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Dayton controls second half, beats Davidson 70-59 on Feb. 15

Dayton leaned on a steady offensive pace and a clean second-half close to beat Davidson 70-59 on February 15, 2026. The Flyers won both halves and turned a halftime edge into a comfortable finish.

James O'Brien
2 min read

Dayton didn’t need late-game drama to get to the finish line. The Flyers built a lead before halftime and kept Davidson at arm’s length the rest of the way, closing out a 70-59 win on Feb. 15, 2026.

How the game swung

The separation came in the margins of the two halves. Dayton won the first half 34-26, then matched it with an even cleaner close after the break, taking the second half 36-33. Davidson never flipped the script after intermission; Dayton’s ability to keep scoring while avoiding a major defensive lapse prevented any real momentum swing.

Score-by-score snapshot

First half: Dayton 34, Davidson 26

Dayton set the tone early with a solid eight-point cushion at the break. That initial gap mattered, because it allowed the Flyers to play from in front for the entire second half.

Second half: Dayton 36, Davidson 33

Davidson made up some ground, but not enough. Dayton’s 36-point second half ensured the Wildcats couldn’t string together the kind of run required to turn the game into a one-possession finish.

What it means going forward

For Dayton (now 16-9), the win stabilizes a stretch that has been up-and-down, as reflected in its recent WLWLL form entering the game. For Davidson (15-10), the loss is another missed opportunity to build on its own uneven LWWLW run. The Wildcats stayed competitive after halftime, but the early deficit and Dayton’s steady scoring after the break left little room to breathe.

Game details

Final: Dayton 70, Davidson 59
Date: February 15, 2026
League: NCAA
Venue: TBD

Source: API-Sports Basketball

Expert Analysis

"Dayton handled business in a 70-59 win, and the 11-point cushion tells the story: they never let the game turn into a one- or two-possession scramble late. Holding an opponent under 60 usually signals control on both ends—Dayton didn’t need a shootout, just clean execution and enough stops to keep momentum from swinging."