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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 2015)
SPORTS Saturday, February 14, 2015 East Oregonian Pac-12 Men’s Basketball Pac-12 Women’s Basketball WASHINGTON ST. 74, ARIZONA ST. 71 — In SEATTLE — Stanley Pullman, Wash., Dexter Ker- Johnson scored 20 points QLFK'UHZ PDNLQJ KLV ¿UVW WR OHDG ¿YH $UL]RQD SOD\- start since Nov. 27, scored a HUV LQ GRXEOH ¿JXUHV DQG career-high 27 points to lead the seventh-ranked Wild- Washington State past Arizo- cats rebounded from last na State, 74-71, Friday night. DaVonte Lacy scored 17 weekend’s upset loss to rout Washington 86-62 on Friday points for the Cougars (11- 13, 5-7 Pac-12), who moved night. Coming off a stunning set- past the Sun Devils (12-12, back to rival Arizona State, 4-7) into eighth place. Gerry Blakes paced Ari- the Wildcats (21-3, 9-2 Pac- 12) used hot shooting and zona State with a season-high D KXJH ¿UVWKDOI UXQ WR SXOO 24 points, including the Sun away from the undermanned 'HYLOV¶ ¿QDO SRLQWV 7UD Huskies. Rondae Hollis-Jef- Holder added 14 and Eric Ja- ferson added 17 points, Gabe cobsen had 12. York scored 13 off the bench Kernich-Drew was and T.J. McConnell orches- coming off a season-high trated it all with 10 points 18-point game Sunday at Or- DQG DVVLVWV KLV ¿UVW GRX- egon. The senior wing came ble-double of the season. into Friday’s game averaging Washington (14-10, 3-9) 4.4 points per game. lost its sixth straight game, The Sun Devils led 34-29 the longest losing streak of at the half after dominating Lorenzo Romar’s tenure as inside. In the opening half, the Huskies’ head coach. Arizona State outscored Washington’s last win came WSU 26-12 in the paint and Jan. 22 at Colorado, before had a 12-0 advantage in sec- center Robert Upshaw was ond-half points. The Sun dismissed from the team for Devils outrebounded WSU a violation of team rules. 25-10 in the half. in the game, putting her at 180 3-pointers in her two CORVALLIS — Oregon seasons. Arizona State trailed by State’s Sydney Wiese says 3-pointers aren’t just about three late in the game with the shot. There’s plenty more the Beavers on offense, but to it: the play call, the move- Hempen made a steal, then ment of teammates and the crumpled to the court, appar- ently with a tweaked ankle. screen before the attempt. They were all working Gabriella Hanson grabbed Friday night for the soph- the loose ball and made an omore point guard, who uncontested lay-in for the scored 15 points and set Or- Beavers with 1:11 left to egon State’s career record make it 66-61. The game had plenty at for 3-pointers, and the No. 8 Beavers held on to beat No. stake as, entering the week, Arizona State and Califor- 12 Arizona State 70-64. “People set me up well,” nia trailed Oregon State by a :LHVHVDLG³,W¶VGH¿QLWHO\D game in the Pac-12 standings. “Down the stretch in Pac- team record.” Ruth Hamblin added 17 12 play is a grind, and any points, nine rebounds and win we can get is a good six blocks, and Ali Gibson one,” Wiese said. “I think scored 14 for the Beavers there’s still room for im- provement for our team.” (22-2, 12-1 Pac-12). Oregon State coach Scott Sophie Brunner had 24 points, and Katie Hempen Rueck thought the game felt added 13 for the Sun Devils OLNHDSUL]H¿JKWDWWLPHVDQG not just for the physical play. (21-4, 10-3). “Couldn’t shake them, Wiese set the 3-pointer record with a shot from be- couldn’t get away from yond the arc with 14:04 left them, but made the plays LQWKH¿UVWKDOI6KHKDGWZR down the stretch,” he said. Johnson leads Arizona rout Associated Press Page 3B Wiese hits career milestone for treys in OSU win Associated Press The Beavers were ahead by as many as eight points early, but led 29-27 at the half as the Sun Devils made their last four shots before the break. Oregon State led by nine with 4:27 left, but Arizona State clawed back. OREGON 75, ARIZO- NA 61 — In Eugene, Jillian Alleyne had 19 points and 17 rebounds as Oregon had a big run spanning both halves to pull away from Arizona 75-61 on Friday night. The Ducks (12-12, 5-8 Pac-12) trailed late in the ¿UVW KDOI EHIRUH RXWVFRULQJ Arizona 24-2 to lead 47-29 with 16:36 left in the game. Alleyne had a double-dou- ble before the break with 12 points and 10 rebounds and ¿QLVKHGIRUIURPWKH¿HOG and 5 of 5 from the foul line. Lexi Petersen scored 16 points, Lexi Bando added 14 and Jordan Loera 11. Oregon made all 13 of its foul shots, LQFOXGLQJVL[LQWKH¿QDOWZR minutes to secure the victo- ry after Arizona (9-15, 2-11) closed within 10 points. Or- egon’s single-game record for free throws is 16 for 16 against Colorado in 1981. LaBrittney Jones had 14 points and Keyahndra Can- non 12 to lead Arizona. STANFORD 76, USC 60 — At Stanford, Calif., Lili Thompson and Briana Rob- erson, removed from starting lineup in a shakeup after two losses last weekend, combined for 27 points to lead No. 19 Stanford over Southern Cali- fornia on Friday night. The lineup change paid off as the Cardinal (18-7, 10-3) shot 55.2 percent with Thompson scoring 14 points and Roberson 13. Amber Orrange also had 13 and Bonnie Samuelson hit four 3-pointers for 12. Alexyz Vaioletama led IRXU LQ GRXEOH ¿JXUHV ZLWK 14 points for the Trojans (13-11, 5-8), who trailed 38-27 at the half. Kaneisha Horn had 10 with 11 re- bounds. GIRLS HOOPS: Bucks slumping Continued from 1B and bumbled the ball around. Pendle- WRQZDVHVSHFLDOO\UHFNOHVVLQWKH¿UVW quarter. More trips resulted in turnovers WKDQ¿HOGJRDODWWHPSWV<HWWKH\IRXQG themselves down 28-23 at the break. The third period played out much the VDPHDVWKH¿UVWDQGWKLVWLPHWKH%XOO- dogs capitalized to extend the slight edge into a 17-poind romp. “You can’t get behind on them,” Go- mez said. “If you get behind there’s real- ly no way to get back...Against Hermis- ton you have to bring it every quarter.” Because of the transition opportu- nities, Hermiston spread the offensive wealth. Seven players scored at least two ¿HOGJRDOVDQGQRQH¿QLVKHGZLWKPRUH than freshman Maddy Juul’s 13 points. Sara Ramirez chipped in with 12 and Kynzee Padilla and Jansen Edmiston had 11 and 10 respectively. The lead took its largest form at 45- 28 after a Padilla layin with 2:29 to go in the third. Pendleton clawed its way back to respectability in the fourth to make it a VLQJOHGLJLWGH¿FLW While the series has been all Bull- dogs for the past nine years, Pendleton has been closer in recent tries. The past four games have all been decided by nine points or less, a stark contrast from the Bulldogs run from 2008 to 2013 when they won 11 in a row by 10 or more including six by 20 or more. “They do a great job against us,” Hof- fert said. “They defend us well. They’re YHU\ FRQ¿GHQW 7KDW¶V H[SHFWHG LQ WKLV thing that’s called a rivalry.” Marlene Bodmer was the Bucks best EHWRIIHQVLYHO\)ULGD\6KH¿QLVKHGZLWK 16 points and added seven rebounds. 1LQH %RGPHU ¿UVW KDOI SRLQWV NHSW WKH Bucks in contact. The loss is the second straight for Pendleton and puts them even with The Dalles for second in league play. “It’s disappointing,” Gomez said. “We’re back to the drawing board, but ZH¶OO¿JXUHLWRXW´ ———— HERMISTON 66, PENDLETON 57 PHS (13-8) 7 16 14 20 — 57 HHS (18-3) 12 16 25 13 — 66 PENDLETON — S. Greb 2, D. Lindsay 9, H. Thompson 0, H. Greb 4, K. Sperl 8, K. Williams 13, L. Taylor 2, Mar- lene Bodmer 16, C. Hoffman 0, K. McGlothlan 3. HERMISTON — A. Drotzmann 8, M. Foley 0, Maddy Juul 13, J. Edmiston 10, K. Padilla 11, T. Headings 9, R. Andreason 3, S. Ramirez 12. 3-point field goals — PHS 3, HHS 3. Free throws — PHS 22-25, HHS 8-14. Fouls — PHS 23, HHS 18. Fouled out — A. Drotzmann (HHS). BOYS HOOPS: Motor working for Persinger Continued from 1B “toughness week” for the Bulldogs, and, by his account, it’s not going well. “Tough teams communicate, and I didn’t think we communicated real well,” he said. “Tough teams get re- bounds and box out every time, not just some of the time. We didn’t do that. Tough teams don’t give up easy bas- kets. When you look at the shot chart after the game, we gave up four shots outside of 15 feet. That’s not a tough team. Tough teams don’t give up bas- kets all night long.” Pendleton scored easy baskets all night long, on the other hand. Wheth- er it was Persinger slashing and grab- bing offensive rebounds or posting up, or Caden Smith getting the ball inside on drive-and-kicks, Pendleton easily scored while keeping Hermiston from get those kinds of looks. At the other bench, Brian Broaddus has been working with Persinger to PD[LPL]HKLVHIIHFWLYHQHVVRQWKHÀRRU “We’ve been working on his motor lately,” he said. “He would have spurts where his motor was really good, then have spurts where he’d take a couple plays off.” Friday night, Persinger was every- Patriots alerted to police interest in Hernandez on day of killing Associated Press FALL RIVER, Mass. — The New England Patriots were alerted within hours that police wanted to talk to tight end Aaron Hernandez after a body was found not far from his house, DGHWHFWLYHWHVWL¿HG)ULGD\HODERUDWLQJGXULQJ often snippy exchanges with the defense in Hernandez’s murder trial. North Attleborough police Detective Dan- iel Arrighi said he and a state trooper went to Hernandez’s home at about 9:40 p.m. on June 17, 2013, hours after they found Odin Lloyd’s body in an industrial park about a mile from the NFL star’s home. Lloyd had in his pocket the key to a Chevrolet Suburban that Hernandez had rented a week before. Hernandez didn’t answer after they repeat- edly knocked and rang the doorbell, Arrighi said, and they walked around his home. He gave the trooper a boost so he could peer into the garage windows, then they went into the backyard and looked in the windows using ÀDVKOLJKWV Eventually, they went to his next-door neighbor’s home. That neighbor turned out to be Patriots assistant coach Joe Judge, who called Patriots security, Arrighi said. The detective said Hernandez eventually came out at about 10:30 p.m., telling them he had been watching them on his surveillance system. They questioned him about a Chev- rolet Suburban he had rented, and Hernandez told them Lloyd had it, Arrighi said. They also asked when he last saw Lloyd. “He informed us that he was up his way yes- terday,” Arrighi said. Hernandez then got agitated, according to Arrighi, and asked, “What’s with all the ques- tions?” before heading back to the house. Just EHIRUHJRLQJLQVLGH$UULJKLWHVWL¿HG+HUQDQ- dez said to them, “You guys aren’t coming in here.” $ VKRUW ZKLOH ODWHU WKH GHWHFWLYH WHVWL¿HG Hernandez came back out and told them he would go to the police station to talk. During cross-examination, Hernandez law- yer James Sultan pressed Arrighi on why the RI¿FHUVGLGQ¶W¿UVWWU\WRFDOO+HUQDQGH]EHIRUH dropping by his home late at night, and point- ing out that the detectives were wandering around Hernandez’s home late at night with ÀDVKOLJKWV where. McElligott was impressed with the 6-foot-6 senior’s motor, and indeed, he was everywhere. He earned on three and-one opportunities — only one of which he converted. But his second on Pendleton’s second third-quarter pos- session had a hand in opening up the lead for the Bucks. ——— PENDLETON 62, HERMISTON 51 PHS 14 17 14 17 — 62 HHS 9 10 10 22 — 51 PENDLETON — S. Green 3, Q. Cockburn 2, K. Quinn 15, T. Hancock 0, D. George 0, W. Persinger 19, W. Morris 0, D. Roe 0, C. Smith 14, J. Bradt 8, C. Winterton 0, M. Foreman 0. HERMISTON — C. Flores 2, J. Ruiz 0, H. Walls 0, K. Crafton 10, P. Earl 13, D. Zimmerly 8, C. Knutz 11, L. Gammell 4, C. Lloyd 2, C. Smith 0, B. Palmer 0. 3-point field goals — PHS 3, HHS 7. Free throws — PHS 12-21, HHS 10-13. Fouls — PHS 12, HHS 20. Fouled out — L. Gammell, C. Lloyd (HHS). AP Photo/Frank Franklin II Skylar Diggins, left, and Chris Mullin, right, defend Shoni Schimmel, center, during the second half of the NBA All-Star celebrity basketball game Friday, Feb. 13, 2015, in New York. Schimmel leads celebrity game Associated Press NEW YORK — Shoni Schimmel represented the WNBA in Friday’s NBA All- Star Celebrity Game. The Eastern Oregon product led the game with 17 points, but was upstaged by comedi- an Kevin Hart, who won his fourth MVP trophy after the West team beat the East 59-51. Schimmel, playing for the West, was able to provide a few laughs of her own when she tricked comedian Sarah Silverman — who was on the other team, to give her the ball under the basket which the Atlanta Dream star con- verted for a layup. “This was awesome,” Schimmel said. “Really had a great time playing here in this.” Little League phenom Mo’ne Davis was so impres- sive on a basketball court she momentarily silenced trash- talking “Wedding Ringer” star Hart. Playing against opponents more than twice her age, the 13-year-old drove past Hart, the game’s MVP for the fourth time, with a spectac- ular spin move for an easy OD\XSLQWKH¿UVWTXDUWHU SCOREBOARD Local Slate PREP BOYS BASKETBALL Saturday Joseph at Nixyaawii, 2:30 p.m. Condon/Wheeler at Arlington, 3 p.m. Umatilla at Vale, 5:30 p.m. Stanfield at Irrigon, 5:30 p.m. Culver at Heppner, 5:30 p.m. Mitchell/Spray at Ione, 5:30 p.m. Pine Eagle at Helix, 5:30 p.m. Nyssa at Riverside, 6 p.m. Pilot Rock at Weston-McEwen, 7 p.m. PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL Saturday Joseph at Nixyaawii, 1 p.m. Condon/Wheeler at Arlington, 1:30 p.m. Umatilla at Vale, 4 p.m. Stanfield at Irrigon, 4 p.m. Culver at Heppner, 4 p.m. Mitchell/Spray at Ione, 4 p.m. Pine Eagle at Helix, 4 p.m. Nyssa at Riverside, 4:30 p.m. Pilot Rock at Weston-McEwen, 5:30 p.m. PREP WRESTLING Saturday Pendleton, Hermiston at District 4 Champion- ships (Hood River), TBD Heppner at Pine Eagle Tournament, 10 a.m. GOL District Championships at Mac-Hi, 10 a.m. PREP SWIMMING Saturday Pendleton, Hermiston at District Champion- ships (Hood River Aquatic Center), 11 a.m. COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL Saturday Big Bend at Blue Mountain, 4 p.m. NW Christian at Eastern Oregon, 7:30 p.m. COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Saturday Big Bend at Blue Mountain, 2 p.m. NW Christian at Eastern Oregon, 5:30 p.m. Basketball OSAA Friday’s scores Boys 5A Columbia River Conference: Pendleton 62, HERMISTON 50 4A Greater Oregon League: BAKER 72, McLoughlin 37 3A Eastern Oregon League: NYSSA 67, Vale 49 2A Columbia Basin Conference: STANFIELD 75, Culver 14 Heppner 51, WESTON-MCEWEN 43 Irrigon 87, PILOT ROCK 49 2A Wapiti League: ELGIN 55, Cove 47 IMBLER 54, Burns 38 1A Big Sky League: DUFUR 60, Condon/Wheeler 42 Horizon Christian 79, MITCHELL/SPRAY 42 Sherman 56, ARLINGTON 37 SOUTH WASCO COUNTY 81, Ione 37 1A Old Oregon League: Joseph 57, GRISWOLD 30 NIXYAAWII 87, Pine Eagle 40 ECHO 45, Wallowa 32 Girls 5A Columbia River Conference: HERMISTON 66, Pendleton 57 4A Greater Oregon League: BAKER 61, McLoughlin 28 3A Eastern Oregon League: Vale 45, NYSSA 29 2A Columbia Basin Conference: Culver 41, STANFIELD 26 PILOT ROCK 55, Irrigon 35 WESTON-MCEWEN 44, Heppner 30 2A Wapiti League: ELGIN 27, Cove 16 Burns 59, IMBLER 25 1A Big Sky League: SOUTH WASCO COUNTY 41, Ione 36 Condon/Wheeler 52, DUFUR 31 Horizon Christian 34, MITCHELL/SPRAY 24 Sherman 31, ARLINGTON 30 1A Old Oregon League: GRISWOLD 66, Joseph 59 NIXYAAWII 58, Pine Eagle 29 ECHO 55, Wallowa 38 NCAA Men Top 25 Friday’s Game No. 7 Arizona 86, Washington 62 Saturday’s Games No. 1 Kentucky vs. South Carolina, 11 a.m. (ESPN) No. 2 Virginia vs. Wake Forest, 11:30 a.m. No. 3 Gonzaga vs. Pepperdine, 5 p.m. No. 4 Duke at Syracuse, 3 p.m. (ESPN) No. 6 Villanova at No. 18 Butler, 3 p.m. (CBSSN) No. 8 Kansas vs. No. 16 Baylor, 10 a.m. (CBS) No. 9 Louisville vs. N.C. State, 1 p.m. (ESPN) No. 12 North Carolina at Pittsburgh, 9 a.m. No. 14 Iowa State vs. No. 21 West Virginia, 1 p.m. (ESPN2) No. 15 Wichita State at Illinois State, 3 p.m. (ESPN2) No. 17 Oklahoma at Kansas State, 5 p.m. (ESPN2) No. 19 Maryland at Penn State, 5:30 p.m. No. 20 VCU at George Washington, 11 a.m. (ESPN2) No. 21 Oklahoma State at TCU, 3 p.m. (ESPNU) No. 23 Ohio State at Michigan State, 9 a.m. (ESPN) No. 24 Arkansas at Mississippi, 6 p.m. No. 25 SMU vs. UConn, 6 p.m. (ESPN) Sunday’s Games No. 5 Wisconsin vs. Illinois, 10 a.m. (CBS) No. 7 Arizona at Washington State, 3:30 p.m. (FS1) No. 11 Utah vs. California, 5:30 p.m. (ESPNU) No. 13 Northern Iowa at Missouri State, 1 p.m. (ESPNU) NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Toronto 36 17 .679 Brooklyn 21 31 .404 Boston 20 31 .392 Philadelphia 12 41 .226 New York 10 43 .189 Southeast Division W L Pct Atlanta 43 11 .796 Washington 33 21 .611 Charlotte 22 30 .423 Miami 22 30 .423 Orlando 17 39 .304 Central Division W L Pct Chicago 34 20 .630 Cleveland 33 22 .600 Milwaukee 30 23 .566 Detroit 21 33 .389 Indiana 21 33 .389 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct Memphis 39 14 .736 Houston 36 17 .679 Dallas 36 19 .655 San Antonio 34 19 .642 New Orleans 27 26 .509 Northwest Division W L Pct Portland 36 17 .679 Oklahoma City 28 25 .528 Denver 20 33 .377 Utah 19 34 .358 Minnesota 11 42 .208 Pacific Division W L Pct Golden State 42 9 .824 GB — 14½ 15 24 26 GB — 10 20 20 27 GB — 1½ 3½ 13 13 GB — 3 4 5 12 GB — 8 16 17 25 GB — L.A. Clippers 35 19 .648 8½ Phoenix 29 25 .537 14½ Sacramento 18 34 .346 24½ L.A. Lakers 13 40 .245 30 ——— Sunday’s Game All-Star Game at New York, 5 p.m. Hockey NHL EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 54 35 15 4 74 146 122 Tampa Bay 57 34 17 6 74 184 154 Detroit 53 31 13 9 71 156 134 Boston 55 28 20 7 63 144 141 Florida 54 24 19 11 59 134 151 Ottawa 53 21 22 10 52 145 150 Toronto 56 23 29 4 50 159 173 Buffalo 55 16 36 3 35 103 191 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Islanders 55 36 18 1 73 173 153 Pittsburgh 55 32 15 8 72 160 139 N.Y. Rangers 53 32 16 5 69 163 130 Washington 55 29 16 10 68 162 139 Philadelphia 55 23 22 10 56 149 161 Columbus 53 24 26 3 51 139 164 New Jersey 55 21 25 9 51 123 151 Carolina 53 19 27 7 45 117 141 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 55 37 12 6 80 167 130 St. Louis 55 36 15 4 76 176 136 Chicago 56 34 18 4 72 170 130 Winnipeg 57 28 19 10 66 155 149 Minnesota 54 27 20 7 61 147 146 Dallas 55 26 21 8 60 174 175 Colorado 55 22 22 11 55 140 158 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 56 35 14 7 77 166 155 San Jose 57 29 20 8 66 162 160 Vancouver 54 31 20 3 65 153 142 Calgary 55 30 22 3 63 159 142 Los Angeles 54 24 18 12 60 149 147 Arizona 56 20 29 7 47 128 184 Edmonton 56 16 31 9 41 129 184 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Friday’s Games Columbus 4, Philadelphia 3, OT Chicago 3, New Jersey 1 Dallas 2, Florida 0 San Jose 4, Arizona 2 Vancouver 5, Boston 2 Saturday’s Games Edmonton at Ottawa, 11 a.m. Toronto at Montreal, 4 p.m. Winnipeg at Detroit, 4 p.m. Columbus at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. New Jersey at Nashville, 5 p.m. Carolina at Minnesota, 5 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Arizona, 5 p.m. Dallas at Colorado, 6 p.m. Vancouver at Calgary, 7 p.m. Washington at Los Angeles, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games Pittsburgh at Chicago, 9:30 a.m. St. Louis at Florida, 2 p.m. Philadelphia at Buffalo, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Anaheim, 5 p.m. Tampa Bay at San Jose, 5 p.m. WHL EASTERN CONFERENCE EAST DIVISION W L OTL SOL GF Brandon 41 9 4 2 257 Regina 30 18 4 3 202 Swift Current 26 24 1 4 165 Moose Jaw 22 29 3 1 160 Prince Albert 23 31 2 0 161 Saskatoon 16 35 2 1 153 CENTRAL DIVISION GA 174 176 177 203 198 229 Pt 88 67 57 48 48 35 GP W L OTL SOL GF Pt Medicine Hat 36 17 1 2 222 170 Calgary 32 18 1 4 233 161 Red Deer 28 18 3 5 186 177 Kootenay 28 27 0 1 184 206 Edmonton 25 26 4 2 162 161 Lethbridge 17 32 3 3 159 231 WESTERN CONFERENCE B.C. DIVISION W L OTL SOL GF GA Kelowna 43 9 3 1 245 141 Victoria 30 21 3 1 189 170 Kamloops 22 29 3 3 165 206 Vancouver 23 30 1 2 159 195 Prince George 22 32 2 2 171 245 U.S. DIVISION W L OTL SOL GF GA Everett 35 16 3 2 200 149 Portland 32 20 1 3 205 183 Seattle 28 20 3 4 156 150 Spokane 27 24 3 1 157 167 Tri-City 26 27 0 3 152 174 Friday’s results Swift Current 5 Regina 0 Spokane 5 Brandon 4 (OT) Saskatoon 4 Calgary 2 Moose Jaw 5 Kootenay 1 Lethbridge 2 Red Deer 1 Prince George 4 Medicine Hat 2 Kamloops 3 Seattle 2 (SO) Portland 7 Tri-City 1 Kelowna 7 Victoria 3 Everett 6 Vancouver 0 Saturday’s games Spokane at Swift Current, 5 p.m. Regina at Prince Albert, 5 p.m. Prince George at Red Deer, 6 p.m. Saskatoon at Lethbridge, 6 p.m. Calgary at Medicine Hat, 6:30 p.m. Victoria at Kamloops, 7 p.m. Moose Jaw at Kelowna, 7:05 p.m. Vancouver at Tri-City, 7:05 p.m. Seattle at Everett, 7:05 p.m. Sunday’s games Prince Albert at Brandon, 2 p.m. Saskatoon at Kootenay, 5 p.m. Victoria at Seattle, 5:05 p.m. GA 75 69 64 57 56 40 Pt 90 64 50 49 48 Pt 75 68 63 58 55 Golf AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am Friday’s Leaders At p-Pebble Beach Golf Links (6,816 yards, par 72) At m-Monterey Peninsula CC, Shore Course (6,838 yards, par 71) At s-Spyglass Hill Golf Club (6,953 yards, par 72) Pebble Beach, Calif. Purse: $6.8 million Second Round Matt Jones 65m-66s—131 -12 Brandt Snedeker 64m-67s—131 -12 Justin Hicks 64p-68m—132 -11 Charlie Beljan 70p-63m—133 -10 Michael Putnam 69p-64m—133 -10 Chez Reavie 67p-66m—133 -10 Daniel Berger 67p-66m—133 -10 Alex Prugh 66s-68p—134 -10 Will Wilcox 66m-67s—133 -10 David Hearn 67p-66m—133 -10 Billy Horschel 68m-65s—133 -10 Chesson Hadley 64m-69s—133 -10 Jon Curran 69m-64s—133 -10 Nick Watney 65m-69s—134 -9 Jim Furyk 64m-70s—134 -9 Pat Perez 66p-68m—134 -9 Jason Day 72p-62m—134 -9 Daniel Summerhays 67p-67m—134 -9 J.J. Henry 65p-70m—135 -8 Alex Cejka 68m-67s—135 -8 Kevin Chappell 66m-69s—135 -8 Chad Collins 68p-67m—135 -8 Glen Day 66m-69s—135 -8 Jordan Spieth 68m-67s—135 -8 Dudley Hart 65p-70m—135 -8 11 players at 136