East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, November 23, 2016, Page Page 2B, Image 12

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    Page 2B
SPORTS
East Oregonian
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
NHL
Newest expansion team finally has
a name: the Vegas Golden Knights
Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — The
NHL’s newest team is
named the Vegas Golden
Knights.
Owner Bill Foley and
NHL Commissioner Gary
Bettman announced the Las
Vegas expansion franchise’s
official name and revealed
its logo and colors Tuesday
night at a gala ceremony
for about 5,000 fans outside
T-Mobile Arena, where the
Golden Knights will begin
play next season.
The Golden Knights’
logo is a simple front view
of a fighting helmet with
a conspicuous “V” in the
middle. Their colors are
steel grey, gold, red
and black.
“Our logo and
our name is really
going to exhibit the
highest element of
the warrior class —
the knight,” Foley
told the crowd. “The knight
protects the unprotected.
The knight defends the
realm. The knight never
gives up, never gives in,
always advances, never
retreats. And that is what our
team is going to be.”
The NHL awarded its
31st franchise in June to
this gambling mecca in the
Mojave Desert. Foley is
a billionaire businessman
who sold the league on the
potential of being
the first major pro
sports franchise in
the growing market
while playing in a
new $375 million
arena
already
constructed on the
south end of the Strip.
The franchise made its
name announcement near an
outdoor rink where young
hockey players braved
the 58-degree nighttime
temperatures in Vegas’
desert basin.
Foley paid $500 million
as an expansion fee to the
other 30 ownership groups,
and the West Point graduate
strongly considered naming
his team the Black Knights
in honor of his Army roots.
Foley has said the team
didn’t want to include an
overt gambling reference in
the name, but also consid-
ered Desert Knights and
Silver Knights.
“I’m very proud of our
name, and I’m very proud of
our logo,” Foley said.
The team has been
enthusiastically
received
in southern Nevada, which
is getting the first major
professional sports fran-
chise in a market of nearly
1.4 million. Foley led a
successful drive that landed
several thousand deposits on
season tickets months before
the NHL officially granted a
team to the city.
Women’s College Basketball
Ducks rout No. 25
Spartans at home
Associated Press
EUGENE — Ruthy
Hebard had 15 points and
10 rebounds and Oregon
blitzed No. 24 Michigan
State 88-55 on Tuesday
night.
The Ducks (4-0) shot 53
percent after a slow start
and led 65-26 after three
quarters. The Spartans made
9 of 13 shots in the fourth,
including all three of their
3-pointers after missing
their first nine, but still shot
just 32 percent (19 for 60).
MSU also had 24 turnovers.
Lexi Bando had all 11 of
her points in the first quarter
when Oregon took a 20-8
lead. Hebard had 10 points
#25 Mich. St.
Oregon
55
88
and eight rebounds playing
just eight minutes in the
second half. The Ducks led
by 44 early in the fourth
quarter. Morgan Yaeger
added 10 points and eight
different players had at least
seven points.
Tori Jankoska had 18
points for Michigan State,
which was only allowing 51
points a game, and moved
up to eighth on the school
scoring list with 1,565
points.
EOU: Team is 5-1 against ranked teams this season, 3-0 against top 10
Continued from 1B
their No. 1 ranking.
Marian is ranked first or
second in NAIA Division I
in nine statistical categories.
The Knights lead the nation
in key stats like opponents’
third-down
percentage,
passing efficiency, rushing
defense and sacks. They’re
second in total defense
allowing just 244 yards
per game (61 rushing, 183
passing) and fourth in total
offense at 552 yards a game
(240 rushing, 312 passing).
But Camp said the Knights
are like any other opponent,
which means they’re beat-
able, and that No. 1 ranking
means nothing when the
teams hit the field. Camp’s
Mountaineers have beaten a
No. 1 before, and took out
top-ranked Southern Oregon
in the 2014 regular-season
finale before the Raiders
went on a postseason run that
ended with a win over none
other than Marian in the
national championship.
“The one thing we’ve
done here over the course
of time is we’ve been able
to beat a No. 1 team, a No.
ALL-
LEAGUE:
Continued from 1B
and head coach Joe Padilla
was named Coach of the
Year.
———
5A Special District 1
Football all-league teams
Offensive Player of the Year — John
Bledsoe, Summit.
Co-Defensive Players of the Year
— John-Henry Line, Hermiston Cooger
Smith, Redmond.
Coach of the Year — Joe Padilla,
Summit.
First team
Quarterback — John Bledsoe, Summit,
sr.
Running backs — Dawson Ruhl, Sum-
mit, sr.; Daniel Bazan, Bend, sr.; Spencer
Klein, Mountain View, sr.
Receivers — Dayshawn Neal, Hermis-
ton, jr.; Ben Graziani, Summit, jr.
Tight end — Grant Tobias, Summit, sr.
Offensive line — Noah Klein, Mountain
View, sr.; Tanner Gilchrist, Redmond, sr.;
Noah Turnbull, Summit, jr.; Mario Nonato,
Redmond, sr.; Brock Metternich, Bend, sr.;
Zach Redelings, Redmond, sr.
Kicker — Tyler Lindsey, Bend, sr.
Defensive line — Cian Marderos,
Summit, jr.; Matt Allen, Redmond, sr.;
John-Henry Line, Hermiston, sr.; Rylee
Ettinger, Mountain View, jr.
Linebacker — Grant Tobias, Summit,
sr.; Cooger Smith, Redmond, sr.; Spencer
Klein, Mountain View, sr.; Kaleb Wyn-
garden, Bend, sr.
Defensive back — Kyle Cornett,
Summit, sr.; Ryan Stanley, Bend, sr.; Shaw
Jerome, Pendleton, jr.; Dalton Kickteig
Bend, sr.; Remy Barber, Ridgeview, sr.
Punter — Kyle Cornett, Summit, sr.
Second Team
Quarterback — Andrew James, Herm-
iston, soph.
Running backs — Jonathan Hinkle,
Hermiston, jr.; Deven Page, Pendleton, sr.;
Dillon Taylor, Redmond, jr.
Receivers — Shaw Jerome, Pendleton,
jr.; Carson Cromwell, Mountain View, sr.
Tight end — Jacob Cockrum, Mountain
View, sr.
Offensive line — Wade Pickering, Hood
River, jr.; Brandt Waller, Mountain View, jr.;
AJ Fernandez, Hermiston, jr.; Reese Buck,
Bend, sr.; Jacob Love, Ridgeview, sr.
Kicker — Casey Weaver, Summit, sr.
Defensive line — Wyatt Mansfield,
Hood River, sr.; Mario Nonato, Redmond,
sr.; Reese Buck, Bend, sr.; Damian Mc-
Leod, Hermiston, sr.
Linebacker — Patrick Estes, Hood
River, jr.; Bradlee Giusti, Hermiston, sr.;
Morgan Holcomb, Pendleton, sr.; Grant
Kennedy, Pendleton, sr.
Defensive back — Joe Gutierrez,
Hermiston, jr.; Colton Mortenson, Red-
mond, jr.; Koltin Ramsay, Mountain View, sr.
Punter — Damian McLeod, Hermiston,
sr.; Chase Lettenmaier, Bend, sr.
Honorable mention
Quarterback — Nick Bower, Pendleton,
jr.; Bunker Parrish, Redmond, sr.
Running back — Logan Green,
Ridgeview, sr.; Jamal Vann, Pendleton, sr.;
Greg Greiner, Ridgeview, sr.
Receivers — Kyle Cornett, Summit, sr.;
Remy Barber, Ridgeview, sr.; Nick Lani,
Pendleton, sr.; Brayden Durfee, Summit,
sr.; Tucker Salinas, Hermiston, sr.
Tight end — Jerry Ramirez, Hermiston,
sr.; Tyson Hester, Redmond, jr.
Offensive line — Brenned Biondi, Red-
mond, sr.; Kaden Caldwell, Hermiston, sr.;
Beau Blake, Hermiston, jr.; Rylee Ettinger,
Mountain View, jr.; Matt Allen, Redmond,
sr.; Cian Marderos, Summit, jr.
Kicker — Brian Lopez, Redmond, jr.;
Sebaztian Corona, Pendleton, sr.
Defensive line — Noah Turnbull, Sum-
mit, jr.; Evan Baughman, Summit, sr.; Noah
Klein, Mountain View, sr.; Justin Wilson,
Hood River, sr.; Greg Lee, Pendleton, jr.
Linebackers — Evan Heimuller, Sum-
mit, jr.; Bunker Parrish, Redmond, sr.; Jona-
than Hinkle, Hermiston, jr.; Cade Anderson,
Pendleton, sr.; Jace Reitz, Ridgeview, jr.
Defensive back — Grant Leiphart,
Summit, sr.; Dawson Ruhl, Summit, sr.;
Vaemu Ena, Hermiston, sr.; Chance Beut-
ler, Bend, sr.; Tyler Rohrman, Hermiston, jr.
2 team, a No. 4 team, seven,
the list goes on and on,”
Camp said in his weekly
interview with EOUsports.
com. “So I don’t treat this
as anything else. It’s playoff
time.”
The Mountaineers are 5-1
against ranked teams this
season and 3-0 against top 10
teams, although two of those
wins were over Southern
Oregon.
Fellow Frontier Confer-
ence member No. 6 Montana
Tech is also on the road this
week in the quarterfinals, and
Camp said the Mountaineers’
tough league schedule is
paying off.
“Well I think the Frontier
Conference has made us
battle tested, and it’s put us
in situations throughout the
season to rise to the occa-
sion, and to be able to make
the plays you need to make
to win games,” he said. “It
showed up against Doane
last week, the kids just never
panicked.”
The Mountaineers never
trailed against Tigers, but
had chances to crumble after
Doane pulled within a score
on a kickoff return in the
third quarter, and then made
it a one-score game again
before intercepting a Zach
Bartlow pass in the fourth
quarter.
Each time, however, EOU
responded immediately in
kind. John Payne’s 87-yard
kick return touchdown came
right after Doane’s, and Jesus
Retano’s second interception
came on the first play after
Doane picked off Bartlow. It
was the Mountaineers’ fourth
win by eight points or fewer.
The Mountaineers were
able to move the ball effec-
tively in the air and on the
ground against the Tigers,
finishing with 456 total
yards, but could find the
going tougher this week.
Marian scored on a safety
less than a minute into its
32-7 win over No. 15 Robert
Morris (Ill.) last week, and
carried a shutout late into the
fourth quarter while giving
up just 32 total rushing yards.
The Knights defense is led
by senior defensive lineman
Dillon Dittemore, who has
16 sacks and three forced
fumbles to go along with a
team-high 57 tackles and
19 tackles for loss. Senior
defensive back Erice Price
has a team-high five inter-
ceptions, and junior JaRon
Clark has four.
“I think our style of foot-
ball fits right into what they
do,” Camp said. “We have
different things and different
wrinkles that we put in each
game that fit what they do
defensively to attack certain
things, but we play a certain
type of football in the Fron-
tier Conference and that’s not
going to change. … I believe
our brand of football is a
different brand than people
see on a week-in, week-out
basis.”
Bartlow is averaging
nearly 300 yards a game
combined
passing
and
rushing yards, and has
thrown 25 touchdowns to
just six interceptions while
completing 59.5 percent of
his passes.
He’s joined in the back-
field by running back Alfred
Gross, who put up 117 yards
on Doane’s No. 6 rushing
defense and is averaging
91.7 per game. Bartlow’s top
three targets are all averaging
more than 13 yards per catch
led by Brenden Kelly (16.9)
who is coming off a career-
high 168-yard game.
Leading the way on
offense for Marian, which
has three wins over ranked
teams this season, is
freshman quarterback Luke
Johnston.
Johnston is averaging
313.5 yards passing a game,
and is completing 68.2
percent of his passes for 31
touchdowns and just two
interceptions.
His job has been made
a little easier by a three-
headed rushing attack paced
by senior Jakhari Gore
(5-foot-9, 190 pounds), who
averages 7.6 yards per carry
and 85.4 yards a game.
Freshman Charles Salary
(5-7, 185) is another smaller
back that has relied on speed
to post averages of 9.5 and
58.9 yards, and sophomore
Maurice Woodard (6-1, 205)
brings some power and aver-
ages of 4.7 and 46.2.
Senior receiver Krishawn
Hogan (6-4, 215) is aver-
aging 18.9 yards a catch
with 1,361 yards and 15
touchdowns on the season,
and senior Trey White (6-0,
190) averages 19.1 yards a
catch with 763 yards and 11
touchdowns.
“What I know is that
there’s two good teams
that are going to play on
Saturday,” Camp said of
the game that kicks off at
10 a.m. local time. “The
team that creates their own
momentum, the team that
takes care of the football,
and the team that executes
the best will win the football
game.
“It all really will always
come back to fundamentals.
They’re going to do what
they do, and we have to be
able to tackle, we have to
cover, and block better. It’s
not going to be a shock to
anybody within our group,
within our locker room, but
we have to prepare well and
at the end of the day we have
to execute.”
Fans will have a couple
of ways to follow the
action with live video
online at LiveStream.com/
MTCsportsnetwork and live
stats at Portal.StretchInternet.
com/Marian/Index.htm. The
game will also be broadcast
live on Newstalk 103.1 FM
(MyEasternOregon.com).
BLAZERS: Five-game road trip concludes today in Cleveland
Continued from 1B
bench as the Knicks won their fifth
straight at home.
“That’s why we came here,”
Jennings said. “We came here to
win.”
Anthony finished with 17 points
after going scoreless in the fourth
quarter and shooting 2 for 12 in
the second half, but tipped out the
rebound of Rose’s miss with about
30 seconds left, allowing the Knicks
to keep possession before Rose’s
jumper that clinched it.
“There’s other ways to impact
the game if your shots not falling
and he did it another way and that
was defense and rebounding,” guard
Courtney Lee said.
Damian Lillard scored 22 points
for the Trail Blazers but fell to 4-1 at
Madison Square Garden. CJ McCo-
llum added 16 points.
The Blazers were trying for a
New York sweep, having routed the
Brooklyn Nets 129-109 on Sunday.
They managed just a pair of free
throws from Lillard after taking a
three-point lead with 3:58 to play.
“We’ve got to go out there and
get after it. We’ve got to play hard,
understand who they are and what
they’re capable of,” Lillard said.
“At the end of the day it’s the NBA,
anybody can be beat.”
Rose made consecutive baskets,
with his reverse layup giving the
Knicks a 102-101 lead. It appeared
he was going to lose possession on
their next trip, but the ball came out
to Mindaugas Kuzminskas for a
3-pointer that made it 105-101 with
2:37 to play.
Lillard’s free throws cut it to
two with 1:22 left, but the Blazers
turned it over, then couldn’t grab
the rebound after a Knicks miss.
Rose hit a jumper as the shot clock
was winding down to put away the
victory.
TIP-INS
Trail Blazers: Portland had won
four straight at MSG, with its last
loss in March 2012, a few months
before drafting Lillard. ... Coach
Terry Stotts remained with 190
wins, tied with Mike Dunleavy for
fourth on Portland’s career coaching
list.
SIBLING RIVALRY
Knicks backup center Marshall
Plumlee didn’t get into the game to
play against his older brother Mason,
the Blazers’ starting center. Marshall
Plumlee made his NBA debut on
Sunday, a day after Mason surprised
him by showing up to watch him
play for the Westchester Knicks of
the NBA Development League.
UP NEXT
Trail Blazers: Visit Cleveland on
Wednesday, the first meeting since
the Blazers’ 105-76 rout last Dec.
26 in a game they played without
Lillard.
SCOREBOARD
Local slate
PREP FOOTBALL
Saturday
1A CHAMPIONSHIP: #5 Dufur vs. #2 Crane (at
Hermiston High), Noon
2A CHAMPIONSHIP: #2 Stanfield vs. #1 Regis (at
Hermiston High), 4 p.m.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Saturday
#9 Eastern Oregon at #1 Marian (IN), 10 a.m.
COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL
Friday
Eastern Oregon vs. Montana Western (at Caldwell,
Idaho), 2 p.m.
Blue Mountain at College of Southern Idaho, 7:30
p.m.
Saturday
Eastern Oregon vs. Rocky Mountain (at Caldwell,
Idaho), 2 p.m.
Blue Mountain vs. Planet Athlete (at Twin Falls,
Idaho), 3:30 p.m.
COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Friday
Eastern Oregon vs. Montana Western (at Caldwell,
Idaho), Noon
Saturday
Eastern Oregon vs. Rocky Mountain (at Caldwell,
Idaho), Noon
Football
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L
T Pct
New England 8 2
0 .800
Miami
6 4
0 .600
Buffalo
5 5
0 .500
N.Y. Jets
3 7
0 .300
South
W L
T Pct
Houston
6 4
0 .600
Indianapolis
5 5
0 .500
Tennessee
5 6
0 .455
Jacksonville
2 8
0 .200
North
W L
T Pct
Baltimore
5 5
0 .500
Pittsburgh
5 5
0 .500
Cincinnati
3 6
1 .350
Cleveland
0 11
0 .000
West
W L
T Pct
Oakland
8 2
0 .800
Kansas City
7 3
0 .700
Denver
7 3
0 .700
San Diego
4 6
0 .400
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L
T Pct
Dallas
9 1
0 .900
N.Y. Giants
7 3
0 .700
Washington 6 3
1 .650
Philadelphia 5 5
0 .500
South
W L
T Pct
Atlanta
6 4
0 .600
Tampa Bay
5 5
0 .500
PF
271
218
253
179
PA
180
216
215
244
PF
181
263
281
193
PA
215
273
275
265
PF
199
238
199
184
PA
187
215
226
325
PF
272
222
239
292
PA
243
187
189
278
PF
285
204
254
241
PA
187
200
233
186
PF
320
235
PA
283
259
New Orleans 4 6
0 .400 285
Carolina
4 6
0 .400 244
North
W L
T Pct
PF
Detroit
6 4
0 .600 231
Minnesota
6 4
0 .600 205
Green Bay
4 6
0 .400 247
Chicago
2 8
0 .200 157
West
W L
T Pct
PF
Seattle
7 2
1 .750 219
Arizona
4 5
1 .450 226
Los Angeles 4 6
0 .400 149
San Francisco 1 9
0 .100 204
———
Thursday’s Games
Minnesota at Detroit, 9:30 a.m.
Washington at Dallas, 1:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Indianapolis, 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 27
San Diego at Houston, 10 a.m.
Arizona at Atlanta, 10 a.m.
Cincinnati at Baltimore, 10 a.m.
San Francisco at Miami, 10 a.m.
Jacksonville at Buffalo, 10 a.m.
Tennessee at Chicago, 10 a.m.
Los Angeles at New Orleans, 10 a.m.
N.Y. Giants at Cleveland, 10 a.m.
Seattle at Tampa Bay, 1:05 p.m.
Carolina at Oakland, 1:25 p.m.
New England at N.Y. Jets, 1:25 p.m.
Kansas City at Denver, 5:30 p.m.
Monday, Nov. 28
Green Bay at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m.
286
246
PA
225
176
276
237
PA
173
190
187
313
NCAA
Top 25
Thursday’s Games
No. 22 Texas A&M vs. No. 25 LSU, 4:30 p.m.
NAIA
Quarterfinals
Saturday’s Games
Morningside (Iowa) (10-1) at Saint Francis (Ind.)
(10-1), 9 a.m.
Eastern Oregon (9-2) at Marian (Ind.) (11-0), 10 a.m.
Montana Tech (10-1) at Reinhardt (Ga.) (12-0), 10:30
a.m.
Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) (11-1) at Baker (Kan.) (12-0), 11
a.m.
Basketball
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L
Toronto
8
6
Boston
8
6
New York
7
7
Brooklyn
4
9
Philadelphia
4 10
Southeast Division
W
L
Atlanta
9
5
Charlotte
8
5
Orlando
6
8
Miami
4
9
Washington
4
9
Central Division
W
L
Cleveland
10
2
Pct
.571
.571
.500
.308
.286
GB
—
—
1
3½
4
Pct
.643
.615
.429
.308
.308
GB
—
½
3
4½
4½
Pct
.833
GB
—
Chicago
9
6
.600
2½
Indiana
7
8
.467
4½
Milwaukee
6
7
.462
4½
Detroit
6
9
.400
5½
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L
Pct
GB
San Antonio
11
3
.786
—
Memphis
9
5
.643
2
Houston
9
5
.643
2
New Orleans
5 10
.333
6½
Dallas
2 11
.154
8½
Northwest Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Oklahoma City
8
7
.533
—
Portland
8
8
.500
½
Utah
7
8
.467
1
Denver
6
8
.429
1½
Minnesota
4
9
.308
3
Pacific Division
W
L
Pct
GB
L.A. Clippers
13
2
.867
—
Golden State
12
2
.857
½
L.A. Lakers
8
7
.533
5
Sacramento
5
9
.357
7½
Phoenix
4 11
.267
9
———
Tuesday’s Games
New Orleans 112, Atlanta 94
New York 107, Portland 103
Denver 110, Chicago 107
L.A. Lakers 111, Oklahoma City 109
Today’s Games
Atlanta at Indiana, 4 p.m.
Memphis at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.
Phoenix at Orlando, 4 p.m.
Portland at Cleveland, 4 p.m.
San Antonio at Charlotte, 4 p.m.
Boston at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m.
Miami at Detroit, 4:30 p.m.
Toronto at Houston, 5 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.
Denver at Utah, 6 p.m.
Minnesota at New Orleans, 6:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Golden State, 7:30 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Sacramento, 7:30 p.m.
NCAA
Men’s Top 25
Tuesday’s Games
Fort Wayne 71, No. 3 Indiana 68, OT
No. 4 North Carolina 107, Oklahoma State 75
No. 5 Kansas 65, Georgia 54
No. 7 Virginia 90, Grambling State 34
No. 13 Oregon 69, Tennessee 65, OT
No. 15 Saint Mary’s 81, San Jose State 64
No. 16 Wisconsin 73, Georgetown 57
No. 17 Purdue 85, Utah State 64
No. 18 Syracuse 101, South Carolina State 59
Colorado 68, No. 22 Texas 54.
Women’s Top 25
Tuesday’s Games
No. 1 Notre Dame 91, UL Lafayette 51
No. 2 Connecticut 98, Dayton 65
No. 3 South Carolina 93, Saint Peter’s 38
No. 5 Baylor 109, Southeastern Louisiana 38
No. 15 Washington 105, Idaho 53
No. 16 Florida 71, Arkansas State 60
No. 19 West Virginia 80, North Carolina A&T 64
Marquette 74, No. 22 Oregon State 73
Oregon 88, No. 24 Michigan State 55
Hockey
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP
W L OT Pts GF
Montreal
20 14 4
2 30
63
Tampa Bay
20 12 7
1 25
62
Ottawa
19
11 7
1 23
44
Boston
19
11 8
0 22
47
Florida
20 10 9
1 21
53
Toronto
19
8 8
3 19
58
Buffalo
19
7 8
4 18
37
Detroit
19
8 10
1 17
46
Metropolitan Division
GP
W L OT Pts GF
N.Y. Rangers 20 14 5
1 29
81
Pittsburgh
19
11 5
3 25
54
Washington 18
11 5
2 24
48
Columbus
17 10 4
3 23
56
New Jersey 18
9 6
3 21
41
Philadelphia 20
9 8
3 21
65
Carolina
18
8 6
4 20
47
N.Y. Islanders 18
6 8
4 16
45
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP
W L OT Pts GF
Chicago
20 13 5
2 28
61
St. Louis
20
11 6
3 25
51
Dallas
20
8 7
5 21
53
Minnesota
18
9 7
2 20
46
Winnipeg
21
9 10
2 20
58
Nashville
18
8 7
3 19
50
Colorado
18
9 9
0 18
39
Pacific Division
GP
W L OT Pts GF
Edmonton
20
11 8
1 23
59
Anaheim
20
9 7
4 22
52
San Jose
19 10 8
1 21
45
Los Angeles 20 10 9
1 21
51
Calgary
21
8 12
1 17
49
Vancouver
19
7 10
2 16
41
Arizona
17
6 9
2 14
44
———
Tuesday’s Games
St. Louis 4, Boston 2
Carolina 2, Toronto 1
Ottawa 4, Montreal 3
Philadelphia 3, Florida 1
N.Y. Islanders 3, Anaheim 2, SO
Today’s Games
Toronto at New Jersey, 4 p.m.
Calgary at Columbus, 4 p.m.
Winnipeg at Minnesota, 4 p.m.
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m.
Detroit at Buffalo, 4 p.m.
St. Louis at Washington, 4 p.m.
Philadelphia at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m.
Dallas at Nashville, 5 p.m.
Chicago at San Jose, 7 p.m.
Vancouver at Arizona, 7 p.m.
Edmonton at Colorado, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m.
Soccer
MLS
Conference Championships
Eastern Conference
Tuesday: Montreal 3, Toronto FC 2 (Leg 1)
Western Conference
Seattle 2, Colorado 1 (Leg 1)
GA
46
49
49
44
54
62
48
51
GA
47
55
40
40
42
68
50
55
GA
53
53
66
35
62
48
49
GA
51
49
42
51
69
61
56