San Francisco hosts Oregon State
Only one more half stands between San Fran. and the win they were favored to collect coming into this evening. They have jumped out to a quick 43-34 lead against Oregon State. If San Fran. keeps playing like this,
Oregon State picked up a big win back in Gill Coliseum Thursday night, taking down the San Francisco Dons 64-57. The Dons had previously been undefeated in West Coast Conference play, so the win gives the Beavers, now 8-9 overall and 4-2 in conference play ...
Oregon State faces San Francisco. Our college basketball odds series has our Oregon State San Francisco prediction, odds and pick.
San Francisco faces the Oregon State Beavers after Malik Thomas scored 20 points in San Francisco's 80-63 win over the Pepperdine Waves.
This is coach Wayne Tinkle’s best performance at home since his first year in Corvallis, when Oregon State produced a 15-2 record at Gill in 2014-15. Since the 11-1 record in 1989-90, the Beavers have had only four two-loss seasons at home.
Oregon State's recent momentum came to screeching halt Saturday night in Gill Coliseum, with the Beavers getting blown out 86-61 by the Portland Pilots. Oregon
In this weekly notes WCC column, I share my insights on the four teams in our coverage footprint, Gonzaga, Oregon State, Saint Mary’s, and Washington State.
Significant movement took place in the logjam at the top of the West Coast Conference women’s basketball standings last weekend. A week ago six teams were knotted at the top of the WCC. A week later just two remained deadlocked – Gonzaga and Washington State. Both teams swept a pair of games last week to gain a little separation.
Why did Chip Kelly leave UCLA for Ohio State? Here's why the former Bruins head coach became the Buckeyes' offensive coordinator in 2024:
While Mark Few's Gonzaga Bulldogs have long been a dominant force in college basketball, particularly in the West Coast Conference, the team has experienced a downturn in recent years.
By the end of their first season of ACC basketball, Cal and Stanford women’s teams will have traveled more than 23,000 miles apiece for conference road games. In their first road trips, to SMU and Clemson earlier this month,