Oregon can complete its first four-game, regular-season sweep of the Pac-12 Conference’s Los Angeles schools since the 2015-16 season with Saturday’s visit to UCLA, but the Ducks are up against one of the league’s hottest teams.
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The Bruins (10-11, 5-5 Pac-12) beat Oregon State 71-63 on Thursday for their fourth victory in the last five games.
Dylan Andrews and Adem Bona each scored 18 points on Thursday — Andrews with 13 in the second half — while Will McClendon had eight points, all after intermission, and a game-high seven rebounds.
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Andrews’ performance came on the heels of a 20-point outing in UCLA’s 65-50 win at rival Southern California on Jan. 27.
“When he plays good, we really play good,” UCLA guard Lazar Stefanovic said of Andrews after Thursday’s game. “He gets us going. Towards the end … it seemed like he scored every point.”
Though Andrews was not responsible for every point down the stretch on Thursday, he scored five consecutively that gave the Bruins breathing room after Oregon State pulled to within one.
With its recent surge, UCLA is part of a logjam of eight teams vying for first place in the conference. Oregon is tied at the top with Arizona, while the Bruins have bounced back from a four-game skid to sit just two games back.
Oregon (15-6, 7-3) is coming off a 78-69 win over USC on Thursday. The win improved the Ducks to 3-0 against the Los Angeles schools after sweeping the meetings at home in December.
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Jackson Shelstad, who scored a game-high 20 points on Thursday, scored 20 against the Bruins on Dec. 30.
“I came out tonight and tried to be really aggressive,” Shelstad told the Oregonian on Thursday. “I need to keep playing this way every game. It makes the game easier for us”
The freshman guard is one of three Ducks averaging at least 12.8 points per game, a group that includes Jermaine Couisnard (14.7) and the recently returned N’Faly Dante (14.3).
Dante was sidelined for more than two months with a knee injury and rejoined the lineup on Jan. 13. He finished with 11 points, five boards and two blocked shots on Thursday.
The Oregon Ducks and Freddie Filione V will duke it out when the Ducks (8-16, 1-12 Big Ten) take on the Penn State Nittany Lions (11-14, 2-12 Big Ten) at Matthew Knight Arena on Saturday, Feb. 14 at 3 p.m. ET.
We provide more coverage below, including how to watch this game on BTN.
To prepare for this matchup, here’s what you need to get ready for Saturday’s college basketball action.
Oregon vs. Penn State: How to watch on TV or live stream
Game day: Saturday, February 14, 2026
Game time: 3 p.m. ET
Location: Eugene, Oregon
Arena: Matthew Knight Arena
TV Channel: BTN
Live stream: Fubo – Watch NOW (Regional restrictions may apply)
Check out: USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll
Watch college basketball on Fubo!
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Oregon vs. Penn State stats and trends
Penn State scores 75.6 points per game and allow 78.8, ranking them 193rd in the nation offensively and 310th on defense.
On the glass, the Nittany Lions are second-worst in the nation in rebounds (26.9 per game). They are 174th in rebounds allowed (30.9 per game).
Penn State is 271st in the nation in assists (12.8 per game) in 2025-26.
In terms of turnovers, the Nittany Lions are 33rd in the country in committing them (9.4 per game). They are 163rd in forcing them (11.5 per game).
Penn State makes 7.2 3-pointers per game and shoots 32.7% from beyond the arc, ranking 249th and 252nd, respectively, in the nation.
In 2025-26 the Nittany Lions are 14th-worst in college basketball in 3-pointers conceded (9.6 per game) and -1-worst in defensive 3-point percentage (38.1%).
In 2025-26, Penn State has attempted 38.1% percent of its shots from behind the 3-point line, and 61.9% percent from inside it. In terms of made shots, 26.7% of Penn State’s buckets have been 3-pointers, and 73.3% have been 2-pointers.
Oregon vs. Penn State Odds and Spread
Spread Favorite: Ducks (-6.5)
Moneyline: Oregon (-293), Penn State (+233)
Total: 147.5 points
NCAA Basketball odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Friday at 9:21 p.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub.
Watch college basketball on Fubo!
Follow the latest college sports coverage at College Sports Wire.
The No. 12 Oregon State Beavers open the season against the Michigan Wolverines Friday at Surprise Stadium in Surprise, Arizona.
The Beavers enter the 2026 season with arguably the best pitching rotation in college baseball, a reloaded bullpen, three returning starters in the field and six newcomers. But the expectations of returning to Omaha remain the same.
They’re a unanimous top 15 team, featuring preseason All-American pitchers Dax Whitney and Ethan Kleinschmit and several others on preseason award watch lists.
OSU will play four games in Arizona this weekend, bookended by Michigan with Arizona and Stanford on Saturday and Sunday, respectively. The Beavers are 5-0 all-time against the Wolverines.
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Oregon State went 12-5-1 in neutral-site games last season.
For more on Beavers baseball, check out our preseason coverage:
Oregon State ace Dax Whitney’s message for hitters excited to face him: ‘I’d like to ruin their year’
Meet the new leaders of Oregon State baseball after the team’s College World Series run
Oregon State baseball is replacing nearly its entire lineup, here’s who could step up in 2026
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Oregon State’s Eric Segura says seeing both worlds helped him become a better pitcher
These 2 transfer pitchers are giving Oregon State baseball a luxury most teams don’t have
Oregon State’s Zach Edwards on his College World Series moment: ‘There’s no reason to hang my head’
How Oregon State is rebuilding its infield after losing two starters in the offseason
Why Oregon State baseball is changing its identity after making it to Omaha last year
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No. 12 Oregon State Beavers vs. Michigan Wolverines
When: 1 p.m., PT Friday, Feb. 13
Where: Surprise Stadium, Surprise, Arizona
TV channel: The game is not televised.
How to watch live stream online: The game will be streamed live by FloSports. Visit osubeavers.com for a direct link to the game and subscription information.
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Radio: All games air on the Beaver Sports Network. Pregame starts 30 minutes before the first pitch. Affiliates include KEJO 93.7-FM & 1240-AM (Corvallis), KKNX 105.1-FM & 840-AM (Eugene), KCFM 104.1-FM & 1250-AM & 104.1-FM (Florence), KLAD 104.3-FM & 960-AM (Klamath Falls), KCFM 103.1-FM (Mapleton), KTMT 96.1-FM & 580-AM (Medford), KCMX 880-AM (Medford), KCMX 99.5-FM (Phoenix), KEX 1190-AM (Portland), KSKR 1490-AM (Roseburg) and KBZY 1490-AM (Salem).
The two pieces of animal skin, joined by a strip of cord, date back more than 12,000 years.
The entrance of Cougar Mountain Cave where artifacts were found dating back to more than 12,000 years old and where the oldest known sewn material was found.
Brent McGregor
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Illustrations and images of sewn hide and other hide items from Cougar Mountain Cave in central Oregon. The items are thought to be the oldest examples of sewn material ever discovered, dating back more than 12,000 years.
Richard L Rosencrance
Researchers in Oregon and Nevada have determined that artifacts found inside Cougar Mountain Cave in Central Oregon are the oldest known examples of sewn hide. The items were preserved inside dry caves for more than 12,000 years and provide rare examples of what researchers say is likely early clothing dating back to the late Ice Age.
The collection of 55 items includes bone sewing needles, braided cord made from plant fibers, and sharpened projectile points. But the most notable among them are the two pieces of animal skin stitched together with cord that are older than anything else like them found in the world.
The sewn hides were interpreted to be “the margin of a piece of tight-fitted clothing, moccasin, bag or container, or part of a portable shelter,” according to the researchers’ analysis, published Feb. 4 in the journal Science Advances.
“Being able to get a glimpse of what those things are really like and confirming what raw materials, what plants and animals they used to make these things, is hardly ever attainable,” said lead author Richie Rosencrance, a researcher based at the University of Nevada, Reno, who also works closely with the University of Oregon.
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Rosencrance’s co-authors included researchers from the University of Oregon and Eastern Oregon University.
While it’s rare to find items made from plants, wood and hide that have been preserved for so long, this research illustrates the deep ties that Indigenous people in Oregon have to their home, Rosencrance said. For example, the artifacts they studied show techniques still used today for basketry by members of the Klamath and Paiute tribes.
“This is kind of chronicling almost 12,000 years of shared technological knowledge,” he said.
Members of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs and the Klamath Tribes could not immediately be reached for comment.
Artifacts made from organic materials usually decay. The items the researchers studied were found inside three cave sites in Central Oregon that are exposed to so little moisture they had been preserved since the Younger Dryas period, between 11,700 and 12,900 years ago during a cold period near the end of the last Ice Age.
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Cougar Mountain Cave, the Paisley Caves and the Connley Caves were used by people as temporary shelter across generations, Rosencrance said, hence the expansive collection of artifacts found there.
Such items “are extremely rare in Pleistocene archeological sites, limiting our ability to construct detailed models of population diasporas and cultural responses to climate change,” the paper reads.
The artifacts themselves were found decades ago. The sewn hide artifacts found inside Cougar Mountain Cave were recovered by a nonprofessional in the 1950s, Rosencrance said. Over the decades, they went from private ownership to the Favell Museum in Klamath Falls, where the team of researchers began studying them and used radiocarbon dating to determine their approximate age.
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