Monday, February 23, 2026

Celtics 111, Lakers 89

 

LA sucks. A full strength Lakers squad, with Luka and LeBron and Smart all in the starting lineup, couldn't even break 90 points against the Boston Celtics. Having taken down the Warriors and the Lakers, the Celtics are now 2-0 on this post-All-Star break, West-Coast road trip.

The Celtics outrebounded the Lakers, 50-39. They hit more three-pointers, 15, than L.A. (9). Jaylen Brown dropped 32 points, Pritchard, 30, and Queta had a double double with 10 points and a dozen rebounds. And the Celttics never let up, tying or beating the Lakers every quarter of the game - no trademark "underperforming" quarters.

Our old friend Marcus Smart was on the court for 22:22 and didn't score a single point, going 0-7 including five missed three-pointers. Only one rebound the whole game, too. Hard to fathom how this team is in first place in the Pacific division. 

Meanwhile, in the Atlantic, Boston remains in first, one game ahead on the Knicks (coincidentally, just before the All-Star break, the Celtics lost to the Knicks, 111-89, the exact same score as last night's win over the Lakers). However, Boston remain 5½ back from the Pistons in the Eastern Conference standings. 

The Celtics' West-Coast road trip continues with a Tuesday night game against the Phoenix Suns (33-25), the second-place team in the Pacific.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

USA 2, Canada 1 (OT)

 

I wasn't going to cover the Winter Olympics here. Too much, too confusing, and I can't stand figure skating. But when both the USA men's and women's hockey teams beat Canada to win gold medals, both in OT by final scores of 2-1 at that, and both teams are chock full of BU alumni, well, I have to say something. 

I had confused the Jack Hughes who scored the game-winning goal in OT with the Jack Hughes who played for the Terriers from 2023 to 2025. I was further confused that Jack's brother, Quinn Hughes, was also on the Olympics team, since brothers Quinn and Lane Hutson both played for the Terriers last year along with the other Jack Hughes. But it turns out the Jack Hughes who scored the winning goal on an Olympic team loaded with former BU players and has a brother named Quinn is in fact not the Terriers' Jack Hughes who played with brothers Quinn and Lane Hutson.

Seriously, it's so hard keeping white people straight. Y'all need more names. You don't all have to call each other "Jack" and "Quinn" and "Hughes" and "Hutson." From now on, I'm calling all white people "Buddy" and "Karen" to avoid mistakes.

But anyway, Team USA won its first Olympic hockey gold since the Miracle on Ice team when Mike Eruzione (BU, Class of 1977) scored the winning goal in 1980.

Boston College 4, BU 0


Well, that fucking sucked. The BU Terriers women's hockey team close their regular season with a shutout loss to their despised cross-town rivals, the BC Eagles. You know the Lebowski quote. 

The Terriers end their season with a disappointing 10-19-3 record. They're 8-13-2 in Hockey East play, but fortunately for them, all conference teams make the Hockey East post-season tournament. More good news - they got a favorable draw in the opening round, and will play Providence (11-21-2) on Wednesday (6:00 pm). The Terriers just beat Providence, 3-1, on Friday night and are 3-0 against the Friars this season, including one shoot-out win.

It's admittedly a long shot, but since conference champions get an automatic bid to the NCAA's Frozen Four tournament, the Terriers could (might, maybe) get to the Big Show despite their losing season record. "All" they have to do is sweep four rounds of Hockey East post-season play. 

Friday, February 20, 2026

BU 3, Providence 1

 

Let's hear it for the women! Last night, the USA Women's Hockey Team beat Canada for the Gold Medal in the Olympics, and tonight the Boston University Terriers women's team beat Providence, 3-1.

The Friars (really? they call the women's team The Friars?) scored first and took a 1-0 lead into the second period. But then the Terriers' Lexie Bertelsen scored late in the second and Kelly Maeve added a power-play goal in the third. Luisa Welcke hit an empty netter in the last minute of play, and that was the it for the Friarettes.   

BU improves to 10-19-3 overall and 8-13-2 in Hockey East. Tomorrow, they take the T up Comm Ave all the way to Chestnut Hill where they will play the hated rival Boston College Eagles. Let's get a late-season streak going!  

Celtics 121, Warriors 110

 

Basketball's back. Sports are back. That long, weird, mid-winter interbellum is finally over and to celebrate, the Boston Celtics traveled out to Oakland and beat the Golden State Warriors with a Jaylen Brown triple double.

Mr. Brown had 23 points, 15 rebounds and 13 assists last night. His 10.9 field goals per game is tied with SGA for first in the NBA, and his 29.2 points per game is fourth.  Mr. Pritchard led both teams with 26 points and Mr. Hauser had the hot hand last night on threes, going 4-5 outside the line. 

The Currys, Steph and Seth, are both out, but our old friend Kristaps Porziņģis scored 16 last night for the Warriors and Al Horford scored five while leading his team with eight rebounds. Glad to see our old friends doing well.  

The Celtics (36-19) are in first place in the Atlantic Division but still trail the Detroit Pistons by 5½ in the Eastern Conference playoff race. 

The West Coast road trip will continue with a 6:30 pm (Eastern  time) game on Sunday against the Lakers (33-21), featuring Luka Dončić, LeBron James, and our old friend Marcus Smart. The game will be aired on NBC.  

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Tragedy on Großglockner

An Austrian mountaineer is on trial for leaving his girlfriend alone on Großglockner, the tallest peak in Austria at nearly 12,500 feet. The 37-year-old defendant, Thomas P, pleaded not guilty of gross negligent manslaughter during the emotional trial for the hypothermic death of his 33-year-old partner, Kerstin G.

The couple had set out on the morning of January 18, 2025. Wind at the base of the mountain was almost nonexistent, but picked up at higher altitudes. Problems began around 8.15 pm when a rope got caught, costing the couple a precious 90 minutes, after which Kerstin injured her hand. Conditions deteriorated, leaving the couple struggling in darkness as temperatures fell to almost 16°F, with a wind chill of -4° and gusts of up to 45 mph. .About 50 meters from the summit, Kerstin's condition dramatically worsened, leaving her exhausted, hypothermic, and disoriented. At around 2:00 am, Thomas secured her to a rock with a rope and then climbed down to get assistance, leaving her alone in a state of exhaustion. He testified that he returned to her once, apparently having second thoughts about leaving her alone, but she told him to “go on your own and save your own life.” Kerstin's body was recovered after daybreak.

Prosecutors say fateful mistakes include insufficient planning, clothing and equipment, a failure to turn back despite the hostile weather conditions, and a decision not to alert rescue teams to their plight earlier in the night. They maintain that Thomas, the more experienced alpinist, was in effect the guide on a two-person tour and therefore bore responsibility for the safety of them both.

The defense argues that Kerstin was also an enthusiastic climber and physically very fit. “We always planned the tour together and took decisions jointly,” Thomas testified. “I did not lead the tour so was not in the lead role.” He added that the adverse conditions had taken them both by surprise. He said he is “endlessly sorry” his girlfriend died on the climb, and “I loved Kerstin and didn’t want anything to happen to her.”

Kerstin's mother has said she does not hold Thomas responsible for her daughter’s death and calls the charges against him a “witch hunt.” She's upset by the way her daughter, who had discovered her passion for mountain climbing during the pandemic, has been depicted. “It makes me angry that Kerstin is being portrayed as a stupid little thing,” she said. “Kerstin was in top physical condition. And she had already mastered far more difficult climbing tours, both alone and with her boyfriend.”

More than 7,000 people climb Großglockner every year, and about 200 mountaineers have died there. The life-and-death consequences of alpine mountaineering are well known to experienced climbers, as is the fact that when all other rescue options are exhausted, sometimes climbers have to abandon a teammate, lest they all die. 

The 2003 documentary, Touching the Void, is about tragic events following the successful first summit of the West Face of Siula Grande in Peru in 1985. The two experienced climbers, Joe Simpson and Simon Yates, encountered difficulties on their descent, with Simpson ultimately suspended mid-air on a rope attached to Yates, who could not see or hear his partner over the howling wind. Unable to pull Simpson back up the cliff and gradually losing traction in the loose snow, Yates eventually realized he was gradually being pulled from his unbelayed position. The only option available to Yates to avoid also being pulled from the cliff himself was to cut the rope connecting him with Simpson and allow his partner to fall 150 feet to almost certain death. Amazingly, Simpson survived the fall and was able to self-rescue a return to base camp and reunion three days later with Yates.

I bring this up because Simpson says he absolutely understood Yates' decision to cut the rope, would have done the same thing himself in the same situation, and would climb with Yates again. In fact, he has - no hard feelings, no ill will. In those difficult life-and-death emergency situations that tragically come down to the death of one or the death of all, the rational decision, if all other options are exhausted, is to rescue the rescuer. 

Putting aside the question of who was the guide and who is responsible for the mistakes last year on Großglockner, should Thomas have stayed on the mountaintop and froze to death along with Kerstin? It's a romantic idea, but was it not a better decision to descend for help and possibly get assistance to save her as well as himself? If you're not willing or able to confront those kind of existential, life-and death decisions, alpine mountaineering may not be the sport for you.

To be clear, though, the trial is not about whether Joseph ultimately made the right or the wrong decision at that point. It's about the responsibilities and liabilities of a "guide" and who assumes that role on non-commercial treks. A verdict to convict him of manslaughter charges could have a chilling effect on mountaineering, as someone may have to be deemed a liable party on every trek in which a death sadly occurs.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Polar Update

 


Hey, now that sports are on a hiatus, remember Tamara Klink? The Brazilian sailor who traversed the Northwest Passage solo last summer (as did British sailor Ella Hibbert in a separate expedition)? We reported on her trip here last summer.  

Her boat, the Sardinia, is still drydocked in Nome, Alaska, but last January, Klink joined the crew of the Malizia Explorer and crossed the Drake Passage from Ushuaia, Argentina to Antarctica. She was last in Antarctica some 20 years ago, when she took a series of trips there with her parents and sisters, and the desolate continent traumatized her "with fear, fascination, and concern," and made her wish with all her heart "to one day be a real navigator and return."

Well, she's back and I don't think anyone can say she's not a real sailor now after her solo voyages across the Atlantic, around Greenland, and through the Northwest Passage. For the past month, she and the crew of the Malizia Explorer have been sailing around the Antarctic Peninsula, returning to  Ushuaia once and then heading back south, for a total of three crossings (so far) of the Drake. The crew explored, made some deep-water scuba dives, engaged in some research, and generally admired the Antarctic wilderness.   

Yesterday, the ship had to take shelter from a storm in Paradise Bay, taking a forced pause until the storm passes and the final journey back home after 22 days at sea.

Monday, February 16, 2026

Outer Worlds 2, II


The Celtics are off this week for the All-Star break along with the rest of the NBA and the Bruins are off for the Winter Olympics along with the rest of the NHL. The CFB and Georgia Bulldog's seasons have ended and it's curtains for the Patriots and the NFL until next autumn. Red Sox pitchers and catchers have already reported, but Boston's first Grapefruit League spring training game is still a full week away. And the Boston University hockey teams only play on weekends, at least most of the time.  

So, friendly reminder during this sports interbellum that video games are e-sports. This is as good a time as any to report that I finished a second playthrough of The Outer Worlds 2, a first-person sci-fi RPG by Obsidian Entertainment. 

My first playthrough took me 83 hours to complete, but even though I did more exploration and found several new quests that I missed during my first run, I completed the second playthrough in 75 hours. I spent less time trying to figure out some puzzles and problems that vexed me my first time through, and as I had a firmer understanding of the combat mechanisms, fewer times dying and having to repeat things all over again. I played this second time on "Normal" difficulty the whole way through, although I had to switch over to "Story" mode a couple of times on my first playthrough during some of the more challenging boss fights.

According to Steam, I completed 18 of 48 possible achievements the first time, and on this second run I picked up only two more - SA Quarterlies Quantified (found all volumes of Science Adventures Quarterly on Paradise Island) and Everything Must Go (earned 50,000 bits by selling items to vendors). A total of 20 out of 48 achievements is low (41.7%), but many of the unearned achievements are based on  multiple playthroughs or are rewards for negative behavior (e.g., "all companions are killed"). I didn't lose a single companion on either playthrough, except for the death-cult fanatic Ava, who insisted on joining a suicide mission at the very end of the game. 

The first time through, I played as a male Renegade and my primary trait was Brilliant. This time, I was a female Professor and my primary trait was Brawny. I was impressed by how different those changes made the game. That's the point of an RPG for sure, but in many games you'd need a redlined script comparison to find the differences.  Add to this the consequence of some in-game decisions (i.e., spare or kill an antagonist, side with one character or another, etc.) and the second playthrough not only didn't feel repetitive, it was downright revelatory. 

But not fresh enough to warrant a third playthrough, at least not immediately. Eventually, as Groucho once supposedly said, you have to take the cigar out of your mouth. Time to move on. I've downloaded a new game (new to me at least, although it is a fairly recent), Assassin's Creed Shadows. We'll see how that goes.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

BU 5, New Hampshire 3

 

The BU Terriers' men's team took the ice last evening following six straight losses between the men's and women's teams, two straight for the men alone. But they weren't having any of that losing shit last night, and beat the UNH Wildcats, 5-3, to end the skid.

Brandon Svoboda scored in the first period for the Terriers, and Cole Hutson and Jack Murtagh scored in the second. Jack Harvey scored at the start of the third period and Cole Eiserman knocked in an empty-netter at the end of the period.

The Terriers are nearing a return to .500 overall (14-15-2) and in conference play (10-11-0). They are tied with UMass for fourth in Hockey East, five points back from fourth-place BC. They  have a pair of games next weekend against the Eagles (17-10-1) and could potentially pick up six points with a sweep. They may be 0-1 against No. 14 BC this season, but anything can happen in The Battle of Comm Ave. 

They'll end the regular season the following weekend with a game at UMass Lowell. 

UConn 2, BU 0

 

Not to sound like copium, but it's a victory of sorts for the unranked BU Terriers women's team to hold the No. 6 UConn Huskies scoreless in the first period, and then limit them to only one goal in each the second and third periods.

But it's also the fourth straight loss for the Terriers, who've lost to four different teams in that stretch.

The Terriers fall to 9-19-3 overall and are tied for eighth place with Providence at 25 points in Hockey East action. They play Providence (11-19-2) next Saturday to sort that out, and then will end the regular season with a Saturday afternoon game against BC. 

All teams make the Hockey East post-season tournament, so the Terriers will have at least one more game after that. Given their low standing in the conference, they'll be seeded against a top team, probably UConn or No. 14 Holy Cross, so I don't expect too many more games after BC.

  

Saturday, February 14, 2026

New Hampshire 4, BU 1

 

With the NBA and the Celtics off on the All-Star break and the NHL and the Bruins off for the Winter Olympics, with the Super Bowl and the Patriots' season now in the read-view mirror and the baseball season not yet begun, in this odd crease in time, Boston University hockey has the spotlight all to themselves. 

And what do the Terriers do with this rare opportunity, solo on center stage as it were? Lose both a women's home game and a men's road game.

Last night, the men lost, 4-1,  in the wintery chill of Durham, New Hampshire. BU freshman Ryder Ritchie scored a goal in the first period, but only after UNH took a 2-0 lead in the first 1:23 of the game. And that was it for the Terriers, scoring-wise, while the Wildcats added a power-play goal and the inevitable open-netter to end the game.

BU falls to a disappointing 13-15-2 overall and 9-11-0 in conference play. They are currently tied for fifth place in Hockey East with Merrimack and Northeastern. With only four games left to the season, including a pair against BC, the Terriers will be lucky to end the season at .500.

The weekend series with the Wildcats moves to Boston, where BU and UNH will go at it starting at 6:00 pm today in BU's home Agganis Arena.

Friday, February 13, 2026

Northeastern 5, BU 2

The BU Terrier women lost their straight game, this time to No.5 Northeastern. 

Northeastern took a 2-0 lead in the first period before Clara Yuhn made it 2-1 early in the second. Northeastern struck back with two more goals before Anezka Cabelova gave the Terriers their second goal late in the third, less than 30 seconds after the Huskies fourth goal. Northeastern's Stryker Zablocki (now there's a hockey name for you) hit an empty netter with less than a second left in regulation for the final score.

Hey, the Terriers are still the 2025 Friendship Series champions of Belfast, North Ireland, so there's that. The Terriers fall to 9-18-3 overall, 7-12-2 and eighth place in Hockey East. 

Good news/bad news: The good news is we've seen the last of No. 5 Northeastern, at least for the regular season. The bad news is tomorrow we play No. 6 UConn (22-7-2).