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Today — 15 December 2025Main stream

KLST Season Pass | Week 16 | Dec. 8th – Dec. 14th | Wall Hawks State Semifinal game | ASU Athletics Fall/Winter sports weekly recap

SAN ANGELO, Texas (Concho Valley Homepage) — Season Pass episode 16 is here as High School football 5th round playoff action has concluded. Angelo State athletics coverage also highlighted this evening with ASU athletics on a break for a week before two more games before their holiday break officially starts soon. Here’s your Concho Valley sports recap from Season Pass!

This week’s episode includes:
-High school football playoffs State Semifinals
-Angelo State Athletics fall/winter sports update, including our ASU weekly recap | ASU Volleyball | ASU Men’s hoops | ASU Women’s hoops
– Dallas Cowboys keys to the game before SNF
– And a look at a few other sports stories including the College football playoffs , the Heisman race and Rise Gymnastics.

High School football week 16 recap | Class 3A | State Semifinal:

High School basketball week 16 local recap:

Angelo State Athletics weekly recap:

NFL & College Football updates: Dallas Cowboys, Heisman race, CFP playoff

Army/ Navy game prep | Rise Gymnastics:

Next week is the final episode of Season Pass before the two week holiday break.

Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to ConchoValleyHomepage.com.

Green earns 200th career win as Illini beat North Texas

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (WCIA) – Illinois women’s basketball extended its winning streak to eight games on Sunday.

The Illini beat North Texas, 81-69, securing head coach Shauna Green’s 200th career win as a Division I head coach.

Illinois sophomore Berry Wallace led the way in scoring with a career high 28 points. The game was unconventionally messy. 50 fouls were called and the two teams combined for 39 turnovers.

Gretchen Dolan scored 19 for Illinois, while Maddie Webber added 16.

The day was highlighted by stellar shooting for Illinois. Green’s team made 11 of 17 shots from beyond the arc, good for 64.7%. The defense was solid for the home team, holding the Mean Green to 40% from the field.

Illinois improved to 10-1 on the season with the victory. Up next: The Illini host Jackson State on Friday, Dec. 19.

Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WCIA.com.

Rick Armstrong’s high school boys basketball rankings and player of the week for the Aurora-Elgin area

Geneva takes over the top spot. Aurora Christian moves up and Burlington Central joins rankings.

Top 10

With records through Sunday and previous rankings in parentheses.

1. Geneva 7-0 (2)

Barrage of five 3-pointers by Nathan Palmer lifts Vikings past Wheaton Warrenville South 51-41.

2. Oswego East 6-2 (1)

Wolves’ winning streak snapped at six straight in back-to-back losses to Bolingbrook and Curie.

3. Kaneland 6-0 (3)

Connor Kimme steps up as a strong third option with 19 points in 92-62 win over Rochelle.

4. Aurora Christian 8-0 (6)

Jacob Baumann tops the 1,000-point mark as the Eagles down Chicago Christian 69-59.

5. Jacobs 6-2 (5)

Samson Averehi scores 18 points as Golden Eagles roll past Dundee-Crown 51-34.

6. Waubonsie Valley 5-2 (4)

Kyler Payne scores 17 points but the Warriors can’t hold on to lead in a 56-54 loss to Oswego.

7. Yorkville 5-2 (7)

Joey Jakstys returns from an injury and provides a spark as Foxes win two of three games.

8. Oswego 4-4 (8)

Bench players outscore Waubonsie Valley’s reserves 14-0 as Panthers rally for 56-54 win.

9. Burlington Central 5-2 (NR)

Basket by Declan Wilson with 1.6 second left slips Rockets past Crystal Lake South 54-53.

10. Marmion 4-2 (10)

Dave Malley embraces sixth-man role with 11 points in 60-25 rout of Aurora Central Catholic.

Player of the Week

Senior guard Jayden Riley, a Southern Illinois Edwardsville recruit, scored 36 points with six assists and six steals in leading Yorkville Christian to an 80-70 win over Lemont in the Team Rose Shootout at Mount Carmel in Chicago.

Basketball Recap: North Bend girls keep record perfect

North Bend’s girls basketball team won a pair of games during the week to keep its record perfect.

The Bulldogs won at Dallas 48-40 and beat Ashland 60-17 to improve to 3-0.

North Bend also is at North Valley on Tuesday before playing in Marshfield’s Les Schwab South Coast Holiday Basketball Tournament starting Thursday. The Bulldogs face Crook County in the opening round.

MUSTANGS TOP MARSHFIELD: Marshfield suffered its first loss of the season when visiting Hidden Valley edged the Pirates 36-34 on Friday.

The Pirates’ game against Phoenix was canceled on Saturday, leaving Marshfield 1-1 entering their home tournament. They play Mountain View in the first round of the event.

EAGLES EDGE COQUILLE: Harrisburg tipped visiting Coquille 35-33 on Friday, handing the Red Devils their first loss of the season.

Coquille also beat Days Creek 60-20 during the week and this week competes in Marshfield’s tournament.

BILLIES BEAT BANDON: Bandon’s girls lost their game in the showcase event at Mac Court in Eugene when Pleasant Hill beat the Tigers 43-29 on Saturday.

It was Bandon’s first loss of the season. The Tigers beat North Valley 44-23 and Powers 41-34 earlier in the week.

This week, Bandon is at East Linn Christian on Thursday, Crosshill Christian on Friday and Santiam on Saturday.

CRUISERS TOP BOBCATS: Before falling to Bandon, Powers beat Myrtle Point 53-33 last week.

This week, the Cruisers are at Mapleton on Tuesday and then head to the northeast Corner of the state for the three-day Bobcat Classic at Union High School. They open against Molalla on Thursday.

PANTHERS BEST PACIFIC: Gold Beach beat host Pacific 54-20 in the Pirates’ lone game of the week.

This week, Pacific is home against Reedsport on Tuesday and at Mohawk on Friday.

SIUSLAW TOPS REEDSPORT: The Brave lost their lone game of the week, falling to host Siuslaw 50-10.

In addition to visiting Pacific this week, Reedsport also is at Toledo on Thursday and faces Umpqua Valley Christian on Friday on the first day of the Tall Timbers Tournament at Elkton High School. Reedsport plays the host Elks on Saturday.

BOYS BASKETBALL

PIRATES WIN TWO: Marshfield’s girls won a pair of home games as they tuned up for their home tournament.

The Pirates topped Hidden Valley 62-49 and beat Phoenix 80-31. Marshfield is 3-1 heading into the tournament, opening against Sutherlin on Thursday.

BULLDOGS WIN: North Bend won at Dallas 56-49 last week to improve to 2-1.

The Bulldogs visit North Valley on Tuesday as they tune up for Marshfield’s tournament. The Bulldogs face Crook County on Thursday.

BANDON WINS AT MAC: Bandon won its game in the Mac Court festival on Saturday, beating North Valley 59-39.

The Tigers improved to 2-2 on the season, having also lost to Days Creek 44-41 in a game played on a neutral court at Powers during the week. Bandon is home against Douglas on Tuesday before visiting East Linn Christian on Thursday, Crosshill Christian on Friday and Santiam on Saturday.

DEVILS DROP TWO: Coquille lost a pair of road games. Days Creek beat the Red Devils 78-54 and Harrisburg beat Coquille 67-27.

The Red Devils are at Gold Beach on Tuesday and St. Mary’s on Friday for their final games before the new year and Bandon’s holiday tournament.

REEDSPORT LOSES TWO: Reedsport dropped a pair of games to larger schools during the week. The Brave fell to Siuslaw 53-45 and lost to Sutherlin 49-42.

This week, Reedsport is at Pacific on Tuesday and at Toledo on Thursday.

BRUINS TOP BOBCATS: Myrtle Point fell on the road to Brookings-Harbor 58-54, falling to 2-2 on the season.

The Bobcats host Camas Valley on Tuesday and visit Douglas on Wednesday this week.

PIRATES FALL: Pacific fell to visiting Gold Beach 79-57 in the Pirates’ lone game last week. This week, Pacific hosts Brookings-Harbor on Monday and also hosts Reedsport on Tuesday and visits Mohawk on Friday.

3 takeaways as the Chicago Bulls offense flounders in a 114-104 loss to the New Orleans Pelicans

It’s hard to win a basketball game when the ball isn’t falling through the net.

That was clear for the Chicago Bulls in Sunday’s 114-104 loss to the New Orleans Pelicans at the United Center.

The Bulls missed 36 shots from behind the arc in the loss, resulting in a dismal 26.5% clip from deep. This is the latest in an icy stretch of shooting after going 32.6% from behind the arc over the last 10 games — the second-worst in the entire league during that span. The hot-and-cold nature of this team’s shooting efficiency has been a key factor in keeping the Bulls from consistently winning this season.

Isaac Okoro went 1-for-8 from deep and Nikola Vučević went 2-for-6. Most notable was a rare 1-for-10 shooting night from Coby White, who led the Bulls in both attempts and misses from behind the arc.

White said the Bulls planned to take a higher volume of 3-pointers against the Pelicans, who pack the paint and limit opportunities at the rim. And a large bulk of that responsibility fell on White, who was playing in only his eighth game of the season as he continues to battle calf injuries. Despite the result, White — a career 36.8% shooter from behind the arc — expressed confidence in his shot selection against the Pelicans.

“I thought all but maybe two were great looks for me. A lot of them felt good coming off my hand, they were either short or long or in and out. I can’t control whether they go in. If I had to go back, I’d take those same shots again. I’ve just got to continue to work to find that rhythm from 3-point range.”

Coach Billy Donovan agreed. He emphasized the importance of increasing shot volume from higher efficiency players on the team: “If Coby White gets up 10 3-point shots, I’m fine with that.”

And despite the team’s lack of finishing, Donovan felt his players produced a more sustainable style of offense — something the Bulls have sought urgently throughout their free fall over the last three weeks.

“We moved the ball,” Donovan said. “We generated good shots. We’ve got to take those 3s. I thought we did a lot of really good things in terms of ball movement.”

A short streak of efficient shooting — going on an 11-for-24 flurry in the third quarter — powered the Bulls to rip off a 14-0 run and regain a 73-72 lead as the Pelicans failed to score a single point for more than four minutes in the third quarter. But that was fleeting for the Bulls, who were overpowered by the Pelicans bench and several ill-timed second-chance scoring opportunities in the fourth quarter.

It was not the worst offensive night of the season — that still belongs to a 91-point performance against the Golden State Warriors earlier this month. But still, winning didn’t last long for the Bulls, who have lost eight of their last nine games.

Here are three takeaways from the loss.

1. A quiet night from Matas Buzelis.

The Bulls offense could use a secondary spark — but it still isn’t coming from Matas Buzelis.

The second-year forward took only five shots in the loss to score nine points. Only two other players (Jalen Smith and Zach Collins) took fewer shots than Buzelis, a player the Bulls hope to position as a centerpiece of production for their offense in future seasons. This is his lowest shot attempt production since the second game of the season, when he logged fewer than 13 minutes after fouling out quickly in a win over the Orlando Magic.

Buzelis aims to develop a strong outside shot, but he’s shooting 32.4% from behind the arc this season — and still struggles to create his own shot from outside. Donovan noted that Buzelis played a lower rotation of minutes due to Chicago’s need to put a larger body on Zion Williamson, swapping in Patrick Williams and Isaac Okoro to avoid pulling a trap over to deal with the bigger body in the paint.

2. Dueling bigs

The Bulls continued to experiment with double-big rotations that played Jalen Smith at the four. But coach Billy Donovan did not stick with his closing changes from Friday’s win in Charlotte, when he benched Vučević in favor of Zach Collins down the stretch.

Despite Vučević’s poor shooting night, the Bulls stuck with their starter down the stretch while utilizing forwards to counter Williamson. Collins logged under 12 minutes and Smith logged just under 13 minutes. The pair combined for eight points and two rebounds.

3. A homecoming for Jeremiah Fears.

Sunday’s game featured a cheering section for one Pelicans player — rookie Jeremiah Fears, a Joliet native playing in his first hometown game.

Fears played his first two years of high school ball for Joliet West, then transferred to AZ Compass Prep as a junior. His older brother, Jeremy, also played for Joliet West. He immediately drew draft speculation during his solo year in the NCAA playing for Oklahoma, ultimately going No. 7 overall this summer.

The rookie made an impact in front of his local crowd, tallying 20 points and three assists. Fears scored 10 of his points in the fourth quarter to clinch the fifth win of the season for the Pelicans.

Short-handed Timberwolves again strike brilliant offensive balance in win over Kings

Minnesota got vengeance for one of its worst losses of the season on Sunday.

Three weeks after kicking away a late lead in Sacramento, the Timberwolves closed the door on the Kings at Target Center for a 117-103 victory.

Minnesota has now won seven of its last eight games. The last two have come short-handed. Anthony Edwards (foot soreness) and Mike Conley (Achilles tendinopathy) each missed both Sunday’s tilt and Friday’s win over the Warriors).

The Wolves (18-9) played most of the second half against Sacramento without Rudy Gobert. The center logged seven points and 12 rebounds in 20 minutes before exiting early in the third quarter due to what the team said were personal reasons.

Minnesota was unimpressive early and trailed the Kings (6-20) at the break. And the lead was just one early in the final frame before the Wolves finally hit their closing gear with a 26-10 run that quickly moved the game out of reach.

Timberwolves coach Chris Finch lauded the improvement his team has shown down the stretch of games of late. The Sacramento collapse from three weeks prior was one of a few of that sort in a short span.

The Kings threatened a rally again late Sunday, as a pair of triples trimmed a 12-point Wolves lead to six with 2 minutes, 22 seconds to play. But Minnesota responded in short order. Naz Reid hit a triple on the other end, then Donte DiVincenzo got a steal he turned into a layup on the other end to quickly boost the lead back to 11 and effectively play the game on ice.

“Just playing with intensity, playing with a little bit more effort and desire,” Naz Reid said in his on-court, postgame television interview.

Bones Hyland, who got his second straight start, scored nine of his 18 points in the final frame. Reid scored eight in the quarter, while Julius Randle had seven and Donte DiVincenzo had five.

That’s the balance Minnesota has flashed over each of its last two wins. The Wolves have five guys drop 17-plus points on Friday. Five players scored 18 or more on Sunday. That included double-doubles for Randle (24 points and 10 rebounds) and Reid (20 points and 11 rebounds), while Jaden McDaniels had 21 points and DiVincenzo and Hyland scored 18 apiece.

Hyland played only four minutes in Friday’s win over Golden State before a knee bruise ended his starting opportunity in the first quarter. He recovered in time to start again Sunday and logged 36 minutes in the win.

“Last game, it was such a bummer. … That one, I couldn’t walk. It was hurting bad,” Hyland said in his postgame television interview. “I wanted to be out there.”

Yes, the balance is part of Minnesota’s way of compensating for the absence of Edwards’ scoring, but Reid seemed to indicate it’s the type of egalitarian offense the Wolves can produce even when their best player returns.

“Even when he is in the game, we’ve got a bunch of guys who can go,” Reid said. “I think it just speaks to the talent that we have. … We have talent all across the board.”

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Kristian Winfield: These New York Knicks look nothing like the old ones

This particular shoe used to be on the other foot. For years, it was the Knicks who ran out of answers before they ran out of clock.

The Knicks of old ran out of legs, ran out of gas and eventually ran out of hope. They operated a predictable offense that devalued the NBA’s most potent shot. They talked about embracing physicality — until it arrived at their doorstep and knocked them off balance.

Those Knicks wanted to contend. They came close. Their first Eastern Conference Finals appearance in a quarter-century proved as much. But even then, they never quite looked the part.

Funny what a sneaky-good offseason can do.

What many viewed as a failed — or at least unnecessarily complicated — summer is quietly pushing this franchise toward new heights. A coaching change. Organizational buy-in. A minute series of calculated roster decisions. Together, they’ve lifted a ceiling that once felt fixed at Madison Square Garden.

Mike Brown’s offseason makeover has been a resounding success, largely because his Knicks look nothing like the Knicks of old. The team now representing the Eastern Conference in the 2025 NBA Cup Final is new and improved — built in the image of the very formula that once undid them.

Take Saturday’s semifinal against Orlando.

The Magic leaned on an 11-man rotation in hopes of running the Knicks into the ground, a tactic that has worked against New York in the past. In theory, it should have worked again — especially with the Knicks missing two perimeter pieces in Miles McBride (ankle) and Landry Shamet (shoulder).

Instead, the Knicks flipped the script.

They’re built — literally and figuratively — to weather this storm. Jordan Clarkson shoots first but defends next. Tyler Kolek is playing with growing confidence and freedom. And under Brown’s run-and-run-more mandate, the Knicks are in better shape than they’ve been in years. Brown’s eight-and-a-half-man rotation beat an Orlando team also missing two key players on Saturday.

That’s real depth.

It means 10 or 11 playable bodies when fully healthy — the same kind of depth the Indiana Pacers once used to knock the Knicks out of consecutive playoff series. The difference now? New York’s starting five is more potent than Indiana’s ever was.

“I didn’t know that 90 percent of the points came from our starters,” Karl-Anthony Towns said after the win. “But it was that 10 percent from the bench that really changed the game. When we needed that boost, and [the Magic] were playing well on their run, that was people like Tyler, Mitch, JC, who came in the game and just changed the energy of the game.”

Depth wasn’t the only thorn in the Knicks’ side in recent years. Physicality was another.

Missteps in Detroit, Atlanta, Houston and Orlando painted a consistent picture of a team that struggled to meet moments requiring teeth and toughness. Now, under Brown, the Knicks are hitting first and asking questions later — another mandate built on aggressive on-ball defense and trust that teammates will cover behind it.

“I think our physicality is extremely better,” Josh Hart said after Saturday’s win. “When you’re able to be physical on the perimeter, you’re able to throw teams off what they do and now your defense is more impactful. You can be in passing lanes and do those kinds of things, protect shots at the rim. So I think our physicality is something that’s driving that, and that’s something we have to do.”

The Knicks also had to solve their own internal contradictions.

Their two best players carried reputations as net-negative defenders, and compensating for them had often put the team in a bind. Jalen Brunson’s ball dominance could stall the offense in previous seasons. This year, it hasn’t.

Brunson is getting off the ball quicker. His 5.18 seconds per touch and 4.86 dribbles per touch are both down year over year, and his scoring is up — 28.8 points per game — despite holding the ball less.

Brown is also extracting improved defense from Towns, who is closer to averaging one block per game this season than at any point in his previous three.

“A guy that was just constant with verticalities, trying not to foul, just being big at the rim was KAT. KAT was our Defensive Player of the Game. It was well deserved,” Brown said after the semifinal victory over the Magic. “He’s been playing a lot better on that end of the floor, and he’s got to keep performing at a high level for us defensively in order for us to continue to get wins, especially in environments like today.”

Brown may spend his miles campaigning for Brunson’s MVP case, but his own résumé is beginning to warrant early Coach of the Year consideration.

The Knicks talked the talk before. Under Brown, they’re walking the walk.

“With his new offense and defense, we’re all adjusting, and he’s doing his best to make it easy for us to transition and for us to impact the game,” Towns said. “I think recently we’ve been playing really good basketball, even though we still could be better, the fact that we’re doing this right now, and we’re still learning, but we’re winning games while learning is a testament to the coaching staff and is a testament to these guys in this locker room that are willing to sacrifice and do whatever it takes to win.”

Yesterday — 14 December 2025Main stream

Glacier boys jump on Bison for 1st win of season

Dec. 14—GREAT FALLS — Cooper Pelc scored 15 points and Glacier had four players in double figures as the Wolfpack defeated Great Falls 60-43 in AA boys basketball Saturday.

Dylan Banzet added 14 points for the Wolfpack. Asher Knopik had 12, while brother Carter Knopik tallied 10 points. The win secured a split on the opening weekend for the Wolfpack, who move to 1-1.

Andrew Boutilier led all scorers with 23 points for the Bison. Elijah Campbell added 10 as Great Falls fell to 0-2 on the season.

The Wolfpack jumped out to a 17-11 lead after one quarter and held the Bison to just 18 points in the second half.

Glacier returns home for the first time this season Friday against Bozeman at 7 p.m. in the Wolf Den.

Glacier 17 15 13 15 — 60

Great Falls 11 14 10 8 — 43

GLACIER — Cooper Pelc 4 6-8 15, Ethan Kastelitz 2 0-0 6, Chase Sliter 0 0-0 0, Tate Kahler 0 0-1 1, Hudson Kastelitz 0 0-0 0, Talis Pitts 0 0-0 0, Hunter Daniels 0 0-0 0, Blake Pittman 1 1-2 4, Dylan Banzet 5 2-3 14, Asher Knopik 5 2-4 16, Carter Knopik 3 3-4 10. Totals 21 14-22 60.

GREAT FALLS — Andrew Boutilier 6 6-8 23, Zander Reeves 2 0-0 4, Zaiden Reeves 0 0-0 0, Jacoby Grealish 0 0-2 0, Cagen Getten 0 0-0 0, Noah Fleming 1 4-4 6, Jonah Perry 0-0 0, Elijah Campbell 5 0-1 10, L Kilian 0 0-0 0. Totals 14 10-15 43.

3-point goals — Glacier 7 (E Kastelitz 2, Banzet 2, Pittman, Pelc, C Knopik) , Great Falls 5 (Boutilier 5). Fouls — Glacier 18, Great Falls 15. Fouled out — none.

Cunningham leads CMR boys over Flathead

Dec. 14—GREAT FALLS — Ben Cunningham scored 13 of his 20 points in the first half to lead CMR to a 61-50 victory over Flathead in AA boys basketball Saturday afternoon.

Caleb Taylor added 10 points for the Rustlers, eight coming in the second half. Carson Pike, who hit a buzzer-beating three against Glacier Friday, and Miles Duda added 9 each.

Ben Reichner led the Braves (1-1) with 12 points, going 4-4 from the line and making two 3-pointers. Lance Schneller scored nine points, Max Shostak added another eight.

CMR (2-0) jumped out to a 17-12 lead by the end of the first period. By halftime, the Braves trailed 33-23.

Flathead scored 13 points in the third and fourth quarters. They finished the game 11-17 from the stripe.

The Braves return home next weekend to Gallatin on Friday at 7 p.m. and Bozeman on Saturday at 2 p.m.

Flathead 12 11 13 13 — 50

CMR 17 16 14 14 — 61

FLATHEAD — Sam McConnell 0 0-0 0, Benny Forman 0 0-0 0, Eli Coopman 2 1-2 5, Ollie Rosenberg 1 0-0 3, Ben Reichner 3 4-4 12, Lance Schneller 4 1-2 9, Karson Johnston 0 0-0 0, Hunter Fann 0 0-0 0, Reece Brotherton 0 0-0 0, Boston Case 2 1-2 6, Max Shostak 2 3-3 8, Kyler Kossman 3 1-4 7. Totals 17 11-17 50.

GREAT FALLS CMR — Blake Bendel 2 0-0 4, Roman Block 0 0-0 0, Drew Etcheberry 0-00-0, Jaxon Dixon 0 0-0 0, Caleb Taylor 5 0-0 10, Carson Pike 4 0-0 9, Ben Cunningham 8 2-2 20, Ethan Young 0 0-0 0, Ruben Chevis 2 0-0 5, Rochrich Soldano 2 0-2 4, Miles Duda 4 1-4 9. Totals 27 3-8 61.

3-point goals — Flathead 5 (Reichner 2, Rosenberg, Case, Shostak) CMR 4 (Cunningham 2, Pike, Chevis) Fouls — Flathead 13, CMR 16. Fouled out — none.

Big 3rd quarter propels Bison over Wolfpack girls

Dec. 14—Margaret Schulte and the Bison took control in the third quarter and never looked back.

Schulte finished with 17 points, 14 coming in the aforementioned third frame and Great Falls pulled away for a 62-42 victory over Glacier in AA girls basketball Saturday at the Wolf Den.

"Hats off to Great Falls, they nailed some shots and they were just more aggressive," Glacier coach Amanda Cram said.

Scarlet Harris tallied 13 for the Bison, Kendall Gonser added eight.

The Wolfpack started strong, jumping out to a 10-6 advantage midway through the first quarter. Karley Allen scored eight in the first frame for Glacier. The senior finished with a team-high 11 points.

The Bison battled back to take their first lead at 19-18 as Gonser found the bottom of the net. Great Falls held on to a 23-22 advantage heading into the half.

"I was super pleased with our first half, I thought the girls executed, exactly what our gameplan was, more disappointed in our third quarter," Cram said. "The youth are not used to the type of energy we need to come out of halftime."

The Bison added the first four points of the third quarter before Olivia Warriner knocked down a 3-pointer to make it 27-25. Warriner had 11 points for the Wolfpack.

Great Falls took control from there.

The Bison sparked a 22-2 run to close out the frame, headlined by a 9-0 spurt for Schulte.

Harris got to the basket early in the fourth to give Great Falls its largest lead of the day at 55-30.

"If anything, this is going to make us more prepared for when conference play comes, that's why we just want to keep after it," Cram said.

Glacier cut the deficit down to 60-40 thanks to a pair of free throws from Clara Ahner, but the Wolfpack got no closer.

"We have had some good energizers from JV and we still need to develop them, but what I really enjoy is that it doesn't matter if it is a JV player or a varsity player, everyone is willing to do the work," Cram said.

The Wolfpack girls head on the road for matchups against Bozeman on Friday at 7 p.m. and Gallatin on Saturday at 1 p.m.

Great Falls 8 15 26 13 — 62

Glacier 13 9 5 15 — 42

GREAT FALLS — Aunika Clemons 1 0-0 2, Magaret Schulte 5 3-4 17, Ashley Little 2 0-0 4, Tatum Swingley 1 2-2 4, Steele Harris 6 1-10 13, Paetyn Mora 0 0-0 0, Kendall Gonser 3 3-5 8, Harper Dirk 1 2-4 4, Taylee Hodke 1 0-0 3, Mia Cerna 3 0-1 7, Aza Trombley 0 0-0 0. Totals 23 11-26 62.

GLACIER — Nika Wangerin 0 1-2 1, Lucy Holloway 0 0-0 0, Karley Allen 2 7-9 11, Miley Fritz 1 0-0 3, Remi Osler 3 2-4 8. Olivia Warriner 3 4-7 11, Alauna Hagen 0 1-4 1, Addison Brisendine 2 0-0 4, Ava Grady 0 1-2 1, Clara Ahner 0 2-2 2. Totals 11 16-28 42.

3-point goals — Great Falls 6 (Schulte 4, Hodke, Cerna) Glacier 3 (Allen, Fritz, Warriner). Fouls — Great Falls 23, Glacier 16. Fouled out — Dirk.

Syracuse Orange's basketball season might be trending toward disaster with inexplicable Hofstra loss

Syracuse Orange's basketball season might be trending toward disaster with inexplicable Hofstra loss originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

There's no excuse.

Even if Hofstra is a quality mid-major opponent, the Syracuse Orange have no business losing in the friendly confines of their home Dome to them. None.

It's inexplicable, inexcusable, but sadly, it's not unbelievable.

This is what SU has become.

Sure, they earned some good graces a few weeks ago by upsetting ranked Tennessee. 

But then they just skated by St. Joe's in a bad performance, and on Saturday, Hofstra beat 'em.

This is what the program has become. The final days of Jim Boeheim weren't great. But since the Hall of Famer left the sideline, there's been nothing out there resembling the Orange of old.

Syracuse fans are begging for it, hoping for it, praying for it. 

But on the floor, even when the recruits are highly ranked and the transfers are sought-after, it somehow doesn't work.

Syracuse probably should've lost to Monmouth, and now this loss to Hofstra.

This take on X is the correct one:

Hofstra is a good team, yes, but to be SYRACUSE, and to lose AT HOME to them is an absolute embarrassment.

Aside from the first two games of this season, Red Autry's team has been extremely unconvincing in buy games over the last two years. Just a horrific sign with ACC play…

— Sam Federman (@Sam_Federman) December 13, 2025

And while we're at it, check out how frustrated Carmelo Anthony was at one call during the second half, in a game when the stress meter should never be this high:

That might as well be all of Syracuse with its arms outstretched: What in the world is going on?

There will be all sorts of reasons given to try and explain this. And there will be arguments made that the season is far from over, that quality wins in ACC play can rescue the campaign.

And maybe that's true. Maybe this season isn't over.

But the Syracuse program is a shell of its former self. One season won't change that.

Another Boeheim isn't coming walking through that door. This isn't changing overnight.

The Orange are in major trouble. The loss to Hofstra is just a reminder. 

This once proud program is mired in mediocrity. Will that ever change? That's what 'Melo's outstretched arms would love to know.

MORE: This HS football game ended on the craziest Hail Mary ever

Ira Winderman: Do Heat risk Grizzlies reality by prioritizing pace?

MIAMI — Gimmicks come with expiration dates, as the Miami Dolphins learned with the evolution and then devolution of their Wildcat, quarterback-free approach in 2008 and 2009.

Now the question becomes whether the Heat are on a similar timetable, eight weeks into the shunning of NBA staples such as pick-and-roll sets in favor of a constant-movement wheel of offense, drive-and-kick passing, pace-on-steroids.

For weeks, as the Heat’s high-octane act toured the NBA, the questions were constant of the dramatic deviation by coach Erik Spoelstra. Eventually, and somewhat sheepishly, Spoelstra asked the questioners simply go with his previous comments.

The intention never was to come off as the smartest man in the room.

And then came Tuesday night’s NBA Cup game in Orlando, with the question again parsed pregame.

“If you’ve noticed,” Spoelstra said candidly and frankly, “the last few games our offense hasn’t been that good.”

After a 15-0 start, it wasn’t good that night against the Magic, either.

With that loss, the 14-11 Heat are now idle until Monday night’s visit by the Toronto Raptors to Kaseya Center.

It is a week off that can create a mental reset amid a four-game losing streak.

Or should the reset be something greater?

Because, perhaps, the Heat should have seen this coming.

A year ago, the Memphis Grizzlies opened their season with a similar approach to the one adopted ahead of this season by Spoelstra. An architect there was offensive guru Noah LaRoche.

And where is LaRoche now? “He’s a part of our staff,” Spoelstra said.

Actually, it later was clarified that LaRoche is a consultant.

No matter, the common thread and common voice is there.

And how did it go last season for the Grizzlies? Hellbent on offense at the start of the season to the degree that the same questions fielded by Spoelstra over these first two Heat months were being fielded by Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins.

As in then-Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins. Because by season’s end, opponents had scouted the offense’s intricacies, the scoring stalled at moments of truth, and on March 28, Jenkins was ex-Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins, in a Memphis housecleaning that also had LaRoche cast aside.

The parallels certainly are there.

Among the reasons it went south for the Grizzlies was a defense that no longer could keep pace with the offense.

As in, perhaps, the Heat’s recent defensive regression (No. 20 in the NBA the past six games)?

Another reason? It left Ja Morant less than sated, his trademark pick-and-rolls legislated out of the Grizzlies’ approach.

As in, perhaps, Tyler Herro’s ongoing attempt to play as seamlessly in the new Heat offense as Norman Powell?

The Herro question stands particularly pertinent with him now back six games after missing the first 17.

If Herro was with the Heat from the outset, and if it was uneven with Herro at the October start, would an adjustment have come then, as it might need to now?

Granted, players have bristled for years over systems, including as Phil Jackson guided championship Bulls and Lakers teams with Tex Winter’s triangle principles.

But even then, there was accommodation.

For the Heat, breakneck could have its breaking point.

When it comes to distance run this season, the Heat went into this break second in the NBA at 17.6 miles per game and first in the league and first in average player speed of 4.6 mph. The other team in the Top 2 in each of those categories? The 6-18 Indiana Pacers.

So, yes, about more than a system.

With Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams, the Dolphins’ Wildcat stood as the rage in the NFL.

Until it didn’t.

For this season’s first six weeks, it was all Heat hype.

Until it isn’t?

At his stubborn Heat coaching best, when his players failed his rigid principles, including lock-and-trail defense, Pat Riley’s answers were simple and to the point — do it better.

So now, with the LaRoche system, it could be the same with Spoelstra — do it better.

Or perhaps history should be the guide.

Recent history.

As in the 2024-25 Memphis Grizzlies.

No, Spoelstra isn’t going anywhere. And he is not nearly the same rigid, unbending sideline presence as at the start of his coaching tenure nearly two decades ago.

But the league is catching up, if it hasn’t already caught up.

Or, perhaps, this was the plan all along, to maximize the benefits of something different, and then tinker and refine from there, basically scout the other teams’ scouting.

“We’re not scoring in the 140s no more,” center Bam Adebayo said just ahead of his five-day break created by Tuesday night’s failure in Orlando. “That was fun. We were sharing the game, playing together. We have to figure out how to put points on the board.”

Or find another way to have fun, if necessary, to avoid the Grizzlies’ reality.

____

What channel is South Carolina vs. Penn State women's basketball on today? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch

Joyce Edwards

What channel is South Carolina vs. Penn State women's basketball on today? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

All eyes will be on the South Carolina women's basketball team as it hosts Penn State on Sunday afternoon.

The Gamecocks' first and only loss of the season came against Texas, a 66-64 defeat on Thanksgiving Day. South Carolina then won back-to-back games over Louisville and North Carolina Central, pushing its record to 9-1.

Sitting at 6-3, Penn State is not on the same level as South Carolina. The Nittany Lions started their season off with a four-game winning streak, but they have since fallen to programs like Nebraska and Arizona State. This will surely be their toughest challenge yet.

Here is everything you need to know about South Carolina vs. Penn State, including TV and streaming options for the game.

What channel is South Carolina vs. Penn State women's basketball on today?

The matchup between South Carolina and Penn State will air live on ESPN. Cord-cutters can stream the game on the ESPN app and Fubo.

Now you can watch ESPN without cable. Stream live NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL and college sports, plus "SportsCenter," "First Take" and all your favorite ESPN shows — anytime, anywhere — only in the new ESPN app.

South Carolina vs. Penn State women's basketball start time

  • Date: Sunday, Dec. 14
  • Time: 3:30 p.m. ET

South Carolina vs. Penn State will tip off at 3:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, Dec. 14. The game will be played at Colonial Life Arena in Columbia, S.C.

South Carolina vs. Penn State women's basketball radio station

  • Radio station:SiriusXM channel 145 (South Carolina broadcast)

Fans can listen to South Carolina vs. Penn State live on SiriusXM. Coverage will be available on channel 145 (South Carolina broadcast).

New subscribers can listen to SiriusXM for free for four months. Listen to live NFL, MLB, NBA and NHL games, plus NASCAR, college sports and more. Stay updated with all the news and get all the analysis on multiple sport-specific channels.

South Carolina women's basketball schedule 2025-26

Here's a look at the Gamecocks' next five matchups:

DateMatchupTime (ET)
Dec. 14vs. Penn State3:30 p.m.
Dec. 18at South Florida7 p.m.
Dec. 20at Florida Gulf Coast2 p.m.
Dec. 28vs. ProvidenceNoon
Jan. 1vs. Alabama2 p.m.

Penn State women's basketball schedule 2025-26

Here's a look at the Nittany Lions' next five matchups:

DateMatchupTime (ET)
Dec. 14at South Carolina3:30 p.m.
Dec. 20vs. VCU*3:30 p.m.
Dec. 21vs. Richmond*2:30 p.m.
Dec. 28at Iowa4 p.m.
Dec. 31vs. UCLA2 p.m.

*Neutral site

Women's college basketball AP top 25 rankings

  1. UConn
  2. Texas
  3. South Carolina
  4. UCLA
  5. LSU
  6. Michigan
  7. Maryland
  8. TCU
  9. Oklahoma
  10. Iowa State
  11. Iowa
  12. North Carolina
  13. Baylor
  14. Vanderbilt
  15. Kentucky
  16. USC
  17. Ole Miss
  18. Tennessee
  19. Notre Dame
  20. Washington
  21. Ohio State
  22. Louisville
  23. Oklahoma State
  24. Nebraska
  25. Michigan State

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Jalen Brunson scores 40 points as Knicks advance to NBA Cup Final with win vs. Magic

This isn’t the banner the Knicks envisioned chasing this season — but after a 132-120 quarterfinal victory over the Orlando Magic on Tuesday, the NBA Cup is within reach. And recent, limited history says competing for the in-season tournament banner gives you a head start in chasing the real thing later down the line.

In 2023, the first year of the Cup, the Los Angeles Lakers defeated the Indiana Pacers to claim the league’s inaugural in-season trophy. The Pacers went on to make an Eastern Conference finals appearance the following spring, and came a Tyrese Haliburton Game 7 injury away from a Cinderella ending last season.

In the Cup’s second year, the Milwaukee Bucks defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder. That Thunder team responded by winning its first NBA championship later that same season, outlasting Indiana in the 2025 Finals.

Now it’s Year 3 of the league’s newest experiment — and the pattern is no longer coincidence.

After two straight quarterfinal exits, the Knicks are one of the final two teams standing in Las Vegas. They defeated the Toronto Raptors in the quarterfinal on Tuesday then punched their ticket to the NBA Cup Final agains the Magic on Saturday night.

And just like that, they’ve joined a short list of teams with a 50% chance of doing something much bigger next.

The New York Knicks are for real. They entered the season with championship aspirations, and a third of the way through the year, they’re finally beginning to look the part. And while an in-season tournament banner was never the target, competing for one has given the world a glimpse into the heights this team’s ceiling has pushed toward this year.

“I was one of those guys when they came up with the Cup idea, I was like, ‘Oh, man, for what? In the middle of the season? We are trying to do this and that and practice and blah, blah, blah,' ” head coach Mike Brown recalled after practice on Friday. “It’s a fantastic experience for everybody. You really applaud how the NBA has tried to continue to find ways to make this more meaningful across the board. So it’s a pleasure to be here.”

So the Knicks look the part. Jalen Brunson looks the part, too.

Brown has been vocal about wanting his All-Star point guard to finally receive MVP consideration. Performances like the one Brunson delivered Saturday make it impossible to have the conversation without him.

The Knicks’ captain dissected an Orlando defense specifically built to grind him down — a physical, switch-heavy unit designed to make every touch uncomfortable. Instead, Brunson made it look easy: 40 points on 16-of-27 shooting from the field and eight assists in New York’s highest-pressure game of the season.

“Yeah, [the Magic] are really physical. That’s what [Orlando’s head coach, Jamahl Mosley] prides himself on. The way that they have been able to do it makes them very successful,” Brunson told reporters after practice on Friday. “There’s a lot of ways you combat it. Obviously with physicality. But I would move it, with space and transition, getting stops and running. I think no matter what, they are going to play their solid basketball. We have to play ours and do it to the best of our abilities.”

Karl-Anthony Towns finished with 29 points and eight rebounds, and OG Anunoby added 24 points on 8-of-13 shooting from the field, as the Knicks advanced to a 17-0 record in games they lead after three quarters.

Jalen Suggs scored 26 points for the Orlando Magic but left in the second half due to injury. Paolo Banchero scored 25 points, and Desmond Bane added 18, but the Magic couldn’t match New York’s firepower with both teams missing key contributors on the injury report. Miles McBride is nursing an ankle injury, and Landry Shamet is recovering from a shoulder sprain, while fringe All-Star Franz Wagner remains out with a high ankle sprain of his own.

Now it’s one more game in Las Vegas against the best of the West. The NBA Cup is beginning to be a true playoff preview, and the Knicks are living up to the early billing they can compete for their first title in decades this season.

'Learning hurts': Jimmies drop to University of Minnesota-Duluth

Dec. 13—JAMESTOWN — After the University of Jamestown men's basketball team pulled off a 71-70 win over the University of Minnesota-Duluth, the UJ women entered Harold Newman Arena with enthusiasm and energy — ready to complete the sweep.

UMD took all of the Jimmies' energy away.

The Bulldogs defeated UJ 82-36 on Saturday afternoon, to drop the Jimmies' record to 4-5 overall and 2-3 in conference. Head coach Thad Sankey and company will be back in action on Wednesday at the University of Minnesota-Crookston. Tipoff is set for 7:30 p.m.

From the opening tip, the Bulldogs were in control.

The Bulldogs surged out to a 7-0 lead to start the ball game but Jessika Lofstrom got the Jimmies back within four with an outside shot at the 6:51 mark of the first quarter. In the next seven minutes, the Bulldogs added 15 points to their score while the Jimmies added three on a shot from Samantha Paulsen. Lofstrom led the Jimmies in first half scoring with five points.

As the game went on, it was clear the Jimmies were simply outmatched.

The Jimmies committed 14 turnovers and only shot 25 percent from the floor and 20 percent from deep in the first half. The home team capitalized on one of two shots from the line. UMD was 53.3 percent shooting and 35.7 percent from deep. At the line, the visitors went 3-for-5. UMD out-rebounded the Jimmies 28-18

At the half, UMD led 40-15.

"As soon as No. 23 was loosening us up with cuts and No. 11 gets in rhythm, and then No. 42 is getting deep paint touches — that's a hard combo," Sankey said in a postgame interview with Jamestown's 107.1 FM. "That's a hard combo for everybody to guard but we have to be able to take at least one of those things away.

UMD's No. 23, Claire Bjorge was responsible for seven points and four assists, while No. 11, Myra Moorjani, cracked into double-digits with 10 points and nabbed three rebounds, three assists, two turnovers and one steal. No. 42, Lexi Karge, was the Bulldogs' leading scorer with 16 points. She also grabbed four rebounds.

In the third quarter, the Bulldogs put up 13 points in the time it took for the Jimmies to score one point. With just over five minutes to play, Paulsen got the Jimmies' first two-point bucket of the half on a breakaway.

Quarter No. 4 was the Jimmies' best of the night — matching UMD's 16 points scored. Daviney Dreckman was the team's leading scorer with nine points while Paulsen finished with seven. As a team, the Jimmies were 15-for-57 shooting and 4-24 from 3-point range. The team recorded 20 turnovers and 28 total rebounds.

"We take the steps we need to take as a team with great effort," Sankey said. "These learning processes hurt. Tonight hurt. Unless we come back and get back on course, great effort doesn't really matter — it doesn't really matter. ... The learning opportunity for us is the difference between wanting to be good and working to be good. We have a lot of work to do to be good."

University of Minnesota-Duluth 82, University of Jamestown 36

UMD 22 18 26 16 — 82

UJ 6 9 5 16 — 36

UMD — Lexi Karge 16, Maria Counts 11, Myra Moorjani 10, Karly Jusczak 8, Claire Bjorge 7, Ashley Fritz 7, Lexi Karlen 7, Drew Johnston 6, Lilly Radcliffe 3, Vanessa Bickford 3, Gabrielle Kirchner 2, Keagan McVicker 2. Totals: 32-60 2FG, 12-27 3FG, 6-9 FT, 11 fouls. 3-pointers: Counts 3, Moorjani 2, Bickford 1, Johnston 2, Fritz 1, Karlen 1, Jusczak 1, Radcliffe 1.

UJ — Daviney Dreckman 9, Samantha Paulsen 7, Jessika Lofstrom 5, Halle Crockett 4, Hali Savela 3, Kiara Jangula 3, Alexa Ham 2, Allie Berns 2, Haidyn Crockett 1. Totals: 15-57 2FG, 4-24 3FG, 2-4 FT, 14 fouls. 3-pointers: Lofstrom 1, Dreckman 1, Jangula 1, Paulsen 1.

BIG DAWG SHOOT-OUT: Asia Roper guides Claremore girls to first championship game since '16, best start since 07-08

VINITA — Asia Roper jogged toward the Claremore bench expecting to hear it.

A quick scolding. A reminder to be smarter from her father, Claremore girls basketball coach Lynn Roper, after her fourth foul sent her to the sideline midway through the third quarter.

Instead, the moments that followed nearly turned Friday night's Big Dawg Shoot-Out semifinals on their head before becoming the defining chapter in one of the most dramatic performances of her career.

With Roper sidelined at the 4:25 mark of the third quarter and Claremore holding what appeared to be a comfortable 12-point lead, the game flipped in stunning fashion.

Kiefer seized the opening, ripping off a 20-2 run that erased the deficit and turned it into a 6-point advantage, while Roper could only watch from the bench as momentum swung violently away from the Lady Zebras.

“I was just trying to stay positive,” Asia Roper said. “Like, ‘This is not it. It is not over. It’s fine. We’ll get through this.’”

And they did.

The senior star returned early in the fourth quarter and delivered a takeover performance that propelled Claremore to a 62-58 victory over the Lady Trojans inside the James E. Sooter Activities Center at Vinita High School.

She scored 15 of the Lady Zebras' final 20 points over a decisive 6:50 stretch, finishing with 36 points and 7 rebounds to send them to their first tournament championship game since Jan. 26, 2016.

“I’m just glad we won,” Asia Roper said. “I didn’t really care how many points I had because if we didn’t win, I would’ve been mad. I was literally telling my teammates, ‘Guys, we are not losing.’ I was telling myself we’re not losing, so I went to the high post and called for the ball. I think me coming back in helped the energy a little bit, too. They [Kiefer] weren’t scoring as much, and we were doing better on offense. I didn’t give the option [to lose] to anybody.”

That night in 2016 came at the Port City Classic in Catoosa, a season that ended with Claremore finishing as the Class 5A state runner-up.

Friday’s win also marked the program's first 4-0 start since the 2007-08 season, another year that ended with a state-tournament appearance.

“I think it’s my first time being 4-0, probably ever,” Asia Roper said. “I’m really happy with our team. I think we play really good together. Last year we were figuring things out, and this year we have it, so I’m just happy to have good teammates.”

The pivotal moment that changed the game didn’t come from the floor, but from the bench.

Earlier in the game, coach Lynn Roper and his staff had agreed Asia Roper would re-enter the game at the 6:00 mark of the fourth quarter to protect her from fouling out.

Assistant coach Lauren McSpadden added one caveat: unless Kiefer went on a game-breaking run.

That condition was met moments later when the Lady Trojans' Coley Rowton scored a fast-break layup to push them ahead 46-40. McSpadden immediately made the call, and coach Roper didn’t hesitate or argue. He turned, called his daughter’s name and sent her to the scorer’s table.

“She’s just as big a part as I am for our success,” coach Roper said. “She bounces stuff off me, I bounce stuff off her and that’s how we coach. I told her when I got hired and she was already in the program, ‘I want to hear everything you have to say all the time.’ I talk with the boys coach, I talk with other coaches — I’m always learning from other coaches. This is only my second year as a head coach at this level, so I’m still learning every game. I learn a lot from year and vice versa. The rule is typically six minutes in the fourth, but she was like, ‘Nope, we’ve gotta get her in now.’ I looked up, saw seven minutes, and I was like, ‘All right, let’s go.’ It just looked like that was a good point [to bring her in].”

Before she could even check back in, Autumn Roper delivered a crucial bucket in the paint, keeping the Lady Zebras within striking distance and helping spark what became a game-winning 22-12 run.

“I’m glad she stepped up because we needed somebody to,” Asia Roper said. “Me coming out brought the energy down a little bit, but she kept it up.”

From there, Asia Roper took control.

She scored on drives, buried a momentum-swinging 3-pointer to tie the game at 50, converted a 3-point play that put Claremore ahead 55-51 with 2:30 remaining and calmly knocked down free throws in the final seconds to close the door.

Autumn Roper finished with 12 points and 7 rebounds, while Alayna Eberley added 8 points and 2 boards as the Lady Zebras overcame a 31-27 rebounding deficit [17-7] on the offensive glass] and 22 turnovers to survive.

Kiefer, which briefly looked poised to steal the game, was led by Rowton’s 19 points and 2 rebounds. Posey LaBouff added 11 points, Claire Hoover chipped in 11 and 5, and Channing Hallum finished with 10 and 7 as the Lady Trojans capitalized on Claremore’s foul trouble and offensive drought in the second half.

Elle Adams added 7 points while co-leading the team with 7 rebounds.

Still, when it mattered most, the ball belonged to Asia Roper, and she delivered.

Claremore now moves into the Big Dawg Shoot-Out championship game riding momentum, history and the confidence that comes from knowing its best player can swing a game even after watching it slip away from the bench.

With that history comes playful memories that a father like Lynn Roper cherishes, even if he is the only one who remembers.

“I want to correct Asia because when I coached her in sixth-grade rec league, we were undefeated,” he said, referring to her comment about never having been 4-0. “She probably forgot that — nobody remembers that.”

BIG DAWG SHOOT-OUT: Sequoyah girls fall to Salina as teams combine for 61 turnovers in semifinal slog

VINITA — With a berth in the Big Dawg Shoot-Out championship hanging in the balance, it often looked like neither team was eager to seize it.

Between 61 combined turnovers, 22 missed free throws and a steady stream of errant layups that flirted with nothing but air, Sequoyah and Salina spent Friday night searching unsuccessfully for the dagger that would separate them.

In the end, the Lady Wildcats found just enough offense to escape with a 32-25 victory over the Lady Eagles in the semifinals inside the James E. Sooter Activities Center at Vinita High School.

In a game where free throws, rebounding and turnovers largely canceled each other out, the biggest difference came from beyond the arc.

Salina made 2 3-pointers. Sequoyah made none.

That margin proved decisive.

The Lady Wildcats' second 3-pointer — a deep shot from Jordan Hawk — snapped a 25-24 Lady Eagles lead and ignited a game-ending 8-0 run. Sequoyah did not score again after Abilene McGee’s free throw gave them their first and only lead of the night with 5:04 remaining.

The Lady Eagles' struggles from the perimeter loomed large.

Lanie Thompson, who torched Catoosa with 5 3-pointers in the opening round, was held to 5 points and could not get a shot to fall from deep.

The game was a grind from the opening tip.

Salina jumped out early behind Maci Proctor and Izzy Pritchett, leading 11-4 after the first quarter. Sequoyah clawed back in the second behind Emmyn Gibson and Abilene McGee, trimming the deficit to 16-12 at halftime despite continued turnover issues.

The third quarter was more of the same with frantic possessions, missed chances and constant trips to the free-throw line.

Gibson sparked a brief surge, and Lexis Breshears tied the game at 22 entering the fourth, setting up what appeared to be a tense finish.

However, after McGee’s free throw gave the Lady Eagles a 25-24 lead, the Lady Wildcats finally delivered the separation it had been searching for.

Hawk’s 3-pointer broke the tie, and Salina added points off free throws and a Zoe Stephenson basket to pull away as Sequoyah went scoreless over the final five minutes.

The Lady Wildcats committed 33 turnovers and the Lady Eagles 28, with the teams combining for 32 giveaways in the second half alone. Free throws told a similar story, as Sequoyah went 9-of-19 [47.4%] and Salina 10-of-22 [45.5%].

Gibson led the Lady Eagles with 9 points and 7 rebounds, while Breshears added 7 boards alongside 3 points. Thompson finished with 5 points and 3 boards, and Sequoyah grabbed 16 offensive rebounds compared to the Lady Wildcats' 9 but could not convert enough second chances.

For Salina, Pritchett led the way with 8 points and 7 rebounds, while Jordan Hawk added 7 points and 3 boards, including the game’s biggest shot.

The loss ended the Lady Eagles' hopes of setting up an all-Claremore championship game against the Lady Zebras — a rare matchup that hasn’t occurred since Jan. 21, 2016, when Claremore beat Sequoyah 49-38 in the Catoosa Port City Classic.

The Lady Wildcats advanced to Saturday’s championship game at 7 p.m. against the Lady Zebras. Sequoyah will play Kiefer in the third-place game at 5:30 p.m.

Lady Eagles coach Lee Ott was unavailable for comment after the game.

Devils Lake turns in big second half to defeat Jamestown

Dec. 13—JAMESTOWN — The Jamestown High School boys basketball team had a one point lead over Devils Lake at the halfway point.

The Firebirds flipped the script in the second half.

Max Palmer's six 3-pointers paced the Firebirds' 70-48 win over the Blue Jays Saturday afternoon. The loss puts Jamestown's record at 2-1 overall. Jamestown will open up the conference season on Tuesday with a tilt against Bismarck Century. Tipoff is set for 7:30 p.m. at Jerry Meyer Arena.

While Palmer notched 28 points to lead all scorers, senior Abel Dolokelen put up a respectable 17 points to lead the Blue Jays. Edison Walters chipped in another 10 points while Kale Verke put seven on the books.

As a team, the Jays hit 18 field goals and went 8-15 from the free throw line.

Devils Lake 70, Jamestown 48

DL 30 40 — 70

JHS 31 17 — 48

DL — Max Palmer 28, Bryar Exner 15, Mason Palmer 11, Ben Brodina 9, Kade Fee 4, Egan Laite 2, Alex Hammond 1. Totals: 25 FG, 11-20 FT, 19 fouls. 3-pointers: Max Palmer 6, Exner 2, Brodina 1.

JHS — Abel Dolokelen 17, Edison Walters 10, Kale Verke 7, Eric Van Berkom 3, Gradin Thorlakson 3, Hudson Rode 3, Liam Frey 3, Mason Joseph 2. Totals: 18 FG, 8-15 FT, 19 fouls. 3-pointers: Dolokelen 1, Walters 1, Verke 1, Rode 1.

BIG DAWG SHOOT-OUT: Phillip's late free throws send Catoosa boys to championship game

VINITA — Ryder Phillips likes to call himself QB1 for Catoosa boys basketball.

On Friday night, that self-appointed title felt less like bravado and more like prophecy.

With the Big Dawg Shoot-Out semifinals on the line, Phillips was the one standing at the free-throw line twice in the final 20 seconds, shoulders squared and eyes steady. He split a pair with 18 seconds remaining, then returned after a defensive stop with six ticks left.

He again missed the first but made the second, and that single point proved to be the difference as the Indians survived for a 58-57 victory over Miami inside the James E. Sooter Activities Center at Vinita High School.

“I knew I was gonna make a second one because I knew I was gonna miss it,” Phillips said. “I had to come through, but I have enough confidence in my teammates to let them know they gotta get a stop.”

Moments later, the Wardogs' Beckett Sooter buried a running 3-pointer at the buzzer that would have sent the game into overtime if not for Phillips’ calm conversion seconds earlier.

One could argue that is why he calls himself QB1. He was the player with the ball in his hands when the game hung in the balance.

“I would say I'm probably the most vocal person out here,” Phillips said. “I would say my role is being the point guard, being the main guy, being QB1. Every night, though, it could be somebody else being a leader. I might not have the best night, but AJ [Timmons] can go have 20, TJ [Tory Hooks Jr.] can go have 20, Ant [Anthony Barnes] could go have 20 — anybody on the roster can get 20. I’ve got confidence in everybody, and not one person is the best on the team. It's everybody. It's how we play together. That's how we play.”

Phillips finished with a team-high 16 points and 4 rebounds as Catoosa improved to 6-0 and advanced to the Big Dawg Shoot-Out championship game for the second-consecutive season.

Friday’s thriller was already the second meeting between the teams this season. Catoosa edged Miami 58-55 in the Dec. 2 opener, and the sequel proved just as tense.

“I think we just fought through every level of adversity, stuck together as a team and found a way to hit some big free throws at the end,” Catoosa first-year coach Rodrick Hall said.

The Wardogs [1-3] made their intentions clear early behind Waike Roblyer, who scored their first 16 points and finished with a game-high 25 points and 9 rebounds.

Despite Roblyer’s early dominance, the Indians stayed composed, closing the first quarter with a narrow 14-13 lead after a Phillips 3-pointer stemmed the momentum.

“He's a monster,” Hall said of Roblyer. “He played really well. We made some adjustments on him and slowed him down a little bit, but I don't think there's any stopping the kid.”

Catoosa gained separation in the second quarter with a balanced attack.

AJ Timmons sparked an 18-point period with a 3-pointer and aggressive drives, while Phillips drained consecutive triples to push the lead to 32-24 at halftime.

The Indians looked poised to pull away in the third, stretching its advantage to 15 points after a Rodrick Hall Jr. 3-point play and a Tory Hooks Jr. basket. However, Miami responded with a flurry from beyond the arc.

Lane Walther hit a trio of 3-pointers in the quarter, trimming the deficit and keeping the Wardogs within striking distance heading into the fourth.

The final eight minutes turned into a possession-by-possession grind.

Every Catoosa run was answered, and every Miami push was met with timely shots or defensive stops. Anthony Barnes knocked down a key 3-pointer midway through the quarter, but the Wardogs continued to chip away, pulling within two points in the final minute.

That set the stage for Phillips.

After a Miami bucket cut the lead to 56-54, Phillips stepped to the line with 18 seconds left and made one of two. Following a stop by the Indians defense, he returned with six seconds remaining.

He missed the first, but calmly knocked down the second — the point that ultimately sealed it. The Wardogs' final heave fell through the net, but it wasn’t enough.

The Indians had seven players score at least 5 points, showcasing the depth that has fueled its unbeaten start. Timmons added 13 points and 5 rebounds, and Barnes and Rodrick Hall Jr. chipped in 7 apiece while combining for 6 boards.

Catoosa will face Rogers County rival Claremore, a rematch of last year’s title game that the Indians won 62-54.

“It's a big deal,” coach Hall said. “I want to make sure the legacy continues and gets better. So every chance we get to do something special, we want to do it.”

Phillips is excited for the opportunity as well.

“I'm ready to go get a two-timer,” he said. “I'm ready to be a two-timer.”

BIG DAWG SHOOT-OUT: Rutherford’s fourth-quarter wake-up call sends Claremore boys back to title game

VINITA — Even with a 17-point cushion heading into the fourth quarter, Claremore boys basketball coach Randy Rutherford wasn’t satisfied.

And he made sure his team knew it.

Grove had just closed the third quarter with back-to-back 3-pointers, trimming what once looked like a runaway into something far less comfortable by his standards.

During the brief break before the final frame, the first-year Zebras coach gathered his players and delivered a blunt message.

“This game isn’t over,” Rutherford told them. “You are 1-2 right now. You can be 1-3 or 2-2. Which one do you want?”

“2-2, coach,” the team answered together.

“Then start playing like it,” Rutherford said.

They did exactly that.

Claremore clamped down defensively, refused to let the Ridgerunners mount any sustained run and stretched the lead to as many as 21 points on its way to a convincing 52-34 victory in the Big Dawg Shoot-Out semifinals Friday night inside the James E. Sooter Activities Center at Vinita High School.

“It’s a process,” Rutherford said. “We’re a little bit more talented than that team is, so if we can impose our will, then it should turn in our favor. But if you don’t focus on the detail stuff, then they have a chance.”

The Zebras [2-2] were in control from the opening tip, racing to a 13-5 lead after the first quarter and holding Grove to just 11 points in the first half.

That defensive effort was especially notable considering the Ridgerunners were coming off an 84-26 blowout of Salina in the opening round. Claremore took that high-powered offense out of rhythm early and never let it find its footing.

“The teams that we’ve already faced, these teams haven’t faced anybody of that caliber,” Rutherford said. “When they face our man-to-man defense, they don’t know how to face that. We felt very confident coming into the game about how our defense would affect them after watching film. We knew they like to shoot a lot of 3s, so we took the 3-point line out. We knew they couldn’t cover us inside, so everybody’s doubling Tobin, we knew our guards were going to get loose, we hit some shots and then the ballgame was in our favor.”

Tobin McGill powered the Zebras inside with a double-double of 12 points and 10 rebounds, while Mike Tarver and Nolan Sherl added 13 and 12 points, respectively.

Claremore extended its halftime advantage from 23-11 to 39-22 after three quarters, though Grove’s late surge in the period prompted Rutherford’s emphatic reminder before the final eight minutes.

The Zebras responded by opening the fourth with defensive stops and efficient offense, pushing the margin beyond 20 at 47-26 and finishing strong.

“We’ve been waiting on somebody to run us in a zone,” Rutherford said. “They ran a zone, and we’ve got good stuff against the zone.”

The Ridgerunners [3-1] were led by a balanced effort, with Colby Watson, Bradee Rutherford and Cody Churchwell each scoring 6 points, while Aiden Knight added 5 points and 6 rebounds. However, they were unable to overcome Claremore’s early defensive dominance and steady execution down the stretch.

With the win, the Zebras advanced to the Big Dawg Shoot-Out championship game for a second-straight season and will face Rogers County rival Catoosa at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in a rematch of last year’s title game, which the Indians won 62-54.

It marks Claremore’s fourth appearance in the tournament championship game, having also reached the final in 2021, 2022 and 2024. The Zebras are still seeking their first Big Dawg title, with each previous championship loss coming against teams nicknamed the Indians — Stilwell in 2021 and 2022 and Catoosa last season.

“We’re excited about the challenge tomorrow,” coach Rutherford said. “Catoosa is a good team, and like I told our guys, all the teams play about the same. They’re going to run a little run-and-jump, they’re going to want to play man and they’re going to want to shoot a bunch of 3s. Defensive transition, guard the 3-point line, stop the ball, stop the paint strong side and let’s see what they can do against us.

“It’ll be a good game tomorrow. I know they’re going to be ready to play, and we’re excited about it.”

A shared sorrow for the Bears and Browns: The never-ending search for a franchise QB

CHICAGO — Case Keenum is well aware of the jersey — the infamous, fan-altered jersey of former Cleveland Browns quarterback Tim Couch with a long list of his successors under his nameplate.

Keenum should know it. He’s on it.

“I’ve seen that shirt,” said Keenum, who played for the Browns from 2020-21 and joined the Bears as a free agent in April. “I think I’m probably the only undefeated quarterback on that list. … Minimum two games, right?”

It’s true. Keenum started two games in 2021 and won both, but he knows that’s not what the spirit of the jersey is all about.

It’s a meme about futility.

It’s about a franchise’s exhaustive yet fruitless search for a solution at the game’s most important position.

“Cleveland is its own little entity,” Keenum said. “It’s got this blue-collar, not-ever-given-anything, had-to-earn-everything-it’s-gotten, been-overlooked, kind-of-little-brother-type mentality. I’ve really had that type of time my whole life, my whole career. So being able to share it with a group of people in a city like that I really enjoyed.

“You know, you could probably make those types of shirts at a lot of different places.”

To his point, a Bears fan could’ve made a Cade McNown jersey with all of his successors.

The Browns have had 42 quarterbacks start at least one game since they were reinstated (after a three-year absence) in 1999, including No. 1 pick Couch. The Bears have had 30 quarterbacks make at least one start since they drafted McNown at No. 12 that same year.

It’s a trauma bond for two fan bases.

Perhaps Bears and visiting Browns fans can discuss it during Sunday’s game when they’re huddled together for warmth amid subzero wind chills at Soldier Field.

The numbers

The Browns have had a staggering number of starters since ‘99.

The full list, in alphabetical order, includes: Derek Anderson, Jacoby Brissett, Jason Campbell, Tim Couch, Austin Davis, Jake Delhomme, Ty Detmer, Trent Dilfer, Ken Dorsey, Jeff Driskel, Joe Flacco, Charlie Frye, Dillon Gabriel, Jeff Garcia, Bruce Gradkowski, Robert Griffin III, Kevin Hogan, Kelly Holcomb, Brian Hoyer, Case Keenum, Cody Kessler, DeShone Kizer, Thaddeus Lewis, Johnny Manziel, Baker Mayfield, Josh McCown, Luke McCown, Colt McCoy, Nick Mullens, Doug Pederson, Brady Quinn, Shedeur Sanders, Connor Shaw, Tyrod Taylor, Dorian Thompson-Robinson, P.J. Walker, Seneca Wallace, Deshaun Watson, Brandon Weeden, Jameis Winston, Spergon Wynn and Bailey Zappe.

Here’s the Bears’ list: Tyson Bagent, Matt Barkley, Henry Burris, Jason Campbell, Chris Chandler, Jimmy Clausen, Todd Collins, Jay Cutler, Andy Dalton, Chase Daniel, Justin Fields, Nick Foles, Mike Glennon, Brian Griese, Rex Grossman, Caleb Hanie, Brian Hoyer, Chad Hutchinson, Craig Krenzel, Shane Matthews, Josh McCown, Cade McNown, Jim Miller, Kyle Orton, Nathan Peterman, Jonathan Quinn, Trevor Siemian, Kordell Stewart, Mitch Trubisky and Caleb Williams.

In 27 years, the Browns have averaged about 1 1/2 quarterback starters per season, but they outdid themselves in 2023 with five: Driskel, Flacco, Thompson-Robinson, Walker and Watson.

Of course, injuries played a factor in the number of starters, as it does with several teams most seasons.

The Browns have had 20 quarterbacks start at least eight games since 1999, the most in the league.

The Bears have had only 11 make eight starts, about average in the league, but they have had 23 make at least four starts, tied for the highest in that span.

However you dissect the numbers, various Bears and Browns front offices have spent a lot of man hours trying to find a long-term solution to their quarterback quandaries, often to no avail.

“You look at quarterback in general, I think it’s probably the toughest, most scrutinized, most unique position in all of sports — we get the ball in our hands every play,” said Keenum, 37, who’s on his ninth team in his 14th season. “No one position in all sports relies more on their team and the entire building, and no other position in all sports has the entire team and the building relying on them.”

Keenum was the primary backup for Mayfield, who eventually joined Couch, Manziel, Quinn and Weeden among Browns first-round quarterbacks who didn’t pan out for them (though Mayfield has found success with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers).

“When you put that type of expectations and stress and pressure on a kid sometimes, that’s not a recipe for success if you’re not making decisions at a very high level based on how it affects that kid,” Keenum said.

He praised Bears coach Ben Johnson in that regard.

“Ben’s done an incredible job — every decision he’s made (has been) with everybody in the building in mind, specifically our quarterback,” Keenum said. “It’s not just him, it’s getting the entire building on it. That’s one thing that you can see that’s going on with Caleb Williams.”

The psyche

George Bozeka is president of the Pro Football Researchers Association (PFRA) and author of several NFL-related books and articles.

His son, Jon Bozeka, is a longtime broadcaster in Northeast Ohio who covers the Browns for Infinity Sports Network and Sirius XM.

In their own ways, they’ve both spent years studying their hometown Browns and they’re both left scratching their heads.

“I think it’s been a huge source of frustration for Browns fans,” George Bozeka said about the team’s quarterback search. “One theory that I have, and I think Jon shares this with me, is that in the modern NFL, they don’t really develop quarterbacks like they used to historically.

“When I was younger, in the ’60s and ’70s, they always said it took about three to five years to develop a quarterback. Now it’s all about instant gratification. A quarterback is drafted high, they expect him to go in and excel immediately. And I think that’s been part of the problem for the Browns.

“They’ve had quarterbacks that have, you know, done well for short periods of time, like for a season, and then they come back to earth and the mediocrity sets in.”

Jon Bozeka said Browns fans would get their hopes up — like during Derek Anderson’s Pro Bowl season in 2007 — only to come crashing down a year or two later. Rinse and repeat with Mayfield.

“I can’t even begin to tell you the excitement when Joe Flacco led the Browns to the playoffs, like, two years ago, you would have thought Joe Flacco was the second coming of Otto Graham around here,” Jon Bozeka said. “People were making T-shirts. There was excitement. … That season, that moment for Browns fans was so unique here that everybody wanted that to work again this year, and it just didn’t.”

Bears fans have ridden similar waves with Trubisky and Fields.

Joe Ziemba, PFRA member and author of “Bears vs. Cardinals: The NFL’s Oldest Rivalry” and other Chicago-related books, can testify to what many Bears fans felt when Fields was selected with the 11th pick in 2021.

“I remember even where I was, I was in an Ace Hardware store, and someone told me the Bears are going to get Fields,” he said. “I said, ‘You’re kidding.’ I’ve seen him in college going nuts at Ohio State.”

Two seasons later Fields and the Bears parted ways.

“I think the system, I think the staff let him down a little bit in terms of his developing further,” Ziemba said

Jon Bozeka said of Trubisky, Fields’ predecessor and the No. 2 pick in 2017: “People here wanted him really badly. He’s a local kid. He’s a Mentor (Ohio) kid.”

There’s still time for Trubisky, who’s in his second season in Buffalo, to be added to that Browns jersey.

The original jersey was the brainchild of Cleveland-based ad agency owner Tim Brokaw, who retired it after 24 names in 2016, when the Cavaliers won the NBA championship.

But it has been resurrected in various forms, handmade or Photoshopped, with some gaining similar notoriety.

“Just because the list is 42, I think we mentally all have that image in our head,” Jon said.

George Bozeka believes both Chicago and Cleveland have a “bruised” psyche when it comes to this subject because of their storied histories that predate the 1970 merger.

“I think it’s painful for the fan bases to constantly go through this,” he said. “There’s more expectation. I think that’s why there’s more impatience.”

Ziemba said Bears fans focus on the modern quarterback carousel and the lack of a 4,000-yard passer in their history but forget about the greats of yesteryear.

“You had somebody like Ed Brown in the ’50s, but no one’s ever heard of Ed Brown, and he probably started more games (66) than anybody,” he said, with the exception of Jay Cutler (102).

“I’m always looking at someone like Sid Luckman, who I still consider the best quarterback in Bears history. “(Bears founder George) Halas had this keen eye for selecting guys, and Luckman wasn’t even a quarterback at Columbia. But since Halas felt that as a tailback, he could fit in with the C formation, he picked him up on a last minute trade with Pittsburgh and added him.

“Of course he’s a Hall of Famer and still holds a lot of the records.”

The Bozekas hold up Graham — a three-time NFL champion — as one of the league’s all-time greats, though they acknowledge fans hang their hat on the fact the Bears have had two quarterbacks lead them to a Super Bowl and one won.

“Even though the Bears haven’t done it since ’85 … Cleveland has so consistently experienced that heartbreak,” Jon Bozeka said. “It’s painful that they can’t get the position that’s the most important position in sports right.”

The franchise

Caleb Williams’ 57.8% completion percentage has invited a bit of scrutiny, but it’s notable that Luckman, passing pioneer though he was, had just a 51.8% career completion percentage.

“And yet he’s considered the dominant guy,” Ziemba said. “But the game was different, and the strategies were different.”

The point is, numbers don’t necessarily make a franchise quarterback. Wins do.

The question for both the Bears and Browns is: Can Williams and Shedeur Sanders become those players?

Recently, Ben Johnson said to throw out the stats when it comes to Williams, who came with Sears Tower-high expectations when he was drafted at No. 1 in 2024.

At this early stage of building a franchise quarterback, only the process and the mindset matter.

“It’s the coachability aspect of it,” Johnson said. “He’s doing a really good job right now of being critical of himself. We see it the same way. We’ll watch tape together and (he says), ‘I’ve got to be better there.’

“Even the walk-through. I mean, we just had a walk-through and he’s a little pissed off walking off. He’s like, ‘I had two in there that I could’ve gotten a little bit cleaner’ in a walk-through setting. Well, we just installed the play, so that’s natural. When he’s critical of himself and he’s taking to coaching, I know good things are coming down the horizon.”

Williams said he and his coach talk every day about everything, from family to football.

And that includes goals and expectations.

“The playoff mentality, the championship mentality, that’s where we want to be,” Williams said. That’s where you want to be every year. … Whether it’s your first year or 10th year, you don’t go into a year not thinking about that.

“That’s one. And then managing those expectations, managing actually being possibly in that position, that’s going to take experience, that’s going to take trusting in him, that’s going to take us just trusting the process.”

Browns coach Kevin Stefanski likes what he has seen of Williams.

“He’s a really, really good young player,” Stefanski said. “He can make a ton of plays both on schedule and off schedule, has elite arm talent to throw the ball around the field.

“And … he’s very elusive, extremely elusive. He can get out of the pocket to the left, to the right, vertical in the pocket. He’s a hard guy to bring down and that adds another element to their team.”

Sanders’ path has been a bit more arduous than Williams’.

He was a projected first- or second-rounder but fell to the fifth and suddenly found himself fourth on the depth chart behind Flacco, Kenny Pickett and fellow rookie Dillon Gabriel, who was drafted in the third round.

There had been murmurs through the preseason and regular season about why Sanders hadn’t gotten more first-team reps or a chance to start, but Sanders finally got his first start Nov. 23, a 24-10 win over the Las Vegas Raiders.

Last week, he threw for 364 yards and produced four total touchdowns in his third start, a 31-29 loss to the Tennessee Titans.

Bears defensive coordinator Dennis Allen hadn’t seen a lot of tape on Sanders before this season but said: “I see a guy that plays with a little bit of a swagger. He’s got a little moxie to him. I think he brings a little bit of excitement to that football team.”

And yet, there are still questions about whether he’ll be in Cleveland long term.

“I just go here, enjoy my day, work hard, do everything I can,” Sanders said. “And if I’m here, I’m here. If I’m not, I’m not. Like it’s nothing in my control. So, I try to control what I can control. That’s going out there and making the right reads, going out there doing the right things, being the person I am. And things will fall how they are supposed to.”

Even if it’s lip service, Stefanski seems compelled to include Gabriel in the conversation about Sanders’ progress, lest he fuel more chatter about the Browns’ muddy quarterback vision.

“I don’t think you can quantify development,” Stefanski said. “With all of our players, we have a development plan that we feel strongly about. … What’s great about our young class, Shedeur, in this case our entire rookie class, is these guys want to get better.”

The Browns have at least committed to starting Sanders the rest of the season.

Starter or benchwarmer, solution or temporary fix, if Sanders harbors any concerns about his NFL future, he’s not showing it at the podium.

“I’m comfortable being uncomfortable,” he said. “You’ve got to understand, that’s just the situation I’m in, and I’m fine with that. I love that.”

Come Sunday at noon, Williams and Sanders will be focused on the game and little else. Realistically, Williams and the Bears need this win against the 3-10 Browns to maintain control of their playoff hunt.

For Sanders, it’s a four-game audition.

Two years ago, Williams and Sanders traded 11 total touchdowns between them when Williams’ USC Trojans defeated Sanders’ Colorado Buffaloes 48-41.

“It was a good atmosphere, a good game,” Williams said this week. “We ended up coming out with the victory, and Shedeur was a hell of a player.”

____

Spirit Week preview: Spokane Public Schools rivalry games bring the noise at Spokane Arena, Reece Court

Dec. 13—It's Spirit Week in the Greater Spokane League. That means raucous crowds, musical numbers, cheerleaders, noisemakers — and plenty of boys and girls basketball.

The festive week is one of the highlights of the season bringing together student bodies, faculty and sports teams in the spirit of camaraderie and friendly competition. Add in the bright lights of a college or downtown arena and it makes for an annual tradition that will produce a lifetime of memories for all involved.

This year's festivities start Tuesday in Cheney, where the Blackhawks host Rogers on Reese Court at Eastern Washington University in the fifth "Railroad Rumble," the youngest of the spirit week games. The girls game starts at 5:30 p.m.; the boys are at 7:30.

Last year at the Arena, the Rogers boys won 44-39 while the Cheney girls came out on top 42-24. Rogers won the spirit competition using a "Minions" theme.

This season, the Pirates boys are off to a fast start at 3-1, while Cheney is at 2-2. Both girls teams are struggling out of the gate with a combined record of 2-7.

On Thursday, the scene shifts to the Numerica Veterans Arena downtown, where Ferris is the designated host against Lewis and Clark in the granddaddy of all of the spirit games, in the 43rd battle for Chuck the "Rubber Chicken."

The schools have been waging an intense but friendly rivalry since 1983, when a student competition was adopted to increase student spirit. The symbol of the rivalry, an ugly rubber chicken, was chosen to symbolize a reward "deeply sought but without actual value."

"I played in the 'Stinky Sneaker' back in 2012, so I love this environment," LC girls coach Sydney Floriani said last year. "It's super fun. There's nothing like playing in the Arena, and Rubber Chicken is just one of the best-attended events in Spokane."

Last year, LC swept the basketball games as the Tigers girls pulled out a close one over Ferris 52-47 and the boys won 58-49, while Chuck went to LC for the third time in four years.

The LC boys are off to a 3-3 start this season while Ferris is 2-3. Both girls teams are 3-2 thus far.

Friday night, North Central and Shadle Park go head-to-head in the "Groovy Shoes" rivalry games. Shadle swept the basketball games last season, 57-37 in the boys game and 52-42 in the girls. In the spirit competition, North Central retained the shoes for the ninth consecutive season.

This season, the NC boys are 2-2 while Shadle is 1-4. The Highlanders girls are 2-3 and NC is 0-4.

The "Stinky Sneaker" games between Central Valley and University is Feb. 3 at Eastern Washington.

Idaho women's basketball falters late in loss at Utah State

Dec. 13—LOGAN, Utah — The Idaho women's basketball team stumbled down the stretch and lost step with Utah State, which finally broke free from a back-and-forth game.

The Vandals lost 80-73 to the Aggies on Saturday at Dee Glen Smith Spectrum in a nonconference matchup that featured 17 lead changes. But Idaho (8-4) shot 2 of 9 from the field over the final three minutes, allowing the Aggies (4-5) to break open a tightly contested game.

Idaho was paced by a trio of standout guards. Ana Pinheiro had 18 points and eight rebounds. Hope Hassmann totaled 14 points, eight assists and six rebounds, and Kyra Gardner logged 14 points and 10 rebounds.

The Vandals outrebounded Utah State 46-38 (19-8 offensively), leading to 17 more shot attempts than the Aggies. But Idaho shot 37.7% from the field, 9 of 36 (25%) from 3-point range, while Utah State hit 48.3% of its attempts. Guard Aaliyah Gayles led Utah State with 18 points and nine boards.

Beers scores 22 to lead No. 9 Oklahoma over No. 23 Oklahoma State 92-70 for 10th straight win

Syndication: The Oklahoman

Oklahoma center Raegan Beers (15) looks to score against Oklahoma State forward Achol Akot (11) during the second half of a Bedlam women’s college basketball game between the OSU Cowgirls and OU Sooners at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025.

NATE BILLINGS/FOR THE OKLAHOMAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Raegan Beers scored 22 points and had 12 rebounds, and No. 9 Oklahoma won its 10th straight by routing No. 23 Oklahoma State 92-70 on Saturday afternoon.

Sahara Williams scored 18 points and Aaliyah Chavez and Zya Vann added 15 each for the Sooners (11-1), who won their seventh straight in the series. The in-state rivals played annually before Oklahoma left the Big 12 for the Southeastern Conference ahead of last season.

Oklahoma shot 51.3% from the field and scored at least 90 points for the eighth straight game. All five Sooners starters scored in double figures.

Micah Gray scored 22 points and Jadyn Wooten added 15 for the Cowgirls (10-2), who had won five straight. Oklahoma State shot just 37.8% from the field and 28.1% from 3-point range.

Vann’s 3-pointer at the end of the first quarter gave the Sooners a 21-20 lead.

In the second quarter, Oklahoma State coach Jacie Hoyt disagreed with a foul call against the Cowgirls on a breakaway layup attempt by Oklahoma, then hounded the official until she was called for a technical foul. Chavez, the Sooners’ leading scorer for the season, made both free throws — her first two points of the game — to give Oklahoma a 38-28 lead with just under three minutes left in the first half.

The Sooners led 42-37 at halftime, despite Chavez producing only four points before the break.

Oklahoma opened the game up with a 30-point third quarter to take a 72-56 lead into the fourth. Williams scored eight points and Chavez scored seven in the quarter. The Sooners made 13 of 21 field goals in the period and had 10 assists on 13 made field goals.

Up next

Oklahoma State: Hosts Tulsa on Monday.

Oklahoma: Hosts North Carolina Central on Dec. 22.

Charles Barkley on NIL, transfer portal: ‘You should not have the ability to get a better offer every year’

© Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

NBA legend Charles Barkley has not been shy about his thoughts on NIL and the transfer portal. During Saturday’s Kentucky vs. Indiana broadcast, he candidly discussed the landscape again.

Barkley called the game on ESPN alongside Dick Vitale, the first of two games they will work together. Vitale called for “stability” in college basketball – and college sports as a whole – because of the amount of player movement via the portal. He used Indiana as an example since new coach Darian DeVries virtually built the program from scratch.

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While Barkley acknowledged he’s in favor of athletes making money through NIL, he also called out players staying more than their four years of eligibility. In addition, he disagreed with the idea of athletes being allowed to seek better offers after every season.

“No. 1, I’m not opposed to players getting paid,” Barkley said on the broadcast. “I always want my players to get treated fairly. But I can’t remember the last time I heard the word, COVID. Some of these guys have been in college for six or seven years. If you’re in college for six or seven years, your name better be, ‘Dr. Somebody.’ You should not still be playing college basketball after six or seven years.

“But you should not have the ability to get a better offer every year. That’s not fair to any school that you are affiliated with because I can’t even do that. None of us can do that, take a better – Amazon, anybody or FOX Sports can come and say, ‘Well, we’ll give you more money and you can leave after every year.’ That’s not fair. … We’ve got to put some guardrails on these sports.”

One of the other new parts of the college basketball landscape is G-League players seeking eligibility. The NCAA has changed its approach regarding players who played in the G-League, arguing they were not professional athletes in a way the old rule said. Instead, if those players are within five years of their high school graduation, they could become eligible unless they went through the NBA Draft process or signed an NBA contract.

To Charles Barkley, that’s another area that needs fixing. He does not think former G-League players should be able to play college basketball.

“We’ve got guys playing in the G-League coming back to college sports now,” he said. “I don’t think that’s fair.”

Charles Barkley on NIL, transfer portal: ‘You should not have the ability to get a better offer every year’

© Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

NBA legend Charles Barkley has not been shy about his thoughts on NIL and the transfer portal. During Saturday’s Kentucky vs. Indiana broadcast, he candidly discussed the landscape again.

Barkley called the game on ESPN alongside Dick Vitale, the first of two games they will work together. Vitale called for “stability” in college basketball – and college sports as a whole – because of the amount of player movement via the portal. He used Indiana as an example since new coach Darian DeVries virtually built the program from scratch.

SUBSCRIBE to the On3 NIL and Sports Business Newsletter

While Barkley acknowledged he’s in favor of athletes making money through NIL, he also called out players staying more than their four years of eligibility. In addition, he disagreed with the idea of athletes being allowed to seek better offers after every season.

“No. 1, I’m not opposed to players getting paid,” Barkley said on the broadcast. “I always want my players to get treated fairly. But I can’t remember the last time I heard the word, COVID. Some of these guys have been in college for six or seven years. If you’re in college for six or seven years, your name better be, ‘Dr. Somebody.’ You should not still be playing college basketball after six or seven years.

“But you should not have the ability to get a better offer every year. That’s not fair to any school that you are affiliated with because I can’t even do that. None of us can do that, take a better – Amazon, anybody or FOX Sports can come and say, ‘Well, we’ll give you more money and you can leave after every year.’ That’s not fair. … We’ve got to put some guardrails on these sports.”

One of the other new parts of the college basketball landscape is G-League players seeking eligibility. The NCAA has changed its approach regarding players who played in the G-League, arguing they were not professional athletes in a way the old rule said. Instead, if those players are within five years of their high school graduation, they could become eligible unless they went through the NBA Draft process or signed an NBA contract.

To Charles Barkley, that’s another area that needs fixing. He does not think former G-League players should be able to play college basketball.

“We’ve got guys playing in the G-League coming back to college sports now,” he said. “I don’t think that’s fair.”

Magic fall to Knicks as Orlando’s NBA Cup run ends

LAS VEGAS — When discussing his team’s keys to success ahead of Saturday’s NBA Cup semifinal against the Knicks, Magic coach Jamahl Mosley had one name on the top of his list to try to slow down:

New York All-NBA guard Jalen Brunson.

The Magic failed to accomplish their goal as Brunson posted 40 points in a 132-120 victory over Orlando at T-Mobile Arena.

Although Jalen Suggs (26 points), Paolo Banchero (25) and Desmond Bane (18) combined for 69 points, New York had Karl-Anthony Towns (29 points) and OG Anunoby (24) total 53 in addition to Brunson.

Neither side took good care of the ball. The Magic scored 21 points off 12 takeaways and the Knicks tallied 17 off 14 Orlando turnovers.

The New York win ties the regular-season series at 2-2, with Orlando dropping a second game to the Knicks in less than a week. The Magic fell by six on Sunday on the road.

While the Knicks (18-7) advance to Tuesday’s Cup championship to face the winner of Saturday’s late Spurs-Thunder game, the Magic (15-11) will have multiple days off before they travel to Denver for a Thursday game.

Super Suggs

It’s not hard to imagine where the Magic would have been without a strong offensive showing from Suggs in the first two quarters.

The Magic guard went mano a mano with Brunson as each guard notched 25 points in the first half. Suggs scored 10 in the opening frame and added 15 in the second as he missed just five shots from the floor.

Often putting his body on the line, Suggs provided a spark for Orlando early but scored only one point in the final two quarters.

He appeared to move slowly in the second half and went to the locker room with 7:35 left in the game. The Magic said he was questionable to return due to a sore left hip and he did not make his way back.

Rest of starters

While Suggs got going early, the same couldn’t be said for Banchero, who missed his first four shots from beyond the arc and had eight points at the half.

Banchero added eight points in the third quarter and nine in the finale frame but wasn’t efficient from distance (0 for 7) and had five turnovers.

Besides Suggs, Bane was Orlando’s only other double-digit scorer in the first half (11 points) as he hit his first 3 and drove regularly to the basket. But he picked up his third foul with about two minutes left in the second quarter and fouled out with just over a minute remaining in the game.

Wendell Carter Jr. hit a pair of 3-pointers as he scored 14 points in 35 minutes.

Starting in place of Franz Wagner (left high ankle sprain) for a second game in a row, Anthony Black struggled. He shot 1 for 6 from 3 and turned the ball over four times.

Rookie watch

Jase Richardson checked into the game after Suggs exited midway through the fourth quarter.

The No. 25 pick made his first pair of buckets, including a 3-pointer that brought Orlando within six points of the Knicks with under five minutes to play.

Richardson took advantage of his late action, posting nine points in 8 minutes with two assists and a rebound.

Jalen Brunson scores 40 points, Knicks advance to NBA Cup Final with win vs. Magic

This isn’t the banner the Knicks envisioned chasing this season–but after a 132-120 quarterfinal victory over the Orlando Magic on Tuesday, the NBA Cup is within reach. And recent, limited history says competing for the In-Season Tournament banner gives you a head start in chasing the real thing later down the line.

In 2023, the first year of the Cup, the Los Angeles Lakers defeated the Indiana Pacers to claim the league’s inaugural in-season trophy. The Pacers went on to make an Eastern Conference Finals appearance the following spring, and coming a Tyrese Haliburton Game 7 injury away from a Cinderella ending last season.

In the Cup’s second year, the Milwaukee Bucks defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder. That Thunder team responded by winning its first NBA championship later that same season, outlasting Indiana in the 2025 Finals.

Now it’s Year 3 of the league’s newest experiment — and the pattern is no longer coincidence.

After two straight quarterfinal exits, the Knicks are one of the final two teams standing in Las Vegas. They defeated the Toronto Raptors in the quarterfinal on Tuesday then punched their ticket to the NBA Cup Final agains the Magic on Saturday night.

And just like that, they’ve joined a short list of teams with a 50 percent chance of doing something much bigger next.

The New York Knicks are for real. They entered the season with championship aspirations, and a third of the way through the year, they’re finally beginning  look the part. And while an In-Season Tournament banner was never the target, competing for one has given the world a glimpse into the heights this team’s ceiling has pushed toward this year.

“I was one of those guys when they came up with the Cup idea, I was like, ‘Oh, man, for what? In the middle of the season? We are trying to do this and that and practice and blah, blah, blah,” head coach Mike Brown recalled after practice on Friday. “It’s a fantastic experience for everybody. You really applaud how the NBA has tried to continue to find ways to make this more meaningful across the board. So it’s a pleasure to be here.”

So the Knicks look the part. Jalen Brunson looks the part, too.

Brown has been vocal about wanting his All-Star point guard to finally receive MVP consideration. Performances like the one Brunson delivered Saturday make it impossible to have the conversation without him.

The Knicks’ captain dissected an Orlando defense specifically built to grind him down — a physical, switch-heavy unit designed to make every touch uncomfortable. Instead, Brunson made it look easy: 40 points and eight assists on 16-of-27 shooting from the field in New York’s highest-pressure game of the season.

“Yeah, [the Magic] are really physical. That’s what [Orlando’s head coach, Jamahl Mosley] prides himself on. The way that they have been able to do it makes them very successful,” Brunson told reporters after practice on Friday. “There’s a lot of ways you combat it. Obviously with physicality. But I would move it, with space and transition, getting stops and running. I think no matter what, they are going to play their solid basketball. We have to play ours and do it to the best of our abilities.”

Karl-Anthony Towns finished with 29 points and eight rebounds, and OG Anunoby added 24 points on 8-of-13 shooting from the field, as the Knicks advanced to a 17-0 record in games they lead after three quarters.

Jalen Suggs scored 26 points for the Orlando Magic but left in the second half due to injury. Paolo Banchero scored 25 points, and Desmond Bane added 18, but the Magic couldn’t match New York’s firepower with both teams missing key contributors on the injury report. Miles McBride is nursing an ankle injury, and Landry Shamet is recovering from a shoulder sprain, while fringe All-Star Franz Wagner remains out with a high ankle sprain of his own.

Now it’s one more game in Las Vegas against the best of the West. The NBA Cup is beginning to be a true playoff preview, and the Knicks are living up to the early billing they can compete for their first title in decades this season.

RCTC men's basketball team heats up in win over Hibbing

Dec. 13—ROCHESTER — The Rochester Community and Technical College men's basketball team used a balanced effort to get past Minnesota North College-Hibbing 87-56 on Friday night.

RCTC moved to 5-6 with the win, while Hibbing is 2-10.

Tycen Vig led the Yellowjackets with 16 points. Carson Brown had 15 and Sam Hemrey came off the bench to score 14.

Charlie Morning and Josh Fiecke both had 10.

RCTC blistered from 3-point range, hitting 9 of 17 tries. Morning was 3-for-5.

Before yesterdayMain stream

Oziyah Sellers’ 3-point surge, Zuby Ejiofor’s blocks help St. John’s shake off slow start in win vs. Iona

In the early stages of its non-conference schedule, defense was the biggest problem for No. 22 St. John’s.

But over the last three games, the work-in-progress Red Storm have shown they’re not immune to cold stretches on offense, either.

That remained the case in Saturday afternoon’s 91-64 win over Iona at Madison Square Garden, as St. John’s (6-3) started just 1-for-13 from the field and at one point went more than seven minutes between baskets.

The Red Storm trailed underdog Iona, 10-2, more than five minutes into Saturday’s matinee, and they committed five turnovers in the game’s first seven minutes.

They missed 11 consecutive shots between the 19:38 and 12:30 marks of the opening half, with a Zuby Ejiofor lay-up finally ending the drought.

St. John’s rolled from there, taking the lead for good with a Lefteris Liotopoulos 3-pointer with 10:42 remaining before halftime.

That was part of an 18-2 run by the Johnnies, whose defense mostly handled the sharp-shooting but undersized Gaels.

But Saturday’s slow start followed a Nov. 26 loss to Auburn in which St. John’s managed only five points in the final 4:50 regulation; and last weekend’s 63-58 win over Ole Miss in which the Red Storm shot 34% from the field.

Helping to keep Iona (8-4) in check was Ejiofor, who recorded eights blocks, matching the career high he set in the Red Storm’s previous game against Ole Miss.

Ejiofor flirted with a triple-double, finishing with six points and 10 rebounds.

St. John’s led, 36-26, at halftime, but Iona cut into the deficit early in the second half behind a torrid stretch from leading scorer C.J. Anthony.

Anthony scored on three of four possessions, including a deep 3-pointer that made it a 48-44 game with 14:22 left in regulation.

But Oziyah Sellers answered with a 3-pointer on the next St. John’s possession, and he drilled another less than three minutes later that put the Johnnies up, 58-44.

Sellers led the Johnnies with 19 points on 7-of-13 shooting, including 4-of-7 on 3-pointers. He made all four 3-pointers in the second half.

The performance marked a bounce back for the senior Sellers, who totaled only 11 points over the previous two games after averaging 21.0 in the two before that.

Bryce Hopkins and Joson Sanon added 13 points apiece Saturday for the Red Storm.

For the first time since the season opener, sophomore Ian Jackson — a former five-star recruit from the Bronx — started for St. John’s.

Jackson, a gifted scorer who spent his freshman season at North Carolina, opened the game at point guard. He started 2-of-8 with five turnovers before getting going late in the second half after the other starters had been removed. Jackson finished 14 points on 4-of-11 shooting to go with five rebounds, three assists and three steals.

Saturday marked Rick Pitino’s first time facing the Gaels since he left Iona to become the St. John’s head coach in March 2023.

Pitino coached Iona, a small school in New Rochelle, for three seasons from 2020-22 and led the Gaels to two NCAA Tournament appearances.

Earlier in the week, Pitino shared his appreciation for Iona, which gave him his first NCAA job since he was fired from Louisville in 2017 amid a federal investigation into fraud and corruption in the sport. Pitino was cleared by the Independent Accountability Resolution Process (IARP) in 2022.

“I have tremendous affection for Iona, obviously, for a lot of reasons,” Pitino said.

St. John’s is set to face its first Big East opponent of the season on Tuesday night when it hosts DePaul at Carnesecca Arena.

Good Morning, Illini Nation: Update on Ty Rodgers

Dec. 13—Illinois has already played through essentially one-third of the 2025-26 regular season, with Saturday's game against Nebraska the 11th of 31 scheduled. Ty Rodgers, meanwhile, is still in the pre-basketball activities portion of his recovery from offseason knee surgery.

"He's getting closer to being able to gain enough strength back in the leg," Illinois coach Brad Underwood said before Friday afternoon's practice at State Farm Center. "He had some atrophy and things that were just repercussions of the surgery. They want to get it back to a certain level of strength. Then start doing some basketball-related stuff.

"He's doing some light jogging. He's got a basketball in his hands, shooting some shots and some of those things. The explosive stuff he hasn't done yet, but he's getting much, much closer to that. We feel really, really positive where that's at and what his progress is to this point."

Will Rodgers be available at any point this season? It's a scenario Underwood said he didn't want to speculate about at this time.

"I wouldn't want to put any guesses out there, so to speak," the Illinois coach said. "There's the physical. There's the mental. There's a ways to go in that. Let's get him in practice and see what that looks like. I'm not going to speculate on what that might look like yet. It's probably way too early. Just happy that he's making the right progress and headed in the right direction where he's getting close to doing some basketball stuff."

CMR bests Glacier girls in season opener

Dec. 13—Kiera Mapes and Ella Cron combined for 25 points to lift Great Falls CMR past the Glacier girls 70-40 on Friday evening in AA girls basketball at the Wolf Den.

Glacier's Karley Allen finished with 18 points, sinking three 3-pointers, but an early deficit proved to be too much.

CMR wasted no time setting the tone. They forced early turnovers and that led to multiple transition points and a 20-5 first quarter lead.

Glacier responded in the second quarter, settling more into the offense and improving their ball movement. Behind Allen and Olivia Warriner the Wolfpack closed the half on a 8-0 run, trailing 35-20 into the break.

The Rustlers opened the third quarter on a 7-0 run to remove any doubt. Nine different CMR players scored.

Glacier coach Amanda Cram emphasized growth over the final score. With injuries and several players stepping into varsity roles for the first time, she viewed the night as part of the process.

"We knew that this was going to be, in some respect, a rebuilding year," Cram said. "We brought a lot of kids up who weren't even on JV, and I'm proud of their effort."

Cram pointed to the team's willingness to adjust and learn throughout the game, particularly against a physical and seasoned opponent.

"I thought they made the adjustments that I wanted them to make, and we tried different things. It certainly was a night that we learned."

CMR 20 15 21 14 — 70

Glacier 5 15 11 9 — 40

GREAT FALLS CMR — Steely Stubblefield 1 0-0 2, Sophia Couno 0 0-2 0, Carina Kainza 3 0-0 9, Rilee Maves 3 2-4 8, Rylee Virts 0 0-0 0, Mia Larson 0 0-0 0, Kiera Mapes 5 2-3 13, Kenna Christensen 2 0-0 5, Zoe Holm 1 2-2 4, Kayla Schultz 3 2-3 9, Ella Cron 5 2-2 12, Madaline Stump 3 0-0 8. Totals 27 10-16 70.

GLACIER — Nika Wangerin 2 0-0 4, Lucy Holloway 1 0-0 2, Karley Allen 5 5-6 18, Miley Fritz 0 0-0 0, Remi Osler 3 1-1 7, Olivia Warriner 2 1-2 6, Alauna Hagen 0 1-2 1, Ava Grady 0 0-0 0, Addison Brisendine 0 0-0 0, Clara Ahner 1 0-0 2. Totals 14 7-11 40.

3-point field goals — CMR 6 (Kainza 1, Mapes 1, Christensen 1, Schultz 1, Stump 2) Glacier 4 (Allen 3, Warriner 1) Fouls — CMR 14, Glacier 13.

Bison girls pull second half comeback over Bravettes

Dec. 13—The Bravettes started strong, but the Bison finished stronger.

Mia Cerna scored 12 points, including eight in the final quarter and Great Falls overcame a 14-point second half deficit to down Flathead 42-39 in AA girls basketball Friday in the Boyle Gym at Flathead High School.

Flathead (0-1) had two chances to send the game to overtime as Grace Gall's 3-pointer rattled off the rim, but a travel from Great Falls (1-0) gave the Bravettes 3.1 seconds to put up another shot.

Reese Rosenberg had a good look from the top of the key, but it rimmed out and the Bison escaped with the victory.

"We had some really good rotations defensively," Bravettes coach Kaylee Fox said. "I think down the stretch we got a little bit tired, our legs got a little bit tired, and we lost a couple people in our half-court defense."

Kendall Gonser added 11 points for Great Falls, eight of those coming in the second half.

Freshman Brynn Kossman led the Bravettes with 10 points. Kossman joins Flathead as a transfer from Eureka; she featured prominently for the Lions a season ago as an eighth-grader.

Kossman knocked down a pair of free throws early in the third quarter to put Flathead up 27-13, but then Bravettes junior Caitlin Converse left the game with a quad injury and Great Falls seized control. Converse had nine points in the game.

"Caitlin not only is a great ballhandler, but she's also a leader for us, so just not having her voice on the court was an impact," Fox said.

Fox was unsure if Converse will play in Saturday's game against CMR. Tip-off is set for 2 p.m. in the Boyle Gym.

A 15-1 Bison run tied things at 28 late in the third quarter. Gall knocked down a shot to restore Flathead's lead just before the buzzer, 30-28. The sophomore forward ended with nine points.

"Down the stretch, I think we just had a few possessions where we rushed shots," Fox said. "They were pressing us, sped us up a little bit, we would like to have those possessions back and have better opportunities to run the clock a little bit."

Early in the fourth Cerna hit a triple to put the Bison ahead 33-32, their first lead since it was 5-4 midway through the first.

Gall answered with a triple of her own and Flathead led 35-33.

Great Falls went on a 6-2 spurt, capped by a Gonser bucket, to lead 41-37.

Kossman finished inside for Flathead before Cerna added a free throw with 19 seconds left.

Fox felt that her team showed a lot of promise for the season.

"I thought there were a lot of really good things that happened tonight," Fox said. "I thought our girls played really hard and we learned a lot of lessons from playing in this close game and playing a very physical team."

Great Falls 7 5 16 14 — 42

Flathead 14 9 7 9 — 39

GREAT FALLS — Annika Clemons 0 0-0 0, Margaret Schultz 5 0-0 10, Ashley Little 0 0-0 0, Tatum Swingley 0 0-0 0, Scarlet Harris 0 0-0 0, Paetyn Mora 2 2-2 7, Kendall Gonser 3 4-8 11, Harper Dirk 1 0-5 2, Taylee Hodke 0 0-0 0, Mia Cerna 3 4-6 12, Aza Trombley 0 0-0 0. Totals 14 10-21 42.

FLATHEAD — Reese Rosenberg 1 0-0 2, Makenna Aldrich 1 0-2 2, Teagan Flint 0 0-0 0, Gracie Mae Kilmer 0 0-0 0, Tayler Greene 1 1-5 3, Caitlin Converse 3 2-2 9, Cheyenne Heino 0 0-0 0, Grace Gall 3 2-8 9, Makenna Korf 1 0-0 2, Lexi Herion 1 0-0 2, Brynn Kossman 2 6-6 10. Totals 13 11-23 39.

3-point goals — Great Falls 3 (Cerna 2, Mora, Gosmer). Flathead 2 (Gall, Converse). Fouls — Great Falls 21, Flathead 19. Fouled out — Harris, Aldrich.

What channel is Gonzaga vs. UCLA on? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch men's college basketball game

Braden Huff

What channel is Gonzaga vs. UCLA on? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch men's college basketball game originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Saturday's Seattle Hoops Showdown will be a highly anticipated matchup between No. 8 Gonzaga and No. 25 UCLA.

Gonzaga has won nine of its first 10 games, suffering its only loss of the season against Michigan at the Players Era Championship on Nov. 26. The Bulldogs defeated Kentucky and North Florida last weekend and moved up multiple spots in the latest AP poll.

The Bruins have gotten off to a strong start in Big Ten play, registering victories over Washington and Oregon. UCLA will be looking for its first ranked win on Saturday night.

Here is everything you need to know about Gonzaga vs. UCLA, including TV and streaming options for the college basketball game.

What channel is Gonzaga vs. UCLA on?

Gonzaga vs. UCLA will air nationally on ESPN. College basketball fans can also stream the game on the ESPN app and Fubo, which is currently offering a free trial.

Now you can watch ESPN without cable. Stream live NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL and college sports, plus "SportsCenter," "First Take" and all your favorite ESPN shows — anytime, anywhere — only in the new ESPN app.

What channel is Alabama vs. Arizona on? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch men's college basketball game

Koa Peat

What channel is Alabama vs. Arizona on? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch men's college basketball game originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

No. 1 Arizona and No. 12 Alabama are getting ready to go head-to-head in the 2025 C.M. Newton Classic.

The Crimson Tide have gotten off to a strong start so far with impressive victories over St. John's and Illinois. Alabama has a chance to extend its current winning streak to five games by beating Arizona.

The top-ranked Wildcats are hoping to keep their perfect record intact. They are coming off a dominant performance against Auburn, marking their fourth ranked win of the season.

Here is everything you need to know about Alabama vs. Arizona, including TV and streaming options for the college basketball game.

What channel is Alabama vs. Arizona on?

Alabama vs. Arizona will air nationally on ESPN. College basketball fans can also stream the game on the ESPN app and Fubo, which is currently offering a free trial.

Now you can watch ESPN without cable. Stream live NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL and college sports, plus "SportsCenter," "First Take" and all your favorite ESPN shows — anytime, anywhere — only in the new ESPN app.

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