East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, December 06, 2017, Page Page 2B, Image 10

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SPORTS
East Oregonian
Wednesday, December 6, 2017
2018 Winter Olympics
Russians can compete at Olympics, but without flag
By GRAHAM DUNBAR
Associated Press
LAUSANNE, Switzer-
land — Russian athletes will
be allowed to stand on the
medal podium at the Winter
Olympics — just not with
their anthem playing or their
nation’s flag rising above
them.
The
International
Olympic Committee barred
Russia and its sports leaders
from the upcoming games
in South Korea after its
lead investigator concluded
members of the Russian
government concocted a
doping scheme at the 2014
Sochi Games that “caused
unprecedented damage to
Olympism and to sports.”
Not welcome in Pyeong-
chang next year will be any
sign of the Russian Olympic
Committee or any member
of its sports ministry, which
was responsible for what
investigators concluded was
a top-to-bottom scheme of
“manipulation and cheating”
to ensure Russians could
dope at the Olympics on their
home turf and not get caught.
The IOC punishment
did leave room for many
Russians to compete under
the name “Olympic Athlete
from Russia” or OAR. They
would have to pass drug tests
to prove they were clean and
also did not benefit from the
Sochi scheme.
If they win, the Olympic
flag would be raised and the
Olympic anthem played to
honor their victories. That
is, if Russian President Vlad-
imir Putin allows them to go
to the Feb. 9-25 games. He
previously has said it would
be humiliating for Russia to
compete without its national
symbols.
“An Olympic boycott has
never achieved anything,”
IOC President Thomas Bach
said at a news conference.
“Secondly, I don’t see any
reason for a boycott by the
Russian athletes because we
allow the clean athletes there
to participate.”
Alexander Zhukov, the
Russian Olympic Committee
president who also was
suspended from his IOC
membership,
told
TV
reporters in Lausanne that
one key was preserving the
name “Russia” in the team
name.
“They’ll be called Russian
athletes and not some kind
of neutrals ... that’s very
important,” Zhukov said.
If it was a victory to have
the word “Russia” in the
team name and invite some
Russian athletes to compete,
it came at a cost.
The IOC also suspended
the
Russian
Olympic
Committee until at least the
start of the closing ceremony
in South Korea.
In an embarrassment
for Russia’s hosting of the
2018 World Cup, the IOC
also banned Russian Deputy
Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko
from the Olympics for life.
Mutko heads the orga-
Jean-Christophe Bott, Keystone
A woman waves a Russian flag outside of the Interna-
tional Olympic Committee (IOC) headquarters in front
of the Olympic Rings prior to the opening of the first
day of the executive board meeting of the Internation-
al Olympic Committee (IOC) at the IOC headquarters,
in Pully near Lausanne on Tuesday.
nizing committee of soccer’s
next World Cup. As sports
minister in 2014, he was
deeply implicated in the
Sochi doping plot by two
IOC commissions and a
World Anti-Doping Agency
investigation.
“The IOC executive board
has made its positon to the
responsibility of Mr. Mutko
very clear,” said Bach, who
would not comment if it
was appropriate for soccer’s
governing body FIFA to
continue working with an
official who is also president
of Russia’s soccer federation.
At the State Kremlin
Palace on Dec. 1, FIFA Pres-
ident Gianni Infantino said
at a joint news conference
with Mutko that the IOC’s
decision would not affect the
World Cup.
That
message
was
repeated Tuesday by FIFA in
a statement which noted that
its ethics and disciplinary
committees could still open
cases against Mutko and
Russian soccer players impli-
cated in doping cover-ups.
The IOC also imposed
a fine of $15 million on the
Russian Olympic Committee
to pay for its two investiga-
tions into the case and toward
future anti-doping work.
The sanctions could be
challenged at the Court of
Arbitration for Sport.
Any Russian athlete
hoping to earn invitations to
Pyeongchang will have to
come through a stricter-than-
usual testing regime and not
have a doping violation on
Men’s College Basketball
Bridges’ career-high 28 leads Nova past Gonzaga
By DAN GELSTON
Associated Press
NEW YORK — Mikal
Bridges had his coming out
performance as one of top
players in the nation, scoring
a career-high 28 points to
lead No. 4 Villanova to an
88-72 victory over No. 12
Gonzaga in the Jimmy V
Classic at Madison Square
Garden on Tuesday night.
Bridges, a 6-foot-7 junior
guard, had shown Villanova
(9-0) what he could do this
season with three games of
20-plus points that already
signaled he may be the
best player on the Big East
champs.
Against an NCAA title
game finalist and in prime
time on basketball’s biggest
stage, Bridges flashed the
type of all-around talent that
should make him an NBA
first-round draft pick.
His defining moment
came in the second half:
Bridges slashed the lane and
unleashed a monster right-
hand dunk over 6-11 center
Jacob Larsen. Gonzaga’s
Josh Perkins tried the same
move on the next set only to
have Bridges swat the ball
out of bounds with a block
that had the Nova fans that
filled MSG roaring on each
big screen replay.
Bridges hit five 3s in the
first meeting between two
Villano-
va guard
Mikal
Bridg-
es (25)
puts up
a shot
against
Gonzaga
guard Si-
las Mel-
son (0)
during
the first
half of
an NCAA
college
bas-
ketball
game,
Tuesday,
Dec. 5,
2017, in
New
York.
AP Photo/Ju-
lie Jacobson
programs that have ranked
among the best for the last
15 years. Villanova won the
2016 national championship
and the Zags lost the 2017
title game to North Carolina.
He even startled one Zag
into a turnover just by his
presence around the rim.
Zach Norvell Jr. led
Gonzaga (7-2) with 22 points
and Perkins had 16.
Bridges cut off the Bull-
dogs each time they made a
small run. The Zags inched
to seven early in the second
half and Bridges connected
on a 3. He
came up with a tough bucket
inside and drew a foul on one
possession and followed with
a 3 on the next to make it a
10-game game.
Bridges dunk-and-block
destroyed whatever mojo
Gonzaga had left and the
Wildcats cruised in their first
real test of the season.
The Wildcats played
every bit like a national
championship favorite in a
first half where they picked
apart the Zags. Bridges had
12 points, Phil Booth had
Jimmy V Classic
#4 Villanova #12 Gonzaga
88
72
11 of his 20 points and the
Wildcats hit six 3s to build a
43-30 lead.
Villanova is more than
a few NBA-ready scorers
carrying the offense. Eric
Paschall missed both of his
shots in the half but it was
his kickout passes on consec-
utive possessions that led to
3s from Booth and Bridges.
Donte DiVincenzo made it
three straight 3s that brought
the Nova fans to their feet.
Booth proved his twice
surgically repaired left knee
was fine on a high-flying
dunk and even the players
got loud at the Garden:
Villanova’s deep reserves
bolted from the bench and
bellowed “Charge! Charge!
Charge!” late in the half and
sure enough the foul was
called on Gonzaga’s Rui
Hachimura.
The Wildcats made the
short 105-mile trip compared
to nearly 2,600 miles for the
Zags and had the decided fan
support at MSG. The Wild-
cats, a regular at the Garden
in the Big East Tournament,
could hoist that trophy in
front of the faithful again in
March in New York.
their record.
Invitations will be decided
by an IOC panel chaired
by former France Sports
Minister Valerie Fourneyron.
The IOC also will bar
Russian officials who were
team leaders at Sochi, and
coaches or medial staff who
have been linked to doping
athletes.
The CEO of the Sochi
Olympics, Dmitry Cherny-
shenko, also had his place on
an Olympic panel overseeing
the 2022 Beijing Winter
Games withdrawn by the
IOC.
Russia has repeatedly
refused to accept that a
state-sponsored
doping
program existed. Such
denials helped ensure bans
on its track federation and
anti-doping agency have not
been lifted.
Instead, Russia blames
Grigory Rodchenkov, the
former director of Moscow
and Sochi testing laborato-
ries, as a rogue employee. It
wants the scientist extradited
from the United States, where
he is a protected witness.
The executive board
reached its decision Tuesday
after a scheduled 4½-hour
debate when it heard from
a Russian delegation that
included world figure skating
champion Evgenia Medve-
deva. The delegation was led
by Zhukov, who was later
suspended.
Two IOC commission
leaders — appointed after
WADA investigator Richard
McLaren upheld Rodchen-
kov’s doping claims in July
2016 — also reported to the
Olympic board.
The report by IOC-ap-
pointed investigator Samuel
Schmid, the former president
of Switzerland who was
asked to verify an “institu-
tional conspiracy,” included a
50-page sworn affidavit from
Rodchenkov, who was also
a key witness for McLaren
and an IOC disciplinary
commission.
The chairman of that
disciplinary panel, Swiss
lawyer
Denis
Oswald,
reported about prosecuting
Russian athletes implicated
in cheating at Sochi. By
Monday, 25 Russians had
been disqualified from the
Sochi Games and banned
from the Olympics for life,
and 11 medals were stripped.
One Russian was cleared.
Russia no longer leads
the Sochi medals table. Even
before the IOC reallocates
the stripped medals, the
United States has the most
total medals and Norway has
the most golds.
The banned Russian
athletes have said they will
appeal the Oswald judgments
at the Court of Arbitration for
Sport.
Any sanctions imposed
by the IOC can also be
challenged at CAS, and later
at Switzerland’s supreme
court, which can intervene
if the legal process has been
abused.
NFL
Steelers’ Shazier
remains hospitalized
with back injury
Associated Press
to be transferred to a Pitts-
burgh hospital later in the
PITTSBURGH — Pitts- week.
While the severity of the
burgh Steelers linebacker
Ryan Shazier will remain in injury will remain unknown
a Cincinnati hospital until at until the swelling subsides,
least Wednesday to undergo the relentlessly upbeat
Shazier offered a
further testing on
bit of hope Tuesday
a spinal injury
evening.
suffered in the first
“Thank
you
quarter of Monday
for the prayers,”
night’s win over the
Shazier
tweeted
Bengals.
. “Your support
Shazier left Paul
is uplifting to me
Brown Stadium on
and my family.
a stretcher less than
#SHALIEVE”
four minutes into Shazier
Shazier’s injury
his team’s 23-20
victory over Cincinnati came on a relatively innocu-
following a tackle that left ous-looking play. Cincinnati
the 25-year-old writhing on quarterback Andy Dalton
the turf, his legs motionless. hit Josh Malone for a short
He underwent extensive 3-yard gain, with Shazier
testing overnight, with the hitting Malone square in the
team saying Shazier’s injury back. Shazier, in his fourth
did not require surgery “at season after being taken in
the first round of the 2014
this time.”
The Steelers had hoped draft, led with his head while
Shazier would be able to making the tackle.
He immediately rolled
return to Pittsburgh on
Tuesday. The timetable has over onto his back, raising
been pushed back at least 24 his hands in the air while
to 48 hours. He will remain his legs went limp. He was
at University of Cincinnati placed on a backboard, then
Medical Center under the put on a stretcher before
care of neurosurgeons being taken to the trauma
David Okonwko and Joseph center at University of
Cheng. Shazier is expected Cincinnati Medical Center.
SCOREBOARD
Local slate
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
Thursday
Stanfield vs. Arlington (at Umatilla), 2 p.m.
Pilot Rock vs. Riverside (at Umatilla), 3:30 p.m.
Faith Bible vs. Echo (at Umatilla), 5:30 p.m.
Union at Umatilla, 7 p.m.
Friday
Irrigon vs. Imbler (at Heppner), 4:30 p.m.
Ione vs. Prarie City (at Condon), 4:30 p.m.
Walla Walla (WA) at Pendleton, 7 p.m.
Chiawana (WA) at Hermiston, 7:30 p.m.
Mac-Hi at Heppner, 7:30 p.m.
Weston-McEwen vs. Salem Acadmey (at
Kennedy), 7:30 p.m.
Helix at Enterprise, 7:30 p.m.
N. Clackamas Christian at Condon/Wheel-
er, 7:30 p.m.
Nixyaawii vs. Crane (at EOU), 7:30 p.m.
Riverside, Umatilla, Pilot Rock, Stanfield,
Arlington, Echo vs. TBD (at Umatilla), TBD
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
Thursday
Riverside vs. Pilot Rock (at Umatilla), 2 p.m.
Stanfield vs. Mac-Hi (at Umatilla), 3:30 p.m.
Union at Umatilla, 5:30 p.m.
Echo vs. Faith Bible (at Umatilla), 7 p.m.
Friday
Irrigon vs. Imbler, 3 p.m.
Ione vs. Prarie City (at Condon), 3 p.m.
Chiawana (WA) at Hermiston, 5:45 p.m.
Mac-Hi at Heppner, 6 p.m.
Nixyaawii vs. Crane (at EOU), 6 p.m.
Weston-McEwen vs. King’s Way Christian
(WA) (at Kennedy), 6 p.m.
North Clackamas Christian at Condon/
Wheeler, 6 p.m.
Helix at Enterprise, 6 p.m.
Pendleton at Walla Walla (WA), 7 p.m.
Riverside, Umatilla, Pilot Rock, Mac-Hi,
Echo vs. TBD (at Umatilla), TBD
PREP WRESTLING
Friday
Hermiston at Post Falls (ID)
Pendleton, Mac-Hi, Heppner at La Grande
Irrigon at Culver Invitational, 8 a.m.
Saturday
Irrigon at Culver Invitational, 8 a.m.
Riverside at Leonard Schutte Invite (WA)
Echo at Nyssa Tournament
PREP SWIMMING
Saturday
Pendleton, Hermiston at Baker, Noon
MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Wednesday
Multnomah JV at BMCC, 5 p.m.
WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Friday
Edmonds at BMCC, 7:30 p.m.
Prep Scores
Tuesday
OSAA BOYS BASKETBALL
Baker 92, Stanfield 41
Beaverton 73, South Salem 61
Butte Falls/Crater Lake Charter 69,
Prospect 11
C.S. Lewis 37, Southwest Christian 27
Catlin Gabel 92, Chemawa 56
Central 57, Putnam 48
Central Catholic 41, Jesuit 37
Churchill 69, Lebanon 38
Coquille 62, Douglas 48
Corbett 72, Cascade 59
Corvallis 55, Marist 51
Crosshill Christian 63, Lowell 48
Dallas vs. Hood River, ccd.
David Douglas 75, Century 61
Days Creek 48, Myrtle Point 33
Dayton 74, Blanchet Catholic 52
Dufur 43, Culver 37
Falls City 67, McKenzie 31
Glencoe 66, Benson 56
Glendale 46, Mohawk 42
Grant Union 68, Crane 55
Harper 51, Meadows Valley, Idaho 40
Henley JV 60, Gilchrist 42
Hermiston 69, Hanford, Wash. 60
Irrigon 72, Weston-McEwen 33
Kennedy 57, Vernonia 56
Lakeview 62, Burns 59, OT
Lincoln 68, West Salem 67
Lost River 44, St. Mary’s 42
McKay 70, Willamette 67
McMinnville 56, Aloha 31
N. Clackamas Christian 54, Livingstone 40
Naselle, Wash. 61, Warrenton 57
North Bend 67, Junction City 58
North Eugene 56, Elmira 40
North Valley 56, South Umpqua 22
Nyssa 50, La Grande 48
Oakland 63, Elkton 20
Ontario 56, New Plymouth, Idaho 47
Oregon City 78, McNary 61
Oregon Episcopal 56, Horizon Christian
Tualatin 45
Pacific 66, Bandon 32
Perrydale 54, Delphian High School 44
Pilot Rock 63, Griswold 19
Powers 50, Riddle 42
Reedsport 64, Mapleton 27
Regis 78, Monroe 73
Scappoose 90, Madras 73
Sheldon 50, Newberg 37
Sheridan 74, Nestucca 22
Siuslaw 71, Newport 69
South Albany 66, Philomath 56
Southridge 85, Wilson 67
Sprague 66, South Eugene 60
St. Stephens Academy 45, Jewell 32
Thurston 63, Roseburg 53
Tillamook 69, Gladstone 57
Toledo 64, Pleasant Hill 60
Tualatin 74, Sunset 56
Valley Catholic 74, North Marion 43
Waldport 74, Central Linn 61
Western Mennonite 49, Creswell 34
Woodburn 66, Milwaukie 55
Yamhill-Carlton 62, Estacada 49
OSAA GIRLS BASKETBALL
Baker 49, Fruitland, Idaho 36
Banks 55, Stayton 52
Canby 57, South Salem 24
Cascade 61, Corbett 28
Catlin Gabel 50, Chemawa 38
Central Linn 41, Waldport 23
Clackamas 62, West Salem 35
Clatskanie 90, Knappa 39
Coquille 39, Douglas 31
Crescent Valley 55, Century 29
Dallas 39, St. Helens 36
Damascus Christian 41, Columbia
Christian 31
David Douglas 48, Sandy 42
Dayton 69, Blanchet Catholic 31
Faith Bible 42, De La Salle 29
Grant Union 45, Crane 26
Harper 58, Meadows Valley, Idaho 29
Henley JV 49, Gilchrist 31
Hermiston 55, Hanford, Wash. 38
Hidden Valley 46, Brookings-Harbor 38
Hood River 40, Heritage, Wash. 39
Illinois Valley 37, Phoenix 29
Irrigon 48, Weston-McEwen 40
Jefferson 52, Willamina 28
Jewell 46, St. Stephens Academy 28
Junction City 53, North Bend 44
Kennedy 67, Vernonia 21
Lebanon 60, Churchill 47
Liberty 51, Hillsboro 41
Lost River 40, St. Mary’s 28
Lowell 38, Crosshill Christian 33
Madras 61, Scappoose 42
Marist 47, Corvallis 32
Marshfield 46, Cottage Grove 29
Mazama 56, La Pine 14
McKenzie 37, Falls City 19
McMinnville 62, Madison 21
Mohawk 49, Glendale 20
Monroe 65, Regis 29
Newport 54, Siuslaw 20
North Eugene 51, Elmira 36
North Marion 54, Sisters 14
Nyssa 48, La Grande 39
Parma, Idaho 52, Vale 20
Pendleton 56, Southridge, Wash. 48
Pilot Rock 49, Griswold 33
Powers 54, Riddle 34
Reedsport 46, Mapleton 23
Salem Academy 47, Amity 24
Sheridan 41, Nestucca 21
South Umpqua 44, North Valley 21
Southwest Christian 45, C.S. Lewis 6
Sprague 47, Lakeridge 38
St. Mary’s Academy 67, Forest Grove 57
Tigard 56, Grant 52
Valley Catholic 58, Country Christian 53
Waitsburg, Wash. 38, McLoughlin 35
Warrenton 65, Naselle, Wash. 28
West Linn 73, Central Catholic 71, OT
Yamhill-Carlton 69, Estacada 19
Basketball
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L Pct
Boston
21
4 .840
Toronto
15
7 .682
Philadelphia
13 10 .565
New York
11 12 .478
Brooklyn
9 14 .391
Southeast Division
W
L Pct
Washington
13 11 .542
Miami
11 12 .478
Charlotte
9 13 .409
Orlando
10 15 .400
Atlanta
5 18 .217
Central Division
W
L Pct
Cleveland
17
7 .708
Detroit
14
9 .609
Milwaukee
12 10 .545
Indiana
13 11 .542
Chicago
3 19 .136
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L Pct
Houston
18
4 .818
San Antonio
16
8 .667
New Orleans
12 12 .500
Memphis
8 15 .348
Dallas
7 17 .292
Northwest Division
W
L Pct
Denver
13 10 .565
Minnesota
14 11 .560
Portland
13 11 .542
Utah
13 12 .520
Oklahoma City
11 12 .478
Pacific Division
W
L Pct
Golden State
19
6 .760
L.A. Clippers
8 14 .364
L.A. Lakers
8 15 .348
GB
—
4½
7
9
11
GB
—
1½
3
3½
7½
GB
—
2½
4
4
13
GB
—
3
7
10½
12
GB
—
—
½
1
2
GB
—
9½
10
Phoenix
9 17 .346 10½
Sacramento
7 16 .304 11
———
Tuesday’s Games
Toronto 126, Phoenix 113
Oklahoma City 100, Utah 94
Washington 106, Portland 92
Wednesday’s Games
Atlanta at Orlando, 4 p.m.
Chicago at Indiana, 4 p.m.
Sacramento at Cleveland, 4 p.m.
Dallas at Boston, 4:30 p.m.
Memphis at New York, 4:30 p.m.
Denver at New Orleans, 5 p.m.
Detroit at Milwaukee, 5 p.m.
Golden State at Charlotte, 5 p.m.
Miami at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m.
Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.
NCAA Men’s Basketball
Top 25
Tuesday’s Games
No. 1 Duke 124, St. Francis (PA) 67
No. 3 Michigan State 62, Rutgers 52
No. 4 Villanova 88, No. 12 Gonzaga 72
No. 6 Wichita State 95, So. Dakota St. 85
Arizona 67, No. 7 Texas A&M 64
Ball State 80, No. 9 Notre Dame 77
No. 10 Miami 69, Boston 54
No. 14 Minnesota 68, Nebraska 39
No. 18 West Virginia 68, No. 15 Virginia 61
No. 20 TCU 94, SMU 83
Texas Tech 82, No. 22 Nevada 76, OT
Wednesday’s Games
No. 13 Xavier vs. Kent State, 4 p.m. (FS1)
No. 11 North Carolina vs. W. Carolina, 4 p.m.
No. 5 Florida vs. Loyola-Chicago, 5 p.m.
No. 2 Kansas vs. Washington, 6 p.m. (ESPN2)
Pac-12
Tuesday
Oregon State 74, Eastern Kentucky 62
Arizona 67, Texas A&M 64
Butler 81, Utah 69
NCAA Women’s Basketball
Top 25
Tuesday
No. 4 Louisville 91, Tenn-Martin 56
No. 5 South Carolina 69, Charleston 43
No. 20 Kentucky 100, Evansville 62
No. 8 Baylor 105, North Dakota 43
Wednesday’s Games
No. 23 Green Bay at Dayton, 8 a.m.
No. 21 Texas A&M vs. TCU, 9 a.m.
No. 12 Ohio State at Florida, 2:30 p.m.
No. 15 Maryland vs. Mt. St. Mary’s, 3:30 p.m.
No. 3 Notre Dame vs. Michigan State, 4 p.m.
No. 11 Tennessee vs. Troy, 4 p.m.
Hockey
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W
L OT Pts GF GA
Tampa Bay 27 19
6
2 40 101 69
Toronto
28 17 10
1 35 99 84
Montreal
29 13 13
3 29 81 90
Boston
25 12
9
4 28 69 73
Detroit
28 11 12
5 27 79 91
Ottawa
25 9 10
6 24 74 86
Florida
27 10 13
4 24 79 93
Buffalo
28 7 17
4 18 60 96
Metropolitan Division
GP W
L OT Pts GF GA
New Jersey 27 16
7
4 36 84 81
Columbus 28 17 10
1 35 80 70
N.Y. Islanders 27 16
9
2 34 101 92
Washington 28 16 11
1 33 84 84
Pittsburgh 29 15 11
3 33 86 95
N.Y. Rangers 27 15 10
2 32 91 81
Carolina
26 11 10
5 27 72 80
Philadelphia 27 9 11
7 25 75 83
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W
L OT Pts GF GA
Nashville
28 18
7
3 39 92 80
St. Louis
28 18
8
2 38 92 75
Winnipeg 28 17
7
4 38 95 76
Dallas
28 16 11
1 33 86 81
Minnesota 27 13 11
3 29 80 82
Chicago
27 12 10
5 29 82 73
Colorado
26 12 12
2 26 81 86
Pacific Division
GP W
L OT Pts GF GA
Los Angeles 29 18
8
3 39 90 63
Vegas
27 17
9
1 35 94 85
Vancouver 28 14 10
4 32 78 77
San Jose
26 14 10
2 30 66 61
Calgary
27 14 12
1 29 80 88
Anaheim
28 11 11
6 28 75 86
Edmonton 27 11 14
2 24 78 92
Arizona
30 7 18
5 19 73 104
————
Tuesday’s Games
New Jersey 4, Columbus 1
Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Islanders 2
N.Y. Rangers 4, Pittsburgh 3
Detroit 5, Winnipeg 1
St. Louis 4, Montreal 3
Nashville 5, Dallas 2
Buffalo 4, Colorado 2
Vegas 4, Anaheim 3, SO
Los Angeles 5, Minnesota 2
Vancouver 3, Carolina 0
Wednesday’s Games
Calgary at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
Chicago at Washington, 5 p.m.
Philadelphia at Edmonton, 6:30 p.m.
Ottawa at Anaheim, 7 p.m.