Sports
67 points and a ‘transfer portal’ surprise: Nonconference hoops superlatives
Conference play is finally here in college basketball.
After many long months apart, rival teams will visit each other to the sounds of rowdy student sections jumping on the bleachers. But it follows a nonconference schedule that treated fans to many defining and humorous takeaways.
As we shift our focus to conference play, let’s revisit some nontraditional superlatives — both on and off the court — that stood out from earlier this season.

Most likely to make an NBA court home
When BYU landed the No. 1 high school prospect in the Class of 2025, it had just completed its second season as a member of the Big 12 — a move that brought the program to a bigger stage. The addition of Dybantsa intensified the spotlight.
In July, when the Cougars released their nonconference schedule, it was revealed that they would play on three NBA courts — and Dybantsa rose to the occasion in all of those games.
Dybantsa and BYU first played No. 3 UConn at TD Garden in Boston, home of the Celtics, where the freshman erupted for 25 points and 6 rebounds in an 86-84 loss. BYU bounced back against No. 23 Wisconsin at the Delta Center, home of the Utah Jazz, with Dybantsa collecting 18 points, 6 rebounds and 3 assists in a 98-70 win.
He delivered another big performance on the Jazz floor against California Baptist, where he dropped 22 points in a 91-60 win before completing his NBA arena tour at the Jimmy V Classic against Clemson at Madison Square Garden, with 28 points, 9 rebounds and and 6 assists in a 67-64 victory.
Most valuable number
67
It got loud in arenas, and we mean loud because of one particular number: 67. The trend, which was popularized on TikTok, sent young students into a frenzy every time a team’s points landed on 67. Young audiences pierced the ears of players, coaches and other spectators at LSU, Oklahoma State, West Virginia and Auburn games, just to name a few.
0:34
Fans go wild after Oklahoma State scores 67 points
Lena Girardi gets a steal and makes the layup to increase Oklahoma State’s score to 67, and the fans celebrate in the crowd.
And the trend seems to be here to stay … at least for a while.
Most likely to make their parents’ commute easy
Cameron Boozer and Cayden Boozer
The Boozer brothers, sons of two-time NBA All-Star Carlos Boozer, have played together their entire lives. From teaming up on the AAU circuit with Nightrydas Elite to prep basketball at Christopher Columbus High in Miami, the twin brothers followed their father’s footsteps in taking their college talents to Duke.
In nonconference play for the Blue Devils, Cameron averaged 23.3 points, 10 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 1.7 steals, while Cayden averaged 7.3 points, 2.3 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 1 steal.
It’s safe to say that Carlos is happy to have his boys close to home.
Unmatched social media presence
Richard Pitino
One thing about the Xavier coach: He keeps it honest with his fans on social media. At the start of the season, Pitino lightheartedly trolled his father, St. John’s coach Rick Pitino.
Just spent 30 minutes trying to explain to @RealPitino how to download Amazon Prime on his iPad. Confidence is sky high that Xavier will get the sweep this year.
— Richard Pitino (@XUCoachPitino) October 31, 2025
As the season progressed, he would share a postgame report card with thoughts on the student section, uniforms, cheerleaders, his team’s performance and even the national anthem singer. For the most part, every category earned an A grade. But he kept it authentic at times with his true thoughts on Xavier’s performance, sometimes giving the team a C for rebounding, or an F for its defense.
Post Game Grades
Anthem Girl- A plus
Student Section- A plus
Grey Unis- A, Big fan!
Offense- B minus, 20 assists!
Defense- F minus
Rebounding- C, Filip 12 rebounds!
— Richard Pitino (@XUCoachPitino) November 7, 2025
When the Musketeers lost 87-68 to Santa Clara, Pitino took ownership of the loss on social media.
Monday night was on me. I will be better. We will be better. Tough one Friday night at Iowa!
— Richard Pitino (@XUCoachPitino) November 12, 2025
Most unconventional ‘transfer portal’ return
Amir Khan
During McNeese’s Cinderella run in last March, team manager Amir Khan went viral for his antics. He would lead the team out of the locker room with a huge boombox around his neck. It led to his nickname, “Aura,” and 20 NIL deals.
Read more: How a McNeese manager became a centerpiece in its March moment
But in the midst of McNeese’s run in the NCAA tournament, coach Will Wade came to an agreement to become the lead man at NC State. Into the “transfer portal” Khan went, following Wade to Raleigh.
However, Khan appeared back in blue and gold in early December after transferring back to McNeese in Lake Charles, Louisiana, which is also his hometown.
“I just wanted to be back home,” he said. “I think NC State was amazing. I loved the city, loved the campus, loved the players on the team. There was no animosity whatsoever. I just wanted to be back with McNeese. It means a lot more to me to work for McNeese.”
Sports
NHL’s holiday on ice amid balmy Miami’s swaying palm trees
WHEN THE MIAMI MARLINS made a bid to host the NHL’s annual Winter Classic at their stadium, LoanDepot Park, they knew they would have to overcome one major obstacle in pitching the idea: Florida’s warm and sunny weather. Rather than ignore the obvious hurdle of hosting the league’s signature outdoor winter hockey event in the tropics, the team decided to go all in on the theme and submitted a proposal entitled “Miami Ice,” a play on the hit 1980s TV show “Miami Vice.”
“We’re not shy of the fact that this is in South Florida. I think that’s what makes this unique and novel,” said Anthony Favata, vice president of operations and events for the Marlins. “The vibrancy of the colors of South Beach, of the palm trees, and this juxtaposition of warm weather versus winter. So, we’re very much leaning into that.”
The big question was whether South Florida’s balmy weather and professional-quality ice hockey could peacefully coexist.
After years of discussions and multiple visits to LoanDepot Park, the league awarded the 2026 Winter Classic to the Marlins, confident that engineers could build an outdoor hockey rink in sunny Miami where the average temperature in January hovers around 70 degrees Fahrenheit.
Miami will likely have the warmest temperature at the 8 p.m. ET puck drop in the history of the Winter Classic, where the average temperature for all previous sites at puck drop was 33 degrees, but the league and Marlins say they have a plan to ensure the ice will be ready to go on game day. The game will air on TNT.
To build the rink, NHL engineers planned to use multiple generators, two 18-wheeler coolant trucks, approximately 20,000 gallons of water and round-the-clock care starting in mid-December. Compared to other outdoor rinks they’ve built in much colder climates, they said, this Miami build was easier to plan and execute.
The idea to hold a Winter Classic in Florida started years ago, according to Steve Mayer, president of NHL events and content. League officials first considered hosting an all-Florida franchise matchup between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Florida Panthers. Ultimately, officials said they decided two games were better than one and awarded the Winter Classic to the Panthers, who will play the New York Rangers in Miami on Friday, and the Stadium Series to the Lightning, who will play the Boston Bruins at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa on Feb. 1.
Mayer described it with a “Field of Dreams” analogy. “This is an incredible sports story where you can go into a place that has never really participated [in hockey], never really been exposed to a sport, and then build it and they will come,” Mayer said, adding that filling a single arena would be an achievement. “And now we’re filling two stadiums that are huge, just full of Panther fans and Lightning fans.”
Mayer called Florida the new “hotbed of hockey.” A Florida team has played in the last six Stanley Cup Final series. The Panthers are the reigning back-to-back champions, having won in 2024 and 2025. The Lightning won back-to-back titles in 2020 and 2021. Additionally, league officials say youth hockey participation rates had increased by 212% since the NHL first expanded into Florida in the 1990s, and for the seventh straight season, there are at least eight Florida-born players playing in the league. Fifteen years ago, there had never been more than two players in the same season from the state.
LOANDEPOT PARK’S retractable roof, which will help control the conditions until game day, is a major reason why Florida’s heat isn’t such a big concern, event planners told ESPN.
“The greatest enemy of the ice is wind and sun,” said Jorge Pinoncély, of Industrial Frigo, a winter entertainment company that has built more than 500 outdoor ice rinks in the U.S. and is unaffiliated with the NHL.
The evening start time means direct sunlight won’t be a concern once the roof is retracted. But Pinoncély cautioned that wind could be an issue.
University of Miami atmospheric sciences professor Paquita Zuidema likened the effects of wind on an ice rink to a block of ice sitting in a backyard.
“The ice will be constantly cooling the air above it,” helping keep the surface temperature low, Zuidema said. But wind “will keep removing that cold pool of air. So the ice will need to work harder to cool off that air layer.”
The optimum temperature for ice level — the pocket of air above the ice and inside the glass — on game day is approximately 60 degrees, said Derek King, the NHL’s vice president of facilities and hockey operations.
“Inside the glass is really important. We know, though, that we don’t have a lot of control over that,” he said. “So we’ll make that [ice] sheet as cold as we can to kind of control that area, and then we’ll monitor our temperatures.”
The league refined the process of building a rink with each of the 43 outdoor games held since 2003. From start to finish, it takes two weeks and about 100 people to create the Winter Classic’s on-field build out of the hockey rink, but only 24 for the ice crew according to King.
Work began as soon as the NHL’s two 18-wheeler mobile refrigeration units arrived at LoanDepot Park from Canada, where they are stored. In cold-weather builds such as Chicago or Minneapolis, the NHL typically needs just one mobile refrigeration unit, but for Miami the league needed two.
Workers ran pipes that carried a mixture of 40% glycol and 60% water from the refrigeration trucks to the baseball field. At the same time, they prepped the field by covering approximately 80% of it with an armored subfloor before building a stage for the rink. Staff used the closed roof to help keep the indoor temperature controlled to 60 degrees.
With the foundation complete, workers laid down aluminum panels that connect to the pipes channeling the glycol mix. That mix has a freezing temperature lower than water and allows the metal plates to get colder than the 32 degrees needed to freeze water.
It typically takes four to five days to lay the pipes and build the foundation, rink and boards, according to King. Next comes a process where workers use ice and water to fill gaps — much like grouting between tiles — to create the smoothest-possible surface.
From there, teams finally begin to make the ice by slowly spraying the rink with water over the course of several days, gradually building the sheet of ice to get to an eventual game-time thickness of 2 to 2.5 inches and a surface temperature of 25 degrees.
During this process, they paint the rink white and add logos and lines before the top layer of ice is added.
Once completed in Miami, the Panthers and Rangers got practice time. The league planned to use any remaining time left to work out any kinks and make sure the ice was ready for Friday’s game day.
BY “TAKING MOTHER NATURE out of the equation,” King said, the build can be easier compared to colder venues such as Nashville in 2022, when rain created more than 4 inches of ice by game day, or during the 2025 Stadium Series in Columbus, where wind and snow interrupted the build.
But warmer venues aren’t hazard-free. Six days before the 2020 Winter Classic at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, heavy rain and warm weather melted the ice, forcing workers to restart the layering process.
When the league finally opens the roof in Miami, King said his team will be prepared to adapt to weather conditions.
“We just need to look at how we deal with the ice on game day. Are we going to limit the amount of time we’re going to flood? Are we going to shave off more ice and kind of deal with what we know we can deal with?” King said. “So control stuff we can control and really let Mother Nature set in.”
But King admits there was one unusual challenge for his team ahead of the warm weather build: what to wear.
“We’re not all bundled up in heavy coats and stuff like that, trying to stay warm,” said King, who is based in Canada and looked forward to the T-shirt weather of Florida. “We’ve all had to kind of rethink our outfitting for this build because we’re going to be in Miami.”
Sports
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ESPN announcer mistakenly calls Ole Miss star by name of late LSU player
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Greg McElroy had an unfortunate slip of the tongue during his College Football Playoff broadcast Thursday night.
McElroy was the color commentator for the Sugar Bowl between Ole Miss and Georgia, which saw Ole Miss kick a game-winning field goal in the final seconds.
Long before that, though, McElroy tried to give kudos to Rebels running back Kewan Lacy, but called him by the wrong name.
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Kewan Lacy was mistakenly called Kyren Lacy during a broadcast. (Rich von Biberstein, Andy Altenburger/Getty Images)
“Love the way Kyren Lacy runs,” McElroy said before correcting himself.
Kyren Lacy was a former LSU wide receiver who died by suicide last year amid a legal battle stemming from a crash that killed a 78-year-old man in December 2024. He was accused of driving recklessly — speeding and passing in a no-passing zone — when a motorist swerved to avoid Lacy and crashed into another vehicle.

Kyren Lacy runs the ball as the LSU Tigers take on the Nicholls Colonels at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024. (SCOTT CLAUSE/USA TODAY Network / USA TODAY NETWORK)
Police said “numerous witnesses” told responding officers that Kyren Lacy’s driving caused the crash. Lacy had been charged with negligent homicide, felony hit-and-run with death, and reckless operation of a vehicle.
Kyren Lacy transferred to LSU in 2022. He had his best season in 2024, when he recorded 58 catches for 866 yards and nine touchdowns and likely would have been an NFL Draft pick.
Kewan Lacy helped Ole Miss to the College Football Playoff semifinal, running for 93 yards and two touchdowns on 22 carries.

LSU Tigers wide receiver Kyren Lacy (2) reacts against the Texas A&M Aggies during the second half. (Maria Lysaker-Imagn Images.)
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The Rebels will face No. 10 Miami in the semifinal, with the winner advancing to play No. 1 Indiana or No. 5 Oregon.
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