Oregon
WSU closes out home finale with thrilling 68-65 win over Oregon
The Washington State Cougars survived a close to late comeback from the Oregon Geese, hanging on for a 68-65 win on Senior Day in Pullman.
WSU (13-15, 8-9 in Pac-12) watched their 10 level lead evaporate as Oregon (15-13, 9-8) flipped the swap and introduced the sport inside a possession happening to the ultimate minute. In want of a bucket, Justin Powell delivered an enormous lay-up to offer WSU two key insurance coverage factors. Down three with the shot clock turned off, Oregon air balled the sport tying triple proper earlier than the clock expired.
With it being the ultimate common season residence recreation at Beasley Coliseum, the Cougars honored seniors D.J. Rodman and Jack Wilson. Through the ceremonies, a tearful Rodman informed the gang how a lot he has loved the previous 4 years in Pullman. He then despatched the Beasley crowd right into a frenzy when he introduced that 4 years wasn’t sufficient. Rodman can be again subsequent season.
A lot to the delight of coach Smith.
The primary half was spent jockeying for the lead and management of the sport. WSU went on the primary huge run of the sport six minutes in. The Cougars 10-0 run, highlighted by a Mouhamed Gueye slam, put the Cougars up 5. Oregon’s protection stifled the Cougar offense shortly after the 10-0 run. WSU may solely muster 10 extra factors within the final 12 minutes of the half. With the Cougar offense locked down, the Geese went on a run of their very own to retake the lead and maintain it into the halftime break.
Rodman gave the Cougars the lead again along with his first trey of the night time three and a half minutes into the second half. Two possessions later, Rodman stored it flowing with a one other three-pointer to push the lead as much as 5. Gueye put the exclamation level on the run with a strong dunk off an awesome move from Powell.
The Cougars stored their foot on the gasoline, extending the lead as much as seven with a freakishly athletic play from Gueye to go catch a excessive lob move and get the powerful lay-up to go. Andrej Jakimovski bought the result in double digits with a nook trey to offer WSU their largest lead of the sport to date, at 10.
Oregon shortly reduce the lead in half after a nasty in-bounds move was thrown proper to Keeshawn Barthelemy for a simple layup. After a missed bucket on the opposite finish, Barthelemy struck once more with an open floater to make it a one-possession recreation. For each bucket the Cougars bought, Oregon was fast to reply. An open Rodman three pushed the lead as much as 4, however Oregon broke down the WSU zone protection for a number of simple buckets and took a one level lead on a free throw.
Popping out of the under-four timeout, Powell knocked residence an enormous three to place WSU again in entrance by two. The Geese have been once more quick to reply with a back-door reduce to the rim, tying the sport again up at 62. With the Cougs main by two with a minute and a half to go, T.J. Bamba took the ball down the lane and completed a troublesome lay-up in visitors to place WSU up 4. Barthelemy continued to be thorn within the Cougars’ aspect, connecting on an enormous step-back three to reply Bamba’s bucket.
After a chaotic sequence that included Bamba calling the Cougars closing timeout to get Jakimovski out of a jam and a kicked ball in opposition to Oregon that reset an expiring shot clock, Powell delivered an enormous lay-up with below 25 seconds to play to push WSU up three.
Oregon bought the ultimate shot and bought an awesome look. Jermaine Couisnard bought Jakimovski to leap, aspect stepped to his left and fired off an open search for the sport tying three. That three fell quick, grazing the web for an air ball. The clock hit triple zeros shortly after and the Cougars survived their Beasley Coliseum season finale.
The Cougars will hope to trip the homestand sweep on the highway for the ultimate three video games of the 12 months, beginning on the Stanford Cardinal on Thursday.
Oregon
Will No. 13 Oregon men’s basketball be able to slow down Braden Smith, No. 17 Purdue?
EUGENE — By far Oregon’s biggest remaining home game this season, a top 20 clash with two-time reigning Big Ten champion Purdue carries significant stakes.
The No. 13 Ducks (15-2, 4-2 Big Ten) are ahead of the No. 17 Boilermakers in the polls, but behind them in the conference standings and NET entering Saturday’s game (12 p.m., NBC) at Matthew Knight Arena.
Both teams could use the Quadrant 1 win to improve their respective resumes come Selection Sunday, with Purdue (14-4, 6-1) arguably in bigger need of the road victory with all of its losses coming away from home. But as jockeying at the top of the Big Ten intensifies these are the matchups that will go a long way to determining the top four seeds in the conference tournament, which all receive double byes.
Oregon
Second man dies after being washed out to sea by king tides on Oregon Coast
King tides on the Oregon Coast 2025
People travel to the Oregon Coast to watch the king tides.
A Happy Valley man died Wednesday after being washed out to sea by abnormally high tides just south of Depoe Bay.
It’s the second fatal incident blamed on the so-called “king tides” — the largest tides of the season — this winter.
Hong B Su, 45, was fishing on the rocks of the shoreline at the north end of Otter Crest Loop when he was “washed out to sea by a wave” at roughly 2:04 p.m., according to Oregon State Police.
Su was in the water for approximately 39 minutes before he was recovered by the United States Coast Guard. He was pronounced deceased when he reached the Depoe Bay Coast Guard station.
The tides were near their highest level of the month on Wednesday. The peak of the king tides was recorded on Jan. 12 at 9.84 feet in Newport, and on the day Su was swept into the sea, Jan. 15, they were just a bit lower at 9.33 feet, according to the National Weather Service. On Friday, high tide was under 8 feet. King tides is an unofficial term for the highest tides of the year.
In December, a 72-year-old North Bend man who went to photograph the king tides at the beach also died after apparently being swept into the surf. His body was recovered nearly a month later in Haynes Inlet.
Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in Oregon for 16 years and is host of the Explore Oregon Podcast. He can be reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or (503) 399-6801. Find him on X at @ZachsORoutdoors.
Oregon
What Gonzaga’s Mark Few said after loss vs. Oregon State
Putting the ball in the basket didn’t seem to be a problem for Gonzaga during Thursday night’s battle with Oregon State in Corvallis, Oregon.
The issue for the Bulldogs (14-5, 5-1 WCC), however, was on the other end of the floor. Led by 29 points from Michael Rataj and 20 from Nate Kingz, the Beavers (14-4, 4-2 WCC) made 58.5% of their field goal attempts to outlast the Zags in a 97-89 overtime final from Gill Coliseum.
“[Oregon State] made shots and [isolated] guys and posted us,” Gonzaga head coach Mark Few said of the Beavers’ attack strategy after the game. “And when we did guard them well, they hit some tough shots [and] some tough pull-ups.”
Here’s more from Few after the loss.
On Gonzaga’s struggles defensively against Oregon State:
“We played really, really good offense. We just could not get consistent stops for longer stretches. Came out in the second half with more intensity on the defensive end. [The Beavers] were still able to get some tough shots. I mean they had some real backbreakers, the bank 3 and contested 3. Even when we did play good defense, they were able to knock in some really tough shots. You almost have to play perfect on offense when you’re playing defense like that.”
On Graham Ike’s big night:
“He was great. Graham was terrific. He delivered time and time again in a high-level game against a very good, physical, big postman. You know, you also got a guard at the other end too. So again, our offense wasn’t the problem — our defense was at pretty much all five spots.”
On the positives the Bulldogs can take from the loss:
“We competed, great environment, fought, dug our way back in after our slow start; played some good ball there in the middle of the second half. We just had a couple of possessions, I think we missed a lay-up on one of those; and then again, just not even some of the stops, we foul a lot off the ball. We fouled on the ball. They were able to get critical free throws when they were in the bonus, and you just can’t do that.”
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