East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, December 14, 2016, Page Page 2B, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 2B
SPORTS
East Oregonian
BRIEFLY
Wake Forest fires radio
analyst for leaking info
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP)
— Wake Forest has fired a former
assistant coach-turned-broadcaster
who the school says attempted to leak
football game plans to opponents for
three years.
The school on Tuesday night
announced the findings of a nearly
monthlong internal investigation that
started after documents related to the
team’s game plan for the Louisville
game were discovered at the Cardinals’
stadium.
In a statement, the school placed
the entirety of the blame on Tommy
Elrod a former Wake Forest player
and assistant under former coach Jim
Grobe. Elrod was not retained by Dave
Clawson when he succeeded Grobe in
2014, and he became an analyst for the
IMG College radio broadcasts of the
Demon Deacons’ games.
The school said it reviewed emails,
text messages and phone records and
determined Elrod either provided or
attempted to provide “confidential
and proprietary game preparations on
multiple occasions” starting in 2014.
ALL-
STATE:
Continued from 1B
team offensive backfield is
senior running back Thyler
Monkus, who ran for 1,505
yards and 22 touchdowns in
12 games this season. In the
playoffs, Monkus ran for a
team-high 459 yards and four
touchdowns on 56 carries —
an average of more than eight
yards per touch. Monkus also
earned a first team nod at
defensive back.
Stanfield also had senior
linemen Jose Garcia and Noe
Sanchez make the first team
on both sides of the ball, as
both were crucial parts of
a tenacious Tiger offensive
line and a bullish defensive
line this season. Garcia was
a first teamer on offense last
season, and Sanchez was an
honorable mention pick on
offense last year as well.
And for Heppner, senior
jack-of-all-trades
Logan
Grieb was selected to the first
team as a receiver and defen-
sive back for the second year
in a row. Grieb was a jack-of-
all-trades player for Heppner
in 2016, leading the team
with 1,283 rushing yards on
115 carries with 19 touch-
downs, 182 receiving yards
and four touchdowns, and he
also completed 2-3 passes for
15 yards and one touchdown.
On defense, Grieb recorded
21 tackles and picked off
three passes.
Earning second team
honors were Stanfield junior
receiver Brody Woods and
Heppner junior defensive
lineman Wyatt Steagall.
Woods, who stands at
6-feet-4, was Stanfield’s
No. 1 receiver this season
and caught 15 passes for
232 yards and a pair of
touchdowns in the playoffs.
Steagall was a force all
season long for the Mustangs
defensive front, recording 64
total tackles and 14 tackles-
for-loss.
Stanfield’s head coach
Davie Salas was also voted
as the state’s Coach of the
Year, leading the Tigers to an
11-2 overall record and the
school’s first league title and
state championship appear-
ance in nearly six decades.
————
Class 2A All-State Football
Offensive Players of the Year: Dylan
Grogan, sr., Stanfield; Bishop Mitchell,
sr., Kennedy.
Defensive Players of the Year: Kevin Mur-
ray, sr., Heppner; Eric Gustin, sr., Regis.
Coach of the Year: Davie Salas, Stanfield
First team
Quarterback — Dylan Grogan, sr.,
Stanfield.
Running back — Brandon Piete, jr., Regis;
Bishop Mitchell, sr., Kennedy; Thyler
Monkus, sr., Stanfield.
Receiver — Eric Gustin, sr., Regis; Logan
Grieb, sr., Heppner.
Tight end — Tyson Horning, sr., Monroe.
Offensive Line — Tanner Williams, sr.,
Regis; Jeremy Kliewer, sr., Kennedy; Kevin
Murray, sr., Heppner; Jose Garcia, sr.,
Stanfield; Noe Sanchez, sr., Stanfield.
Kicker — Diego Hernandez, sr., Kennedy.
Defensive Line — Tanner Williams, sr.,
Regis; Jeremy Kliewer, sr., Kennedy; Noe
Sanchez, sr., Stanfield, Jose Garcia, sr.,
Stanfield.
Linebacker — Andrew Goozee, sr., Knap-
pa; Eric Gustin, sr., Regis; Jack Suing, sr.,
Kennedy; Kevin Murray, sr., Heppner.
Defensive back — Brendon Woodcock,
sr., Regis; Brett Traeger, sr., Kennedy; Lo-
gan Grieb, sr., Heppner; Thyler Monkus,
sr., Stanfield.
Punter — Holden Smith, jr., St. Paul;
Andrew Harrington, jr., Oakland.
Second team
Quarterback — Bryce Piete, jr., Regis.
Running back — Andrew Goozee, sr.,
Knappa; Fernando De la Cerda, sr., St. Paul;
Jaiden Jones, sr., Culver.
Receiver — Skyler Bizon, sr., Kennedy;
Brody Woods, jr., Stanfield.
Tight end — Campbell Smith, jr., St. Paul.
Offensive line — Reece Hunt, jr., Knappa;
Ethan Wyss, sr., St. Paul; Randall Klagge,
sr., Santiam; Ben Hughes, sr., Central Linn;
Mack Little, sr., Culver.
Kicker — Jorge Olivera, jr., Culver.
Defensive line — Reece Hunt, jr., Knappa;
Jack Forsythe, sr., St. Paul; Randall Klagge,
sr., Santiam; Wyatt Steagall, jr., Heppner.
Linebacker — Cuay Weaver, jr., Grant
Union; Justin Herberger, soph., St. Paul;
Mack Little, sr., Culver; Dylan Grogan, sr.,
Stanfield.
Defensive back — Andrew Harrington, jr.,
Oakland; Mason Hoover, jr., Knappa; James
Hixenbaugh, sr., Reedsport; Fernando de la
Cerda, sr., St. Paul.
Punter — Javier Analco, fr., Reedsport.
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
BLAZERS:
Continued from 1B
City’s first starting lineup
change of the season. Jerami
Grant, acquired by the
Thunder in a trade with Phil-
adelphia at the start of the
season, got his first start for
Oklahoma City and finished
with 11 points.
The Blazers didn’t have
Al-Farouq Aminu, who
has a sore back, instead
starting Noah Vonleh. But
Vonleh got into foul trouble,
collecting three in the first
quarter.
Westbrook’s
3-pointer
put the Thunder up 25-16
early, but Portland came
back to take a 32-31 lead on
Allen Crabbe’s layup before
the end of the first quarter.
CJ McCollum made a three-
quarter court shot, but he
didn’t beat the buzzer.
Portland stretched the
lead to 50-36 after Evan
Turner’s floater and free
throw. The two sides
exchanged words midway
Portland
Trail Blazers
guard Evan
Turner, right,
shoots over
Oklahoma
City Thun-
der guard
Semaj
Christon
during the
second half
of an NBA
basketball
game in
Portland,
Ore., Tues-
day, Dec. 13,
2016.
through the second quarter
when Lillard reached down
to pick up the ball at a time
out and Westbrook kicked it.
Lillard closed out the half
with a left-handed layup to
make it 68-52. Plumlee’s
basket stretched Portland’s
lead to 90-65 late in the third
quarter.
ALL ABOUT THE
SHOES
In addition to being Star
Wars Night at the Moda
Center, the Blazers were
celebrating the release of
Lillard’s new signature shoe,
the Dame 3. Lillard wore an
all-red version of the Adidas
shoe, which will be released
Wednesday, and the fans at
the game were all treated to
T-shirts emblazoned with
Lillard’s logo.
UP NEXT
Thunder: Visit Utah on
Wednesday night.
Trail Blazers: Head back
out on the road to face
Denver on Thursday night.
AP Photo/Craig
Mitchelldyer
PREPS: Weston-McEwen girls win fourth straight game
Continued from 1B
against them (Irrigon) because they
get after you, and they’re a really
good team.”
Heppner (3-1) shot 38 percent
(18-48) from the floor in the game
and Jake Lindsay was the game’s
high-scorer with 19 points. Logan
Grieb added 17 points for the
Mustangs, and Caden Hedman
scored 12 points and grabbed 11
rebounds.
It was a two-horse show for
Irrigon (2-2) offensively, as Hayden
White and Johnny Phillips each
scored 14 points in the game.
Heppner next hosts Imbler on
Friday night at 7:30 p.m., while
Irrigon travels to Grant Union for a
7:30 p.m. start.
————
IHS
8 13
7 10 — 38
HHS
7 8 21 16 — 52
IRRIGON — H. White 14, J. Phillips 14, E. Carillo 6,
A. Rice 3, O. Vera 1.
HEPPNER — J. Lindsay 19, L. Grieb 17, C. Hedman
12, W. Steagall 2, K. Smith 2.
3-pointers — IHS 2, HHS 4. Free throws — IHS 8-11,
HHS 12-17. Fouls — IHS 19, HHS 14.
RIVERSIDE 53, WESTON-
MCEWEN 48 — At Boardman,
Eon Castillo scored 23 points to
lead his Riverside Pirates past the
Weston-McEwen TigerScots in
a non-league contest on Tuesday
night.
“It was a really good win for
us,” Riverside coach Clair Costello
said. “We needed that after falling
flat on our face against Walla Walla
Valley last week ... I’m starting to get
players back from injury and grades,
and it’s finally looking like the team
I envisioned.”
Also making an impact for River-
side (3-2) was junior wing Felix
Aparicio, who had 18 points in his
season debut. For Weston-McEwen
(3-2) Shaw Broncheau and Brenden
Dearing each scored 12 points to
lead the team.
Riverside next travels to Stanfield
on Friday to take on Ione in the Stan-
field Tournament, while Weston-
McEwen will travel to Imbler on
Saturday.
————
W-M
13 11 12 12 — 48
RHS
12 19 11 11 — 53
WESTON-MCEWEN — S. Broncheau 12, B. Dearing
12, G. Hungerford 8, Q. Picard 7, B. Speed 6, J. West
3.
RIVERSIDE — E. Castillo 23, F. Aparicio 18, J. Carmo-
na 3, J. Garcia 3, M. Hegar 3, D. Rodriguez 3.
3-pointers — W-M 6, RHS 6. Free throws — W-M
8-15, RHS 14-24. Fouls — W-M 22, RHS 15. Fouled
out — S. Broncheau (W-M).
Girls Basketball
IRRIGON 50, HEPPNER 28
— At Heppner, the Irrigon Knights
got back above the .500 mark for the
season with a win over their former
league rival Heppner Mustangs on
Tuesday night 50-28.
Jada Burns led Irrigon (3-2)
with 21 points in the game on 8-19
shooting. As a team, Irrigon shot just
31 percent (20-65) from the field,
but played good defense against the
Mustangs, as Heppner (2-2) shot just
10-47 (21 percent). Jacee Currin led
Heppner with eight points.
Heppner next hosts Imbler on
Friday at 6 p.m. and Irrigon heads to
Grant Union on Friday at 6 p.m.
————
IHS
11 17
8 14 — 50
HHS
7 12
6
3 — 28
IRRIGON — J. Burns 21, A. Munoz 8, T. Davis 6, K.
Wyant 6, A. Zacarias 5, N. Romero 3, O. Luna 1.
HEPPNER — J. Currin 8, K. Gray 7, M. Correa 4, T.
McCurry 3, M. Silvia 2, J. Mahoney 2, M. Combe 2.
3-pointers — IHS 3, HHS 1. Free throws — IHS 7-10,
HHS 7-15. Fouls — IHS 19, HHS 12.
WESTON-MCEWEN
44,
RIVERSIDE 39 — At Boardman,
the Weston-McEwen TigerScots
won for the fourth straight game
after beating the Riverside Pirates
44-39 in a non-league contest on
Tuesday night.
“It was the best game we’ve
played, the girls played hard the
whole game,” Riverside coach Clair
Costello said. “We did everything we
could, but their (Weston-McEwen’s)
height got the best of us in the end.”
Sarah Finifrock had 18 points in
the game for Weston-McEwen (4-1),
including 10 of those in the fourth
quarter. For Riverside (2-3) Alondra
Caldera led the team with 12 points
and added nine rebounds, while
Lacey Mashos had 11.
Riverside next heads to Stan-
field on Friday to take on Ione in
the Stanfield Tournament, while
Weston-McEwen travels to Imbler
on Saturday.
————
W-M
12 9
8 15 — 44
RHS
10 6 13 10 — 39
WESTON-MCEWEN — S. Finifrock 18, A. Hill 11,
K. Vescio 6, A. Schroeder 4, C. Quaempts 3, M.
Muilenburg 2.
RIVERSIDE — A. Caldera 12, L. Mashos 11, S.
Wightman 9, F. Rosen 4, A. Hernandez 3.
3-pointers — W-M 0, RHS 5. Free throws — W-M
10-20, RHS 9-17. Fouls — W-M 14, RHS 15.
————
To report game scores and
statistics, coaches can call (541)
966-0838 or email us at sports@
eastoregonian.com.
OREGON: Picks up 100th win at Matthew Knight Arena
Continued from 1B
of 25.
Ahmaad Rorie, who played his
freshman season at Oregon before
transferring in 2015, led the Griz-
zlies (3-8) with 19 points. Michael
Oguine and Walter Wright added
12 each.
Montana missed 10 of its first 11
shots but built a 21-14 lead when
Oregon went 7 1/2 minutes without
a field goal. The culprit was five
turnovers in a span of six posses-
sions by Altman’s count.
“Good teams don’t do that,” he
said. “Our guards have got to get it
moving better.
“Our ball movement and player
movement is just slow. We’re
supposed to be pushing it and
flowing into something.”
The Ducks had 11 of their
13 turnovers by halftime. They
bounced back with a 14-2 run late
in the first half and never trailed the
rest of the way.
Boucher led Oregon to a 40-34
edge in rebounds. It was his first
double-double of the season and
10th of his career.
He also had five of the eight
blocked shots by the Ducks, who
lead the nation at 8.8 per game.
BIG PICTURE
Montana is off to its worst
nonconference start under third-
year coach Travis DeCuire. The
Grizzlies, who have finished 14-4
in the Big Sky the past two seasons,
were picked for second by the
media and fourth by the coaches.
Oregon’s search for two solid
halves against anything but an
overmatched opponent continues
with just two games left before
the Pac-12 season begins. The
defending conference champions
continue to bring preseason
All-America Dillon Brooks off the
bench.
STAT OF THE NIGHT: The
Ducks won their 100th game in
Matthew Knight Arena. They are
50-2 in nonconference games and
50-11 against Pac-12 foes in their
6-year-old home.
GLUE GUY: Ennis, the
sixth-year transfer from Villanova
coming off a medical redshirt
season, had his best shooting game
as a Duck, hitting 7 of 10 overall
and 3 of 5 from 3-point range to go
with three assists and two blocks.
UP NEXT
Oregon plays its only game away
from Eugene during December
when it faces UNLV in Portland
on Saturday night. The Ducks host
No. 2 UCLA to open Pac-12 play in
two weeks.
SCOREBOARD
Local slate
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
Thursday’s Games
Umatilla vs. Jordan Valley (at Union
Tournament), 3:30 p.m.
The Dalles (JV) at Arlington, 7 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Ione vs. Riverside (at Stanield Tourna-
ment) 3:30 p.m.
Enterprise vs. Condon/Wheeler (Pilot
Rock Tournament), 3 p.m.
Nyssa at Stanfield (at Stanfield Tourna-
ment), 6:30 p.m.
Pendleton vs. Mountain View (at Wilson-
ville Invite), 7 p.m.
Irrigon at Grant Union, 7:30 p.m.
Imbler at Heppner, 7:30 p.m.
Nixyaawii at Wallowa, 7:30 p.m.
Helix at Echo, 7:30 p.m.
Umatilla vs. TBD (at Union Tournament),
TBD
Mac-Hi vs. TBD (at Pilot Rock Tourna-
ment), TBD
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
Thursday’s Games
Umatilla vs. Jordan Valley (at Union
Tournament), 2 p.m.
The Dalles (JV) at Arlington, 5 p.m.
Pendleton at Wilsonville, 7 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Ione vs. Riverside (at Stanfield Tourna-
ment), 2 p.m.
Condon/Wheeler vs. Enterprise (at Pilot
Rock Tournament), 4:30 p.m.
Nyssa at Stanfield, 5 p.m.
Irrigon at Grant Union, 6 p.m.
Imbler at Heppner, 6 p.m.
Nixyaawii at Wallowa, 6 p.m.
Helix at Echo, 6 p.m.
Mac-Hi at Pilot Rock (at Pilot Rock Tour-
nament), 7 p.m.
Umatilla vs. TBD (at Union Tournament),
TBD
PREP WRESTLING
Thursday
Pendleton at Liberty, 6 p.m.
Friday
Hermiston at North Idaho College (Tri-
State Tournament), TBD
Echo at Dobbs (ID) Invitational, 3 p.m.
Pendleton at Banks, TBD
Saturday
Hermiston at North Idaho College (Tri-
State Tournament), TBD
Pendleton at Liberty Invitational, 9 a.m.
Mac-Hi, Riverside, Irrigon, Heppner at
Mac-Hi Tournament, 10 a.m.
Echo at Dobbs (ID) Invitational, 3 p.m.
PREP SWIMMING
Saturday
Pendleton, Hermiston at La Grande,
Noon
Pendleton (selects) at Bend, 1 p.m.
COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL
Friday
Corban at Eastern Oregon, 7:30 p.m.
Skagit Valley at Blue Mountain, 8 p.m.
Saturday
Northwest Christian at Eastern Oregon,
7:30 p.m.
Tacoma at Blue Mountain, 2 p.m.
Sunday
Clark at Blue Mountain, 2 p.m.
COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Friday
Corban at Eastern Oregon, 5:30 p.m.
Blue Mountain vs. Grays Harbor (at
Salem), 5:30 p.m.
Saturday
Blue Mountain vs. Chemeketa (at
Salem), 3 p.m.
Northwest Christian at Eastern Oregon,
5:30 p.m.
Sunday
Blue Mountain vs. Everett (at Salem),
Noon
COLLEGE MEN’S WRESTLING
Sunday
Eastern Oregon at Reno (Nev.) Tourna-
ment of Champions, TBA
COLLEGE WOMEN’S WRESTLING
Saturday-Sunday
Eastern Oregon at West Coast Tourna-
ment of Champions (at Rocklin, Calif.),
TBD
Football
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W
L T Pct PF PA
New England 11 2
0 .846 349
Miami
8 5
0 .615 281
Buffalo
6 7
0 .462 325
N.Y. Jets
4 9
0 .308 229
South
W
L T Pct PF PA
Houston
7 6
0 .538 229
Tennessee
7 6
0 .538 321
Indianapolis 6 7
0 .462 328
Jacksonville 2 11
0 .154 240
North
W
L T Pct PF PA
Pittsburgh
8 5
0 .615 317
Baltimore
7 6
0 .538 279
Cincinnati
5 7
1 .423 268
Cleveland
0 13
0 .000 207
West
W
L T Pct PF PA
Kansas City 10 3
0 .769 302
Oakland
10 3
0 .769 358
Denver
8 5
0 .615 296
San Diego
5 8
0 .385 350
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W
L T Pct PF PA
x-Dallas
11 2
0 .846 340
N.Y. Giants 9 4
0 .692 255
Washington 7 5
1 .577 330
Philadelphia 5 8
0 .385 290
South
W
L T Pct PF PA
Atlanta
8 5
0 .615 428
Tampa Bay 8 5
0 .615 293
New Orleans 5 8
0 .385 358
Carolina
5 8
0 .385 311
North
W
L T Pct PF PA
Detroit
9 4
0 .692 295
Green Bay
7 6
0 .538 333
Minnesota
7 6
0 .538 258
Chicago
3 10
0 .231 221
West
230
301
301
324
274
306
333
338
256
237
269
375
255
320
242
347
238
244
317
272
W
L T Pct PF PA
Seattle
8 4
1 .654 274 232
Arizona
5 7
1 .423 299 277
Los Angeles 4 9
0 .308 194 304
San Francisco 1 12
0 .077 251 393
x-clinched playoff spot
———
Week 15
Thursday’s Game
Los Angeles at Seattle, 5:25 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 17
Miami at N.Y. Jets, 5:25 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 18
Philadelphia at Baltimore, 10 a.m.
Cleveland at Buffalo, 10 a.m.
Detroit at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m.
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 10 a.m.
Tennessee at Kansas City, 10 a.m.
Green Bay at Chicago, 10 a.m.
Indianapolis at Minnesota, 10 a.m.
Jacksonville at Houston, 10 a.m.
New Orleans at Arizona, 1:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Atlanta, 1:05 p.m.
New England at Denver, 1:25 p.m.
Oakland at San Diego, 1:25 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 19
Carolina at Washington, 5:30 p.m.
NCAA
Bowl Game Lineup
Saturday, Dec. 17
Celebration Bowl
At Atlanta
NC Central (9-2) vs. Grambling State
(11-1), 9 a.m. (ABC)
New Mexico Bowl
Albuquerque
UTSA (6-6) vs. New Mexico (8-4), 11
a.m. (ESPN)
Las Vegas Bowl
San Diego State (10-3) vs. Houston (9-3),
12:30 p.m. (ABC)
Camellia Bowl
Montgomery, Ala.
Toledo (9-3) vs. Appalachian State (9-3),
2:30 p.m. (ESPN)
Cure Bowl
Orlando, Fla.
UCF (6-6) vs. Arkansas State (7-5), 2:30
p.m. (CBSSN)
New Orleans Bowl
Southern Miss. (6-6) vs. Louisiana-Lafay-
ette (6-6), 6 p.m. (ESPN)
FCS Playoffs
Semifinals
Friday
No. 4 James Madison at No. 1 North
Dakota State, 4 p.m. (ESPN2)
Saturday
Youngstown State at No. 2 Eastern
Washington, 3:30 p.m. (ESPNU)
345
296
351
337
NAIA
Championship
Saturday
At Municipal Stadium
Daytona Beach, Fla.
Saint Francis (Ind.) (11-2) vs. Baker (Kan.)
(14-0), 3 p.m.
268
312
225
290
Basketball
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L Pct GB
Toronto
17
7 .708 —
New York
14 11 .560 3½
Boston
13 11 .542
4
Brooklyn
6 17 .261 10½
Philadelphia
6 18 .250 11
Southeast Division
W
L Pct GB
Charlotte
14 11 .560 —
Atlanta
12 13 .480
2
Orlando
11 15 .423 3½
Washington
9 14 .391
4
Miami
8 17 .320
6
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Cleveland
18
5 .783 —
Chicago
13 11 .542 5½
Indiana
13 12 .520
6
Detroit
13 13 .500 6½
Milwaukee
11 12 .478
7
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L Pct GB
San Antonio
19
5 .792 —
Houston
18
7 .720 1½
Memphis
17
9 .654
3
New Orleans
8 18 .308 12
Dallas
6 18 .250 13
Northwest Division
W
L Pct GB
Oklahoma City
15 10 .600 —
Utah
15 10 .600 —
Portland
13 14 .481
3
Denver
9 16 .360 6½
Minnesota
7 18 .280 8½
Pacific Division
W
L Pct GB
Golden State
22
4 .846 —
L.A. Clippers
18
7 .720 3½
Sacramento
9 15 .375 12
L.A. Lakers
10 17 .370 12½
Phoenix
8 17 .320 13½
———
Tuesday’s Games
Cleveland 103, Memphis 86
Orlando 131, Atlanta 120
Golden State 113, New Orleans 109
Minnesota 99, Chicago 94
Phoenix 113, New York 111, OT
Portland 114, Oklahoma City 95
Wednesday’s Games
Charlotte at Washington, 4 p.m.
Indiana at Miami, 4 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Orlando, 4 p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Memphis, 5 p.m.
Sacramento at Houston, 5 p.m.
Detroit at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Utah, 6 p.m.
Boston at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m.
NCAA
Men’s Top 25
Tuesday’s Games
No. 1 Villanova 78, Temple 57
No. 25 Cincinnati 96, Texas Southern 58
No. 22 Oregon 81, Montana 67
Today’s Games
Southern at No. 4 Baylor, 4 p.m. (ESPNU)
Green Bay at No. 14 Wisconsin, 6 p.m.
Western Kentucky at No. 20 Saint
Mary’s, 7 p.m.
UCSB at No. 2 UCLA, 7:30 p.m. (PAC12)
Grand Canyon at No. 19 Arizona, 8 p.m.
(ESPNU)
Women’s Top 25
Tuesday’s Games
No. 5 Mississippi State 58, Arkansas
Little Rock 44
No. 23 Arizona State 69, MTSU 48
Today’s Games
No. 25 Oregon at Mississippi, 4 p.m.
St. Francis (PA) at No. 22 South Florida,
4 p.m.
South Dakota State at No. 8 Louisville,
4 p.m.
No. 9 UCLA at UCSB, 7 p.m.
Hockey
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W
L OT Pts GF GA
Montreal
29 19 6 4 42 92 64
Ottawa
29 16 11 2 34 70 78
Boston
30 16 12 2 34 71 71
Tampa Bay 29 14 13 2 30 81 81
Florida
30 13 13 4 30 71 82
Detroit
30 13 13 4 30 71 81
Toronto
28 11 11 6 28 81 87
Buffalo
28 11 11 6 28 62 75
Metropolitan Division
GP W
L OT Pts GF GA
Pittsburgh 29 19 7 3 41 104 84
N.Y. Rangers 31 20 10 1 41 106 72
Columbus 27 18 5 4 40 90 57
Washington 28 18 7 3 39 76 61
Philadelphia 31 18 10 3 39 101 94
New Jersey 28 12 10 6 30 69 82
Carolina
29 12 11 6 30 77 82
N.Y. Islanders 28 11 12 5 27 73 85
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W
L OT Pts GF GA
Chicago
31 19 8 4 42 83 71
St. Louis
30 16 10 4 36 82 85
Minnesota 28 16 8 4 36 80 57
Nashville
28 13 11 4 30 84 81
Dallas
31 12 13 6 30 81 98
Winnipeg 32 13 16 3 29 82 96
Colorado
27 11 15 1 23 60 86
Pacific Division
GP W
L OT Pts GF GA
San Jose
29 17 11 1 35 71 63
Anaheim
30 15 10 5 35 83 81
Edmonton 32 15 12 5 35 94 88
Calgary
31 16 13 2 34 81 86
Los Angeles 28 14 12 2 30 74 76
Vancouver 30 12 16 2 26 73 94
Arizona
29 10 14 5 25 66 91
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for
overtime loss.
————
Tuesday’s Games
Buffalo 6, Los Angeles 3
Washington 4, N.Y. Islanders 2
Carolina 8, Vancouver 6
Chicago 2, N.Y. Rangers 1
Arizona 4, Detroit 1
San Jose 3, Toronto 2, SO
Nashville 6, St. Louis 3
Minnesota 5, Florida 1
Dallas 6, Anaheim 2
Columbus 3, Edmonton 1
Wednesday’s Games
San Jose at Ottawa, 4 p.m.
Boston at Pittsburgh, 4:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Calgary, 6:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Colorado, 7 p.m.