East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, January 20, 2016, Page Page 2B, Image 10

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    SPORTS
East Oregonian
Page 2B
Wednesday, January 20, 2016
College Basketball
Mountaineers sweep Yotes on hardwood
East Oregonian
LA GRANDE — The Eastern
Oregon women shook off a slow
start with 15 unanswered points and
never looked back in a 73-47 route
of College of Idaho on Tuesday.
The Mountaineers (13-7, 9-2
CCC) found themselves trailing
the Cascade Collegiate Conference
basketball game 9-6 after an inside
basket from the Yotes’ Ryleigh
Swagerty, but Maloree Moss found
Payton Parrish for an open three-
pointer on the other end and EOU
never trailed again.
(DVWHUQ¿QLVKHGWKH¿UVWTXDUWHU
on a 17-3 run and led by double
digits the rest of the way. The lead
reached its largest margin at the end
of the third quarter when a layup by
Mariah Swanson pushed it to 56-26.
Eastern turned 25 CofI turnovers
into 28 points and got 44 points
from bench players to win their
second straight.
3DUULVK ¿QLVKHG ZLWK D JDPH
high 17 points and Swanson added
nine as 11 Mounties scored in the
game. Moss led all players with
six assists and added six point and
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No scorers reached double digits
for the Yotes (4-13, 3-8), which lost
their fourth straight.
Eastern shot 50 percent (27-54)
IRUWKHJDPHZKLOH&RI,¿QLVKHGDW
36 percent (18-50).
Up next for Eastern is a home
game against Northwest Christian
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Men’s Basketball
EASTERN OREGON 95,
COLLEGE OF IDAHO 74 — At
La Grande, freshman guard Caulin
Bakalarski scored a career-high 25
points to lead the EOU Mountain-
eers over the College of Idaho Yotes
on Tuesday night.
Bakalarski scored his 25 points
RQ VKRRWLQJ IURP WKH ÀRRU
DQG KLW ¿YH SRLQWHUV 2WKHU
top performers included Kalvin
Johanson with 19 points and nine
rebounds, and Case Rada with
17 points. Also, guard Kentrell
Washington neared a triple-double
with 13 points, 10 assists, and eight
rebounds.
7KH¿UVWKDOISOD\HGRXWPXFK
closer than the second half in this
one, as Eastern Oregon (10-11,
6-5 CCC) and CofI (12-8, 7-4)
were tied at 38-38 at halftime.
%XWWKH0RXQWDLQHHUVFDXJKW¿UH
offensively behind Bakalarski and
shut down the Yotes defensively
— holding the team to 10-38
shooting (26 percent) — to run
away with the win in the second
half.
Eastern Oregon next plays at
home against Northwest Christian
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VIKINGS: 8PDWLOODJLUOVFRPSOHWHFRPHEDFNWRWDNHGRZQ6WDQ¿HOG
Continued from 1B
numbers agree. The Vikings
committed 11 turnovers and
VKRWSHUFHQWIURPWKH¿HOG
(22-48), 39 percent from
3-point range (7-18). Mean-
while, the Vikings limited the
HIIHFWLYHRIIHQVHRI6WDQ¿HOG
Running a 1-3-1 zone in
WKH¿UVWKDOIWKHGLPLQXWLYH
Webb was matched up on
the 6-foot-3 Grogan who
was running the baseline.
6WDQ¿HOG KDG VXFFHVV HDUO\
ZLWK ¿QGLQJ WKH ODQN\
junior down low for easy
baskets.
But Umatilla moved
senior
forward
Aaron
Simmons to that spot, and
6WDQ¿HOG KDG D WRXJK WLPH
getting those easy looks.
“They didn’t really
adjust,” Lete said of his
defensive adjustment to
move Simmons to the post
on Grogan. “Whatever
we tried throwing at them
seemed to work.”
%XW 6WDQ¿HOG DOVR VWUXJ-
gled, especially making
shots.
The Tigers never really
shot the ball well Tuesday
night, going 36 percent
IURP WKH ÀRRU LQ WKH ¿UVW
half and 27 percent in the
VHFRQG 6WDQ¿HOG ZDV DW LWV
worst in the fourth quarter,
when it shot 3-18 and 0-10
from deep. Umatilla, mean-
while, had its best offensive
quarter, shooting 4-7 from
WKH¿HOGIURPGHHSDQG
8-12 from the free throw line
to put it away.
6WDQ¿HOGOHGE\IRXUDIWHU
WKH ¿UVW TXDUWHU DQG E\ RQH
at halftime. Its largest lead
of the game was seven at
36-29 in the third quarter
when Tony Flores made his
VHFRQG DQG ¿QDO SRLQWHU
RI WKH QLJKW ZLWK RQ
the clock. Umatilla came
roaring back with a 12-2 run
to take a 41-38 on a Coria
OD\XS ZLWK OHIW LQ WKH
period. Umatilla made six
of its seven shots on the
run and never had an empty
possession.
*RLQJ LQWR WKH ¿QDO
SHULRG XS 6WDQ¿HOG
never got closer than three
and Webb’s three-point
play with 53 seconds left
was in the midst of a game-
closing 12-0 run to send
the Vikings down Highway
395 happy.
“I told them in the locker
room, ‘Bar’s set high now,
fellas. I expect that every
time,’” Lete said. “I’m so
tired of the inconsistency
and stuff. Hopefully after
a win like tonight — it was
kinda fun — hopefully they
enjoyed it and hopefully it’ll
just continue.”
6WDQ¿HOG UHWXUQV WR
Columbia Basin Conference
play on Friday when it hosts
:HVWRQ0F(ZHQ DW
S. Garcia, J. Maret, S. Cranston, T. Durfey.
STANFIELD — B. Woods 16, D. Grogan
15, T. Flores 8, R. Bailey 6, T. Monkus 3, J.
Carrillo, A. Nunez, E. Angel, J. Garcia, N.
Sanchez, J. Galarza.
3-pointers — UHS 7, SHS 6. Free throws
— UHS 12-18, SHS 4-8. Fouls — UHS 15,
SHS 18.
Girls Basketball
Staff photo by E.J. Harris
Umatilla’s Taija Coffey shoots the ball guarded by Stan-
field’s Yazzmin Chavez and Brittin Braithwaite in the Vi-
kings’ 34-28 win against the Tigers in Stanfield.
p.m. Umatilla returns to
Eastern Oregon League play
on Thursday when it plays
host to Riverside at 7 p.m.
———
UHS (9-9, 1-2) 13 12 20 18 — 63
SHS (11-3, 3-1) 17
9 14 8 — 48
UMATILLA — J. Coria 24, K. Webb 18, A.
Simmons 9, J. Ramirez 7, T. Sanguino 3, J.
Tejada 2, S. Munoz, G. Armenta, D. Silverio,
UMATILLA 34, STAN-
FIELD 28 ²$W 6WDQ¿HOG
the last time the Umatilla
9LNLQJV DQG 6WDQ¿HOG
Tigers played a girls basket-
ball game, the Vikings
hammered the Tigers 77-21
in Umatilla exactly a year
ago today.
When they got together
Tuesday night, the result
couldn’t have been more
different. Umatilla had a
to mount a second-half
comeback to overcome 12
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GRZQ6WDQ¿HOG
No player scored in
GRXEOH ¿JXUHV $OHHVKD
Watson and Taija Coffey of
Umatilla (14-4), and Stan-
¿HOG¶V 1DWDOLD (VTXLYHO OHG
all scorers with seven points
each.
6WDQ¿HOG OHG PRVW
RIWKH¿UVWKDOIDIWHU%ULWWLQ
Braithwaite’s two-pointer
SXW6WDQ¿HOGXSPLGZD\
WKURXJKWKH¿UVWTXDUWHUDQG
the Tigers led by as many as
10 when Yazzmin Chavez’s
layup when through late
the quarter. Watson hit a
3-pointer with one second
left in the half to put Stan-
¿HOGXSJRLQJLQWRWKH
locker room.
,QDGGLWLRQWRWKH¿UVW
half turnovers, Umatilla
shot just 17 percent (4-23)
LQWKH¿UVWKDOIDQGKDGKDOI
DVPDQ\PDGH¿HOGJRDOVDV
6WDQ¿HOG
The half break proved
useful for the Vikings, as
they started the second half
on an 8-2 run to cut Stan-
¿HOG¶VOHDGWRRQHDW
A Courtney Dohman laup
with 12 seconds left sent the
game to the fourth quarter
tied at 23.
And from there, it was
all Umatilla. The Vikings
started the quarter on
another 8-2 run to go up
DQGOHGE\¿YHZLWK
D PLQXWH OHIW 6WDQ¿HOG
started fouling, and though
Umatilla missed half its free
WKURZV 6WDQ¿HOG FRXOGQ¶W
make up the difference.
Both teams return to
their respective leagues this
week. Umatilla gets River-
side at home on Thursday
DW SP DQG 6WDQ¿HOG
welcomes Weston-McEwen
on Friday at 6 p.m.
———
UHS (14-4, 3-0) 4
7 12 11 — 34
SHS (6-8, 2-2) 9 9
5
7 — 28
UMATILLA — A. Watson 7, T. Coffey 7
C. Dohman 6, S. Webb 6, M. Paz 5, B.
Campos 2, G. Contreras 1, L. Journot, G.
Lemus.
STANFIELD — N. Esquivel 7, G. Chavez 5,
B. Braithwaite 4, C. Curiel 4, B. Manderas
2, C. Connell 2, C. Hopper 2, M. Griffin, A.
Lemmon, A. Carrillo.
3-pointers — UHS 1, SHS 1. Free throws
— UHS 13-27, SHS 5-14. Fouls — UHS 13,
SHS 18.
PREPS: &RQGRQ:KHHOHUJLUOVKDQG$UOLQJWRQ¿UVWORVVLQ%LJ6N\/HDJXH
Continued from 1B
The TigerScots trailed
Dayton by 20 points early
in the third quarter before
staging a comeback to cut it
WR D QLQH SRLQW GH¿FLW DW WKH
end of the quarter. The Tiger-
Scots got within three points
late in the fourth quarter and
had several possessions to
get closer or tie, but just were
not able to come through.
“We started off with
not much intensity,” said
Weston-McEwen
coach
Brian Pickard. “Playing our
IRXUWKJDPHLQ¿YHQLJKWV
the guys were tired. But I’m
proud of the way they hung
in there tonight.”
Shaw Broncheau led
Weston-McEwen offensively
with 14 points, while Brett
Speed had 13 points and
Jimmy Patrick added 12
points. Patrick also led the
team with seven rebounds.
Weston-McEwen
will
have a few days to rest before
hitting the court on Friday at
6WDQ¿HOGDWSP
———
DHS (1-7) 16 21 18 10 — 65
W-M (6-8) 15 13 18 16 — 62
DAYTON — Z. Wagner 25, B. Kleck 15,
T. Bren 12, Z. Bryan 8, C. Martin 3, Z.
Waggoner 2.
WESTON-MCEWEN — S. Broncheau
14, B. Speed 13, J. Patrick 12, K. Scott 9,
S. Mikesell 7, A. Finifrock 5, E. Reger 2,
X. Bailey.
3-pointers — DHS 5, W-M 7. Free throws
— DHS 12-24, W-M 7-16. Fouls — DHS
18, W-M 21. Technicals — S. Mikesell
(W-M). Fouled out — S. Mikesell (W-M), S.
Broncheau (W-M), C. Martin (DHS).
MITCHELL/SPRAY
51, IONE 49 — At Ione, the
Cardinals fell just short of
their second league win of the
season, falling to Mitchell/
Spray on Tuesday night.
No details were reported.
Ione (2-11, 1-4 BSL) next
travels to South Wasco on
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Girls Basketball
DAYTON (WA) 31,
WESTON-MCEWEN
19²$W$WKHQDDVORZ¿UVW
half proved to be too big of
a hole for Weston-McEwen
to climb out of, falling to
Dayton (WA) on Tuesday
night in non-league play.
The TigerScots (7-8) shot
11.7 percent (7 of 60) from
WKHÀRRUDQGKDGQRSOD\HUV
score in double digits. Ashley
Hill led them with eight
points and had a team-high
nine rebounds.
Sidney Andrews led
Dayton (7-1) with 10 points,
and the Bulldogs led 19-5 at
halftime.
Weston-McEwen returns
to league play Friday at
6WDQ¿HOGDWSP
———
DHS (7-1) 11 8 10
2 — 31
W-M (7-8)
3 2
7
7 — 19
DAYTON — S. Andrews 10, J. Phillips 7,
S. Currin 6, M. Becker 4, M. Mings 4, J.
Fullerton, A. Wanlarbkam, K. Moore, K.
Price. (15-39)
WESTON-MCEWEN — A. Hill 8, S. von
Borstel 5, C. Quaempts 2, A. Broncheau 2,
S. Finifrock 1, A. Finifrock 1, B. Hillmick, A.
Schroeder, J. Lambert, M. Muilenburg. (7-60)
3-pointers — DHS 0-3, W-M 1-14. Free
throws — DHS 1-2, W-M 4-17. Fouls —
DHS 15, W-M 9.
held Riverside (3-12) the rest
of the way.
Pioneers coach Brooke
Garton said Riverside’s post
defense gave her team trouble
all night, and the team will be
working to remedy that issue
prior to their next league
game on Saturday.
Sydney Richwine led
Mac-Hi with 15 points and
the Pioneers out-rebounded
the Pirates 24-16. Riverside
had 29 turnovers to Mac-Hi’s
11 and no Pirates reached
double digits in points.
Mac-Hi hosts Baker on
Saturday at 3 p.m. River-
side plays at Umatilla on
Thursday at 6 p.m.
———
M-H (11-5) 8 5
7 12 — 32
RHS (3-12) 5 11
6
8 — 30
MAC-HI — S. Richwine 15, S. Tveidt 6, S.
Carter 5, A. Biggs 4, B. Smiley 2, K. Cris-
man, R. Jones, B. Hernandez, M. Yensen.
RIVERSIDE — L. Mashos 7, A. Hernandez
7, S. Hasbell 4, J. Shimer 4, S. Wightman
4, A. Caldera 2, B. Avalos 2, F. Mabilla, E.
Daltoso, S. Andrande.
3-pointers — M-H 0, RHS 1. Free throws
— M-H 8-14, RHS 9-17. Fouls — M-H 16,
RHS 18. Fouled out — J. Shimer (RHS).
MAC-HI 32, RIVER-
SIDE 30 — At Boardman,
the
Mac-Hi
Pioneers
squeezed by the Riverside
Pirates in some non-league
action on Tuesday night.
Mac-Hi (11-5) grabbed
WKH ¿QDO OHDG FKDQJH ZLWK
ECHO 50, HERM-
about tow minutes left and ISTON JV 45 — At Echo,
the Cougars came out of
halftime on a 17-8 run and
held on to beat Hermiston’s
junior varsity in a non-league
game on Tuesday.
Hannah McCarty scored
a game-high 21 points and
Kelsey Ranger added 12
points to go with a team-high
eight rebounds.
Sydney Stefani led Herm-
iston with 11 points.
Echo’s next game is
Saturday when it hosts Helix
at 4 p.m.
———
HHS JV
10 12
8 15 — 45
EHS
9 11 17 13 — 50
HERMISTON — S. Stefani 11, K. Smith
8, R. Meyers 7, H. Thompson 7, M. Wilson
2, C. Wheeler 2, K. Gree 2, M. Huff 2, J.
Thomas 2, S. Mires 2. (15-51)
ECHO — H. McCarty 21, K. Ranger 12, T.
Swaggart 8, E. Parks 5, L. Cox 3, D. Tarvin
1. (22-53)
3-pointers — HHS 3-16, EHS 1-7. Free
throws — HHS 12-19, EHS 5-19. Fouls —
HHS 19, EHS 20. Fouled out — D. Tarvin
(EHS).
Jessie Flynn led Ione with
22 points, while Morgan
Orem added eight points.
The win also moves
Ione (7-6, 4-1 BSL) into a
three-way tie atop the Big
Sky League standings with
Arlington and Condon/
Wheeler.
Ione next plays at South
Wasco on Friday at 6 p.m.
———
M/S (3-11, 0-5) 2
6
6 7 — 21
IHS (7-6, 4-1) 25 17
6
6 — 54
MITCHELL/SPRAY — K. Myers 12, L.
Domenigini 7, T. Hudson 2.
IONE — J. Flynn 22, M. Orem 8, K. Gil-
bert 7, S. Qualls 6, S. Teeman 5, I. Sandford
4, R. Holland 2.
3-pointers — M/S 1, IHS 0. Free throws
— M/S 4-12, IHS 10-23. Fouls — M/S 15,
IHS 17.
CONDON/WHEELER
53, ARLINGTON 41 — At
Arlington,
the
Condon/
Wheeler Knights handed the
$UOLQJWRQ +RQNHUV WKHLU ¿UVW
league loss of the season with a
IONE 54, MITCHELL/ 12-point win on Tuesday night.
SPRAY 21 — At Ione, the
No details were reported.
Cardinals broke above the
Condon/Wheeler (13-2,
PDUN IRU WKH ¿UVW WLPH 4-1 BSL) next hosts Dufur
this season with a win over at 6 p.m. Arlington (11-5,
Mitchell/Spray on Tuesday 4-1) next hosts Sherman on
night.
Friday at 6 p.m.
SCOREBOARD
Local slate
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
Thursday
Riverside at Umatilla, 7:30 p.m.
Friday
Irrigon at Culver, 4:30 p.m.
Weston-McEwen at Stanfield, 4:30 p.m.
Heppner at Pilot Rock, 6 p.m.
Nixyaawii at Joseph, 6:30 p.m.
Pendleton at Hood River, 7 p.m.
The Dalles at Hermiston, 7 p.m.
Ione at South Wasco, 7:30 p.m.
Sherman at Arlington, 7:30 p.m.
Dufur at Condon/Wheeler, 7:30 p.m.
Pine Eagle at Helix, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday
Condon/Wheeler at Sherman, 3:30 p.m.
Baker at Mac-Hi, 4:30 p.m.
Nixyaawii at Wallowa, 5:30 p.m.
Helix at Echo, 5:30 p.m.
Arlington at Dufur, 5:30 p.m.
Horizon Christian at Ione, 5:30 p.m.
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
Today
Pendleton at Baker, 7 p.m.
Thursday
Riverside at Umatilla, 6 p.m.
Friday
Nixyaawii at Joseph, 5 p.m.
Irrigon at Culver, 6 p.m.
Pine Eagle at Helix, 6 p.m.
Ione at South Wasco, 6 p.m.
Dufur at Condon/Wheeler (Condon), 6 p.m.
Sherman at Arlington, 6 p.m.
Hood River at Pendleton, 7 p.m.
Hermiston at The Dalles, 7 p.m.
Heppner at Pilot Rock, 7:30 p.m.
Weston-McEwen at Stanfield, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday
Condon/Wheeler at Sherman, 2 p.m.
Baker at Mac-Hi, 3 p.m.
Horizon Christian at Ione, 4 p.m.
Arlington at Dufur, 4 p.m.
Nixyaawii at Wallowa, 4 p.m.
Helix at Echo, 4 p.m.
PREP WRESTLING
Thursday
Pendleton at Hood River, 6 p.m.
Friday
Hermiston at Reser’s TOC (Corvallis),
9 a.m.
Heppner at Grant Union Invite, 10 a.m.
Echo at Parma Meet, TBD
Irrigon at Grant Union, 8 a.m.
Saturday
Hermiston at Reser’s TOC (Corvallis), 9 a.m.
Mac-Hi, Echo at Parma Tournament, 5 p.m.
PREP SWIMMING
Saturday
Pendleton, Hermiston at Hood River, 10 a.m.
COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL
Friday
Northwest Christian at Eastern Oregon,
7:30 p.m.
Blue Mountain at Yakima Valley, 8 p.m.
Saturday
Blue Mountain at Wenatchee Valley, 4 p.m.
Corban at Eastern Oregon, 7:30 p.m.
COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Friday
Northwest Christian at Eastern Oregon,
5:30 p.m.
Blue Mountain at Yakima Valley, 6 p.m.
Saturday
Corban at Eastern Oregon, 5:30 p.m.
Blue Mountain at Wenatchee Valley, 2 p.m.
Football
NFL
Divisional Playoffs
Saturday, Jan. 16
New England 27, Kansas City 20
Arizona 26, Green Bay 20, OT
Sunday, Jan. 17
Carolina 31, Seattle 24
Denver 23, Pittsburgh 16
Conference Championships
Sunday, Jan. 24
AFC: New England at Denver, 12:05 p.m.
(CBS)
NFC: Arizona at Carolina, 3:40 p.m. (FOX)
Basketball
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L
Toronto
26 15
Boston
22 20
New York
21 22
Pct
.634
.524
.488
GB
—
4½
6
Brooklyn
11 31
.262
Philadelphia
5 38
.116
Southeast Division
W
L
Pct
Atlanta
25 17
.595
Miami
23 19
.548
Orlando
20 20
.500
Washington
19 21
.475
Charlotte
19 22
.463
Central Division
W
L
Pct
Cleveland
28 11
.718
Chicago
24 16
.600
Indiana
23 19
.548
Detroit
22 19
.537
Milwaukee
19 25
.432
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L
Pct
San Antonio
36
6
.857
Memphis
24 19
.558
Dallas
24 19
.558
Houston
22 21
.512
New Orleans
14 27
.341
Northwest Division
W
L
Pct
Oklahoma City
31 12
.721
Utah
18 23
.439
Portland
19 25
.432
Denver
16 26
.381
Minnesota
13 30
.302
Pacific Division
W
L
Pct
Golden State
38
4
.905
L.A. Clippers
27 14
.659
Sacramento
17 23
.425
Phoenix
13 30
.302
L.A. Lakers
9 34
.209
———
Monday’s Games
New York 119, Philadelphia 113,2OT
Portland 108, Washington 98
Charlotte 124, Utah 119,2OT
Memphis 101, New Orleans 99
Chicago 111, Detroit 101
Atlanta 98, Orlando 81
Toronto 112, Brooklyn 100
Golden State 132, Cleveland 98
Dallas 118, Boston 113, OT
L.A. Clippers 140, Houston 132, OT
Tuesday’s Games
Milwaukee 91, Miami 79
New Orleans 114, Minnesota 99
Oklahoma City 110, Denver 104
15½
22
GB
—
2
4
5
5½
GB
—
4½
6½
7
11½
GB
—
12½
12½
14½
21½
GB
—
12
12½
14½
18
GB
—
10½
20
25½
29½
Indiana 97, Phoenix 94
Today’s Games
Philadelphia at Orlando, 4 p.m.
Miami at Washington, 4 p.m.
Boston at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m.
Utah at New York, 4:30 p.m.
Golden State at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Detroit at Houston, 5 p.m.
Charlotte at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m.
Minnesota at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.
Sacramento at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Portland, 7:30 p.m.
CCC
S. Oregon
Oregon Tech
NW Christian
E. Oregon
Warner Pacific
Corban
Northwest
C of Idaho
Evergreen
Multnomah
Walla Walla
NCAA
Men’s Top 25
Tuesday
Oklahoma State 86, No. 3 Kansas 67
Georgetown 81, No. 5 Xavier 72
No. 7 Maryland 62, Northwestern 56 (OT)
No. 8 SMU 77, Houston 73
No. 10 Texas A&M 71, LSU 57
No. 13 Virginia 69, Clemson 62
No. 16 Providence 71, No. 18 Butler 68
No. 24 South Carolina 77, Mississippi 74
No. 25 Indiana 103, Illinois 69
Women’s Top 25
Tuesday
No. 21 Michigan State 59, Rutgers 48
Standings
Pac-12
Arizona St.
Oregon St.
Washington
Stanford
Utah
UCLA
Washington St.
USC
Arizona
Oregon
California
Colorado
Conf
6-0
5-1
5-2
4-2
4-2
4-2
3-4
2-4
2-4
1-5
1-5
0-6
Ovr
15-3
14-3
14-4
14-4
12-5
12-5
12-6
14-4
11-7
12-5
10-7
5-12
Str
W12
W4
W3
L1
L1
W1
L1
L2
W1
W1
L3
L7
NWAC East
Wenatchee Valley
W4 Walla Walla
Treasure Valley
Columbia Basin
Spokane
Blue Mountain
Big Bend
Yakima Valley
Conf
3-0
2-1
2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
1-2
0-3
Ovr
15-3
13-3
11-6
10-8
12-6
7-10
7-12
3-14
Str
L1
W2
W1
W1
L1
L2
L10
Conf
9-1
8-2
8-2
9-2
6-4
5-5
4-6
3-8
3-8
1-9
0-9
Ovr
16-1
14-5
12-6
13-7
11-5
10-9
10-11
4-13
3-13
3-15
0-17
Str
L1
W3
W4
W2
L2
W3
W3
L4
W1
L6
L17
Tennis
Australian Open
How the seeds fared
Tuesday
At Melbourne Park
Melbourne, Australia
Men
First Round
Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Alexander
Zverev, Germany, 6-1, 6-2, 6-3.
Stan Wawrinka (4), Switzerland, def. Dmit-
ry Tursunov, Russia, 7-6 (2), 6-3, retired.
Rafael Nadal (5), Spain, lost to Fernando
Verdasco, Spain, 7-6 (6), 4-6, 3-6, 7-6 (4),
6-2.
David Ferrer (8), Spain, def. Peter Gojow-
czyk, Germany, 6-4, 6-4, 6-2.
John Isner (10), United States, def. Jerzy
Janowicz, Poland, 6-3, 7-6 (7), 6-3.
Kevin Andeson (11), South Africa, lost to
Rajeev Ram, United States, 7-6 (4), 6-7 (4),
6-3, 3-0, retired.
Milos Raonic (13), Canada, def. Lucas
Pouille, France, 6-1, 6-4, 6-4.
Bernard Tomic (16), Australia, def. Denis
Istomin, Uzbekistan, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-4, 6-4.
Feliciano Lopez (18), Spain, def. Daniel
Evans, Britain, 6-1, 6-0, 6-4.
Fabio Fognini (20), Italy, lost to Gilles
Muller, Luxembourg, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (7), 6-7
(5), 7-6 (1).
Viktor Troicki (21), Serbia, def. Daniel
Munoz de la Nava, Spain, 4-6, 4-6, 6-1, 7-6
(4), 6-3.
Gael Monfils (23), France, def. Yuichi
Sugita, Japan, 6-1, 6-3, 6-2.
Jack Sock (25), United States, def. Taylor
Fritz, United States, 6-4, 3-6, 0-6, 6-3, 6-4.
Jeremy Chardy (30), France, def. Ernests
Gulbis, Latvia, 7-5, 2-6, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 13-11.
Steve Johnson (31), United States, def.
Aljaz Bedene, Britain, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (3).
Joao Sousa (32), Portugal, def. Mikhail
Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, 6-3, 6-4, 6-3.
Women
First Round
Simona Halep (2), Romania, lost to Zhang
Shuai, China, 6-4, 6-3.
Garbine Muguruza (3), Spain, def. Anett
Kontaveit, Estonia, 6-0, 6-4.
Angelique Kerber (7), Germany, def. Misa-
ki Doi, Japan, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (6), 6-3.
Venus Williams (8), United States, lost to
Johanna Konta, Britain, 6-4, 6-2.
Karolina Pliskova (9), Czech Republic, def.
Kimberly Birrell, Australia, 6-4, 6-4.
Timea Bacsinszky (11), Switzerland, def.
Katerina Siniakova, Czech Republic, 6-3,
7-5.
Victoria Azarenka (14), Belarus, def. Alison
Van Uytvanck, Belgium, 6-0, 6-0.
Madison Keys (15), United States, def.
Zarina Diyas, Kazakhstan, 7-6 (5), 6-1.
Elina Svitolina (18), Ukraine, def. Victoria
Duval, United States, 6-2, 6-3.
Jelena Jankovic (19), Serbia, def. Polona
Hercog, Slovenia, 6-3, 6-3.
Ana Ivanovic (20), Serbia, def. Tammi
Patterson, Australia, 6-2, 6-3.
Ekaterina Makarova (21), Russia, def.
Maddison Inglis, Australia, 6-3, 6-0.
Irina-Camelia Begu (29), Romania, lost to
Johanna Larsson, Sweden, 6-3, 6-2.
Sabine Lisicki (30), Germany, def. Petra
Cetkovska, Czech Republic, 6-4, 6-4.
Lesia Tsurenko (31), Ukraine, lost to
Varvara Lepchenko, United States, 6-7 (5),
6-2, 6-3.
Caroline Garcia (32), France, lost to Barbo-
ra Strycova, Czech Republic, 6-2, 6-4.
Hockey
NHL
Tuesday’s Games
New Jersey 4, Calgary 2
N.Y. Rangers 3, Vancouver 2, OT
Toronto 3, Philadelphia 2
Washington 6, Columbus 3
Boston 4, Montreal 1
Tampa Bay 6, Edmonton 4
Chicago 4, Nashville 1
Los Angeles 3, Dallas 2