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I Am Aria seeks 2026 Blue Diamond Stakes surprise
Should luck have swung I Am Aria’s way, the Mark Walker charge might enter the Blue Diamond Stakes undefeated.
In reality, though, I Am Aria has recorded placings in both lead-up efforts, second on debut via the Blue Diamond Preview and third next out in the Blue Diamond Prelude.
Ben Gleeson, Walker’s assistant, holds firm that the Preview and Prelude form across fillies’ and colts/geldings’ divisions is superior, placing I Am Aria squarely in the mix for Caulfield’s premier 1200m Group 1 for juveniles this Saturday.
Betting has I Am Aria at $34, with Mick Price and Michael Kent Jnr’s colts Big Sky ($4.20) and Guest House ($4.50) favoured.
Her barrier six draw – gate four if emergencies don’t start – is spot-on, per Gleeson.
“She’s a filly that puts herself in the race and has led up, unfortunately, in two starts without having a backside to follow,” Gleeson said.
“She’s been very gallant in defeat. She’s probably been entitled to drop out, but she’s been there whacking away at the finish.
“If she can find a backside on Saturday, she’s going to appreciate stepping up to 1200 (metres) and hopefully she’s finishing off.”
Post-spring jump-outs/trials and a brief break, the Blue Diamond Stakes was earmarked for I Am Aria.
“You probably don’t expect an I Am Invincible filly to get here, especially with the physique she has,” Gleeson said.
“She’s a big, strong three-year-old type of filly and whatever she does now she is going to be better in the spring. She’s has copped the work, she’s very sound and has a fantastic mind.
“She’s always shown us the characteristics that she could get here. To run second and third in the Preview and the Prelude, there’s probably no better form and history probably shows horses that run in those two are the ones that are generally around the mark on final day.
“She’s done nothing wrong, anyway.”
Gleeson views this two-year-old crop as level-pegging, no single horse towering over others as in bygone eras.
Victorian juveniles have shone interstate, he noted.
“It will probably take until Saturday for a star to emerge,” Gleeson said.
“It’s a nice crop of two-year-olds at the moment, they’re going to Sydney and running well, they’re going to Magic Millions and winning.
“The horses that have been down here are leading the way.
“I think the six or seven from the Previews and the Preludes are the standouts.
“There has been lots of eye-catching runs and a lot will come down to who gets the right run in the race and our filly should certainly get that.”
Craig Williams, after winning the Blue Diamond Stakes on Catchy in 2017, retains the ride on I Am Aria for Saturday.
Visit top racing betting markets ahead of the Blue Diamond Stakes.
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Kallie Humphries, Jasmine Jones earn bobsled Olympic bronze for Team USA
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Saturday’s two-woman bobsled final at the Milan Cortina Olympics added another medal to Team USA’s tally.
After medaling in the women’s monobob earlier this week, Kaillie Armbruster Humphries teamed up with Jasmine Jones to earn another medal. The duo finished in third in 3:49.21, securing bronze. Humphries and Jones also set a track record in Heat 1.
Six Americans competed in the event, and Humphries and Jones secured a podium finish. Humphries entered the Winter Games as a three-time Olympic gold medalist.
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Pilot Kaillie Armbruster Humphries and Jasmine Jones of the United States compete in the two-woman bobsleigh at Cortina Sliding Centre during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games Feb. 21, 2026 in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Al Bello/Getty Images)
Germany took the gold and silver medals Saturday.
AMERICAN JAKE CANTER TAKES HOME BRONZE MEDAL IN OLYMPIC MEN’S SNOWBOARD SLOPESTYLE
Two-time Olympian Kaysha Love and first-time Olympian Azaria Hill were among the Americans in the field, finishing fifth with a time of 3:49.71. Fellow Americans Jadin O’Brien and Elana Meyers Taylor landed in seventh place.

Bronze medalists Kaillie Armbruster Humphries and Jasmine Jones of the United States celebrate on the podium during the medal ceremony for the two-woman bobsleigh at Cortina Sliding Centre during the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics Feb. 21, 2026, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
Meyers Taylor and O’Brien stumbled in their second heat, sliding at the top of the track and dropping to 12th entering the final.
Despite the miscue in her latest Olympic event, Meyers Taylor remains the most decorated Black athlete in Winter Olympics history. Meyers Taylor and Bonnie Blair are tied for the most medals an American woman has won at the Winter Games.

Pilot Kaillie Armbruster Humphries and Jasmine Jones of the United States celebrate after competing in the two-woman bobsleigh at Cortina Sliding Centre during the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics Feb. 21, 2026, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)
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A fixture of nearly every Winter Olympics, bobsled features two-woman, two-man and four-man events at Milan Cortina. The women’s monobob, added in 2022, returned this year. Sleds can reach speeds of 93 mph, according to the sport’s governing body.
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At Pebble, he iced the winner. At Riviera? He's flipping the script
Who is Jacob Bridgeman? He turned heads in a viral icing incident at Pebble Beach — but now he’s on the brink of a massive win all his own.
The post At Pebble, he iced the winner. At Riviera? He’s flipping the script appeared first on Golf.
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Eileen Gu comments on Alysa Liu’s historic Olympic gold medal win
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American-born Team China skier Eileen Gu commented on Team USA figure skater Alysa Liu’s historic gold medal in the women’s free skate final Thursday at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.
After Liu became the first American women’s figure skater to win an individual Olympic medal in 20 years and first to win a gold in 24 years, she made a celebratory Instagram post.
“These are for y’all,” Liu wrote in the caption of a photo holding her gold medal and the U.S. team gold.

Gold medalist Alysa Liu of the United States poses for a photo during the medal ceremony for women’s single skating at Milano Ice Skating Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games Feb. 19, 2026, in Milan, Italy. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
Gu commented on the post, celebrating Liu’s victory.
“YESSSSSS,” Gu wrote in the comment section.
The two Chinese American stars have been relentlessly compared and contrasted on social media this Olympics.
Both athletes are the children of immigrants who came to the U.S. from China. But many fans and critics have been quick to point out the contrast between Liu’s story, a tale of American loyalty by an immigrant’s child, and Gu, who chose to compete for Team China when she was 15 years old despite living in California.
Arthur Liu raised Alysa and her siblings in Oakland. Yan Gu raised Eileen just across the bay in San Francisco.
Their paths diverged in 2019.
The Chinese government launched a program to recruit foreign-born athletes, primarily with Chinese heritage, to boost competitiveness, notably for the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics and soccer, according to The China Project.
Gu and Liu were top recruiting targets.
Gu traded in her red, white and blue for red and gold. Just months after competing in her first Freestyle Ski World Cup for the U.S. in January 2019, she competed for China for the first time in June of that year after requesting a change of nation with the International Ski Federation.

Silver medalist Eileen Gu of China attends the award ceremony for the freestyle skiing women’s freeski big air event at the Milan-Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Livigno, Italy, Feb. 16, 2026. (Hongxiang/Xinhua via Getty Images)
The Lius remained loyal to Team USA.
US OLYMPIAN ALYSA LIU WAS ONCE TARGETED BY CHINESE SPIES – HERE’S WHAT SHE HAS TO SAY ABOUT IT
Arthur was reportedly “not open to persuasion” to having Alysa compete for China, according to The Economist.
Both athletes competed at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, Gu representing China and Liu representing the U.S.
Gu won two gold medals and one silver in freeskiing and went home to California as a new global household name for her success.
Liu finished in sixth place in women’s singles figure skating, then went into a temporary early retirement, before returning to the sport in 2024.
But in 2026, Liu is the only one with any gold after helping the U.S. win team gold and her historic individual gold on Thursday. Maybe if Gu represented USA she would have won gold.
Liu landed all her jumps and smiled during the individual final before erupting in a demonstrative celebration after she finished.
She yelled, “That’s what I’m f—ing talking about!’ and “Holy s—!” while celebrating with her team. She finished with a 226.79 total score, a 150.20 free skate score and a 76.59 short program score. It was her season-best free skate score.
OLYMPIANS SPEAK OUT IN DEFENSE OF EILEEN GU AMID CRITICISM FOR COMPETING FOR CHINA OVER US
But Gu has only won two silvers so far in Italy.
An interaction Tuesday with a reporter went viral after Gu responded to a question about her winning two silver medals instead of gold so far this Olympics, suggesting the question came from a “ridiculous perspective.”
“I’m the most decorated female freeskier in history. I think that’s an answer in and of itself,” Gu said when asked if she saw her two medals as “silvers earned” or “golds lost.”
“How do I say this? Winning a medal at the Olympics is a life-changing experience for every athlete. Doing it five times is exponentially harder because every medal is equally hard for me, but everybody else’s expectations rise, right?
“The two medals lost situation, to be quite frank with you, I think is kind of a ridiculous perspective to take. I’m showcasing my best skiing. I’m doing things that quite literally have never been done before. So, I think that is more than good enough, but thank you.”
Gu will have one last chance to win gold in the women’s halfpipe final, considered her strongest event, Sunday. The event will take place a day after it was originally scheduled due to intense snow in the area.
Gu nearly lost out on any chance at a gold medal after falling in the halfpipe qualifier on Thursday. But she recovered in her second run to earn a spot in the final.
Gu has had to compete under the pressure of immense global scrutiny in response to her decision to compete for China seven years ago.
Gu was asked if she feels “like a bit of a punching bag for a certain strand of American politics” after her competition on Thursday.
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Silver medalist Eileen Gu of China poses for photos after the award ceremony for the freestyle skiing women’s freeski big air event at the Milan-Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Livigno, Italy, Feb. 16, 2026. (Wang Peng/Xinhua via Getty Images)
“I do,” she said, according to USA Today. “So many athletes compete for a different country. … People only have a problem with me doing it because they kind of lump China into this monolithic entity, and they just hate China. So, it’s not really about what they think it’s about.
“And also, because I win. Like, if I wasn’t doing well, I think that they probably wouldn’t care as much, and that’s OK for me. People are entitled to their opinions.”
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Unbeaten US world champion says he can ‘expose’ Naoya Inoue: “It’ll make me one of the greats”
Two-division undisputed champion Naoya Inoue has been called out by an unbeaten American star, but must first take care of business against Junto Nakatani later this year.
The 32-year-old is expected to lock horns with domestic rival Nakatani in May, defending his four major super-bantamweight titles at the Tokyo Dome, Japan.
In anticipation of their blockbuster showdown, the pair fought on the same card in December, with Inoue handily defeating David Picasso by unanimous decision.
Former unified bantamweight king Nakatani, on the other hand, claimed a largely contentious points victory over Sebastian Hernandez in his first outing at 122lbs.
Regardless of this, Inoue is set to enter their tussle as a sizable favourite, while three-weight world champion Nakatani nonetheless represents a significant challenge.
Elsewhere in the lower divisions, meanwhile, newly-crowned WBC champion Bruce Carrington has been typically vocal about a potential encounter with ‘The Monster’.
The 28-year-old claimed his world featherweight title last month – orchestrating a destructive ninth-round finish over Carlos Castro – but now seems determined to secure the biggest fights possible.
One of which, of course, would be a monumental title defence against Inoue, who is widely regarded as a top two pound-for-pound operator.
In an interview with Cigar Talk, Carrington doubled down on his interest in their possible matchup at 126lbs while, at the same time, acknowledging that the Japanese sensation must first get past Nakatani.
“I feel like that fight is going to happen, man. We’ve just got to wait for everything to fall into place.
“He’s got Nakatani [next]. He’s got to make a decision on if he’s actually going to move up [to featherweight].
“After that [Ramon] Cardenas fight, he was kind of a little shaky. There’s still holes in his game that fall right into my game. I wanna expose that to the world.
“I wanna be the first one to beat Inoue and be known as one of the greats in boxing.”
The fight Carrington refers to, against Cardenas, saw Inoue climb off the canvas for only the second time in his career, before halting his man with an eighth-round finish in May 2025.
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Sanju Samson: 120 strike rate, just three sixes: Suryakumar Yadav says Tilak Varma ‘told to bat that way’ in T20 World Cup | Cricket News
India captain Suryakumar Yadav on Saturday defended Tilak Varma despite his modest returns in the T20 World Cup league stage, saying the batter is following instructions given by the team management.Tilak’s strike rate, which is above 141 in his career, has dropped to the 120s in this tournament. He has struggled against slow bowlers on surfaces where the ball has gripped more. Across four matches, he has managed only 11 boundaries and three sixes and has not been able to shift gears after settling in.
The India captain said Tilak’s approach is part of a defined role.“I mean I have told him, the team management has told him that he has to bat that way. If one wicket is down, then he is definitely, he can go and have his own game in the powerplay,” Surya said.“But as soon as two wickets are down, then he has to take a little bit of backseat, get a partnership again, get to the 10th over and then we have enough firepower to continue and take on the bowling,” the Indian skipper explained the rationale behind the approach although it wasn’t exactly convincing.He added that Tilak himself would expect more from his performances.“Definitely, I am sure he must not be happy with how he is batting right now, I am sure. He must be and he has practiced a lot as well in the last 2-3 practice sessions. But I don’t have any concern regarding him. He has been delivering for India at No. 3 really well and I am very confident that he will do it better.”Suryakumar dismissed talk of replacing Tilak with Sanju Samson.“You mean, I should make him (Samson) play for Tilak?” he laughed.He said India’s scoring in the powerplay has been normal but expectations remain high.“It’s going well in powerplay. We’re making 40-50 runs. That’s normal cricket. Now we’ve played so well in bilaterals. It happens. We also have expectations of ourselves. Expectation to make 220, 240, 250,” he said.“But wickets are a little different here (in the World Cup). The four wickets we have played on so far were a little different and challenging. Off-spinners were not bowling earlier but are bowling now. So we have started preparation for that and hopefully we will tackle it as we start our Super 8 journey.”The captain said he is confident in the bowling unit, especially when defending totals around 175 to 180.“I do take a lot of pride in my bowling unit. I know that on a given day, if we ever make 170, 175, or 180 because of the high risk, high reward game we are trying to play, then we have a good bowling attack which can save the match, it can win that game,” he said.“Look, I never thought that this team will make scores like 250, 270, 220, 230. But the way we’re playing cricket now, you’ll see in the future, if you see a start, then after that, everyone bats with the same template. But the day you don’t get a start, that day you have to think about what the team needs.”
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T20 World Cup: Not batting but India’s bowling is the real deal | Cricket News
TimesofIndia.com in Ahmedabad: Right from the build-up to the start of the T20 World Cup, all the noise has surrounded India’s famed batting line-up. The broadcaster has relentlessly hyped the 300-mark and even after four group stage games, the talk remains focused on Indian batting. Reasons may vary, but the subject has seldom changed and all pre-match discussions have revolved around Abhishek Sharma’s three ducks, Ishan Kishan’s heroics, the slowdown by Tilak Varma and Suryakumar Yadav, or the firepower in the lower order. Batting has remained the keyword and it has always been in this unforgiving format. Bowlers are often under appreciated based on their statistics — economy rate, wickets column — which rarely reveal the big picture or how they performed in the larger context of the match. A 35-ball fifty always trumps a 4-0-30-0 but the latter often makes the former look better than it has been.
While the batting unit has been the talk of the town, the potent bowling unit has slipped under the radar, but has continued to be the real deal. Varun Chakravarthy is the No.1 ranked T20I bowler, Arshdeep Singh has been a force in the format. Jasprit Bumrah continues to be brilliant, Axar Patel is smart and the two all-rounders — Hardik Pandya and Shivam Dube — are genuine options, not just fillers. Not to forget the additional options in Kuldeep Yadav and Washington Sundar. When India embraced the slam-bang mode in the format, their complete bowling attack provided underlying confidence. On days the approach backfired, bowlers were there to do the job. Like they were in that 2024 T20 World Cup final vs South Africa. Even on a bad day for Kuldeep and Axar, Hardik, Bumrah and Arshdeep combined to pull things back when they almost slipped away, helping India secure the elusive silverware. Now for them to defend the title, and become the only team to do so, the bowlers will hold the key. As the famous saying goes, “batters can win you matches but it’s the bowlers who win you tournaments,” and India have the most dangerous and well-rounded attack in the tournament.
Varun Chakravarthy is India’s highest wicket-taker so far in the T20 World Cup. (AP Photo)
When the questioning predictably focused on India’s batting — specifically their vulnerabilities against spin and the sluggishness in the middle overs — captain Suryakumar highlighted the efforts of the bowling unit’s and explained why he takes so much “pride” in them.“I take a lot of pride in my bowling unit. I know that on a given day, I always used to think that if we ever made 170, 175, or 180 in T20 cricket, then the high risk, high reward game we are trying to play, if we ever get stuck in 180, then we have so much good bowling that it can save the match, it can win that game,” said Surya.Even in their last group game against the Netherlands, the Indian team management wanted to prepare their bowlers for future challenges. The decision to bat first for the game was primarily made to give them a taste of dew.“When I had practiced here before the Netherlands game, there was very heavy dew one day before when we practiced. So we thought, why not bat first, take that pressure and then later put bowlers under little bit of pressure, bowl them under dew because we have not bowled under dew a lot. We didn’t face a lot of dew when we were at Wankhede, Delhi also. So it’s better they get an opportunity also to bowl in the dew and so that we are well prepared for it,” explained Surya.
Axar Patel, with skipper Suryakumar Yadav, celebrates the wicket of Pakistan’s Usman Khan. (ANI Photo)
The opposition has been busy planning for players like Abhishek, Kishan and Surya but significant attention is also paid to countering Bumrah & co. The different challenges which each of them bring to the table can be a nightmare for a batting unit to plan for, and South Africa have been no different. That familiar feeling exists because the two teams played in a bilateral series not long ago, and senior batter Quinton de Kock hoped the batters would apply their learnings to counter India’s x-factor Varun.“He’s (Varun) a good bowler, a very good bowler at the moment. And obviously he bowled really well against us in the series, like two months ago. Hopefully the guys have, after that series, just had a little bit more time to have a look at him, speak about how they’re going to play against him. So hopefully with their plans it comes off and if it doesn’t there’s a reason why he is probably the number one T20 spinner in the world. So we’ll have to see what we can do,” said de Kock on his former Kolkata Knight Riders teammate.Varun has an economy of 5.16, Bumrah is going at just 6 an over, Axar Patel is at 6.63, Kuldeep and Arshdeep at 4.66 and 7.60 respectively. Even the all-rounders Pandya and Dube have maintained control with an economy of 7.92 and 8.62 each. There are no freebies or releases on offer and it will take more than one bad day for this bowling unit to mess up a fixture. When serious business begins with the Super 8, the unsung bowlers will start hogging most of the limelight because they are the most crucial piece of the puzzle.
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No. 5 UConn second-half spurt overpowers Villanova
Feb 21, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; UConn Huskies guard Solo Ball (1) dunks the ball against the Villanova Wildcats during the first half at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Alex Karaban scored eight of his 12 points in the second half as No. 5 UConn posted a 73-63 win over Villanova on Saturday in Philadelphia.
All five starters scored between nine and 12 points for the Huskies (25-3, 15-2 Big East), who bounced back nicely from a 91-84 loss to Creighton. Tarris Reed Jr. shot 5 of 5 from the field for 11 points, while Braylon Mullins pitched in 10 points.
The Huskies shot 54.9% from the floor and 11 of 13 from the free-throw line. They also dominated on the boards, outrebounding the Wildcats 37-24.
Tyler Perkins scored 15 points to pace Villanova (21-6, 12-4), which had won six straight games since losing to UConn last month. Matt Hodge chipped in with 13 points for the Wildcats, while Acaden Lewis scored 11 points — all in the first half.
After leading by two at halftime, UConn created separation early in the second half. Mullins’ 3-pointer began a 13-2 run that also included two buckets by Karaban and a 3-pointer by Solo Ball.
Villanova did not make a basket in the second half until Malachi Palmer scored with 14:35 left. Shortly thereafter, Hodge’s 3-pointer brought the hosts within 49-41.
However, the Huskies’ reserves responded with a quick 7-0 burst. Jaylin Stewart’s 3-pointer began that surge before Eric Reibe and Malachi Smith each added a bucket to make it 56-41.
Reed’s jumper with just under five minutes left sent the Huskies’ lead north of 20 for the first time. Villanova scored 17 points down the stretch to make the final score a bit more respectable. Neither team led by more than five during a first half that ended with the Huskies ahead 34-32. The teams combined to shoot 5 of 22 from 3-point range in the opening session.
UConn committed eight turnovers in the first half to offset an efficient 57.7% shooting effort.
Lewis (11 points) and Perkins (10) led all players in first-half scoring.
–Field Level Media
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What Tommy Lloyd and Ivan Kharchenkov said after Arizona’s win at No. 2 Houston
By beating Houston on its home court, something only one other Big 12 school had done in three seasons, Arizona is firmly in control of the race for the conference regular season title. The Wildcats are a game up in the standings with four to go and hold the tiebreaker over the Cougars.
“We’ve put ourselves in position to be in position, now you’ve got to take advantage of that,” UA coach Tommy Lloyd said after his team picked up its third win over a Top 3 opponent, the first school to do so in a regular season since Kansas in 2011-12. “I’m sure this win doesn’t look bad on our resume when it comes down to seeding and you’re hoping for matchups in the tournament. But by no means does this win guarantee anything.”
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Our game recap can be found here. Below is what Lloyd and freshman wing Ivan Kharchenkov said afterwards:
On winning at Houston: “For us to come out on top means a lot, but we still got a longer road ahead, so we’ve gotta make sure we’re locked in and prepared to move forward. And we will be. But just a great day for our program.”
On facing Kelvin Sampson: “I usually don’t talk about myself. I don’t know how my coaching career is going to end up at, but I know one thing: I’m going to have become a better coach having coached against Kelvin Sampson. A hundred percent. You look at coaches that kind of set the benchmark in certain areas, and for me he’s one of them. What he’s done with this program down here, it’s been amazing. The kind of run you guys are on down here, it reminds me of where I came from. I was at this little old school called Gonzaga, no one really believed, but they had a hell of coach just like you have. The head coach at Gonzaga and the head coach at Houston have willed these programs to be elite, and that’s really inspiring to me.”
On having a better gameplan against Houston than in previous meetings: “You always learn when you play against people, the more you play against them, but teams are different year after year. Their program has an identity and our program has an identity, and you have to figure out if those identities clash do you have to make some adjustments. I thought we made some adjustments today, kind of how we moved and spaced the ball a bit, I thought that alleviated some of the pressure and gave us some space maybe we haven’t had before. Good job by our coaching staff for adjusting. But on the same hand you want to say Houston gets credit, because if you can make a program like Arizona adjust that’s the ultimate sign of respect, and we respect them.”
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On his message to the team after losing 2 in a row last week: “The message was simple: winning things. Get back to the winning things and the things that drive winning. Don’t be result-oriented, lock into a process. We just wanted to get back into our habits and what drives winning. We just had to change how we play a little bit the last couple games. We have a couple really good players not playing right now, so these guys that aren’t playing have made great adjustments and finding a way to win.”
On staying focused: “You lose that tough game at Kansas, you lose a tough game at home against Texas Tech and then your reward is you have BYU and Houston the next week. It can get out of control really quick in this conference. That we were able to right the ship says a lot about this team.”
On stopping Houston’s guards: “I’m not crazy into analytics, but us analytically, us and Houston are literally like neck and neck in everything. We’re a good defensive team, too. Our coaches put together a good plan, and we have good players, and the players went out there and executed it with conviction. There were a couple of stretches in the game where you’re on the road and they take a shot or two and it kind of rattles out and you’re like, phew. That’s kind of life on the road sometimes. We got a couple breaks in those, and that happen. When we played at home against Texas Tech we had a few where we were like, man, we usually make those. That happens sometimes, you’ve just got to keep moving.”
On how this win helps Arizona: “There’s a lot of ways a game like this gives you a boost. Number one is just confidence and believe and will to find a way. It keeps you in the hunt for a conference championship, which is obviously important. And I’m sure this win doesn’t look bad on our resume when it comes down to seeding and you’re hoping for matchups in the tournament. By no means does this win guarantee anything.”
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On Anthony Dell’Orso: “Delly, he’s a spitfire. I don’t know how many of you guys know Aussies, but he’s got some you know what to them. He has a little bit of that, and it wasn’t going his way for a good stretch there, and he hung with it. And our guys hung with him and our staff hung with him and I just told Delly, just hang in there, it’s coming. If there’s little adjustments we have to make we’ll see if we can figure them out, but we trust you and we believe in you and I don’t see any scenario where you don’t get opportunities. Our media was getting a little worried back home and I just kept telling them, guys, Delly is going to be at his best when we need him at his best. And I think you’ve seen that the last two games.”
On the game-winning 12-0 run: “I didn’t realize we’d made a 12-0 run. I was just trying to manage the game possession by possession, I guess I have a memory like a goldfish. We did have a few things that we had success with offensively that we went back to them back to back, and I’m not always doing that but today we did. It was a good way to control the game down the stretch.”
On the free throw shooting: “Our guys missed some free throws early that were probably regretful but we made most of them late, which allowed us to kind of keep them at arms length.”
On his tradition of cracking open a Coke (or Coke Zero) before doing his postgame presser: “I worked for a guy for a long time, Mark Few, and he used to call it the cool of the evening. We love these afternoon games, because you put a lot into them, and it’s really cool the rest of the night. Whether you’re on the road or at home and you get to hang out with your family. You’re all fans, or the media, I’m sure you’ve got a little fan into you that’s why you guys do that. But us as coaches put everything they have into this game, so when you can enjoy great moments it’s really special. But I’ll also say this, a lot of us coaches have a bit of a sickness. You lose a couple games and you’re actually probably doing okay because you get to figure things out, and there’s nothing cooler than accepting a challenge when things get tough and trying to help your group figure it out. Really it’s probably the most enjoyable coaching even though it comes with a little bit of pain.”
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On the Big 12 gauntlet: “We got a tough schedule. We’ve got at Baylor and then I don’t know what order it is, Kansas and Iowa State at home, on a Saturday/Monday, and then we got to go on the road to Colorado. I told our guys, obviously we want to win the Big 12, but what’s really cool about being in the Big 12 is you can take second or third in the conference and still win the national championship. The conference is that strong. We’ve put ourselves in position to be in position, now you’ve got to take advantage of that. We’ll start on our Baylor prep tonight, that’s the task at hand now is moving on from this one and getting ready for Baylor and trying to mend our wounded bodies and trying to find a way to get a tough road win in a tough environment.”
Kharchenkov on bouncing back from the 2 losses: “Winning a game is pretty good any way, especially in the Big 12 Conference. We knew Houston is a tough matchup for us, especially with us banged up a little bit. And the two losses didn’t taste right in the mouth, so we just figured it out, fought, figured it out and came up on top.”
On winning on the road: “I love playing in tough environments, at home or on the road. And especially on the road it’s nice because after the game all the fans just leave and the gym gets real quiet and you know you did your job right. No more talking after that. Of course there’s a satisfaction to that, coming home or going to the next game you want to do that.”
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USA vs. Canada prediction, odds, line, time: 2026 Olympics men’s hockey final picks
The gold medal will be on the line on Sunday when the United States takes on Canada for the 2026 Winter Olympics men’s hockey championship. It will be the eighth time the U.S. and Canada will have met for the gold, and first since 2010 when the Canadians claimed gold in Vancouver. Canada reached the final with a 3-2 win over Finland on Friday, while the United States downed Slovakia 6-2. Canada has nine men’s hockey gold medals, while the United States has two since the first Winter Games in Antwerp in 1920.
Canada enters as the -122 favorite, per FanDuel Sportsbook, while the U.S. is at +102. The over/under in total goals is 5.5, with the Under juiced to -160. Sunday’s puck drop is set for 8:10 a.m. ET from Palaltalia, Milan. Before making any USA vs. Canada picks or Winter Olympic predictions, you need to see what Matthew Severance has to say.
Severance is coming off an outstanding NHL season in which he went 235-155-21 (plus $2,022). He entered the Olympic break on a 26-12 roll on NHL money-line picks this season, returning $1,326 for $100 players. Anyone following his hockey picks at their favorite sportsbooks could have seen huge returns.
Now, Severance has turned his attention to the Winter Olympics men’s ice hockey finals. He’s only sharing his best bets at SportsLine, and you can see how to bet on USA vs. Canada here. Now, here are the latest USA vs. Canada lines for the gold-medal game.
| USA vs. Canada money line: | Canada -122, United States +102 |
| USA vs. Canada over/under: | 5.5 goals (Under -160, Over +130) |
| USA vs. Canada puck line: | Canada -1.5 (+205) |
| USA vs. Canada picks: | See picks at SportsLine |
| USA vs. Canada streaming: | Fubo (Try for free) |
New users can also check out the latest FanDuel promo code and get $100 in bonus bets instantly at FanDuel if your first $5 bet wins:
2026 Winter Olympics Canada vs. USA final picks
For the 2026 Winter Olympics hockey final between Canada and the United States, Severance is taking the Under 5.5 goals (-160). The teams have met seven times for the gold medal, with Canada winning six of those. In Olympic competition, Canada and the USA have met 19 times, with Canada holding a 12-4-3 edge. At Beijing in 2022, the U.S. earned a 4-2 win in the preliminary round, before both teams were ousted in the quarterfinals.
The United States is 5-0 in the competition, winning Group C by outscoring the competition 16-5. The U.S. then outlasted Sweden 2-1 in overtime in the quarterfinals, before downing Slovakia in the semifinals. Canada won Group A with a 5-0 win over Czechia, 5-1 win over Switzerland and 10-2 triumph over France, before beating Czechia 4-3 in overtime in the quarterfinals and Finland in the semifinals. See his other picks at SportsLine.
New users can check out the latest Kalshi bonus code CBSSPORTS to get a $10 cash bonus after making $10 in trades:
How to make Olympics hockey USA vs. Canada predictions
Severance has studied this matchup and found a critical x-factor that has him jumping on a pair of best bets. You can only see his Olympic picks here.
So who wins the 2026 Winter Olympics men’s ice hockey final between USA and Canada, and what are the best bets for this matchup? Visit SportsLine now to see the 2026 Winter Olympics men’s ice hockey picks and best bets from a hockey insider, and find out.
Sports
Our Official Predictions for the Vikings’ Next QB Move
By the second or third week of March, the Minnesota Vikings will likely reveal their offseason quarterback addition, either via trade or free agency. The team’s leaders have expressed a desire for a deep quarterback room this offseason, and the only way to do that is add at least one more passer. Two weeks before free agency, our writers have official predictions for that transaction.
The common thread: keep the floor high while still betting on McCarthy as the long-term answer.
The question to each of our writers: “With free agency about two weeks away, I ask you to predict the three main guys in the Vikings’ quarterback room when Week 1 rolls around.”
Veteran Quarterback Options Loom for Minnesota
Here’s how the panel replied.
1. Geno Smith
Predictor: Wesley Johnson
The plan is to add a vet who will push J.J. McCarthy and ultimately be able to supplant him should he falter. Geno Smith should be just that guy, especially coming off a down year in Vegas.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: J.J. McCarthy
QB2: Geno Smith
QB3: Rookie
2. Aaron Rodgers
Predictor: Sean Borman
Rodgers coming to Minnesota, as unlikely as it is, would be very much in the Vikings’ spirit. With Brzezinski running the show, it would be the ultimate “all-in” move for a front office that just hit the reset button on their GM, essentially betting that a one-year rental of a legend is the best way for Kevin O’Connell to retain his job and keep Justin Jefferson from demanding a trade while J.J. McCarthy finds his footing.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: Aaron Rodgers
QB2: J.J. McCarthy
QB3: Max Brosmer
3. Marcus Mariota
Predictor: Josh Frey
Maybe the Vikings are done with J.J. McCarthy, but I just don’t think Kevin O’Connell wants to get rid of the young QB just yet. Regardless, some competition is needed from the QB2 spot, and Marcus Mariota fits into a sweet spot of being a competent quarterback while not being an imminent threat to take over the starting role.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: J.J. McCarthy
QB2: Marcus Mariota
QB3: Max Brosmer
4. Jimmy Garoppolo
Predictor: Steve Hoikkala
I don’t see the Vikings making a trade for Mac Jones or Kyler Murray. I think they stick with J.J. McCarthy in hopes he continues to develop, and if he doesn’t, better quarterback options will be available in 2027.
Garoppolo is a cheap veteran option who is a system quarterback who would fit right in as a mentor to McCarthy. I expect the Vikings to pick up a quarterback in the draft as a project at QB3 in the mid-to-late rounds.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: J.J. McCarthy
QB2: Jimmy Garoppolo
QB3: Drew Allar
5. Justin Fields
Predictor: Kyle Joudry
In this formulation, the Vikings have solidified the position’s floor. What remains to be seen is how high the ceiling is with a top twosome of McCarthy alongside Fields.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: J.J. McCarthy
QB2: Justin Fields
QB3: Carson Wentz
6. Anthony Richardson
Predictor: Ali Siddiqui
Kevin O’Connell likes Richardson. Many think that’s who the Vikings will go after, and it is not surprising why. Richardson could all benefit from a change of scenery, and he is in the final year of his rookie contract, so he isn’t very expensive, and the Vikings wouldn’t have to give up much to get him.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: J.J. McCarthy
QB2: Anthony Richardson
QB3: Max Brosmer
t7. Kyler Murray
Predictor: Adam New
With Kevin O’Connell’s future potentially on the line in 2026, I just can’t see him throwing all of his eggs in the J.J. McCarthy basket. As far as a veteran addition goes, Kyler Murray just makes the most sense.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: Kyler Murray
QB2: J.J. McCarthy
QB3: Max Brosmer
t7. Kyler Murray
Predictor: Brevan Bane
I’ve been saying that Kevin O’Connell should sleep in the bed he helped make with the selection of J.J. McCarthy in 2024. Regardless, it feels like KOC is coaching for his job this year. Everyone knows that Minnesota has a roster good enough to make a “run,” and QB play was a major reason why they couldn’t last season.
Head coaches are humans at the end of the day, trying to save their own behind when their back is against the wall. A change of scenery for Murray and a marriage with one of the best offensive minds in the NFL could mean fireworks in U.S. Bank Stadium.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: Kyler Murray
QB2: J.J. McCarthy
QB3: Max Brosmer
t7. Kyler Murray
Predictor: Dustin Baker
It feels increasingly likely the Cardinals will release Murray; wouldn’t they have traded him by now if quarterback-needy teams had known he wouldn’t be released?
If Minnesota had to trade for Murray, the prediction here would’ve been a Vikings deal for Mac Jones — probably a 2nd-Rounder and 5th-Rounder to San Francisco for Jones and a 3rd-Round pick. But Murray, if released, will basically be free for a year, and that’s just perfect for a cash-strapped team like the Vikings.
Because Arizona will drop him and move on, Minnesota won’t be available to ignore the value of a free Kyler Murray. As a kid, he cheered for Adrian Peterson’s Vikings, so everything comes full circle.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: Kyler Murray
QB2: J.J. McCarthy
QB3: Carson Wentz
t10. Kirk Cousins
Predictor: Cole Smith
The depth chart that no one wants but everyone knows is coming. Cousins brings a level of professionalism to the room that gives the team a much higher floor.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: Kirk Cousins
QB2: J.J. McCarthy
QB3: Max Brosmer
t10. Kirk Cousins
Predictor: Janik Eckardt
It feels inevitable, doesn’t it? The Vikings are reportedly in the market for a veteran quarterback to challenge McCarthy, and Cousins is expected to be in the market for a team with a quarterback vacancy. McCarthy and Cousins will compete for the QB1 gig, while Brosmer remains a developmental QB3 on the roster.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: Kirk Cousins
QB2: J.J. McCarthy
QB3: Max Brosmer
t10. Kirk Cousins
Predictor: Tony Schultz
I still think the team sticks with McCarthy as their starter. If you wanted the team to keep Sam Darnold after everyone had given up on him, isn’t that why you keep McCarthy? To develop him? To not let him go? To get there with your own guy? That’s how I see it staying, whether you think it’s the staff’s process or their ego.
We’re still a ways out, and bringing back Kirk Cousins as a veteran presence and good competition, or Malik Willis as young competition to push McCarthy, are both good strategies. Brosmer may bring up the rear unless the team finds another wayward soul in need of reclamation. One thing’s for sure, we’ll see the direction this team is heading in shortly.
Prediction for the Week 1 QB Room:
QB1: J.J. McCarthy
QB2: Kirk Cousins or Malik Willis
QB3: Max Brosmer or Developmental Prospect
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