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  • GCU 9 Saint Marys 8 Final

    Team
    Inning
    Score summary
    SMC
    GCU
    2nd Kashimoto,Cody singled through the left side of the infield, RBI (2-0 BB); Nicholson,Micah scored; Mettam,Jared advanced to second base.
    1
    0
    2nd Galvan,Marcus singled to shallow left field, RBI (2-2 BSBK); Penzkover,Gunnar scored from second base; Nielsen,Jarret advanced to second base.
    1
    1
    2nd Sanko,Jake singled to shallow center field, RBI (0-2 KS); Nielsen,Jarret scored from second base; Galvan,Marcus advanced from first base to third base; Sanko,Jake advanced from to second base on a throwing error by Sniffen,Makoa (E3).
    1
    2
    2nd Scaldeferri,Billy singled to left field, 2RBI (1-1 BK); Galvan,Marcus scored; Sanko,Jake scored from second base, unearned.
    1
    4
    3rd Lopez,Jose homered to deep center field (407 ft), 1st of season, RBI (1-2 KSB).
    1
    5
    4th Kashimoto,Cody reached on a fielder’s choice hit to the pitcher’s mound, bunt (0-0); Nicholson,Micah advanced from second base, scored on a fielding error by Lopez,Jose (E5), unearned; Mettam,Jared advanced from first base to third base on error; Kashimoto,Cody advanced to second base on error.
    2
    5
    4th Petit,Brady sacrifice fly to cf, RBI (2-1 FBB); Kashimoto,Cody scored.
    3
    5
    6th Schmidt,Trevor singled through the right side of the infield, RBI (1-1 BF); Penzkover,Gunnar scored; Chacon,Dominic advanced to third base.
    3
    6
    6th Cameron,Griffin advanced to second base on error, on a failed pickoff attempt; Chacon,Dominic scored on a throwing error by Romero,LuisMartin (E1), on a failed pickoff attempt.
    3
    7
    6th Galvan,Marcus doubled down the right field line, RBI (3-1 BBKB); Cameron,Griffin scored from second base.
    3
    8
    6th Scaldeferri,Billy sacrifice fly to lf, RBI (2-0 BB); Galvan,Marcus scored.
    3
    9
    7th Nicholson,Micah singled to center field, RBI (0-0); Armstrong,Ian scored from second base; Nicholson,Micah out at second base, cf to c to 2b.
    4
    9
    8th Petit,Brady doubled to left center, 2RBI (2-1 BKB); Kashimoto,Cody scored from second base; Griffith,Tanner scored from first base.
    6
    9
    8th Johnson,Jacob doubled down the left field line, RBI (2-0 BB); Petit,Brady scored from second base.
    7
    9
    8th Castellanos,Diego grounded into double play, 2b to ss to 1b (1-0 B); Johnson,Jacob scored; Sniffen,Makoa out at 2B on the play, 2b to ss.
    8
    9

    Saint Mary’s

    Player
    Pos
    AB
    R
    H
    RBI
    BB
    IBB
    SO
    LOB
    Griffith, Tanner
    CF 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0
    Petit, Brady
    3B 4 1 1 3 0 0 0 3
    Johnson, Jacob
    LF 4 1 2 1 1 0 0 1
    Sniffen, Makoa
    1B 5 0 1 0 0 0 1 4
    Castellanos, Diego
    RF 4 0 2 0 1 0 0 0
    Armstrong, Ian
    C 4 1 1 0 1 0 0 1
    Nicholson, Micah
    DH 4 2 2 1 1 0 1 2
    Mettam, Jared
    SS 4 0 0 0 1 0 1 0
    Kashimoto, Cody
    2B 5 2 3 1 0 0 0 0
    Staton, Cam
    P
        Waldeck, Noah
    P
    Romero, Luis Martin
    P
    Roberts, David
    P
    Nobles, Jake
    P
    Totals
    38 8 14 6 5 0 3 11
    Batting

    2B: Kashimoto, Cody (1); Petit, Brady (1); Armstrong, Ian (1); Johnson, Jacob (1)
    SF: Petit, Brady (1)

    Baserunning

    SB: Griffith, Tanner (1)
    HBP: Griffith, Tanner (2)

    Fielding

    E: Sniffen, Makoa (1); Romero, Luis Martin (1)

    Grand Canyon

    Player
    Pos
    AB
    R
    H
    RBI
    BB
    IBB
    SO
    LOB
     Sanko, Jake 2B 5 1 3 1 0 0 0 0
     Scaldeferri, Billy RF 3 0 1 3 1 0 1 0
     Sanders, Troy SS 5 0 0 0 0 0 2 4
     Peery, Cannon 1B 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
     Lopez, Jose 3B 4 1 1 1 0 0 0 1
     Penzkover, Gunnar LF 3 2 1 0 1 0 1 0
     Chacon, Dominic DH 3 1 1 0 1 0 1 0
     Nielsen, Jarret CF 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
     Schmidt, Trevor PH 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
     Cameron, Griffin PR/CF 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0
     Galvan, Marcus C 4 2 2 2 0 0 1 0
     Guerrero, Jt P
     McGuire, Tommy P
     Cunnings, Cam P
    Totals
    34 9 10 8 3 0 8 6

    Saint Mary’s

    Player
    IP
    H
    R
    ER
    BB
    SO
    WP
    BK
    HBP
    IBB
    AB
    BF
    FO
    GO
    NP
    Staton, Cam
    3.0 6 5 4 0 2 0 0 1 0 15 16 4 3 51
    Waldeck, Noah
    2.0 2 3 3 1 1 2 0 0 0 9 10 2 4 38
    Romero, Luis Martin
    2.0 1 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 6 7 2 1 25
    Roberts, David
    0.2 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 13
    Nobles, Jake
    0.1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 1 11
    Totals 10 9 8 3 8 2 0 1 0 34 39 8 9 138

    Grand Canyon

    Player
    IP
    H
    R
    ER
    BB
    SO
    WP
    BK
    HBP
    IBB
    AB
    BF
    FO
    GO
    NP
     Guerrero, Jt 6.0 8 3 2 4 2 1 0 1 0 25 31 6 10 99
     McGuire, Tommy 1.0 4 4 4 0 1 0 0 1 0 6 7 0 1 34
     Cunnings, Cam 2.0 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 8 3 2 25
    Totals 14 8 7 5 3 1 0 2 0 38 46 9 13 158
    Loss: Staton, Cam (1-2)
    HBP: Staton, Cam (1) ;  Guerrero, Jt (1)McGuire, Tommy (1)

  • ASU 15 TCU 8 Final game 2 of 3

    03/14/2026
    Phoenix Municipal Stadium
    6:36 PM

    TCU

    11-7, 1-1

    8
    Final
    15

    Arizona State

    13-5, 1-1

    Team
    1st innning 1
    2nd innning 2
    3rd innning 3
    4th innning 4
    5th innning 5
    6th innning 6
    7th innning 7
    8th innning 8
    9th innning 9
    Runs R
    Hits H
    Errors E

    0 1 0 5 0 0 0 2 0 8 10 1

    0 0 9 1 0 3 1 1 X 15 16 1

    Win: Penn, Taylor (3-0)Loss: Davis, Lance (0-3)

    Scoring Summary

    Team
    Inning
    Score summary
    TCU
    ASU
    2nd Franco,Lucas singled to center field, RBI (2-0 BB); Dallimore,Brady scored from second base; Arthur,Jack advanced from first base to third base.
    1
    0
    3rd Moutzouridis,PJ reached on a fielder’s choice hit to third base, RBI (0-2 KFF); Zavorek,Beckett scored; Hairston,Landon out at second base, 3b to 2b.
    1
    1
    3rd Michel,Garrett singled to right center, RBI (1-1 FB); Moutzouridis,PJ scored from second base; Roellig,Austen advanced from first base to third base.
    1
    2
    3rd Longo,Dominic singled to shallow right field, RBI (2-2 BKKFB); Roellig,Austen scored; Michel,Garrett advanced to second base.
    1
    3
    3rd Toigo,Dean singled to right field, RBI (0-0); Michel,Garrett scored from second base; Longo,Dominic advanced from first base to third base.
    1
    4
    3rd Smaldino,Dominic singled to left field, RBI (3-2 KBBFB); Longo,Dominic scored; Toigo,Dean advanced from first base to third base.
    1
    5
    3rd Hairston,Landon homered to deep right field (413 ft), 7th of season, 4RBI (1-2 SKFFB); Toigo,Dean scored; Smaldino,Dominic scored from second base; Briggs,Brody scored from first base.
    1
    9
    4th Arthur,Jack singled to left center, RBI (1-0 B); Gargett,Kyuss scored, unearned; Bell,Jack advanced to second base.
    2
    9
    4th Liddington,Rob singled to left center, 2RBI (0-0); Bell,Jack scored; Arthur,Jack scored from second base; Franco,Lucas advanced to second base.
    4
    9
    4th Strosnider,Sawyer walked, RBI (3-0 BBBB); Franco,Lucas scored; Liddington,Rob advanced to third base; Griffin,Colton advanced to second base.
    5
    9
    4th Cramer,Cole grounded into double play to short, unassisted (2-1 BBK); Liddington,Rob scored, unearned; Griffin,Colton advanced to third base; Strosnider,Sawyer out at 2B on the play, ss to 1b.
    6
    9
    4th Toigo,Dean advanced to second base on a passed ball; Michel,Garrett scored on a passed ball, unearned.
    6
    10
    6th Michel,Garrett homered to deep left field (427 ft), 2nd of season, 2RBI (3-1 FBBB); Roellig,Austen scored from first base.
    6
    12
    6th Toigo,Dean homered to deep left field (400 ft), 7th of season, RBI (1-0 B).
    6
    13
    7th Moutzouridis,PJ sacrifice fly to cf, RBI (1-0 B); Zavorek,Beckett scored, unearned.
    6
    14
    8th Bell,Jack homered to deep center field (399 ft), 1st of season, RBI (2-2 BKSB).
    7
    14
    8th Strosnider,Sawyer singled to shallow center field, RBI (3-2 FBFBFBF); Liddington,Rob scored from second base; Griffin,Colton advanced from first base to third base.
    8
    14
    8th Briggs,Brody sacrifice fly to cf, RBI (3-1 BBBK); Longo,Dominic scored.
    8
    15

  • 2026 World Baseball Classic: Venezuela stuns defending champion Japan, advances to semifinals vs. Italy

    abreu-wbc-getty.png

    Getty Images

    Japan’s World Baseball Classic title defense is over. Saturday night at loanDepot Park in Miami, Venezuela rallied from behind to eliminate Japan (VEN 8, JPN 5) and advance to the semifinals. Venezuela is one step away from Tuesday’s Championship Game and Japan will head home following its worst World Baseball Classic finish ever.

    Saturday’s game started with a bang. Two bangs, actually. Ronald Acuña Jr. and Shohei Ohtani have combined to win the last three NL MVP awards and they opened Saturday’s game with leadoff home runs. Acuña did the honors in the top of the first inning, then Ohtani responded in the bottom half. It’s the first-ever WBC game with two leadoff homers. This, right here, is the good stuff:

    Reigning World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto got hit hard early against Venezuela. Acuña tagged him for the leadoff homer and three of the first six batters he faced had extra-base hits. Yamamoto did eventually settle down, though. He retired nine of the final 10 batters he faced, including five via strikeout. Yamamoto finished with two runs allowed in four innings.

    2026 World Baseball Classic bracket, schedule: Semifinals set after Venezuela’s upset of Japan
    Matt Snyder
    2026 World Baseball Classic bracket, schedule: Semifinals set after Venezuela's upset of Japan

    Venezuela took a 2-1 lead into the third inning before Japan jumped on starter Ranger Suárez. Four of the first five batters they sent to the plate in the third inning reached base, and one batter who didn’t reach laid down a sacrifice bunt. Center fielder Shota Morishita, who replaced the injured Seiya Suzuki (right knee discomfort) in the second inning, slugged a three-run homer to end Suárez’s night.

    Morishita’s home run gave Japan a 5-2 lead and it felt like they were in control of the game, but once the bullpen door swung open, it was advantage Venezuela. Maikel Garcia got Venezuela to within 5-4 with a two-run homer in the fifth, then Wilyer Abreu clobbered a three-run blast to turn the 5-4 deficit into a 7-5 lead in the sixth inning in an electric moment.

    That’s a brand name Abreu took deep. Hiromi Itoh was the 2025 winner of the Eiji Sawamura Award, which is Japan’s Cy Young. Yamamoto held Venezuela to two runs in four innings. Five Japan relievers were charged with six runs in five innings the rest of the night. The game swung when five of eight Venezuela hitters reached base, spanning the fifth and sixth innings.

    Venezuela’s bullpen, meanwhile, stood tall behind Suárez. Six relievers held Japan scoreless across 6 ⅓ innings, and retired 13 straight at one point. Japan’s best chance to get back into the game came in the eighth inning, when Kazuma Okamoto and Munetaka Murakami strung together back-to-back two-out singles. Andres Machado got Shugo Maki to ground out to end the threat.

    Tigers minor-league lefty Enmanuel De Jesus did the heaviest lifting out of the Venezuela bullpen, soaking up 2 ⅓ scoreless innings in the middle of the game to give the offense a chance to rally. He struck out three, including Ohtani with two runners on base in the fourth inning. De Jesus was awarded the win for his effort.

    Ohtani went 1 for 4 with the leadoff homer and an intentional walk against Venezuela. He struck out twice and popped up behind second base to end the game.

    Venezuela will play Italy in the semifinals Monday night in Miami after Italy continued its Cinderella run Saturday with a nail-biter 8-6 win over Puerto Rico. The winter of Monday’s Italy vs. Venezuela game will advance to the Championship Game and face the winner of Sunday’s highly anticipated USA vs. Dominican Republic game.

    Team USA Baseball vs. Dominican Republic: Odds, prediction, what to know as Paul Skenes faces powerful lineup
    Dayn Perry
    Team USA Baseball vs. Dominican Republic: Odds, prediction, what to know as Paul Skenes faces powerful lineup

    This is Japan’s lowest-ever finish in the WBC. They won the 2006 and 2009 events, finished third in the 2013 and 2017 and won the 2023 WBC. Japan will finish either fifth or sixth in the final standings this year, depending on how Sunday’s USA vs. Dominican Republic game plays out.

    As for Venezuela, this is the first time they’ve advanced to the semifinals since 2009, when they lost to Korea and finished fourth in the tournament. That is Venezuela’s best WBC finish ever. Saturday’s win also clinched a berth in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

  • 2026 Players Championship leaderboard: Ludvig Åberg stands well in front; who can catch him at TPC Sawgrass?

    ludvig-aberg-players-r3-g.jpg

    Getty Images

    Saturday at the 2026 Players Championship saw the leaderboard compress and then expand as those golfers out in front at the halfway point backtracked on the front nine while some in chasing mode made the most of their Moving Days. Despite seeing his lead trimmed to as little as one, the 36-hole leader remained the 54-hole leader as Ludvig Åberg increased his advantage to three strokes entering Sunday’s final round.

    The Swedish superstar stumbled in the initial stretch of his third round but found his groove around the turn and never looked back. Åberg played his final 10 holes in 2 under to put a bow on a 1-under 71 that put him at 13 under for the championship and three shots clear of Michael Thorbjornsen.

    Åberg aims to become the first player since Rory McIlroy in 2019 to lead at the 36-hole mark at the Players Championship and go on to win. He entered this week 1 of 5 attempting to convert 36-hole leads into victories, his lone situational win coming at the 2023 RSM Classic.

    One day after shooting the third-lowest score in competition at TPC Sawgrass, Aberg struggled out of the gate. He put a bogey on his scorecard on No. 4 thanks to a 7-foot conversion on the greens and looked out of sorts until a par save from 14 feet on No. 5 knocked him back on track.

    From there, Åberg was just about flawless. A birdie on the par-5 9th allowed him to turn in even par and extended his lead to three strokes. Two holes later, he dropped a 5 iron from 240 yards to 17 feet and dropped a roar for the rest of the field to hear when his eagle bid found the bottom of the cup.

    With playing partner Xander Schauffele struggling and those out in front unable to maintain their charging efforts, the 26-year-old zipped into the left lane and past them all. He made tidy pars on Nos. 14-15, and although he did not take advantage of the par-5 16th, that was about all he did wrong in the final two hours of his third round before the 18th green.

    A three-putt bogey on the last hole — which presented problems for the likes of Cameron Young, Brian Harman and Matt Fitzpatrick — brought the robotic right-hander back to the field ever so slightly and confirmed his overnight lead would be three.

    On a golf course that has trickled and baffled the best in the world, Åberg has put just three bogeys on his scorecard through 54 holes. He has gotten the job the conventional way and played the par 5s in 11-under fashion to put space between himself and the rest of the field.

    However, while the manner in which he is getting the job done is the manner in which one should attack TPC Sawgrass, the visual of his effort has been something to watch. Towering drives, high iron shots landing with a softness that has been unmatched and a supportive short-game effort, Åberg has shown he is the complete package up to this point.

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    2. Michael Thorbjornsen (-10): Don’t tell this first timer that experience is required around TPC Sawgrass. Thorbjornsen hit the center of the club face time and again on Saturday en route to his 67, which was one of the lowest rounds of the day despite going off in the afternoon. While he has yet to win on the PGA Tour, the powerful righty has recent experience in contention at the WM Phoenix Open, where he held the lead with three holes to play. He has played the par 5s in 6 under the last two rounds after opening with a 74.

    “I don’t think I have to change too much, especially on courses like this,” Thorbjornsen said. “I think if you play some really steady golf, you’ll run into some birdies. Does anyone have a bogey-free round either yesterday or today? I’m not too sure, but there aren’t many. So, I think slow and steady wins the race, and we’re just going to play some solid golf.” Odds: 17/2

    3. Cameron Young (-9): A weapon like the driver will always give him a chance, and the way he is striking putts invokes confidence. His wedge play was subpar for most of his third round, but he threw a dart into the island green for a kick-in birdie in what could perhaps serve as a lynchpin with those clubs on Sunday. It would have been nice if he had not hit his tee shot in the water on the last and carded a double bogey, but there are only two players in front of him on this leaderboard with 18 holes to play. Odds: 9-1

    T4. Xander Schauffele (-8): It was not pretty from Schauffele on Saturday, but he is not completely out of this tournament. His wedge play was abysmal as those clubs led to all three of his bogeys and squandered scoring chances on holes like the par-5 2nd and par-4 12th. Schauffele was one of two players inside the top 25 on the leaderboard to post an over-par score in Round 3, but if he cleans up the wedge play, he could flip the script on Sunday. Odds: 16-1

    T4. Viktor Hovland (-8): We are living in a timeline where Hovland leads the field in strokes gained around the green and ranks outside the top 50 in terms of strokes gained off the tee. Something has got to give in the final round; a superb driving performance could push the Norwegian towards greatness, or a conventional short-game showing could sink his chances. Regardless, Hovland is no stranger to final-round comebacks as he has the firepower — even amid swing changes/struggles — to scratch together a low round. Saturday was his best ball-striking performance of the week. Odds: 21-1

    T4. Justin Thomas (-8): It appeared as if Thomas’ tournament was over when he carded an ugly triple bogey on the par-4 6th, but he hung tough to ultimately post a third-round 72. The 2021 Players champion played his final 12 holes in 3 under, including birdies on Nos. 16-17 and a near-miss on the last to pull even closer to Åberg. Thomas knows better than anyone that anything can happen around TPC Sawgrass — after all, he’s the owner of the course record, which he tied in the second round of last year’s championship. One nuclear round from J.T. could be more than enough to get the job done. Odds: 22-1

    T4. Matt Fitzpatrick (-8): He has got to be kicking himself for his double bogey on No. 18 that did not feature a drive in the water like many before him. Simply struggling up the last, Fitzpatrick dropped from 10 under to 8 under and five strokes behind Åberg. It is not insurmountable, but the deficit leaves little room for error. The scoring has been there thus far for Fitzpatrick as he has made 18 birdies through 54 holes. If he somehow manages a clean card on Sunday, it would go a long way. Odds: 22-1

    Updates
    (52)

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 7:01 pm EDT

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 6:52 pm EDT

    Young throws a dart on the island green and inches closer to the lead

    Cameron Young throws one in close on No. 17 and kicks in his birdie to reach 11 under. He is only three behind Ludvig Aberg who will do well to get up and down on the par-5 16th for his birdie to reclaim his four-stroke lead.

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 6:06 pm EDT

    Thorbjornsen gets in the house at 10 under

    The Players Championship debutant makes a nice run at the end and makes a big par save on the last to get in with his 5-under 67 and climb to 10 under for the tournament. He took on some water after making eagle on No. 11, but he puts birdies on the scorecard on Nos. 16 and 17 to get back to double digits.

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 5:57 pm EDT

    Big last six holes upcoming

    The contenders are suddenly dropping like flies. Matt Fitzpatrick makes a bad double bogey on No. 18 after making birdies on Nos. 16-17 to get in the house at 8 under. That puts him six strokes back of Ludvig Aberg who has a three stroke lead over Cameron Young and a five stroke lead over those in third place.

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 5:35 pm EDT

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 5:21 pm EDT

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 5:19 pm EDT

    The big bird lands for Åberg on No. 11

    A beautiful, high 5 iron from 240 yards leaves Ludvig Aberg 17 feet for his eagle and he connects. The Swede pushes the pace out to 14 under and four clear of Cameron Young. Meanwhile, Xander Schauffele makes his first birdie of the afternoon as he tries to keep up. He stands at 9 under and five back alongside a couple others.

    Ludvig Åberg plays front nine in even par, grows lead to three strokes

    It has been a scrappy front nine from the overnight leader, but he makes the turn at 12 under after a birdie on the par-5 9th. He grows his lead to three as Xander Schauffele cards eight pars and a single bogey on his front nine, while Michael Thorbjornsen and Jacob Bridgeman — who both reached 10 under at one point — have both dropped a shot since.

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 4:26 pm EDT

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Mar. 14, 2026, 4:24 pm EDT

    Michael Thorbjornsen making a big move

    From 245 yards, Michael Thorbjornsen gets up and down on the par-5 11th for the sixth eagle on that hole today. He jumps into a share of second place at 10 under thanks to playing his first 11 holes in 5-under fashion. Thorbjornsen is leading the field in terms of approach play thus far today.

  • The Players Championship Scores

    TV: GOLF, ESPN, NBC

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    1
    SWE
    -13 69* 63 71 1:40 PM 203
    2
    USA
    -10 74* 65 67 1:40 PM 206
    3
    USA
    -9 68* 67 72 1:30 PM 207
    T4
    ENG
    -8 70 69* 69 1:30 PM 208
    T4
    USA
    -8 75 64* 69 1:20 PM 208
    T4
    NOR
    -8 69* 70 69 1:20 PM 208
    T4
    USA
    -8 68* 68 72 1:10 PM 208
    T4
    CAN
    -8 69* 67 72 1:10 PM 208
    T4
    USA
    -8 69 65* 74 1:00 PM 208
    T10
    SCO
    -7 72* 72 65 1:00 PM 209
    T10
    USA
    -7 67 74* 68 12:50 PM 209
    T10
    USA
    -7 67* 72 70 12:50 PM 209
    T10
    USA
    -7 70 68* 71 12:40 PM 209
    T10
    AUT
    -7 67 70* 72 12:40 PM 209
    T15
    USA
    -6 69* 72 69 12:25 PM 210
    T15
    ENG
    -6 72 68* 70 12:25 PM 210
    T15
    JPN
    -6 71 69* 70 12:15 PM 210
    T15
    USA
    -6 68* 71 71 12:15 PM 210
    T19
    CAN
    -5 73 72* 66 12:05 PM 211
    T19
    USA
    -5 71 72* 68 12:05 PM 211
    T19
    USA
    -5 77* 66 68 11:55 AM 211
    T19
    USA
    -5 72* 70 69 11:55 AM 211
    T19
    USA
    -5 70* 70 71 11:45 AM 211
    T19
    USA
    -5 70* 70 71 11:45 AM 211
    T19
    USA
    -5 67 71* 73 11:35 AM 211
    T26
    USA
    -4 72* 73 67 11:35 AM 212
    T26
    USA
    -4 71 73* 68 11:25 AM 212
    T26
    USA
    -4 71* 71 70 11:25 AM 212
    T26
    AUS
    -4 72 70* 70 11:15 AM 212
    T26
    AUS
    -4 70* 70 72 11:15 AM 212
    T26
    USA
    -4 72 68* 72 11:05 AM 212
    T26
    ENG
    -4 69* 70 73 11:05 AM 212
    T33
    KOR
    -3 73* 72 68 10:55 AM 213
    T33
    USA
    -3 70* 75 68 10:55 AM 213
    T33
    USA
    -3 76* 68 69 10:40 AM 213
    T33
    USA
    -3 71* 72 70 10:40 AM 213
    T37
    USA
    -2 72 72* 70 10:30 AM 214
    T37
    CAN
    -2 74* 70 70 10:30 AM 214
    T37
    DEU
    -2 70 73* 71 10:20 AM 214
    T37
    USA
    -2 73* 70 71 10:20 AM 214
    T37
    USA
    -2 73 68* 73 10:10 AM 214
    T37
    USA
    -2 72* 69 73 10:10 AM 214
    T43
    USA
    -1 74 72* 69 10:00 AM 215
    T43
    DEU
    -1 75* 71 69 10:00 AM 215
    T43
    AUS
    -1 72 72* 71 9:50 AM 215
    T43
    CAN
    -1 74* 69 72 9:50 AM 215
    T43
    USA
    -1 68 75* 72 9:40 AM 215
    T43
    SWE
    -1 71* 71 73 9:40 AM 215
    T43
    USA
    -1 70 72* 73 9:30 AM 215
    T43
    USA
    -1 67 71* 77 9:30 AM 215
    T51
    USA
    E 73 73* 70 9:20 AM 216
    T51
    USA
    E 76 69* 71 9:20 AM 216
    T51
    DNK
    E 71* 74 71 9:10 AM 216
    T51
    USA
    E 71* 74 71 9:10 AM 216
    T51
    USA
    E 70 74* 72 8:55 AM 216
    T51
    USA
    E 72 72* 72 8:55 AM 216
    T57
    USA
    +1 73* 73 71 8:45 AM 217
    T57
    USA
    +1 75* 71 71 8:45 AM 217
    T57
    COL
    +1 74* 71 72 8:35 AM 217
    T57
    NIR
    +1 74 71* 72 8:35 AM 217
    T57
    USA
    +1 70 72* 75 8:25 AM 217
    T57
    USA
    +1 73 68* 76 8:25 AM 217
    63
    JPN
    +2 70 72* 76 8:16 AM 218
    T64
    USA
    +3 72 74* 73 8:16 AM 219
    T64
    USA
    +3 69* 75 75 8:07 AM 219
    66
    IRL
    +4 74* 72 74 8:07 AM 220
    T67
    PHL
    +5 77* 69 75 7:58 AM 221
    T67
    USA
    +5 72* 74 75 7:58 AM 221
    T67
    USA
    +5 75* 71 75 7:49 AM 221
    T70
    NOR
    +6 75* 71 76 7:49 AM 222
    T70
    USA
    +6 71 74* 77 7:40 AM 222
    72
    USA
    +8 71* 75 78 7:40 AM 224
    73
    JPN
    +10 73 72* 81 7:35 AM 226
    CUT
    USA
    +3 75* 72 147
    CUT
    USA
    +3 74 73* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +3 73 74* 147
    CUT
    DNK
    +3 75* 72 147
    CUT
    VEN
    +3 75* 72 147
    CUT
    USA
    +3 77 70* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +3 75 72* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +3 70 77* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +3 75* 72 147
    CUT
    KOR
    +3 75* 72 147
    CUT
    ZAF
    +4 77 71* 148
    CUT
    ENG
    +4 76* 72 148
    CUT
    USA
    +4 70 78* 148
    CUT
    USA
    +4 73* 75 148
    CUT
    ENG
    +4 74 74* 148
    CUT
    USA
    +4 75 73* 148
    CUT
    USA
    +4 76* 72 148
    CUT
    CHN
    +4 74 74* 148
    CUT
    USA
    +5 74* 75 149
    CUT
    IRL
    +5 76 73* 149
    CUT
    FRA
    +5 75* 74 149
    CUT
    KOR
    +5 75* 74 149
    CUT
    DNK
    +5 79 70* 149
    CUT
    USA
    +5 77 72* 149
    CUT
    USA
    +6 77 73* 150
    CUT
    USA
    +6 75* 75 150
    CUT
    USA
    +6 74 76* 150
    CUT
    ZAF
    +6 73 77* 150
    CUT
    AUS
    +6 77 73* 150
    CUT
    USA
    +6 73 77* 150
    CUT
    CHN
    +6 76 74* 150
    CUT
    USA
    +7 76* 75 151
    CUT
    ENG
    +7 75* 76 151
    CUT
    CAN
    +7 74* 77 151
    CUT
    ZAF
    +7 74* 77 151
    CUT
    AUS
    +8 73 79* 152
    CUT
    ZAF
    +8 76 76* 152
    CUT
    FIN
    +8 78 74* 152
    CUT
    USA
    +8 80* 72 152
    CUT
    ENG
    +8 79 73* 152
    CUT
    USA
    +9 73* 80 153
    CUT
    CAN
    +9 78 75* 153
    CUT
    USA
    +9 73 80* 153
    CUT
    USA
    +10 73 81* 154
    CUT
    USA
    +14 75* 83 158
    CUT
    USA
    +14 80 78* 158
    CUT
    TWN
    +14 80 78* 158
    CUT
    ARG
    +17 84 77* 161
    CUT
    USA
    +19 84 79* 163
    WD
    USA
    WD
    Notes
    • All times are US/Eastern.

    Legend

  • Vikings sign Kyler Murray: Deal makes sense for Minnesota, but NFL betting expert isn’t buying in

    kyler-murray.jpg

    Imagn Images

    The Vikings did on Thursday what the entire NFL world expected them to do, when they signed former No. 1 overall pick Kyler Murray to a cheap, one-year deal as a veteran addition to their quarterback room. Murray, who was the 11th-ranked player on Pete Prisco’s Top 100 Free Agents list, considered going other places for a backup role but ultimately decided to battle it out with J.J. McCarthy for the starting job in Minnesota.

    It was the right move, both for Murray and the Vikings. It also has a pretty massive implications for not just Minnesota’s win total and 2026 season futures, but on the rest of the NFC North as well.

    Let’s break it all down.

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    Why is this move smart for the Vikings?

    First: it’s a great move for the Vikings, because it gives them a veteran quarterback who (despite a somewhat shaky track record) has a strong pedigree and has made the playoffs. Murray should be highly motivated to beat out McCarthy for the starting job and play well in order to boost up his free-agent stock.

    Murray is polarizing. He’s been a high-profile two-sport athlete ever since he played at Oklahoma. He’s been meme’d for his Call of Duty habits, he’s pulled off miracles, he’s won a lot of games off script and he’s also never reached the full potential everyone expected out of him when he was drafted with the first pick.

    But the Vikings missed the playoffs and took a massive step back in 2025 because they had to depend entirely on McCarthy, who simply wasn’t ready to be an NFL starter yet. The quarterback issue was only exacerbated by the two other options on the roster in 2024 — Sam Darnold and Daniel Jones — leaving and enjoying extremely high levels of success while McCarthy struggled. Darnold winning a Super Bowl with an elite defense in Seattle had to weigh heavy on everyone in Minnesota.

    Murray might not take Minnesota to the promised land, but he’s a fantastic safety net at an extremely reasonable price. He’ll play for the minimum in 2026, with both parties letting Arizona foot the $36 million bill for the majority of his services next year.

    There’s almost no risk here for the Vikings — if Murray is great, they benefit by winning football games. If McCarthy beats him out, it’s promising for the franchise’s future. And if both QBs are terrible, the cost at taking the shot was completely minimal, at least on the Murray end of things.

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    Why is this move smart for Murray?

    Kyler could have gotten more money elsewhere, potentially, but this is the perfect blend of having his cake and eating it too. Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell has revitalized some careers, including Darnold and Jones, and Murray isn’t losing any money by taking a low price from the Vikings. In fact, with agent Erik Burkhardt negotiating a deal that includes a clause preventing the Vikings from franchise tagging Murray, Kyler is perfectly set up to win the job, play well and cash in massively during free agency next offseason.

    With a strong offensive scheme and Justin JeffersonJordan Addison and T.J. Hockenson in place, Murray will have weapons at his disposal, assuming he wins what we have to believe is a true competition at the position.

    Having been soft benched by the Cardinals last year, Murray should be completely healthy heading into the offseason. The Vikings’ willingness to do what’s necessary to win games coupled with his experience advantage over McCarthy give him a real shot to win the job and put up strong numbers.

    Minnesota might also be willing to overpay for a legitimate starter they have on the roster next offseason given what happened to Darnold and Jones, so if Murray plays well, he could end up cashing in with the team who just inked him to a cheap deal.

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    Will Murray actually win the job?

    I’d say it’s pretty likely at this point given McCarthy’s struggles last year and his injury history. Obviously McCarthy will be extremely motivated to prove the Vikings smart for drafting him and silence the doubters, but it’s an uphill battle against a former No. 1 overall pick who has a ton of experience starting in the NFL and can match or exceed the youngster’s mobility.

    Assuming, again, this is an actual competition (and why wouldn’t it be?), Murray should be roughly a -150 favorite (at least) to start Week 1 if we assume everyone is healthy.

    How much did Vikings futures move?

    Not as much as you might think! The line didn’t move itself, but the juice moved pretty massively on the news that Murray joined the Vikings. When we profiled the NFL win totals for the NFC in 2026, the Vikings were at 8.5 with the juice pretty heavy on the Under (-140).

    After the Murray news became official, the line shifted to -115 on the Under. It’s pretty remarkable that the addition of a high-profile quarterback in free agency is only worth 35 cents to a season-long total. It’s also worth noting the Vikings cut several key defensive players as well, which obviously counteracts the Murray signing.

    Worth noting: when we profiled the Vkings last week, the expectation was Murray would be signing there.

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    What does this mean for NFL betting?

    This largely depends on your belief in O’Connell as a quarterback guru. Personally, I think he’s an elite coach and this signing, even if Murray isn’t necessarily an elite quarterback, significantly raises the floor for Minnesota. The Vikings could have won 10 games last year if they had just re-signed Darnold or Jones, and probably would have done so fairly easily.

    Murray’s a different cat from those two, but I would be worried about backing the Vikings with just McCarthy on board. Murray will be highly motivated now. He wants to earn that big paycheck (he’s quietly already 28 years old).

    But let’s paint a different picture and grab some value here: the Vikings aren’t in heavy on Murray and we don’t know his status completely when it comes to health. He’s new to the system. Maybe this is motivation for McCarthy and this isn’t a real competition, and they start the youngster out of the gate no matter what happens. The defense takes a step back and the offensive line isn’t very good.

    The BearsPackers and Lions could all be awesome, which is a very feasible scenario. And now instead of laying -140, we get to pay pretty reasonable juice to fade a team that is objectively the worst in the division.

    Essentially, if you didn’t love the Vikings before and wanted to bet the Under, now is a much, much more opportune time to fade Kyler and Minnesota than it was just a few days ago.

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  • Suns Report and Team Notes

    • Suns’ Ryan Dunn: Drops out of rotation

      Dunn (coach’s decision) went unused off the bench in Friday’s 122-115 loss to the Raptors.

      Dunn had been seeing his playing time trend down recently, but Friday marked the first time all season that the second-year forward failed to see any action for non-injury reasons. Though he’s regarded as a versatile defender, Dunn’s perimeter shooting hasn’t developed as the Suns had hoped, as he’s converting on just 32.6 percent of his three-point attempts on the season. Now that the Suns are at full strength on the wing and at forward sans Dillon Brooks (hand), Dunn looks like he could find himself outside of the rotation more often than not while head coach Jordan Ott prioritizes Grayson Allen, Haywood Highsmith and Rasheer Fleming in the second unit.

    • Suns’ Amir Coffey: Falls out of rotation

      Coffey (coach’s decision) went unused off the bench Friday in the Suns‘ 122-115 loss to the Raptors.

      After appearing in seven of the Suns’ first eight games out of the All-Star break while averaging 5.1 points, 2.4 rebounds and 1.0 assists in 14.9 minutes, Coffey has now been left out of the rotation for two of the past three contests. Though Dillon Brooks (hand) is likely still a week or more away from a return, the Suns appear set to move forward with Grayson Allen, Haywood Highsmith and Rasheer Fleming as their primary reserve options at forward and on the wing, which leaves Coffey and Ryan Dunn on the outside looking in for rotation spots.

    • Suns’ Grayson Allen: Chips in 15 points off bench

      Allen finished with 15 points (3-7 FG, 1-4 3Pt, 8-10 FT), two rebounds, six assists and one steal across 29 minutes during Friday’s 122-115 loss to the Raptors.

      It was the fifth time this season that Allen attempted 10 free throws in a game. He scored 12 of his 15 points in the first quarter and finished as the Suns‘ third-leading scorer behind Jalen Green (34 points) and Devin Booker (31 points). Friday was Allen’s return from a one-game absence due to right knee injury management, and he may continue to sit out at least one game of back-to-back sets until the postseason.

    • Suns’ Devin Booker: Drops 31 points in Friday’s loss

      Booker logged 31 points (10-20 FG, 2-5 3Pt, 9-11 FT), three rebounds and one block over 34 minutes during the Suns‘ 122-115 loss to the Raptors on Friday.

      Booker enjoyed an efficient night from the field while also showing aggression on the offensive side of the floor, as he attempted double-digit free throws for the third time in four games. He’s now scored at least 27 points in six consecutive games, averaging 31.7 points, 4.7 assists, 4.7 rebounds, 3.0 threes and 1.0 steals over 34.1 minutes per game while connecting on 40.9 percent of his three-point attempts over that span.

    • Suns’ Jalen Green: Nails eight three-pointers in loss

      Green finished Friday’s 122-115 loss to Toronto with 34 points (13-25 FG, 8-16 3Pt), five rebounds, four assists and one steal over 35 minutes.

      Green came out firing with 11 points in the first quarter while connecting on all three of his attempts from beyond the arc in the frame. He gave the Suns a steady supply of points, scoring at least seven in every quarter while tying a career high in three-pointers. Green has scored 30-plus points in back-to-back games, and over his last five outings he has averaged 28.8 points on 51.0 percent shooting along with 4.2 rebounds, 3.6 assists, 4.2 threes and 1.2 steals over 32.6 minutes per game.

  • Dbacks Notes and Recaps

    • Diamondbacks’ Corbin Burnes: Throws BP session Friday

      Burnes (elbow) tossed 15 pitches during Friday’s bullpen session, Nick Piecoro and Jose Romero of The Arizona Republic reports.

      It was an encouraging sign for Barnes, with Friday’s bullpen session being his first since undergoing Tommy John surgery in June. All 15 of his pitches were fastballs or sinkers, and he reached a top velocity of 91 mph. Barnes’ current plan is to toss two bullpen sessions a week, and the 31-year-old right-hander is aiming to make his 2026 debut around the All-Star break in July.

    • Diamondbacks’ Gabriel Moreno: No structural damage in elbow

      Diamondbacks Torey Lovullo told reporters Saturday that an MRI on Moreno‘s right elbow showed inflammation and no structural damage, Nick Piecoro of The Arizona Republic reports.

      Moreno was scratched from Friday’s Cactus League game against the Royals after experiencing forearm tightness. The good news for the 26-year-old backstop is that imaging did not reveal a serious injury, and Lovullo relayed that Moreno should be available for Opening Day, per Jose M. Romero of The Arizona Republic.

    • Diamondbacks’ Merrill Kelly: Expects IL stint

      Kelly (back) said Friday that he expects to be on the injured list to open the regular season, Steve Gilbert of MLB.com reports.

      Kelly spoke about his chances of making the Opening Day roster following his Cactus League debut Friday. “I won’t go into depth on what the tentative plan is right now, but yeah, as of right now, not very good,” the pitcher said. That’s the bad news; the good news is that Kelly’s back held up over 1.2 innings (36 pitches), which was the priority of the day. Stints on the IL can be backdated three days, which means Kelly would miss at least the first 12 days of the regular season. He would be eligible for activation in time for April 7 against the Mets.

    • Diamondbacks’ Pavin Smith: Sidelined by forearm injury

      Smith is dealing with forearm tightness and will be rested for the next couple of days, Jose M. Romero of The Arizona Republic reports.

      Both Smith and catcher Gabriel Moreno are dealing with forearm tightness, though only the latter will undergo further testing. That indicates that Smith’s injury isn’t considered a long-term concern, and he could be back in Cactus League action over the coming days. Smith is looking to build off a 2025 campaign in which he slashed .258/.362/.434 with two steals, eight home runs and 28 RBI in 287 plate appearances during the regular season.

    • Diamondbacks’ Gabriel Moreno: Dealing with forearm tightness

      Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo told reporters that Moreno was scratched from the lineup for Friday’s Cactus League game against the Royals due to forearm tightness, Jose M. Romero of The Arizona Republic reports.

      Moreno will undergo an MRI to determine the severity of the injury, so the Diamondbacks should provide an update for the 26-year-old catcher in the coming days. Adrian Del Castillo is unlikely to be ready for Opening Day while rehabbing from a calf strain, so James McCann would get the bulk of the work behind home plate if Moreno were to be sidelined for an extended amount of time.

  • Dbacks 8 SF Giants 7

    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
    0 0 0 2 0 4 1 1 0 8 11 0

    15-6

    0 1 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 7 16 1
    HITTERS AB R H RBI HR BB SO LOB AVG OBP SLG OPS FPTS
    C. Carroll DH 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 .167 .167 .167 .333 0.5
    J. Lawlar CF 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 .278 .381 .639 1.020 -0.5
    J. Valdez 3B 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 0.0
    T. Tawa 3B 3 3 2 0 0 1 0 0 .303 .425 .576 1.001 7.0
    J. McCann C 4 1 2 0 0 0 2 1 .167 .200 .167 .367 2.0
    C. Virahonda C 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 .000 .000 0.0
    L. Baker 1B 3 2 1 2 1 1 0 2 .273 .385 .576 .960 9.0
    J. Alpuria RF 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 .000 .000 0.0
    J. Amaya 2B 4 1 2 5 1 0 0 0 .281 .294 .469 .763 11.0
    J. Walters 2B 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 0.0
    C. Torin SS 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 .000 .000 .000 .000 0.0
    A. Benua LF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 0.0
    A. Ortiz RF 4 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 .250 .250 1.000 1.250 5.0
    M. Marte 1B 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 0.0
    A. Owusu-Asiedu LF 3 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 .667 .750 .667 1.417 2.5
    Total 37 8 11 8 3 4 7 11
    HITTERS AB R H RBI HR BB SO LOB AVG OBP SLG OPS FPTS
    J. Rodriguez LF 4 1 2 1 0 0 1 2 .345 .406 .586 .992 4.5
    L. Matos LF 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 .294 .368 .529 .898 1.0
    R. Devers DH 3 2 2 3 1 0 1 1 .095 .136 .238 .374 9.5
    a- B. Kennedy PH-DH 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 .304 .393 .652 1.045 1.0
    J. Oliva PR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .367 .424 .433 .858 2.0
    W. Adames SS 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 .118 .167 .206 .373 0.0
    O. Basabe SS 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .417 .440 .667 1.107 0.0
    b- N. Furman PH 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 .000 .000 0.0
    C. Schmitt 3B 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 .306 .359 .333 .692 2.0
    P. Harber 3B 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 1.000 1.000 2.000 1.0
    Z. Zielinski PR-3B 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000
    c- B. Eldridge PH 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .242 .390 .515 .905 0.0
    W. Brennan CF 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 .379 .455 .483 .937 2.0
    E. Haase C 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 .231 .310 .500 .810 1.5
    D. Susac C 3 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 .345 .406 .517 .923 7.0
    G. McCray CF 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 .214 .361 .321 .683 0.0
    V. Bericoto RF 4 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 .250 .250 .250 .500 1.5
    C. Koss 2B 3 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 .423 .545 .423 .969 3.0
    T. Fitzgerald PR-2B 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .188 .188 .375 .563 0.0
    J. Holton 1B 3 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 .667 .667 .667 1.333 3.0
    T. Gavello PR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000
    J. Encarnacion 1B 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .300 .293 .425 .718 0.0
    Total 36 7 16 7 2 1 3 16
    • a-grounded out for Devers in the 6th
    • b-grounded out for Basabe in the 9th
    • c-struck out for Zielinski in the 9th
    BATTING
    • 2B – T. Tawa (3)
    • HR – L. Baker (3), J. Amaya (2), A. Ortiz
    • RBI – L. Baker 2 (8), J. Amaya 5 (10), A. Ortiz
    • 2-Out RBI – L. Baker 2 (2), J. Amaya
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – J. Lawlar, C. Torin
    BATTING
    • 2B – J. Rodriguez (4), E. Haase
    • HR – R. Devers, D. Susac
    • RBI – J. Rodriguez (4), R. Devers 3 (4), W. Brennan (6), D. Susac (2), V. Bericoto
    • 2-Out RBI – W. Brennan
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – E. Haase, V. Bericoto, J. Holton
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – J. Oliva (10)
    • CS – W. Brennan (2)
    FIELDING
    • Outfield Assist – J. Lawlar
    FIELDING
    • E – O. Basabe
    PITCHERS IP H R ER BB SO HR ERA WHIP FPTS
    A. Morillo (H, 1) 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0 21.60 4.80 1.0
    Z. Gallen 2.2 7 3 3 0 1 1 4.05 1.20 -2.5
    K. Ginkel 0.2 4 4 4 0 0 1 10.38 2.77 -6.0
    Z. Russell 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.00 1.0
    J. Ross 2.0 2 0 0 0 2 0 4.76 1.41 5.0
    R. Thompson (W, 0-0) 1.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 6.00 1.17 1.0
    J. Morillo (H, 1) 1.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 1.00 2.0
    L. Mercado (S, 0) 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.00 0.0
    Total 9.0 16 7 7 1 5 2
    PITCHERS IP H R ER BB SO HR ERA WHIP FPTS
    A. Houser 5.0 4 2 2 1 6 1 3.86 1.29 11.0
    K. Winn 0.0 2 4 4 2 0 1 7.11 1.58 -8.0
    S. Bivens 1.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1.17 1.57 2.0
    J. Lucchesi 1.0 3 1 1 0 0 0 9.00 3.00 -1.0
    M. Fulmer (L, 0-1) 1.0 1 1 1 0 1 1 3.00 0.67 -3.5
    R. Dabovich 1.0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0.00 1.29 2.0
    Total 9.0 11 8 8 4 7 3
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – A. Morillo 2-0, Z. Gallen 55-37, K. Ginkel 27-17, Z. Russell 3-2, J. Ross 23-15, R. Thompson 14-10, J. Morillo 10-5, L. Mercado 3-2
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – Z. Gallen 4-3, K. Ginkel 2-2, J. Ross 2-0, R. Thompson 4-0, J. Morillo 2-0
    • Batters Faced – Z. Gallen 15, K. Ginkel 6, Z. Russell, J. Ross 7, R. Thompson 5, J. Morillo 3
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – A. Houser 73-48, K. Winn 20-10, S. Bivens 9-6, J. Lucchesi 15-11, M. Fulmer 11-7, R. Dabovich 11-4
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – A. Houser 8-1, K. Winn 1-1, S. Bivens 4-0, J. Lucchesi 0-2, M. Fulmer 1-1, R. Dabovich 2-0
    • Batters Faced – A. Houser 20, K. Winn 4, S. Bivens 4, J. Lucchesi 6, M. Fulmer 4, R. Dabovich 3
  • Brayden Burries scores 21 as No. 2 Arizona survives No. 5 Houston 79-74 in Big 12 final rematch

     

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Arizona Wildcats guard Jaden Bradley had just emerged from the locker room, his left wrist tightly taped after a collision left him holding it in pain. Koa Peat was mired in foul trouble, and Houston Cougars was making a big run in the Big 12 Tournament title game

    All season long, the second-ranked Wildcats had demonstrated their talent.

    On Saturday night, they proved their resilience.

    Brayden Burries broke out of a slump with 21 points, including a pair of clinching free throws with 8.3 seconds left. Peat also had 21 points and Bradley, who hit the semifinal game-winner against Iowa State, finished with 13 as Arizona held on for a 79-74 victory over the fifth-ranked Cougars in a rematch of last year’s championship game.

    “They’re just resilient, you know? And they just have this unbreakable spirit,” Tommy Lloyd, the Big 12 coach of the year, said of his Wildcats. “These guys do an amazing job of figuring it out in tough moments.”

    It’s a talent that should serve the Wildcats (32-2) well going into next week’s NCAA Tournament. They’ve won nine straight since their only two losses of the season, and six of those wins have come against ranked opponents.

    “We got in the Big 12 and I learned real quick we were looking up and chasing a program, and it was Houston,” Lloyd said. “And not that we were fixated on the chase, but it gave us a great barometer for what we felt we had to do in our program.”

    The Wildcats, who lost to the Cougars 72-64 in their Big 12 title game debut a year ago, led 75-66 with just over a minute left on Saturday night before Mercy Miller and Milos Uzan hit 3s on consecutive possessions to give Houston a chance.

    But when Peat missed a jumper with 22 seconds to go, Arizona big man Motiejus Krivas gathered the rebound and was fouled under the bucket. The 7-foot-2 junior from Lithuania calmly made both free throws to extend the Wildcats’ lead.

    Kingston Flemings and Miller missed layups at the other end for Houston (28-6), and by the time Miller was fouled and made two free throws, there was just 13.2 seconds to go. Burries was fouled on the inbound pass and put away the game.

    “You had the two best teams in the Big 12 fighting down the stretch. Either team could have won the game,” Houston coach Kelvin Sampson said. “Sometimes it comes down to a break. Sometimes it comes down to a whistle. Sometimes it comes down to a bounce. When two teams are evenly matched like they were today, that’s what it comes down to.”

    The championship matchup – one befitting of a Final Four – was close throughout the first half until Burries, who’d missed 11 straight shots going back to a quarterfinal win over UCF, finally got hot for Arizona. The All-Big 12 guard hit four in a row late in the first half, scoring the Wildcats’ last 10 points and giving them a 44-36 advantage at the break.

    They stretched the lead to 15 points in the second half as the game became more physical.

    In a span of a few minutes, Bradley hurt his wrist in a collision and briefly went to the locker room. Peat was slow getting up after he was hammered on a shot. And during a scrap for a loose ball, five bodies hit the floor, and when a jump ball was finally called, Burries and Houston forward Kalifa Sakho laid on the court unwilling to let go.

    Houston was still trailing 59-44 when it finally went on its big run, scoring 14 straight points and nearly drawing even.

    But the unflappable Burries answered with a three-point play, Ivan Kharchenko scored on three straight trips down floor for the Wildcats, and they managed to regain just enough breathing room to survive all the way to the finish.

    “Arizona is really good,” Sampson said. “If Arizona had lost to Houston, I’d have said the same thing. ‘Arizona lost to a really good team. There’s no shame in Arizona losing to Houston.’ And I’ll say the same thing the other way. Arizona is really good.”

    Houston will likely be a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament and play first- and second-round games in Oklahoma City. Perhaps more importantly, the Cougars would play their regional semifinal in Houston should they advance.

    Arizona should have a short trip to San Diego for its opening weekend games in the NCAA Tournament. If the Wildcats advance, the projected No. 1 seed would head up the coast to San Jose, California for the second weekend.

    Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP mobile app). AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

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    Expert Picks
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    Zack Cimini
    Zack CiminiContrarian with Chutzpah
    +77.5 (58%)
    Last 26 CBB ATS
    Houston +1.5-110
    Point Spread
    Picked Mar 14 @ 2:18 pm, 1 unit on DraftKings
    LOSS
    After a four game losing streak towards the end of conference play, Kelvin Sampson has his Houston Cougars back on track. The offense had excelled during their win streak, but now the defense caught up in yesterday’s win against the Jayhawks limiting them to 47 points. Tournament momentum for March can be as simple as freshmen growing that extra level at the tail end of the season. We are seeing that with Houston’s trio in Kingston Flemings, Chris Cenac, and Chase McCarty. Tail Houston.

    Zack’s Pick

    Chip Patterson
    Chip PattersonShoot Your Shot
    +290 (80%)
    Last 5 CBB
    Arizona -2.5-110
    Point Spread
    Picked Mar 14 @ 9:13 am, 1 unit on FanDuel
    WIN
    Tommie Lloyd gets another shot at Houston in the Big 12 Tournament after losing to the Cougars by eight points in the title game last year, and the Wildcats are roaring off Jayden Bradley’s buzzer-beater in what might have been one of the best games of the entire season. The Wildcats looked so connected and in rhythm on offense against an elite Iowa State defense that it’s going to help them deal with Houston’s pressure, and the Cougars do not present the same kind of three-point threat that helped the Cyclones keep pace. Arizona won the regular season meeting in Houston by seven, so I think the Wildcats cover this number and claim their first conference tournament title since 2023.

    Chip’s Pick

    1 2 T

    2 Houston 28-6

    36 38 74

    1 Arizona 32-2

    44 35 79
    TOP SCORERS
    11
    J. Tugler F 20PTS 10REB 3AST
    5
    B. Burries G 21PTS 2REB 3AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    J. Tugler 20 10 3 4
    E. Sharp 10 1 0 5
    M. Uzan 8 1 2 2
    K. Flemings 8 5 7 2
    C. Cenac Jr. 5 4 0 4
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    M. Miller 13 7 1 1
    C. McCarty 10 1 0 1
    K. Sakho 0 2 0 2
    R. Walker Jr.
    I. Harwell
    C. Lath
    J. McFarland
    Total 74 31 13 21
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    K. Peat 21 6 2 5
    B. Burries 21 2 3 0
    J. Bradley 13 5 2 1
    I. Kharchenkov 12 7 1 0
    M. Krivas 6 6 0 3
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    A. Dell’Orso 4 1 1 2
    T. Awaka 2 5 0 4
    D. Aristode 0 0 0 1
    S. Gueye 0 0 0 0
    A. Arnold
    E. Nelson
    J. Francois
    J. Cook
    S. Djopmo
    M. Mawut
    B. James
    Total 79 32 9 16
    Around