Article

Houston Cougars loss to Arizona reveals the ultimate NCAA tournament … — and more

Houston Cougars loss to Arizona reveals the ultimate NCAA tournament concern

With back-to-back losses against top-teams the talk is now on, can the Cougars bounce back before March?

UND fails to weather final storm as St. Thomas bursts ahead in fourth quarter to victory

Feb. 21—GRAND FORKS — St. Thomas sophomore guard Laura Hauge hit a 3-pointer, turned to the bench with a wide grin and pointed a finger at her celebrating teammates.

It was her second triple of the fourth quarter, and the Tommies' third in less than three minutes.

UND head coach Dennis Hutter called a timeout.

"Clip that!" yelled graduate guard Jada Hood as St. Thomas gathered courtside.

The Fighting Hawks had weathered storms early in the second and third quarters. They entered the fourth trailing by five.

The flurry of 3-pointers, though, gave St. Thomas an 12-point lead, which proved too much to overcome.

The Tommies (14-14, 7-7) kept the Hawks at bay down the stretch for a 70-58 win Saturday afternoon at the Betty Engelstad Sioux Center.

"I think we had a little bit of miscommunication, in conversion especially," sophomore guard Sydney Piekny said. "Getting ball side and getting to those shooters. But that's the way the game goes. We've got to adjust to that and we've got to get there faster. That really turned out to be the swing at the end of the game that pushed them away."

UND shot 4-for-5 from beyond the arc in the first quarter to overcome a 9-0 start by St. Thomas and carry a 16-14 lead into the second.

However, the Hawks made just one triple through the next two quarters. They shot 7-for-21 from 3-point range overall.

"They really just started trailing us out," Piekny said. "Hard switches, just trying to make it difficult for us to even get the ball. And we've got to adjust to that, we've got to find other ways to score, whether that's back cutting, changing our pace."

The Tommies shot 18-for-29 inside the arc to UND's 12-for-23. Sophomore Mikayla Werner scored 17 points without a single 3-pointer, shooting 7-for-9 from the field.

Senior guard Faith Feuerbach led St. Thomas by shooting 8-for-13 for 21 points.

The Tommies negated senior center Walker Demers' interior presence. Consistently hounded by double teams, she finished with five turnovers and shot 1-for-3 for two points.

"They made life tough for her," Hutter said. "They were doing a lot of things to take her away. Some teams have fronted her to make her life tough. Tonight, they doubled her and stunted her a little bit."

Graduate guard Mackenzie Hughes scored 19 points and was the only Hawk who scored in double figures.

When the Tommies opened the second quarter with a 9-2 run and eventually stretched their lead to nine, Hughes put in a layup and hit two free throws in the final two minutes for a more manageable deficit.

"She's the most fun player to watch," Piekny said. "I spot up in the corner and I just get a firsthand view of her drive going downhill. She's a pretty special player."

UND faced another weighty deficit near the end of the third quarter.

St. Thomas stretched its advantage to 10 points, though a triple from Piekny and a couple of free throws from graduate forward Hanna Miller in the final two minutes sliced the lead in half.

"We had to weather it again, because we didn't come out of the gate in the third quarter very well again," Hutter said. "We get down early, and we're always playing from behind. That's just something that we're struggling with is we're down (9-0 in the first quarter) before I had to call that timeout. It just takes twice as much effort, in my opinion, to come back as it does to hold and maintain a lead. ... It'd be nice if we could get off to a fast start once in a while here and get up 8-0, 8-2, 10-4 or something like that, where we don't have to withstand that kind of energy."

UND fell to 7-21 overall and 3-11 in Summit League play. The Hawks host South Dakota for Senior Night on Wednesday before closing out the regular season at North Dakota State on Saturday.

Suns beat Magic in double overtime on Jalen Green's buzzer-beating 3-pointer

An additional 10 minutes were needed to decide a winner between the No. 7 seeds in the East and West when the Magic met the Suns inside Mortgage Matchup Center on Saturday night.

Both Phoenix and Orlando took double-digit leads in regulation but found themselves tied at 96 following four quarters of action and then tied again at 103 after the first five-minute overtime period.

Ultimately, it was the Suns who finished on top in double overtime, 113-110, thanks to a Jalen Green buzzer-beating corner 3-pointer.

With 56 seconds left in regulation, Anthony Black stole the ball away from Grayson Allen and dunked it on the other end to tie the game at 96 and eventually force overtime. Paolo Banchero (26 points) tied the game at 103 with a driving dunk with just over a minute left in the first overtime period.

After Jevon Carter sunk a corner 3 to tie the game at 110 with 1.1 seconds left in the second overtime period, Green punched right back and delivered a thrilling victory for Phoenix.

The Suns did a solid job of taking advantage of extra opportunities, holding a 23-13 edge in second-chance scoring with 22 offensive rebounds. Phoenix also scored 22 points off 16 Orlando turnovers.

While the Suns (33-24) were without Devin Booker (right hip strain), the Magic were missing Jalen Suggs (back spasms) and Franz Wagner (left high ankle sprain injury management).

The Magic (29-26) have a quick turnaround, traveling to Los Angeles to take on the Clippers on Sunday night.

The Bane event

Desmond Bane came out firing, knocking down his first seven shots from the floor, including his first three 3-pointers.

After a 14-point first quarter, the Magic guard kept it up in the second and scored 22 of Orlando’s first 37 points. The 22-point first half was Bane’s eighth 20-point half of the season.

Bane scored in a number of ways, whether it was penetrating the paint, hitting from distance or getting to the free-throw line. He scored 30-plus points for the eighth time this season.

Bane, however, fouled out less than a minute into the first overtime.

Banchero boost

After a 1-for-5 start from the floor in the first quarter, Banchero scored seven points in the second quarter to have 11 by the half.

Banchero added 14 rebounds and eight assists to go with four blocks.

Carter’s contribution

Carter scored in double figures for a second game in a row while coming off the bench first for Orlando again.

Despite starting 1 for 6 from 3-point range, Carter scored 12 points in his first 14 minutes.

He added two rebounds, two assists, two steals and two blocks.

Phoenix’s bench outscored Orlando’s 58-28.

Suggs update

Magic coach Jamahl Mosley said before the game that Suggs’ back was “bothering him a little bit” during the practice before Thursday’s game at Sacramento.

Suggs still played 20 minutes against the Kings, registering nine points, three rebounds and three assists with three turnovers, but he only saw nine minutes of action in the second half.

“He went into the game and you could just see him kind of laboring a little bit as the game went on,” Mosley said. “And I think after halftime it tightened up on him. So, that’s what’s kind of giving him problems.”

Rivalry reset: Delaney Gibb’s career-high 37 carry BYU to season sweep of Utah

BYU Cougars guard Delaney Gibb (11) drives past Utah Utes guard LA Sneed (2) at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. Gibb scored 37 points in the game.
BYU Cougars guard Delaney Gibb (11) drives past Utah Utes guard LA Sneed (2) at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. Gibb scored 37 points in the game. | Laura Seitz, Deseret News

Delaney Gibb saw red Saturday afternoon, and in the process, she led the BYU women’s basketball team past Utah 86-74 at the Huntsman Center.

The win gave the Cougars a season sweep of the Utes after BYU won by 12 in Provo three weeks ago.

Gibb’s career-high 37 points were largely the storyline of Saturday’s matchup, as most other details branched off from her heat check of a contest.

“When she gets that ball going, the basket gets enormous, and that’s what happened today,” BYU coach Lee Cummard said. “I mean, she even banked one in today, but I’ve seen it quite a few times, whether it’s in high school, in club basketball, and I mean, now twice in two seasons up here in the Huntsman Center.

“I don’t know what it is about when she sees red, but she’s been pretty good the last two times up here, so it was fun to watch.”

Gibb’s most impressive stretch of the game came in the fourth quarter.

Utah, despite a slump to start the third quarter, had clawed back within 10 at 62-52 with 7:47 to play.

Coming out of a timeout, though, Gibb nailed a 3-pointer, then she proceeded to make two more on the Cougars’ next couple of possessions.

That pushed the lead back to 17, and Utah could never close within single digits in the final period.

For good measure, Gibb banked in a running 3 later with the shot clock winding down to push the lead back to 78-65.

“Delaney Gibb is one of the best players in the (Big 12) conference, and we didn’t do a good enough job breaking her out of her rhythm,” Utah coach Gavin Petersen said.

“And that’s a credit to her. I’ve been on the other end of these games where Gianna Kneepkens or Kennady McQueen goes for the same amount. When somebody’s feeling it, it’s hard, and when she banked in that 3, it was a backbreaker for us.”

“When somebody’s feeling it, it’s hard, and when she banked in that 3, it was a backbreaker for us.”

Utah coach Gavin Petersen

As Cummard referenced, Gibb isn’t unfamiliar to having big games at the Huntsman — her previous career-high in points came last season when she scored 36 in an overtime loss to Utah.

In that game, Gibb turned the ball over on BYU’s final possession before Maty Wilke nailed a half-court heave to win the thriller.

Gibb got redemption this time, though.

She shot 13 of 21 from the field, including 5 of 8 from 3-point range, while adding five rebounds, five assists, two blocked shots and two steals.

“I just was put in positions to be successful,” Gibb said. “We were joking before the game, my high school colors were red and I love the color red, so we were joking that when I see the stands and it’s all red, I love it, but it’s just a high-energy game, and I think that I just feed off that.

“I’m super competitive. Props to my teammates, they did a great job of finding me early and giving me easy opportunities in the in the first half, which kind of got me rolling.”

0221bkwutes.spt_LS_005.JPG
BYU Cougars guard Delaney Gibb (11) drives past Utah Utes guard la Sneed (2) at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. Gibb scored 37 points in the game. | Laura Seitz, Deseret News
0221bkwutes.spt_LS_0001.JPG
Utah Utes guard Grace Foster (10) center gets fouled by BYU Cougars guard Kambree Barber (14) at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. | Laura Seitz, Deseret News
0221bkwutes.spt_LS_0002.JPG
Utah Utes guard Avery Hjelmstad (1) against BYU Cougars center Lara Rohkohl (13) and guard Delaney Gibb (11) at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. | Laura Seitz, Deseret News
0221bkwutes.spt_LS_003.JPG
BYU Cougars guard Delaney Gibb (11) drives past Utah Utes guard la Sneed (2) at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. Gibb scored 37 points in the game. | Laura Seitz, Deseret News
0221bkwutes.spt_LS_004.JPG
BYU Cougars guard Delaney Gibb runs off court after BYU beat the Utah Utes at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. Gibb scored 37 points in the game. | Laura Seitz, Deseret News

Both teams battled back and forth through the first half, as BYU opened up a nine-point lead in the second quarter before Utah (17-11, 8-8 Big 12) trimmed it back to two points.

The Cougars (18-10, 7-9 Big 12) ended the first half with a 5-0 spurt over the final 45 seconds to make it 36-29 at the break, and that started a critical stretch that played a major role in determining the outcome.

Building off that last-minute second-quarter run, BYU scored seven quick points to start the third. Lara Rohkohl hit two shots inside, and Kambree Barber hit a 3 after a Utah turnover, making the score 43-29 before fans had settled back into their seats after intermission.

“I think we did a really great job of executing in the third quarter on defense, and that really led to easy transition buckets on offense,” Gibb said.

“I think that was kind of a difference-maker, just making them take tough shots, getting a quick outlet and just pushing the ball.”

The Cougars ended up with a 10-1 edge in fast-break points while outshooting the Utes 53.7% to 33.3% and holding Utah to 8 of 28 from 3-point range.

BYU continued to pile on during that early third-quarter stretch, eventually scoring 15 of the first 16 points of the period as it pushed its lead as high as 21 points at 51-30.

“The start of the third quarter was bizarre, because, the players we had on the court are usually like, ‘Let’s go,’” Petersen said. “And (BYU) scored quickly, I think, seven straight points, and then we turned the ball over.

“... We can’t compound those mistakes, like if they’re scoring, we turn the ball over, we miss a shot. We just got to be able to kind of stop the bleeding a lot sooner, especially when you’re starting the third quarter at already a deficit. That’s something I think we got to just continue to practice and continue to fight and and try to turn the page there.”

Stretches like that have become an unfortunately common theme for the Utes in recent weeks, as they’ve gone from beating ranked teams like TCU and West Virginia to losing five of their past seven games since that victory over the Mountaineers.

“You gotta push through these losses. We can’t hang our heads on this. We have however many games ahead of us and a (conference) tournament,” Utah senior Lani White said.

“That’s (what) I always try and tell them, to stay where their feet are, because if we look too far ahead, then we don’t focus on the right now, but I mean, we got to take this loss on the chin and just keep pushing.”

While Utah’s defense suffered through repeated breakdowns all afternoon, BYU was able to attack the paint early. The Cougars wound up with a 30-16 edge in points in the paint.

That helped lead to BYU shooting well from the 3-point line in the second half, as the Utes collapsed defensively. The Cougars made 8 of 14 from 3-point range in the final two quarters and were 11 of 24 from long range overall.

“(Attacking the paint) really helped us, and I think it allowed for some of the good shooting that we had,” Cummard said. “I don’t know for sure, (but that) was one of the best 3-point nights that we had field goal percentage-wise.

“A lot of that has to do with Delaney, but we had a kind of approach of we just want to play on an attack.”

Olivia Hamlin hit a pair of 3-pointers and added 11 points, three rebounds, an assist and a steal for BYU, while Sydney Benally (13 points, two assists) also provided a spark offensively.

Rohkohl made an impact on both ends, finishing with 11 points while adding six blocks and five rebounds.

White ended up leading the Utes with 20 points, five rebounds, two blocks and a steal, though she was the only starter to shoot above 50%.

Wilke added 13 points on 4 of 12 shooting and had two assists, while Grace Foster came off the bench to score 10, with eight of those points coming in the fourth quarter as Utah tried to rally.

This was a must-win game for both programs going into the contest in terms of postseason hopes. When BYU beat Utah in Provo three weeks ago, both teams were largely in the NCAA bubble discussion.

Since then, the Cougars had gone 1-4 while the Utes were 2-3.

That kind of slump has pushed both of them into territory where they need to make an impressive run down the stretch to keep their NCAA Tournament hopes alive.

“Let’s go. I mean, at this point in the season, let’s play our way into the tournament. That’s the mindset that I’m going to give them, and that’s what I want from them,” Petersen said.

“I want them to be like, ‘Let’s go.’ That’s why you signed up to come play in these games in this conference at this school, and let’s get after it.”

Both teams hit the road next for critical midweek games against teams in the upper half of the Big 12.

Utah will play at Colorado on Tuesday, while BYU heads to Tempe to take on Arizona State.

For now, BYU can enjoy a win and the sweep over Utah.

“It was a battle,” Cummard said, “and I thought our group was engaged, as we’ve been in recent games.”

Lacey Eden gets 100th goal, Wisconsin hockey moves closer to WCHA title

MADISON – History and a hat trick? It was all in a day’s work for Lacey Eden.

On the way to record her second career hat trick, the senior forward for the Wisconsin women’s hockey team became the fourth player in program history to score 100 goals.

Eden also recorded two assists for her first five-point game.

“It was a really fun game to play,” she said. “I think we played a complete game. We played 60 minutes. They came out pretty hard in the first period and gave us some competition there and we were able to get over that (hump) and just work hard and it showed up on the scoreboard today for us.”

The accomplishment was part of an eventful afternoon for the nation’s No. 1 ranked team.

First and foremost, the Badgers (28-3-2, 22-3-2 WCHA, 69 points) defeated St. Cloud State, 9-2, at LaBahn Arena to move within one victory of the WCHA regular-season title.

And individually Eden wasn’t even the team’s top goal scorer. That distinction went to junior Kelly Gorbatenko, who finished with four goals, two better than her previous single-game high.

A lot of Badgers in the mix. Six players had multi-point performances. Senior Vivian Jungels and junior Laney Potter set single-game career highs with three and four assists, respectively. Freshman Charlotte Piekenhagen scored twice for her first multi-goal game.

Not bad considering when the teams last met Nov. 14 they skated to a 4-4 tie.

UW is 5-2 since its top players left for the Olympics.

“The group that we have right now, they've come together,” Wisconsin coach Mark Johnson said. “Out of the seven games we've played, this was one of their best from start to finish.”

Eden joins Hilary Knight, Brianna Decker and Meghan Duggan as Badgers with 100 goals. Her pursuit of the milestone has been steady this season. She has scored a goal in 18 of 33 games and has put one on the board in nine of the last 11.

Goal No. 100 came off assists from sophomore Emma Venusio and Potter and gave the Badgers a 3-1 edge at the 3-minute 43-second mark of the second period.

Goal No. 2, which proved to be the game-winner, came 20 seconds into the third period and the third goal came at the 10:47 mark.

Eden has much respect for the players in the group she joined.

“Those three are girls that I've looked up to since I was a little kid and I've had the honor to play with two of them,” Eden said. “They've just been such big inspirations for me as a Badger and just throughout my hockey career so it's it's really cool to be on that shortlist with them.”

While Eden has been on a hot streak, Gorbatenko hadn’t scored in six games. Saturday she had the most consequential score of the day when she found the back of the net with less than 1 second to play at the end of the first period.

The power play goal was the difference between leading, 2-1, and 1-1 tie after one period. A flood of goals ensued.

Ohio State’s 6-3 win at Bemidji State on Feb. 21 assured the need for the Badgers to get a win in the season finale, which will begin at 11 a.m. Feb. 22 at LaBahn to win the league title. A loss gives the Buckeyes, who completed their regular season, the tie. An overtime loss would leave the teams tied for first.

The game is expected to be the last the Badgers play without its Olympians, who are expected to return to town Monday.

“It's going to feel like playoff hockey where you just have to do the little things right to kind of just get some momentum going,” Gorbatenko said. “We want that trophy. We know what's at stake.

“The B squad will be ready to go. We've done such like a great job, like with our Olympians gone and been able to hold on the fort. We're just one, one game away from a trophy and so we don't want to let it slip through.”

This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Lacey Eden gets 100th goal, Wisconsin moves closer to WCHA title

In brief

Barkley: KAT doesn't know how to play basketball - TSN Barkley: KAT doesn't know how to play basketball TSN

No. 25 Alabama beats LSU 90-83 for its 6th straight victory BATON ROUGE. La. (AP) — Aiden Holloway scored 17 points, Amari Allen added 16 and No. 25 Alabama beat LSU 90-83 on Saturday for its sixth straight victory.The Crimson Tide (20-7l, 10-4 Southeastern Conference) also beat the Tigers (14-13, 2-12) for the sixth straight time. Alabama, ranked second nationally in

Jalen Green is the first player with a three-point … Jalen Green is the first player with a three-point …