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Creighton Wins Big Comeback

February 7, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

OMAHA – (Staff Report from Official News Release) -Nik Graves’ late 3-pointer paced Creighton in comeback win; Villanova gets season-best 26 from Acaden Lewis in win at Georgetown; Jason Edwards returns to lead Providence with 25 points in win over DePaul; Marquette’s balanced offensive attack proves to be the difference in home win versus Butler.
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Villanova 80, Georgetown 73 – Box Score 
  • Freshman Acaden Lewis poured in a season-high 26 points to help propel Villanova to a road win at Georgetown.  Lewis made 11-of-15 shots (3-5 3FG) to go with six assists and three steals.
  • Lewis – from Washington, D.C. – scored 17 of his 26 over the final 10-plus minutes of the game.
  • The Hoyas led for much of the first half; Villanova did hold a pair of one-point leads.
  • The Wildcats took a 27-26 lead with 7:54 left before an 11-4 push by the Hoyas gave them their largest lead of the half (37-31).  The Hoyas led 40-37 at the break.
  • There were six ties and three lead changes in the second half as both teams traded runs early in the period.
  • Nova opened the final 20 minutes with six quick points on back-to-back 3-pointers before a 10-1 Georgetown push put it back up six (50-44).
  • Malachi Palmer and Tyler Perkins made three shots from beyond the arc over an extended 17-4 push that gave Villanova a 61-54 lead with 10:21 to play.
  • The Hoyas’ Malik Mack scored eight of the next 12 points before a Vince Iwuchukwu dunk tied it at 66-66 with 5:41.
  • From there, it was all Villanova, as an 11-3 push gave the ‘Cats the lead for good.  Lewis scored 10 of those 11 points, including a pair of 3-pointers that pushed the lead to eight (77-69) with 1:46 to play.
  • For Villanova, Duke Brennan logged his 10th double-double of the season with 13 points and 13 rebounds.  Tyler Perkins had 15 points and eight rebounds, while Malachi Palmer tallied 10 points off the bench.
  • Georgetown was led by 21 points from Mack.  Iwuchukwu had 15 points and 12 boards, while KJ Lewis added 13 points.
  • The loss snapped a four-game win streak for the Hoyas.
Of Note:
  • With the win, Villanova improved to 5-1 in BIG EAST road games on the season
  • The Wildcats made at least 10 3-pointers for the 14th time this season; Nova is 10-4 in those games
  • Georgetown’s Vince Iwuchukwu recorded back-to-back double-doubles for the first time in his career.  He is the first Hoya to do so since a season ago, when Thomas Sorber did so against Villanova (1/20/25) and Providence (1/25/25).
Marquette 70, Butler 55 – Box Score
  • Four Golden Eagles reached double-digits, led by Chase Ross’ 19 points and a season-high 18 from freshman Adrian Stevens
  • Marquette led throughout the first 13-plus minutes, opening up as much as an eight-point advantage (14-6).
  • A trio of 3-pointers from Butler’s Finley Bizjack would push the Bulldogs ahead by four (28-24) with 2:14 left in the opening period.
  • Eight straight points from Marquette to close the first half gave it a 32-28 lead at the break.
  • The Golden Eagles began the second half with a pair of 3-pointers as part of an extended 19-9 run.  A trifecta from Stevens with 13:58 to go gave Marquette its largest lead of the game – 17 points (54-37).
  • Marquette made 56.0% of its shot attempts over the final 20 minutes (14-25), including 9-of-14 shots from the outside.
  • Butler’s Finley Bizjack finished with 23 points, making 8-of-12 shots from the floor including 5-of-7 from the perimeter.
  • Michael Ajayi tallied 19 rebounds (5 off; 14 def) – his second-highest total of the season
  • For Marquette, Nigel James Jr. finished with 16 points, four assists, and four steals, while Royce Parham added 12 points.  Ben Gold grabbed a team-best 10 rebounds.
Of Note:
  • Former Marquette head coach Tom Crean was honored with a banner in the rafters at halftime of the game, celebrating his accomplishments during his tenure with Golden Eagles.
  • The Golden Eagles tied their season-high with 14 3-pointers.
  • Butler was missing a pair of starters (Jamie Kaiser Jr. and Stink Robinson); Evan Haywood earned his first start of the season
Providence 90, DePaul 72 – Box Score
  • Jason Edwards returned to the Providence lineup after missing the previous seven games and led all scorers with 25 points
  • With the game tied at 7-7 early on after a 3-pointer by DePaul’s CJ Gunn, the Friars broke the game open with a 15-4 run.  Providence would not trail the rest of the way.
  • An Edwards 3-pointer late in the opening half extended the Friar lead to 19; PC would lead 43-26 at the break.
  • Providence built on its lead in the second half.  Back-to-back fastbreak dunks from freshmen Stefan Vaaks and Jamier Jones put the home team ahead by 20.
  • The fifth 3-pointer of the day from Edwards built the largest lead of the day – 27 points – with 2:18 to go.
  • The Friars connected on a season-best 58.9% from the floor (33-56), making 9-of-21 attempts from the perimeter.
  • Brandon Maclin led DePaul with 17 points off the bench, making 8-of-13 shots from the floor.  Kaleb Banks added 11 points, also in reserve play for the Blue Demons.
  • For Providence, Jaylin Sellers added an efficient 21 points on eight total field goal attempts, while Ryan Mela added 16 points and eight boards. Oswin Erhunmwunse tallied a double-double with 10 points and 13 boards.
Of Note:
  • Providence’s Jaylin Sellers tallied 57 points over two games this week – the most over a two-game span by a Friar since Josh Oduro in Feb. 2024
  • Stefan Vaaks finished with eight points for the Friars – marking the first time in 24 games that he did not reach double figures
  • In conference play, DePaul’s Brandon Maclin leads the BIG EAST in scoring by a reserve (zero starts), averaging 10.8 points per game.  Over his last 10 games, the 6-3 guard is averaging 12.3 ppg.
Creighton 69, Seton Hall 68 – Box Score
  • A Nik Graves 3-pointer with three seconds left capped an 11-1 run to close the game for Creighton
  • Trailing by 10 (63-53) with 3:30 to play – and by nine (67-58) with 1:35 to go – the Bluejays’ Fedor Zugic hit a pair of 3-pointers and Jasen Green a putback layup – to cut the margin to one – 67-66 – with 22 ticks to play.
  • Seton Hall’s Trey Parker made 1-of-2 free throws with 17 seconds to play, putting the Pirates up 68-66 before the eventual game winning possession for the Jays.
  • In the first half, Creighton was paced by 15 points from Isaac Traudt who made four 3-pointers in the opening eight minutes of play.
  • A layup by Owen Freeman gave the Bluejays a seven-point lead (22-15) with 11:22 left in the period.  Seven unanswered by the Pirates tied it up at 22-22 less than two minutes later.
  • There were four lead changes and three ties over the final 9:33, with Seton Hall holding a 34-32 lead at the break.
  • In the second half, Creighton took a 41-38 lead after a Josh Dix 3-pointer with 16:33 left made it 41-38.
  • Seton Hall would score 10 straight to start an extended 19-6 run.  Two free throws from Tajuan Simpkins gave the Pirates a 57-47 lead with nine and half minutes to play.
  • SHU would lead 63-53, after a layup by Elijah Fisher with 3:30 left, before the Creighton run to close the game.
  • For Seton Hall, Budd Clark led the way with 20 points, making 8-of-16 shots (3-4 3FG).  AJ Staton-McCray had 11 points and Elijah Fisher 10.  Stephon Payne grabbed 11 rebounds.
  • Traudt’s 18 points led Creighton, while Dix added 16 points and Zugic 13.  Green had 11 points and seven boards.
Of Note:
  • The victory marked the 33rd double-digit comeback win for Creighton under head coach Greg McDermott
  • Creighton has won 10 or more home games in 11 straight seasons and 29 of the past 30 years
  • Seton Hall’s Budd Clark has scored 18 or more in four consecutive games; his three 3-pointers tied a career-best

Filed Under: Big East, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East Basketball

St John’s Holds Court v. UConn

February 6, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Staff Report from Official News Release) – The most anticipated college basketball game of the 2025-26 season did not disappoint, as No. 22/22 St. John’s earned an 81-72 victory over No. 3/3 UConn in front of a sold out crowd at Madison Square Garden.  The win for the Red Storm extended their win streak to nine games, while the loss snapped the Huskies’ 18-game win streak, which began on Nov. 23.
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St. John’s 81, UConn 72 – Box Score 
  • Zuby Ejiofor finished with 21 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists, three blocks, and two steals to lead No. 22/22 St. John’s past No. 3/3 UConn in front of a capacity crowd at Madison Square Garden.
  • The senior forward made 6-of-10 shots from the floor and 8-of-10 from the charity stripe.
  • Neither team gained more than a six-point advantage in the first half; UConn led 16-10 with 13:50 to play in the period, while SJU took a 23-17 lead at the 10:10 mark.
  • There were six lead changes and four ties, including a 39-39 score at intermission.
  • UConn’s Solo Ball 3-pointer early in the second half made it 45-45 before a 10-0 run by St. John’s gave it the lead for good.
  • Bryce Hopkins’ 3-pointer with 13:03 to play.
  • The Huskies cut the deficit to one point twice, the last coming off a Silas Demary Jr. layup which made it 66-65 with 4:46 remaining.
  • SJU would outscore UConn 15-7 the rest of the way.
  • Dillon Mitchell had 15 points and six rebounds, while Bryce Hopkins chipped in with 14 points and six boards for the Johnnies.
  • UConn was led by 18 points from Silas Demary Jr., who also added seven rebounds and five assists.
  • Alex Karaban tallied an efficient 17 points on 7-of-10 shooting, including 3-of-4 from the perimeter.  Tarris Reed Jr. added 12 points and Braylon Mullins 11.
Of Note:
  • Dating back to last season, St. John’s has won three straight against Connecticut.
  • It was St. John’s’ highest-ranked win since Feb. 3, 2021, when it defeated No. 3/3 Villanova at Carnesecca Arena; it was the highest-ranked victory for the Red Storm at Madison Square Garden since taking down No. 3/3 Duke on Jan. 30, 2011
  • Since Jan. 6, SJU’s Bryce Hopkins is averaging 14.3 points, 6.1 rebounds, and 2.0 assists per game
  • UConn’s 18 straight wins marked the third-longest win streak in program history
  • Alex Karaban made his 134th career start at UConn – one short of the program record, held by Jake Voskuhl (1996-2000)

Filed Under: Big East, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East Basketball

Patriots Had This Moment in Mind

February 5, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

SANTA CLARA – (Wire Service Report) – There’s more security than Patriots players around the Santa Clara hotel the team is staying at this week, one of the novel elements of the Super Bowl for New England players and staff making their maiden voyage on this eight-night sleepover.

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Every player and coach — from the most identifiable in quarterback Drake Maye and head coach Mike Vrabel to 5-foot-10 face-in-the-crowd rookie wide receiver Efton Chism III — follows the mandate to wear a lanyard around his neck with his plastic 3×4-inch name tag fully displayed for security checks at every exit and entrance of the property. On Monday, for example, Maye had to flash his badge to uniformed officers to exit in the morning, return to the building, enter a meeting room, return to the lobby, exit for practice, return from practice, exit for In-N-Out Burger and return.

Vrabel, who won three Super Bowls with the Patriots as a player, made it a strict point to stress grace and being a polite Patriot when the team receives a request from support staff, security, equipment managers and janitors. It’s his new Patriot Way.

“Those little things that go a long way, do things right, and coach Vrabel is the best at it,” Maye said Thursday at 8 a.m. PT media before the team loaded buses to Stanford University for another full squad practice.

Vrabel and offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels were present when 24-year-old Tom Brady started Super Bowl XXXVI. Vrabel was 26. He started at outside linebacker with Tedy Bruschi and Roman Phifer with a mandate to corral Marshall Faulk and put Kurt Warner on his can to douse the “Greatest Show on Turf.”

Their unique perspective as observers of Brady’s ascension and active participants in the Patriots’ dynasty has been gold for Maye as he advances in the NFL’s ultimate treasure hunt for the Lombardi Trophy.

One example: McDaniels has stressed to Maye the competitive stamina required to play in a Super Bowl. The pace and cadence of daily and even hourly activities the task of winning a Super Bowl requires of the position. Brady did not participate in family events during the week as a matter of course if only briefly interacting with them when the team’s traveling party multiples to include spouses and children on Friday.

Brady and the Patriots beat the Rams, 20-17, riding the quarterback’s arm on the final possession. McDaniels was on a headset but Charlie Weis was offensive coordinator. When the Patriots saw their 17-3 lead dissolve and the game was tied with 1:37 on the clock, coaches discussed briefly playing it safe and going to overtime.

“They let the kid go out and rip it. I remember Drew (Bledsoe) saying (to Brady) ‘Just go out there and sling the ball. Play like you always have,’” McDaniels said. “And he did. Those are the types of situations the best players in football live for. Hopefully we have one of those in us if we need it on Sunday.”

Brady completed his first two passes — to running back J.R. Redmond — and hit him again between two incompletions to get the ball to the Patriots 40. The 23-yard connection to Troy Brown down the left sideline put Adam Vinatieri within range and a quick-hitter to tight end Jermaine Wiggins got him six yards closer to the 48-yard game winner.

McDaniels said he uses Brady on teaching tapes for quarterbacks and Maye has seen plenty of examples of execution in the four- and two-minute offense with No. 12’s play doing the teaching. Without directly comparing Brady and Maye, McDaniels knows there is at least one visible common trait the quarterbacks share.

“He wants to have the last shot. If you play quarterback in the National Football League, that’s probably one of the prerequisites, that you would like to have the ball in your hand at the end,” McDaniels said.

Numbers back up the idea of Maye rising to meet elevated pressure. Against the blitz, he had 16 touchdowns, one interception and a 115.8 passer rating. Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald noticed.

“The thing that makes Drake so dangerous is, in addition to the arm talent, the processing and the movement, he’s got a playmaking ability late in, late in, late in plays,” Macdonald said.

Vrabel sees flashes of Brady’s trademark competitiveness. Daily. From trying to be the first and last in the building to pickup basketball and everything in between, Maye has an obvious and trained refuse-to-lose mindset.

“Every 2-on-2 basketball game in the backyard prepared me for this. The joy of it but also the feeling you get of accomplishing beating my older brothers, compete at a high level,” Maye said. “Watching my older brothers (Cole, Beau and Luke), excel in sports wanting the ball at the end of the games. And always being the player that you felt like, knowing that if they play well, they’re going to win the games. That’s the position I’m in now.”

– Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NFL, Patriots, Super Bowl LX Tagged With: NFL, NFL Playoffs, Super Bowl, Super Bowl LX

Patriots Meet Seahawks, Again

February 5, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

SANTA CLARA – Call it a comeback. And better make it two.

Super Bowl LX sets up as a repeat of two recent NFL championship teams colliding Sunday on the home field of another NFL champion, the San Francisco 49ers.

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It’s a repeat of Super Bowl XLIX in February 2015 that swung from a Seattle Seahawks celebration to a confirmation of the New England Patriots’ dynasty when Malcolm Butler intercepted Russell Wilson pass at the goal line with 20 seconds left.

“It hasn’t come up one time,” Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald said of the Super Bowl rematch.

Almost everything has changed on both sidelines in the decade since that game. Neither team was even in the playoff field last season.

Patriots owner Robert Kraft called a leadership audible and restored the championship standard in New England, placing three-time Super Bowl champion Mike Vrabel atop the organization pecking order, and the new head coach guided a stunning turnaround in 2025.

Vrabel, a former linebacker under Bill Belichick, has resurrected the franchise and partnered with the second-youngest Super Bowl starting quarterback ever, 23-year-old Drake Maye, to move New England to the doorstep of a league-record seventh Lombardi Trophy.

“The organization has set a standard,” Vrabel said. “The Patriots organization, Robert and Jonathan (Kraft), have set a standard for this organization that this is what the expectation is. We understand that, we embrace that.”

Seattle shifted from Pete Carroll at the end of the 2024 season, and longtime general manager John Schneider restocked in tandem with Macdonald, 38. The second-year coach and defensive-minded mad scientist won 14 games in the 2025 regular season, earning the top seed in the NFC with reclamation project Sam Darnold starring in the vast shadow of Seattle’s sledgehammer defense.

Darnold threw 25 touchdown passes in his first season with the Seahawks. He opposes Drake Maye, the No. 3 pick in the 2024 draft, who produced numbers once expected of another famous Patriots passer with a fully stocked ring finger. Maye finished ahead of Darnold in most passing categories. He had 31 touchdown passes, 4,394 yards and a league-leading 113.5 passer rating with a pair of rookies starting on the left side of a fully revamped offensive line.

Maye has harped on running the ball, and Vrabel continues to preach balance in the long preamble to Super Bowl LX. But numbers could set up in Seattle’s favor.

The Seahawks have a streak of 28 consecutive games without allowing a 100-yard rusher and big plays are a pipe dream — only 15 plays of 20-plus yards — because of the speed and versatility of the back seven and the ability of Macdonald to generate pressure with his front four. They were stingy on first down and excelled on third down, when the crosshairs are largely centered on the pocket.

New England had allowed Maye to be sacked 15 times in the playoffs.

“We’ve got to stay connected,” Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels said. “It’s kind of like synchronized swimming. If one of them is different than the other, you usually have a bad play. We’re going to be put to the test. They will twist and stunt, a really violent team.”

Seahawks defensive tackle Leonard Williams is a terror inside, and six Seattle defenders have at least 40 QB pressures. Williams leads the team with 65 followed by DeMarcus Lawrence with 58. While Seattle’s dynamic personnel and playmaking mix is getting headlines, the Seahawks were far from flawless in 2025. They allowed 27 points to the Rams in the NFC Championship Game and needed an offensive explosion to edge the same team 38-37 in the regular season.

McDaniels said he’s not afraid of leaning on his young players. He recalled being in the press box as an assistant coach in the 2001 season when a young Tom Brady made his Super Bowl debut and beat the St. Louis Rams.

“That was a great example of a young player being put in a situation where (coaches) could have let the game go to overtime,” Daniels said. “Those are the types of situations players live for. Drake has had to deal with those types of circumstances this season, and we’ve only gotten his best football.”

Maye registered 11 multiple-TD games in the 2025 regular season. He has taken only one loss since Sept. 21, compiling a 16-1 record since then. Maye leads the Darnold, 29, in career postseason wins, and their combined five playoff victories were all collected last month.

Seahawks wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba led the league with 1,793 passing yards and was the target of 163 of Darnold’s 477 passes in the regular season. He logged 119 receptions and 10 touchdowns. Smith-Njigba had 10 catches for 153 yards and a touchdown in the NFC Championship Game. On film, Vrabel is still hunting for a major weakness.

“Sudden, savvy, competitive,” Vrabel said. “Really good play strength for his stature. He’s really good at contested catches. Good route craft and understanding in zone and man. Great body control.”

Maye insisted Wednesday his shoulder was fine after being limited last week. He was in Levi’s Stadium the last time it hosted the Super Bowl — February 2016, when the Denver Broncos beat the Carolina Panthers — and the Patriots played at San Francisco last season. He said the preparation for the Super Bowl is mostly a normal week with a bonus hotel stay and practice at a foreign facility. Ah, youngsters.

“It’s such a cool moment to be out here with the guys and the teammates,” Maye said. “A chance to enjoy the moment together. The emotions will be a little bit higher on game day.”

Vrabel’s Super Bowl experience has been a common talking point in the Patriots’ makeshift camp at the San Jose Marriott and Stanford University this week. Veteran defensive players such as cornerback Carlton Davis III (Tom Brady’s teammate for Tampa Bay’s Super Bowl win to cap the 2020 season) and defensive tackle Milton Williams (a winner with the Eagles 12 months ago) are helping keep younger players and newbies like 32-year-old wide receiver Stefon Diggs from emotional exhaustion with all of the pomp and circumstance on the Super Bowl periphery this week.

“His maturation process is second to none. One of the best I’ve ever seen from a quarterback position,” Diggs said of Maye’s calm. “He’s still super young, which is crazy. He’s had a lot of success, but as I have grown closer to him, I’m a huge fan of him. He’s like a mini inspiration. To be that young, be that mature and be able to play at a high level is something that I always wanted when I was a young player. I’m just happy to be a part of this thing.”

As expected with another defense-first head coach, Seattle also stresses the running game. Kenneth Walker III led the team with 1,027 rushing yards in the regular season, and he has added 178 yards and four touchdowns in two playoff games.

For the Patriots, Rhamondre Stevenson was second to rookie speedster TreVeyon Henderson in rushing in the regular season, but Stevenson climbed out of Vrabel’s doghouse — where he landed due to three fumbles — to lead the NFL in rushing in the playoffs with 194 yards on 51 carries.

“We’re always looking to find balance in our offense because you become more difficult to defend if the defense has to defend run-pass on every series in every situation,” McDaniels said.

The Patriots finished the season sixth in the NFL in rushing with 128.9 yards per game after ranking 31st the first month of the season. Maye has been a problem for front sevens in the playoffs because of his mobility. Seattle can use rookie safety Nick Emmanwori as a spy to keep Maye’s speed in check, but the Patriots know there are counters to that kind of chess move.

“There are weak spots in every coverage,” Maye said.

New England’s interior defensive line tandem of Milton Williams and Christian Barmore, self-described QB predators, present a hurdle for Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak finding a comfort zone for Darnold. Seattle rookie left guard Grey Zabel will be vital in making the mission possible.

“Me and him, we come in hungry. We’re like lions. We come to hunt,” Barmore said. “And the whole D-line. Our goal is to dominate every time we’re out there. It doesn’t matter who it is, another day to line up and kick ass.”

Darnold signed a three-year, $100.5 million deal with the Seahawks last March. He hasn’t played for the same team or play-caller since 2022, his second year with the Carolina Panthers, when Baker Mayfield was named the starter. Darnold, the third pick in the 2018 draft, is on his fifth team but playing his finest football. However, he led all quarterbacks in turnovers — six fumbles lost, 14 interceptions — opening the door to doubts about his performance this week.

Darnold said his oblique strain, an issue that crept up before the divisional playoffs, is vastly improved with the two-week break between conference title games and the Super Bowl. He said he is not in the mindset of proving anyone wrong by winning Sunday.

“All of the hard work and dedication leads to this moment,” Darnold said.

– Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NFL, Patriots, Super Bowl LX Tagged With: New England Patriots, NFL, Seattle Seahawks, Super Bowl LX

Celtics Acquire Vučević

February 5, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Staff Report from Official Team News Release) – In a pre-trade deadline deal this week, the Boston Celtics acquired center Nikola Vučević and a future second-round pick from the Chicago Bulls in exchange for guard Anfernee Simons and a 2026 second-round pick.

In 48 games (all starts) this season, Vučević (6’10”, 260) is averaging 16.9 points (50.5 FG%, 37.6 3FG%, 83.8 FT%), 9.0 rebounds, and 3.8 assists in 30.8 minutes per game. The 35-year-old is the only player in the NBA this season with 400+ rebounds and 80+ 3-pointers and is just one of three centers this season averaging at least 16.0 points, 8.0 rebounds, and 3.0 assists (Jokic, Sengun).
In 1,020 career NBA games (956 starts) over 15 seasons with Philadelphia (2011-12), Orlando (2012-2020), and Chicago (2020-2026), the Montenegro native has averaged 17.2 points (49.8 FG%, 35.1 3FG%, 77.3 FT%), 10.4 rebounds, and 2.9 assists in 31.4 minutes per game. Vučević is coming off the most efficient shooting season of his career, shooting a career-best 53.0 percent from the field in 2024-25 while shooting 40.2 percent from three-point distance, the second-highest mark of his career. Vučević has made 16 career playoff appearances (15 starts), averaging 18.4 points, 9.9 rebounds, and 3.2 assists in 32.3 minutes per game.
A two-time NBA All-Star (2019, 2021), Vučević is the only active NBA player with 10+ seasons averaging at least 10.0 rebounds per game. He is also the only player in NBA history with at least 2,500 offensive rebounds, 800 3-pointers, 800 steals, and 800 blocks. Recording at least 40 double-doubles in nine consecutive seasons, Vučević ranks second among active players in career double-doubles (578), trailing only LeBron James, and ranks fourth among active players in career rebounds (10,601).
Vučević was originally selected with the 16th overall pick in the 2011 NBA Draft by Philadelphia after playing three seasons collegiately at USC (2008-11).

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Celtics, NBA Tagged With: Boston Celtics, NBA

Celtics Too Much for Rockets

February 5, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

HOUSTON – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Celtics’ guard Derrick White scored a game-high 28 points and Payton Pritchard added 27 points off the bench as the short-handed Boston throttled the Houston Rockets 114-93 on Wednesday.

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The Celtics earned their fourth consecutive victory and claimed both ends of a road back-to-back, including a win in Dallas on Tuesday. The Celtics did so without Jaylen Brown, the Eastern Conference Player of the Month, who paired 33 points with 11 rebounds against the Mavericks, in the second game by unleashing a flurry of 3-pointers early in the third quarter.

White was the linchpin of the decisive surge. The Celtics opened the second half 5 for 7 from behind the arc with White and Baylor Scheierman (15 points, 10 rebounds) nailing two threes apiece before Ron Harper Jr. extended a seven-point halftime lead to 67-48 at the 7:02 mark. When White converted from deep again roughly two minutes later, the Celtics led 72-50.

With 1.1 seconds left in the third, Rockets coach Ime Udoka was assessed a technical foul. The Celtics closed that frame with four free throws, two each from Pritchard and Neemias Queta, and carried an 85-63 lead into the final frame.

Queta posted a double-double of 10 points and 19 rebounds, while Luka Garza added 19 points for the Celtics. Harper paired 11 points with nine rebounds, including a trio of 3-pointers. Boston finished 19 for 51 from behind the arc, with White and Pritchard finishing 11 for 24 from deep.

Kevin Durant led the Rockets with 15 points but missed 7 of 11 shots. Alperen Sengun, who grabbed a team-high nine rebounds, and Jabari Smith Jr. scored 13 points apiece. Amen Thompson (11 points) and Tari Eason (10) also scored in double figures for the Rockets, who shot 41.5%.

The teams combined to shoot 32.6% and missed 17 of 20 3-pointers in the first quarter. The Celtics emerged from that slog with an 8-2 spurt to open the second quarter, only for Smith to drill back-to-back threes that pulled the Rockets to within 26-25.

However, Boston eventually gained some separation later in the quarter to take a 49-42 halftime lead.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Celtics, NBA Tagged With: Boston Celtics, Houston Rockets, NBA

Drake Maye “Feeling Good” in Palo Alto

February 5, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

PALO ALTO – (Staff, Pro Footbal Writers and Wire Service Report) – New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye was a full participant in Wednesday’s practice as on-field preparations for Super Bowl LX against Seattle shifted gears.

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The second-year quarterback, who injured his right shoulder during the AFC championship game, took all of the team’s first-team reps during a 90-minute practice at Stanford Stadium. He had told reporters earlier in the week that he was “feeling good” and that certainly appeared to be the case as the team worked through seven-on-seven and full-squad drills in full shoulder pads.

While the team installed much of its game plan during practices last week in Foxborough, head coach Mike Vrabel said his staff saved several elements of that plan so they would have new information to present to players in meetings and practices here in the Bay Area. This was a suggestion from offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels, who is coaching in his 10th Super Bowl as a member of the Patriots’ staff.

“No one has more experience than Josh with this, and he felt like that we needed to do something to keep them engaged and stimulated, so they weren’t looking at some things for the second or third time,” Vrabel said.

Vrabel is taking that engagement literally. After practice ended, Vrabel pulled a group of interior defensive linemen aside for extra instruction. Vrabel even got down into a three-point stance to work with defensive tackle Cory Durden on pass rush technique.

“We’re now talking about 36 hours being critical here, before people come in, friends and obligations that come with this game,” Vrabel said.

Team owners Robert and Jonathan Kraft arrived at Stanford with legendary Patriots receiver Julian Edelman. Like McDaniels, those three men are quite familiar with the Super Bowl preparation process, but it’s all new for most of Vrabel’s squad. No Patriot remains on the roster from their last Super Bowl and only five players on the current roster have prior Super Bowl experience.

“We’ve got some things to clean up, and then we’ve got to forge ahead,” Vrabel said. “We want to continue to keep the energy and the enthusiasm, but the execution is going to end up really helping us win the game.”

Maye was listed on the team’s first injury report with the shoulder, but as a full participant. Linebacker Robert Spillane was the only Patriots player who did not participate as he continues to recover from an ankle injury he suffered in the AFC title game in Denver. Linebacker Harold Landry was listed as a limited participant with a knee injury. Other players listed on the injury report were backup offensive lineman Thayer Munford Jr. (limited, knee) and defensive tackle Joshua Farmer (full participant, hamstring.) Farmer remains on the injured reserved list but has been designed to return.

–Pro Football Writers of America

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NFL, Patriots, Super Bowl LX Tagged With: NFL, NFL Playoffs, Super Bowl, Super Bowl LX

Marchand Beats the Bruins

February 5, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

SUNRISE – (Wire Service Report) – Anton Lundell came off the injured list and provided one goal and two assists in regulation and also scored in the shootout as the host Florida Panthers defeated the Boston Bruins, 5-4, on Wednesday night in South Florida.

Brad Marchand also scored in the four-round shootout. Victor Arvidsson scored for Boston.

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The Panthers, who snapped a season-high-tying four-game losing streak, also got two other players back from the injured list: Marchand and Sam Bennett.

Other prominent Panthers still injured are center Aleksander Barkov and defensemen Seth Jones and Dmitry Kulikov.

The Panthers also got goals from Eetu Luostarinen, Uvis Balinskis and Matthew Tkachuk. Sergei Bobrovsky made 25 saves for his first win since Jan. 24.

Boston, playing its final game before its Olympic break, got two goals from Michael Eyssimont. Prior to Wednesday, he had scored just once since Nov. 17. The Bruins also got one goal each from Mark Kastelic and Casey Mittelstadt.

Joonas Korpisalo added 22 saves as the Bruins lost consecutive games for the first time this calendar year.

Bennett appeared to open the scoring just 84 seconds in, but the goal was wiped out on review due to offsides.

The Panthers made it 1-0 — for real this time — as Boston’s Morgan Geekie fanned on a clearing attempt, and that led directly to Luostarinen scoring from the right circle.

However, Boston closed the first period with a 2-1 lead as Eyssimont scored with 12:42 left and again with 7:17 remaining.

On the first goal, Alex Steeves earned the primary assist as he won a puck battle and made a blind pass to Eyssimont, who was in alone on Bobrovsky. On the second one, Eyssimont scored on another breakaway, faking out Bobrovsky before stuffing the puck just inside the right post.

Florida took a 4-2 lead in the second period, scoring twice on its power play and once short-handed.

First, Tkachuk, operating from behind the goal line, tossed a pass to Balinskis, who scored from the slot. Then, less than three minutes later, Florida struck again as Tkachuk made two more great passes before scoring himself, banking the puck in off the back of Korpisalo.

Both times, the Panthers scored within the first 30 seconds with the man advantage.

Florida then added a short-handed goal as Sam Reinhart came up with a steal and then put the puck on Lundell’s stick for a tap-in tally.

However, Boston tied the score 4-4 with third-period goals by Kastelic and then Mittelstadt. First, Kastelic scored on a deflection off a pass from Charlie McAvoy. Then, with 9:30 left in the third, Mittelstadt scored on a rebound, just nine seconds into Boston’s sixth power play of the night.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Bruins, NHL Tagged With: Boston Bruins, Florida Panthers, NHL

Super Bowl LX: Seahawks’ Safety Nick Emmanwori Limited

February 5, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

SAN JOSE – (Wire Service Report) – The Seattle Seahawks opened Super Bowl week Wednesday with their first and only padded practice of the week before the game. The Seahawks players took the practice field at San Jose State for 1 hour and 50 minutes, starting at 2:15 p.m. under a sunny and cloudless sky. It was 73-degrees.

“We had an opportunity to work at a different practice window,” head coach Mike Macdonald said after practice. “Which I thought was great with our guys’ cadence. Lot of spirit. Guys did a great job. We had a great practice.”

Safety Nick Emmanwori was limited in practice on Wednesday with an ankle injury that he suffered during practice.

The rookie safety injured his ankle while defending a pass late in practice. He walked off the field on his own shortly before 4 p.m. Several players and coaches went over to comfort him before he left.

“He had an ankle today, we brought him in to look at it, and we’ll kind of go from here and figure out what are the next steps?” Macdonald said.

Seattle practiced in pads for about an hour before taking them off for the second half of practice.

Macdonald said he reached out to coaches he’d worked with in the past to design the structure for last week and this week of practice. He said the team started installing their game plan last week.

“We’re going to be evolving. We didn’t put the whole thing in last week. We’re just gonna keep building it, stay on cadence this week and do what we need to do to feel like we get to a sweet spot by end of the week.”

Five Seahawks were limited in practice on Wednesday. Left tackle Charles Cross (foot), left tackle Josh Jones (ankle, knee), quarterback Sam Darnold (oblique), fullback Robbie Ouzts (neck) and safety Emmanwori (ankle).

Darnold has been limited in all eight practices since he injured his oblique on Jan. 15.

“Sam’s right on schedule,” Macdonald said. “So we’ve had this plan here over the last X amount of weeks, and it varies every day. And today he had a great day, so we’re right on schedule.”

Six other Seahawks players are on the injury report but practiced in full Wednesday: Tight end Eric Saubert (hamstring), receiver Jake Bobo (hand), fullback Brady Russell (hand), linebacker Ernest Jones IV (chest), safety Julian Love (shoulder), linebacker Drake Thomas (shoulder).

Three players were limited in practice for non-injury rest: linebacker DeMarcus Lawrence, receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, and defensive tackle Leonard Williams.

Seattle will practice again Thursday at 2:15 p.m. local time.

–Pro Football Writers of America

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NFL, Super Bowl LX Tagged With: New England Patriots, NFL, Seattle Seahawks, Super Bowl LX

Next Up: The BIG EAST Showdown

February 4, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

CHICAGO – (Staff Report from Official News Release) – UConn and St. John’s extended their respective win streaks on Tuesday night, with victories over Xavier and DePaul, respectively. The two nationally ranked teams will play the first of their two regular season games this coming Friday at Madison Square Garden.
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Tuesday, Feb. 3
UConn 92, Xavier 60 – Box Score 
No. 3/3 UConn scored the first 10 points of the game at home against Xavier, setting the tone en route to their 18th consecutive victory.  Five Huskies reached double figures – and seven had at least nine points – as UConn passed the 90-point mark for the third time in league play.  Braylon Mullins scored six of his 13 points during the 10-0 start to the contest.  The Huskies pushed the lead over 20 points midway through the opening frame, after a steal and transition bucket from Tarris Reed Jr. made it 29-8 with 10:05 to go.  UConn led 50-22 at the break and extended its lead to as many as 38 over the final 20 minutes of play.  Silas Demary Jr. led the Huskies with 17 points and eight assists, while Reed Jr. and Eric Reibe each tallied 14 points, combining to shoot 12-of-13 from the floor.  Mullins scored all 13 of his points in the first half.  For Xavier, All Wright tallied 14 points, while Malik Messina-Moore and Roddie Anderson III each scored 10 points.
Of Note:
  • UConn’s 18-game single-season winning streak trails only a 19-game streak in 1998-99 and a 23-game run in 1995-96 for best in program history
  • Over his last three games, UConn’s Tarris Reed Jr. has connected on 19-of-20 shots from the floor and is averaging 13.7 points, 6.3 rebounds, 2.0 assists, and 2.0 blocked shots in 21 minutes per game.
  • Xavier’s Tre Carroll finished with nine points, ending an eight-game streak of scoring in double-digits.  During that span, Carroll averaged 22.4 points per game.
St. John’s 68, DePaul 56 – Box Score
Zuby Ejiofor led No. 22/22 St. John’s with 16 points, nine rebounds and four assists, becoming the 54th player in program history to reach the 1,000-point mark, as the Red Storm extended their win streak to eight games last night at DePaul.  After a back and forth opening 20 minutes that saw seven ties and six lead changes, the Red Storm outscored the Blue Demons, 39-28, in a strong second half.  After DePaul’s CJ Gunn hit a 3-pointer to give his team a 35-34 lead with 17:34 remaining, SJU rattled off 12 straight and never trailed again.  The Blue Demons got within six – 56-50 – with 3:36 to go but got no closer.  Bryce Hopkins finished with 15 points and six rebounds, while Oziyah Sellers chipped in with 13 points, including three 3-pointers.  DePaul was led by 13 points and five rebounds from Layden Blocker, while Brandon Maclin added seven points and nine rebounds in 26 minutes off the bench.
Of Note:
  • The win improved St. John’s BIG EAST record to 10-1 for the second straight season.  The Red Storm started 10-1 a season ago under head coach Rick Pitino
  • It was also the Johnnies’ ninth consecutive road victory in BIG EAST play.
  • DePaul’s Layden Blocker has scored in double-digits in seven straight game.  During the span, the junior guard is averaging 13.3 points per game.
—–
Tonight’s Action: All three BIG EAST games on Wednesday will air on Peacock Network, via streaming.  Seton Hall heads to Villanova for a 6:30 p.m. ET tipoff at Finneran Pavilion, followed by Butler taking on Providence at 7 p.m. ET.  Creighton travels to Georgetown for a 7:30 p.m. ET tip.
Wednesday, Feb. 4
Peacock; NBC Sports Network
Seton Hall at Villanova – 6:30 p.m. ET
John Fanta (pxp); Tarik Turner (analyst)
Peacock
Butler at Providence – 7 p.m. ET
Mike Corey (pxp); Matt McCall (analyst)
Creighton at Georgetown – 7:30 p.m. ET
Paul Burmeister (pxp); Brendan Haywood (analyst)

Filed Under: Big East, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East, Big East Basketball

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“The Boston Marathon is to a runner as Red Rocks is to a Rock n’ Roll band.” - TL “The Boston Marathon is to a runner as Red Rocks is to a Rock n’ Roll band.” - TL
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Somehow, the Blue Devils are connected to the basketball gods. Somehow, the Blue Devils are connected to the basketball gods.
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