Tag: Fox Sport News

  • Fantasy Basketball Waiver Wire: Maxine Raynaud, T.J. McConnell among top adds in 9-cat/standard points leagues for Week 8

    Welcome back to The Playlist — your weekly scan of the fantasy basketball landscape, where we break down the waiver adds who can keep your roster competitive in 9-cat and points leagues.

    You can also read my High Score pickups story for advice in that format.

    Fantasy basketball pickups and advice.

    Fantasy basketball pickups and advice.

    Week 8 comes with a twist: the NBA Cup. The Yahoo Fantasy Basketball default schedule doesn’t combine this week and next, which means your outcome will largely depend on how your schedule shakes out.

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    Here’s what we do know heading into Week 8:

    • NBA Cup games take place Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday, with the championship next Tuesday.

    • The Kings, Pacers, Pelicans and Timberwolves are locked into three games.

    • The Heat, Knicks, Magic, Thunder, Suns and Raptors will play either two or three games, depending on the outcomes of the quarterfinal games on Tuesday and Wednesday night.

    • Spurs and Lakers will play one or two games, depending on whether they advance.

    It’ll be tough to stream this week, but let’s get to the waiver adds.

    🎧 Who’s in My Rotation: 9-cat and standard points leagues

    Maxime Raynaud – C, Sacramento Kings (19% rostered)

    Raynaud should be added in all 12-team or deeper formats — 9-cat or points — as one of the highest-upside stashes under 20% rostered. With Domantas Sabonis sidelined, Raynaud’s minutes have jumped, and Sacramento’s poor record all but guarantees the Kings will shop veterans (like Sabonis) once Dec. 15 rolls around. That clears a long runway for the rookie to emerge as a rest-of-season asset.

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    He provides rebounds, blocks and efficiency for 9-cat managers, and his overall counting stats will translate to points leagues.

    TJ McConnell – PG, Indiana Pacers (15% rostered)

    The Pacers play three games in Week 8, making him a strong streaming option. McConnell is efficient, providing a solid source of steals and assists while minimizing turnovers.

    In points leagues, his contributions across categories provide a safe 21-30 fantasy-point floor any time he sees extra run. That’s bound to happen in Week 8, facing the Kings, Sixers and Wizards.

    Jordan Walsh – SG/SF/PF, Boston Celtics (17% rostered)

    Walsh is no longer just a deep-league watchlist guy. He ranks 54th over the past month and 40th over the last two weeks in 9-cat, thanks to his efficiency and stocks. With three-position eligibility, he’s a valuable piece to plug throughout your lineup.

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    The Celtics only play one game this week, but if you have space, I’d add him after averaging 14 points, 7 rebounds and almost 3 stocks in 28 minutes per game over his last five contests.

    [It’s not too late to join or create a fantasy basketball league for the 2025-26 NBA season]

    Jose Alvarado – PG, New Orleans Pelicans (10% rostered)

    I’d add Jeremiah Fears (28%) as the priority in shallow leagues, but Alvarado is a player to consider if Fears isn’t available. Now, Alvarado is likely playing with borrowed time, but with the Pelicans having three games and Jordan Poole still not ready, I’d stream him on Monday and hold for later in the week if Poole remains out.

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    Over the past two weeks, Alvarado has averaged 1.6 steals per game while shooting an uncharacteristic 48% from the field. In a tricky schedule week due to the NBA Cup where the volume of games could be the difference between a win and a loss, bet on volume and sneak in another game of production.

    Final tip for Week 8

    Before picking up Week 7 streaming gems like Pat and Cam Spencer or Jaylen Wells, wait until mid-week to get a clearer picture of stars likes Ja Morant, Stephen Curry, Tyler Herro, Devin Booker and others returning from injury. Since a bulk of the games will come on Thursday, Friday and Sunday, there’s no need to pick up fringe guys who could eventually be dropped preemptively.

  • The High Score Playlist: Week 8 fantasy basketball waiver wire pickups and lineup advice

    Welcome to The High Score Playlist: my weekly column that lets you know who to add off the waiver wire and get in your lineup for the upcoming week in fantasy basketball. You can also read my 9-cat and standard points leagues pickups story for advice in those formats.

    So press play and shuffle through the latest fantasy basketball info.

    Fantasy basketball pickups and advice.

    Fantasy basketball pickups and advice.

    Week 8 in High Score is pure chaos — the NBA Cup has the schedule in flux, and depending on outcomes, teams could play anywhere from 1-3 games. Volume doesn’t matter as much in High Score, but you still want to maximize your efforts in locking in the highest score for your team.

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    Ok, let’s get to the pickups.

    [High Score is a new way to play Fantasy Basketball on Yahoo with simple rosters and scoring. It’s not too late to create or join a league]

    🎧 Who’s in My Rotation: High Score

    Jaden McDaniels – FC, Timberwolves (46% rostered)

    Yes, we’re going back to McDaniels in consecutive weeks — and the Wolves’ Week 8 schedule makes it unavoidable. Minnesota is locked into three games, and McDaniels closed Week 7 with back-to-back 40+ fantasy points in High Score. As one of the best wing defenders in the league, the Wolves will lean on him for heavy minutes, offering more time for production.

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    He’s averaging two stocks per game over his last six contests and is posting the highest assist rate of his career. In a week where a couple of extra opportunities can matter, McDaniels is a must-add in High Score.

    Grayson Allen – G/FC, Suns (32% rostered)

    Allen returned in Week 7 after missing seven games, and while the performance wasn’t to the standard we’ve seen this season, the opportunity is there. Before the injury, he averaged 34 fantasy points per game in High Score. Allen is one of four players under 40% rostered who is in the top-100 overall in per-game production.

    With Devin Booker still sidelined by a groin injury and the Suns potentially playing three games depending on NBA Cup results, Allen’s fantasy potential is worth exploring. A proven producer (this year) + a favorable schedule = a player you should add in Week 8.

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    Jeremiah Fears – G, Pelicans (28% rostered)

    The Pelicans play three games in Week 8, and Fears has posted 32+ fantasy points in High Score in four of his last five outings. New Orleans is bad — straight up — but that actually helps Fears maintain a stable, high-usage role even when Jordan Poole returns. Fears scores, hits 3s, gets to the line and contributes enough steals to keep his floor sturdy.

    In a week with volume scattered across the league, Fears is a viable option widely available in this format.

    Anthony Black – G, Magic (29% rostered)

    Black continues to trend up across all formats because of his play, but he is also making the most of his minutes. Franz Wagner (leg) and Jalen Suggs (groin) both left Sunday’s contest early and with Paolo Banchero still working his way back, Black held it down with 14 points, 11 rebounds, 4 assists and 1 block in 30 minutes. He’s been averaging 16/5/4 with 1.6 steals per game over his past 10 outings. Keep him locked into your lineups because he’s not going anywhere.

    Ryan Nembhard – G, Mavericks (26% rostered)

    Dallas only plays one game this week, which keeps Nembhard last on the list — but make no mistake, he should still be rostered in High Score. Jason Kidd’s rotations have been unpredictable. However, the Mavs are 4-2 with Nembhard as the starting point guard and he initiates the offense far better than D’Angelo Russell and Brandon Williams. Nembhard will generate a ton of assists, which is key for High Score, so if you have room on your bench, stash him; it’ll pay off beyond Week 8.

  • Tulane promotes Will Hall to head coach, replacing Jon Sumrall

    Tulane has promoted passing game coordinator Will Hall to head coach, according to Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger. The deal is now official, and he was introduced to the team Monday morning.

    Hall is replacing Jon Sumrall, who recently became the head coach at the University of Florida. Hall became the target after LSU defensive coordinator Blake Baker opted to stay with the Tigers.

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    The 2025 season marked Hall’s second stint with the Green Wave, first serving as the offensive coordinator in 2019-20 under former head coach Willie Fritz. Hall was also a former head coach at Southern Mississippi, West Georgia and West Alabama. Hall has a 70-50 record across the three schools.

    Hall helped quarterback Jake Retzlaff have an efficient season in his first season at Tulane. Retzlaff, who transferred from BYU late this offseason, has thrown for 2,862 yards, 14 touchdowns and 6 interceptions. Hall also recruited and coached quarterback Michael Pratt during his first stint at Tulane, and Pratt is the program’s all-time leading passer with 9,602 yards.

    Tulane is coming off a 34-21 victory over North Texas to clinch a spot in the College Football Playoff. It was the Green Wave’s second American Conference championship in program history and their fourth straight appearance in the conference championship game.

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    Despite this being Tulane’s first appearance in the College Football Playoffs, the Green Wave have been one of the most successful Group of Five teams in recent years; Tulane has won 43 games in the last four seasons. Sumrall has gone 20-7 overall and 14-2 in the American in two seasons with the team.

    On Dec. 20, Tulane will play No. 6 Ole Miss as an 11th seed in the first round of the College Football Playoff. Hall will take over as head coach starting next season, as Sumrall will continue to coach Tulane in the playoffs. Their opponent in the first round will be without their former head coach, Lane Kiffin.

    This will be Tulane’s second matchup with Ole Miss this season. In early September, Ole Miss beat Tulane 45-10. Quarterback Trinidad Chambliss, running back Kewan Lacy and wide receiver Deuce Alexander led the way for Ole Miss on offense. Retzlaff had his worst performance of the season against the Rebels, going 5-for-17 for 56 yards passing, adding 51 yards on the ground.

  • Fantasy Basketball High Score Perfect Lineup: Top 6 scores from Week 7 in the NBA

    As the 2025-26 NBA season approaches the two-month mark, we should all be talking about how dominant the Oklahoma City Thunder have been sitting at 22-1. Or perhaps we should also be talking about how Denver Nuggets big Nikola Jokić appears poised to win a fourth MVP award. Or maybe bring up how this could be the end of an era with LeBron James potentially in his final season.

    Nope. Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors are what’s on everybody’s mind right now. The Greek Freak could be sidelined for about a month due to a calf strain. The Bucks don’t appear to be a contender in the East (though it’s early). Milwaukee needs to weigh what’s best for the franchise and whether the team can compete before Giannis can hit free agency again in 2027. So Antetokounmpo is back in the mill and could be on the move at some point this season before the NBA trade deadline.

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    Whatever happens with Giannis will surely have a huge echo for fantasy basketball. If you haven’t stockpiled some Bucks exposure now, the only player who is above 60% rostered on Yahoo is Myles Turner. Everyone else on Milwaukee’s roster can be had in most shallow High Score leagues and are worth considering. Some contingent of Ryan Rollins, Kevin Porter Jr., Bobby Portis and Kyle Kuzma will have to carry the load while Giannis is out (and if he’s ultimately traded).

    Anyway, with the Greek Freak sidelined, he’s not making an appearance in this week’s High Score perfect lineup (though he’s been in there a few times). Let’s take a look at the top-six scorers from this week.

    The top-six performances overall by position from Week 7.

    The top-six performances overall by position from Week 7.

    (Taylor Wilhelm)

    More on the top performers

    Luka Dončić, guard: Luka had missed the past two games this week due to personal reasons before returning on Sunday to make the list. He had a 31-15-11 triple-double to help the Lakers get back in the win column against the 76ers. This score likely swung a decent amount of matchups one way or the other on Sunday; had Dončić not played, his High Score for the week would have settled at 59 points. L.A. could have only one game this week (vs. the Spurs in the NBA Cup Quarterfinals), so you’ll need a good one from Dončić to pay off.

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    [High Score is a new way to play Fantasy Basketball on Yahoo with simple rosters and scoring. It’s not too late to create or join a league]

    Cade Cunningham, guard: In a four-game week for the Pistons, Cade managed his best score last Monday. Everyone is still chasing his 101 points from early November that stands as the highest output of any player in a single game all season.

    Alperen Şengün, frontcourt: The Rockets big man started the week off right with the top overall score but did very little else after that. Şengün missed a Friday-Saturday back-to-back due to an illness. The Rockets continue to run Şengün like a point-center (remind you of anyone?) and it’s paying off big in fantasy basketball. He finished with 31-14-8 with seven stocks. Şengün now has 11 games this season with multiple stocks, which will always elevate his floor/ceiling combo.

    Nikola Jokić, frontcourt: Nikola Jokić. Part of me wants to just leave this paragraph with that, just the future Hall of Famer’s name. Jokić has made his way into the perfect lineup in five of seven weeks this season. But this score is special since it was the star’s first 20-rebound game of the season. It was also his NBA-leading 11th triple-double of the season.

    Jalen Johnson, frontcourt: Johnson is also getting some Most Improved Player hype and will continue to be the guy in ATL so long as Trae Young is hurt. Young is set to be reevaluated at some point this month, so a return could be on the horizon. Whenever Young gets back, it’ll impact Johnson, but the Hawks may be wise to continue to run their offense through the forward. He turned in back-to-back triple-doubles on Friday-Saturday, the first score helping him land in this lineup. That line read 21-18-16 with a pair of steals.

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    Jamal Murray, UTIL: This is Murray’s first appearance of the season on the perfect lineup. With the Pacers already staring down the lottery, Murray took advantage, going off for a season-high 52 points, three points shy of his career high he set last season. The veteran guard turned in one of the best scoring performances in NBA history, shooting 19-25 from the field while going a near-perfect 10-11 from downtown. Unfortunately, we likely won’t see Murray hit this number often in High Score given his lack of peripheral stats. His only path to gaudy fantasy point totals is scoring volume and while Murray is capable, he just isn’t going to shoot like this every game. In fact, he may never do something like this ever again. Cherish these moments.

    Austin Reaves, UTIL: The Lakers swingman will have a good case for Most Improved Player for 2025-26 and has kept up his numbers despite Luka Dončić and LeBron James being in and out of the lineup. With Luka sidelined due to personal reasons last week, Reaves took advantage of the extra usage by dropping 44 points with 10 assists and 5 boards against Toronto. With Dončić and James missing games pretty consistently, Reaves should continue to be a top High Score asset. All it takes is one game with Dončić sidelined and we see the type of ceiling Reaves can provide.

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    Karl-Anthony Towns, UTIL: KAT was held out Sunday vs. the Magic due to a calf injury. Hopefully he can get back on the court Tuesday vs. the Raptors, the Knicks lone game this week depending on how they do in the NBA Cup. Last week, Towns was one of four players to post 69 as a High Score and make it onto this list. It was a smash spot against the Hornets with the big man scoring 35 points with 18 rebounds, 5 assists and 2 steals.

  • Grizzlies’ Zach Edey is leveling up: Is the second-year big man on his way to NBA stardom?

    It doesn’t take long for Zach Edey to make his presence felt.

    On the opening basket of Sunday’s game between the Memphis Grizzlies and Portland Trail Blazers, rookie wing Cedric Coward is able to eek out a late-clock bucket against Sidy Cissoko after a well-timed pump fake. What stands out to me is what happens before it:

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    • Edey and Jaylen Wells (looking good lately) flow into a ball screen that the Blazers work to force down the sideline. Edey’s dive naturally occupies the attention of Toumani Camara, who technically has low-man responsibilities. Edey doesn’t get the ball, but that doesn’t stop the work. He seals rookie (and Summer League legend) Yang Hansen, then retreats once he recognizes a drive is happening.

    • As he backs out of the paint, Camara gets two hands on Edey — in part to make sure Edey feels him, but I’m sure a part of him wanted to take whatever chance a lob was available off the table. As that’s happening, Yang is already working his tail off to box out Edey. A noble act on its face — do your work early, rook! — but a poorly timed one in practice. Because Yang was preoccupied with Edey, Coward’s able to get an uncontested layup after his pump fake.

    This is where the fun really begins.

    A little later, Jaren Jackson Jr. is dealing with full-court pressure from Jerami Grant; that high activity remains a staple for the pesky-but-injured Blazers. As Jackson drives and gathers, Grant’s able to strip the ball away, though Jackson is able to recover. Searching for an option, he quickly wraps a pass around to Edey — quietly in position after slow-rolling from the free-throw line to the restricted area during Jackson’s drive.

    Two points, too easy.

    Not to be outdone, Grant brings the ball up the left side of the floor on the next trip. He receives a screen from Yang, hoping to attack the space given by Edey’s drop. It doesn’t work; Grant snakes to his right, attempts to power through Edey on his gather — and maybe draw a foul in the process — but ultimately tosses up a righty push shot that misses everything.

    Thirty seconds later, Edey takes Yang to Seal City. What should happen on the possession is a high ball screen between Coward and Jackson, with potential interplay between Jackson and Edey — maybe another 4-5 ball screen they’ve been sprinkling in? — following shortly after. Instead, Camara gets handsy with Jackson to prevent a screen from happening.

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    No matter; Edey gives Grant a little tap before darting down the middle of the floor, setting up shop at the dotted line and pinning Yang behind him in the process. The ball finds Jackson, who immediately hits Edey. You know what’s coming: one dribble, dislodge, turn, bucket.

    Yang wants his get-back on the next trip. He inbounds the ball, then flies down court for a trail 3, but he misses. Edey takes advantage by doing what every big should: jet back down the middle of the floor and seal like your life depends on it. Yang doesn’t deal well with the blow and is so preoccupied with Edey that he isn’t really prepared for the Jackson drive coming right at him. The second Yang steps up, Jackson lobs a slightly off pass for Edey.

    Catch, load up, bucket.

    The Blazers alter their approach on the next trip, this time opting for an early post-up for Grant against Vince Williams Jr. Grant works quickly, spinning to his left … only to see Edey meeting him at the rim. Grant tries to wrap a pass around Edey, but a turnover ensues.

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    Edey darts down the middle of the floor, again. He seals Yang, again. As he goes to work on Yang, Cissoko opts to provide some help for the rook. The second he does, Coward fills that space with a cut, and Edey hits him.

    Bucket. Timeout, Blazers.

    When I say it didn’t take long for Edey to make his presence felt, it’s true in a literal sense. All of that happened within the first two minutes, 36 seconds of the game. Edey would eventually finish with another double-double — 12 points, 10 rebounds, 3 assists in roughly 22 minutes — in another Grizzlies win.

    In a broader sense, it hasn’t taken long for Edey to change life for the Grizzlies.

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    Edey’s enormous impact

    Since making his season debut on Nov. 15, Edey’s averaging 13.6 points (65.6% on 2s, 78.1% from the line), 11.1 rebounds (3.9 offensive) and 1.9 blocks. Zooming out a bit, the Grizzlies have performed like a top-10 team in basketball since that date: a 7-4 record while ranking 15th in offense (115 offensive rating), 2nd in defense (109 defensive rating) and 6th in net rating (+6.0), per Cleaning The Glass. After a tumultuous start, they’re firmly in a play-in spot with plenty of room and time to move upward.

    Looking at just the Edey minutes, they’ve been even more dominant: the offense has been a smidge better (115.1), but the defense has been stingier than the Thunder’s (95.1). There are four players who have logged at least 200 minutes whose teams are at least 20 points per 100 possessions better with them on the court: Pascal Siakam (+20.4), Aaron Gordon (+20.5, get well soon), Giannis Antetokounmpo (+20.6, get well soon), and Edey (+29.6).

    Now, I’m obviously not here to argue that Edey is legitimately the most impactful player in basketball. I will say it’s pretty easy to see why he matters so much. Thanks to his intersection of abnormal size and skill, there’s a level of interior gravity that he brings to the table.

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    He flat out isn’t a good screener right now, an annoying carryover from last season, and it hasn’t really mattered because of how much mass defenders have to navigate anyway. Because of where the Grizzlies often deploy him as a screener — among 39 players to set at least 300 on-ball screens, only nine players have a lower average screen distance than Edey (25.2 feet from the basket) — he’s able to threaten the paint earlier.

    That opens up early pocket passes, lob chances or, as you saw above, opportunities for Edey to turn his rolls into seals. In addition to his own post scoring, he’s also been more intentional about turning those seals into driving lanes for his opponents. Marcin Gortat would be … well, more proud than last year.

    [Get more Grizzlies news: Memphis team feed]

    If you aren’t able to get a body or bodies on him, he’ll cause havoc in some form. There are the aforementioned scoring opportunities within the flow of a possession, but there’s also the offensive rebounding. He’s fifth in the league (min. 10 games) in offensive rebounds per game. But even when he isn’t grabbing them, the attention he draws can leave room for his teammates to swoop in.

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    You really feel Edey’s size, and some subtle mobility improvements, on the defensive end. To the boring part: The Grizzlies do a much better job of ending possessions when Edey’s on the floor. They rebound a whooping 80.3% of opponent misses in Edey’s minutes; that drops to 72% with Edey on the bench.

    What’s impressed me the most since his return is the level of do-your-job consistency he’s reached. The Grizzlies most often deploy him in drop coverage — it makes sense to keep that much size near the rim, where he’s been solid — but he’s a more active participant in those reps. He’s using his arms more to take up space; he’s tossing in more swipes and lunges while he backpedals, aimed to disrupt the rhythm of ball-handlers while giving his screen navigators more time to recover.

    Wells, Williams, and even Coward deserve a ton of credit for the work they’ve done on and off the ball. In addition to their navigation chops, they are incredibly active helpers — they shrink gaps and get their paws on plenty of kick-out passes. Per Genius Sports tracking data, the Grizzlies have help defenders present on over 77% of the drives they face, a top-five mark in the league. With Edey on the floor, that rises to 81.4% — a mark that would edge out the Warriors (81%) for the highest in the league.

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    That context is necessary when parsing out some of Edey’s data. For example, the Grizzlies are allowing 0.89 points per possession on trips featuring a pick-and-roll defended by Edey. That’s 13th among 62 players to defend at least 200 — above names like Bam Adebayo, Rudy Gobert, Isaiah Hartenstein, Draymond Green, Jackson, and Chet Holmgren. I think it’s fair to say he isn’t that, at least not yet for the optimists. The Grizzlies deserve credit for creating this infrastructure, and Edey deserves credit for doing his job — and unlocking some of the aggression in front of him because of the size security he provides — within the infrastructure.

    There’s still room for growth with Edey. Offensively, he just has to become a more dutiful screener to grease the wheels for some of Memphis’ well-schemed off-ball concepts. There’s another leap or two of passing growth for him, especially with the attention he can draw on some of his deep catches.

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    Defensively, you’d like to see him continue to take strides on the perimeter. The Grizzlies don’t switch him out as often as last season, but he’s still tasked with navigating late switches when ball-handlers string things out. Some of his load-ups on rim contests are a hair late; any growth in that area could lead to him leveling up even more as an interior defender.

    But that’s what makes this all so encouraging. There are things to point to and he’s still impacting winning to this degree. At worst, he’s a very useful floor raiser on both ends that’ll swing the possession battle in your favor. At his best, he just wrecks people, man. I’m excited to keep watching to see just how high his ceiling is.

  • Men’s basketball AP poll: Arizona moves to No. 1 after Iowa State’s historic win over Purdue

    We’ve got a new No. 1 men’s basketball team in the country this week after the previous one completely fell apart this past weekend.

    Here’s everything you missed in the fifth week of the regular season, and the latest Associated Press poll.

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    Iowa State launches into top 5 after stunning Purdue

    It was only a matter of time before Purdue finally dropped a game. After all, it’s been decades since we’ve had an undefeated national champion. But the Boilermakers’ first loss of the season was a historic one, and it vaulted Iowa State into the top tier of teams in the country.

    The Cyclones erupted in the second half on Saturday to pick up an 81-58 road win over Purdue. The 23-point loss at Mackey Arena was the largest nonconference home loss by a top-ranked team in the AP poll’s history, and matched the largest home loss ever by a No. 1 team. In fact, the last time Purdue lost at home by such a big margin was back in 2013.

    That loss knocked Purdue down five spots to No. 6 in this week’s poll. That paved the way for Arizona to take over the No. 1 spot. The Wildcats picked up a 29-point win over then-No. 20 Auburn on Saturday in what was their fourth ranked win of the season. Michigan remained undefeated, too, with a 41-point rout over Rutgers, and moved up a spot to No. 2.

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    Duke, thanks to 16 second-half points from Cameron Boozer, handed Michigan State its first loss of the season on Saturday. The Blue Devils also climbed up to No. 3.

    Iowa State, meanwhile, launched into the top five after Saturday’s win, which got it to 9-0. They came in at No. 4, one spot above UConn. The Cyclones now have several quality wins already this season, including over St. John’s and Creighton before steamrolling Purdue, and they came in at No. 2 in Ken Pomeroy’s rankings behind only Michigan.

    The Cyclones have already positioned themselves, not only in line with Arizona and Houston in the Big 12, but as a legitimate title contender nationally. While the Cyclones have yet to make it past the Sweet 16 in the TJ Otzelberger era, this group in Ames looks like it’ll be in a great position in a few months time.

    Kentucky falls out of poll

    It’s a concerning time in Lexington.

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    Mark Pope and the Wildcats are coming off their worst week of the season so far, which they capped with a blowout 35-point loss to Gonzaga in which they were repeatedly booed off the court by their own fans in Nashville. The Bulldogs led the entire way after opening Friday night’s game on a 19-2 run. Kentucky shot less than 27% from the field as a group and missed their first 10 shots of the night.

    “All the boos that we heard tonight were incredibly well-deserved, mostly for me, and we have to fix it,” Pope said, via Fox Sports. “We’ve kind of diminished a little bit into a bad spot right now that we have to dig ourselves out of it, and it’s going to be an internal group thing, and we feel the responsibility we have to this university and this fan base.”

    That loss came after Kentucky fell to North Carolina in the ACC-SEC Challenge earlier in the week. Gonzaga, now 9-1, climbed up to No. 8 in this week’s poll. North Carolina, which also beat Georgetown by 20 points on Sunday, is at No. 14.

    All four of Kentucky’s losses have come against ranked opponents. The Wildcats tumbled out of the poll completely this week after being ranked 18th last week. While they have a chance to rebound with two more ranked opponents before SEC play kicks off — they’ve got Indiana and Saint John’s waiting later this month — the Wildcats have yet to pick up a quality win this season. For a team that started inside the top 10, and is now completely unranked, that’s not a good spot to be just six weeks into the season.

    Games to watch this week

    All times ET | * denotes neutral site

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    Tuesday, Dec. 9

    Villanova at No. 2 Michigan | 6:30 p.m. | FS1
    No. 18 Florida at No. 5 UConn | 9 p.m. | ESPN *

    Thursday, Dec. 11

    Iowa at No. 4 Iowa State | 8 p.m. | FS1

    Saturday, Dec. 13

    No. 17 Arkansas at No. 16 Texas Tech | 12 p.m. | ESPN2 *
    No. 1 Arizona vs. No. 12 Alabama | 9:30 p.m. | ESPN

    AP Top 25

    The full Associated Press men’s basketball poll from Dec. 8, 2025.

    1. Arizona (8-0)
    2. Michigan (8-0)
    3. Duke (10-0)
    4. Iowa State (9-0)
    5. UConn (8-1)
    6. Purdue (8-1)
    7. Houston (8-1)
    8. Gonzaga (8-1)
    9. Michigan State (8-1)
    10. BYU (7-1)
    11. Louisville (8-1)
    12. Alabama (7-2)
    13. Illinois (7-2)
    14. North Carolina (8-1)
    15. Vanderbilt (9-0)
    16. Texas Tech (7-2)
    17. Arkansas (7-2)
    18. Florida (5-3)
    19. Kansas (7-3)
    20. Tennessee (7-3)
    21. Auburn (7-3)
    22. St. John’s (5-3)
    23. Nebraska (9-0)
    24. Virginia (8-1)
    25. UCLA (7-2)

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    Others receiving votes: Iowa 60, Oklahoma State 54, USC 50, Georgia 49, Saint Mary’s 38, Seton Hall 31, Kentucky 29, Wisconsin 24, Indiana 18, Clemson 14, LSU 14, Villanova 9, California 6, Notre Dame 4, Miami 4, SMU 3, TCU 2, Arizona St 2, Miami (Ohio) 2, St. Bonaventure 1

  • Shedeur Sanders named Browns’ starting quarterback for rest of the season

    Shedeur Sanders will start at quarterback for the Cleveland Browns for the rest of the season.

    Head coach Kevin Stefanski announced the decision to reporters on Monday. Sanders has started each of Cleveland’s previous three games. Stefanski had previously named him the starter each week leading up to a game. Now Stefanski has assigned him the starting job for the remaining four games on Cleveland’s schedule.

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    “He has constantly and consistently gotten better in each one of these games and how he’s approached this game,” Stefanski said. “He’s been working very hard. I feel good about where his development is heading.

    “He knows there are always going to be plays where he can be better and those type of things. But he is very intentional about getting better each and every game he’s out there.”

    Shedeur Sanders will start Cleveland's remaining four games.

    Shedeur Sanders will start Cleveland’s remaining four games.

    (Diamond Images via Getty Images)

    Stefanski announced the decision on the heels of Cleveland’s 31-29 loss to the Tennessee Titans on Sunday. Sanders had his most productive performance as a pro in that game, completing 23 of 42 passes for 364 yards with 3 touchdowns and an interception.

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    [Get more Browns news: Cleveland team feed]

    The Browns scored two touchdowns on offense in the game’s final six minutes. But they failed to convert a game-tying two-point conversion with 1:03 remaining, and the Titans won their second game of the season.

    The decision quells speculation that Cleveland would consider starting Deshaun Watson, who has returned to practice from a ruptured Achilles tendon suffered last season.

    The Browns are 1-2 in games that Sanders has started, but he has shown steady improvement in each appearance since taking over for injured starter Dillion Gabriel in Week 11 against the Ravens. Sanders is now slated to start Cleveland’s final four games against the Bears, Bills, Steelers and Bengals. All but the Bengals are in the playoff picture, providing Sanders with a tough test as the Browns assess their future at quarterback.

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    A fifth-round pick in April’s draft, Sanders started the season as the No. 4 quarterback on Cleveland’s depth chart and wasn’t expected to ascend to the starting role. But the Browns traded Kenny Pickett and Joe Flacco, and Sanders got his shot when Gabriel suffered a concussion against Baltimore. Now the Browns will give him a long run at the end of the season without the burden of a week-to-week starting status.

    The Browns will have two first-round picks in next year’s NFL Draft, their own and that of the Jaguars after April’s draft-day trade that allowed Jacksonville to select Travis Hunter with Cleveland’s assigned pick. Cleveland is expected to go into the 2026 draft targeting a quarterback. Sanders now has four more starts to convince them otherwise.

  • ‘Slightly Biased, Spot On or So Wrong?’ Contenders, Celtics, Lakers, Embiid, Nembhard & more

    Subscribe to The Kevin O’Connor Show

    Kevin O’Connor is joined by Slightly Biased to break down whether Ryan Nembhard is the next Steve Nash and his impact on the Dallas Mavericks. Plus, are the Lakers the most overrated team in the NBA? Is Joel Embiid finished?

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    Next, they discuss if the Thunder could still make the play-in even if you took all the starters off the roster, whether the Celtics will win 55 plus games if Tatum returns by March and Zach Edey’s defensive impact for the Grizzlies. Plus, should everyone besides Steph Curry on the Warriors be available for a trade?

    (1:24) Ryan Nembhard the next Steve Nash?

    (9:42) Are Lakers overrated?

    (14:49) Is Embiid finished?

    (20:21) Could OKC’s bench make the play-in?

    (29:55) Clippers could blow it all up

    (36:30) Are Celtics actually any good?

    (42:34) Zach Edey defensive improvements

    (49:00) Is Zaccharie Risacher officially a bust?

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    (54:36) Can Kings turn their season around?

    (57:55) Should Warriors make a trade?

    (1:07:59) NBA Cup predictions

    Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid looks on during the third quarter against the Golden State Warriors at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

    Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid looks on during the third quarter against the Golden State Warriors at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

    (Bill Streicher)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • 2025 College Football Playoff national championship odds: Ohio State still betting favorite to win CFP national title

    The Ohio State Buckeyes lost 13-10 in the Big Ten Championship game to the Indiana Hoosiers on Saturday and fell out of the top spot in the College Football Playoff rankings. Ohio State QB Julian Sayin also likely lost out on a chance at the Heisman trophy to Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza (Sayin had 300-1 odds to Mendoza’s -5000 before the odds were taken down on Monday).

    However, despite being the No. 2 seed, the defending champion Buckeyes remain the betting favorite to win the CFP at sportsbooks, including BetMGM. Ohio State has +225 odds to win it all, followed by No. 1 seed Indiana at +275 and No. 3 Georgia at +500.

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    “The sportsbook is in great shape heading into the College Football Playoff,” Seamus Magee, BetMGM trading manager, said in a statement. “Many of the favorites to win the championship, including Ohio State, Indiana and Georgia, are winners for the book.”

    Ohio State has the most wagers (13.8%) and total dollars wagered (16.8%), followed by Georgia in both categories. The Buckeyes were the 8 seed in last year’s CFP after missing the Big Ten title game. Ohio State then won four straight games in the CFP en route to a title, capped by a 34-23 win over No. 7 Notre Dame.

    The two biggest title liabilities for BetMGM are Texas and LSU — and neither team even reached the College Football Playoff.

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    The four higher-seeded teams in the first round — No. 5 Oregon, No. 6 Ole Miss, No. 7 Texas A&M and No. 8 Oklahoma — opened as favorites, but No. 9 Alabama was quickly bet to a 1.5-point favorite against the Sooners. Oregon is a 21-point favorite vs. No. 12 James Madison, Texas A&M is a 3.5-point favorite against No. 10 Miami (Fla.) and Ole Miss is a 16.5-point favorite vs. Tulane in the opening round.

    The Buckeyes will play the winner of the Miami-Texas A&M matchup on Dec. 31 in the Cotton Bowl at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

  • Magic F Franz Wagner reportedly has high-ankle sprain, avoided more serious injury; will miss multiple weeks, remainder of NBA Cup

    Standout Orlando Magic forward Franz Wagner has a high left-ankle sprain that’s expected to sideline him for multiple weeks, ESPN’s Shams Charania reports. The injury projects to sideline Wagner for the remainder of NBA Cup play. Orlando will play the Miami Heat in the quarterfinals on Tuesday. The championship final is scheduled for Dec. 16 in Las Vegas.

    The good news for Wagner is he avoided more significant structural damage in a scary fall against the Knicks on Sunday, according to the report. Wagner fell to the court after a hard foul by New York’s Ariel Hukporti.

    Wagner immediately grabbed his lower left leg and rolled around on the floor in pain. He eventually needed the help of teammates to limp off the court.

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    Wagner is Orlando’s leading scorer this season with averages of 22.7 points, 6.1 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 1.2 steals while shooting a career-high 49% from the floor and 36% from 3. He has played much of the season with a broken nose and has helped keep the Magic competitive in the East despite the extended absence of All-Star Paolo Banchero due to a groin injury.

    Banchero returned to the lineup on Friday after missing 10 games due to the injury. Now the Magic will be down another star for an extended period. Wagner’s absence will likely result in a heavier workload for Banchero and an expanded offensive role for Desmond Bane.

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    The Magic are off to a 14-10 start, good for fifth in the East as of Monday.