We Are Back To Win: Lamont Butler and Jaxson Robinson returned for UK basketball at Oklahoma. How did it go…

Amid the multitude of storylines that emerged during No. 17 Kentucky basketball’s 83-82 road win at Oklahoma on Wednesday night, it was perhaps the biggest news at the beginning of the night — the returns of fifth-year guards Lamont Butler and Jaxson Robinson from injury — that became the most buried.

The Wildcats’ last-second win over the Sooners had seemingly everything: a sensational scoring night from Otega Oweh against his former school, a chaotic final sequence for Kentucky and a myriad of players on both sides taking on former teammates.

The Kentucky Wildcats edged out the Oklahoma Sooners 83-82 in a thrilling matchup on February 26, 2025, at the Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, Oklahoma. This victory improved Kentucky’s record to 19-9 overall and 8-7 in the Southeastern Conference.

A standout performance came from Otega Oweh, who returned to his former team and delivered a career-high 28 points, including 23 in the second half. Oweh’s scoring surge was pivotal, as he contributed 21 of Kentucky’s final 23 points, leading the Wildcats to a narrow victory.

The game was closely contested, with both teams shooting efficiently. Kentucky made 50% of their field goals (29-58), while Oklahoma shot 53% (30-57). Despite the higher shooting percentage, the Sooners were unable to secure the win.

Injury updates were significant for Kentucky, as both Lamont Butler and Jaxson Robinson returned to the lineup. Butler contributed seven points, six assists, and four rebounds, while Robinson added seven points, all in the first half. Robinson’s return was particularly notable, as he had been sidelined due to a wrist injury.

The Wildcats’ next game is scheduled against the top-ranked Auburn Tigers on March 1, 2025, at Rupp Arena. This matchup is crucial for Kentucky as they aim to strengthen their position in the NCAA Tournament.

“Той не го направи: Новак Джокович разкрива голяма тайна за звездата Григор Димитров, заявявайки, че той не е…”

“Той не го направи: Новак Джокович разкрива голяма тайна за звездата Григор Димитров, заявявайки, че той не е…”

Wow OMG! Clemson Tigers Pull a Stunning Sensational Deal for Tye Johnson, 2024’s Best WR and 2025’s Top Recruit…

When Shanghai-based designer Guo Qingshan posted a vacation photo on Valentine’s Day and captioned it “Puppy Mountain,” it became a sensation in China and even created a tourist destination.

Guo had gone on a hike while visiting his hometown of Yichang in central China’s Hubei province in late January. When reviewing the photos, he saw something he hadn’t noticed before: A mountain shaped like a dog’s head rested on the ground next to the Yangtze River, its snout perched at the water’s edge.

“It was so magical and cute. I was so excited and happy when I discovered it,” Guo said.

Column: It’s stunning but true. Luka Doncic and LeBron James can’t lead the Lakers to an NBA title…See Why…

The revelation is as stunning as a Luka pass. The truth is as sweet as a Luka trey.

These Lakers can win the NBA championship.

Not next year after they find their missing big man. Not in two years after LeBron James retires. Not in three years when Luka Doncic takes full ownership.

Now. The Lakers can win an NBA title right now. They can win it this season, this summer, right here, this moment, and this is not just some homerish spewing, this is real.

Have you seen Luka and LeBron playing together? Did you watch the Saturday blowout of the Denver Nuggets in a gym that has hosted so many L.A, heartbreaks? Did you watch Tuesday’s emotional victory in the kind of game that the hard-playing Dallas Mavericks usually win?

First, it’s still surreal to see Doncic in a Lakers uniform. It still doesn’t look right. This gift-wrapping of him by the Dallas Mavericks to the Lakers in a trade for Anthony Davis still doesn’t make sense. Luka still looks like a big kid wearing a purple-and-gold Halloween costume.

One of the three greatest players on the planet plays on the same team as arguably the greatest player ever? And they’re actually throwing passes to each other? No way. Still.

Once you realize Luka is actually here, mix his abilities with those of an all-in LeBron, who is amazingly playing as well as ever, actually playing defense, totally being the great teammate, no ego, all embrace.

During Saturday’s 123-100 win in Denver, Luka scored 32 points with 10 rebounds and seven assists. LeBron deferred and enabled and still scored 25 points with two baskets off perfect Luka passes.

“That’s what we love about the game and love about him, being able to come out here and show that passion and show that fire,” defensive whiz Jarred Vanderbilt told reporters when asked about Luka afterward.

Then in Tuesday’s 107-99 win against Dallas, Doncic was a mental mess in his first game against the team that quit on him, so LeBron took over, saving the win with an amazing 16-point fourth quarter.

“He’s doing that at 40 years old, which is insane,” Doncic said later. “Taking over in the fourth quarter. It was unbelievable to watch.”

They’re unbelievable to watch together. It’s only been a handful of games, but this duo feels much different than the LeBron-AD tandem. It feels more explosive yet, at the same time, it feels more consistent. It feels more — dare we say? — Kobe and Shaq?

Now add role players who have greatly benefited from all the options Luka offers.

Austin Reaves has wide-open lanes, Rui Hachimura has unguarded threes, and Dorian Finney-Smith may have been the league’s most underrated acquisition this season; he’s everywhere doing everything.

Late in Tuesday’s win, Finney-Smith set a powerful screen, finished a nifty dunk and then pulled off a dramatic steal, leading coach JJ Redick to anoint him as one of the team’s spiritual leaders.

“He normally does a fantastic job of just setting the tone with the toughness. … I think Doe is a banshee,” said Redick of the guy that Rob Pelinka smartly grabbed out of Brooklyn in the D’Angelo Russell deal. “He leads that charge for us and sets the tone with winning basketball plays.”

Add these weapons together and the Lakers now have a diversified attack that ranks seventh in the league in offensive rating. They become even more dangerous when you throw in something Lakers fans haven’t seen in several years.

This team plays championship defense.

In the past 15 games they’ve led the league in defensive rating, inspired by the unlikeliest of sources. Yeah, believe it, LeBron James actually cares about guarding his man. In fact, few in the league are doing it better.

“This is not an exaggeration if you watch our basketball team every night and you’ve watched our team now for the last six weeks or so, LeBron’s playing at an all-NBA defense level,” said Redick. “People may have perceptions of what he is as a defender. I watch it every night. He doesn’t get scored on in isolation if teams do try to target him. He blows plays up. He’s always in the right position, shifting, recovering.”

And, of course, all this at 40? LeBron’s full adoption of a changing culture at this stage of his career is beyond admirable.

“I think there was this perception of him at this age, like conserving energy. No,” said Redick. “There’s no conservation of energy on that end of the floor. He’s played elite defense now for a while.”

And to think, the initial idea behind the Feb. 1 trade was that this was a deal for the future with no immediate title expectations.

Nine games later, that’s all changed.

Who knew Doncic’s mere presence would have such a profound effect on a team chemistry that had already started taking shape before he arrived?

Who knew LeBron would so willingly accede his power, not to mention his touches? Who knew Reaves and Hachimura would so quickly figure out how to catch Doncic’s circus passes? Who knew Finney-Smith would be such a baller?

And who knew that maybe, just maybe, they are athletic enough and smart enough to survive without replacing the huge loss of rim protection that sailed out the door with Davis?

Check the standings. If you haven’t looked lately, you might be surprised. This week the 35-21 Lakers were in fourth place in the West and just one game out of second place in the loss column.

Here’s a prediction that should be as obvious as all those new smiles on those recharged Crypto faces:

The Lakers will finish second in the West behind Oklahoma City, then use their veteran savvy to beat the young Thunder in the conference finals and advance to the NBA Finals.

Waiting for them should be Boston.

Waiting for Boston will be LeBron and Luka.

No matter how it ends up, the waiting in Laker Nation should be over.

The time for their 18th title run is now.

“Zakaj bi menjava Luke Dončića lahko določila generacijo – za Mavericks, Lakers in NBA…

NICO HARRISON WORE the kind of suit no one could miss. Electric blue is probably the best way to describe it. And for 10 minutes, the Dallas Mavericks general manager stood at midcourt, 15 feet away from the generational superstar he’d traded to the Los Angeles Lakers a little over three weeks ago, and let himself be seen.

If Luka Dončić had anything to say to the executive who had upended his career — and the NBA — with one of the most shocking trades in league history, this was the moment.

Thousands of fans and media members were already inside Crypto.com Arena on Tuesday night, bearing witness to the scene. The vast majority of them pulled out cellphones to document it. Dončić on the Lakers’ side of the court, going through his pregame warmups. Harrison at midcourt, leaning against the scorer’s table.

Dončić did not look up or acknowledge Harrison once. Not during warmups. Not during the game, when Harrison sat right behind the Mavericks’ bench. And not after the game, when he was asked about it.

“I didn’t see him,” Dončić said with derision that would’ve made Don Draper proud.

The most game-changing trade in NBA history was a public and private repudiation of one of the best players in the world — of his work habits, of the culture he reportedly sets, of his future as a top player in basketball. Those close to him say he has alternated between shock, sadness and anger in the weeks since the trade. Every day that he goes home to the Los Angeles hotel he’s living in with his fiancée and young daughter is a reminder of how much his life has been upended.

This trade is a defining moment for everyone involved — for the Mavericks, for Harrison, for the Lakers — but especially for Dončić. What happens over the next 26 regular-season games will begin to shape their legacies and the league for the next generation.

“Great ones have been traded,” Mavericks coach Jason Kidd said before the game. “When you look at others that have been traded, they keep moving on. Yes, you’re going to be mad. Everyone’s human. … But you can be traded or you could be cut. How you respond after that is what everybody wants to see, and I truly believe Luka’s going to be fine.”

Still, even Dončić admitted he has never experienced rejection like this before.

“The closure is going to take a while, I think,” Dončić said after the Lakers’ 107-99 win. “It’s not ideal.”

“I’m glad this game is over,” Dončić said. “There was a lot of emotions. But we go little by little, and every day is better.”

For Dončić, facing the Mavericks was an opportunity to face the people and organization that had spurned him. For the Lakers, it was an opportunity to embrace and support their new star at a difficult moment.

“I think the best teacher in life is experience,” LeBron said. “When you first start off you’re not great, but that’s your aspiration, that’s your goal. You want to become great, but you have to go through adverse moments.”

For Harrison and Kidd, whom Dončić also pointedly did not acknowledge or embrace, it was a moment to stand behind the decision and take whatever scorn or response Dončić had for them.

On this night, Dončić chose to ignore them and anyone else who could be regarded as culpable for trading him. He would let his play speak for him: a 19-point, 15-rebound, 12-assist triple-double, his first as a Laker.

“I’m just glad it’s over, honestly,” Dončić said. “It was just so weird, the moments. Felt like I didn’t know what I was doing.”

Kyrie Irving has stayed in touch with Dončić since the trade, checking on his emotional state more than anything. He feels protective of Dončić.

“I don’t think he expected the change, and I think that’s probably what leads to him feeling his emotions even more so in a deeper way,” Irving said. “Rejection, I think that’s a strong word … but sometimes it can feel like that.

“You got to go through your process of grieving. Grieving … is not a word we use in NBA circles — it’s like, ‘Just be tough, bro.’ Everybody expects you to turn over the next page and get over it. The reality is, man, we’re human too.”

Eventually, Dončić will either move forward — or he won’t. Those close to him are working to help him do so sooner rather than later.

HOURS BEFORE TIPOFF Tuesday night, Nike posted an ad in which a purple Regera changes its No. 77 license plates from Texas to California plates. The soundtrack is George Strait’s hit “All My Ex’s Live In Texas.” The tagline is “Full Tank, No Mercy.” Nike also used Tuesday’s stage to roll out a new ad campaign for the release of his Luka 4s.

Before the game, that purple Regera pulled up outside of Crypto.com Arena to complete the spectacle.

This kind of rollout would only happen in Los Angeles, and after the trade, the stage was set for a massive Hollywood debut.

Dončić has already begun to signal he will eventually embrace all that comes along with the stage in the NBA’s glamour market. First, by donating $500,000 for wildfire recovery in Los Angeles. Then, Tuesday, by buying up a parking lot across the arena and offering free parking for fans on a first-come, first-served basis.

These are early, positive signs that Dončić’s future is in Los Angeles, even though he has the ability to become a free agent in 2026 and is no longer eligible to sign the massive five-year, $345 million supermax contract he could have received in Dallas. The Lakers can offer him a four-year, $229 million extension this summer, or, like other teams, a five-year, $296 million contract next summer.

Yes, the franchise will have to surround him with talent, a task the Mavericks struggled for five years to achieve and one that will only get harder when James eventually retires. And yes, the quickness with which he and James build their partnership on and off the court matters.

Every game is a microcosm of the pressure and challenge of integrating two such similar players, and the unique type of basketball brilliance this partnership can create. There are times when James and Dončić seem to be taking turns initiating the offense, much like James’ early days with Dwyane Wade in Miami. Then there are times when they look like they’ve been playing a two-man game for a decade.

There are stretches, like the fourth quarter of a loss to Charlotte last week, when Dončić looked like a defensive liability and out of shape — confirmation of the criticisms the NBA world heard after the trade. And then there have been games, such as Sunday’s win over the Denver Nuggets, when Dončić has looked like the best player in the world, one who can conjure magic on the court and lift a franchise to a championship.

Former Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, who sat courtside in a pair of Luka 1 shoes to Tuesday’s game, took in the absurdity of the moment.

Each time Dončić touched the ball, Cuban made a show of booing him. At one point, Dončić turned to Cuban, smiled and said, “Shut up, Mark.”

But when asked by ESPN’s Tim MacMahon what it was like to root against Dončić, Cuban said, “I hated it.”

NICO HARRISON JE NOSIL obleko, ki je ni mogel spregledati nihče. Elektično modra je verjetno najboljši opis. In deset minut je generalni direktor Dallas Mavericks stal na sredini igrišča, 15 metrov stran od generacijskega superzvezdnika, katerega je pred nekaj več kot tremi tedni zamenjal za Los Angeles Lakers, in si dovolil biti viden.

Če bi Luka Dončić imel kaj povedati izvršnemu direktorju, ki je preobrnil njegovo kariero – in NBA – z enim najbolj presenetljivih trgov v zgodovini lige, bi bil to trenutek.

Tisoči navijačev in novinarjev so že bili v dvorani Crypto.com Arena v torek zvečer, priča tej sceni. Večina jih je potegnila svoje mobilne telefone, da bi dokumentirala trenutek. Dončić na strani Lakers, kjer je opravljal ogrevanje pred tekmo. Harrison na sredini igrišča, naslonjen na mizo za rezultati.

Dončić ni niti enkrat pogledal v Harrisonovo smer. Niti med ogrevanjem. Niti med tekmo, ko je Harrison sedel tik za klopjo Mavericks. In ne po tekmi, ko so ga o tem vprašali.

“Se ga nisem videl,” je Dončić rekel z gnusom, ki bi lahko rivaliziral z Donom Draperjem.

Najbolj prelomna menjava v zgodovini NBA je bila javna in zasebna zavrnitev enega najboljših igralcev na svetu – njegovih delovnih navad, kulture, ki naj bi jo postavil, njegove prihodnosti kot vrhunskega igralca v košarki. Tisti, ki so mu blizu, pravijo, da je v tednih po menjavi preklapljal med šokom, žalostjo in jezo. Vsak dan, ko se vrne v hotel v Los Angelesu, kjer živi s svojo zaročenko in majhno hčerko, je opomnik, koliko se je spremenilo njegovo življenje.

Ta menjava je prelomni trenutek za vse vpletene – za Mavericks, za Harrisona, za Lakers – predvsem pa za Dončića. Kaj se bo zgodilo v naslednjih 26 rednih sezonah, bo začelo oblikovati njihove zapuščine in ligo za naslednjo generacijo.

“Veliki so bili trgovani,” je pred tekmo dejal trener Mavericks Jason Kidd. “Ko pogledaš druge, ki so bili trgovani, nadaljujejo. Ja, jezen boš. Vsi smo ljudje. … Lahko si trgovani ali pa te odpustijo. Kako se boš odzval potem, to je tisto, kar vsi želijo videti, in verjamem, da bo Luka v redu.”

Kljub temu je tudi Dončić priznal, da še nikoli ni doživel takšne zavrnitve.

“Zapiranje bo trajalo nekaj časa, mislim,” je Dončić dejal po zmagi Lakers s 107 proti 99. “Ni idealno.”

“Vesel sem, da je ta tekma končana,” je dodal Dončić. “Bilo je veliko čustev. A gremo korak za korakom, vsak dan je bolje.”

Za Dončića je bilo soočenje z Mavericks priložnost, da se sooči z ljudmi in organizacijo, ki sta ga zavrnila. Za Lakers je bila priložnost, da objamejo in podprejo svojega novega zvezdnika v težkem trenutku.

“Mislim, da je najboljši učitelj v življenju izkušnja,” je dejal LeBron. “Ko začneš, nisi velik, ampak to je tvoj cilj, tvoja ambicija. Hočeš postati velik, vendar moraš skozi težke trenutke.”

Za Harrisona in Kidda, katerih Dončić prav tako ni očitno pozdravil ali objel, je bil to trenutek, da stojita za svojo odločitvijo in sprejmeta vse zamere ali odzive, ki jih ima Dončić do njiju.

Ta večer je Dončić izbral, da jih ignorira in vse, ki bi jih lahko štel za odgovorne za njegovo menjavo. Pustil je, da njegova igra spregovori zanj: 19 točk, 15 skokov, 12 asistenc – triple-double, njegov prvi kot igralec Lakers.

“Vesel sem, da je to končano, iskreno,” je dejal Dončić. “Bilo je tako čudno, tisti trenutki. Kot da ne bi vedel, kaj počnem.”

Kyrie Irving je ostal v stiku z Dončićem po menjavi, predvsem zaradi njegovega čustvenega stanja. Občuti zaščitniški odnos do Dončića.

“Mislim, da ni pričakoval te spremembe, in mislim, da je to verjetno tisto, kar vodi do tega, da čuti svoja čustva še globlje,” je dejal Irving. “Zavrnitev, mislim, da je to močna beseda … ampak včasih se tako lahko počutiš.”

“Moramo iti skozi svoj proces žalovanja. Žalovanje … to ni beseda, ki jo uporabljamo v NBA krogih – kot, ‘Samo bodi trden, prijatelj.’ Vsi pričakujejo, da boš prešel na naslednjo stran in to pozabil. Realnost pa je, da smo tudi mi ljudje.”

Na koncu bo Dončić ali šel naprej – ali ne bo. Tisti, ki so mu blizu, mu pomagajo, da se bo čim prej odločil za napredek.

TUNGE PRED ZAČETKOM TEKME je Nike objavil oglas, v katerem se vijoličen Regera spremeni iz številke 77 iz Teksasa v Kalifornijske registrske tablice. Oglas spremlja pesem Georgea Straita “All My Ex’s Live In Texas”. Slogan je “Full Tank, No Mercy.” Nike je izkoristil tudi to tekmo, da predstavi novo oglaševalsko kampanjo ob izdaji njegovih Luka 4.

Pred tekmo je vijoličen Regera pripeljal pred dvorano Crypto.com Arena in dokončal spektakel.

Takšen tip promocije se lahko zgodi le v Los Angelesu, in po menjavi je bil oder pripravljen za velik Hollywoodski nastop.

Dončić že nakazuje, da bo na koncu sprejel vse, kar pride z odrom v NBA-jevem glamuroznem trgu. Najprej z donacijo 500.000 dolarjev za obnovo po požarih v Los Angelesu. Potem, v torek, z nakupom parkirišča pred dvorano in ponudbo brezplačnega parkiranja za navijače, ki so prvi prišli.

To so zgodnji, pozitivni signali, da je Dončićeva prihodnost v Los Angelesu, čeprav ima možnost postati prost igralec leta 2026 in ni več upravičen do podpisa ogromne petletne pogodbe v vrednosti 345 milijonov dolarjev, ki bi jo lahko prejel v Dallasu. Lakersi mu lahko ponudijo štiriletno podaljšanje pogodbe v vrednosti 229 milijonov dolarjev poleti, ali pa, kot druge ekipe, petletno pogodbo v vrednosti 296 milijonov dolarjev prihodnje poletje.

Seveda bo morala ekipa obkrožiti njega s talenti, kar je naloga, s katero so se Mavericks mučili pet let, in bo postajalo vedno težje, ko James končno upočasni. In ja, hitrost, s katero bosta James in Dončić zgradila svojo partnerstvo na igrišču in izven njega, bo pomembna.

Vsaka tekma je mikrokozmos pritiska in izzivov pri vključevanju dveh tako podobnih igralcev ter edinstvene vrste košarkarske briljantnosti, ki jo lahko to partnerstvo ustvari. Obstajajo trenutki, ko se James in Dončić izmenjujeta pri začetku napada, kot v Jamesovih zgodnjih dneh z Dwyaneom Wadem v Miamiju. Potem pa so trenutki, ko izgleda, kot da sta igrala v dvoigralnem paru že desetletje.

So obdobja, kot je četrta četrtina poraza proti Charlotte prejšnji teden, ko je Dončić izgledal kot obrambna šibkost in izven forme – potrditev kritik, ki jih je NBA svet slišal po menjavi. In potem so igre, kot je nedeljska zmaga proti Denver Nuggets, ko je Dončić izgledal kot najboljši igralec na svetu, tisti, ki lahko na igrišču ustvari čudeže in popelje ekipo do naslova.

Bivši lastnik Mavericks Mark Cuban, ki je sedel ob robu igrišča v čevljih Luka 1 na torek, je spremljal absurdnost trenutka.

Vsakič, ko je Dončić prejel žogo, je Cuban uprizoril bučno bujenje. Nekajkrat se je Dončić obrnil proti Cubanu, se nasmehnil in rekel: “Zaprskaj, Mark.”

Ko pa ga je novinar ESPN Tim MacMahon vprašal, kaj je bilo, ko je navijal proti Dončiću, je Cuban odgovoril: “Sovražil sem to.”

Indiana keeps postseason hopes alive with 83-78 win against Penn State…

As Trey Galloway cashed in the second of back-to-back 3-pointers with 5:14 left in the second half against Penn State, he flexed and nodded toward the Indiana bench as he made his way over.

The triple gave the Hoosiers a four-point lead they didn’t relinquish the rest of the way Wednesday night, securing a necessary 83-78 win to keep postseason hopes alive.

It may have taken a while for Indiana to play its best basketball, but it’s happening at the right time.

“These guys are playing for something,” Mike Woodson said postgame. “We’re trying to get in the tournament. We’ve got three games left.”

While finding a true personification of a shared goal or connectedness is difficult, IU did the closest thing to it – 24 assists on 29 made field goals.

Following up an 18-assist performance against Purdue, the Hoosiers notched marks they hadn’t accomplished since a 21-assist outing against Minnesota on Dec. 9. Wednesday night’s assist total was narrowly shy of a season-high 26 assists on Nov. 10 against Eastern Illinois.

With five double-digit scorers against the Nittany Lions despite Malik Reneau’s absence due to illness, everyone on the floor was engaged and contributing. Shots were falling all around and it was in large part because of trust building up.

“We’ve really preached on sharing the ball and making the right play,” Galloway said. “We got great shots out of our offense flowing and being able to move the ball because we knew they were going to hard hedge and put two on the ball.”

While the philosophy was being applied offensively all night, it wasn’t the case on the defensive side of the ball early on.

IU got off to a sluggish start – nearly a trademark this season – and played back and forth the entire first half. Led by Ace Baldwin Jr., the Nittany Lions’ trio of guards got past Indiana’s backcourt with ease possession after possession, earning easy looks at the rim.

Once the inside was established, Penn State also started to connect from the outside. Baldwin made all three of his 3-point attempts in the first half and the team shot 4-for-8.

Both teams played sloppy, though. Penn State committed seven first-half turnovers and the Hoosiers had eight, four at the hands of Galloway.

However, the mistakes didn’t slow down the Hoosiers. With Oumar Ballo shouldering the load with 11 points in the half, Indiana shot 60 percent and went 4-for-7 from deep in the first 20 minutes. The Nittany Lions hit at an even more impressive 64 percent clip and held a 39-37 halftime lead.

When the urgency escalated in the second half, Galloway rose to the occasion. He scored 12 points – all from beyond the arc – and added five assists to total nine on the night. And, of course, the back-to-back threes that swung momentum.

That said, the defensive effort stepped up when needed. As Penn State continued to shoot over 60 percent as the half progressed, the Hoosiers needed to lock in and string stops together before it was too late.

With six minutes left, that’s precisely what happened.

After Nick Kern put in a layup to take a 69-67 lead with 5:59 to go, IU dug deep and stood its ground. The result? Forcing Penn State to finish the game 2-for-10 from the field.

“I told them at halftime, the team that is going to defend and rebound this half is going to win the game,” Woodson said. “I thought coming down the stretch we made the defensive stops we needed.”

It hasn’t just been the results that have changed for Indiana, it’s been how they’ve done so. Whether it be riding emotional highs, firing each other up, or leaving it all out there – like Luke Goode hitting the floor to beat an oversized opponent for a key rebound – the Hoosiers have changed their tune.

Finally finding moments of resilience and toughness after inconsistencies earlier this season, IU’s experience is taking over. With a four-senior starting lineup Wednesday night, the feeling of now or never is kicking in for Woodson’s team and it has played like so as of late.

With an important two-game stretch on the west coast next, the beginning of the end is nearing. For the Hoosier veterans, it’s about embracing it all and doing so together.

“We just have to keep reminding each other to cherish every moment because wins and losses, it’s all special because you’re learning through it all,” Galloway said. “When it’s over we’re all going to miss it and it’s going to be tough to really understand what it meant to put on this uniform and go to war with our brothers every day.”

In a game that featured 10 ties and seven lead changes, Indiana needed every piece to complete the puzzle. From Ballo’s 36-minute double-double to Langdon Hatton’s four minutes on the court, every player who saw the floor contributed to the win.

Moving forward, the Hoosiers need their connection to be more than a bond that comes and goes – it needs to be unbreakable. If that’s the case, Woodson’s motive – the tournament – remains in sight.

Update on Duke Basketball Commit Shelton Henderson…

The future Duke basketball forward is now showcasing his competitiveness in Texas postseason action.

Early 2025 Duke basketball signee Shelton Henderson, averaging over 20 points, seven rebounds, and two steals per game as a prep, has powered his Bellaire High School (Texas) Cardinals to a 24-10 overall record this season. And they’re now gearing up for the Texas 6A Regional Final.

The 6-foot-6, 225-pound Henderson recorded 25 points in Tuesday night’s 75-66 semifinal win over the Summer Creek High School Bulldogs.

He and the Cardinals face the Seven Lakes High School Spartans (33-5) on Friday night.

Henderson is a five-star prospect currently checking in at No. 24 overall, No. 4 among small forwards, and No. 2 in Texas on the 247Sports 2025 Composite.

“Shelton has all of the makings of a high-level player at Duke,” third-year Duke basketball head coach Jon Scheyer said after signing Shelton Henderson and the other three members of the Blue Devils’ top-ranked 2025 haul back in November.

“His athleticism, versatility as a defender, and high-level competitiveness is everything we look for…His game is just scratching the surface, and I can’t wait to coach him.”