SPORTS
Saturday, January 30, 2016
East Oregonian
Page 3B
Girls Basketball
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night.
Macey Tullis led Helix
in scoring with 13 points,
Paden Flerchinger was close
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and both Charmayne Bennett
and Sadie Wilson added six
points apiece.
“We played great team
basketball tonight,” said
Helix coach Kirk Flerchinger.
“They’re really coming
together which is what we
want to see and what we will
need down the stretch.
Helix will next play at
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a 4 p.m. tip-off.
———
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HEPPNER — Jada Burns with their next game coming
poured in a game-high at Condon/Wheeler in a
24 points and the Irrigon PHHWLQJ RI ¿UVWSODFH WHDPV
Knights held off Heppner in in the Big Sky League, coach
the second half for a 50-37 Nathan Heideman said he
win on Friday in Columbia was a little concerned by the
ball security issues.
Basin Conference play.
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Burns
added
eight
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for Irrigon (7-10, 3-3 CBC), still a little rusty,” he said.
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for third place in the CBC out before (Saturday).”
Jessie Flynn led Ione
with four games remaining
(10-6, 7-1 BSL) with 19
in the regular season.
Jacee
Currin
paced points and Emily Hill paced
Heppner
(2-15,
0-6) Sherman (3-13, 3-5) with 13.
Ione plays at Condon/
with eight points, eight
rebounds and four assists, Wheeler today at 4 p.m. The
and the Mustangs won the last time the teams met on
Jan. 8 the Cardinals pulled
rebounding battle 35-29.
,UULJRQZLOOWU\IRULWV¿UVW out a 56-50 win that is the
back-to-back wins of the Knights’ only league loss.
———
season today when it hosts
SHS (3-13, 3-5) 9
7 10 10 — 35
Weston-McEwen at 4 p.m.
IHS (10-6, 7-1) 10 12 8 12 — 42
— E. Hill 13, B. Orendorf 9,
Heppner will try to snap D. SHERMAN
Winslow 7, K. Casper 2, B. McKinney 2,
a 12-game losing streak at E. Poirier 2, J. Hill, T. Henderson, L. Grenvik.
IONE — J. Flynn 19, R. Holland 8, I.
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Sandford 5, M. Orem 4, K. Gilbert 4, M.
Flynn 2, S. Qualls.
———
East Oregonian
IHS (7-10, 3-3) 16 10 10 14 — 50
HHS (2-15, 0-6) 9 10 11 7 — 37
IRRIGON — J. Burns 24, T. Davis 9, A.
Zacarias 6, B. Aguilera 5, K. McLaughlin 3,
N. Romero 2, H. Vera 1, L. Mills, B. Rice.
(17-53)
HEPPNER — J. Currin 8, R. Kollman 6, J.
Kempken 6, M. Correa 6, K. Lindsay 6, K.
Gray 5, R. Dompier, M. Combe. (14-48)
3-pointers — IHS 1-5, HHS 1-5. Free
throws — IHS 15-25, HHS 8-27. Fouls —
IHS 22, HHS 17. Fouled out — L Mills, K.
McLaughlin (IHS).
WHS (1-16, 0-8) 3
0
9 2 — 14
GHS (14-4, 7-1) 13
8 15 11 — 47
WALLOWA — S. Nobles 4, M. Hulse 3, B.
Johnston 3, R. Goller 2, G. Pendarvis 2.
HELIX — M. Tullis 13, P. Flerchinger 7, C.
Bennett 6, S. Wilson 6, K. Mize 4, E. Feh-
renbacker 3, M. Mize 2, H. Christman 2.
3-pointers — WHS 2, GHS 3. Free throws
— WHS 4-6, GHS 14-22. Fouls — WHS
14, GHS 11.
3-pointers — SHS 2, IHS 2. Free throws
— SHS 5-16, IHS 8-16. Fouls — SHS 16,
IHS 18. Fouled out — E. Poirier (SHS).
UMATILLA 52, VALE
46 — At Vale, Umatilla
needs one more win to clinch
the regular season Eastern
Oregon League title after
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IONE 42, SHERMAN of Vikings.
Aleesha Watson led
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Umatilla
with 12 points,
been an issue of late for the
Ione Cardinals as point guard though she shot just 2-11
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games with a back injury, make eight of 10 free
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night the Cardinals struggled rebounds and swiped six
steals. Amanda Trenkel led
to take care of the ball.
The Cardinals still held Vale with 12 points.
Staff photo by E.J. Harris
Irrigon’s Jada Burns shoots the ball in front of Hep-
pner’s Rylee Kollman in the Knights’ win against the
Mustangs in Heppner.
Umatilla (16-4, 5-0 EOL)
plays at second-place Nyssa
today at 4 p.m. and only has
to win one of its next three to
secure the EOL crown.
———
VHS (10-9, 2-3) 9 12 17 8 — 46
UHS (16-4, 5-0) 9 18 10 15 — 52
VALE — A. Trenkel 12, D. Johnson 9, K.
Weber 9, A. Hamilton 8, A. Burkhardt 5, G.
Reever 3, M. Gonzalez, H. Dayton.
UMATILLA — A. Watson 12, S. Webb
9, T. Coffey 8, M. Paz 8, B. Campos 7, C.
Dohman 6, J. Contreras 2, L. Journot, G.
Lemus.
3-pointers — VHS 1, UHS 2. Free throws
— VHS 13-24, UHS 16-26. Fouls — VHS 21,
UHS 19. Fouled out — K. Weber (VHS).
STANFIELD 46, PILOT
ROCK 35 — At Pilot Rock,
the Tigers pulled off the upset
to jump into third place in the
Columbia Basin Conference
on Friday night. No details
were reported.
Pilot Rock (13-6, 4-2
CBC) hasn’t lost back-to-
back games all season and
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2:30 p.m.
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try for its third straight win
when it hosts Heppner today
at 4 p.m.
HELIX 47, WALLOWA
NYSSA 35, RIVERSIDE
14 — At Helix, the Helix
Grizzlies cruised to their 24 — At Nyssa, the Pirates
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season with a blowout win game on Friday as they
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Eastern Oregon League win.
No details were reported.
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plays at Vale today at 2 p.m.
CONDON/WHEELER
55, HORIZON CHRIS-
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in a row to keep pace atop the
Big Sky League standings
on Friday. No details were
reported.
Condon/Wheeler (16-2,
7-1 BSL) has a chance to
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today when it hosts Ione at
4 p.m. The Cardinals were
responsible for Condon/
Wheeler’s only league loss
in a 56-50 game in Ione on
Jan. 8.
ECHO
46,
PINE
EAGLE 16 — At Pine Eagle,
the Cougars and Spartans
remained consistent, totaling
just two points less on each
side as their last meeting. No
details were reported.
Fifth-place Echo (10-10,
3-5 Old Oregon League) can
get back into the playoff hunt
today when it hosts Joseph at
4 p.m.
SOUTH WASCO 49,
ARLINGTON 35 — At
Maupin, the Honker lost their
second game in a row to fall
further behind in the Big Sky
League title race on Friday.
No details were reported.
Arlington (12-7, 5-3 BSL)
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losing streak of the season
today when it hosts Mitchell/
Spray at 4 p.m.
Boys Basketball
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East Oregonian
PILOT ROCK — Dylan
Grogan came off the bench
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Tigers on a game-clinching
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Pilot Rock on Friday in
Columbia Basin Conference
play.
It was unclear why
Grogan didn’t start, but
his fresh legs in the second
quarter and Pilot Rock’s
own foul trouble opened
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(13-4, 5-1 CBC) went into
halftime leading 38-17.
Pilot Rock (7-13, 1-5)
had three starters on the
bench with three fouls for
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game-high 20 points and
Ryan Bailey added 12 for
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three straight in CBC play
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four games remaining until
the district tournament.
Gunner McCall paced
Pilot Rock, which struggled
to get its offense into a
rhythm with Bryson Pierce
limited to just one point as
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best outside shooter.
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with 30 fouls in the game,
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of 42 at the charity stripe.
Rockets coach Mike Weinke
said he’s happy the team is
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the key now is controlling
that aggression.
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today at 5:30 p.m. while
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4 p.m.
———
SHS (13-4, 5-1) 15 23
1 15 — 54
PR (7-13, 1-5) 7 10
8 11 — 36
STANFIELD — D. Grogan 20, R. Bailey 12,
A. Nunez 5, J. Garcia 5, B. Woods 4, J. Car-
rillo 4, L. Moreno 2, T. Flores 2, J. Galarza,
E. Angel, N. Sanchez, T. Monkus.
PILOT ROCK — G. McCall 10, C. Weinke
7, I. Winter 7, B. Postma 6, P. Roe 4, B.
Pierce 1, R. Lankford 1, B. Kannier, D.
Hasher, T. Denny, L. Thieme.
3-pointers — SHS 2, PR 2. Free throws
— SHS 22-42, PR 12-20. Fouls — SHS
19, PR 30. Fouled out — B. Postma (PR).
Technicals — D. Grogan (SHS).
WESTON-MCEWEN
62, CULVER 26 — At
Athena, defense set the tone
for a TigerScots blowout in
Columbia Basin Conference
play on Friday.
“We got a lot of hands on
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that led to some easy points,”
said Weston-McEwen coach
Brian Pickard.
The TigerScots (8-9, 3-3
CBC) led 29-16 at halftime
and started the third quarter
on a 12-0 run to seal the win.
Shyler Mikesell turned
in a double-double with 13
points and 11 rebounds and
Shaw Broncheau added a
game-high 16 points to go
wih six steals and four assists
for Weston-McEwen.
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(5-13, 0-6) with 10 points.
Up next for the TigerScots
is a road game at Irrigon
today at 5:30 p.m.
Pickard said he thought
his team only put in about 2.5
quarters of good basketball
the last time the teams met, a
61-41 Irrigon win on Jan. 9.
“We need to take of the
things we can control and
play a complete game and
see what happens,” he said.
———
ence was their narrowest
margin in Old Oregon
League play. No details were
reported.
Helix (2-16, 0-8 OOL)
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p.m.
SHERMAN 82, IONE
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Sherman continued to roll
CHS (5-13, 0-6) 2 14
3 7 — 26
and handed the young Cardi-
W-M (8-9, 3-3) 14 15 18 15 — 62
CULVER — W. Basl 10, D. Gutierrez 4, C.
nals squad its second straight
Sledge 3, T. Bogart 3, I. Stevens 2, M. Davis
loss on Friday. No details
2, M. Krueger 2, T. Cox.
WESTON-MCEWEN — S. Broncheau 16,
HORIZON
CHRIS- were reported.
S. Mikesell 13, E. Reger 12, B. Speed 7,
J. Patrick 4, X. Bailey 4, A. Finifrock 4, K.
TIAN 56, CONDON/
Ione (3-13, 2-6), which
Rodriguez 2, K. Scott.
WHEELER 43 — At Hood picked up a win in the stand-
3-pointers — CHS 3, W-M 2. Free throws
— CHS 3-7, W-M 12-13. Fouls — CHS 13,
5LYHU WKH .QLJKWV ORVW IRU ings due to a forfeit by South
W-M 13.
the third straight game in Big Wasco in their Jan. 22 game,
Sky League action on Friday. plays at Condon/Wheeler
ECHO
55,
PINE No details were reported.
today at 5:30 p.m.
EAGLE 38 — At Pine
Condon/Wheeler (7-10,
Eagle, the Cougars won their 3-5 BSL) has plenty of time
NYSSA 60, RIVER-
WKLUGLQDURZWRPRYHDKDOI to make up ground with six SIDE 27 — At Nyssa, the
game behind Joseph for third games remaining before the Pirates lost ground in the
place in the Old Oregon district tournament, and will Eastern Oregon League title
League on Friday. No details host Ione today at 5:30 p.m.
hunt with Friday’s loss to
were reported.
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Echo (7-12, 5-3 OOL)
SOUTH WASCO 54, were reported.
will get its chance to leapfrog ARLINGTON 39 — At
5LYHUVLGH(2/
the Eagles today when they 0DXSLQ IRU WKH VHYHQWK has dropped three of its last
host Joseph at 5:30 p.m.
straight game the Honkers four but has a great chance
came out on the wrong end to right the ship today when
WALLOWA 33, HELIX of a Big Sky League contest it plays at three-win Vale at
29 — At Helix, the Grizzlies on Friday. No details were 3:30 p.m. The last time the
suffered their eighth straight reported.
teams met on Jan. 15, the
loss in heartbreaking fashion
Arlington hosts Mitchell/ Pirates edged the Vikings
on Friday. The four-differ- Spray in a battle to stay out 50-44 in Boardman.
SCOREBOARD
Local slate
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
Today
Umatilla at Nyssa, 3:30 p.m.
Riverside at Vale, 3:30 p.m.
Culver at Pilot Rock, 4 p.m.
Ontario at Mac-Hi, 4:30 p.m.
Heppner at Stanfield, 5:30 p.m.
Weston-McEwen at Irrigon, 5:30 p.m.
Mitchell/Spray at Arlington, 5:30 p.m.
Ione at Condon/Wheeler, 5:30 p.m.
Joseph at Echo, 5:30 p.m.
Nixyaawii at Powder Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday
Pendleton at Hermiston, 5:45 p.m.
Mac-Hi at Baker, 7:30 p.m.
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
Today
Riverside at Vale, 2 p.m.
Culver at Pilot Rock, 2:30 p.m.
Ontario at Mac-Hi, 3 p.m.
Umatilla at Nyssa, 3 p.m.
Heppner at Stanfield, 4 p.m.
Weston-McEwen at Irrigon, 4 p.m.
Mitchell/Spray at Arlington, 4 p.m.
Ione at Condon/Wheeler, 4 p.m.
Joseph at Echo, 4 p.m.
Nixyaawii at Powder Valley, 4 p.m.
Tuesday
Mac-Hi at Baker, 6 p.m.
Pendleton at Hermiston, 7 p.m.
PREP WRESTLING
Today
Mac-Hi, Riverside, Heppner, Irrigon at BEO
Invite, 10 a.m.
PREP SWIMMING
Today
Pendleton, Hermiston at La Grande, Noon
COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL
Today
Treasure Valley at Blue Mountain, 4 p.m.
Eastern Oregon at Northwest (WA),
7:30 p.m.
COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Today
Treasure Valley at Blue Mountain, 2 p.m.
Eastern Oregon at Northwest (WA),
5:30 p.m.
Basketball
NCAA
Men’s Top 25
Friday’s Games
No games scheduled
Saturday’s Games
No. 1 Oklahoma at LSU, 2 p.m.
No. 2 North Carolina vs. Boston College,
1 p.m.
No. 4 Kansas vs. No. 20 Kentucky, 4 p.m.
No. 5 Texas A&M vs. No. 14 Iowa State,
11 a.m.
No. 7 Xavier at DePaul, 11 a.m.
No. 9 West Virginia at Florida, 9 a.m.
No. 10 Providence at Georgetown, 5 p.m.
No. 11 Virginia at No. 16 Louisville, 10 a.m.
No. 13 SMU vs. Memphis, 5 p.m.
No. 15 Miami at N.C. State, Noon
No. 17 Baylor vs. Georgia, 3 p.m.
No. 18 Arizona vs. Oregon State, 6:30 p.m.
No. 19 Indiana vs. Minnesota, 11:15 a.m.
No. 21 Purdue vs. Nebraska, 1:30 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
No. 3 Iowa vs. Northwestern, Noon
No. 6 Villanova vs. St. John’s at Madison
Square Garden, 9 a.m.
No. 8 Maryland at Ohio State, 10 a.m.
No. 12 Michigan State vs. Rutgers, 2:15
p.m.
No. 22 Wichita State at Evansville, 1 p.m.
No. 23 Oregon at Arizona State, 5:30 p.m.
No. 25 Notre Dame vs. Wake Forest, 10
a.m.
Women’s Top 25
Friday’s Games
Seton Hall 83, No. 23 DePaul 74
No. 9 Oregon State 71, Arizona 43
No. 15 UCLA 82, Colorado 64
No. 16 Stanford 69, No. 25 Washington
53
No. 8 Arizona State 63, Oregon 58
Saturday’s Games
No. 1 UConn vs. Memphis at the XL Cen-
ter, Hartford, Conn., 9 a.m.
No. 4 Baylor at No. 24 West Virginia, 1 p.m.
No. 5 Maryland vs. Indiana, 11 a.m.
No. 6 Texas at Kansas State, 5 p.m.
No. 21 Oklahoma at Iowa State, 11 a.m.
Sunday’s Games
No. 2 South Carolina at No. 10 Texas A&M,
3 p.m.
No. 11 Florida State vs. Virginia Tech, 11 a.m.
No. 12 Kentucky at Florida, 10 a.m.
No. 13 Mississippi State at Arkansas, Noon
No. 15 UCLA at Utah, 1 p.m.
No. 16 Stanford vs. Washington State, Noon
No. 17 Louisville vs. Wake Forest, 10 a.m.
No. 18 Michigan State at Wisconsin, 1 p.m.
No. 19 Tennessee vs. Alabama, Noon
No. 20 South Florida at SMU, 11 a.m.
No. 22 Missouri at Mississippi, 2 p.m.
No. 23 DePaul vs. St. John’s, 10 a.m.
No. 25 Washington at California, 2 p.m.
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L
Toronto
31 15
Boston
27 21
New York
23 26
Brooklyn
12 35
Philadelphia
7 40
Southeast Division
W
L
Atlanta
27 21
Miami
26 21
Charlotte
22 25
Washington
20 24
Orlando
20 25
Central Division
W
L
Cleveland
33 12
Chicago
26 19
Detroit
25 22
Indiana
24 22
Milwaukee
20 29
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L
Pct
GB
San Antonio
39
7 .848
—
Memphis
27 20 .574 12½
Dallas
27 22 .551 13½
Houston
25 24 .510 15½
New Orleans
17 28 .378 21½
Northwest Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Oklahoma City
36 13 .735
—
Portland
22 26 .458 13½
Utah
21 25 .457 13½
Denver
18 29 .383
17
Minnesota
14 34 .292 21½
Pacific Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Golden State
42
4 .913
—
L.A. Clippers
31 16 .660 11½
Sacramento
20 26 .435
22
Phoenix
14 34 .292
29
L.A. Lakers
9 40 .184 34½
———
Friday’s Games
Boston 113, Orlando 94
Cleveland 114, Detroit 106
New York 102, Phoenix 84
Miami 107, Milwaukee 103
Oklahoma City 116, Houston 108
Dallas 91, Brooklyn 79
Utah 103, Minnesota 90
Portland 109, Charlotte 91
L.A. Clippers 105, L.A. Lakers 93
Saturday’s Games
Golden State at Philadelphia, 2 p.m.
Detroit at Toronto, 3:30 p.m.
Brooklyn at New Orleans, 4 p.m.
Denver at Indiana, 4 p.m.
Sacramento at Memphis, 5 p.m.
Washington at Houston, 5 p.m.
San Antonio at Cleveland, 5:30 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Chicago at L.A. Clippers, 12:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Miami, 3 p.m.
Boston at Orlando, 3 p.m.
Phoenix at Dallas, 4 p.m.
Golden State at New York, 4:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Portland, 6 p.m.
Charlotte at L.A. Lakers, 6:30 p.m.
Football
Pct
.674
.563
.469
.255
.149
GB
—
5
9½
19½
24½
Pct
.563
.553
.468
.455
.444
GB
—
½
4½
5
5½
Pct
.733
.578
.532
.522
.408
GB
—
7
9
9½
15
NFL
Pro Bowl
Sunday, Jan. 31
At Honolulu
Team Rice vs. Team Irvin, 4 p.m. (ESPN)
Super Bowl
Sunday, Feb. 7
At Santa Clara, Calif.
Denver vs. Carolina, 3:30 p.m. (CBS)
Golf
Singapore Open
Friday’s Leaders
At Sentosa Golf Club (Serapong Course)
Singapore
Purse: $1 million
Yardage: 7,300; Par: 71
Second Round
Play suspended by bad weather
of last place at 5:30 p.m.
Song Younghan, South Korea
Shintaro Kobayashi, Japan
Paul Peterson, United States
T. Khrongphha, Thailand
Brett Munson, United States
Park Sanghyun, South Korea
Himmat Rai, India
Berry Henson, United States
Sam Brazel, Australia
Tadahiro Takayama, Japan
Yuki Inamori, Japan
Five players at 140
70-63—133
66-69—135
68-70—138
69-69—138
71-67—138
70-69—139
70-69—139
66-73—139
72-67—139
71-68—139
67-72—139
LPGA
Pure Silk-Bahamas LPGA Classic
Friday’s Leaders
At Ocean Club Golf Course
Paradise Island, Bahamas
Purse: $1.4 million
Yardage: 6,625; Par: 73
Second Round
Megan Khang
70-68—138
Haru Nomura
68-70—138
Charley Hull
68-70—138
Sei Young Kim
71-68—139
Anna Nordqvist
70-69—139
Min Seo Kwak
69-70—139
Catriona Matthew
68-71—139
Hyo Joo Kim
70-70—140
Paula Creamer
68-72—140
Stacy Lewis
73-68—141
Brittany Lincicome
70-71—141
Alison Lee
68-73—141
Seven players at 142, 10 at 143
Hockey
NHL
Today
All-Star Skills Challenge, 4 p.m. (NBCSN)
Sunday
All-Star Game, 2 p.m. (NBCSN)
Tennis
Australian Open
Friday
At Melbourne Park
Melbourne, Australia
Purse: $30.18 million (Grand Slam)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Semifinals
Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Milos Raonic
(13), Canada, 4-6, 7-5, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-2.
Doubles
Women
Championship
Martina Hingis, Switzerland, and Sania
Mirza (1), India, def. Andrea Hlavackova and
Lucie Hradecka (7), Czech Republic, 7-6
(1), 6-3.
Mixed
Semifinals
CoCo Vandeweghe, United States, and
Horia Tecau, Romania, def. Andreja Klepac,
Slovenia, and Treat Huey, Philippines, 6-4,
6-4.
Elena Vesnina, Russia, and Bruno Soares
(5), Brazil, def. Sania Mirza, India, and Ivan
Dodig (1), Croatia, 7-5, 7-6 (4).
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East Oregonian
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sity women’s basketball team withstood a late rally
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as 24 points en route to taking down the Geoducks
Friday night in Cascade Collegiate Conference (CCC)
play.
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senior forward Madeline Laan led the way with 15
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guard Maloree Moss added 13 points and a trio of
3s, while senior forward Nikki Osborne registered 10
points in a team-high 30 minutes.
EOU concludes its two-game road swing tomorrow
night against Northwest. Tipoff in Kirkland, Wash., is
set for 5:30 p.m.
Men’s Basketball
EASTERN OREGON 103, EVERGREEN 93
— At Olympia, Wash., senior guard Case Rada nailed
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sium.
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(19), junior guard Kentrell Washington (18), sopho-
more forward Brandon Hoston (17), sophomore guard
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(10) posted double digits for the Mountaineers. Wash-
ington also pulled down a team-best 12 boards.
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points on 10-for-19 shooting.
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action.