Erikan Francis has restated his commitment to help Heartland FC regain promotion to the Nigeria Premier Football League after scoring in their 3–1 victory over Smart City FC.
The forward who joined Heartland FC in mid-season on-loan from Akwa United gave the Owerri side a perfect start when he opened the scoring just two minutes into their Matchday 13 clash at the Dan Anyiam Stadium on Saturday.
Erikan’s early strike helped set the pace for a strong performance by the home side, who went on to secure an important win.
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After the match, the Akwa Ibom-born forward, who was named the NNL Player of the Match, thanked God and spoke about his strong connection with the club. He said returning to Heartland means a lot to him and that he is determined to help the team return to the top division.
“First and foremost I want to thank the Almighty God. I want to thank Christ Jesus that I truly believe in. Coming back to Heartland to play for them is something I have always had in mind because this is my home,” he said.
“I love it here and anytime I play I put in everything. What runs through my mind is that this team needs to promote back to the NPFL. That is why I am giving 100 percent. The God that did it before through me when this team went to the NPFL in 2023/24, I believe that same God will do it again for Heartland this season.”
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Heartland began the match strongly, with Erikan’s quick goal giving the Naze Millionaires an early advantage.
Erikan Francis was again involved in a key moment in the 21st minute when he was fouled inside the penalty area, leading the referee to award a penalty. Jonathan Osondi stepped up and calmly converted the spot kick to extend the lead.
Smart City reduced the deficit just before half-time when Gafar Ojo scored in the 45th minute.
However, Heartland regained control in the second half when Ali Sunday added a third goal to seal the victory for the team coached by Emmanuel Amuneke.
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Erikan had previously played for Heartland under the late coach Christian Obi when the club secured promotion to the top flight. Since returning to the team in the middle of the season, he has recorded two goals and one assist.
The win moves Heartland to third place in Conference A with 17 points from 11 matches.
They will next face Sunshine Stars F.C. in another crucial fixture as they continue their push for promotion back to Nigeria’s top division.
Both clubs were relegated from the NPFL last season alongside Akwa United F.C. and Lobi Stars F.C., making the upcoming clash an important battle in the race for a return to the top flight.
Technical Adviser of Warri Wolves FC, Hassan Abdallah, says his team is determined to secure maximum points when they face Enyimba FC in their Matchweek 29 clash of the Nigeria Premier Football League.
The match will take place at the Southern Delta University Stadium in Ozoro, where the Seasiders hope to repeat their earlier success against the nine-time Nigerian champions.
Speaking before the game, Abdallah said his team is confident of getting a positive result after defeating Enyimba 2–1 in the first meeting between both sides earlier in the season in Aba.
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“The mentality of the boys have changed,” he said. “They are now more determined and ready to express themselves on the pitch. We have worked hard to reform the mindset of the squad and position them for success.”
The coach explained that since he took charge of the team, efforts have been made to correct weaknesses that previously affected their performances.
According to him, the players have shown improvement in both their attitude and physical condition, which has helped the team become more competitive.
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Abdallah also said the results of the work done by the technical crew are beginning to show, as the players are now stronger and more confident.
Despite recognising the quality and history of Enyimba, the coach believes Warri Wolves can achieve another victory.
“Ozoro is not different from Aba,” he said. “If we could defeat Enyimba at the Elephant Park, we can certainly do it again here.”
He also called on supporters to come out in large numbers to encourage the team during the match.
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Abdallah expressed hope that the energy from the fans will motivate the players to give their best and secure an important win against their experienced opponents.
Manchester City beat Newcastle United 3-1 on Saturday night to reach the FA Cup quarter-finals, with Omar Marmoush’s second-half double securing their place in the next round.
Pep Guardiola admitted he said sorry during the victory over Newcastle United in the FA Cup fifth round because of “how good Manchester City were playing”. The hosts took the lead on 18 minutes through Harvey Barnes, but once Savinho equalised before half time, City were in control.
Omar Marmoush fired home from close range just after the break to put City ahead. He then bagged a second with a spectacular long-range effort on 65 minutes. Following the third goal, television cameras cut to Guardiola repeatedly saying something as his players celebrated.
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When asked by TNT Sports what he was saying, Guardiola replied: “I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I’m sorry.” Pressed on why he felt the need to apologise, Guardiola added: “For how good we were playing.” City’s head coach was in the spotlight throughout the victory after being booked for arguing a decision.
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Guardiola felt Jeremy Doku should have received a free kick when he was caught by his opponent but referee Sam Barrott waved away the complaints. This led to the City boss’ furious reaction that earned him a booking. Reflecting on that incident, Guardiola said: “When Jeremy Doku dribbles past Trippier and goes alone to the box and is being pulled from behind, I’m not asking for a yellow card but please – it’s a foul.
“I will defend my team. We have all the records in this country – all of them. Despite everything, we have all of them.
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“And we have the record of the manager with the most yellow cards. I have always wanted this record and now I have it. Two games banned now and I will go on holiday.”
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He added: “Oh my god. Oh, my, God. There are things that still after ten years I cannot understand. Review the action, review the action. Of course I’m going to defend Doku, and all my teams. They continue to do it.”
The suspension for Guardiola’s sixth booking of the season will come into effect against West Ham in the Premier League next weekend and the FA Cup quarter-final in April. The suspension does not apply to European matches or the Carabao Cup final vs Arsenal.
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Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Derek Carr (4) celebrates after securing an overtime victory against the Denver Broncos, Nov. 20, 2022, at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver. The veteran signal-caller lifted his arms while teammates and fans reacted to the dramatic finish following the Raiders’ late-game push to close out the divisional matchup. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports.
With free agency one day away, our Minnesota Vikings myths and misses — the Nopedy Nopes — ride again. We track weekly all Vikings-themed items that are unrealistic, wrong, or didn’t quite work out.
A few popular Vikings theories are already falling apart.
We call them the “Nopedy Nopes,” and the series has spanned a few years.
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Carr, Jones, and Spending Hype Belong in Minnesota’s Myth Bin
Here’s a look at Vikings stuff from the week that didn’t or won’t turn out as planned.
Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Derek Carr (4) celebrates during the second half against the Denver Broncos at Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada, Dec 26, 2021. Carr pumped his fist after a successful offensive sequence as teammates gathered nearby during the AFC West matchup played in front of a packed crowd. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports.
The Nopedy Nope: Derek Carr is a realistic QB option for the Vikings.
Carr resurfacing as a viable option for the Vikings — or any team — may feel like a Philip Rivers-style comeback fantasy.
NFL insider Jason La Canfora wrote Tuesday, “Although sections of the media continue to suggest that NFL teams would welcome a comeback from retired quarterback Derek Carr, it’s far harder to find any front-office executives who share that enthusiasm for a return.”
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“Carr, whose tenure with the Saints was mostly dreadful with him signing a lucrative contract that team officials quickly regretted, has been threatening to come out of retirement to play for a contending team.”
Carr will turn 35 in three weeks and, in theory, could still perform at a semi-high level.
La Canfora added, “New Orleans retains his rights and conversations with multiple teams actually in the market for quarterback upgrades revealed no appetite for the veteran even despite this college draft being very short on quarterback options and despite the free-agent class being barren as well.”
“An agent for a top free agent quarterback said he does not view Carr as competition for his client’s services and in general there has been skepticism within the football world about Carr playing anywhere in 2026.”
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That reporting cools the conversation quickly for anyone hoping Carr might restart his career in the Twin Cities.
The Verdict: Nopedy nope on Carr as an overly realistic quarterback option for the Vikings. Why trade for Carr and his contract when you can sign Kyler Murray or Geno Smith for “free?”
The Nopedy Nope: Daniel Jones could be on the Vikings’ radar — all $40 million per year, plus a busted Achilles tendon.
The transition tag keeps a small door open for Daniel Jones to land in Minnesota. In that setup, another team can extend Jones an offer sheet while the Colts retain the option to match it.
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ESPN’s Peter Schrager said Tuesday, “There’s also another team that’s lingering (in free agency. The transition tag does mean some other team can make an offer; the Colts would just have the last opportunity to match that offer. The team I would watch as a possible long shot, but also one that could be angling here is the Minnesota Vikings.”
KSTP’s Darren Wolfson also mentioned on SKOR North programming, “Daniel Jones is certainly somebody at least that needs to be on our radar.”
Indianapolis Colts quarterback Daniel Jones (17) speaks with head coach Shane Steichen during the first quarter against the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, Oct 19, 2025. Jones and Steichen discuss strategy along the sideline while the Colts offense prepares for its next possession. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images.
A Vikings pursuit of Jones would likely require a contract north of $40 million. That becomes tricky for a team that started the offseason about $40 million over the cap. The medical component adds another layer of risk, too, with Jones working back from a torn Achilles.
The Verdict: Nopedy nope on spending $40 million for Jones and his ruptured Achilles when, again, Murray and Smith can be signed for next to nothing.
The Nopedy Nope: The Vikings will spend big in free agency.
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Because it spent so much in 2024 and 2025, Minnesota won’t pay top dollar in 2026 during free agency, or so says interim general manager Rob Brzezinski.
Brzezinski chatted with ESPN this week: “We’ve spent a lot of money the last two years in free agency. And so our goal is going to be to keep our core in place, and that’s going to involve making some difficult decisions on some players, which you deal with on a daily basis.”
“But I think for the most part, our goal is going to be to draft and develop and to retain our core, and supplement with free agency. It just makes logical sense that that bill’s coming due. We do have to navigate it, and navigate it responsibly.”
Minnesota Vikings executive Rob Brzezinski speaks with Vikings.com host Gabe Henderson during a sit-down interview about the team’s leadership structure at the Vikings facility in Eagan, Minnesota, Feb 17, 2022. The discussion focused on organizational philosophy and the hiring of head coach Kevin O’Connell. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
Brzezinski continued, “A big part of that is balancing what we’re doing in 2026 versus the future. It’s just inherent in my role. I feel like that’s a critical part of when I talk about the guardrails and the vision and the philosophy.”
“To make sure, maybe if we’re veering a little bit, to try to make a decision that maybe is not the best for the long term, maybe we can come back to what we talked about originally and say, ‘Hey, remember we talked about this is the way we’re going to do things? This is our philosophy.’ I think we can just lean on that and go from there.””
The Verdict: The Vikings will sign new players, but don’t expect the top guys like center Tyler Linderbaum or EDGE Trey Hendrickson. Nopedy nope. The spend-big window has closed for a while.
It’s fitting that John Daly the Second speaks like a pro golfer — short, to the point, Just have to keep doing what I’m doing — for he is competing in a professional event. The 22-year-old amateur is a sponsor exemption in this week’s Puerto Rico Open.
But it’s also fitting that he’s doing it this week in particular, alongside a handful of other up-and-coming youths … in a field that features a bunch of outgoing PGA Tour members. This is the final week before the future of the PGA Tour starts to crystallize in a more public way.
The Puerto Rico Open, played at the same time as this week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational, a Signature Event, is exactly the kind of tournament that would fit into a future second-tier beneath the PGA Tour. Where those relegated from the top tier go to figure their game out, and where the best players from the next generation graduate to when their college days are over.
Daly II is a senior at Arkansas and the 54th-ranked amateur in the world. He’s working through a difficult spring at the moment, but won a pair of meaningful amateur events in 2025, not to mention his T5 finish at the U.S. Amateur. It’s not just the name — he wouldn’t have earned a sponsor’s exemption if he didn’t at least have a good bit of game to back it up. And through 54 holes, he’s paying us a solid reminder: nine under and three shots back of leader Ricky Castillo.
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Daly II called his third-round 70 “solid,” just like a 10-year pro would, before rattling off the kind of ho-hum, nothing-to-see-here answer that pros spit out with regularity: “Stayed in it well, hit some good shots. Yeah, sucks to make my first bogey in a while on 18. Hit a good second shot, just the wind let it rise in the air. Oh, well, it was a good day.”
The point here isn’t a new one: these kids arrive at the pro ranks and you have to squint pretty hard to see the “(a)” next to their names on leaderboards. This one, in particular, has a lot, and if more of these kids are ready to compete, then more of them should have a spot in the field. At least tournament director Matt Truax seems to think so. Daly II is just one of 14 sponsor exemptions into Puerto Rico, a large majority of which have been spent on the youths.
There’s 18-year-old Blades Brown, two clear of Daly, who has already been a pro for nearly two years. He’s a sponsor exemption, but now has the fourth-best odds entering Sunday’s final round. Another exemption got 17-year-old Miles Russell in the field. He’s already played eight PGA Tour or Korn Ferry Tour events before this one. Beating a bunch of veteran Tour pros, like he’s done this week, is old hat for him now and he hasn’t graduated from high school yet.
In between Brown and Russell is Kihei Akina, a freshman at BYU, who sits tied for 13th. He’s eight-up on last year’s Ryder Cupper Rasmus Hojgaard, to mention just one top-50 player looking up at him on the ‘board.
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What the youths are combining to do here is collectively shout that there better be a defined spot in the future, tiered system carved out for them, too. It’s coming at a good time, just ahead of conference tournaments and NCAAs, when we’ll see them play a lot more on TV. But also as Tiger Woods, chairman of the Tour’s Future Competitions Committee, has been invoking them them in regards to the tiered system his committee members are trying to create.
“We’re trying to create opportunities for that turnover coming from the PGA Tour [University],” Woods said at last month’s Genesis Invitational. “Or it’s the Korn Ferry and trying to get more youth out here because eventually they’re going to take over the game.”
Just how many youths will be included? That answer hasn’t arrived yet. But this weekend suggests the number aught to be pretty big.
Mar 7, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Connecticut Huskies guard Silas Demary Jr. (2) shoots against Marquette Golden Eagles forward Ben Gold (12) during the first half at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images
Ben Gold prevented Silas Demary Jr. from hitting a game-tying basket with 2 seconds remaining and host Marquette upset No. 4 UConn 68-62 on Saturday in Milwaukee.
Nigel James Jr. led the Golden Eagles (12-19, 7-13 Big East) with 19 points before Gold made the defensive play of the game and prevented the Huskies from getting a share of the Big East regular-season title.
James missed a jumper with 14 seconds left and Jayden Ross seized the defensive rebound. Demary moved the ball up the floor and entered the paint, but he was met by Gold, who contested the jumper and was not called for a foul. The no-call angered UConn coach Danny Hurley, who was tossed by referee John Gaffney, and Chase Ross (14 points) hit four free throws with one second left to finish it.
Demary led the Huskies (27-4, 17-3) with 17 and Tarris Reed Jr. added 16, but the Huskies endured a woeful shooting day, finishing at 35.6%. UConn made just 3 of 24 three-pointers as Braylon Mullins and Alex Karaban were a combined 1 of 15 from behind the arc and 4 of 21 overall.
No. 1 Duke 76, No. 17 North Carolina 61
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Cameron Boozer scored 26 points and grabbed 15 rebounds as the Blue Devils rolled over the Tar Heels in the second half of a home victory to avenge their only Atlantic Coast Conference loss at Durham, N.C.
Maliq Brown racked up 15 points and Isaiah Evans had 11 for Duke (29-2, 17-1 ACC), which was saddled with some makeshift lineups because of injuries that could be concerning in the coming weeks. The Blue Devils, who also received 10 points from Dame Sarr, head to the ACC tournament with the top seed while riding an eight-game winning streak.
Derek Dixon’s 17 points were tops for North Carolina (24-7, 12-6), which will be the No. 4 seed in the ACC tournament. Henri Veesaar had nine of his 11 points in the first half, and Jarin Stevenson and Seth Trimble both scored 10 points.
No. 2 Arizona 89, Colorado 79
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Freshmen Koa Peat and Brayden Burries combined for 56 points on 21-of-31 shooting from the field to lead the Wildcats past the Buffaloes at Boulder, Colo.
Arizona (29-2, 16-2 Big 12) set the program record for most wins in a regular season. Burries had 22 of his career-high 31 points in the second half and Peat finished with 25 points in the final regular-season game for both teams. The Wildcats shot a sizzling 70.4% from the field (19 of 27) in the second half.
Colorado’s Isaiah Johnson broke the program’s freshman scoring record, scoring a career-high 28 points to put him at 526. Alec Burks had the previous record of 512 points in 2009-10. Barrington Hargress had 13 points and Jalin Holland finished with 12 points and five rebounds for the Buffaloes (17-14, 7-11).
No. 5 Florida 84, Kentucky 77
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Thomas Haugh had a team-high 20 points, nine rebounds and three steals, and the Gators closed out their Southeastern Conference regular season with their 11th straight win, holding off the Wildcats in Lexington, Ken.
Boogie Fland had 16 points and six assists, while Alex Condon posted 14 points, five rebounds and four assists for Florida (25-6, 16-2). Rueben Chinyelu produced 13 points and eight rebounds and Xaivian Lee posted 11 points, seven rebounds and five assists.
Top scorer Otega Oweh notched 28 points and five rebounds for Kentucky (19-12, 10-8), which lost to the Gators for the third time in four meetings. Denzel Aberdeen had 15 points and five assists, but the Wildcats ended the SEC season in a 2-5 plummet.
No. 6 Iowa State 86, Arizona State 65
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Tamin Lipsey, Milan Momcilovic and Joshua Jefferson scored 16 points apiece and the Cyclones dominated the middle 12 minutes of the second half on the way to a win over the Sun Devils in Ames, Iowa, in the regular-season finale for both teams.
Jamarion Bateman added 13 points and Dominykas Pleta had 11 for Iowa State (25-6, 12-6 Big 12), which clinched the fifth seed in the league tournament as well as a first-round bye.
Massamba Diop led Arizona State (16-15, 7-11) with 12 points while Anthony Johnson and Maurice Odum scored 10 each. The Wildcats finished 12th in the league and will play No. 13 seed Baylor in the first round on Tuesday in Kansas City. The winner of that game faces the Cyclones in the second round.
No. 7 Houston 82, Oklahoma State 75
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Freshman reserve Chase McCarty scored a season-high 20 points and the Cougars rallied past the Cowboys to close out Big 12 regular-season play in Stillwater, Okla.
McCarty made 7 of 10 from the field, including a career-best 6 of 9 from deep and added four rebounds. Kingston Flemings had 13 points, nine assists and five rebounds as Houston (26-5, 14-4 Big 12) secured its second-place conference position. Joseph Tugler totaled 12 points, six rebounds, three blocks and two steals, and Milos Uzan and Emanuel Sharp had 11 points apiece.
Anthony Roy led Oklahoma State (18-13, 6-12) with 18 points, while Kanye Clary had 14 points, six rebounds and four assists. Jaylen Curry notched 13 points and six rebounds and Benjamin Ahmed scored 11. The Cowboys finished league play by dropping seven of nine games.
BYU 82, No. 10 Texas Tech 76
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Robert Wright III scored 27 points, including 23 in the second half, to lift the Cougars to a win over the Red Raiders in Provo, Utah.
AJ Dybantsa had 21 points and Kennard Davis Jr. added 16 for the Cougars (21-10, 9-9 Big 12), who overcame a 13-point deficit. They will be the No. 10 seed in next week’s Big 12 tournament.
Texas Tech (22-9, 12-6) fell to a No. 4 seed in the conference tournament and received a double bye. Christian Anderson posted 23 points and nine assists and finished the regular season with a school-record 233 assists. Donovan Atwell also had 23 points and Jaylen Petty had 14.
No. 13 Virginia 76, Virginia Tech 72
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Malik Thomas and Ugonna Onyenso each scored 16 points and the Cavaliers finished the regular season with a victory over the rival Hokies in ACC action in Charlottesville, Va.
The Virginia (27-4, 15-3) finished 16-1 at home in its first year under coach Ryan Odom and will be the No. 2 seed in next week’s ACC tournament in Charlotte, N.C. The Cavaliers have won 11 of their last 12 games. Sam Lewis added 15 points and Thijs De Ridder had 13 for Virginia, which never trailed.
Ben Hammond scored 21 points to lead Virginia Tech, which will need to make some noise in Charlotte to impress the NCAA Tournament selection committee. Amani Hansberry and Jailen Bedford each scored 12.
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No. 14 Kansas 104, Kansas State 85
Darryn Peterson poured in 27 points and Tre White knocked down five 3-pointers en route to a 23-point performance as the Jayhawks cruised to a home victory over the Wildcats in the Sunflower Showdown in Lawrence, Kan.
Kansas (22-9, 12-6 Big 12) closed the regular season with its 20th straight win over the Wildcats at Allen Fieldhouse. The Jayhawks ended a two-game skid as they’ll enter the postseason with high hopes.
K-State (12-19, 3-15) has lost four of its last five under interim coach Matthew Driscoll. P.J. Haggerty and Nate Johnson both finished with 21 points to lead the Wildcats.
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Wisconsin 97, No. 15 Purdue 93
John Blackwell scored 25 points to lead the sweet-shooting Badgers past the host Boilermakers in West Lafayette, Ind.
Nick Boyd had 23 points, Austin Rapp scored 17 and Aleksas Bieliauskas added 16 for Wisconsin (22-9, 14-6), which played without top big man Nolan Winter due to an ankle injury. The Badgers made a season-high 18 3-pointers while hitting 52.9% from 3-point range and 87.5% at the free-throw line.
Fletcher Loyer scored 23 points, Braden Smith had 20 points and Trey Kaufman-Renn added 17 points in the trio’s final game at Mackey Arena for Purdue (23-8, 13-7), which held a 34-22 rebounding advantage. The Boilers shot 11 of 25 from 3-point range and 34 of 67 overall.
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No. 16 Alabama 96, Auburn 84
Labaron Philon Jr. and Aden Holloway scored 21 points apiece as the Crimson Tide cruised to an easy home win over the Tigers at Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Amari Allen added 16 points, London Jemison scored 11 and Aiden Sherrell had 10 points and three blocked shots as Alabama (23-8, 13-5 SEC) won for the ninth time in 10 games. The Tide never trailed and led by as many as 28 while beating the Tigers for the sixth time in the past eight meetings.
In the teams’ regular-season finale, Kevin Overton scored 24 points for fading Auburn (16-15, 7-11), which lost for the eighth time in 10 games. Tahaad Pettiford added 19 points and four steals, Keyshawn Hall scored 13 points and Elyjah Freeman had 11 points for the Tigers.
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No. 20 Arkansas 88, Missouri 84 (OT)
Meleek Thomas shot 5-for-6 from 3-point range en route to scoring 28 points and John Calipari won his 900th career game as the Razorbacks edged the Tigers in overtime in Columbia, MO.
Arkansas (23-8, 13-5 SEC) won its regular-season finale despite not having Wooden Award finalist Darius Acuff Jr. on the court. The freshman sensation and leading scorer (22.2 points per game) for the Razorbacks sat out because of a nagging ankle injury. A 19-point, nine-rebound performance from Trevon Brazile and 17 points from Malique Ewin helped make up for Acuff’s absence.
Mark Mitchell went off for 32 points to lead the Tigers (20-11, 10-8). Trent Pierce scored 13 and Jayden Stone tallied 11.
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Louisville 92, No. 22 Miami 89
Adrian Wooley made a go-ahead 3-pointer with 18 seconds left as the visiting Cardinals defeated the Hurricanes in an ACC matchup in Coral Gables, Fla.
Louisville (22-9, 11-7) got double-figure scoring from Ryan Conwell (24 points), J’Vonne Hadley (16), Wooley (15) and Isaac McKneely (15) in the regular-season finale for both teams.
Miami (24-7, 13-5) finished tied for the most regular-season wins in program history. The Hurricanes had a three-game win streak snapped despite a game-high 25 points and six assists from Tre Donaldson. Donaldson, Malik Reneau (18 points) and Ernest Udeh Jr. (eight points, eight rebounds) were honored on Senior Day.
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No. 24 Vanderbilt 86, No. 23 Tennessee 82
Tyler Tanner scored 25 points, AK Okereke added 17 and Duke Miles scored 13 with four steals to lead the Commodores past the host Volunteers in Knoxville, Tenn.
Vanderbilt (24-7, 11-7 SEC) shot 52.9% from the floor, 50% from 3 and 84.4% from the line and never trailed. The Commodores avenged a four-point loss to Tennessee two Saturdays prior in Nashville and snapped the Vols’ eight-game home winning streak in the series.
Amari Evans had a career-high 24 for Tennessee (21-10, 11-7). J.P. Estrella had 20 points and 10 rebounds off the bench while Felix Okpara had eight points, 10 rebounds and four blocks. Ja’Kobi Gillespie scored 17 and dished out four assists.
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George Mason 86, No. 25 Saint Louis 57
Jahari Long scored 21 points and handed out nine assists to spark the Patriots to an upset win over the Billikens in the Atlantic 10 Conference finale for both teams in Fairfax, Va.
Kory Mincy contributed 15 points, Nick Ellington had a double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds and Riley Allenspach tallied 13 points for George Mason (23-8, 11-7 A-10). Emmanuel Kanga also posted a double-double with 13 points and 11 rebounds.
Dion Brown led Saint Louis (27-4, 15-3) with 13 points. The Billikens have a double bye into the quarterfinals as the No. 1 seed in next week’s conference tournament.
McDonald piloted a historic sixth winner during the finale of Randwick’s 10-race meeting, steering Gangsta Granny to success in the Wenona Girl Quality (1200m).
This represents the first instance of a jockey riding six winners at a Sydney Saturday since Jim Cassidy did so in 1987.
McDonald’s accomplishment gains extra prominence since every one of his six wins was in a Group or Listed race.
“I knew I had a proper book of rides. I thought every single one was capable of winning with a bit of luck,” McDonald said.
“But it was one of those days where everything just falls into place. If you get that luck, it just snowballs.
“You can feel them running well and you’re feeling good on top of them and things just worked out that way.
“I did ride six winners in New Zealand once (2010) but this is the first time I’ve done it in Sydney.”
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Despite the triumph, McDonald was deemed guilty of careless riding that affected Hidrix in the Todman Stakes.
Pleading guilty earned him a four-meeting ban from Racing NSW stewards starting Sunday, but he remains eligible for next Saturday’s Coolmore Classic card.
Team Hawkes’ Gangsta Granny ($2.80) exhibited class, topping off McDonald’s record-setting performance with a three-quarter length victory from Cosmonova ($41) and Asgarda ($81) a neck back in third place.
“I thought she looked pretty well placed today even with the 58kgs,” McDonald said.
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“She is a class mare and did run Autumn Glow to half a length.”
Co-trainer Michael Hawkes views the capable mare Gangsta Granny as having “gone to another level” this time in, elevating her stats to five wins (with five placings) over 10 runs.
“Her trials have been outstanding, she has come back with a bang,” Hawkes said.
“It was a nice race that we picked for her. We thought it was an easier race, albeit she had to carry the weight, but she is a class mare.
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“She has always been strong, she has always been that sort of mare but you just want these good horses to come back to the next level, which she has.”
Hawkes revealed no firm autumn target yet for Gangsta Granny.
“She can go anyway,” Hawkes said.
“The improvement she has taken, they’ve run good time, it’s only first-up and she carried a big weight. Her day will come and hopefully we can get to the top of the tree.”
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The main event of UFC 326 produced a surprise performance from Charles Oliveira in a rematch 11 years in the making for the ceremonial BMF title in Las Vegas.
Former lightweight Oliveira, 36, relied on his grappling to shut out and completely dominate Max Holloway over five rounds inside T-Mobile Arena. In the co-headliner, middleweight contender Caio Borralho bounced back from his first UFC defeat by winning all three rounds on all three scorecards to take a decision from Reinier de Ridder.
Let’s take a look at the biggest takeaways from an exciting night at the fights.
1. Charles Oliveira delivered the performance not enough of us saw coming
Despite how legendary this matchup was on paper in a fight that set a record for the most combined UFC wins in a single fight, the 34-year-old Holloway held firmly as a nearly 2-to-1 betting favorite and many (including this writer) predicted he would finish Oliveira in an all-action fight. But, in hindsight, there simply wasn’t enough talk about just how big Oliveira is for the division. Historically, Holloway has been stingy when it comes to takedown defense. But he had never fought a grappler this big or skilled and it showed immediately. Oliveira routinely took Holloway down with ease and spent most of the first two rounds threatening chokes while beating the former featherweight king up with ground and pound. Oliveira also held the advantage the rare times they exchanged on the feet to begin each round. Already the UFC recordholder for finishes, submissions and post-fight bonuses, Oliveira also moved into second place for most wins (two behind Jim Miller’s record of 27). Adding a name like Holloway to his legendary resume — and doing so by complete domination — was something very few pundits or fans had on their bingo card.
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2. If we’re being honest, Oliveira’s performance was not befitting of a BMF title fight
On one hand, it’s hard to criticize a fighter who just won seemingly every second of a 25-minute title fight against a fellow legend. But the BMF title was created to showcase the combined toughness and violent striking of two action legends and, without question, MMA fans expected (rightfully) for this rematch to be an all-out war. While Oliveira wasn’t exactly resistant to exchanging strikes with Holloway (and the Brazilian doubled Holloway’s output in significant strikes landed), he did quickly shoot for takedowns in all five rounds and amassed an absurd control time of 20 minutes and 49 seconds over the 25-minute fight. This simply wasn’t the spirit of a title lineage that was created in 2019 to honor the swagger and exploits of celebrated brawlers Jorge Masvidal and Nate Diaz. No one is saying Oliveira was expected to make this fight easier for Holloway. It’s just that anymore performances like the one Oliveira delivered on Saturday will quickly make the delightfully gimmicky BMF title played out and unnecessary.
3. Oliveira’s gameplan and post-fight demeanor proved what matters most to him
For “Do Bronx,” defeating Holloway in their rematch wasn’t about the BMF title. It was about taking one giant step forward toward his real goal: regaining the UFC lightweight title. That was apparent not only by Oliveira’s decision to grapple and methodically beat up Holloway but also his reluctance to call out a big name after the victory. Instead of trying to secure a BMF title defense against, say, a returning Conor McGregor at July’s International Fight Week in Las Vegas, Oliveira pushed UFC brass for a last-minute opportunity on the June White House card and mentioned his want for a title fight next. Oliveira, who was knocked out by Ilia Topuria in their vacant lightweight bout last June, put himself in a strong position to get a second chance should Topuria defeat interim titleholder Justin Gaethje in the recently announced White House main event.
4. Raul Rosas Jr. is evolving quickly but still has more work to do
At just 21, Rosas was stepping up considerably in class on Saturday for his seventh walk to the Octagon by facing his first ranked opponent in 38-year-old Rob Font. But even though Rosas would go on to pass the test with flying colors by pitching a shutout on all three scorecards and completing a bantamweight three-round record of 16 takedowns, his performance was a bit one-dimensional. Rosas, who won his fifth straight bout since his lone pro defeat in a 2023 decision loss to Christian Rodriguez, ultimately relied on his wrestling to a fault. Even though it was the right strategic move to get past the striking-heavy Font, it failed to showcase whether Rosas’ own striking could hold up at this level. Rosas will likely earn a top-15 ranking with the win and is still on pace at 21 years, 5 months to potentially break Jon Jones’ UFC record (23 years, 8 months) as the youngest champion. But it will be difficult to call him a true title threat until he levels up his striking to where his incredible grappling skills already lie.
5. ‘RoboCop’ is quietly becoming a legitimate threat at middleweight
In the three years since Gregory Rodrigues was knocked out in Round 1 by countryman Bruno Ferreira, he won six of his next seven fights, including four by knockout. But it wasn’t until he changed his demeanor and gameplan entering their rematch on Saturday that he truly looked like a future title contender. The 34-year-old Rodrigues opened calm, cool and patient this time, which is a departure from his normal aggressive starts that have often left him fatigued late in fights. Not only did Rodrigues control distance, he waited for the risk-taking Ferreira to come to him and lined him up with a perfect right cross to knock him out less than two minutes into their rematch. Rodrigues has always had size, tremendous power and a solid ground game but if he continues to add the veteran wrinkles and utilize his fight IQ, a run into the top 10 appears likely.
Mar 7, 2026; Newark, New Jersey, USA; New Jersey Devils center Jack Hughes (86) celebrates his goal against the New York Rangers during the third period at Prudential Center. Mandatory Credit: Thomas Salus-Imagn Images
Olympic hero Jack Hughes recorded his fourth career hat trick and second this season, lifting the New Jersey Devils to a 6-3 victory over the New York Rangers on Saturday in Newark, N.J.
Hughes, who also had an assist, scored one of the Devils’ three power-play goals before converting on a breakaway with 3:04 to play in the third period. He completed the hat trick by scoring into an empty net with 32 seconds left. New Jersey’s Jesper Bratt collected a goal and two assists, and captain Nico Hischier and Dawson Mercer also tallied.
Jacob Markstrom made 17 saves for the Devils, who rode a 3-for-3 performance on the power play to their fourth straight win.
New York’s Will Cuylle scored his third goal in two games, defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov tallied in his third consecutive contest and fellow blueliner Will Borgen also found the net. Jonathan Quick turned aside 29 shots for the Eastern Conference cellar-dwelling Rangers, who have lost 15 of their last 19 games (4-12-3).
Bruins 3, Capitals 1
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Viktor Arvidsson scored the game-winning goal at 4:28 of the third period, leading Boston past visiting Washington for the Bruins’ 12th straight home win.
Pavel Zacha and Elias Lindholm also scored, David Pastrnak dished out two assists, and Jeremy Swayman made 22 saves for Boston, which has won three of five since the Olympic break. Elias Lindholm clinched the victory on an empty-net goal with 23.2 seconds left.
Aliaksei Protas scored the lone goal and Logan Thompson stopped 27 shots for Washington, which lost its third straight after having veterans Nicolas Roy and John Carlson traded in recent days.
Jets 3, Canucks 2 (OT)
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Josh Morrissey scored in overtime and added an assist in his first game back from an upper-body injury as host Winnipeg rallied past Vancouver.
Mark Scheifele had a goal and two assists and Gabriel Vilardi also scored for the Jets, who got 21 saves from Connor Hellebuyck. Morrissey scored the winner from high in the zone, with the puck deflecting off the skate of the Canucks’ Filip Hronek and into the net at 1:49 of the extra frame.
For Vancouver, Linus Karlsson had a goal and an assist and Liam Ohgren also scored. Teddy Blueger added two assists and Kevin Lankinen made 32 saves
Penguins 4, Flyers 3 (SO)
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Trevor Zegras scored the game-winner in the shootout and Dan Vladar made 20 saves and stopped all three shootout attempts to lead Philadelphia to a victory over host Pittsburgh.
Alex Bump, who helped lead Western Michigan to its first NCAA hockey title in 2025, scored a goal in his NHL debut for the Flyers. Owen Tippett and Denver Barkey also scored for Philadelphia. Head coach Rick Tocchet secured a win in his 700th game as an NHL coach.
Rickard Rakell collected a goal and an assist, Egor Chinakhov had two assists and Erik Karlsson and Tommy Novak also scored goals for Pittsburgh. Stuart Skinner stopped 12 of 15 shots for the Penguins, who lost their third straight game and fell to 1-9 in shootouts.
Mammoth 5, Blue Jackets 4 (OT)
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Utah’s Logan Cooley scored a pair of goals, including the game-winner in overtime against host Columbus.
Alexander Kerfoot and Michael Carcone each tallied a goal and an assist for the Mammoth, who improved to 3-0-0 on their five-game road trip. Dylan Guenther also scored, while Clayton Keller tacked on a pair of assists and Karel Vejmelka made 27 saves.
Adam Fantilli, Mason Marchment, Damon Severson and Mathieu Olivier all finished with a goal and an assist for the Blue Jackets, who saw their three-game winning streak halted. Elvis Merzlikins tallied 18 stops.
Islanders 2, Sharks 1 (OT)
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Bo Horvat scored the winner at 4:20 of the extra period as New York edged host San Jose.
Horvat, on a partial break, put a backhand between the legs of Yaroslav Askarov for his 27th tally of the season. Tony DeAngelo scored in regulation for the Islanders, who avoided a third straight loss and improved to 9-0 in overtime this season.
Ilya Sorokin made 30 saves to improve to 5-0-3 in eight career appearances against the Sharks. Macklin Celebrini scored in regulation and Askarov stopped 32 shots for San Jose, which has dropped back-to-back games in overtime.
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Lightning 5, Maple Leafs 2
Jake Guentzel and Brandon Hagel each had a goal and an assist and visiting Tampa Bay defeated Toronto.
Nikita Kucherov added four assists to give him 100 points (32 goals, 68 assists) for the season. Ryan McDonagh, Corey Perry and Oliver Bjorkstrand also scored for the Lightning, who snapped a four-game losing streak. Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped 27 shots.
Matias Maccelli and Nicholas Robertson scored for the Maple Leafs, who have lost seven in a row (0-5-2) since the Olympic break. Anthony Stolarz made 28 saves for Toronto.
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Sabres 3, Predators 2
Tage Thompson extended his career-high point streak to 10 games with a goal as host Buffalo held on to beat Nashville for its sixth straight win.
Thompson has six goals and five assists during the streak. Jason Ducker and Josh Doan also scored for the Sabres, who were opening a five-game homestand as they look to keep pace atop the Atlantic Division with the Tampa Bay Lightning, whom they host on Sunday. Alex Lyon made 23 saves.
Zachary L’Heureux scored his first goal of the season for the Predators, who have lost four of five and were kicking off a five-game road swing. Matthew Wood also scored, and Juuse Saros made 21 saves.
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Canadiens 4, Kings 3
Juraj Slafkovsky had two goals and an assist for Montreal in a comeback win against host Los Angeles.
Nick Suzuki notched a goal and two assists, Jake Evans also scored and Jakub Dobes made 36 saves for the Canadiens, who were coming off a 6-5 shootout loss at the Anaheim Ducks on Friday night.
Scott Laughton scored in his first game with the Kings, who are 2-4-0 since the Olympic break. Los Angeles acquired Laughton from the Toronto Maple Leafs at Friday’s trade deadline. Anze Kopitar and Alex Laferriere also scored, Brandt Clarke had two assists and Darcy Kuemper made 19 saves for Los Angeles.
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Flames 5, Hurricanes 4
Joel Farabee scored two goals and added an assist and Ryan Strome scored once and added an assist in his team debut as host Calgary rode a three-goal second period to upset Eastern Conference-leading Carolina.
Morgan Frost netted one goal and two assists while Blake Coleman also collected one goal and one assist for the Flames, who snapped a four-game skid (0-3-1) after dealing away key veterans MacKenzie Weegar and Nazem Kadri this week. Goaltender Dustin Wolf made 25 saves.
Seth Jarvis netted one goal and two assists, Andrei Svechnikov posted one goal and one assist and Sean Walker and Alexander Nikishin each tallied once for Carolina. Sebastian Aho collected three assists and goalie Brandon Bussi stopped 20 shots as his personal nine-game winning streak ended.
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Senators 7, Kraken 4
Shane Pinto had a goal and two assists as Ottawa defeated host Seattle.
Michael Amadio added a goal and an assist, and Tyler Kleven, Dylan Cozens, Warren Foegele, Tim Stutzle and Brady Tkachuk also scored. Nick Cousins and Thomas Chabot had two assists for the Senators, who extended their point streak to six (4-0-2) and improved to 3-0-1 on their five-game trip. Linus Ullmark made 17 saves.
Jacob Melanson, Eeli Tolvanen, Matty Beniers and Brandon Montour scored and Jordan Eberle had two assists for short-handed Seattle, which dropped to 2-2-0 on its six-game homestand. Joey Daccord stopped 29 of 36 shots.
Victory at Paycom Center was the Thunder’s fifth in a row. They became the first side to 50 wins this season and sit top of the Western Conference.
Gilgeous-Alexander said: “If we were the best team last year, all year, we win a championship, and we get better, we should put ourselves in great position to repeat.
“This year’s had a little bit more ups and downs for us, but I think we’ve done a pretty good job keeping that front of mind.”
The Warriors – again missing the injured Stephen Curry – scored seven unanswered points to reduce the Thunder’s lead to 99-97 before a three-pointer from Gilgeous-Alexander in the final minute.
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Michael Porter Jr scored 30 points as the Brooklyn Nets came from 23 points down to win 107-105 at Eastern Conference leaders Detroit Pistons and end a 10-game losing streak.
Giannis Antetokounmpo scored 27 points as the Milwaukee Bucks beat the visiting Utah Jazz 113-99.
Jalen Johnson’s 35 points, 10 rebounds, and seven assists helped the Atlanta Hawks to a 125-116 home win over the Philadelphia 76ers.
Kawhi Leonard scored 28 points as the Los Angeles Clippers overturned a 19-point first-half deficit to win 123-120 at the Memphis Grizzlies.
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The Orlando Magic won 119-92 at the Minnesota Timberwolves despite Anthony Edwards’ 34 points for the hosts.
Maybe more than any week on the PGA Tour schedule, Bay Hill delights in kicking your teeth in.
And on a noticeably punchy Saturday afternoon at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, Scottie Scheffler wasted no time getting started.
The World No. 1 began a vexing third round at Bay Hill in particularly unusual fashion, recording three bogeys in his first five holes — and four in his first seven — to drop from the outskirts of the leaderboard to well out of contention. As he has for much of the week in Florida, the typically cool and collected Scheffler looked out of character with a club in his hands and out of patience without it, en route to a decidedly up-and-down 72. As if to emphasize the point, when his fourth bogey of the day dropped on the seventh hole, NBC cameras captured Scheffler crow-hopping his ball into the woods in disgust — his second frustrated ball-toss of the week.
By the time he made the turn, Scheffler had recorded his most bogeys on an opening nine in more than eleven months, since the second round of the Masters last April, and just one fewer black score than he recorded all week at the American Express in January. (Of course, another read of these stats emphasizes Scheffler’s brilliance in the 2020s, seeing as until the Genesis Invitational at the end of February, the World No. 1 had gone 11 months without a finish outside of the top 10.)
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After it was over, Scheffler was blunt.
“Pretty up and down, I would say,” he said.
No kidding. But the ups were revealing, too. On a Saturday when Bay Hill pulled few punches, the 29-year-old responded with a few of his own. Just when it seemed he might fade from the competition entirely, Scheffler recorded four straight birdies between holes 11 and 14, and then added a fifth on the par-5 16th. He entered the 18th hole needing a birdie to get to six under for the tournament, seven shots out of the lead set by Daniel Berger and within striking distance for another Sunday charge.
Instead, he wiped his approach short and right, watching helplessly as it bounced on a lakebed and plunged into the water. Scheffler folded over in exasperation as the ball disappeared into the water. He tidied up from there, but the damage was done: A double on the last had ended the momentum he’d battled so hard to win back. He finished the day at even par for the round, and 3 under for the tournament, 10 shots off the lead set by Daniel Berger.
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“Out here the margins are just so small,” Scheffler said. “I felt like the breaks, when they go against you, you make bogeys, and when they go with you, sometimes you make birdies.”
On Saturday at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the story for Scheffler was in the margins. And at a golf tournament known for its snarl, the World No. 1 admitted that he left wounded.