Chattanooga and Alabama A&M meet in NIT

Alabama A&M Bulldogs (21-10, 14-5 SWAC) at Chattanooga Mocs (16-14, 11-6 SoCon) Chattanooga, Tennessee; Saturday, 5 p.m. EDT BOTTOM LINE: Chattanooga takes on Alabama A&M in the National Invitation Tournament. The Mocs are 11-6 against SoCon opponents and 5-8 in non-conference play.

Utah takes on Indiana in first round of NCAA Tournament

Indiana Hoosiers (19-12, 11-9 Big Ten) vs. Utah Utes (22-8, 13-6 Big 12) Columbia, South Carolina; Friday, 1:30 p.m. EDT BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Hoosiers -1.5; over/under is 138.5 BOTTOM LINE: Utah and Indiana square off in the NCAA Tournament opening round. The Utes are 13-6 against Big 12 opponents and 9-2 in non-conference play.

How A Delayed Penalty From Utah HC Turned Into a 'Clutch, Clutch Play' in 5-2 Win Over Sabres

Mar 20, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Hockey Club defenseman Ian Cole (28) and Buffalo Sabres right wing Alex Tuch (89) watch the puck during the third period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Don't let the 5-2 final score fool you, this was a grit-and-grind game for Utah Hockey Club.

With roughly two minutes remaining, Utah held a narrow 3-2 lead over the Buffalo Sabres and had to withstand a late push from a Sabres team with an extra attacker, as goalie James Reimer had been pulled.

To make matters even more challenging, Utah was about to be down a man as well after Kevin Stenlund was called for high-sticking. But what happened seconds later was nothing short of one of the most bizarre goals of the season:

Yes, that's right. The Sabres scored on their own net after a pass from Tage Thompson slipped past teammate Rasmus Dahlin, instead ricocheting at a perfect angle into their own goal.

"Oh it was great, as long as it doesn't happen on our side, its great, its perfect," said Tourigny. "That was a key moment... now you lead by two and on top of it the face off is in the middle of the ice instead of your own zone. That was good timing, it was a clutch, clutch play."

While Stenlund was credited with the goal simply because he was the last Utah player to touch the puck before his penalty, he oddly deserves credit for… not intercepting Thompson's pass attempt as he was the closest Utah player in the vicinity of the puck. 

Utah HC Drops UtahHC+ Service To $1 For Rest Of The SeasonUtah HC Drops UtahHC+ Service To $1 For Rest Of The SeasonUtah Hockey Club owner Ryan Smith loves his fans, and it shows after the announcement made today.

That goal was both the unluckiest play of the game and a 'clutch' moment—depending on which team you ask.

Instead of Utah being in an extremely vulnerable position, forced to withstand a full minute of a Sabres two-man advantage that was trying to force overtime, Utah was suddenly given a huge amount of breathing room with the two goal lead.

"I mean, it was kind of a scrambly play, and I was just kind of filling a spot and I got the puck and wasn't really aware that there was a delayed call," said Thompson. "So had that been the case, then I probably would have just tried to attack and shoot it, make them touch it. But yeah, they're kind of sitting there, and thought I had a lane to Dahls (Dahlin) to the top, and it just went through everybody, so bad play by me, and even worse result."

But to make this game even more painful for Sabres fans, that wouldn’t be the only empty-netter Utah would score.

Even while shorthanded and facing a two-man disadvantage, Utah’s Mikhail Sergachev managed to score his second goal. But even that goal had an unusual stat: it was the first assist goalie Karel Vejmelka had for Utah Hockey Club. It's also the third assist of his NHL career.

"No, obviously, that was lucky," said Sergachev. "To get those lucky bounces, you gotta work hard, and I think that stretch in the third, we worked hard and had a lot of chances to score. We didn't score, and we got those two, so I guess we’ll take them."

Mar 20, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Buffalo Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin (26) breaks his stick on the net after an open net goal by the Utah Hockey Club during the third period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Earlier this season, Utah’s other goalie, Connor Ingram, recorded his first two assists for the team. His first came on Dylan Guenther’s clutch game-winner against Columbus. In his very next start against the Capitals, Utah's first-ever shootout win, Ingram would register another assist, this time on a Josh Doan goal, before leaving the game after taking a puck to the mask.

It certainly is one of the stranger endings to a Utah game all season, considering it was just a 3-2 game only a minute before all of this transpired. Plus, Buffalo had been proving to be a very tough and competitive opponent, so for it to end with a three-goal lead for Utah is truly bizarre.

But before any of the strange empty-net goals occurred, it was Guenther who, his team-leading 25th goal of the season, scored the game-winner for Utah.

That goal also happened to be his ninth game-winner of the season, the second-highest in the NHL behind only Edmonton's Leon Draisaiti, who has 10 on the season. 

On a night that saw Calgary, St. Louis, and Vancouver all register points, with Vancouver managing to force overtime on a last-second goal before eventually losing 4-3 to St. Louis, Utah needed this win to stay close in the hunt. 

Now, Utah will need to prepare for a home game against the Tampa Bay Lightning this Saturday, March 20.

Stephen Curry leaves game after frightening fall, suffers pelvic contusion

Nothing sucks the air out of the Chase Center like Stephen Curry lying on the court in pain.

That's what happened in the third quarter Thursday night against the Raptors when Curry drove the lane, drew the defense, passed out of it, and was hit as he did, landing flat on his back.

After the game, coach Steve Kerr said Curry wanted to re-enter the game, but the medical staff would not allow that. Postgame Curry got an MRI. It should be noted that Curry's back was bothering him earlier in the week, which is why he sat out the game against Milwaukee. Don't be surprised if Curry misses a few games, the Warriors are going to want to slow-play this and make sure there are no lingering issues heading into the playoffs.

The Warriors went on to win 117-114 behind a triple-double from Jimmy Butler (16 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists) plus 21 points from Draymond Green and 17 from Curry before his injury. The Warriors need all the wins they can get to hold on to the No. 6 seed in the West and avoid the play-in.

No. 3 Texas Tech takes NCAA Tournament-record 46 3-pointers and beats No. 14 UNC Wilmington 82-72

Kerwin Walton scored a career-high 27 points and No. 3 seed Texas Tech attempted an NCAA Tournament-record 46 3-pointers in an 82-72 victory over No. 14 seed UNC Wilmington on Thursday night. The Red Raiders raced to a 16-point lead, lost most of it by going cold in the final 6 1/2 minutes of the first half and then made enough plays down the stretch to recover after the Seahawks went ahead with about 14 minutes remaining. Texas Tech (26-8) finished 13 for 46 behind the arc, breaking the tournament record of 43 attempts by Saint Joseph's in a 1997 second-round game against Boston College.

Three Takeaways From Blues' 4-3 OT Win Against Canucks

St. Louis Blues defenseman Philip Broberg (6) scored the game-winner in overtime past Vancouver Canucks goalie Kevin Lankinen on Thursday in a 4-3 St. Louis win. (Jeff Curry-Imagn Images)

ST. LOUIS – Who thought this was possible a month ago?

We don’t know how things will shake out in the end, as things can change from day to day, but in a span of 26 days, the St. Louis Blues went from being eight points out of a playoff position to holding down the final wild card in the Western Conference.

It didn’t go according to play, but a playoff-like atmosphere developed between the Blues and Vancouver Canucks, and when Philip Broberg scored at 3:42 of overtime to send the Blues to their fourth straight win, 4-3, over the Canucks at Enterprise Center on Thursday, it moved the Blues (35-28-7) above the playoff line in the Western Conference for the first time since Nov. 6 by matching their season-high fourth straight win.

“That was a playoff game and boy, what momentum swings in it,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said. “I really liked our resilience.”

“Yeah, that was an incredible atmosphere,” said Blues forward Dylan Holloway. “Our fans were super loud. You could feed off that energy. After ‘Tucksy’ scored, they were jumping. It was really fun to be a part of. I thought our crowd was awesome tonight.”

Tyler Tucker, aka ‘Tucksy,’ also had a goal and an assist and Zack Bolduc scored, while Jordan Binnington, while not tested often, made 15 saves.

“I think it’s the same thing, you’ve got to keep sticking to what’s made us successful here lately,” Broberg said. “We’ve just got to keep that going here the last games.”

It was a crazy up-and-down, emotional game with plenty of playoff implications, and the emotional roller coaster was none more evident than the third period after it was a nip-and-tuck 1-0 game through 40 minutes.

Then things didn’t necessarily open up, but guys …

“Made really good plays, made really good shots,” Montgomery said. “And there’s more desperation offensively, so you saw that from both teams.”

Let’s get into the Three Takeaways:

* Blues are showing incredible resiliency – You want to talk about a range of emotions, then this was the game for you.

The Blues started this game well but were kept off the scoreboard by Canucks goalie Kevin Lankinen.

When Vancouver pushed in the second, the Blues had to absorb the counter-punches.

And when Bolduc made it 1-0 at 15:47 of the second period finally breaking through, one wondered with so much at stake whether it would be difficult to get scoring chances in the third period.

Well …

The Canucks came out and sent a strong message to start the third that they weren’t going to relinquish the second wild card that easily.

When Kiefer Sherwood tied it 1-1 at 1:11 of the third and then Brock Boeser scored the first of two goals, including his 200th in the NHL, that gave Vancouver a lead at 6:35, now it was the Canucks’ turn to try and lock down a tight one-goal lead.

Maybe earlier in the season, the Blues would have wilted.

Not these Blues, not this day.

“The talk on the bench was great,” Montgomery said. “It was just, ‘Let’s just go get it back, plenty of time. Let’s get back to the goal line, let’s get back to playing in the offensive zone.’ The talk on the bench was very positive. It was never, ‘What did we just give up?’ We’re staying in the moment really well mentally.”

Tucker and Holloway would restore the lead in short order. They scored 24 seconds apart and the Blues regained the lead 3-2, with Tucker scoring at 9:28 off a face-off win by Brayden Schenn, and Holloway finishing off a Jordan Kyrou pass at 9:52 to make it 3-2.

“Yeah obviously a huge goal,” Tucker said. “Just tried to get it through. Obviously a big win by ‘Schenner’ there. It was fortunate enough to go in.”

Tucker then blocked a Sherwood shot that began the sequence for the go-ahead goal.

“As soon as I touched the puck, ‘Rouzy’ was yelling for it, so I knew that he had some speed,” Holloway said. “He usually gets excited like that when he's buzzing up the ice. So as soon as I passed it to him, I tried to get on my horse and go back post. He made a helluva pass over and all I had to do was tap in.

“That's where we've grown so much as a team, not getting too high, not getting too low. We knew it was going to be a tight-checking game. That's another team trying to get into the playoffs just like us. We knew it was going to be hard. Down by a goal, we still had that belief. Even when it went into OT, we still believed that we were going to win. I think that's probably the biggest thing that we've grown on so far.”

And when Boeser scored the tying goal at 19:56 to tie the game 3-3, it was a gut punch that could have provided devastating affects.

Again, a mental fortitude was tested and one was passed when Broberg finished Schenn’s pass off a 2-on-1 – that Holloway sprung – and ended the game and put the Blues into the wild card when he went backhand for the finish at 3:42 of overtime.

“I just tried to drive the net and he was able to do a great pass and I just tried to take it to the backhand and just happy it went in.

“It speaks a lot to the belief in this group. Nobody stopped working. We came back and I thought we played a very good game today.”

* Tucker/young players are growing into quite the prospects -- Here we have a pressure-packed game with tremendous playoff implications, and there is Tucker, Jake Neighbours, Holloway, Broberg, Bolduc all in the middle of it.

Tucker came up with clutch plays with the game on the line, played 15:49 with five hits and five blocked shots and none bigger than the one that led to the Holloway goal.

These are valuable lessons that the young Blues are gaining, not only in the immediate but for the future.

“It’s a lot of guys, right? Jake Neighbours hasn’t been in this kind of stretch run, Bolduc and then you have Tucker, right,” Montgomery said. “We’re starting to see these guys. The experience they’re getting down the stretch run is only going to help us next year and for years to come, and that’s why we’re very thankful our team has been able to play so well to get into these types of games like this. This is not only going to help us this year but years to come.

“I’ll say this for Tucker. He’s really a good offensive defenseman, and as he matures in this league, you’re going to see plays like that more and more. He really understands … his hockey brain is really good. It’s underestimated by a lot of people and I think people will see that over the next couple of years of how good of a Blue he’s going to be for us.”

Broberg added, “I think [Tucker’s] playing great. He’s made a huge impact and he’s an unbelievable guy too. I’m happy for him.”

I’ll admit I had Tucker written off a long time ago. When he was cut from training camp and assigned to Springfield after clearing waivers, the Blues had seven guys (including Scott Perunovich and Pierre-Olivier Joseph) in front of Tucker, who was eighth on the depth chart, and with the acquisition of Fowler, he was essentially in a no-win situation until he wasn’t.

It’s tremendous perseverance from a seventh-round pick with one last chance who’s made himself a reliable, dependable NHL defenseman in the end who keeps growing.

* Game-tying goal late could be costly point to give away? -- We’ll know more when all is said and done, but should the Blues miss the playoffs by a point – like the 2017-18 season – they’ll look back at the sequence of events that led to giving up a costly point in this game.

It all started when Justin Faulk, with time and space along the wall, instead of just playing the puck into open ice in the neutral zone or into the Vancouver zone, made a critical mistake and played it into the Canucks bench from his own zone and brought the face-off back into the Blues zone with 17.5 seconds left.

And even after winning the face-off, Faulk was killed off along the wall by Jake DeBrusk and another puck wasn’t cleared right away, but the puck did get moved out into the neutral zone, but the Blues allowed the great Quinn Hughes to shift around Pavel Buchnevich, find Elias Pettersson at the offensive zone blue line, and veteran Ryan Suter had vacated the opposite side to move to his right and help the play in the middle left Boeser alone and he stepped into a slap shot from the right circle to beat Binnington and tie the game 3-3.

It could have been a momentum-zapper – it left 18.096 stunned – but ultimately, it wasn’t. However, it was a point given away, which could go a long way in the end.

“I thought we should have scored into the empty net twice [Alexey Toropchenko and Buchnevich], so you’ve got to end the game there. We should have executed better. We won the face-off, that puck’s got to get out and then the last thing is on that line rush, we’ve got to have sticks protecting middle ice and they were able to go east-west on us five feet inside the blue line. That shouldn’t happen to us.”

It shouldn’t, but they were able to conquer the gut punch.

“It's definitely deflating, but that's where we've grown as a team,” Holloway said. “I think early on in the year we probably get down on ourselves, but as soon as that happened, we weren't very happy, but the message on the bench was just stay with it, we've got this, we're going to win. We had that team belief. When guys are stepping up and saying that, it kind of chills the bench a little bit, kind of cools us off a little bit. We were lucky enough to win that in OT. ‘Schenner’ and ‘Broby’ made a helluva play.”

With LeBron, Luka and Reaves out, Bronny James scores 17 in Lakers' blowout loss

Los Angeles, CA - March 20: Lakers guard Bronny James, #9, right, drives to the hoop.
Lakers guard Bronny James, right, controls the ball in front of Milwaukee guard AJ Green during the Lakers' 118-89 loss Thursday night at Crypto.com Arena. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The sixth game in eight nights for the Lakers meant they were going to have to pay for all the energy they used fighting short handed over the last week.

It meant Austin Reaves and Luka Doncic needed to sit out because of sore ankles, Jarred Vanderbilt had to rest an injured groin and Dorian Finney-Smith was out because of nagging ankle issues. LeBron James also missed his seventh consecutive game because of a groin strain.

So who was in?

“The healthy players are gonna play tonight,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said.

Read more:Luka Doncic's hot first quarter sparks Lakers to win over shorthanded Nuggets

That Bronny James is one of the healthy ones, again, is a reminder of how much of his journey is already house money, the Lakers rookie surviving a cardiac arrest less than two years ago.

With the Lakers down to 10 available players against Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Bucks in a 118-89 lopsided loss, Bronny James got his longest runway yet to show the steps he’s taken largely in the shadows of the G League.

James scored a career-high 17 points, sparking the Lakers’ only positive quarter, the second, when the team outscored the Bucks 27-23.

James made seven of 10 from the field along with three rebounds, five assists and three turnovers. He played a season-high 30 minutes for the Lakers (43-26).

The performance caps a stretch where he has been much more comfortable on NBA courts. He has made 15 of his last 26 shots over an eight-game stretch that’s included real rotation minutes twice, including Thursday. Dalton Knecht also scored 17 points.

Antetokounmpo led the Bucks (39-30) with 28 points, seven rebounds and four assists.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets Spring Training Notes: Max Kranick's stock rising, Luis Torrens showing offensive capability

It was another productive day at spring training for the Mets, who are now less than a week away from Opening Day following a 10-3 blowout win over the Washington Nationals.

Before and after the game, manager Carlos Mendoza shined a light on some of the things he and the rest of the coaching staff are seeing from players on the team as final roster cuts begin to loom.

Reliever on the rise

Max Kranick has been perhaps the most surprising pitcher at camp this year as the 27-year-old has dominated opposing hitters whenever he's been on the mound. That continued on Thursday night when the right-hander struck out two batters in his two scoreless innings of work, throwing 19 pitches and 11 strikes.

It was the third time Kranick pitched two innings so far in spring training, but the first time since Feb. 27. In fact, in all but one outing this year Kranick has recorded more than three outs, showing he's capable of being a multi-inning reliever which is of great value in a modern-day bullpen with starters no longer asked to pitch deep into games.

"[Kranick's] a guy that is a multiple inning guy," Mendoza said. "... [He] attacked the strike zone [on Thursday], slider was good, life on the fastball, continues to throw strikes and that’s what you want out of a guy like that that is capable of going multiple innings."

Kranick's ascension as a bullpen arm has been surprising because of his lack of MLB experience and because he hasn't pitched in the majors since 2022 as a member of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Even then, he only pitched five innings that year before undergoing Tommy John surgery.

Since then, Kranick was designated for assignment by the Pirates in January 2024 and claimed off waivers by the Mets a week later. And while he didn't make the team out of spring training (started the season on the IL), Kranick pitched well in Triple-A with a 3.57 ERA (1.22 WHIP) in 63 innings across 41 appearances.

With a fastball that can reach the upper 90s and a devastating slider that he can also throw for strikes (one walk in 11.1 innings), New York hopes Kranick can be its secret weapon this year.

Luis Torrens -- good hitter

With the injury to Francisco Alvarez landing him on the IL to begin the season, the Mets will start the year with Torrens as their starting catcher. Known more for his defense -- especially his throwing arm -- Torrens showed New York he was capable with the bat as well at times. While it's not necessary for a backup catcher to be an offensive juggernaut, Torrens will have to step up like he did in 2024 while Alvarez is on the shelf.

On Thursday, the 28-year-old went 3-for-3 at the plate with a triple, three RBI and three runs scored in the heart of the Mets lineup.

"He’s a good hitter. We saw flashes last year, especially when he first came up and got the opportunity to play," Mendoza said. "This is a guy that can drive the baseball, knows what pitchers are trying to do in certain situations. He’s going to get an opportunity here and like I said, he’s a good player."

For his career, Torrens has slashed .227/.289/.356 with 22 home runs in 850 at-bats. If New York can get some pop out of Torrens along with great defense before Alvarez gets back, it should be fine, especially with so much firepower elsewhere in the lineup.

Starting rotation battle

The Mets still haven't unveiled their full starting rotation with a couple of spots still up for grabs and three pitchers -- Tylor Megill, Paul Blackbun and Griffin Canning -- vying for them.

All three pitchers have had strong moments during camp and Mendoza is pleased with how they are throwing the ball, as well as how they are recovering.

Asked if Megill has an inside track to make the Opening Day roster, the skipper wouldn't tip his hand.

"He’s in the mix, he’s in the conversation," Mendoza said. "Those three guys that we’re talking about, they’ve been throwing the ball really well, Megill being one of them. And that’s why this decision is not as easy as people think.

"You can make a case for Megill, you can make a case for Blackburn, you can make a case for Griffin [Canning]. All three of them are throwing the ball really well, they’re recovering well so that’s why we want to wait here and see what we’ve got."

Despite having the least amount of experience in the majors out of the three options, Megill has experience with New York, debuting with the Mets in 2021 and having varying amounts of success. The right-hander has looked good in Grapefruit League action, owning a 3.86 ERA (1.03 WHIP) with 13 strikeouts over 11.2 innings in three starts.

It's Canning, though, who's been the most impressive in camp with his 0.90 ERA (0.80 WHIP) and 16 strikeouts in 10 innings so far. A former second-round pick, Canning signed with the Mets on a one-year, $4.25 million contract during the offseason after spending five seasons with the Los Angeles Angels.

In his career, the 28-year-old is 25-34 with a 4.78 ERA (1.33 WHIP).