Hunter Dickinson continues to be the biggest villain in college basketball. Kansas head coach Bill Self ripped his big man for what he called a "bonehead
FORT WORTH, Texas -- Kansas big man Hunter Dickinson grabbed an offensive rebound and had the ball cradled into his body with both arms, with no intention of letting TCU take it away from him.
Despite an impressive first-half performance, Texas Christian University was unable to keep pace with No. 12 Kansas in a disappointing 74-61 defeat Wednesday night at Schollmaier Arena.
Hunter Dickinson was involved in an oddly aggressive incident during the second half of the Jayhawks' 74-61 win over the TCU Horned Frogs at Schollmaier Arena on Wednesday night.
Hunter Dickinson had 16 points to lead five Kansas players scoring in double figures as the 12th-ranked Jayhawks won 74-61 at Texas Christian. The 14-4 Jayhawks trailed by 14 points
KU’s Hunter Dickinson and TCU’s Trazarien White were both tagged with technical fouls for refusing to release the basketball after a hard-fought rebounding battle on Wednesday.
Kansas star center Hunter Dickinson flaunted his endorsement success with a series of photos on social media. The post highlighted his partnership with Adidas.
Bill Self called Hunter Dickinson's technical foul for holding on to the ball too long "a bonehead play. "Cost us a possession, so yeah, I wasn't happy to see that at all."
Houston picked up a two-game road sweep in Big 12 Conference play at a pair of the league’s more imposing venues. As a result, the Cougars maintain their hold o
TCU did just enough to catch Texas Tech's attention on Wednesday. Once the 22nd-ranked Red Raiders got their wake-up call, however, they settled back in as one of the hottest
No. 22 Texas Tech men’s basketball (16-4) defeated Texas Christian University (10-10) by a score of 71-57 behind a double-double performance from sophomore JT Toppin on Wednesday night at the
The Red Raiders were short-handed as standout forward Darrion Williams was ruled out just before tip-off. But even without their third-leading scorer and second-leading rebounder, Texas Tech (16-4, 7-2) had more than enough offense to pull away from TCU (10-10, 3-6) in the second half.