Brunson's 31 points, Anunoby's 23 lead Knicks past 76ers 112-109

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Jalen Brunson scored 31 points, OG Anunoby added 23 and the New York Knicks followed their most lopsided win in franchise history with a 112-109 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers on Saturday.

The Knicks crushed the Nets 120-66 on Wednesday and then exploded with a 30-point third quarter in a stiffer road test that sent them to their first win in three tries this season over the 76ers.

Joel Embiid had 38 points and 11 rebounds, but turned the ball over on the final play of the game after the Knicks seemingly tried to intentionally foul him. Tyrese Maxey scored 22 points for the Sixers but shot an airball on a late tying 3-point attempt from near halfcourt as he anticipated an intentional foul that didn’t come.

The 76ers had pulled within two late until Anunoby and Landry Shamet followed with consecutive 3s that helped the Knicks stave off the late-game collapse.

Led by Brunson, the Knicks opened the quarter on a 21-7 run and made Philly sound a bit like the inside of Madison Square Garden. The “Let’s go Knicks!” chants that had largely been tamped down by boos in a competitive first half, instead filled the arena with each big Knicks bucket.

Brunson gave a little wave after he buried a 3 for an 84-72 lead. Embiid tried to rally the Sixers and his three-point play in the fourth — aided by a sixth foul on Karl-AnthonyTowns — cut it to 98-92.

It wasn’t enough and a Knicks team that had lost nine of its previous 11 games heading into the Nets game has now won two straight. Modest, yes, but good enough to ensure the Sixers didn’t gain ground on them in the East standings.

HORNETS 119, WIZARDS 115

CHARLOTE, N.C. (AP) — Brandon Miller scored 21 points as the Charlotte Hornets beat Washington, sending the Wizards to their ninth straight loss.

Miles Bridges and LaMelo Ball each scored 20 points, Kon Knueppel added 16 and Moussa Diabate 11 as the Hornets won consecutive games for the first time since January 3-5 against Chicago and Oklahoma City.

Tre Johnson had career-highs of 26 points and six assists for the Wizards, who, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, fielded the youngest starting lineup, by average age, since the NBA began tracking starters in 1970-71. Washington’s starting five, at an average age of 20.64 years old, beat the previous youngest lineup of 20.74, fielded by Oklahoma City on April 10, 2021 against Philadelphia.

CAVALIERS 119, MAGIC 105

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Donovan Mitchell scored 27 of his 36 points in the second half and Cleveland pulled away to a win over Orlando.

Jaylon Tyson added 17 points for the Cavaliers and Evan Mobley had 13 points and seven rebounds.

Paolo Banchero led the Magic with 27 points. Desmond Bane added 20 points and Anthony Black finished with 16 points, five rebounds and five assists.

Jalen Suggs returned after missing eight games with a bruised right knee and had 9 points and six assists in 24 minutes for Orlando.

Playing without Darius Garland (sore toe) and DeAndre Hunter (sore knee), the Cavaliers won for the fifth time in six games.

After Mitchell scored on four layups and a short bank shot in the third quarter, Cleveland got 3-pointers from Lonzo Ball, Mobley and Tyrese Proctor in the first 3 1/2 minutes of the fourth quarter to take a 97-79 lead, the largest of the game.

Banchero hit three 3-pointers in the final period, but the Magic could get no closer than nine.

Mitchell made 15 of 30 shots and had nine assists and two steals.

BULLS 114, CELTICS 111

CHICAGO (AP) — Kevin Huerter made a 3-pointer just before the buzzer, lifting Chicago past Boston before retiring Derrick Rose’s jersey number.

Coby White scored 22 points and hit five of Chicago’s 21 3s, helping the Bulls win their fourth straight.

Rose entered rarified air after the game when the Bulls sent his No. 1 to the rafters, putting the Chicago product alongside Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Jerry Sloan and Bob Love as the only players with numbers retired by the team.

The Bulls gave their crowd plenty to cheer before they honored the South Side product and former MVP by squeezing out a win over the Eastern Conference’s second-place team, even though Jaylen Brown scored 33 for Boston.

Chicago led 111-109 when White missed a driving layup and Smith missed the putback with 20 seconds remaining. Brown got the rebound and drove for a layup to tie it with 14 seconds left.

The Bulls called a timeout and worked the ball to Huerter, who nailed a 3 from the corner with less than a second remaining. Huerter arrived at United Center wearing a No. 1 jersey in honor of Rose.

Nikola Vucevic scored 16 for Chicago, and Smith and Matas Buzelis added 14 points apiece.

LAKERS 116, MAVERICKS 110

DALLAS (AP) — Luka Doncic had 33 points and 11 assists, and the Lakers erased a 15-point deficit in the final seven minutes of a victory over the Mavericks in the star guard’s second visit to Dallas since his shocking trade to Los Angeles almost a year ago.

LeBron James scored 11 of his 17 points in the fourth quarter, when Rui Hachimura had a four-point play before another 3-pointer on the next possession to put the Lakers in front for good as Doncic improved to 4-0 against his former team.

Hachimura’s 3-pointer for a 108-106 lead started an 11-2 run that Doncic capped with a driving layup for an eight-point edge, prompting the Slovenian star to turn his old bench and declare the game over.

Max Christie, who came to Dallas along with injured 10-time All-Star Anthony Davis in the trade for Doncic, scored 24 points. Naji Marshall had 21 points and 11 rebounds as Dallas’ season-best four-game winning streak ended.

The Mavericks outscored the Lakers 41-14 from the start of the third quarter until early in the fourth, turning a 13-point deficit into a 14-point lead. Brandon Williams, who scored 20 points, had eight on a 10-2 run to finish the third, which started with a 20-4 Dallas burst.

The lead was 15 points with less than 7 minutes remaining when the Lakers started their rally, sparked by James after a slow start had him with a minus-28 rating early in the fourth.

HEAT 147, JAZZ 116

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Bam Adebayo had 26 points and 15 rebounds to lead Miami to a victory over Utah.

Nikola Jovic added 23 points and Pelle Larsson had 20 as the Heat matched their most points in a game this season. Miami beat Denver 147-123 last month.

The Heat, who are 2-2 on their five-game West Coast road trip, narrowly ended its streak of nine straight games allowing 117 points or more.

Jusuf Nurkic had 17 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds to become the first player in Jazz history with three consecutive triple-doubles. He had only one triple-double in his career before this streak, and the last came on Jan. 16, 2019, while playing for Portland.

Brice Sensabaugh scored 23 points for the Jazz, which has lost six of seven. Keyonte George finished with 19 points.

The Heat took the lead for good with 6:44 remaining in the first quarter and cruised to a 73-52 lead at halftime.

_____

Luka Doncic scores 33 and remains unbeaten against Mavericks in Lakers comeback

DALLAS, TEXAS - JANUARY 24: Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers.
Lakers star Luka Doncic shoots during the first quarter of a 116-110 win over the Dallas Mavericks on Saturday night. Doncic scored 33 points. (Sam Hodde / Getty Images)

Luka Doncic was met with a chorus of cheers when he strolled onto the court at American Airlines Center to do his pregame shooting routine.

“We love you Luka,” the fans chanted. “We love you.”

Doncic smiled and waved toward the crowd. He had spent six-plus seasons playing for the Mavericks, a place he thought he would call home for his entire career as the face of the franchise.

But a stunning, three-team trade last year sent Doncic to the Lakers.

Doncic returned to Dallas for the second time since the trade, leading the Lakers to a 116-110 comeback win on cold and icy Saturday night.

Read more:LeBron James downplays reported rift with Jeanie Buss: 'It's always been respect'

Doncic was magnificent with 33 points, 11 assists and eight rebounds as he improved to 4-0 against his former team.

“Obviously, there’s always going to be emotions,” Doncic said. “I was happy to be back here. I went to my house. I saw my cars. But obviously it’s always going to be emotions. I really appreciate how they cheered for me when I was introduced. It’s always going to be a special place for me.”

LeBron James finished with 17 points, eight rebounds and five assists. Rui Hachimura had 17 points and eight rebounds and Marcus Smart had 13 points, seven rebounds and three assists.

“I’m always going to want to win, no matter what,” Doncic said. “But obviously this win is a little different."

The Lakers (27-17) led by 14 points at one point before going down by 15 in the fourth quarter.

They made a stirring comeback late in the fourth quarter behind Hachimura, who went on a 7-0 run. He made a three-pointer while being fouled and made the subsequent free throw. He then hit another three to put the Lakers ahead 108-106, a lead they wouldn't relinquish.

“I think we were sharing the ball today and Luka was getting double-teamed in the last five minutes. So, I think that was a good look for us,” Hachimura said. “We talked about how we had to share the ball and find each other and I ended up shooting the last shot. So, yeah, I think it was good by the whole team.”

Hachimura was six for 13 from the field and four for seven from three-point range.

Lakers forward Rui Hachimura celebrates after scoring against the Mavericks in the second quarter Saturday.
Lakers forward Rui Hachimura celebrates after scoring against the Mavericks in the second quarter Saturday. (Julio Cortez / Associated Press)

“He took his shots tonight,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “And we're all very confident in him. He's a laser. He's a fantastic shooter. The four-point play followed by the three, that seven-point swing where we're down five and go up two in the matter of 30 seconds was huge.”

After Cooper Flagg made one of two free throws, Smart grabbed a rebound off a missed Hachimura three-pointer and scored despite dislocating his right index finger earlier in the quarter.

"I was like, 'I don't want to come out of the game, so I'm trying to pop it back in real quick,’” Smart said. “It was able to go back in."

James followed Smart’s play with a tip-in. Doncic made two free throws to finish off the Mavericks (19-27) after Naji Marshall was called for a charge.

Read more:Lakers admit thinking about contracts, LeBron calls for changes after loss to Clippers

In the first quarter, Doncic shot a three-pointer over Brandon Williams to give him 1,500 career threes, making him the youngest player in NBA history to accomplish the feat.

“There were still emotions, trust me. But a little bit better, a little bit easier for me," Doncic said. "How the fans accept me here, it’s unbelievable. I still got a lot of friends here, players, some other people. So I’m happy to be back a little bit.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Furious fourth quarter salvages Lakers victory over Dallas

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Los Angeles Lakers player Luka Doncic dribbling the ball against a Dallas Mavericks player, Image 2 shows LeBron James with the ball, being guarded by Naji Marshall
Lakers @ Dallas Mavericks | 1.24

DALLAS — Since shockingly being traded to Los Angeles nearly a year ago, Lakers star Luka Dončić didn’t know what losing a basketball game to the Mavericks felt like. 

And he still doesn’t.

The Lakers beat the Mavericks 116-110 on Saturday night at American Airlines Center in Dončić’s second game back in Dallas, and fourth matchup against his former team since the franchise traded him Feb. 2, 2025. 

For a significant part of the second half, it looked like the Lakers were on the path to losing their first game against the Mavericks since acquiring Dončić.

Jan 24, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) looks to move the ball past Dallas Mavericks forward Caleb Martin (16) during the first quarter at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

The Mavericks’ dominant third quarter, which they won 35-14, gave them an 87-79 lead going into the fourth. And a strong start to the quarter for Dallas gave the Mavericks a 93-79 advantage.

But the Lakers, like they have in the last three games, unlocked a different gear late in the game, outscoring the Mavericks 29-8 in the final 7 ½ minutes, helping Dončić’s remain undefeated (4-0) against his former team. 

Dončić, as he does most nights, led the Lakers with 33 points, 11 assists and eight rebounds. 

But it was the late-game energetic plays from Marcus Smart (13 points, seven rebounds and three assists) that shifted the momentum to the Lakers.

And a pair of late 3-pointers from Rui Hachimura (17 points) — including one he got fouled on — gave the Lakers their first lead, 108-106, since midway through the third quarter. 

Smart helped the Lakers maintain momentum with a putback layup after a missed Hachimura 3 with 1:40 left, putting the Lakers up 110-107.

LeBron James (17 points, eight rebounds and five assists) had another putback layup with 1:30 left to give the Lakers a 112-107 lead. The Lakers led by at least five points the rest of the way. 

Jan 24, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) looks to move the ball past Dallas Mavericks forward Naji Marshall (13) during the first quarter at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

What does it mean?

From a standings standpoint, the Lakers (27-17) stay at No. 5 in the crowded Western Conference.

And from a rhythm standpoint, it helps gives the Lakers a shot to stack wins after losing five of their last eight.

The Lakers are 12-13 since Dec. 1, only going on a three-game winning streak once since November ended, but have won three of their last four.  

Turning point

When Lakers Coach JJ Redick went with a small-ball lineup of Dončić, Smart, James, Hachimura and Jake LaRavia for the final 9:38 of the game after Hachimura subbed in for Deandre Ayton, who struggled scoring with 9 points on 4-of-16 shooting to go with 11 rebounds.

The Lakers outscored Dallas 36-17 behind their small-ball unit.

MVP: Luka Dončić

Dončić not only led the Lakers in scoring, but individually got six straight stops in the fourth as part of the Lakers’ defensive turnaround.

“Just a fantastic job from him,” Redick said of Dončić. Then makes sort-of the game-sealing defensive play with the charge on [Naji] Marshall. He was fantastic in the fourth quarter. Just picked apart their defense down the stretch.”

Stat of the game: 10 possessions

That’s how many possessions — a near six-minute stretch — in which the Lakers went without scoring in the third, helping Dallas go on a 16-0 run to take a 72-69 lead.

Up next

The Lakers’ eight-game Grammy trip continues with a matchup against the Bulls in Chicago on Monday at 5 p.m. 

It’ll be the Lakers’ first matchup against an Eastern Conference team on the road since they beat the Philadelphia 76ers on Dec. 7 at Xfinity Mobile Arena. 

The Lakers have played five of their 14 games road games against Eastern Conference foes so far, going 3-2.

6 things as the Mavericks collapse late in 116-110 loss to Luka Dončić and the Los Angeles Lakers

The Dallas Mavericks (19-27) crumbled in the fourth quarter on Saturday, in Luka Dončić’s second trip to American Airlines Center in a Los Angeles Lakers uniform, wilting in the face of a late 23-5 run behind two clutch 3-pointers from Rui Hachimura in the 116-110 loss. The Lakers (27-17) got a game-high 33 points, eight rebounds and 11 assists from Dončić in the comeback win.

LeBron James, who had scored just six points through the game’s first three quarters, poured in 11 of his 17 points down the stretch as the Mavericks’ four-game winning streak, their longest of the 2025-26 season, came to an abrupt halt.

Max Christie led the Mavericks with 24 points on four made 3-pointers in the loss, while Naji Marshall added 21 points and 11 rebounds. Brandon Williams contributed 20 off the bench in the loss as well.

Luka on the hunt

Dončić missed his first 3-point attempt of the game, then pulled his patented step-back out of his bag while being defended by Naji Marshall with 5:30 left in the first quarter to tie the game at 16-16. Three possessions later he hit another vintage step-back 3-ball from the left wing to give the Lakers a 21-18 advantage. Dončić led Los Angeles with 12 points on 2-of-3 shooting from 3-point range and four assists in the first quarter as the Lakers led 37-28 after one.

Dončić snuck into the lane and scored a cheap one over Marshall for his first bucket of the second quarter to put the Lakers up 50-38 midway through the frame. He came into the game leading the league in free-throw attempts this year and made nine of his 10 attempts from the stripe in the first half on his way to a game-high 17 points to go along with seven assists and six boards.

Dončić absorbed the contact in the lane for a driving bucket through Daniel Gafford, his first of the third, to pull LA to within 72-71, before canning his third 3-ball of the night a minute later to pull the Lakers back in front, 74-72, still early in the third quarter.

Hunting Luka

Dončić’s hot start on offense didn’t stop the Mavericks from hunting him on the defensive end, though.

Flagg drove and dished after getting Luka Dončić switched onto him early in the first, finding Christie open for a 3-pointer out on the right wing to put the Mavericks up 9-7. Flagg rose up over Dončić two possessions later for a mid-range pull-up jumper to extend the early lead to 11-7. The Lakers settled into a two-three zone after the Mavs’ early success hunting Luka on the offensive end, which seemed to stall the Mavs’ momentum a little. All five of Dallas’ first-quarter turnovers came in the frame’s last 5:40, after the Lakers switched to the zone defense.

The Mavs turned the ball over four more times in the first 6:20 of the second quarter, further disrupting the offensive rhythm Dallas established early on by hunting matchups against Dončić. Dončić had trouble keeping Mavericks attackers in front of him throughout the third quarter as well, as Dallas stormed back with a 16-4 run to start the second half.

Coop and Christie

So much of this season has been searching out which of Flagg’s teammates complement the rookie sensation’s game. Saturday’s game gave us further proof that Christie is absolutely one of those guys. They just play off one another well.

Christie was the Mavericks’ saving grace in the second quarter, as he pump-faked and shuffled to his right for his third 3-pointer of the game to pull Dallas to within 46-38 with 7:46 left before the half. He bailed the Mavs out late in the shot clock with a jumper over James midway through the second to keep Dallas connected, down 50-40. He sprinted out in transition along the right wing and finished the break with a dunk assisted by Flagg to give him 13 points to that point. Flagg found him wide open under the basket as Dončić lost Christie on defense the next time down to give him a team-high 15 and pull the Mavs to within 10, down 57-47 with 3:40 left in the first half. Dallas trailed 65-52 at the half.

Christie came into the game scoring better than 17 points per game this January and continued his tear in the second half.

After a silent second quarter, Flagg was more decisive in the third, even if his shot wasn’t falling. He drove through the teeth of the Los Angeles defense for his first score since late in the first quarter on the Mavs’ second possession of the third. Christie found Flagg for a corner 3-pointer with 8:30 left in the third to bring Dallas to within 69-63, before Flagg sucked the LA defense in and found Christie alone in the opposite corner the next time down for Christie’s fourth 3-pointer of the game. The Lakers called a timeout, up 69-66, with 7:56 left in the third.

Flagg got one to go in the lane to see-saw the Mavs back in front, 70-69, before taking a steal the next time down and finding Caleb Martin for a transition score midway through the third to give Dallas a 72-69 advantage. Christie got past James for his first score of the fourth quarter with 8:15 left in the game to put the Mavs ahead 99-85 and give Christie 20 or more points in his fourth-straight game.

Birthday boy

Marshall came into the matchup with the Lakers off one of his best nights in a Mavericks’ uniform in Thursday’s 123-115 win over the Golden State Warriors, when he scored 30 points on 10-of-12 shooting and dished nine dimes in the impressive win. His performance on his 28th birthday on Saturday may have been comparatively muted, but he still pulled more than his weight against LA.

Marshall scored 10 of his 21 points in the first half and pulled down 11 rebounds in the loss. He has been one of the most consistent Mavericks this season and is no doubt one of the team’s most intriguing players as the trade deadline looms, less than two weeks away. He added two more buckets early in the third as the Mavs continued to search for offensive rhythm.

Marshall’s third driving score of the third came as part of a 16-4 run to open the second half and pulled Dallas to within one, 69-68, with 7:30 left in the frame.

B-Will makes waves late

Brandon Williams scored all eight of his third-quarter points in the frame’s final 2:40 to add some fuel to the Mavericks’ third-quarter about-face. He fended off the much bigger Vanderbilt for a banking score with three seconds left in the third to extend the Dallas lead to eight, up 87-79 going into the fourth.

Williams shot 4-of-6 in the third after the Lakers moved back in front, 74-72, on Dončić’s 3-pointer earlier in the frame. The diminutive guard score a three-point play on the Mavericks’ first possession of the fourth, this time over Lakers’ big man Deandre Ayton, to give Williams 20 points on the night.

The next time down, Williams found Martin in the corner for his fourth assist and Martin’s second 3-pointer of the game to extend the Dallas lead to 14, up 93-79, and force a Laker timeout with 10:49 left to play. Martin was also solid for the Mavericks in the win over the Lakers, scoring 17 points on 6-of-9 shooting and 3-of-4 from 3-point range.

Collapse

But the Lakers had one more late run left in the tank behind Dončić, James and Hachimura, who nailed two 3-pointers in the game’s final three minutes, including a four-play with 2:15 left to play when P.J. Washington swiped at Hachimura while running under the shot. Hachimura’s second came two possessions later and gave the Lakers back a 108-06 lead, as part of a 23-5 run in the game’s final 7:30.

After the Mavericks dominated the Lakers so thoroughly in the third, LA had something for them down the stretch, as Flagg and Dallas’ scrappy gang of role players ran out of juice. Flagg shot just 7-of-20 from the field in the loss, finishing with 16 points, seven rebounds and six assists.

Lakers narrowly escape embarrassment, earn comeback win over Mavs

The Lakers led by as many as 14 and trailed by as many as 15 before coming from behind down the stretch to beat the Mavs, 116-110.

The Lakers used a strong first half to hold a comfortable lead for much of the second half. All of that disappeared in the third quarter as LA was thoroughly outplayed, losing the period 35-14. Dallas scored the first six points of the fourth quarter to make it a prolonged 41-14 run.

After eventually settling the ship, the Lakers mounted a comeback led by Marcus Smart, LeBron James and Rui Hachimura. A pair of huge 3-pointers from Rui gave the Lakers a lead in the fourth that they would not relinquish as they closed out the win.

The game began with LeBron James and Cooper Flagg exchanging baskets. Former Laker Max Christie knocked down two 3-pointers. Deandre Ayton was off to a good start for LA, scoring four points. Quite a few fouls were called, resulting in eight free throws between the teams. 

At the five-minute mark, the game was tied.

Luka Dončić was the first player in double figures with 10. He also drained two out of his three attempts from behind the arc. Rui Hachimura scored a quick five points off the bench. Jarred Vanderbilt once again provided excellent energy and hustle. He also scored five points, three of which came from a corner triple. 

At the end of the first, the purple and gold were up by nine. 

The second period started with a 3-pointer by Marcus Smart. Caleb Martin responded on the other end with a triple of his own. Los Angeles was putting in a good effort defensively, holding the Mavericks to 40% shooting, allowing the Lakers to extend their lead to double digits.

At the 5:16 mark, LA was up by 14.

Los Angeles was having a pretty good half from behind the arc, shooting 50% compared to Dallas’ 41%. Christie continued to light up his former team, pushing his point total to 13. Hachimura was a bright spot offensively off the bench for LA with 10 points. 

At halftime, Los Angeles was up by 13. 

Naji Marshall opened the third period by scoring in the paint. LeBron responded with a midrange jumper on the other end. The teams exchanged two more baskets until shots stopped falling for the purple and gold, while Dallas scored four in a row. 

The scoring run grew to 10-0 for the Mavericks, making it a three-point game. The Lakers were forced to call a timeout to regroup. Out of the break, Marshall scored on a layup.

Dallas jumped ahead by one thanks to a runner in the paint by Flagg. 

Luka stopped some of the bleeding with five points for LA, giving them the lead back. Both teams also exchanged triples, keeping the game tied. Brandon Williams was having a great game off the bench for the Mavericks with 17 points. 

Los Angeles shot an atrocious 31% from the field in the third. They allowed Dallas to score 35 points to their disastrous 14 points. Going into the fourth period, the Lakers were down by eight. 

The final frame began with Drew Timme airballing a 3-pointer, which was a great example of how terrible this game became for LA. Williams then continued his strong performance, converting on a three-point play. Los Angeles called a timeout again after Martin drained a 3-pointer.

Dallas’ lead was now at 14. 

Martin pushed his point total to 17 points, draining his third triple of the game. LeBron started taking over offensively, trying to will his team to a comeback, scoring seven points to cut the deficit to single digits.

At the 5:06 mark, LA was down by eight.

LaRavia then knocked down a triple after Smart stole the ball from Flagg. With just over three minutes remaining, the Mavs led by five after a pair of Christie freebies. 

A layup by Luka made it a three-point game, once more. 

Christie was sent to the line again and converted on both free throws.

Hachimura drained a 3-pointer and drew the foul, completing the four-point play with 2:44 remaining. Hachimura then knocked down another 3-pointer on the next possession, giving the Lakers the lead.

Flagg converted on a free throw after he was fouled to make it a one-point game. Smart then scored two on a putback layup off a missed three by Hachimura, putting LA up three with 1:40 left. LeBron extended the lead to five with a layup. 

Luka added the finishing touches on an impressive 27-9 scoring run with four points of his own and while drawing a charge to seal the win. 

Key Player Stats

Dončić finished the game with 33 points, eight rebounds and 11 assists. LeBron ended with 17 points after coming alive in the fourth to go along with eight rebounds and five assists. Jake LaRavia pitched in with 13 points.

Smart scored 13 points with seven rebounds and three assists. Hachimura notched 17 points with eight rebounds off the bench. Ayton struggled mightily, scoring nine points on 4-16 shooting. Vanderbilt pitched in with eight points, four rebounds and two assists. 

The Lakers’ next matchup will be against the Chicago Bulls on Monday at 5:00 PM PT.

You can follow Karin on Twitter at @KarinAbcarians.

Kings Pick Up Two Massive Points In Barnburner With Blues

On Saturday night, the Los Angeles Kings (21-16-13) kicked off a six-road trip in St. Louis in what would be a barn burner against the Blues (19-24-9). The Kings entered St. Louis coming off a victory over the Rangers on Tuesday. Not only are they coming off of a win, but they also entered Saturday's action riding a four-game point streak.

That streak would grow to five with perhaps the most resilient victory for the Kings all season long. After blowing two separate leads, including allowing a goal in the dying minutes of regulation, the Kings were able to hold strong and start the road strip off with two massive points.

Kings Jump Out to Early Lead

The Kings needed a quick start in this one and that is exactly what they got. Just under five minutes into the opening frame Los Angeles found themselves having a 1-0 lead.

A strong forecheck by Samuel Helenius allowed Jeff Malott to keep the puck in the Blues zone, Helenius then grabbed the loose puck and found Taylor Ward in the slot who wasted no time firing a wicked snap shot by Joel Hofer. Ward now has goals in back-to-back games and continues to improve as his stint in the NHL continues.

The first period came to a close and after two power play opportunities for both teams, the Kings held their 1-0 heading into the second period.

Once again, Los Angeles struck early in the period as they doubled their lead just over a minute into the middle frame. Brian Dumoulin gave his team a 2-0 with a blistering shot from the point for his long awaited first goal as a member of the Los Angeles Kings. Alex Laferriere and Adrian Kempe were credited with the assists.

Blues Score Three Unanswered Goals

The Kings early period momentum came to a screeching halt as the Blues found themselves quickly back into the game thanks to Dalibor Dvorsky's ninth goal of the season. Dvorsky was able to muscle through three Kings defenders as he fired a snap shot past the right shoulder of Darcy Kuemper, cutting the Kings lead in half. 

Shortly after the Blues goal, Samuel Helenius found himself just a goal away from the elusive 'Gordie Howe Hat Trick' after a solid scrap with Nick Bjusgtad. Helenius challenged the Blues veteran after he caught Brandt Clarke with a solid check along the boards.

Now all of a sudden, St. Louis had the momentum, and it showed. After Kevin Fiala is called for tripping the Blues were headed to the power play where they then evened the score thanks to their captain. Brayden Schenn knotted things up as he fired his 10th of the year past Kuemper off a nice pass from Pavel Buchnevich.

Not eve two minutes later, the Kings found themselves trailing after Jordan Kyrou scored his first of the game and 10th of the season. All props go to Kyrou on this one as he used his all world speed to pull off a terrific wrap around goal, giving Kuemper no chance. In what seemed like a blink of an eye, the Kings went from leading by two early in the second period, to down by a goal in less than 10 minutes.

Why The Kings Shouldn't Pursue Artemi PanarinWhy The Kings Shouldn't Pursue Artemi PanarinThe New York Rangers are retooling and have made Artemi Panarin available ahead of this year's NHL Trade Deadline. The Los Angeles Kings are among a plethora of teams with interest in acquiring the four time all-star. However it may not be the best course of action for the Kings to take.

Kings Score Twice as Seesaw Battle Continues

However, the Kings responded well as they generated chances and were able to even the game just over two minutes after falling behind. 

Laferriere evened the score with his 13th of the year. After receiving a slick dish from Corey Perry, 'Laffy' was able to beat the unsuspecting Hofer, giving the Kings some much needed life and the game would enter the third period tied at 3-3.

The score would remain the same throughout the first half of the third period, and it wasn't until Trevor Moore buried a loose puck off a Brandt Clarke point shot. 

In his first game since December 29th, Moore's sixth of the season gives the Kings a 4-3 lead as they look to close out a hectic game in St. Louis. 

Kyrou Strikes Again

In the dying minutes of regulation St. Louis was pushing hard to battle back and even the score, while the Kings defended the Blues barrage.  

With their goalie pulled, it began to look inevitable that the Blues would tie the game, and Kyrou did just that with his second of the game. The Kings fail to hold a late game lead and this on his headed to overtime.

NHL Rumors: Kings Linked To Multiple Centers Amid Positional StrugglesNHL Rumors: Kings Linked To Multiple Centers Amid Positional StrugglesAs the NHL trade deadline approaches, trade rumors have been heating up, and there's no exception with the Los Angeles Kings. Players such as Elias Pettersson, Nazem Kadri, and others have linked to L.A.

Kuemper, Kempe, Moore Shine in Shootout

Both teams had a series of chances in the five minute overtime period but neither squad was able to capitalize and a shootout was necessary. 

Kempe opened the shootout with a goal, while Kuemper stopped three of the four Blues skaters he faced. Which lead to Trevor Moore playing hero in his return, scoring in the fourth round to give the Kings a massive 5-4 victory.

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Carolina 4 Ottawa 1: Hurricanes Show Senators How To Protect A Multi-Goal Lead

The Ottawa Senators got a first-hand look at how playoff-bound teams protect multi-goal leads on Saturday night.

The Carolina Hurricanes jumped out to a 4-0 lead and then expertly shut things down the rest of the way, skating to a 4–1 win at Canadian Tire Centre. Seth Jarvis led the way for Carolina with a goal and an assist, while Brandon Bussi, a Canes' waiver claim earlier this season, stopped 35 shots.

Ottawa has now lost four of its last five games, and three of the losses feature multi-goal Sens leads. The shot clock did little to tell the real story, as despite outshooting the Hurricanes 36–19, the Senators were never truly in the game.

Travis Green talks about the coaching shift with his penalty killing unit, handing the reins to assistant Mike Yeo.

William Carrier opened the scoring less than four minutes into the game. The Senators were in the middle of a wholesale line change, and Jordan Spence drifted way out of position, allowing an easy 2-on-0 rush that Carrier finished off for his sixth goal of the season.

Less than two minutes later, Jarvis was left all alone in the slot. Alex Nikishin threaded a pass to him through traffic, and Jarvis beat James Reimer to make it 2–0. Before the period was over, Taylor Hall made it 3–0 with his 12th of the season on what looked like a harmless wrist shot from distance, one Reimer would likely want back.

The score held until midway through the second period. After a sketchy tripping call on Claude Giroux, Carolina had a five-on-three advantage, and Svechnikov scored his 18th of the season by simply floating a puck toward the front of the net. It went in off Tyler Kleven and through Reimer to make it 4–0.

Tim Stützle finally got the Senators on the board with his 23rd of the season, a close-range wrist shot after a nice pass from Jake Sanderson. That would be the final goal of the night, as Carolina completely shut the door over the final 28 minutes.

The Senators now sit nine points out of the final wild-card spot and ten points back of the Atlantic Division’s top three, which is perhaps a sign it’s time to stop checking the playoff standings altogether.

Things don’t get any easier for the locals. Ottawa hosts the Vegas Golden Knights on Sunday at 5:00 p.m., followed by the top-ranked Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday night.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News - Ottawa

Keaton Wagler's career-high 46 points lead No. 11 Illinois past No. 4 Purdue

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — Keaton Wagler scored a career-high 46 points, making nine 3-pointers, as No. 11 Illinois beat No. 4 Purdue 88-82 on Saturday.

Wagler, a freshman guard, shot 13 for 17 overall, 9 of 11 from 3-point range and 11 of 13 on free throws. David Mirkovic added 12 points and eight rebounds for the Illini (17-3, 8-1 Big Ten).

Braden Smith led the Boilermakers (17-3, 7-2) with 27 points and 12 assists. Trey Kaufman-Renn added 12 points for Purdue, which lost its second consecutive game.

The Illini hit 18 of 38 3-pointers while Purdue was 7 of 19.

Wagler had 24 of the Illini’s 39 first-half points, including the first 14.

Smith’s 3-pointer cut Illinois’ lead to 82-80 with 45 seconds left. Wagler answered with a jumper with 18 seconds left, and after Smith made two from the line to again make it a two-point game, Wagler hit two to make it 86-82 with 9.3 seconds left. Purdue then turned the ball over.

Purdue shot 63% percent in the opening half compared to 43% for Illinois. However, the Illini countered that by hitting 9 of 21 3-pointers while the Boilermakers were 3 of 8 on 3-point shots.

NO. 2 UCONN 75, VILLANOVA 67, OT

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Solo Ball had 24 points, including a key 3-pointer in overtime, and Alex Karaban had all of his 17 after halftime as UConn beat Villanova.

Silas Demary Jr. and Tarris Reed Jr. each finished with 10 for UConn (19-1, 9-0 Big East), which won its 15th game in a row.

Matthew Hodge hit a 3-pointer with 1:06 left in the second half to give Villanova a two-point lead, but Reed tied it on a tip that bounced off the rim a couple of times.

Villanova’s Tyler Perkins opened overtime with a 3-pointer, but that was the Wildcats’ only field goal in the extra period. Perkins and Duke Brennan had 16 points apiece for Villanova (15-5, 6-3).

UConn coach Dan Hurley was called for a technical foul with 15:06 left in the second half after no foul was called on a shot in the paint by Karaban and then Villanova’s Acaden Lewis went to the line after being fouled. Devin Askew made both free throws on the technical and Lewis hit both foul shots to put Villanova up 39-33. Ball had five points in a 7-0 UConn run and his 3-pointer with 12:12 remaining gave the Huskies their first lead of the second half.

NO. 5 DUKE 90, WAKE FOREST 68

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Cameron Boozer scored 32 points to lead Duke’s dominating interior play that helped the Blue Devils beat Wake Forest.

The star freshman big man made 11 of 20 shots to go with nine rebounds and four assists, controlling large stretches with his scoring and his playmaking ability to passing out of oncoming double teams.

And with the 6-foot-9, 250-pound forward in charge, Duke (18-1, 7-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) outscored its longtime instate league foe 48-16 in the paint. The Blue Devils also outrebounded the Demon Deacons by 21 and finished with a 18-7 edge in second-chance points.

It marked Boozer’s fourth output of at least 30 points this season, while Duke shot 50% overall.

NO. 12 TEXAS TECH 90, NO. 6 HOUSTON 86

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — JT Toppin had 31 points and 12 rebounds for his 44th career double-double and Donovan Atwell hit consecutive 3-pointers late to put Texas Tech ahead to stay in a win over Houston, ending the Cougars’ 11-game winning streak.

True freshman Kingston Flemings had a season-high 42 points with six assists for the Cougars (17-2, 5-1 Big 12), who had won their past 16 true road games — all conference games — since a loss at No. 8 Kansas two years ago. That was a school record and the nation’s longest active streak.

Texas Tech (16-4, 6-1) had 10 made 3s in the first half when scoring 55 points against a Houston team that coming in ranked second nationally allowing only 60.1 points. The Red Raiders made only two from beyond the arc after halftime, Atwell hitting the go-ahead 3 with 5:55 left and adding another 34 seconds later.

There were eight lead changes and eight ties in the game that Houston led for 18 minutes, 41 seconds, and Tech led 18:12.

NO. 7 NEBRASKA 76, MINNESOTA 57

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Pryce Sandfort scored 20 of his 22 points in the second half and grabbed 10 rebounds for Nebraska, helping the Huskers remain unbeaten by surging past Minnesota.

Sam Hoiberg had 14 points and seven assists and Jamarques Lawrence added 14 points for the Huskers (20-0, 9-0 Big Ten), who maintained sole possession of first place in the conference and matched the program’s best start in conference play since the 1965-66 team began 9-0 in the Big Eight. That season was also the last time Nebraska won five straight conference road games.

The Huskers, who entered the weekend as one of three undefeated NCAA Division I teams along with No. 1 Arizona and No. 25 Miami of Ohio, outscored the Gophers 46-21 in the second half behind a stifling defensive performance. Sandfort finished with four blocks and two steals.

NO. 8 GONZAGA 68, SAN FRANCISCO 66

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — Jalen Warley scored 19 points and Davis Fogle added 15 points and a last-second rebound as Gonzaga edged San Francisco for its 14th consecutive victory of the season and 34th win in a row over the Dons.

Tyon Grant-Foster added 15 points for Gonzaga (21-1, 9-0 West Coast Conference), which was without its two leading scorers for the third straight game. Forward Braden Huff (17.8 points per game) is out for several weeks with a knee injury. Forward Graham Ike (18 ppg) is expected back soon from an ankle injury.

Legend Smiley scored 18 points and Ryan Beasley 14 for San Francisco (13-9, 5-4), which has not beaten Gonzaga since 2012. The Dons’ last win in Spokane was in 1989.

San Francisco sank 14 of 28 3-point attempts to nearly end its long victory drought at Gonzaga.

Junjie Wang had a basket and two free throws to cut Gonzaga’s lead to 60-57 with five minutes left. But the Dons went cold after that and Grant-Foster’s basket and a late 3-pointer with two minutes left lifted the Zags to a 67-57 lead.

Vukasin Masic hit a pair of 3-pointers for the Dons to cut Gonzaga’s lead to 68-66 with 30 seconds left.

The Dons played for the final shot and Wang launched a long 3-pointer that clanged off the rim. Fogle rebounded for Gonzaga and time expired.

NO. 9 IOWA STATE 84, OKLAHOMA STATE 71

STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) — Milan Momcilovic scored 29 points, and Iowa State defeated Oklahoma State.

Momcilovic made 8 of 12 field goals, including 5 of 9 3-pointers, and all eight of his free throw attempts. The 6-foot-8 junior guard has averaged 27.7 points in his past three games.

Joshua Jefferson added 20 points for Iowa State, (18-2, 5-2 Big 12), which led by 30 points at halftime.

Kanye Clary and Jaylen Curry each scored 19 points for the Cowboys (14-6, 2-5), who outscored the Cyclones 50-33 in the second half, but lost for the fifth time in seven games.

Iowa State jumped out to an 11-2 lead. Momcilovic hit a 3-pointer, was fouled and made the free throw to push Iowa State’s lead to 23-4 seven minutes into the game. Oklahoma State missed nine of its first 10 shots and its first six 3-pointers.

Iowa State kept the pressure on and led 51-21 at halftime. Momcilovic scored 19 points in the first half as Cyclones made nine of 17 3-pointers before the break.

NO. 10 MICHIGAN ST. 91, MARYLAND 48

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Jeremy Fears had 17 points and a career-high 17 assists and Coen Carr scored 14 points while adding to his highlight reel of dunks, leading Michigan State to a win over Maryland.

The Spartans (18-2, 8-1 Big Ten) jumped out to a 24-4 lead and didn’t let up in the second half, scoring 15 straight points to lead 71-34 with 11:11 to play.

Michigan State’s 43-point margin of victory in a Big Ten game trailed only a 51-point win over Michigan during its 2000 national championship season.

The Spartans have won six straight games and 10 of 11, losing only to then-No. 13 Nebraska by two points on the road. They also lost to then-No. 4 Duke 66-60 at home in December.

NO. 13 BYU 91, UTAH 78

PROVO, Utah (AP) — AJ Dybantsa scored 43 points to break BYU’s freshman scoring record, leading the Cougars to a victory over Utah.

Dybantsa went 15 for 24 from the floor and 9 for 10 from the free throw line for his first 40-point game. He surpassed Danny Ainge’s record for points in a game by a BYU freshman and added six rebounds, three assists and blocked a shot.

Rob Wright III finished with 21 points and Richie Saunders added 12 to help the Cougars (17-2, 5-1 Big 12) bounce back from an 84-71 loss to Texas Tech a week earlier. BYU shot 60% in the second half to pull away in its final test before facing No. 1 Arizona on Monday.

Keanu Dawes led Utah with 23 points and six rebounds. Terrence Brown chipped in 22 points and Dom McHenry added 16 for the Utes (9-11, 1-6), who shot 62% from 3-point range.

NO. 15 VANDERBILT 88, MISSISSIPPI ST. 56

STARKVILLE, Miss. (AP) — Tyler Tanner scored 24 points and Duke Miles added 17 as Vanderbilt snapped a three-game losing skid with a win over Mississippi State.

The 32-point margin was the third-largest defeat for coach Chris Jans in his tenure at Mississippi State.

Tyler Nickel scored 13 points and Devin McGlockton 10 for Vanderbilt (17-3, 4-3 SEC).

Jayden Epps led Mississippi State (10-10, 2-6) with 14 points. After winning their first two SEC games, the Bulldogs have dropped five straight.

Vanderbilt led by as many as 34 points in the second half and shot 54% for the game. The Commodores shot 8 for 25 from 3-point range and were 10 for 11 at the foul line. Vanderbilt outscored Mississippi State 50-22 in points in the paint and never trailed.

AUBURN 76, NO. 16 FLORIDA 67

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Keyshawn Hall scored 24 points, including 22 in Auburn’s dominant and stunning first half, and the Tigers upset Florida for the program’s first win in Gainesville since 1996.

Auburn used 7-0, 8-0 and 12-0 runs en route to a 15-point halftime lead in a matchup of 2025 Final Four teams, building enough of a cushion to withstand the Gators’ frantic rally after the break.

Defending national champion Florida (14-6, 5-2 Southeastern Conference), an 11 1/2-point favorite, tied the game twice in the second half, but Auburn’s Tahaad Pettiford hit a driving layup with 4:24 remaining to push the lead to 62-56. The Tigers (13-7, 4-3) held on from there for their third consecutive win.

The outcome ended Florida’s five-game winning streak, its 16-game home winning streak and its 15-game winning streak in the series.

Hall was the difference. The 6-foot-7, 225-pound senior made 8 of 17 shots, including 3 of 5 from 3-point range, to go along with seven rebounds and four assists. He got just about anything he wanted in the first half inside and made an array of shots from every level.

The Tigers mostly neutralized the best rebounding team in the country, outscoring Florida 36-28 in the paint and holding big men Rueben Chinyelu and Alex Condon to a combined 11 points and 16 rebounds.

KeShawn Murphy added 16 points and nine rebounds for Auburn, and Pettiford chipped in 11 points and five boards while being heckled by chants of “D-U-I, D-U-I” every time he touched the ball.

TENNESSEE 79, NO. 17 ALABAMA 73

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Tennessee freshman Nate Ament scored a career-high 29 points, Ja’K Gillespie added 23 and the Volunteers upset Alabama.

The loss spolied the debut of Charles Bediako for Alabama. He was playing in his first college game in nearly three years after securing a temporary restraining order in an ongoing eligibility lawsuit against the NCAA. Bediako received a loud ovation when he checked into the game nearly 4 minutes in. He scored two quick baskets and finished with 13 points and three rebounds in 25 minutes.

He provided a lift for Alabama (13-6, 3-3 SEC) , which was without two starters on Saturday — guard Aden Holloway and forward Amari Allen, who are the team’s second and third leading scorers. Alabama’s offense, which ranks third nationally in points per game (93.7), had its lowest total of the season.

Labaron Philon led Alabama with 26 points and Latrell Wrightsell added 14.

The win marked the fifth straight for Tennessee over Alabama — its longest streak since 1968-1972.

NO. 18 CLEMSON 77, GEORGIA TECH 63

ATLANTA (AP) — Jake Wahlin and Nick Davidson scored 13 points apiece and Clemson got hot from long range, bouncing back from its first Atlantic Coast Conference loss to beat Georgia Tech.

After making only 4 of 16 beyond the 3-point stripe in the first half, the Tigers (17-4, 7-1 ACC) went 7 of 12 over the final 20 minutes. Jestin Porter’s step-back 3 with just over a minute left sealed the victory.

Wahlin made all three of his 3-point attempts in the second half after going 0 for 3 in the opening period. He also led Clemson with eight rebounds, along with a thunderous dunk after the inside game opened up.

NO. 19 KANSAS 86, KANSAS STATE 62

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Flory Bidunga had 21 points and 10 rebounds, Elmarko Jackson added 19 points, and Kansas overcame the absence of standout guard Darryn Peterson with a big finishing kick for a win over Kansas State.

Melvin Council Jr. contributed 17 points and Bryson Tiller had 16 for the Jayhawks (15-5, 5-2 Big 12), who ended the game on a 27-7 run in the return to the sideline for coach Bill Self, who had missed their previous game because of a health-related issue.

Peterson, one of the nation’s best freshmen, had been on a tear after finally overcoming a series of cramping issues. But the Jayhawks’ high-scoring guard was sidelined against Kansas State after spraining his ankle in Tuesday night’s win over Colorado.

P.J. Haggerty had 18 of his 23 points in the second half to lead the Wildcats (10-10, 1-6). Andrej Kostic added 12 points.

NO. 22 NORTH CAROLINA 85, NO. 14 VIRGINIA 80

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Caleb Wilson scored 20 points, Jarin Stevenson added all of his 17 in the second half and North Carolina rallied past Virginia for a big ACC road victory.

Trailing by two points with 3:50 to play, Carolina got three-point plays from Stevenson and Seth Trimble to build a 78-74 lead, then hung on. The Tar Heels outscored the Cavaliers 18-9 over the final 5:25.

Thijs DeRidder had 20 points and seven rebounds for UVA, which had its 11-game home winning streak snapped.

Virginia led by 16 in the first half and went to the locker room ahead 43-34. That lead was thanks, in part, to a 26-16 rebounding edge that helped the Cavaliers score 14 second-chance points in the first 20 minutes.

But the Tar Heels rallied after the break, executing crisp, efficient offense and taking their first lead since the game’s opening minutes on a dunk by Stevenson with 11:57 to go. That put UNC up 59-58. They’d go ahead by as many as five.

NO. 18 CLEMSON 77, GEORGIA TECH 63

ATLANTA (AP) — Jake Wahlin and Nick Davidson scored 13 points apiece and Clemson got hot from long range, bouncing back from its first Atlantic Coast Conference loss to beat Georgia Tech.

After making only 4 of 16 beyond the 3-point stripe in the first half, the Tigers (17-4, 7-1 ACC) went 7 of 12 over the final 20 minutes. Jestin Porter’s step-back 3 with just over a minute left sealed the victory.

Wahlin made all three of his 3-point attempts in the second half after going 0 for 3 in the opening period. He also led Clemson with eight rebounds, along with a thunderous dunk after the inside game opened up.

Georgia Tech (11-9, 2-5) trailed by as many as 16 before rallying down the stretch. Kam Craft swished a 3 to close the gap to 71-63 with about 2 minutes to go, but the Yellow Jackets would get no closer.

Kowacie Reeves Jr. led Georgia Tech with 19 points. No one else scored more than 10 for the Yellow Jackets, who shot just 37% from the field.

Clemson, on the other hand, had four players in double figures. Ace Buckner and Dillon Hunter chipped in with 12 points apiece.

NO. 20 ARKANSAS 85, LSU 81

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) — Darius Acuff Jr. scored 24 of his career-high 31 points in the second half to lead Arkansas to a victory over LSU.

Acuff shot 10 for 11 from the field in the final 20 minutes, making all three of his 3-pointers. Fellow freshman Meleek Thomas joined him in double figures for the Razorbacks (15-5, 5-2 Southeastern Conference) with 13 points and Billy Richmond III added 11.

Arkansas made nine consecutive shots starting midway through the second half and Acuff had a hand in all of them. He made six of the baskets, including three from 3-point range, and assisted on the other three.

LSU (13-7, 1-6) stayed in the game by getting inside. The Tigers scored 19 second-chance points and outscored the Razorbacks in the paint, 42-36. Arkansas only made 7 of 18 free throws to LSU’s 22-of-25 mark, as well.

Acuff missed two free throws with 31 seconds remaining and Arkansas ahead by three points, giving LSU a chance. But Dedan Thomas Jr. missed a jumper on the Tigers’ next possession.

Thomas scored 18 points to lead all five LSU starters in double figures. Pablo Tamba had 12 points and 10 rebounds.

TEXAS 87, NO. 21 GEORGIA 67

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Dailyn Swain scored 26 points, Tramon Mark added a season-best 23 and Texas overwhelmed Georgia with a strong second half.

Texas (12-8, 3-4 Southeastern Conference) trailed by seven at halftime but outscored Georgia 57-30 in the second half while shooting 69% from the field.

Swain hit 12 of 16 shots from the field overall, and Mark made 10 of 16.

Mark scored 10 straight points for Texas in the second half, including consecutive 3-pointers. Mark had 16 points in the second half, and Swain had 14. Swain also had five steals.

After Mark’s scoring streak, the Longhorns made a 17-2 push that included a pair of 3-pointers by Cam Heide. Texas hit 5 of 11 3-pointers in the second half.

NO. 23 LOUISVILLE 85, VIRGINIA TECH 71

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Mikel Brown Jr. returned from an eight-game absence and scored 20 points to lead Louisville to a victory over Virginia Tech.

Brown had been sidelined by a back injury. The 6-foot-5 freshman point guard went 7 for 11 from the field in his fourth 20-point game of the season and added a team-high six assists.

Neither team shot particularly well in the first half, but the Cardinals (14-5, 4-3 Atlantic Coast Conference) warmed up toward the end as they outscored the Hokies 14-3 over the final 3:54 to take a 37-22 halftime lead.

Virginia Tech (15-6, 4-4) shot just 24.2% (8 for 33) before intermission. The point total and shooting percentage in the first half were both the second-lowest of the season for the Hokies.

Louisville led 49-29 with 14:24 left, but Virginia Tech finally found its touch and made 10 of its next 11 shots, with Amani Hansberry hitting two 3-pointers 30 seconds apart to cut the deficit to 64-56 with 7:22 remaining.

That was the only time the Cardinals’ lead went under 10 points in the second half. A 12-2 run capped by Ryan Conwell’s four-point play put Louisville up 17 with 5:11 to play, and the Cardinals were never threatened the rest of the way.

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Knicks’ Mikal Bridges suffers brutal shooting night in return to native city

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Mikal Bridges #25 of the New York Knicks shoots a three point basket during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers on January 24, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

PHILADELPHIA — Mikal Bridges could build a house in his native city with the many bricks he put up there.

The Philadelphia product and Villanova alumnus shot a brutal 3-for-16 from the field and 1-for-9 from 3-point range in the Knicks’ 112-109 win over the 76ers on Saturday afternoon.

He also sat the last 5:24.

Mikal Bridges shoots a jumper during the Knicks’ 112-109 win over the 76ers on Jan. 24, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia. NBAE via Getty Images

Instead, coach Mike Brown decided to roll with Landry Shamet and Miles McBride down the stretch over the struggling Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns, who had fouled out earlier in the quarter. It was a small lineup — with Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and OG Anunoby primarily on the floor with Shamet and McBride.

That meant Anunoby had to guard Joel Embiid.

“We can’t do anything like that if you don’t have a guy like OG,” Brown said. “OG allows us to play the basketball game in a lot of different ways. So, we were able to do it.”

Shamet and McBride — and Mitchell Robinson — filled in admirably for Bridges and Towns. The Knicks had a 17-point advantage in points off the bench.



“Some nights, that [bench scoring] is going to have a huge onus on it,” Shamet said. “Some nights it’s not. Some nights it’s just going to change. I’ve been saying that the entire time I’ve been here because we have that group, it’s a carousel. Some nights, it’s going to be a heavy bench night where we come in and pick it up. Other nights, our first five have it going and the ball doesn’t find us as much. That’s the beauty of our team. We’re built that way. We’ve got to be adaptable and find ways to win games as difficulties and challenges within the game are presented to us.”

Towns managed to foul out in just 16 minutes on the floor and was minus-6. The Knicks were actually better when he was on the bench.

“We gotta just have other guys step up,” Brown said. “We can’t control the fouls called, so if somebody is in foul trouble, hopefully the next guy can step up and play the right way to help us get a win.”

Stewart Cink wins the PGA Tour Champions' opener in Hawaii

KA’UPULEHU-KONA, Hawaii (AP) — Stewart Cink won the PGA Tour Champions' season-opening Mitsubishi Electric Championship on Saturday, closing with an 8-under 63 for a three-stroke victory.

The 52-year-old Cink finished at 23-under 193 at Hualalai. He won his second straight event after closing last season with a victory in Phoenix in the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. He has five senior titles.

Ángel Cabrera was second after a 66. Retief Goosen shot a 64 to finish third at 18 under, and Ernie Els (67), Thomas Bjorn (66) and Freddie Jacobson (70) were 17 under. Sixty-six-year-old Fred Couples was 15 under after a 70.

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

Camden hits 5 3s, scores 25 to help Cal beat Stanford 78-66, snap 5-game skid in series

STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — John Camden his season high with 25 points and set a new season high with 10 rebounds on Saturday night to help California overcome a 16-point deficit to beat Stanford 78-66 and snap a five-game skid in the series.

Camden made 8 of 13 from the field, 5 of 8 from 3-point range, and 4 of 5 from the free-throw line. Justin Pippen scored 18 points and added six assists. Dai Dai Ames added 11, including nine in the second half, to go with six rebounds. Chris Bell had 10 and three blocks for Cal (15-5, 3-4 ACC).

Jeremy Dent-Smith led Stanford (14-6, 3-4) with 20 points and Ryan Agarwal had 12 points and nine rebounds. Ebuka Okorie, who went in scoring 22.1 per game (No. 8 nationally), had 14 points on 1-of-16 shooting, 0 of 9 from 3-point range, while making 12 of 14 from the free-throw line.

The Cardinal scored 10 consecutive points to make it 60-all with 6:38 to play, but Bell answered 14 seconds later with a 3-pointer before Pippen hit two free throws and added a 3 to spark a 17-2 run that made it 77-62 with 55 seconds left.

The Bears lead the series, which dates to the 1911-12 season, 155-134.

Dent-Smith scored 11 points, which included three 3-pointers, in a 21-4 run that gave the Cardinal a 16-point lead with 7:08 left in the first half.

The Cardinal made nine of their first 21 field-goal attempts, but hit 9 of 45 from there and finished shooting 27% (18 of 66) overall.

Stanford announced Wednesday that Chisom Okpara, the team's second-leading scorer (13.9 per game), will miss the rest of the season. The 6-foot-8 senior suffered a lower-body injury in a 70-55 loss Jan. 10 at No. 14 Virginia.

Up next

Cal: Plays Wednesday at Florida State.

Stanford: Visits Miami on Wednesday.

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Winners and Losers: Cavs at Magic – Donovan Mitchell dazzles

A near wire-to-wire victory for a Cleveland Cavaliers team that is slowly, and quietly, playing their best basketball of the season. Here is who won and lost the game.

Winner – Donovan Mitchell’s Second Half

There is a Disney joke in here somewhere, but pun or not, the Cavs got a superstar effort from their best player in a game that held a little more meaning than usual. Mitchell’s 36 points, 27 of which came in the second half, are even more impressive given that he was only 2-8 from deep and attempted five free throws the whole night. Mitchell methodically and surgically picked apart Orlando’s defense, like here, where he did his patented high carry to lose the defender.

With the Cavs missing four rotation players and playing on the second end of a back-to-back, a sterling performance from Mitchell is exactly what they needed. The NBA’s leading second-half scorer lived up to that title, and it led the Cavs to an impressive road win.

Winner – Team Defense

The Cavs won this game on the defensive end, treating the Magic as they should be – the worst three-point shooting team in the Eastern Conference. Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen patrolled the paint and stonewalled any attempts at the rim, forcing Orlando to work from the outside in. That, predictably, went quite poorly.

Desmond Bane is not having a great three-point shooting season, seemingly becoming stricken with whatever has plagued Orlando’s shooters over the last few years. Paulo Banchero is not a good shooter from deep, yet tied for the team lead in makes with three. Anthony Black has been good, but he isn’t striking fear into anyone. Orlando’s bench went 1-12 from deep, the lone make coming from Moe Wagner.

This game felt like the Cavs had a plan in mind and executed it perfectly, which has not appeared to be the case as much as one would expect. Cleveland’s team defenders all played well and pressured the Magic in all the ways they should.

Loser – De’Andre Hunter’s knee

Hunter was a relatively late scratch with knee soreness, something to monitor given his injury history. The tumultuous season for Hunter has, somehow, not involved any extended injury issues. It’s just been ineffectiveness, lineup shifts, and the odd trade rumor. Surely the Cavs will be cautious with Hunter as the All-Star break approaches.

Winner – The Backup Point Guards

Craig Porter Jr. has his place in Cavs’ fans’ hearts, and has stepped up this season as well, but tonight was about the other two point guards on Cleveland’s roster.

Lonzo Ball has been a disappointment for the Cavs, but he has the capability of putting together enough plays to make an impact. He had a stretch in the second quarter where he poked the ball free from Wagner, dove for possession, and immediately ran up the floor and got back on offense for an eventual bucket. If the shot isn’t falling, and it hasn’t for Ball this season, then those types of things are where he can make an impact.

Another quality draft find for the Cavs’ front office is Tyrese Proctor, who now has double-digit minutes in four of his last five games. Proctor had 12 points on 4-4 shooting, staying ready given the constantly changing rotations. With Darius Garland out, Proctor may get the occasional spurt of minutes to provide a little shooting, but his size also gives an additional wrinkle. Once Garland returns, Proctor’s minutes will surely decline, if not disappear. But he has some juice for a rookie second-round draft pick.

Red Wings score 4 times in third period to beat Jets 5-1

WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — J.T. Compher scored twice as the Detroit Red Wings defeated the Winnipeg Jets 5-1 in front of a sold-out crowd of 15,225 on Saturday night.

The Red Wings rebounded from a 4-3 overtime loss to Minnesota on Thursday and now have points in their last five games. The Jets have lost four of their last five.

Lucas Raymond and Marco Kasper added a goal and assist, and Alex DeBrincat also scored for the Red Wings, who scored four times in the third period.

John Gibson made 26 saves to earn his 21st win of the season. Gibson has now earned victories in eight straight starts.

Cole Koepke scored for the Jets, and Connor Hellebuyck made 26 saves in his fourth consecutive loss.

Koepke opened the scoring at 10:08 of the second period. The goal snapped a scoreless drought for Winnipeg at 5-on-5 dating back to Jan. 17 against Toronto — a span of 235 minutes, 48 seconds.

Detroit responded with 4:10 left in the period when Compher batted home a loose puck in the crease. Former Jet Andrew Copp picked up the assist.

Raymond scored his 18th of the season to extend his point streak to five games. The goal stood following video review for a high stick.

The Red Wings swept the season series 2-0. Detroit won the first game on home ice, 2-1, on Dec. 31.

Up next

Red Wings: Host the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday.

Jets: Visit the New Jersey Devils on Tuesday.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Celtics drop second game of back-to-back, lose to Bulls 114-111

On a night when the Bulls franchise honored Derrick Rose and raised his #1 to the United Center rafters, the home team beat Boston 114-111 with a last second triple from Kevin Huerter. For the Celtics, they split the back-to-back nailbiters after winning in double OT last night in Brooklyn, but fall to 10-14 in clutch games.

Back in early January, the Celtics cruised to a 115-101 win over the Bulls back at TD Garden. They led by as many as 23 points and Boston buried Chicago under an avalanche of threes with Anfernee Simons hitting 8-of-14 from behind the arc for 27 points.

On a chilly night in the Windy City, it was the Bulls that got hot and hit nearly half their triples (21-of-45), including Huerter’s game-winner from the corner.

Since promoting Joe Mazzulla to head coach, the Celtics have the best record on back-to-backs at 35-13 (h/t Dan Greenberg). Coming off a double overtime win in Brooklyn on Friday night, the Celtics offense looked a little tired and hey couldn’t overcome their poor shooting; they made just 15 of their 47 threes.

Jaylen Brown finished with another 30-plus game with 33 points (14-0f-28 from the field), eight rebounds, and five assists. Anfernee Simons chipped in 21 and Derrick White’s shooting slump (5-of-18) continued in the loss. Seven Bulls players finished in double figures.

As CelticsBlog’s Nate Moskowitz noted in his Question Marks heading into the game, Williams getting more minutes was a distinct possibility:

Mazzulla has consistently rewarded young players who impact games, and Williams may have earned himself a longer look. While his development is primarily happening in Maine, there’s value in giving him NBA reps — something he’s handled well each time so far.

Williams in fact started in place of Neemias Queta. He didn’t get the lion’s share at center as a starter normally does, but he did look solid in his ten minutes of playing time.

The team now heads home for seven of nine at TD Garden with the trade deadline (February 5th) and All-Star Weekend on the horizon. They host the Portland Trail Blazers on Monday at 5 pm.

Warley scores 19 points and Fogle grabs key rebound as No. 8 Gonzaga edges San Francisco 68-66

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — Jalen Warley scored 19 points and Davis Fogle added 15 points and a last-second rebound as No. 8 Gonzaga edged San Francisco 68-66 on Saturday night for its 14th consecutive victory of the season and 34th win in a row over the Dons.

Tyon Grant-Foster added 15 points for Gonzaga (21-1, 9-0 West Coast Conference), which was without its two leading scorers for the third straight game. Forward Braden Huff (17.8 points per game) is out for several weeks with a knee injury. Forward Graham Ike (18 ppg) is expected back soon from an ankle injury.

Legend Smiley scored 18 points and Ryan Beasley 14 for San Francisco (13-9, 5-4), which has not beaten Gonzaga since 2012. The Dons' last win in Spokane was in 1989.

San Francisco sank 14 of 28 3-point attempts to nearly end its long victory drought at Gonzaga.

Junjie Wang had a basket and two free throws to cut Gonzaga’s lead to 60-57 with five minutes left. But the Dons went cold after that and Grant-Foster’s basket and a late 3-pointer with two minutes left lifted the Zags to a 67-57 lead.

Vukasin Masic hit a pair of 3-pointers for the Dons to cut Gonzaga’s lead to 68-66 with 30 seconds left.

The Dons played for the final shot and Wang launched a long 3-pointer that clanged off the rim. Fogle rebounded for Gonzaga and time expired.

The Zags opened the game with a 12-0 run. San Francisco missed its first eight field goal attempts and didn't score until Tyrone Riley's 3-pointer with 12:40 left in the first.

But the Dons hit four more 3-pointers in the first to close within 26-21. Gonzaga then went on a 10-4 run to build a 36-25 lead at halftime.

San Francisco made six 3-pointers early in the second half, including three by Smiley, to cut Gonzaga's lead to 53-47.

Up next

San Francisco: Plays at Santa Clara on Wednesday.

Gonzaga: Hosts rival Saint Mary's next Saturday.

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