Delaware
UNCW Seahawks vs. Delaware Fightin’ Blue Hens live stream info, start time, TV channel: How to watch NCAA Basketball on TV, stream online
Halftime Report
Only one more half stands between UNCW and the win they were favored to collect coming into this afternoon. A win is still up for grabs for either team after one quarter, but UNCW is up 38-36 over Delaware.
UNCW came into the game with some extra motivation after the defeat they were dealt the last time these two teams faced off. We’ll see if they’re able to flip the script or if it’ll just be more of the same.
Who’s Playing
Delaware Fightin’ Blue Hens @ UNCW Seahawks
Current Records: Delaware 10-6, UNCW 10-5
How To Watch
What to Know
We’ve got another exciting Coastal Athletic matchup on schedule as the Delaware Fightin’ Blue Hens and the UNCW Seahawks are set to tip at 4:00 p.m. ET on January 14th at Raiford G. Trask Coliseum. Both teams come into the matchup bolstered by wins in their previous matches.
Last Thursday, the Fightin’ Blue Hens were able to grind out a solid win over the Fighting Camels, taking the game 68-62. Delaware was down 14-0 with 17:09 left in the first half but they still came back for the handy six-point victory.
Multiple players turned in solid performances to lead Delaware to victory, but perhaps none more so than Cavan Reilly, who scored 15 points along with four steals. The team also got some help courtesy of Gerald Drumgoole Jr., who scored 20 points along with six rebounds.
Meanwhile, UNCW’s three-game losing streak finally came to an end on Thursday. They came out on top against the Hawks by a score of 69-56.
Among those leading the charge was Shykeim Phillips, who scored 16 points. Khamari McGriff was another key contributor, scoring nine points along with nine rebounds.
The Fightin’ Blue Hens’ win bumped their record up to 10-6. As for the Seahawks, their win was their fourth straight at home, which pushed their record up to 10-5.
Fans should be in for an exciting game on Sunday as the pair are among the highest scoring teams in the league right now. Delaware hasn’t had any problem running up the score this season, having averaged 76.4 points per game. However, it’s not like UNCW struggles in that department as they’ve been averaging 81.7 points per game. With both teams so easily able to put up points, the only question left is who can run the score up higher.
Delaware is hoping to beat the odds on Sunday, as the experts think they’re headed for a loss. They might be worth a quick bet since they’re sitting on a five game streak of covering the spread when playing as the underdog.
Odds
UNCW is a 5-point favorite against Delaware, according to the latest college basketball odds.
The oddsmakers were right in line with the betting community on this one, as the game opened as a 5-point spread, and stayed right there.
The over/under is set at 145.5 points.
See college basketball picks for every single game, including this one, from SportsLine’s advanced computer model. Get picks now.
Series History
Delaware has won 7 out of their last 10 games against UNCW.
- Feb 18, 2023 – Delaware 75 vs. UNCW 66
- Mar 08, 2022 – Delaware 59 vs. UNCW 55
- Feb 26, 2022 – UNCW 69 vs. Delaware 62
- Dec 29, 2021 – UNCW 70 vs. Delaware 68
- Jan 24, 2021 – Delaware 67 vs. UNCW 62
- Jan 23, 2021 – UNCW 77 vs. Delaware 70
- Feb 29, 2020 – Delaware 82 vs. UNCW 65
- Dec 28, 2019 – Delaware 82 vs. UNCW 68
- Feb 09, 2019 – Delaware 70 vs. UNCW 66
- Jan 10, 2019 – Delaware 82 vs. UNCW 69
Delaware
Delaware hoops loss worst in decades but Ingelsby has faith in future
Delaware closes basketball season with lopsided Conference USA loss
Ingelsby determined to return Blue Hens to success after 10-21, injury-marred season
Historical calamities notwithstanding, what occurred inside the Carpenter Center in the early afternoon of March 7 should not be the total measure of the Blue Hens.
Certainly, an unsightly 81-38 basketball loss to Louisiana Tech was in some ways emblematic of Delaware’s 2025-26 basketball season, during which it endured unprecedented misfortune.
But the Blue Hens also frequently rose above their hardships, and even periodically excelled despite them.
First-year Conference USA member Delaware needed to win its game against Louisiana Tech, plus have Florida International and New Mexico State lose theirs later to make the CUSA Tournament, which includes just the top 10 of the 12 league schools.
As that final score hints, it turned into a failure of epic proportion for Delaware, which finishes the season in last place.
The 38 points Delaware scored were its fewest in a game in more than 61 years, since a 77-34 setback against Penn at the Palestra Dec. 9, 1964.
Delaware had scored fewer than 40 points just twice since, in a 46-39 defeat at Rider Feb. 19, 1983, and a 60-39 loss at VCU Jan. 16, 2008.
Ingelsby determined to improve situation
The Blue Hens played their fifth straight game with just six of the 13 scholarship players with whom they began the season, including two freshmen. They’d played the nine games before that with seven.
It caught up with them.
So they’re stuck with their 10-21 record, making these Delaware’s first back-to-back 20-loss seasons since it went 10-20 in 2014-15 and 7-23 in 2015-16 under former coach Monte Ross and 13-20 in Martin Ingelsby’s first UD season in 2016-17.
But the final showing was not representative of who’d they recently been. Delaware was coming off an 83-80 victory over Sam Houston State, which will be the league tournament’s second seed.
They’d also won four of eight before Saturday, which followed a near home upset of regular-season champion Liberty and included an excruciating overtime home loss to Western Kentucky in which the Hens trailed only in the opening seconds of the game and the final moments of OT.
“We’ve dealt with a lot this year,” Ingelsby said. “Obviously, the injuries, adversity, clarity on our roster.
“I’m a competitive dude. So it doesn’t sit well with me. You’re not happy with how overall this season went, obviously going into the league and trying to figure it out.”
Critical offseason looms
In the end, too many players playing too many minutes was part of those struggles. Christian Bliss was first nationally, Justyn Fernandez was fifth and Macon Emory eighth in minutes per game entering Saturday
But those three, in particular, showed how good they are, which is why Delaware won as much as it did. Same with Tyler Houser, though the knee injury he sustained in that WKU game could sideline him all next year.
So Delaware has several very good players. It just needs to retain those it has, such as the aforementioned group, and get more.
That is, of course, easier said than done. But it will be up to Ingelsby, whose contract extends through the 2028-29 season, and his staff to ensure it does, when the transfer portal opens after the Final Four.
“I’m optimistic,” Ingelsby said. “I think we were damn close this year with being dealt a tough hand with all the injuries. We put a good team together but never got a sense to see that team kind of play and grow and learn through the ups and downs of the season.
“But I’m confident that the right players, the right coaching staff, the right support, which we’re getting, that we can be very good in this league.”
“I’ll thank them forever”
Houston Emory, feted in Senior Day ceremonies Saturday, is the only one of Delaware’s remaining 12 scholarship players after Nnanna Njoku’s departure who has completed his eligibility. What a modern-day oddity he is, having spent his entire career at one school.
Delaware has signed one incoming freshman, Jafet Valencia, a 6-7, 200-pound guard from Leesburg, Virginia, and Evergreen Christian School. Ingelsby said he’ll likely be the only one.
“Today was not a semblance of what this team was able to do and how they competed for Delaware men’s basketball,” Ingelsby said, “the University of Delaware, with as tough of a hand as I’ve experienced in my 20-plus years in college basketball.
“We got six scholarship guys out there, two freshmen. Those guys that were there every day, I’ll thank them forever for everything that they gave this program.”
Contact Kevin Tresolini at ktresolini@delawareonline.com and follow on Twitter @kevintresolini. Support local journalism by subscribing to delawareonline.com and our DE Game Day newsletter.
Delaware
What is Delaware’s state dog? It’s not a particular breed
This library lets kids read books to dogs to practice fluency
PAWS for People brings therapy dogs to the Milton Public Library where kids can practice reading out loud and spend time with the dogs, Jan. 31, 2026.
Delaware has a several items that represent the state.
The First State has a state bird (Blue Hen chicken), a state flower (peach blossom), a state fish (weakfish) and a state dessert (peach pie). Delaware even has a state bug (ladybug), state wildlife (gray fox) and state butterfly (tiger swallowtail).
While all the symbols have their place, few tug at the heartstrings like the state dog.
What is Delaware’s state dog?
The state dog of Delaware is the rescue dog, which replaced the golden retriever in 2023.
Then-Gov. John Carney signed Senate Bill 37 into law in May 2023 to make the change. The designation was made to help bring attention to rescue animals in the hope of getting them adopted.
“That just elevates all animals in shelters,” Sara Smith, a Brandywine Valley SPCA spokesperson, said during an adoption event in 2024.
What are the country’s other state dogs?
Delaware is one of 16 states with official dogs.
- Alaska — Alaskan malamute
- Delaware — rescue dog
- Georgia — adoptable dog
- Louisiana — Catahoula leopard dog
- Maryland — Chesapeake Bay retriever
- Massachusetts — Boston terrier
- New Hampshire — Chinook
- New Jersey — seeing eye dog
- New York — working dogs
- North Carolina — Plott hound
- Pennsylvania — Great Dane
- South Carolina — Boykin spaniel
- Tennessee — bluetick coonhound
- Texas — Blue Lacy
- Virginia — American foxhound
- Wisconsin — American water spaniel
Delaware
Widow of fallen Delaware state trooper launches foundation in his memory
The widow of a Delaware state trooper killed in the line of duty last year has launched a foundation in his memory to support families of law enforcement officers.
Two months ago, Lauren Snook’s world looked different. Her husband, Corporal Grade One Matthew T. “Ty” Snook, a devoted father, husband, and friend, filled their house with laughter and love. Then in an instant, everything changed.
“He just went to work one day and didn’t get to come home,” Lauren told NBC10.
Two days before Christmas, Cpl/1 Snook, a 10-year veteran, was killed while working an overtime shift at the DMV in Wilmington, Delaware.
Lauren said that she was at their home, making salt dough ornaments in the kitchen with Letty, their 15-month-old daughter.
“When the two Tahoes pulled up out in front of my house. You know it, you see it in movies, you hear about it, and I knew. But I didn’t want to, and it took about 7 times for them to tell me he’s gone,” Lauren shared.
Lauren said the life they built together is now marked by a painful reality, learning to live without him. She clings to the memories and a bear with his uniform that Letty calls “Dada Bear.”
“On a quiet day, it’s totally ugly. I’ll grab his clothes that no longer have his scent, wear them, hold them, cry in his closet, grab his deodorant, dryer sheets, his cologne and make this scent cocktail, and I’m like bring me Ty back for a second and I’ll look at pictures, and then I look over at that cute little girl and see her smile and immediately see him because they share the same smile,” said Lauren.
Lauren explains that the grief isn’t just in the big moments; it’s in the quiet ones, too. She said Letty can feel it also.
“She knows. She waits by the baby gate at the top of the stairs. She grabs his shoes and sits in them so she knows. Before she knows her name,” Lauren said.
Lauren said that following Cpl/1 Snook’s death, she leaned on her faith and the support from others to help her through it.
“People have given so much of themselves, their heart to us, it’s a gift I know I can never repay, but it’s forever touched and shaped who I am,” said Lauren.
Through heartbreak, Lauren is choosing to turn pain into purpose by starting the “Ty Snook Foundation,” a community for families and children of law enforcement officers navigating life after losing a parent.
Lauren said, “Headlines fade, people go back to real life, but this is going to be Letty’s forever, it’s forever going to shape who she is, and I’m a firm believer that the community shaped us, and she needs her own community to talk about loss.”
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