any strikeouts. But he limited the damage to just one run allowed, and was sitting about 96 in the first inning. Like Whisenhunt, he lost about 1 mph of velo in his second inning of work.
NRI right-handed pitcher Caleb Kilian had quite a game, throwing 12 out of 14 pitches for strikes in a perfect seventh inning that included a strikeout. Kilian, whose four-seam fastball velocity has averaged 93.6 mph for his big league career, got all the way up to 98.7 in this game, while also throwing in a 98.8-mph sinker.
The Giants had just two stolen bases — and just two stolen base attempts — entering this game, both by Oliva. But they got three more in this contest: one each from Rodríguez, Furman, and Harber.
Lee, likely playing in his final game before departing for the World Baseball Classic, had an awesome game. He hit 2-3, which included a triple to the wall. In all, the Giants had six extra-base hits, with the final one being a double by NRI infielder Osleivis Basabe.
The Giants host the Rockies on Thursday at 12:05 p.m. PT. Blade Tidwell is scheduled to start, with Hayden Birdsong also pitching.
NEW YORK — CC Sabathia’s No. 52 will be retired on Sept. 26 by the New York Yankees, who will dedicate a plaque in honor of the Hall of Famer at Monument Park before that day’s game against the Baltimore Orioles.
Sabathia will be the 24th man to have his number retired by the Yankees, the first since Paul O’Neill was honored with the retirement of No. 21 in 2022. Twenty-three numbers have been retired, with No. 8 set aside for both Yogi Berra and Bill Dickey.
New York made the announcement Wednesday night.
Sabathia will join former teammates Derek Jeter and Andy Pettitte with plaques in Monument Park, beyond Yankee Stadium’s center-field fence.
Sabathia was a six-time All-Star who won the 2007 AL Cy Young Award with Cleveland and a World Series title in 2009, his first season with the Yankees after signing as a free agent.
He went 251-161 with a 3.74 ERA and 3,093 strikeouts, third among left-handers behind Randy Johnson and Steve Carlton, during 19 seasons with Cleveland (2001-08), Milwaukee (2008) and the Yankees (2009-19), including a 134-88 record with a 3.81 ERA and 1,700 strikeouts for New York.
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Gia Cooke scored 19 points, Jordan Harrison added 16 and No. 17 West Virginia pulled away from UCF in the third quarter for a 74-62 victory on Wednesday night.
UCF led 27-25 at the break, but West Virginia outscored the Knights 31-9 in the third quarter for a 20-point advantage heading into the final period. Harrison scored eight points, Cooke added seven and Sydney Shaw chipped in with six. The Mountaineers hit all three of their 3-pointers and shot 76.5% (13 of 17) from the field in the third.
Cooke shot 6 of 16 overall, and Harrison was 6 of 7 from the floor. Cooke made four 3-pointers, and Shaw scored all nine of her points from behind the arc. Carter McCray and Kierra Wheeler each added 12 points for West Virginia (23-6, 13-4 Big 12).
Khyala Ngodu scored 21 points and grabbed nine rebounds to lead UCF (10-18, 2-15), which has lost 10 straight.
West Virginia shot 52% overall while UCF hit 51%, but the Mountaineers made 7 of 15 from long range while the Knights missed all six of their attempts from distance. West Virginia also scored 22 points off 22 UCF turnovers.
The Mountaineers dominated the season's first meeting with a 106-56 win. It was the most points scored in a conference game in program history.
Up next
West Virginia hosts Cincinnati on Sunday in a regular-season finale.
Feb 25, 2026; Tampa, Florida, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Ryan Weathers (40) throws a pitch during the first inning against the against the Washington Nationals at George M. Steinbrenner Field. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images
The Yankees didn’t do much in the way of new addition over this past offseason. The most notable move they made was the signing of Cody Bellinger, but he of course already spent last season in the Bronx. In terms of new pieces, the most notable was the trade for pitcher Ryan Weathers.
The son of former Yankee David, Weathers was coming off two solid seasons with the Marlins, but was far from a marquee acquisition. It mostly seemed like he was depth in both the rotation and bullpen. Well, you shouldn’t judge too much on one spring training game, but it appears he’s actually the Cy Young favorite. To be serious, Weathers looked very impressive in his first outing as a Yankee, as he struck out five Nationals’ batters in his 3.2 innings.
Meanwhile on offense, the Yankees ran out a lineup that only included a couple likely 2026 big leaguers, but they still did the job. Washington chipped in by making three errors in total, as the Yankees cruised to a 7-0 victory on Wednesday night.
The Yankees got the game started on a nice note. After Weathers threw an easy 1-2-3 top of the first, Amed Rosario took the first pitch he saw from Andrew Alvarez out to right for a lead-off homer. An inning later, JC Escarra singled on a slow roller that catcher Keibert Ruiz couldn’t handle. The Nats’ defense got a little farcical after that, as an Alvarez error and a wild pitch later allowed Escarra to come around and score.
On the mound, Weathers looked about as good as you could hope in both his first outing of the spring and first as a Yankee. He ended up throwing 49 pitches over 3.2 innings. He allowed just one hit and no walks, while striking out five and looking downright nasty at points.
Some more shoddy defense allowed the Yankees to tack on three more runs in the fourth inning. Non-roster invite Jonathan Ornelas chipped in with one RBI single, but another two runs scored after former #2 draft pick Dylan Crews made an error on a Rosario batted ball.
Having made a nice defensive play at third base in the top of the fifth, top prospect George Lombard Jr. then flashed some offense in the bottom half of the inning. With two runners on, he took a ball into the gap in left-center field, bringing home both runners for a two-RBI double.
Prospective closer David Bednar was one of the notable names of the bullpen for the Yankees in this one. He came in and threw a fairly easy 1-2-3 inning, but did get some help from the aforementioned nice defensive play from Lombard. Fernando Cruz replaced him in the sixth, and he looked very good, striking out the side in a perfect inning. Tim Hill rounded things out for the regulars by striking out one batters in an easy inning of his own.
Add in the innings from the prospects and non-roster guys, and the Yankees allowed just one hit in total on the night. The only baserunner they allowed was a hit off Weathers, which was then erased by a double play. In total, the Yankees only faced the minimum possible 27 batters.
Tomorrow, the Yankees will be back in action as they host the Braves at Steinbrenner Field at 1:05 pm ET. Following up on an impressive outing in his spring debut, pitching prospect Elmer Rodríguez will take the mound again in this one.
BOSTON (AP) — Fred Payne scored 23 points and Aidan Shaw tipped in a miss with 0.5 seconds remaining as Boston College snapped an eight-game losing streak with a 68-67 victory over Wake Forest on Wednesday night.
Boston College took a 64-56 lead with 1:42 remaining but the Eagles would not make another field goal until Shaw's game-winner.
Juke Harris gave Wake Forest its first lead of the second half with 18.8 seconds left in the game after back-to-back 3-pointers following a Boston College turnover.
Then Boston College worked the clock down before Payne drove into the lane for a shot that hit high off the glass and rolled off the rim. But Shaw, who averages 4.1 points per game, skied for the rebound and put it home.
It was the first win for Boston College (10-18, 3-12 ACC) since topping Pittsburgh 65-62 on Jan. 21.
Shaw finished with 11 points and Boden Kapke had 13 points and 10 rebounds, his third double-double this season, for the Eagles.
Harris finished with a career-high 38 points for Wake Forest (14-14, 5-10). Harris was 12 of 19 from the field, including 6 of 12 from distance, while the rest of his teammates combined to go 10-of-43 overall.
Harris scored 16 points in the opening 13 minutes of the game, including six straight overall, to give Wake Forest a 21-15 lead. The Demon Deacons led 29-22 at the break despite shooting 10 of 33 (30%) from the field.
Boston College started the second half on a 14-1 run, with 11 points from Payne, to take its first lead since it was 13-11. The Eagles went 1 of 15 from 3-point range in the first half before starting 4 of 5 after the break.
The game was originally scheduled for Tuesday before being moved a day later due to a winter storm.
On the same day that the Yankees announced they will retire CC Sabathia's No. 52 later this year, another southpaw made his spring debut in pinstripes and dominated.
Ryan Weathers struck out five batters and faced the minimum, pitching into the fourth inning of the Yankees' 7-0 win over the Nationals on Wednesday night at GMS Field.
The Yankees' offense didn't have to do much as they took advantage of three Nationals errors and multiple misplays to push across seven runs, five unearned.
Here are the takeaways....
-Weathers was dominant. After CJ Abrams grounded out on a liner up the middle -- that almost hit the southpaw -- Weathers struck out Dylan Crews and got Keibert Ruiz to pop out in the 11-pitch first inning. He would strike out two more in a 1-2-3 second before giving up his first baserunner, a one-out single in the third. However, Weathers erased him with a 6-4-3 double play to get through three on just 39 pitches (26 strikes).
Weathers got the first two batters out in the fourth before being pulled in the middle of an at-bat after 49 pitches (32 strikes). Danny Watson came in and finished off the at-bat with a strikeout to put an end to Weathers' line.
The young southpaw went 3.2 innings, allowed one hit and struck out five batters.
-Amed Rosario got the Yankees' scoring started with a leadoff, first-pitch homer off of lefty starter Andrew Alvarez. The veteran infielder, who has a spot on the bench locked up, finished 1-for-3 while reaching on an error when Crews dropped a Rosario pop-up with men on first and second and two outs, plating two.
The other Yankees runs came on some shoddy Nationals defense as a wild pitch allowed J.C. Escarra to score from third in the second inning and Jonathan Ornelas' single drove Max Schuemann home in the fourth.
-George Lombard Jr. had himself a good day at the plate and in the field. After going hitless in his first two appearances this spring, the Yankees' top prospect went 1-for-2 with a walk and a two-run double in the fifth. He also made a strong throw on a soft dribbler to third in the fifth to get the first out.
-In addition to Rosario, the Yankees had three other players who appeared in games last season start in Wednesday's game. But they didn't do much at the plate. The combination of Jasson Dominguez, Ben Rice and Escarra went 1-for-9 with four strikeouts. The lone hit came from the Yankees' backup catcher.
-On the pitching side, manager Aaron Boone got a couple of his high-leverage relievers some work. David Bednar had a 1-2-3 fifth inning while Fernando Cruz struck out the side in the sixth. Tim Hill struck out one in a 1-2-3 seventh inning
The combination of Weathers, Watson, Bednar, Cruz, Hill, and Kyle Carr allowed just one hit and faced the minimum 27 batters in the victory.
Game MVP: Ryan Weathers
Weathers showed why the Yankees traded for him this offseason with the best pitching performance at camp so far.
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — Oluchi Okananwa scored 25 points, surpassing 1,200 career points in the process, and No. 14 Maryland defeated Northwestern 79-57 on Wednesday night.
Okananwa, one of four 1,000-point scorers on Maryland's roster, now has 1,213 career points. The 17.4 points per game scorer has 51 points in the past two games.
Northwestern was within eight points in the middle of the third quarter before Okananwa and Kyndal Walker each scored six points in a 12-2 run that gave the Terrapins a 63-45 lead heading to the final period.
The lead reached 24 points four times in the fourth quarter.
Maryland (23-6, 11-6 Big Ten) turned Northwestern’s 21 turnovers into 24 points. The Terps committed only six turnovers, leading to two points for Northwestern.
Among Maryland's starters, Yarden Garzon scored 11 points, Addi Mack added 10 points and Saylor Poffenbarger grabbed 13 rebounds to reach 1,000 for her career. Walker scored 10 points off the bench.
Grace Sullivan scored 23 points for Northwestern (8-20, 2-15).
Okananwa scored eight points in the first quarter and Maryland led 20-14 after one. A 12-3 run in the second quarter helped push the lead to 15 points and the Terrapins went on to lead 44-31 at halftime.
Maryland leads the series with Northwestern 16-1 and has won the last eight games.
Up next
Maryland: Visits No. 8 Michigan on Saturday in a regular-season finale.
Northwestern: The regular season ends at home against Purdue on Sunday.
CINCINNATI (AP) — Marta Suarez scored a career-high 32 points, and No. 11 TCU used a dominant third quarter to defeat Cincinnati 83-70 on Wednesday, clinching at least a share of the Big 12 regular-season title.
With the win, defending Big 12 champion TCU secured no worse than a share of the league title entering Sunday’s regular-season finale against No. 18 Baylor. The Horned Frogs also became the first program to repeat as Big 12 champions within three seasons of finishing last.
The Horned Frogs (26-4, 14-3 Big 12) trailed 29-23 at halftime before taking control with a decisive stretch out of the break. TCU outscored Cincinnati 35-14 in the third quarter, turning a six-point deficit into a 58-43 lead entering the fourth.
Suarez, who entered the game averaging 16.5 points, fueled the surge as TCU opened the period on a 20-3 run to build its first double-digit lead at 43-32 with 4:40 remaining in the quarter. Donovyn Hunter added 16 points, and Olivia Miles finished with 15 points, eight assists and seven rebounds as the Horned Frogs shot 45% from the field and made 11 3-pointers.
Cincinnati (11-18, 6-11) was led by Mya Perry's 27 points, while Caliyah DeVillasee added 20 and Reagan Jackson scored 12. The Bearcats shot 35% from the floor and could not cut the deficit below double digits in the final period.
Up Next
TCU: hosts No. 18 Baylor on Sunday in a regular-season finale.
Cincinnati: travels to No. 17 West Virginia on Sunday for its finale regular-season matchup.
SCOTTSDALE, AZ — The Los Angeles Dodgers kept raving about Roki Sasaki all spring, believing he was becoming the star pitcher they envisioned all along when they won the sweepstakes for his services a year ago.
Well, Sasaki did nothing to inspire the same euphoria, let alone confidence Wednesday, as he struggled in his spring training debut against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Sasaki was hit hard, hit often and struggled with his control. He gave up three hits, including two doubles, and three runs to the first five Diamondbacks batters he faced. He threw only 17 of his 36 pitches for strikes, walking two batters with three strikeouts. He was scheduled to pitch two innings, but lasted just four outs.
“I thought he was overthrowing,’’ Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said after their 10-7 victory, keeping them undefeated (5-0) this spring. “I haven’t seen that all spring.’’
Roberts, who was gushing over Sasaki’s bullpen sessions in his media session Wednesday morning, wasn’t panicking over his performance, saying he could have simply been overwhelmed by an adrenaline rush in his first outing. But Roberts also isn’t simply going to hand him a starting job until he proves he deserves it, either. Sasaki pitched only 36.2 innings for the Dodgers last season, spending four months in the minor leagues while overcoming a shoulder impingement injury.
“I think the first thing is,’’ Roberts said, “is that he’s just got to mix [pitches] better. He’s got to command the fastball. … Honestly, I thought today was the first day he came out of his mechanics. He just didn’t have the feel or control of that fastball.’’
Scouts in attendance also criticized Sasaki’s performance, saying he showed a lack of confidence with his body language, with one scouting saying, “He looked scared to death.’’
Sasaki’s fastball reached 98.6 mph, but there was no movement, with Sasaki giving up two of the hits with an exit velocity of 105 mph.
“In the bullpen, I felt pretty good about the forkball,’’ Sasaki said, “but once I got on the mound, it didn’t go well. And the four-seam, I felt pretty good in the bullpen, but once I got on the mound, it felt a little off.’’
Roberts has made it perfectly clear to Sasaki that he needs to command at least three pitches in his arsenal if he’s going to be a regular in the Dodgers’ ultra-talented starting rotation. Sasaki is trying to incorporate a slider to go along with the fastball and splitter, throwing his new pitch seven times in Wednesday’s game.
“I’m really impressed by Roki in the sense that he’s had a lot of success with the two pitches,’’ Roberts said, “but he has to be open and understand that if he wants to be a great as a starting pitcher in the big leagues, that third pitch is important ...
“We’re expecting him to be good, he’s exepcting to be good, and to continue to get better.’’
Opening day is one month away, and Sasaki must still prove that he can be a bona fide starter after making only eight starts (1-1, 4.72 ERA) and finishing the season in the bullpen. He was a critical piece to the Dodgers’ bullpen in October, yielding just one earned run in 10.2 innings, while saving three postseason games.
Sasaki has made it clear that he wants to be a starter. The Dodgers want him to start. But he needs to prove he can do it.
Sasaki, who is staying in Dodgers camp and not pitching for Team Japan in the World Baseball Classic, conceded there was at least was one positive aspect of the day.
“I was able to finish my outing,’’ he said, “without getting hurt.’’
Don’t worry – we’ll all get through this one together.
After a tight game in Indiana and a dicey last-minute flight to Brooklyn, the Dallas Mavericks head back home to host the Sacramento Kings on Thursday night. Your feelings about this matchup depends entirely on your current operating theory of the Mavericks: if you’re team tank, this is a nail-biter, one of several dice-rolls that will have a material impact on Dallas’ lottery odds in the coming offseason. If you’re team let’s-get-out-there-and-try-our-best, this is likely a breezy contest, as few teams in the Association have the moxie to truly out-bad this Kings squad.
As you might have guessed, Sacramento comes into town scraping the bottom of the barrel. They’re 13-46 at the time of writing, and likely to be 13-47 after a matchup against the Houston Rockets Wednesday night. That’s enough for #30 across the entire league. If that isn’t sufficient to convince you, they’re also on the second night of a back-to-back, and they’ve won only four road games the entire season. But hey – they beat a struggling Memphis Grizzlies team a few nights ago. Maybe we can call that momentum?
On the flip side, Dallas (21-36) has found something that – if you squint hard enough – looks like footing. They closed out strong enough against the Pacers on Sunday to beat them 134-130, and they thoroughly handled the Brooklyn Nets on Tuesday 123-114. If they beat the Kings tomorrow evening, that would make three solid wins in a row after a nasty 10-game skid. Again, there’s an argument to be made that this is a bad thing, if you’re team tank. But this Dallas roster fights hard just about every right, so you can be sure they’ll show up at the American Airlines Center ready to play.
Here are three storylines to watch going to the final Dallas-Sacramento matchup this season.
As goes the three-ball (and the turnovers), so goes the game
It’s no secret that Dallas is a bad three-point shooting team. This has been the case the entire season, and while the Anthony Davis trade was welcome in many (so many) ways, the Mavericks didn’t see much relief in this area. This means that they need all of the shooting they can find – typically, this comes from Max Christie (who is in a bit of a slump right now) and Klay Thompson, but anyone is welcome to join the party.
Since the all-star break, Dallas has done okay enough behind the line, shooting a reasonable 39.3% in the Indiana win and a slightly-less-reasonable 34.8% in the Brooklyn win. Against Sacramento, they’re likely to have plenty of opportunities – the Kings have one of the lowest defensive ratings in the league at 120.9, and their opponents hit on 36.4% of their attempts. This is one potential avenue of Mavericks success, whether or not they actually take the victory.
Another avenue of success? Cutting down on turnovers. It’s been said many times, many ways that Dallas lacks an effective point guard and can’t take care of the ball – so there’s no need to re-hash. But facing off against the Kings, it’s a factor to consider. While this Kings defense is unmistakably bad in the macro, they have some notable defensive threats in the micro. The Mavericks took care of the ball well enough against Indiana and Brooklyn; if they can stave off Keon Ellis and Russell Westbrook, they should cruise to a three-game win-streak relatively easily.
The new guys continue to contribute
When Anthony Davis was traded to the Washington Wizards at the beginning of February, the return of Khris Middleton, AJ Johnson, Tyus Jones, and Marvin Bagley III was considered by many to be largely incidental. And while that may still turn out true – Khris Middleton is reportedly still considering the prospect of a buyout – the new Mavericks are nonetheless contributing in the meantime. Marvin Bagley III is perhaps the stand-out here: he went for 22 against the Nets on Tuesday, leading the team in scoring in only 20 minutes of play. Against the Timberwolves and Pacers before them, he led the team in rebounds, filling a much-needed role in given the team’s dearth of healthy centers. If he continues to play as he has, he’ll make an outsized impact against Sacramento – hell, he might even convince the Dallas front office he’s a longer-term piece.
Not to be forgotten, Khris Middleton has also played some meaningful minutes for Dallas recently, putting up 18/6/2 against Minnesota and 23/9/2 against Indiana. Though there’s a chance he won’t play against the Kings – Middleton left Tuesday night’s game early with a shoulder stinger – his presence is a reminder that this Dallas team has some fresh tools to play around with.
Injuries are like opinions: everyone has one
Speaking of leaving the game early, P.J. Washington also exited late Tuesday night with an apparent ankle injury. Nothing definitive has been announced yet – but alongside Middleton’s shoulder, and Cooper Flagg’s lingering midfoot sprain, the Mavericks could be missing three key pieces headed into Sacramento. Taking Kyrie Irving and Dereck Lively II into account as well, that’s a whole starting lineup that is potentially riding the bench for Dallas.
Beside their ugly records, this is probably the most compelling symmetry between Sacramento and Dallas. The Kings, too, have multiple key players out for the year: De’Andre Hunter had surgery this season to repair a detached retina; Zach LaVine, to repair a torn tendon in his hand; Domantas Sabonis, to repair a torn meniscus. Likewise, a few more are game-time decisions: rookie center Dylan Cardwell suffered a left ankle sprain a few days ago, and guard Devin Carter is dealing with lingering back soreness.
Call it tanking, or call it preparation for next season – whatever the case, the main story of this Mavericks-Kings matchup is whether either team can be anything more once their star players are healthy.
The road ahead
After Sacramento, Dallas enjoys two more games at home, facing off against the Memphis Grizzlies and the Oklahoma City Thunder. Then, they’re back on the road for most of the first two weeks of March.
How to watch (or listen)
The Dallas Mavericks host the Sacramento Kings on Thursday, February 26 at 7:30 PM CT. The game will will be streamed live on MavsTV as well as broadcast on KFAA/WFAA. As usual, fans can also tune in at 97.1FM KEGL (English) or at 99.1FM KFZO (Español).
Feb 25, 2026; Mesa, Arizona, USA; Colorado Rockies first baseman T.J. Rumfield (64) celebrates with teammates after hitting a solo home run against the Chicago Cubs in the second inning at Sloan Park. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images
Earlier today, the Colorado Rockies soundly defeated the Chicago Cubs in a 14-7 routing.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 25: An overall view of the draft board following the first round of the 2025 NBA Draft at Barclays Center on June 25, 2025 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. 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 Sarah Stier/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Everybody wants the NBA to fix tanking. Nobody knows how to do it.
Tanking. You’ve seen the word thousands of times in your recent social media doom scroll. You’ve heard it repeated countless times on television and podcasts to the point of semantic satiation — the word is losing all meaning. It’s just a jumble of sounds at this point.
It’s an issue so significant and foundational to the National Basketball Association that at this point, half of the league’s eyeballs are glued to the bottom of the standings, rather than fixating on the top half. Basketball teams don’t want to win anymore, at least not until they’re certain they found a winning formula. A potential superstar, a blooming project player, and the surrounding infrastructure to support the weighty task of pursuing the NBA Finals.
When it works (Philadelphia, Oklahoma City, San Antonio, Dallas), the results are magnificent. The stars of the league carry their team to the spotlight and duke it out for a chance to hoist the trophy at the end of the season. Isn’t San Antonio the picture of perfection — a mythical paradise where beast and man play as one? Who can stop Oklahoma City and their endless supply of young talent? Perhaps the aprons of the CBA?
When it doesn’t (Charlotte, Washington, New Orleans), the NBA points the finger of shame. How can Washington still be destitute this many years removed from the Wall-Beal era? Michael Jordan is gone, so why is Charlotte still so horrible?
The metronome is swinging for the Utah Jazz and their tanking efforts. The NBA imposed a tanking fine on them for sitting star players in a game the Jazz won, and one on the Pacers for listening to their team medical staff: refusing to medicate and force a player to enter a game when the professionals on staff advised against it.
Why are some teams lauded for tanking, while others are hand-slapped for reaching into the cookie jar?
The reasoning is irrelevant — the NBA is planting its foot on the tanking issue, and rule changes could arrive as soon as next season.
Multiple sources with knowledge of Thursday's GM meeting as well as a late January Competition Committee meeting told ESPN that the following concepts have been discussed to curb tanking:
•First-round picks can be protected only top-4 or top-14+ •Lottery odds freeze at the… https://t.co/Vk2n1cSzde
Rather than investigating the root cause of their illness (small market teams have too few avenues to become a championship competitor), the NBA is opting to attack the symptoms. It’s not the common cold that must be stopped; it’s sneezing.
Ignoring the logical inconsistencies, I’d like to evaluate each proposed remedy for tanking offered by Shams Charania’s report. Which ones could work, which ones probably wouldn’t, and which ones are just plain dumb (most of them are this last one). I don’t know how to solve tanking, but I can poke holes in the ideas of others like it’s nobody’s business.
How will the NBA eliminate tanking?
Option A: First-round picks can be protected only top-4 or top-14+
I’ll take this one further: if you’re restricting pick protections, why not just eliminate them entirely?
Why complicate the pick protections when a far simpler solution is to remove them from the equation? Do you want to put up your first-round pick to acquire a great player? Then trade the first-round pick. Utah has fallen under fire for tanking to remain below the 9 mark in the lottery order. Their pick is top-8 protected, and conveys to Oklahoma City if it falls below that mark. For the good of humanity, we must not allow another lottery pick to fall into Sam Presti’s clutch.
I like pick swaps — that seems like a great compromise for teams who want to wager their future for the present, but are unsure they’d like to give it up entirely. Keep pick swaps, eliminate protections entirely.
Verdict: Good idea. Could use a minor adjustment.
Option B: Lottery odds freeze at the trade deadline or a later date
This is a bad idea. The core idea is to avoid manipulating results to artificially fall in the standings, right? Tanking season will simply move to earlier in the season. Instead of a last-second struggle to tumble down the hill in April, you’ll see that happening in February, January, and even December!
This proposal is pitched in tandem with a round-robin style points system for the lottery teams beyond a specific date. Simply put, once the lottery order is frozen, teams in the lottery now compete for the top pick. Wins get 3 points, overtime wins get two points, overtime losses get one point, and losses get 0 points. While fascinating in theory, this idea falls apart when considering the original purpose of the NBA draft: saving bad teams from perpetual torment. It’s hard to imagine a world where teams like Sacramento or New Orleans would ever climb out of the dregs if they have to compete against Dallas or Oklahoma City (they traded for a lottery pick five years ago. They own the rights to the pick, so of course they’ll compete).
This idea is messy, and while it might affect the way tanking is executed, I don’t see this improving the overall competitiveness of the league.
Verdict: Bad idea.
Option C: No longer allowing a team to pick top 4 in consecutive years and/or after consecutive bottom-3 finishes
Sure, this may dissuade teams from prolonged tanking, but basketball Occham’s Razor grinds its teeth at the idea.
As a rule, I don’t believe that complicating basketball will improve the product or boost the health of the league. All you’re doing is tying our brains in knots. Does this apply to teams like Atlanta, who will likely pick in the top four thanks to the New Orleans pick? Should a team like Charlotte, which picked fourth last season, be barred from the top of the lottery? That feels a bit odd, even if their prize was Kon Knueppel. That makes Utah eligible for the top four in this coming season, since they snagged Ace Bailey fifth overall in 2025.
This rule is anything but straightforward, and doesn’t account for rare situations where star players are injured, traded, or otherwise affect the expected success of their team.
Verdict: Bad idea. Too complicated.
Option D: Teams can’t pick top-4 the year after making conference finals
Sorry, Indiana, we know that your star point guard tore his ACL in Game 7 of the NBA Finals, and you lost Miles Turner, your cornerstone big man, but you, a 5 seed in the East, played in the Conference Finals a year ago. Oopsies.
The same would go for Cleveland the year after they lost LeBron (both times). You’re not eligible for a top-four pick because a generational superstar carried you to the promised land before leaving you high and dry. Sorry, we don’t make the rules… wait, actually, we do. Again, oopsies.
Verdict: Bad idea. Doesn’t account for upsets or complete implosions.
Option E: Lottery odds are allocated based on two-year records
This is supremely idiotic. It incentivises prolonged tanking efforts and rewards the usual suspects just as much as a one-year record would. The same jersey could be worn by an entirely different roster from one year to the next — in what world does it make sense to punish one team for falling apart, while rewarding another for always being horrible? Isn’t that the exact problem you’re trying to solve?
Verdict: What are we doing here?
Option F: Lottery extended to include all play-in teams
Wonderful, now even more teams have reason to tank at the end of the season. And to sweeten the deal, good teams sitting in the 4th, 5th, or 6th place spots in their conference may want to push for that 7 or 8 seed. Play in the playoffs and have a chance at the number one pick! Surely, this won’t cause even more poverty below.
Verdict: Pull yourselves together.
Option G: Flatten odds for all lottery teams
Finally, an idea that makes sense. Do the teams at the bottom of the lottery need the pick more? Yes, but now it doesn’t matter if you’re the worst team or the 10th worst; winning basketball games will not be detrimental to your future. The truly bad teams will have a chance in the lottery, but they won’t be jockeying for position down the stretch (save for the teams just outside the lottery who may want to tank for a slice of the pie).
If I were in charge, I’d likely eliminate the lottery entirely. The truly awful teams will have no reason to tank for more than a season or two, and all the drama and accusations surrounding lottery fixing will be a thing of the past. Simplify the process, and watch your league heal. Then again, I could be completely wrong.
Verdict: Good idea, but we could do more.
Calvin Barrett is a writer, editor, and prolific Mario Kart racer located in Tokyo, Japan. He has covered the NBA and College Sports since 2024.
NEW YORK (AP) — CC Sabathia's No. 52 will be retired on Sept. 26 by the New York Yankees, who will dedicate a plaque in honor of the Hall of Famer at Monument Park before that day's game against the Baltimore Orioles.
Sabathia will be the 24th man to have his number retired by the Yankees, the first since Paul O'Neill was honored with the retirement of No. 21 in 2022. Twenty-three numbers have been retired, with No. 8 set aside for both Yogi Berra and Bill Dickey.
New York made the announcement Wednesday night.
Sabathia will join former teammates Derek Jeter and Andy Pettitte with plaques in Monument Park, beyond Yankee Stadium's center-field fence.
Sabathia was a six-time All-Star who won the 2007 AL Cy Young Award with Cleveland and a World Series title in 2009, his first season with the Yankees after signing as a free agent.
He went 251-161 with a 3.74 ERA and 3,093 strikeouts, third among left-handers behind Randy Johnson and Steve Carlton, during 19 seasons with Cleveland (2001-08), Milwaukee (2008) and the Yankees (2009-19), including a 134-88 record with a 3.81 ERA and 1,700 strikeouts for New York.