San Diego aims to end its eight-game road losing streak with a win over San Francisco. The teams meet Saturday for the first time this season.
San Francisco; Saturday, 10 p.m. EST BOTTOM LINE: San Diego will look to stop its eight-game road losing streak when the Toreros face San Francisco. The Dons have gone 12-0 in home games. San Francisco is third in the WCC at limiting opponent scoring,
Forward Javan Johnson scored a team-high 21 points, but the Santa Cruz Warriors coughed up the lead late in their 102-98 loss to the San Diego Clippers in NBA G League action at Frontwave Arena in
UCSD visits the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors after Aniwaniwa Tait-Jones scored 32 points in the Tritons' 79-54 win against the CSU Northridge Matadors.
Transfer news LIVE! Arsenal launch shock Watkins move and rival Chelsea for Tel, Man Utd medical booked - The transfer window is approaching its final week as clubs in the Premier League and across Eu
The New York Yankees may not be done making moves yet. There's still just about two weeks until Spring Training.
The San Diego Toreros (4-17, 1-7 WCC) will be looking to stop a seven-game losing skid when hitting the road against the San Francisco Dons (16-6, 6-3 WCC) on Saturday, January 25, 2025 at War
Led by Paulius Murauskas' 24 points, the Saint Mary's Gaels defeated the San Francisco Dons 71-51 on Thursday night.
However, the Yankees have been quiet for a while, largely because they want to move Stroman before continuing to rebuild their roster. Stroman is still a viable starter, but the Y
In what’s been a particularly motionless January, the topic that has dominated Yankees headlines has been the team’s adamant attempt to shed as much of Marcus Stroman’s $18
The biggest target elsewhere is Mathys Tel, who appeared to bid goodbye to Bayern Munich fans on teh pitch last night and is the subject of a bidding war involving Manchester United, Tottenham, Chelsea and, potentially Arsenal. Spurs have also been linked with Yoane Wissa, Noah Okafor, Tyler Dibling and Angel Gomes.
New York keeps letting infielders fly off the market, and their penny-pinching owner is to blame.