Michigan
Basketball Games on TV in Michigan: Channel Info & Live Streams – February 3
We’ve got 45 college basketball games to watch in Michigan on Saturday, February 3 — seven men’s, three women’s, and 35 high school. Looking for how to watch? You’ve come to the right place.
Sign up for Fubo, Max, ESPN+, and NFHS Network to make sure you don’t miss out watching a single basketball game.
Michigan Men’s College Basketball Games Today
Robert Morris Colonials at Detroit Mercy Titans
Cleveland State Vikings at Oakland Golden Grizzlies
Ball State Cardinals at Western Michigan Broncos
Eastern Michigan Eagles at Northern Illinois Huskies
Rutgers Scarlet Knights at Michigan Wolverines
Central Michigan Chippewas at Bowling Green Falcons
Maryland Terrapins at Michigan State Spartans
Michigan Women’s College Basketball Games Today
Central Michigan Chippewas at Kent State Golden Flashes
Michigan Wolverines at Penn State Lady Lions
- TV Channel: Big Ten Network
- Stream Live: Watch this game on Fubo (regional restrictions may apply)
- Game Time: 6:00 PM ET
Eastern Michigan Eagles at Buffalo Bulls
Michigan High School Basketball Games Today
Boys Basketball
| Stream Live | Game Time | Location | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maplewood Baptist Academy at Beaver Island Community School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 10:00 AM ET | Beaver Island, MI |
| Hastings High School at Phoenix High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 10:30 AM ET | Kalamazoo, MI |
| Bridgman High School at Paw Paw High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 12:00 PM ET | Kalamazoo, MI |
| East Jackson High School at Addison High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 1:30 PM ET | Addison, MI |
| Garber High School at Freeland High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 1:30 PM ET | Freeland, MI |
| Divine Child High School at Greenhills School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 2:00 PM ET | Ann Arbor, MI |
| Coleman High School at Carson City-Crystal High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 2:30 PM ET | Carson City, MI |
| Parchment High School at Edwardsburg High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 3:00 PM ET | Edwardsburg, MI |
| Plymouth High School at Novi High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 3:00 PM ET | Novi, MI |
| Hamtramck High School at Grand Blanc High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 3:00 PM ET | Grand Blanc, MI |
| Gabriel Richard High School – Ann Arbor at Loyola High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 4:00 PM ET | Detroit, MI |
| Stevenson High School at Dearborn High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 4:30 PM ET | Dearborn, MI |
| Portage Central High School at Forest Hills Northern High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 4:30 PM ET | Grand Rapids, MI |
| Waldron High School at Fayette High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 4:30 PM ET | Fayette, OH |
| Marshall High School at Charlotte High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 5:00 PM ET | Charlotte, MI |
| Lumen Christi Catholic High School at Traverse City St. Francis High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 5:30 PM ET | Traverse City, MI |
Girls Basketball
| Stream Live | Game Time | Location | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maplewood Baptist Academy at Beaver Island Community School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 8:30 AM ET | Beaver Island, MI |
| Parkway Christian School at Lutheran High School Westland |
Watch on NFHS Network | 12:00 PM ET | Westland, MI |
| Whitehall High School at Muskegon Orchard View High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 12:30 PM ET | Muskegon, MI |
| Bridgeport High School at Genesee High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 1:00 PM ET | Genesee, MI |
| Alpena High School at Islanders |
Watch on NFHS Network | 1:00 PM ET | Cedarville, MI |
| Westwood High School at Gladstone High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 1:00 PM ET | Gladstone, MI |
| Waldron High School at Fayette High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 1:00 PM ET | Fayette, OH |
| Kent City High School at Mason County Central High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 2:00 PM ET | Scottville, MI |
| Grandville High School at East Grand Rapids High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 2:00 PM ET | Grand Rapids, MI |
| Munising High School at Ishpeming High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 2:30 PM ET | Ishpeming, MI |
| Dearborn High School at Stevenson High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 3:00 PM ET | Livonia, MI |
| Reading High School at Union City High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 3:00 PM ET | Union City, MI |
| Detroit Edison PSA Early College of Excellence at Homewood-Flossmoor High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 2:00 PM CT | Flossmoor, IL |
| Hart High School at Holton High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 3:00 PM ET | Holton, MI |
| Southfield High School for the Arts and Technology at Pershing High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 4:00 PM ET | Detroit, MI |
| Kingsley Area High School at Traverse City St. Francis High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 4:30 PM ET | Traverse City, MI |
| Mason County Central High School at Meridian Early College High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 5:30 PM ET | Sanford, MI |
| Lincoln High School – Ypsilanti at Saline High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 6:00 PM ET | Saline, MI |
| Berrien Springs High School at Cassopolis Ross Beatty High School |
Watch on NFHS Network | 7:00 PM ET | Cassopolis, MI |
© 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
Michigan
Michigan president has strong words for college sports after Dusty May exit
Dusty May is leaving Michigan for the Dallas Mavericks. What now?
Free Press sports writer Tony Garcia breaks down the “shocking” news of Michigan basketball coach Dusty May leaving for the NBA.
At the University of Michigan’s board of regents meeting on Thursday, June 25, interim president Domenico Grasso addressed the departure of former Michigan basketball coach Dusty May, calling the move a “bellwether” for college athletics.
May, who had reportedly agreed in principle to a contract extension with the Wolverines but had yet to sign it, left the program on Monday, June 22. One day later, he was in Brooklyn for the NBA Draft where his Dallas Mavericks selected his former player, Michigan forward Morez Johnson Jr., with the No. 9 overall pick.
“Our current system is in dire need of clarity and equitable reform,” Grasso said at the regents meeting. “Coach May told me that among his reasons for leaving were uncertainties and pressures involving the transfer portal and NIL support for student-athletes.
“He and I agree that the future of college sports is headed in the wrong direction.”
While Grasso did say the new “Protect College Sports Act” could provide “greater stability, clearer national standards and more consistent rules” to college athletics, he also said it has “deeply concerning provisions.”
“Rather than looking to conferences such as the Big Ten as models of athletic and academic excellence, it imposes restrictions that disproportionately affect the institution,” he said. “Among the most troubling provisions are targeted limits on conference expansion and realignment, as well as harmful restrictions on student athletes’ ability to benefit from additional NIL opportunities. These measures will reduce universities and conferences’ flexibility to adapt to changing conditions for student innovative opportunities.
“We want what’s best for the Big Ten and for Michigan. We are not going to sacrifice competitive advantage that we built for more than a century. We stand ready to work with legislators on a bill that will establish a system in which every university can compete and thrive for generations to come.”
May spent just two years in Ann Arbor but made a lasting mark on the program. He went 64-13 during his time, won the 2024-25 Big Ten Tournament championship, the 2025-26 Big Ten championship and finished his time in Ann Arbor defeating UConn, 69-63, to win the national championship on Monday, April 6.
“When my family and I came to Ann Arbor two years ago, we hoped we could help bring Michigan basketball back to where it belongs,” May said in a goodbye statement to U-M. “This wasn’t an easy decision. An opportunity came along that was right for my family and something I felt I needed to pursue, but that doesn’t change how much these last two years have meant to us.
“Thank you for trusting us, believing in us and making these last two years so much fun. It was an honor to coach at Michigan and wear the Block M.”
On Tuesday, June 23, Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel officially announced assistant basketball coach Mike Boynton Jr. would be appointed as interim head coach.
That set a clock for the transfer portal to open for U-M players on Friday, July 24, 31 days after Boynton’s appointment as interim.
Tony Garcia is the Michigan beat writer for the Detroit Free Press. Email him at apgarcia@freepress.com and follow him on X at @RealTonyGarcia.
Michigan
Michigan’s single-stair reform gains as housing package languishes
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Michigan
Michigan heatwave on way. See day likely to set a record high
Tourists bemused as Louvre closes early due to heat
France’s heat closed the Louvre in Paris early on June 24, 2026.
Reuters
Get ready to sweat, Michigan.
The summer’s first big heatwave is expected to start on Monday, bringing a four-day stretch of potential 90-plus-degree temperatures to much of the state, across the Midwest and parts of the East Coast.
The National Weather Service is advising Michiganians to limit time outdoors and stay hydrated in the leadup to Independence Day.
The heatwave is projected to peak on Tuesday, the final day of June, when virtually the entirety of Lower Michigan and surrounding states will be considered at major risk of heat-related effects, according to NWS.
Anyone without access to cooling or hydration or who must engage in prolonged outdoor activity or strenuous labor will face a significantly elevated risk of heat-related illness, including heat exhaustion or heat stroke.
The NWS office in Marquette said above-normal humidity is expected to accompany the high temperatures, elevating the risk.
About 16 people a year die from heat and heat-related illnesses in Michigan, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Relief will be minimal, experts advised. Thunderstorms are unlikely during the heatwave, AccuWeather reported, and overnight lows are expected to drop only into the mid-70s, according to NWS.
‘Heat dome’ bringing near-record temperatures
AccuWeather attributes the warmup to a “heat dome,” which is a high-pressure system that traps hot air and prevents cooling. The weather system will bring above-normal temperatures throughout the central and eastern states. St. Louis could log eight straight days of at least 90 degrees.
Lower Michigan is expected to see this summer’s first consecutive 90-plus-degree days. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday are all currently expected to climb past that mark.
Currently, the hottest day on record this year in Detroit was May 18, when the mercury climbed to 90 degrees, according to NWS data.
High temperatures are likely to approach daily records during next week’s heatwave. Detroit’s record highs for June 29 through July 2 are 96, 96, 98 and 99, respectively. The weather service currently projects highs of 91, 97 and 95 for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. A high for Thursday is not yet available.
On average, temperatures during this time of year top out around 81 or 82, NWS data shows.
The high temperatures approach the United States as Western Europe swelters under a record-setting heatwave that is expected to persist through the end of the week. On Wednesday, Britain and France both logged the hottest June days on record, Reuters reported.
mreinhart@detroitnews.com
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