Syracuse’s March Run Ends in 98-45 Blowout Against UConn

Syracuse’s run ends with a 98-45 loss to UConn, a game that is out of reach before it ever settles.

Coming off a win over Iowa State, Syracuse enters the matchup on the road against undefeated UConn, and from the opening minutes, it is clear what the women’s basketball team is up against.

From the opening minutes, nothing settles.

Five turnovers in the first six minutes force two early timeouts in an attempt to slow things down, but it doesn’t make a difference. UConn jumps out to a 20-6 lead, turning every Syracuse mistake into points and taking control immediately.

By the end of the first quarter, it is already 33-8.

UConn shot over 70% in the opening quarter, getting whatever it wanted in transition, in the paint and from three. Syracuse couldn’t string together stops or possessions and was constantly chasing the game.
The second quarter puts it out of reach.

Syracuse’s offense stalled, managing just four points in the period and going long stretches without a field goal. On the other end, UConn kept building.

Another 32-point quarter sends the Huskies into halftime with a 65-12 lead, a 53-point gap that reflects exactly how the game played out.

“We came out… on the back foot,” Sophie Burrows said. “And against a team like UConn, you can’t come out like that.”

Azzi Fudd led the way with 34 points, knocking down eight threes and controlling the game from the perimeter. Sarah Strong added 18 points and nine rebounds, while Blanca Quiñonez contributed 18 more, as UConn’s offense came from everywhere. They spaced the floor, moved the ball and it showed in every part of the game.

For Syracuse, it wasn’t just one issue. It was everything.

The Orange turned the ball over twenty times, leading directly to 35 points for UConn. Every mistake became a runout, and even in the half court, Syracuse struggled to keep up with the ball movement and spacing.

When the shots were there, they didn’t fall.

Syracuse finished shooting 32.8% from the field and one-for-eighteen from three. That cannot happen in March. The second half didn’t change the result, but it did show something about this group. Both teams scored 17 in the third and 16 in the fourth, but the outcome was already decided. The pace evened out, but the damage was already done.

“We just needed to clean up that first half,” Burrows said.

After a difficult year, this group turned a corner. Picked near the bottom of the ACC, Syracuse grew into a team that fought its way back to the NCAA Tournament, built on belief and trust inside the locker room.

“I’m just really proud of the way we kind of turned that corner and believed in ourselves,” Burrows said. “No one believed in us, but we believed in ourselves… that sisterhood that we created.”

That belief showed up in players like Laila Phelia.

After dealing with a retinal detachment and questioning her future in basketball, she found stability in Syracuse through head coach Felisha Legette-Jack.

“When I talked to Coach Jack… she was the one coach that really truly felt and understood exactly what I was going through,” Phelia said. “Her confidence in me straight off the bat, it just gave me a sense of belief.”

That belief carried this team all season, even if it didn’t show on the scoreboard tonight.

“Syracuse deserves a better showing than we did today,” Legette-Jack said. “But I hope they saw the second half… we just didn’t do the best job in the first half.”

Uche Izoje led Syracuse with 12 points, while Phelia added 10, but there was never a stretch where the Orange could make the game competitive.

UConn finished 55.9% from the field and 50% from three, controlling every part of the night from start to finish.

The final score, 98-45, reflects it.

In March, you win to advance. For Syracuse, the season ends here, but what this team built all year doesn’t end tonight. It is belief, resilience, and a true sense of family that stays with them.

Syracuse’s season-to-forget comes to an end as the Orange fall to SMU in the first round of the ACC Tournament

Nate Kingz layup
Syracuse falls to SMU 86-69 in the first round of ACC Men’s Basketball Tournament. Photo Credits: Syracuse Athletics

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — In a game where Syracuse trailed by just one point at halftime, the SMU offense was too much to handle for the Orange in the second half as No.14-seeded Syracuse fell to No.11-seeded SMU 86-69 in the first round of the ACC Men’s Basketball Tournament. The loss effectively ends Syracuse’s 2025-26 season in Charlotte, with a 15-17 record.

The loss also means Syracuse will finish with a losing record in back-to-back seasons for the first time in 55 years. Prior to this, the program had consecutive losing seasons was in 1967-68 and 1968-69.

A big story in today’s defeat was Syracuse’s inability to rebound. SMU outrebounded the Orange 44-31 and grabbed 19 offensive rebounds, leading to 26 second-chance points.

Syracuse head coach Adrian Autry, after what may have been his final game as the head coach of the Syracuse men’s basketball program, opened his postgame press conference with his thoughts on the rebound differential.

“I thought today’s game really came down to, for us, the ability to rebound, second-chance points,” said Autry. “And offensively, our guards and our perimeter, we didn’t make enough shots and we didn’t play well enough. We just couldn’t make a ton of shots besides Tyler (Betsey) and Nate (Kingz).”

Kingz led the way for Syracuse with 25 points on 11-for-18 shooting from the field, and Betsey added 15 points on five made three-pointers. The rest of the Orange, however, were essentially nonexistent on offense. Syracuse’s leading scorer Donnie Freeman who averaged 17.0 points per game, finished with just seven points on 3-for-9 shooting, and third-leading scorer, J.J. Starling finished with just two points.

Freeman was asked why he believed the season unraveled toward the end of the year, with the Orange losing 12 of their last 15 games—beginning with a loss on the road against Boston College, the second-worst team in the conference—concluding the season on a six-game losing streak.

Donnie Freeman in locker room
Syracuse forward Donnie Freeman in the locker room post-game. Photo credits: Hunter Caparelli

“That’s tough, I can’t really pinpoint where it started honestly,” said Freeman. “It happened slowly but it started to snowball and the losses started to pile up. But even after the season’s over, I still feel that we were so much better than how our record may look.”

Kingz was one of few bright spots for the Orange, was no surprise given how much he had come on the scene during the conference play with his ability to score and knock down shots from beyond the arc. With his collegiate future in question due to the eligibility petition process, Kingz was asked about what may have been final game as a college athlete.

“I just went in with a win-or-go-home mentality,” said Kingz. “I was just trying to leave it all out there on the court and go as hard as I could. Might have been my last game, I don’t know what the future holds for me, so I just wanted to leave it all out there and do whatever I could.”

Betsey was the other bright spot, coming off the bench and finishing with 15 points and seven rebounds, which was especially crucial for a Syracuse team missing one of their vital bench pieces in Kiyan Anthony due to an undisclosed lower-body injury. Betsey was asked why the season may not have gone the way they had hoped for with high expectations going into the year.

“I would just say inconsistencies with each other,” said Betsey. “Whether it was practice or people working hard or not, it just showed against good teams. I feel like all of us in the locker room, we know what players had in there and what coaches we had. I feel like we could have done something special this year, but it just didn’t go that way.”

Syracuse post-game press conference
Syracuse men’s basketball coach Adrian Autry, senior guard Nate Kingz, and sophomore forward Tyler Betsey at the post-game press conference. Photo credits: Hunter Caparelli

There will be a lot of questions about coach Autry’s future after the loss, who is 49-48 in three seasons as Syracuse’s head basketball coach. Autry was asked if he had thoughts about his future as he walked off the court and through the tunnel after the defeat.

“Obviously now with the game over with, you think about those things,” said Autry. “This was a group we put together with the hopes of being able to work through those inconsistencies, and try to be able to develop ‘on the job’ so-to-speak. We knew there was going to be a learning curve, and we thought we had a group that could push through that, but that didn’t happen.”

One of the team’s leaders this season, and starting guard Naithan George, who finished with a 2-for-13 shooting performance, was asked about coach Autry’s future and why he may have a perspective being around Autry every day behind closed doors that outside fans may not have.

“Just his care and his passion,” said George. “He always just wants the best for you and he always has a smile on his face. He’s also always willing to work though the highs or the lows. He just cares so much, and sometimes it just comes down to players making shots, and today I didn’t make shots. Maybe if I made a couple it would have been different.”

Coach Autry also had an interesting take on the ever-changing NIL landscape being a potential factor in underperforming this year. Syracuse is in the third tier ranking for ACC men’s basketball NIL budgets, which estimates their roster to be valued somewhere between $2 million to $4 million, compared to a program like North Carolina or Duke in the first tier ranking for budgets ranging between $10 million to more than $14 million.

“It’s not an excuse, but it’s just the reality,” said Autry. “I own up to everything, but to be able to operate and to be able to do things, the NIL is a real thing. The transfer portal is a real thing, those are the variables that can shape a season. Those are always going to be challenging, and if you fall a little short of those things, it makes it that much more difficult to win”

Autry said at the end of his press conference that he will be meeting with Syracuse officials for their end-of-season meetings. The next time the Orange are back in action next November, it will likely be an entirely new team looking to get Syracuse back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2021, the program’s longest streak of not making the Big Dance in over 50 years.

Syracuse Basketball senior night spoiled by Pittsburgh Panthers in overtime loss.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. –– March 7th marked the beginning of spring break for Syracuse University students, which is usually an opportunity to go home, reset, and return fresh and better than ever to tackle the remainder of the semester. The Syracuse basketball team had the same opportunity – a get-right game at home against the Pittsburgh Panthers to eliminate them from conference tournament contention and right the ship after four consecutive losses before the ACC tournament.

This game was anything but rejuvenating, with 14 ties and seven lead changes, most of which occurred in the final six minutes of regulation and beyond, extending into overtime. Even with many of the Dome seats left unfilled, those in attendance were treated to a back-and-forth affair that came down to one shot. Syracuse dropped its fifth consecutive game in a 71-69 overtime loss and finish 6-11 in the ACC and under .500 overall at 15-16.

The Orange faithful stood to their feet as time wound down in overtime. | ©Matt Sheremeta 2026

Prior to tip-off, Syracuse celebrated the team’s four seniors: J.J. Starling, Nate Kingz, William Kyle III, and Bryce Zephir. It seemed this game was going to be all about them, as Starling lobbed an alley-oop to Kyle on the first possession of the game. Kyle then had two more dunks for six of Syracuse’s first nine points. The other three came from a Kingz three-pointer. This was the only make from Syracuse’s first seven attempts from deep.

Kingz even alluded to reuniting with Syracuse next season after averaging 12.2 points per game in an Orange uniform this year.

“I’d definitely stay here as long as people want me here still, I would definitely see that as an option for sure,” Kingz said, who is in the process of gaining another year of eligibility from the NCAA. “I just have to see what they say and go from there.”

Redshirt senior Nate Kingz brings clarity into his future as a college basketball player. | ©Matt Sheremeta 2026

The seniors were silenced for the majority of the contest, Starling, the Baldwinsville native, who finished 0-for-7 from the floor and scored no points on senior day. He has struggled to get anything going for the last couple of nights, with just four points scored in the last three games.

“The last couple of games, it’s been hard for him to get going. Obviously, teams are defending him a certain way,” Autry added about Starling’s recent struggles. “We tried giving him some looks early, but as the games go on, teams are doing a pretty good job defending him.”

The Orange as a collective had a slow start to either half, starting 4-13 from the floor in the first and 0-5 in the second. Pitt was able to capitalize the second time around, leading by as much as 12 points nearly 30 minutes into the game.

Syracuse was able to will their way back into the game after a Tyler Betsey triple tied it at 52 with six minutes left in regulation. From there, the Orange regained the lead with three to play but could never quite escape the Panthers’ grasp.

The man leading the comeback was Naithan George, who played his best game in a Syracuse uniform, scoring a season-high 26 points – just two points shy of his career best set while at Georgia Tech. He opened overtime with a midrange jumper to notch his 26th, but then committed a crucial turnover midway through the extra frame, leading to a Pitt jumper.

Pitt called a timeout with 10 seconds remaining for one final shot attempt. Kyle committed a goaltending violation on Pitt’s Nojus Indrusaitis, giving the Panthers the lead with four seconds remaining.

“I thought the difference was our late-game execution,” Autry said. “We turned it over twice in overtime, and we had been taking care of the basketball pretty well for the most part.”

There was some speculation that this would be Coach Red’s last home game, as he reflected on his last three seasons with the team and whether he met the “Orange Standard.”

“I can only worry about today,” Autry said. He added, about the different dynamic in college athletics due to NIL and the transfer portal since taking the reigns three seasons ago, “When we had ‘the standard’, we were able to retain and develop and have guys. And every coach is going through that. So getting back to ‘the standard’ is going to be a little bit more challenging than we all thought it would be.”

Syracuse basketball coach at podium speaking into microphone
Coach Adrian Autry addressed rumors and speculation of his future tenure with Syracuse in his post-game press conference | ©Matt Sheremeta 2026

Donnie Freeman was asked if there was any extra desire to win for Autry today, since it may be his final home game, to which he replied with “next question.” But there was an extra desire to pull one out for the senior leaders on the day they were celebrated.

“I’m just feeling for the seniors, man, like I wanted to win it for them. Like J.J., he’s been here since I got here,” Freeman said. “That’s really all I wanted, honestly, nothing else other than that. If I had zero across the board tonight and we would’ve won for the seniors, I would have been content with that.”

Syracuse will finish the season in the ACC Tournament, where they will face SMU on Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. One final chance to potentially earn their spot in the NCAA Tournament – but it will take a playoff win.

“I think we’ve made progress as far as being able to be in games,” Autry said. “That gives me the hope that we can string it together on a neutral site with our guys very motivated to get some things done.”

Syracuse struggles continue in 77-62 loss to Louisville, dropping fourth straight 

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Syracuse fell 77-62 at Louisville on Tuesday night, extending a season slide that now includes four straight losses and seven consecutive road defeats.

The Orange didn’t start this one flat. Syracuse opened the night playing together, pushing the pace early, attacking downhill and crashing the glass behind J.J. Starling and William Kyle III. For a moment, it looked different. Louisville struggled to settle in, even turning the ball over twice in the opening minutes as Syracuse controlled tempo.

But that rhythm didn’t last. Once the Cardinals found their shooting, the game flipped quickly in a way that has become too familiar this season. Louisville sped the game up, got back defensively and turned missed Syracuse opportunities into runs. Without consistent scoring, Syracuse fell into iso-ball, forcing isolation possessions instead of moving the ball and creating rhythm. That’s been the Orange’s biggest struggle all season, and it showed again in a game that could have stayed competitive.

Even without Mikel Brown Jr., Louisville never struggled generating offense. Ryan Conwell led the way, scoring 23 points with five three-pointers, repeatedly finding space as Syracuse struggled to fight through screens. Isaac McKneely added 16 points, contributing five three-pointers of his own, while J’Vonne Hadley contributed 19 points and seven rebounds, including a transition dunk that energized both the bench and the packed home crowd.

By halftime, Syracuse trailed 39-21 after shooting 0% from three. Head coach Adrian Autry said that deficit ultimately decided the game.

“We had a lot of shots… layups and good looks… that we didn’t make,” Autry said postgame. “That first-half deficit was the difference.”

Defensively, Syracuse struggled again with communication and assignments, allowing Louisville to build confidence throughout the night.

“We’re dealing with things we can control that we’re just not doing,” Autry said. “We’ve got to get over screens. We have to communicate better.”

For Syracuse, Naithan George was one of the few steady performers, finishing with 16 points and three assists, often carrying the offense while the Orange tried to regain rhythm. At stretches, George handled extended minutes almost alone as Syracuse tried to stabilize.

Syracuse showed life late. A 9-0 run fueled by second-chance efforts and back-to-back dunks briefly cut the deficit to single digits, creating a small window back into the game. But every push was met with an immediate Louisville response, often from open perimeter looks that continued to haunt Syracuse throughout the night.

The Orange outscored Louisville in the second half, but the damage from the first 20 minutes was too much to overcome. Autry credited the team’s fight but acknowledged execution remains the difference.

“I thought they fought,” he said. “But when you’re down like that on the road, it’s tough to come back.”

This game told a story that’s been playing out all season: slow offensive starts, defensive lapses and a team too reliant on isolation plays that kill momentum. Even so, the Orange aren’t entirely out of goals. Syracuse sits at .500 on the overall season, giving them a small target to work toward — finishing above .500 in the regular season. It’s not a solution to the season-long struggles, but it’s at least a tangible benchmark as the team heads into the last game before the ACC Tournament.

With Pittsburgh next, will Syracuse try to show they can still compete?

Legette-Jack’s Emotional Speech Caps 90-65 Win Over Boston College

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse closed out the regular season Sunday with a 90-65 rout of Boston College, the team that handed the Orange one of their most painful losses a year ago.

Syracuse Center, Uche Izoje, against Boston College on Sunday, March 1st, 2026 in the JMA Wireless Dome. Credit: Cadence Dudley

Freshman center Uche Izoje led the way with 24 points and 12 rebounds, her 13th double-double of the season. The Orange dominated the paint, outscoring the Eagles 56-34, and never let the game get close.

The win carried a layer of symmetry.

It was that same Boston College team that Syracuse blew a 17-point halftime lead to in last year’s ACC Tournament — a collapse that came during a difficult period that left Legette-Jack reflecting on her coaching future.

After the final buzzer and a ceremony recognizing the Orange’s graduating seniors, Legette-Jack took the microphone and delivered an emotional address. She explained to the crowd how this group of players rejuvenated her coaching spirit.

Syracuse University Women’s Basketball Seniors, senior appreciation on Sunday, March 1st, 2026 in the JMA Wireless Dome. Credit: Cadence Dudley

“I had brain surgery, and I didn’t take any time off,” she told reporters afterward. “I didn’t feel like myself, and I certainly didn’t coach as well as I wanted to.”

She credited transfers Dominique Darius and Laila Phelia, along with Izoje and senior Jasmyn Cooper, as the group that reignited her passion.

“Had they not come into our lives, we might be making different decisions right now,” she said. “The energy that jumped into my space was like, whoa.”

Her players felt it, too. Phelia said Legette-Jack’s belief in her roster has been a driving force all season.

Syracuse team huddle against Boston College on Sunday, March 1st, 2026 in the JMA Wireless Dome. Credit: Cadence Dudley

“Coach Jack truly believes in the women that she has on her team,” Phelia said. “It just makes players out here want to fight for her… You always want to play for a coach who fights for you, and I feel like Coach Jack definitely is the definition of that.”

Syracuse — after being picked 13th in the ACC preseason poll after a 12-18 season — will head to the ACC Tournament as the No. 7 seed with a coach whose fire is burning again.

Syracuse vs. Boston College Women’s Basketball Senior Night 3/1/26 Photo Gallery

SYRACUSE, N.Y. Graduate student Cadence Dudley ’26 photographed the Syracuse Orange game that faced Boston College’s Women’s Basketball team in the JMA Wireless Dome.

Boozier Daddy: Orange suffer worst conference loss since joining ACC

NCAA Basketball: Syracuse at Duke
Feb 16, 2026; Durham, North Carolina, USA; Duke Blue Devils guard Isaiah Evans (3) reacts after scoring against the Syracuse Orange during the during the first half at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Zachary Taft-Imagn Images

DURHAM, N.C. — The stars were out at Cameron Indoor Stadium for Big Monday between Syracuse and Duke, as Carmelo Anthony, Carlos Boozer, Cooper Flagg and Kon Knueppel were all in the building to take in the action.

But the game they watched was anything but competitive, as the Blue Devils shot 72% from the field in the second half, scoring 61 points and handing the Orange their worst conference loss since joining the ACC and their 11th straight loss to Duke overall in a 101-64 drubbing.

And it was not just the staggering offense numbers that stood out, it was the overall team defense played by Duke that caught the eye of their head coach as well.

“[Defense] is what our identity is. This is as good as a defense as we have had here,” said Duke head coach Jon Scheyer after the game.

The defense surrendered just 24 points to Syracuse in the first half and was led by freshman guard Dane Sarr, whose impact may not be easy to see by looking at the box score, but gave Syracuse fits all evening.

And while Sarr led the defense, his teammate Cameron Boozer anchored it and the Blue Devils as a whole. Boozer recorded a double-double before the end of the first half and finished the game with 22 points and 12 rebounds, while only missing two shots.

NCAA Basketball: Syracuse at Duke
Feb 16, 2026; Durham, North Carolina, USA; Duke Blue Devils forward Cameron Boozer (12) brings the ball to the basket against Syracuse Orange forward Donnie Freeman (1) during the during the second half at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Zachary Taft-Imagn Images

“I don’t think there are too many players in college that can hold him off when he gets to the spots that he wants to,” said Syracuse head coach Adrian Autry.

The player that was tasked with guarding Boozer was forward William Kyle III, and although he led Syracuse with 12 points and added two blocks, he was not afraid to admit the difficulty of the assignment.

“I don’t think I’ve played a player as talented as that as far as getting to his spots and finding his angles,” said Kyle after the game.

Whether it was Duke scoring their first five field goals off offensive rebounds, closing the first half on an 11-0 run in under three minutes, or making fourteen consecutive field goals in the second half, every bounce seemed to fall Duke’s way, and highlighted the difference between the two programs.

NCAA Basketball: Syracuse at Duke
Feb 16, 2026; Durham, North Carolina, USA; Duke Blue Devils forward Maliq Brown (6) brings the ball to the basket during the during the second half against the Syracuse Orange at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Zachary Taft-Imagn Images

And if that wasn’t enough, playing in front of the 9,314 “Cameron Crazies” only made things harder.

“It’s real loud, and I feel like that affected us as far as being organized with our plays and what we were doing,” Kyle said.

The road for Syracuse ahead does not get any easier as well, as the No. 16 North Carolina Tar Heels head to the Dome on Saturday, with tipoff at 1 PM.

Kingz breaks hearts of SMU fans in final seconds on Valentines Day

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — With 2.3 seconds left, Nate Kingz worked SMU’s Boopie Miller to the block and banked in the go-ahead bucket to give Syracuse the 79-78 win. It marks the first pair of back-to-back wins for the Orange in just over a month.

Feb 14, 2026; Syracuse, New York, USA; Syracuse Orange guard Nate Kingz (4) drives the ball with Southern Methodist University Mustangs guard B.J. Edwards (0) defending in the second half at the JMA Wireless Dome. Photo Credit: Mark Konezny-Imagn Images

“The fight that these guys have shown in the last two games, I’m just so proud of them,” head coach Adrian Autry said. “We felt like this was an NCAA Tournament opportunity for us. SMU is a damn good team, and we had a chance to play them on our home court. We didn’t want to lose that opportunity.”

The Kingz-Miller matchup was one that Autry had joked with Kingz about in the week leading up to the game.

“We figured that they would be switching everything,” Autry said. “I was just joking and messing with him, but I said, ‘hey, if we get a switch on you, you think you can take Boopie to the basket?’”

“Coach, anybody that’s in front of me, and I ain’t worried about who it is, I’m going down there and I’m going to score.” Kingz responded.

Syracuse held Miller, the ACC’s sixth best scorer averaging 19.2 points per game, scoreless in the first half. Jaden Toombs and Samet Yiğitoğlu picked up his slack, combining for 18 points on 9-12 shooting by the midway point.

In the second half, Yiğitoğlu picked up his fourth foul with 11:06 left, forcing him to sit for the next six minutes. The Orange battled back from down 61-54 to lead 72-71 while he was on the bench.

“To get him out of the game was huge, because he was causing a lot of issues down there for us,” Autry said. “We knew we were going to give up some stuff to him just because of his ability to play in his size. We just wanted to keep a body on him and just fight to get him out.”

Kiyan Anthony led the second half push, scoring all of his 13 points in less than 10 minutes. Anthony played 24 minutes after seeing the floor for just 14 against California and being benched against Virginia the game prior. He said he leaned on his dad through his first real test of adversity at this level.

“I go to him about everything,” Anthony said. “He even flew up here just to work me out a couple of days and just to talk to me. He was right there by my side, and he never lost confidence in me. He’s the main guy that helped me play the way I did today.”

Feb 14, 2026; Syracuse, New York, USA; Syracuse Orange forward Kiyan Anthony (7) shoots the ball with Southern Methodist University Mustangs guard Jaron Pierre Jr. (5) defending in the second half at the JMA Wireless Dome. Photo Credit: Mark Konezny-Imagn Images

Kingz also finished with 13 points. He’s averaged 17.8 points per game across the last five and said a shift in his mindset has been the difference.

“You can’t play perfect every game, so I’m just going to go out there and play without trying to be perfect,” Kingz said. “I made that adjustment right before the Boston College game. I was like, I’m just going to play freely. I’m not going to think. I’m just going to go out there and be aggressive. Ever since then I’ve just been trying to attack every game with that mindset.”

Donnie Freeman led the team with 18 points and a career high four blocks. He’s now been the top scorer in 11 games this season.

Feb 14, 2026; Syracuse, New York, USA; Syracuse Orange forward Donnie Freeman (1) drives the baseline with Southern Methodist University Mustangs center Samet Yigitoglu (24) defending in the second half at the JMA Wireless Dome. Photo Credit: Mark Konezny-Imagn Images

The Orange has another quick turnaround against their toughest opponent of the year. They’ll play No. 4 Duke at Cameron Indoor on Monday night at 7pm.

“I think we showed that we can compete with those high-level teams,” Kiyan Anthony said. “We’ve had a bit of an inconsistent season, but I don’t feel like we’re done. We had a couple big games that we won. We had a couple big games that we could’ve won. We go to practice every day positive, and we come out here every day thinking we can win every game.”

Syracuse survives late surge from Clemson on the shoulders of Sophie Burrows

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse women’s basketball picked up its 11th ACC win of the season behind a 19-point, 16-rebound double-double from Sophie Burrows. The 68-64 win over Clemson puts the Orange third in the ACC.

Syracuse guard Sophie Burrows shoots against Clemson on Sunday, Feb. 15th, 2026. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

“What a gutsy performance that was by our team,” head coach Felisha Legette-Jack said. “I just really enjoy watching them figure it out. This is a microcosm of life. It’s my responsibility to help young people grow so they can figure out this life thing. I’m just so proud of the young ladies beside me.”

The double-double was Burrows’ first of the season and third of her career. Her 16 rebounds shattered her previous career high of 10.

“I just wanted to come in and try to impact the game in ways that wasn’t just scoring,” Burrows said. “Whether that was defense or offensive rebounds today, that was kind of my goal.”

Syracuse held Clemson scoreless for the first 3:34 of the game. The Orange took a 17-12 lead into the first quarter break, with all starters contributing multiple points or assists.

“One of the most special parts about our team is that we’re so deep,” Burrows said. “We have five people on the court constantly who can score and play defense.”

Sophomore Shy Hawkins shoots against Clemson on Sunday, Feb. 15th, 2026. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

The Tigers picked up the pace in the second quarter, nearly matching the Orange bucket for bucket. Burrows’ 11 rebounds throughout the first half helped Syracuse maintain control of the game, and the Orange took a 34-28 lead into halftime.

“I think a lot of times rebounding is just the effort to go and get it,” Burrows said. “If they’re not going to box me out, then I’m going to try to get in there and help out the bigs a little bit on the glass.”

Sophie Burrows jumps for an offensive rebound against Clemson on Sunday, Feb 15th, 2026. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

Laila Phelia came alive in the third quarter to help Syracuse stay in front 53-48. She finished the game with 17 points after combining for just eight over the last two matchups. She credited her teammates for the bounce-back performance.

“I definitely couldn’t have done it without them,” Phelia said. “Just them having my back and constantly staying in my ear regardless of the situation definitely helped me a lot.”

Syracuse guard Laila Phelia drives for a layup against Clemson on Sunday, Feb. 15th, 2026. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

Clemson came out firing to start the fourth quarter, scoring six straight points to take their first lead 54-53 with 6:57 left to play. Burrows ended the run by draining a three to put Syracuse back on top 56-54. The Tigers stayed close, but the Orange never trailed the rest of the game.

Legette-Jack said she knew Burrows would be knocking down shots like that since she started recruiting her.

“When she plays, she’s locked and loaded. Her eyes [Burrows] are very focused on trying to be the best version of herself,” Legette-Jack said. “After she committed to us, she was playing in a tournament in Spain, and I flew over just to watch so she could know that I was really, really, really excited for her to be a part of this team.”

Syracuse guard Sophie Burrows looks to pass against Clemson on Sunday, Feb. 15th, 2026. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

Eight of Burrows’ rebounds came on the offensive end. The Orange had 18 total compared to one for the Tigers. Syracuse continues to lead the ACC in offensive rebounds per game with 17.2, and Legette-Jack says they represent who this team is.

“Through offensive boards, you tell your story,” head coach Legette-Jack said. “You might beat us in a lot of things, but if you beat us in rebounds, that’s just an effort thing. It’s your heart. What do you stand for? What are you fighting for? What are you willing to get thrown out of the gym for? Go for an offensive rebound because that is your commitment to your dream.”

The Orange have a week off before heading to NC State to take on the Wolfpack next Sunday. Tipoff is set for 2 p.m.

Head Coach Gary Gait: “No Weight” Lifted After Beating No. 1 Maryland

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The No. 2 Syracuse Men’s Lacrosse team (3-0) defeated No. 1 Maryland Terrapins (1-1), 11-9, for the first time in 17 years.   

When the 2026 college lacrosse schedule dropped, everyone in the lacrosse world had the date February 13th marked on their calendars, and it did not disappoint, as 10,159 Orange faithful fans packed the Dome during Friday night’s game.  

“There’s no other place in the world you can go to a game in February and have ten thousand people, screaming, yelling and cheering,” said Syracuse head coach Gary Gait.  

Syracuse fans in attendance cheering during Fridays 11-9 win over No. 1 Maryland
Syracuse fans in attendance cheering during Friday’s 11-9 win over No. 1 Maryland ©Robert Pszybylski 2026

2009 marked the last time Syracuse took down Maryland, snapping an eight-game losing streak against the Terps. Last night, the Orange got the win after the Terps ended the Orange’s season in last year’s Final Four, sending home Cuse in a 14-8 loss.  

The win meant a lot to the 315, but in coach Gait’s eyes, they still haven’t gotten the monkey off their backs after defeating the No. 1 team in the nation.   

“No weight,” Gait said, “It’s February, it’s the third game of the year, but it was a nice step.”  

In last year’s game, senior attackman Joey Spallina recorded only one assist, as the Terps hounded him all day long. Tonight it was different for the Syracuse captain, as he put up a four-goal performance for the second time this season.  

With Maryland’s top defender, Will Schaller, being tasked with shadowing Spallina all night, coach Gait had to find different ways to get his star player the ball.   

“If that means playing off the ball to start possessions, where they have to slide, and now I’m on a different player, then that’s what I’ll do at the end of the day,” said Spallina. “I’m doing whatever I have to do to win the game.”  

Spallina has tallied 11 goals and 7 assists for 18 points so far this season, moving his total to 264 points over his career, putting him 44 points away from Mike Powell’s program record of 307 all-time points.  

“I’ve been seeing it for a long time,” said Maryland head coach John Tillman, “Joey’s a great player; he’s a great kid.”  

Joey Spallina backing down the Maryland defender on top of his four-goal effort Friday night
Joey Spallina backing down the Maryland defender on top of his four-goal effort Friday night ©Robert Pszybylski 2026

The Terps got out to an early lead in the first after a failed offensive possession by the Orange. Leo Johnson came the other way and ripped a shot right past Jimmy McCool to get things going in this one-versus-two showdown.   

The largest lead of the game for the Terps was when they were up 2-1 over the Orange early in the quarter before Cuse sparked a run of five unanswered goals (Spallina 2x, Wyatt Hottle, Tyler McCarthy, Paytan Anderson) putting the Orange up 6-2 in the early stages of the second quarter.   

Maryland’s Elijah Stobaugh had himself a night, recording a hat trick, but getting two of his three goals just about 90 seconds apart to get the Terps back to within two, and they were finding rhythm offensively. Still, it was Cuse’s Michael Leo who had a two-goal third quarter, helping the Orange outpace the Terps.  

That marks Leo’s 20th career multi-goal game and puts the All-American midfielder up to six goals on the year through three games.   

“We were always chasing to be number one for three years,” said Leo, “So now we’re actually being chased, and we’ve got a lot more to do.”  

Entering the fourth and final quarter, Stobaugh notched his third goal for the Terps, which brought them back within one, as Cuse was leading 10-9 until the freshman Bogue Hahn fired a rocket of a shot past Brian Ruppel to give the Orange a late insurance goal up 11-9.   

Joey Spallina and Bogue Hahn celebrating after his goal late in the game
Joey Spallina and Bogue Hahn celebrating after his goal late in the game ©Robert Pszybylski 2026

Even though this was the largest offensive victory over a No. 1 opponent for the Orange since 2009, they also dominated the groundball battle 36-22 with Joey Spallina recording five ground balls and McCool moves 3-0 on the season after a stellar nine-save performance, after earning ACC Defensive Player of the Week honors last week.  

The Orange and Terps went dead even at the face-off circle, winning 12 a piece, with draws being a talking point heading into the game. Each team’s players, John Mullen for Syracuse and Henry Dodge for Maryland, both won 11 draws each.   

After starting 3-0 at the Dome, the Orange will begin their six-game road trip in Cambridge, Massachusetts, against Harvard this Saturday before returning home on March 22nd against Georgetown.   

“I think that would be the real test for us to get out on the road and not be in front of 10,000 people on a cold winter day,” said head coach Gait.   

Kyle III’s grit and Kingz’s 27 points power Syracuse past Cal in 2OT marathon

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — In a wild affair featuring 28 lead changes, 14 ties and two power outages, Syracuse outlasted California 107-100 in double overtime Wednesday night at the JMA Wireless Dome.

J.J. Starling jumping
J.J. Starling finishes a contested layup. Photo Credits: Leah Masi

“I was really proud of the way these guys just kept going,” SU head coach Adrian Autry said, “because we could’ve folded and they didn’t.”

Autry particularly praised senior William Kyle III’s effort.

“I thought Will Kyle was a man amongst boys today,” Autry said. “He gave us 16 rebounds, 15 points and he had that will that we were not going to lose that game.”

William Kyle III on the floor
Wiliam Kyle III grimaces in pain as his legs begin to cramp up in the second overtime. Photo Credits: Leah Masi

Kyle logged a season-high 40 minutes to go with his fourth double-double of the season. However, the workload took its toll, as leg cramps forced the forward to leave the game with 31.6 seconds left in the second overtime. 

“That was actually the first time I’ve ever cramped up in a game,” Kyle III said. “I was running, and both my calves just started getting really tight.”

Nate Kingz shooting a free throw
Nate Kingz sinks a free throw for one of his game-high 27 points. Photo Credits: Leah Masi

Autry also commended Nate Kingz on a standout performance. The redshirt senior dropped a game-high 27 points, eclipsing the 20-point mark for the second time in the last four games.

The Orange snapped a two-game losing streak with the victory and improve to 14-11 (5-7 ACC). Next up for Syracuse is another home game against SMU on Saturday. Tip-off is at 2 p.m. inside the JMA Wireless Dome.

Syracuse vs. Clemson Women’s Basketball 2/15/26 Photo Gallery

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Graduate student Cadence Dudley ’26 photographed the Syracuse Orange game that faced Clemson’s Women’s Basketball team in the JMA Wireless Dome.

Syracuse Women’s Hockey takes down RIT in AHA action due to late-game heroics

Syracuse Forward #26 Peyton Armstrong recorded her 6th goal of the season in the 2nd period against RIT
Syracuse Forward #26 Peyton Armstrong recorded her 6th goal of the season in the 2nd period against RIT – Photo Courtesy: Griffin Uribe Brown | The Daily Orange

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Syracuse Women’s Hockey team defeated RIT 3-2 in the final regular-season home game of the year.  

RIT came into this evening sitting at the 4th seed in the AHA with 29 points, sitting one point ahead of the No. 5 seeded Orange.  

The No. 1 and No. 2 seeds are both secured by Penn State and Mercyhurst. There are seven teams in the AHA playoffs, the No. 3 and No. 4 seeds host playoff games.  

No. 3-seeded Lindenwood took on No. 4 nationally ranked Penn State, losing 6-3, which means Syracuse not only jumped RIT but also the Lions, who were sitting at the No. 3 seed in the AHA with 30 points.   

“We have to take care of our business,” said associate head coach Heather Farrell, “We can’t expect anyone else to help us at this point, so we need to get points tomorrow and get some points from Mercy.”

Syracuse found success quickly in this one, 7:24 into the first period; Jackson Kinsler on the doorstep put home the rebound off the captain Nea Tervonen’s chance to put the Orange up 1-0.   

Shortly after, at the 11:08 mark, Jaidan Fahrny ripped one right past the Syracuse netminder Ava Drabyk, on the Power Play, notching this one up at one a piece.  

Syracuse Goaltender #31 Ava Drabyk made 32 saves on 34 shots faced in the 3-2 win over RIT
Syracuse Goaltender #31 Ava Drabyk made 32 saves on 34 shots faced in the 3-2 win over RIT – Photo Courtesy: Griffin Uribe Brown | The Daily Orange

Moving forward to the later stages of the 2nd period, Emma Gnade and Peyton Armstrong found themselves up the rush on a 2-on-1 where Gnade found Armstrong, who ripped it right by the RIT netminder Brenna McNamara.   

“Army (Peyton Armstrong) is just so quick with her hands, so she was able to roof that puck pretty quickly and hit the water bottle it was a pretty nice goal,” said associate head coach Heather Farrell.

Not even two minutes later, in the late stages of the 2nd period, Cassandra Barnes deflected one in off a point shot from Tilli Keranen to tie it up at two apiece.   

Jumping to the final period of play just over the mid-way point, Ireland Stein ripped one right past Drabyk, giving RIT a 3-2 lead, so that’s what they thought until coach Farrell challenged the play. The officials decided that RIT was the official turning the goal over, keeping this one tied.   

With time running out and this one potentially about to go to overtime, Jessica Cheung delivered her first goal of the season to break the deficit at the 18:38 mark.   

“I haven’t gotten a goal so far this year so, but I’m glad that I was able to get that, and I think it’s really going to boost my confidence,” said Cheung.

The Orange look to keep their pace in the AHA standings on the road tomorrow against RIT, before they hit the road again against Mercyhurst for the team’s final regular-season series of the year.  

Syracuse can’t recover from scoreless quarter in 84–65 loss

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Orange women’s basketball fell to No. 6 Louisville Cardinals, 84–65 Sunday at the JMA Wireless Dome. This game was largely decided by how poorly the Orange opened. They missed shots, turned the ball over and had an inability to find rhythm until it was nearly too late.

The Syracuse community showed up to cheer the Orange on against a nationally ranked team. That belief became all too real when fans were forced to stand and cheer through an entire first quarter. Not because Syracuse was scoring, but because they were waiting for it.

Syracuse didn’t make a field goal in the opening ten minutes. From the opening tip, Louisville set a strong pace. The Cardinals opened on a 10–0 run, forcing an early Syracuse timeout and speeding the game up before the Orange could settle. Within the first four minutes, Syracuse had already turned the ball over four times.

Syracuse went 0-for-13 from the floor, missing open looks and rushed finishes, while Louisville hit 12 of its first 14 shots, shooting 86 percent and building a 28–6 lead. Syracuse wasn’t just outpaced. It was off. The only offense Syracuse could generate early came at the free-throw line.

Guard Sophie Burrows helped create those chances by attacking gaps and getting the ball inside to Uche Izoje, who accounted for Syracuse’s first points from the line. For an entire quarter, free throws were the Orange’s only way onto the scoreboard.

Uche Izoje dribbles the ball.
Center Uche Izoje (#44) dribbles the ball as Syracuse faced Louisville on Sunday, February 8, 2026, inside the JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse. © Robert Pszybylski

“We always talk about throwing the first punch,” Burrows said. “I think they just hit us first.”

That changed early in the second quarter when Dominique Darius finally broke through with a floater — Syracuse’s first made field goal of the game. From there, the offense ran almost entirely through her.

Darius scored 16 of her 22 points in the second quarter alone, attacking downhill, drawing fouls and converting at the free-throw line. Syracuse leaned heavily on the stripe during the stretch, using free throws to chip away possession by possession.

Behind Darius’ run, Syracuse erased much of a 22-point deficit and briefly cut the lead to five, giving the Dome its loudest stretch of the afternoon.

Head coach Felisha Legette-Jack said the rally showed both Syracuse’s potential and how costly the opening minutes proved to be.

Laila Phelia turns the ball over against Louisville.
Guard Laila Phelia (#5) gets the ball stolen from her as Syracuse faced Louisville on Sunday, February 8, 2026, inside the JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse. © Robert Pszybylski

“Credit to Louisville, they’re incredible,” Legette-Jack said. “We were down 20, and then we cut it to five, and then the fouls piled up on us. I thought we were really rolling in there. But today, the better team won.”

Louisville steadied itself before halftime and never allowed Syracuse to fully reset. The Cardinals continued to answer each push with disciplined possessions and timely scoring.

The second half followed a familiar pattern. Syracuse stayed within reach but couldn’t string together stops and baskets at the same time. Outside of Darius, Burrows and Izoje showed brief contributions, but no consistent scoring. Once again, the free-throw line became Syracuse’s most reliable source of offense as field goals stalled.

Meanwhile, Louisville showed balance. Laura Ziegler led the Cardinals with 22 points, anchoring an offense that placed four players in double figures. Each time Syracuse threatened to cut the deficit, Louisville responded, pushing the margin back to double digits.

With under five minutes remaining, Syracuse’s offense visibly shut off. Louisville closed the game efficiently, eventually sitting its starters and allowing its bench to finish out the 84–65 win. This win preserved their unbeaten road record.

Despite the loss, Syracuse pointed to the second-quarter response as a standard, even if it came too late.

“I think that really was Syracuse basketball at its finest,” Burrows said. “That’s how we need to play for 40 minutes if we want to play with teams like Louisville.”

Kathrine Switzer addressing the crowd.
Kathrine Switzer addresses the crowd as her 261 Bib was raised in the rafters at halftime of Syracuse vs Louisville on Sunday, February 8, 2026, inside the JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse. © Robert Pszybylski

That standard carried added weight Sunday, as Syracuse honored Kathrine Switzer for her role in expanding visibility and opportunity for women in sports, with many young girls in attendance throughout the Dome.

“That little kid in the stands who never saw basketball or sport before,” Legette-Jack said, “She’s watching how to become. And it’s our responsibility to give her our best effort.”

That responsibility, Legette-Jack said, made the loss sting even more.

“They’re hurting in that locker room right now,” she said. “They really tried to represent Syracuse the best way they could. They just weren’t good enough today, and that’s the truth.”

The response, she said, will come quickly.

“I guarantee you every single one of them will be in the gym Monday,” Legette-Jack said. “Because they really want to make this place proud.”

Head Coach Felisha Legette-Jack courtside.
Head Coach Felisha Legette-Jack courtside as Syracuse faced Louisville on Sunday, February 8, 2026, inside the JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse. © Robert Pszybylski

Syracuse didn’t lose because of effort alone. The Orange dug themselves too deep a hole, relied too heavily on the free-throw line for offense, and couldn’t recover against a national team.

It was a lesson Syracuse will have to use going forward.

Virginia lets it fly handing Syracuse it’s sixth loss in last seven games

Feb 7, 2026; Charlottesville, Virginia, USA; Virginia Cavaliers forward Thijs de Ridder (28) shoots the ball while Syracuse Orange guard Bryce Zephir (55) and forward William Kyle III (42) defend during the second half at John Paul Jones Arena. Photo Credit: Emily Faith Morgan-Imagn Images

CHARLOTTESVILLE, V.A. — The 18th ranked Virginia Cavaliers came into Saturday’s matchup against Syracuse as the third best offensive rebounding team in the country, and they secured 17 more on route to a 72-59 victory against the Orange.

The Cavaliers took 30 threes in the game, and while they only made ten of them, the offensive rebounds the Cavaliers grabbed on their misses generated second chance opportunities that helped them improve to 20-3 on the season.

“They know and understand how impactful [offensive rebounding] can be for our overall game and offense in particular,” said Virginia head coach Ryan Odom after the game.

On the other side, the Orange were led by 19 points from point guard Nait George, who finished eight of nine shooting on the day, as well as 13 apiece from JJ Starling and Nate Kingz.

Feb 7, 2026; Charlottesville, Virginia, USA; Syracuse Orange guard Naithan George (11) controls the ball while Virginia Cavaliers guard Dallin Hall (30) defends during the second half at John Paul Jones Arena. Photo Credit: Emily Faith Morgan-Imagn Images

But at the end of the day, the second chance points generated by UVA fueled them to victory.

“We just have to turn around and box out,” said Starling after the game.

“They just got more opportunities because of their offensive rebounds, and I think that was the key that separated them from us,” said Syracuse head coach Adrian Autry.

For Autry’s Orange early on, it was a two man show offensively. George scored eight of the team’s first twelve points but was in foul trouble early and had to go to the bench. Starling scored four points in the early going as well but needed to take a breather.

When those George and Starling were off the floor, Syracuse turned to the leading scorer from Monday to put up the most shots, but forward Donnie Freeman really struggled from the floor on Saturday.

Freeman finished the game with a mere five points and only made two of his eleven attempted shots. His frustration boiled over after one of his two made shots, as he screamed at the official pleading he was fouled and was given a technical foul. This tech fueled Virginia, and their lead quickly extended to twelve.

“I thought [Virginia’s] physicality really bothered our front court today,” said Autry.

Feb 7, 2026; Charlottesville, Virginia, USA; Virginia Cavaliers center Ugonna Onyenso (33) dunks the ball while Syracuse Orange forward Donnie Freeman (1) defends during the second half at John Paul Jones Arena. Photo Credit: Emily Faith Morgan-Imagn Images

It felt as if this might be another game where it would get ugly, but Syracuse ended the first half strong. With George and Starling back in there, Syracuse would go on a 13-2 run to tie the game at 33 right before the break and would trail by only three at halftime with the score 38-35.

Syracuse would keep it close for a good portion of the second half as well, but then another mistake from Donnie Freeman ignited the Cavaliers.

Coming out of a media timeout down 48-44, Freeman turned the ball over attempting to inbound it to George as Virginia ran the full-court press over the course of the entire game. That turnover led to a three from Sam Lewis, who led Virginia with 16 points on the day, and an eruption inside the John Paul Jones Arena.

From that point forward, Virginia would never surrender the lead. The Orange would show a bit of fight late, but would never get closer than four, and did not make a shot for almost three minutes to end the game.

“The turnovers and the defense got the game further than what it should have been, but it was those momentum plays that really killed us,” said Kingz.

Feb 7, 2026; Charlottesville, Virginia, USA; Syracuse Orange guard Nate Kingz (4) shoots the ball while Virginia Cavaliers center Johann Gruenloh (17) defends during the second half at John Paul Jones Arena. Photo Credit: Emily Faith Morgan-Imagn Images

One name that was not etched into the box score, and a subplot that was generated from the game was that freshman Kiyan Anthony did not see the floor for the first time this season.

“There are no injuries he is dealing with, this was my decision,” said Autry.

Autry’s decision will raise questions moving forward, but for now, Syracuse soaks up its sixth loss in its last seven games and will return home for a two-game homestand against SMU and California this week.

Syracuse cruises past Boston University in season opener

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The No. 2/3 Syracuse Orange opened the scoring and never looked back, as they took down the No. 16/17 Boston University Terriers Sunday afternoon in the JMA Wireless Dome.  

Senior Joey Spallina led the way for Syracuse with three goals and two assists in the afternoon.  He is now 57 points away from matching Mike Powell’s 307 career points while playing at Syracuse University. Whether taking it to the rack himself or firing the ball through the heart of Boston University’s defense, he showed why he is the USA Lacrosse Preseason Player of the Year. 

Attackmen Joey Spallina (#22) dodges a Boston University defender as Syracuse faced BU on Sunday, February 1, 2026, inside the JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse. © Gino Capicchioni

After the game, Boston University head coach, Ryan Polley, said the goal was to make No. 22 dodge and score on his own, limiting his opportunities to get teammates involved.

“I didn’t see the final stat sheet, but you know, try not to [let Spallina] have the three and four [assists] involving all of his teammates,” Polley said.

One of the biggest questions heading into 2026 for the Orange: Who would replace Owen Hiltz at attack?  Sophomore Payton Anderson had two goals and was able to show his versatility and why he won the job. For Anderson’s first goal, his 6-foot-2, 228-pound frame was on full display, getting underneath his defender and finding his way for a dunk on the doorstep.  His second came off of a perfect cross field feed from Spallina.  

Payton Anderson (#88) celebrates his second goal of the afternoon as Syracuse faced BU on Sunday, February 1, 2026, inside the JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse. © Gino Capicchioni

“[Spallina] draws the attention of every defense. They have to know where he is at all times,” Anderson said, “And like you saw on my goal, he gave me a perfect pass right to my ear and I finished.” 

Seniors Michael Leo and Luke Rhoa each found the back of the net twice from the midfield.  Both were named Inside Lacrosse Preseason All-Americans.  Leo had a few opportunities to invert and attack from behind the cage, but ultimately had success with a quick shot on the run and a step down, courtesy of the feed from senior Spallina.   

Michael Leo (#7) gets downhill against Boston University defender, Connor Kehm (#44) as Syracuse faced BU on Sunday, February 1, 2026, inside the JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse. © Gino Capicchioni

The specialists are where the Orange really jumped off the stat sheet on Sunday.  Jimmy McCool picked up right where he left off as last year’s ACC Goalie of the Year, making 12 saves, good for 67% in the crease.  John Mullen, the faceoff specialist went 14-19, 73%, and added a goal.  The extra possessions were crucial; Syracuse turned the ball over 17 times and struggled to clear against Boston’s 10-man ride all afternoon. 

Head coach Gary Gait now has the baseline for his 2026 season squad.  Gait claims he is happy to start the season off with a win, but knows there is still a lot to be improved upon. 

“Really, it’s just about guys that are going to now take a look at themselves and say, ‘What can I do better this week so that we can execute at a higher level?’”

The Syracuse team still has skills to work on and improve before they face off with Saint Joseph’s on Saturday.

“I thought our guys controlled the game throughout,” Gait said. “They won every quarter and played very smart. And I think we’re only going to get better as we go.”

Thirty-two-point deficit insurmountable despite Orange late game charge

CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA – FEBRUARY 02: Jonathan Powell #11 of the North Carolina Tar Heels celebrates after a basket during the first half against the Syracuse Orange at Dean E. Smith Center on February 02, 2026 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. © David Jensen/Getty Images

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – With just under 10 minutes remaining in the second half, North Carolina guard Johnathan Powell connected on a corner triple to give the Tar Heels a 72-40 lead over what appeared to be a defeated Syracuse squad on its way to the worst loss of the season.

“I thought [North] Carolina set the tone right from the beginning with their physicality on defense, inside in the paint and scoring,” Coach Autry said after the game.

But then, seemingly out of nowhere, the Orange went on a 37-11 run, and at one point, had made 13 of 14 field goals. With a minute left in the game, it was 83-77.

But the fight was too little, too late. The Tar Heels closed the door and walked away with an 87-77 victory, as the Orange remain winless all-time at the Smith Center.

“I thought we were more aggressive late, and we opened the floor up and allowed our guards to make the play,” said Autry of what went right in the final ten minutes.

The problems for Syracuse shined bright in the first half. UNC attacked Orange forward Donnie Freeman on nearly every offensive play. He was tasked with guarding the Heels freshman phenom forward Caleb Wilson, and it was a clear mismatch, as Wilson had 13 points by halftime.

Autry was left with a predicament because, on the other end, Freeman was the only Syracuse player who could score consistently in the first half. He made up 18 of ‘Cuse’s first 32 points.

CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA – FEBRUARY 02: Jonathan Powell #11 of the North Carolina Tar Heels defends Donnie Freeman #1 of the Syracuse Orange during the second half of a basketball game at Dean E. Smith Center on February 02, 2026 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. (© David Jensen/Getty Images)

But the subplot unfolded when the ball wasn’t in the hands of those two, highlighting the key difference between the two teams. UNC had five players not named Wilson with at least five points or more at halftime, while Syracuse only had one not named Freeman.

The Tar Heels also had nine assists and four turnovers heading into the locker room. Syracuse, on the other hand, assisted on only two baskets and committed nine turnovers.

“We have to do a better job of moving without the ball and making quicker decisions, and we just did not do that,” said coach Autry.

Starting the second half trailing 46-32, Syracuse failed to make adjustments.

For the first ten minutes of the second half, UNC went on a 26-8 run led by freshman Luka Bogavac, who at one point scored eight straight Carolina points. Tar Heel fans were heading for the exits with every indication that this ballgame was over.

But then things changed. As they’ve done in so many different spurts this season, Syracuse started to show life, and a lot of it. When coach Autry brought forward Akir Souare into the game, Syracuse began to get stops, and then those stops led to points. In only nine minutes of action Souare finished with a plus-17.

At the same time, guard Kiyan Anthony started to make some baskets, guard Nate Kingz knocked down some big-time 3s, and there was a legitimate scare sent through the Tar Heel faithful late.

“I put a lot of stock into [what happened at the end of the game],” said UNC coach Hubert Davis after the game as he proceeded to give Syracuse credit for not giving up.

At the end of the day, there is a reason that only three teams in the history of Division I college basketball have come back from a 30-point deficit, and the Orange fell short once again to drop their fifth game of the last six.

Feb 2, 2026; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA; Syracuse Orange head coach Adrian Autry reacts in the first half at Dean E. Smith Center. © Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

And the message was strong after the game.

“We just have to be more consistent in what we are trying to do,” said Coach Autry three times as he will prepare his team for another road ranked matchup on Saturday against the Virginia Cavaliers.

Sports media student, Maggie Robinson, does it all: reviving Cooking with ‘Cuse and buried interests

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Maggie Robinson, a Broadcast Digital Journalism graduate student at Newhouse, revived ‘Cooking with ‘Cuse,’ a food show that was on hiatus before Robinson and Cypris Wilkinson got their hands in the mix.

Maggie Robinson preparing for another episode of Cooking with ‘Cuse | © Cypris Wilkinson

For Robinson, sports has never just been a game, but a foundation. As a multi-sport athlete and Division I competitor in soccer, she learned early what it meant to fully commit to something demanding. That same discipline has followed her off the field, shaping how she approaches all of her passions.

“Yeah, I think I love my sports projects that I’m doing here. But I think something I’ve tried to lean into more is all the different aspects of my personality and interests,” said Robinson,” Like food was such a big part of my life and I kind of forgot about that so it’s given me the opportunity to get a lot of air time and learn how to prepare a show.”

Robinson’s background in broadcast production showed her the power of storytelling but also revealed something deeper. She doesn’t want to just capture moments, she wants to connect people to them.

Maggie Robinson ahead of a matchup between Syracuse Women’s Soccer and UVA © Christian Locker

That desire to connect people together naturally carried into her passion for food. Long before culinary storytelling, food was woven into her life; “Maggie’s Munchies,” was a health-focused food Instagram account that Robinson created, born out of her athlete lifestyle.

In both sports and food, Robinson saw the same core truth: these are shared experiences. A meal, similar to a game, brings people from wildly different backgrounds together around something joyful, human, and universal.

“Go to the club fair. Talk to people in different programs. I think getting outside the sports bubble is super beneficial. It just makes you more well-rounded as a person and gain many other skills that can be applicable.” urged Robinson to students.

Now, Robinson’s work lives at the intersection of these two worlds. Whether she is helping elevate a sports broadcast or hosting a food-focused series, her approach is the same — find the authentic story and give that to the audience with care.

Robinson advises students to lean into their other interests, “Something I’ve also learned through this and am really glad to have gotten is that I can be passionate about more than one thing. When I think about telling a story about an athlete, their whole thing isn’t just being an athlete. That’s like the least important thing about them honestly. It’s about who are you as a human being.”

Freeman comes off bench as Orange snap four-game slide

SYRACUSE, N.Y. – Syracuse men’s basketball played its 11th game without star forward Donnie Freeman in its starting lineup. But this time it wasn’t due to injury – it was by choice.

Syracuse Forward, Donnie Freeman, against Notre Dame on Saturday, Jan. 31st, 2026 in Syracuse NY. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

In the midst of a four-game losing streak, head coach Adrian Autry decided to bring Freeman off the bench and start Sadiq White Jr. It was Freeman’s second time playing the role of reserve this season, with the first coming in his return from injury.

The gamble paid off, as the Orange defeated Notre Dame, 86-72.

Autry emphasized that his choice was based on matchups and strategy. He also said Freeman understood the decision.

“Me and him had talked and he was ready to go,” Autry said. “He’s trying to win. He had a great attitude.”

Coach Autry on court side on Saturday, Jan. 31st, 2026 in Syracuse NY. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

After the game, it appeared as if Autry’s assessment was correct. Freeman dapped up White in the tunnel before the two shared a laugh.

Autry said he was not sure if Freeman, who finished with seven points and six rebounds in 22 minutes, would be in the starting lineup Monday against North Carolina.

With Freeman playing the role of spectator for the game’s first eight minutes, JJ Starling shined as Syracuse’s de-facto scorer. The former Fighting Irish guard is known for his ability to score near the basket, but he turned into a marksman in the first half. He scored 17 points while making all seven of his shots in the first 20 minutes – including a trio of three-pointers.

Syracuse Guard, J.J. Starling, shooting against Notre Dame on Saturday, Jan. 31st, 2026 in Syracuse NY. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

In the second half, Notre Dame made a point to deny Starling opportunities. He gladly deferred, making way for the crowning moment of Nate Kingz’s Syracuse career so far.

The senior transfer scored 22 points in the second half, draining nine of 12 shots. Kingz, normally a long-range specialist, submitted a barrage of dunks down the stretch to close the game for the Orange.

“I like getting dunks, and screaming and getting hype,” Kingz said. “I don’t think I’ve ever had three dunks in one game… that was pretty fun.”

Syracuse Guard, Nate Kingz, shooting against Notre Dame on Saturday, Jan. 31st, 2026 in Syracuse NY. Photo Credits: Cadence Dudley

Kingz finished the game with a season-best 28 points. It was the culmination of his perseverance through early season struggles, and the ability to accept his imperfections.

“Sometimes when you’re one-for-three, (you feel like), the next one you’ve gotta make it,” he said. “If I miss a few, I kind of get in a shell. I just kind of broke out of it and said ‘you’re going to make mistakes.’”

Before Kingz’s second-half outburst, legendary former Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim took the court with the family of Lawrence Moten. During a halftime ceremony, the group honored Moten, who passed away in 2025.

“I know right now he’s up there rooting for Syracuse to win a game,” Boeheim said.

If Moten was watching, he almost certainly wore a smile as the final whistle blew.

Spectrum News Partners with Newhouse Sports Media Center

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Spectrum News stopped by the Sports Media Center at Newhouse on Jan. 30, 2026 to present students with live broadcasting opportunities. This partnership allows students to report live on Syracuse sports games, and get their stories broadcast across New York state.

Ray Sullivan (left) and Tim Robertson (right) speaking about Spectrum News live broadcasting opportunities

Managing Editor of Central New York, Ray Sullivan, and Digital Executive Producer, Tim Robertson, met with aspiring reporters eager to learn about how they could report on behalf of Spectrum News. This strategic partnership provides students with a chance to go out into the field and find captivating stories to report on, with an emphasis on Syracuse sports.

The partnership is a great way for students to gain experience in the world of live sports, as well as produce original content for Spectrum News. Sullivan emphasized this point by stating,“… it’s a two-way street. We want to give students the opportunity to get your work onto a professional news broadcast—great for your reels, great for your resumes…producing on air. And the other direction of that street is—we get some content.”

Ray Sullivan (left) addressing advantages of working with Spectrum News as an entry level reporter

Spectrum News is a network station with a reach that expands across the nation. Sullivan listed the regions where Spectrum is broadcast, some of which include California, Texas, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and parts of the Midwest including Ohio and Wisconsin. He then points out the advantage of working with a network that has cultivated such a broad reach across the nation.

That advantage is internal growth within the company. “If you start at Syracuse market … you don’t even have to leave your own company to end up at market number one in New York City”, Sullivan explains.

Ray Sullivan (left) addressing student questions during the Q&A portion of the event

Sullivan and Robertson then opened the floor for students to ask any remaining questions. They followed up with examples of previous students’ work, displaying the quality of work they’re looking for. To conclude the presentation, Sullivan encouraged students to share their content with them so they can provide feedback and ensure the quality of work meets the standard of Spectrum News.

Ultimately, students left the event excited and hopeful to begin the next phase of their professional journey.