Creighton transfer Christian Bishop commits to Texas over Kansas, UNC

Texas head coach Chris Beard has raided the NCAA transfer portal over the past week.

While many assumed that this would be a rebuilding year for Texas basketball, newly hired head coach Chris Beard had other plans. He wants to win right away.

Beard’s latest moves have suddenly revamped Texas’ roster. Not only did Brock Cunningham, Jase Febres and Andrew Jones announce their returns for another season, Beard has done incredible work via the NCAA transfer portal.

Beard was able to land commitments from Utah forward Jimmy Allen and Kentucky guard Devin Askew over the past week.

On Friday morning, Longhorns Wire mentioned that small forward Christian Bishop was deciding between three schools after entering the transfer portal. He was a highly sought-after player in the portal after a promising three seasons with Creighton. Bishop eventually chose Texas over Kansas and the University of North Carolina.

Bishop averaged 11.0 points and a team-high 6.4 rebounds last season for Creighton. He shot 68 percent from the floor and started all 31 games.

Needles to say, it’s been a fantastic week for Beard and his staff.

Warren Buffett’s million-dollar March Madness contest returns, and his employees need Creighton to go deep

Warren Buffett’s employees could win big this year, especially if Creighton advances.

March Madness is back, and so is Warren Buffett’s (almost) annual giveaway for having a strong bracket. And that means someone has a change to win $1 million for the rest of their lives if they can correctly predict all of the Sweet 16 teams.

The 90-year-old billionaire’s company, Berkshire Hathaway, is bringing back its employee competition for the men’s NCAA tournament after it didn’t happen last year — along with the tournament itself — because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Bloomberg reported.

And the potential prize money is broken into tiers.

First — in what seems like perhaps the “easiest” path to a win — Buffett’s company will give $100,000 to the employee who accurately picks the winner of the most games before an incorrect pick, per Bloomberg. To win here, they don’t have to be perfect with their picks; they just have to out-do their coworkers by one game.

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Another way for employees to get a big bonus is by nailing the first-round games.

Berkshire will award an employee with $1 million for correctly picking each first-round matchup, and if someone correctly picks the winner of each of the first- and second-round games, they will get $1 million a year for the rest of their life.

But there’s more if Creighton — the No. 5 seed in the West Region from Buffett’s hometown of Omaha, Nebraska — wins big.  Via Bloomberg:

Berkshire also brought out its hometown spirit, saying that the winner’s prize will be doubled if Creighton University, which is based in Buffett’s hometown of Omaha, Nebraska, makes it to the final four teams remaining in the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s 2021 men’s basketball championship.

So if Creighton makes it to the Final Four, an employee’s winnings could end up being $200,000, $2 million or $2 million a year for life.

It’s not quite like the time Buffett put up $1 billion for anyone who ended up with a perfect March Madness bracket. But this still takes an office bracket pool to another level.

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Blocking out the Silence: Denzel Mahoney thrives on malleability

When Creighton guard Denzel Mahoney tore his ACL, he did the only thing he knew how: Adapt and overcome adversity.

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In an instant, silence filled the Las Vegas arena.

When a defender plucked Denzel Mahoney’s teammate at halfcourt, Mahoney planted his foot and bolted in the opposite direction. Down big at halftime to a powerhouse opponent in the Fab 48 Tournament, where the best high school prospects took center stage, Mahoney’s team roared back to trail by just one. 

Rubber on glass echoed throughout the arena, Mahoney pinning the ball to the backboard. And then, in an instant, it was all over.

Mahoney lay motionless under the rim.

The summer before his senior season, the Florida A8 State Player of the Year wouldn’t receive any high-major NCAA offers; coaches throughout the arena heard the pop loud and clear. 

“Why me?” Mahoney cried as trainers carried him off of the court. “What did I do wrong?”

To continue his basketball journey Mahoney would have to adapt and overcome. It’s how he went from missing out on varsity to high-school stardom, from tearing his ACL to starring at Southeast Missouri and from struggling in a diminished role to becoming the Big East’s Sixth Man of the Year at Creighton.

Mahoney’s malleability would be his saving grace throughout his life. But for now, the same trait of his knee was all that mattered.

*****

After the final buzzer sounded, Mahoney tightened his focus.

Mahoney wasn’t thinking about the game’s result. As players exited the court, Mahoney ran onto the hardwood to put up shots.

Mahoney had a problem, though. He struggled to lift a basketball nearly as large as he was and struggled to launch the ball anywhere near the rim. This court wasn’t fit for a baby.

Growing up in Oviedo, Florida, one-year-old Mahoney attended all of his brother Darrell Hamilton’s high school basketball games, infatuated with the sport from as early as he could remember. 

“Ever since then, I want to be just like him,” Mahoney said.

After games, he’d chase after the ball, attempting to sink shots.

Hamilton embraced his little brother, allowing him to hang around his basketball team as he pleased, despite some of his friends mistaking Mahoney for his son.

“I treated him like he was my little kid although he was my brother,” Hamilton said.

Even as Hamilton went off to college in Kansas to play basketball, Mahoney made trips to watch his brother take the floor. Playing his last two years in St. Augustine, Florida, was “instrumental” for Mahoney, as Hamilton says, being closer to his brother and his basketball games.

When Mahoney reached preschool, his mother, Hazel, quit her job to focus on time with her son and make sure he could further his love for basketball.

“She sacrificed her work for me,” Mahoney said. “[She] made sure I learned and got everything I wanted.”

Off the court, Mahoney’s soft-spoken nature didn’t draw attention. But on the court, even a young Mahoney started to turn heads.

From the age of three, Mahoney played organized basketball, dominating YMCA and church leagues. By fifth grade, Mahoney played AAU basketball. 

Unlike most kids, Mahoney spurned casual pickup games for shooting guns and full-fledged workouts. As a seventh-grader, Mahoney had 24/7 access to an at-home gym, owned by family friend Irwin Hudson. There, Mahoney’s handling and passing improved, despite being forced to play center for most of his teams as the tallest kid.

“He never wanted to leave the gym,” Hamilton said.

As Mahoney prepared for high school basketball, one rule devastated Mahoney, all of his work for naught: At Orlando Christian Prep, no freshmen would be allowed on varsity.

Mahoney took up soccer and football in eighth and ninth grade. Nothing would replace basketball, though. For a better opportunity, Mahoney transferred to Hagerty High School, where he’d eventually flourish.

To Hamilton, Mahoney’s devotion to basketball was always evident. But when Mahoney was in 10th grade, Hamilton realized he’d be a special player.

As Hamilton watched sophomore Mahoney play, he sat in the stands, confused. Mahoney’s team played a spread offense, whizzing the ball around the court.

“I was thinking to myself, ‘Man, how come you’re so passive?'” Hamilton said. 

When the game ended, Hamilton glanced at the score sheet, stunned. Mahoney spent the whole game moving the ball like the team-first player he was. How on earth did he end up with 24 points, eight rebounds and six assists?

After the game, Hamilton asked Mahoney to be more aggressive. If he could do that despite his passivity, Hamilton knew how devastating he could be if he pumped the gas harder. That year, Mahoney led his conference in scoring. 

At that point, Hamilton knew his brother flipped a switch.

“When I saw that he was playing that way that’s when I really saw that he understands the game, that he gets it and he’s going to be a really good player at the next level,” Hamilton said.

From there, Mahoney continued to accrue awards and championships, carving his path to play Division I college basketball. But during the height of his recruitment, playing with his AAU team, Q6 All-Stars Elite, at the Fab 48 Tournament in Las Vegas, one awkward landing derailed everything.

Hamilton had never seen Mahoney jump as high as he did on that fateful leap, the rejection that would set him back months and scare off college coaches.

“It took the air out of the gym,” Hamilton said.

Hamilton hoped it wasn’t serious. A bad sprain, maybe. A minor tear. But as trainers carried Mahoney off of the court and as the days went on, MRIs confirmed the worst: A torn ACL.

For the rest of the tournament, Hamilton stayed at Mahoney’s side, as he limped around his hotel room in a boot and crutches. He did all he could to keep Mahoney’s spirits up.

“Things happen,” Hamilton would tell his brother. “There’s nothing that you did wrong.”

All it took was one coach to believe in Mahoney, and that coach was Southeast Missouri’s Rick Ray.

“The way sports medicine is today, I’m 100% confident you’re gonna bounce back,” Ray told Mahoney. “And when you do, I’ve got a scholarship for you.”

Mahoney would miss his senior season rehabbing his ACL injury. He had a scholarship at a Division I school. There was no reason to risk that certainty. 

Mahoney rehabbed his knee in Orlando, battling through the physical and mental rigors of his injury. 

“The hardest thing was just the mental aspect of it,” Mahoney said.

Through all of the hardship and the doubt, a milestone came five months after surgery. Finally, his knees were strong enough to begin jogging again. To keep taking steps back towards the court.

“I was just smiling ear to ear,” Mahoney said.

*****

When Damien Jefferson first saw Mahoney’s raggedy, spiked hair and goofy glasses, he had one wish: Don’t let this kid be my roommate.

Jefferson doesn’t know why, but he dreaded sharing a room with the Southeast Missouri transfer. But he and Mahoney would share a dorm and, in time, a transformative bond.

Jefferson understood the challenges of transferring to Creighton, moving to Omaha after playing his freshman year at New Mexico. The two transfers shared a common pain. 

Moving from Florida to Missouri was difficult enough for Mahoney. Aside from leaving his family, Mahoney endured the harsh Cape Girardeau winters, at least compared to tropical Oviedo.

On one snowy October morning – unheard of for a native Floridian – Mahoney awoke in disbelief. The sheen of white covering the ground outside his window had to be fake. But through the distance from his family and through the cold, Mahoney kept a positive attitude.

“Not one time did he complain, he actually embraced it, and was like ‘Send me another coat’,” Hamilton said.

Mahoney dominated opponents at Southeast Missouri, winning awards like conference Freshman of the Year and scoring nearly 20 points per game. Yet, Mahoney had a goal, one he believed would go unrealized at Southeast Missouri. 

Mahoney wanted to play on the biggest stage, to reach the NCAA Tournament. Ohio Valley Conference powerhouses Murray State and Belmont run the conference — Southeast Missouri has won the conference once in history. 

With more left to accomplish, Mahoney left Missouri and everything that came with basketball stardom, transferring to Creighton, even further from his home, without a friend for hundreds of miles.

And despite Jefferson’s initial impression of his new roommate, Mahoney turned a skeptic into a best friend quickly. Jefferson remembered what it was like to know nobody on campus. 

“He motivated me and he knew what I was struggling with,” Mahoney said. “I’m used to being the guy.”

At Creighton, Mahoney transitioned from carrying the scoring load to coming off of the bench. He struggled to shake old habits, often taking shots the coaches weren’t fond of.

As much as Jefferson helped his roommate’s transition, Mahoney’s positivity and humor captivated Jefferson.

“He will never let you have a bad day,” Jefferson said.

When Jefferson sulked after a bad game, Mahoney would blast old-school music and host a mini-concert in their living room to lift his roommate’s spirits.

On the court, Mahoney adapted quickly. A team-first player, Mahoney reverted to his passivity of old, finding a role in Creighton’s rotation quickly.

“I had to accept the role that was given to me and make the best of it in any way possible, leave my imprint on the game,” Mahoney said. 

Embracing this role, Mahoney engineered a Big East Sixth Man of the Year campaign. Mahoney wasn’t a good shooter when he was little, nor did he know about his 6-foot-11 wingspan, yet he played the 3-and-D role for the Bluejays.

The sacrifices Mahoney made led to a share of the Big East regular-season title, the first in program history. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, he wouldn’t reach an NCAA Tournament this season. But at Creighton, Mahoney accomplished more than he ever thought he would.

“Being a part of that team and making that push and making history, I think it was worth it,” Mahoney said. “Everything was worth it.”

*****

Darrell Hamilton’s phone buzzed.

“You know your brother played the other day,” the caller said.

“No way, what’d he do that for?” Hamilton replied.

“He said he was feeling good,” the caller responded.

Mahoney wasn’t supposed to play a second of competitive basketball until he reached Cape Girardeau. His scholarship at Southeast Missouri wasn’t going anywhere.

Not even an ACL tear could pry Mahoney away from the court for long. His coach wasn’t going to let Mahoney play more than 20 minutes in his senior season debut. The risk wasn’t worth it. But Mahoney’s team found itself down big, needing a spark to secure a victory.

Seven months earlier, injury kept Mahoney from finishing his comeback.

Seven months and 24 points later, Mahoney led his Hagerty team to victory.

“The guy went out on his own merit,” Hamilton said. “He knew his body, he was confident in himself.”

The pandemic allows Hamilton to spend more precious time with his brother. Even when Mahoney lived miles away, the brothers cherished spring and summer breaks together.

Mahoney has to remain focused, though. He has big plans, goals he writes down and executes. Pandemic or not, Mahoney still has an NBA dream to train for

“Over time, seeing that evolution and maturation him growing up, [he] really turned from a boy to a man,” Hamilton said.

Mahoney spends his days where he always did, at Irwin Hudson’s gym, getting hundreds of shots up, lifting weights and watching film. When Mahoney’s next basketball opportunity calls, he has to be ready.

Almost five years after his injury, Mahoney struggles to trust his own knees at times. Certain movements are still dubious. What if his ACL gives out again?

Amongst the deafening silence within his own head, Hamilton’s words echo louder.

“In the end, it’s all going to be worth it.”

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When, where, how to watch, how to stream Oklahoma-UCF

After losing by 10 to Creighton (9-2) on Tuesday, 83-73 the Sooners come home after a month of road games to take on their second…

After losing by 10 to Creighton (9-2) on Tuesday, 83-73 the Sooners (7-3) come home after a month of road games to take on their second American Conference opponent of the season in Central Florida (9-2).

After two consecutive shooting performances below 40% from the field, Oklahoma hopes to get back on track in the Lloyd Noble Center.

Against the Bluejays, the Sooners were ice cold outside of Austin Reaves, Brady Manek and Kristian Doolittle. The trio accounted for 61 of Oklahoma’s 73 points. The ball has to move around more if the Sooners want to build momentum towards Big 12 play which is lurking right around the corner.

If you cannot make it to the LNC, here’s how to catch the broadcast:

WHERE: Norman, Okla. (Lloyd Noble Center)

WHEN: 1:00 p.m. CT

HOW TO WATCH: Fox Sports Oklahoma / Fox Sports Atlantic

HOW TO LISTEN: Sooner Sports Radio Network—KOKC AM 1520 and KRXO 107.7 FM in OKC, KMOD FM 97.5 and KTBZ AM 1430 in Tulsa (click here for more options if not in either of those markets)

HOW TO STREAM: Fox Sports App

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4 takeaways form Oklahoma’s 83-73 loss to Creighton

Oklahoma (7-3) dropped another on the road, losing to Creighton (9-2) 83 to 73.

Oklahoma (7-3) dropped another on the road, losing to Creighton (9-2) 83 to 73. The Sooners had three of their five scorers in double-digits but could only muster 12 total points outside of Brady Manek, Kristian Doolittle and Austin Reaves.

ONE-MAN SHOW

I think it’s fair to say that the Sooners are a one-man show so far this season. Kristan Doolittle’s performances this season are what is keeping Oklahoma above water. At the half, Doolittle had 13 of the Sooners’ 38 points and eight of the teams 19 rebounds. As the lone senior on the squad, Doolittle has shown great leadership but it seems to be falling on deaf ears so far. He finished with 21 points and 15 rebounds in 35 minutes.

DEFENSE NEEDS WORK

Stop me if you’ve heard this before but there’s a defensive problem in Norman. The Sooners lacked effort defensively and it showed. The eye test alone would tell you that Oklahoma is slow and sloppy. Transition points came very easy for Creighton, especially to start the second half. It seemed as though the only reason the Bluejays did not score was when they got in their own way.

In the second half, the Sooners were simply bullied by the Jays. Lose balls, rebounds, you name it, Creighton wanted it more than Oklahoma.

HARMON & BIENIEMY NON-EXISTENT

A combined 0-14 halfway through the second half, the backcourt duo of Jamal Bieniemy and De’Vion Harmon were essentially ghosts against Creighton. Harmon did not even have a recorded stat until 5:54 left in the second half when he made his first shot of the night. Harmon finished with three points on one of seven shooting in 22 minutes. Bieiemy tallied three rebounds and four assists in 20 minutes but was 0-8 from the floor.

CREIGHTON MADE IT RAIN

It was elementary for the Bluejays. They were not ran off the three-point line and made the Sooners pay for it. Coming into tonight, Creighton had made 10 or more three-pointers in eight of their 10 games. They continued the streak against Oklahoma making 12 of their 35 attempts.

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When, where, how to watch, how to stream Oklahoma-Creighton

Following an 80-75 loss to Wichita State (9-1) on Saturday, Oklahoma (7-2) looks to rebound against Creighton (8-2) tonight. 

Following an 80-75 loss to Wichita State (9-1) on Saturday, Oklahoma (7-2) looks to rebound against Creighton (8-2) tonight.

With the Sooners having just three remaining non-conference games before the  Sooners host Kansas State to kick-off Big 12 play on Jan. 4, tonight’s matchup carries a lot of weight moving forward.

Kristian Doolittle continues to impress after a season-high 28 points against North Texas and 22 points against Wichita State. He, alongside Austin Reaves, lead the Sooners, averaging 16.8 and 17.1 points per game respectively.

Oklahoma played host to the Bluejays last year on Dec. 18 and beat them 83-70. The Sooners lead the all-time series 4-2. Tonight’s game is part of the inaugural Big 12/Big East Challenge.

Here is how to follow the Sooners on the road:

WHERE: Omaha, Neb.

WHEN: 7:30 p.m. CT

HOW TO WATCH: Fox Sports One

HOW TO LISTEN: Sooner Sports Radio Network—KOKC AM 1520 and KRXO 107.7 FM in OKC, KMOD FM 97.5 and KTBZ AM 1430 in Tulsa (click here for more options if not in either of those markets)

HOW TO STREAM: Fox Sports Go

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3 keys for Oklahoma against Creighton

Following a road loss to Wichita State (9-1), Oklahoma (7-2) squares off against Creighton (8-2) in Omaha.

Following a road loss to Wichita State (9-1), Oklahoma (7-2) squares off against Creighton (8-2) in Omaha.

START HOT

I know I sound like a broken record but the Sooners absolutely need to put a full 40 minutes together. Against the Shockers, Oklahoma was ice cold to start the game and down the stretch. The Sooners need to make shits early and often to gain confidence not just tonight, but for the rest of the season.

GET ON TRACK

Oklahoma has had a slow start to the season, allowing teams that have no business keeping the game close within striking range. The Sooners must put together a win against Creighton, no matter what. With an initial NET ranking at No. 37, the season is set to only get harder for Oklahoma. With a win tonight, no matter how they do it, it will bode well for the Sooners moving forward.

STAY HEALTHY

Obviously something everyone hopes for every game but with Big 12 play right around the corner, Oklahoma can not afford any injuries. Just two games separate the Sooners from the Big 12. As this team continues to mesh, staying healthy with be a major key to playing better.

Oklahoma and Creighton are set to tip-off at 7:30p.m. CT on Fox Sports One.

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