SPORTS Saturday, January 20, 2018 East Oregonian Page 3B Spence to make first title defense against Peterson “I have a lot more great fights and a lot more great opportunities and unifica- tion fights and things like that I have to do,” Spence said. Some of those won’t come yet, so in the mean- time Spence will make the first defense of his IBF welterweight title when he faces Lamont Peterson on Saturday night in Brook- Pair of Hermiston wrestlers undefeated after Day 1 at Reser’s ROUNDUP: Pilot Rock beats Weston-McEwen East Oregonian HILLSBORO — At the Reser’s Tournament of Champions, one of the biggest events on the calendar for Oregon wrestlers, Hermiston is sitting in 17th place. Two wrestlers remain unbeaten and in the winner’s bracket after the first day of competition. Adrian Villareal (22-8) won his first three matches of the tourna- ment in the 138-pound division. He won by major decision over Crook County’s Tyler Fioravanti 14-2 in the quarterfinals to remain undefeated and move on. In the semifinals Saturday, he will face Brandon Gibson of North Marion. In the 285 pound divi- sion, Beau Blake (22-6) got two wins after a first-round bye, defeating Ashten Brecht of Dallas by a 3-1 decision in the quarterfinal. He has scored 11 points for the Hermiston team, and has the opportunity to earn more when he faces off Saturday against Tristan Osborn of Newburg. Other Bulldogs who won multiple matches including Ruben Madrigal in the 106-pound division, Gage Shipley at 120 pounds, Adrian Tuia at 145, and Joey Gutierrez at 195. Hemiston has 49 points thus far with the opportunity to score more. But Crook County has more than doubled the Bulldogs already and sits at 105 points after Friday. DAWGS: Continued from 1B The Dalles caught up to Hermiston, the River- hawks fell back into a hole they wouldn’t be able to get themselves out of. “I knew (The Dalles) would make a run but we made it a little bit too easy for them there,” Arstein said. “But I thought they kids responded well — not every quarter you’re going to win, so we’ve got to find ways to capi- talize when we can.” Hermiston was able to do that in the fourth. The Bulldogs were beating the Riverhawks to the ball on their missed free throw attempts and went on a 13-7 run to keep the scoreboard in Hermis- ton’s favor. Ortiz led the team with 20 points. Following Ortiz and Mendez was senior Cole Smith with 12 and sophomore Andrew Earl with 10. The Bulldogs will have a week off before hitting the road to face Hood River Valley at 7 p.m. Friday. ——— DHS 19 11 19 12 — 61 HHS 25 16 15 22 — 78 THE DALLES — J. Nisbet 22, D. Murr 12, J. Hernandez 10, H. Lee 7, O. Fernandez 6, J. Bonham 2, D. Seufalemua 2. HERMISTON — C. Ortiz 20, A. Mendez 18, C. Smith 12, A. Earl 10, R. Andreason 8, A. James 4, B. Davis 2, T. McCullough 2. 3-pointers — DHS 9, HHS 10. Free throws — DHS 10-12, HHS 8-16. Fouls — DHS 17, HHS 13. Continued from 1B time Roa missed both free throws. Luckily, junior Keith Fleming was quick off the line and snagged the rebound to run out the clock and cement the Knight’s victory. Senior Johnny Phillips was their top shooter with a game-high 16 points. For Burns, sophomore Dakota Ceja recorded a team best of 15. ——— BHS 20 8 14 6 4 — 52 IHS 15 10 13 10 6 — 54 BURNS — D. Ceja 15, B. Goss 13, C. Tiller 11, Z. Taylor 10, J. Cawood 3. IRRIGON — J. Phillips 16, E. Carillo 11, A. Roa 9, L. Covarrubia 8, A. Gomez 6, K. Flemming 4. 3-pointers — BHS 7, IHS 3. Free throws — BHS 3-4, IHS 9-16. Fouls — BHS 17, IHS 10. PILOT ROCK 51, WESTON-MCEWEN 35 — In Athena, Pilot Rock handed the home team a 51-35 loss to go 2-0 in league. The Rockets (11-6 overall, 2-0 Columbia Basin Conference) opened the game outscoring the Tiger- Scots (5-12, 0-2) 12-2 and built a lead they would never relinquish. Leading Pilot Rock was one of its top shooters, senior Bryson Piesce with a game high 27 points. Senior Brett Speed almost matched Pierce’s efforts and dropped 20 points for Weston-McEwen. ——— PR 12 15 14 10 — 51 W-M 2 12 9 12 — 35 PILOT ROCK — B. Pierce 27, R. Lankford 13, C. Weinke 11, L. Weinke 2, A. Drake 2, A. Smith 2, L. Thieme 2. WESTON-MCEWEN — B. Speed 20, K. Rodriguez 9, J. Speed 2, G. Smith 2, P. Munk 1, B. Rudolph 1. 3-pointers — PR 3, W-M 4. Free throws — PR 7-15, W-M 8-16. Fouls — PR 16, W-M 13. VALE 51, RIVERSIDE 40 — In Boardman, Vale broke out in the third quarter of Friday’s game to hand Riverside a 51-40 loss. Despite the efforts from the Knights’ top scorer, senior Mason Hager — who along with his 12 points recorded 12 rebounds for a double-double — Riverside (8-9 overall, 0-3 Eastern lyn’s Barclays Center. Spence (22-0, 19-0 KOs) won the title last May when he stopped Kell Brook in the 11th round of their match in Sheffield, England. Brook had never been beaten in the 147-pound division, losing only when he moved up two weight classes to challenge undefeated middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin. Oregon League) has yet to pick up a league win. Vale (5-12, 1-3) was coming of three consecutive losses itself, and broke the skid thanks to sophomore Francisco Medrano (16 points) and junior Kade Haueter (13). ——— VHS 13 6 24 7 — 52 RHS 10 5 10 15 — 40 VALE — F. Medrano 16, K. Haueter 13, K. Brown 7, C. Kesey 4, T. Hamilton 2. RIVERSIDE — M. Hager 12, F. Aparicio 9, J. Pena 6, C. Rea 5, F. Barajas 5, M. Marigal 3. 3-pointers — VHS 4, RHS 5. Free throws — VHS 10-16, RHS 3-10. Fouls — VHS 11, RHS 14. HELIX 45, PINE EAGLE 34 — After continuing league play with four consecutive losses, the Helix Grizzles were finally able to pull off a 11-point victory over Pine Eagle. The Spartans were held to single digits through three quarters of play, and a strong start for the Grizzles helped overcome Pine Eagle’s efforts. The 45-34 win marks Helix’s first in five games, and its second this season. Leading the charge for Helix (2-15 overall 1-6 Old Oregon League), was soph- omore D’Artagnan Carlson with 15 points. Junior Gavin Newtson followed with 14. For Pine Eagle (3-11, 0-7), senior Buck Robinette was the top shooter, knocking down a game-high 16 points. ——— PE 8 6 6 14 — 34 HHS 20 12 6 7 — 45 PINE EAGLE — B. Robinette 16, T. Gulick 11, J. Simrell 3, N. Seggerman 2, J. Wagner 2. HELIX — D. Carlson 15, G. Newtson 14, E. Sprenger 6, L. Davis 5, M. McBee 3, B. Fairchild 2. 3-pointers — PE 1, HHS 3. Free throws — PE 1-13, HHS 8-22. Fouls — PE 21, HHS 15. NIXYAAWII 46, JOSEPH 40 — It was one of Nixyaawii’s closer games at home against Joseph, but the Eagles were able to hold off the visiting Eagles to remain undefeated in the Old Oregon League. Nixyaawii (13-2 overall, 6-0 OOL) had a little dip in the second quarter, as it only But Spence knocked him down in the 10th round of his defining performance. Brook went to a knee in the 11th with his left eye swollen shut because of a broken orbital bone before the referee stopped the bout. “Just even taking the fight and going over there for his first title fight was impres- sive for me,” Peterson said, “because a lot of times when a young fighter, especially one who is talked about as much as Errol is, they kind of take their time and be patient with the fighter and he normally fights an older, more washed-up fighter to get his championship. But he ended up fighting a guy who was in his prime, in his country, and to will himself to win that fight says a lot about him. I was NEW YORK (AP) — Errol Spence Jr.’s last fight would be the career high- light for many boxers. Winning a title by going overseas to the champion’s hometown and stopping him is tough to top, and even Spence’s next opponent was impressed. But one belt is far short of what Spence has planned in boxing. scored eight points while allowing Joseph (8-4, 4-2) to catchup by scoring 14. Joseph carried that momentum into the third quarter, outscoring Nixy- aawii 13-10 but then the home Eagles held Joseph to only seven points in the final quarter. Their top scorer was sophomore Quanah Picard with 14 points. For Joseph, freshman Chase Murray mirrored Picard’s team-best performance with 14 of his own to lead the visiting Eagles. ——— JHS 6 14 13 7 — 40 NCS 15 8 10 13 — 46 JOSEPH — C. Murray 14, T. Homan 13, C. Murray 6, T. Wandschneider 4, J. Palma 3, NIXYAAWII — Q. Picard 14, M. Schimmel 13, Maj. Moses 9, D. Barkley 6, N. Enright 5, T. Burns 4. 3-pointers — JHS 4, NCS 4. Free throws — JHS 14-18, NCS 2-11. Fouls — JHS 15, NCS 18. GIRLS BASKETBALL NIXYAAWII 63, JOSEPH 33 — Friday night marked another dominate victory for the Nixyaawii girls basketball team. Senior Milan Schimmel led the Eagles with 27 as they defeated Joseph 63-33 at home. Nixyaawii (16-0 overall, 7-0 Old Oregon League) remains perfect on the season the win, breaking Joseph’s (11-3, 2-5) five-game win streak. Schimmel recorded a double-double after grabbing 12 rebounds to go along with her game-high points. The home Eagles played sound basketball, only committing 11 turnovers and moving the ball well throughout the offense. Senior Mary Stewart with a team-best seven of Nixyaawii’s 15 total assists. Stewart also finished with 15 points. Leading Joseph was senior Alexis Sykora with 12 points. ——— JHS 7 8 9 9 — 33 NCS 16 20 20 7 — 63 JOSEPH — A. Sykora 12, H. Miller 9, S. Albee 7, E. Hite 3, M. Nelson 2. NIXYAAWII — M. Schimmel 27, M. Stew- art 15, T. Melton 9, K. Melton 4, E. Butler 4, E. Looney 2, K. Mountain Chief 2. 3-pointers — JHS 4, NCS 7. Free throws — JHS 5-14, NCS 4-5. WESTON-MCEWEN 48, PILOT ROCK 36 — The Weston-McEwen Tiger- Scots defended their home curt and defeated the visiting Pilot Rock Rockets 48-36. The TigerScots (11-6 overall, 2-0 Columbia Basin Conference) got out to a resounding first half lead, up 29-14 at the break. The tough second quarter was too much for the Rockets (10-7, 0-2) to overcome. Leading Weston-McEwen was senior Chelsea Quae- mpts with 19 points. For Pilot Rock, senior Kayla Deist finished with a team best of 15 points. ——— PR 8 6 9 13 — 36 W-M 12 17 5 14 — 48 PILOT ROCK — K. Deist 15, S. Weinke 8, L. Brewer 7, B. Howland 2, A. Aguilar 2, G. Austin 2. WESTON-MCEWEN — C. Quaempts 19, K. Vescio 15, A. Finifrock 6, J. Lambert 6, T. Hearn 2. 3-pointers — PR 2, W-M 1. Free throws — PR 4-12, W-M 19-28. Fouls — PR 20, impressed.” Spence, a 2012 U.S. Olympian from Dallas who was born in New York, hoped as a titleholder he’d land big-money fights against some of the division’s big names who wouldn’t face him before. He said Keith Thurman, who holds two welterweight belts, and Danny Garcia still aren’t interested. 3-pointers — IHS 5, C/W 0. Free throws — IHS 3-4, C/W 6-17. Fouls — IHS 19, C/W 9. BURNS 56, IRRIGON 49 — Irrigon hung with Eastern Oregon League foe, Burns, for almost all of Friday’s game. But after being held to only three points in the final quarter, Burns was able to come away with a 56-49 victory. Leading the Hilanders (11-6 overall, 3-0 EOL) was freshman Allie Hueckman with a game-high 23 points. For the Knights (13-3, 2-2), junior Ana Zacarias was the top scorer with 12. Senior Taylor Davis led in rebounds (10) and assists (seven), and notched a double-double after recording 11 points. Zacarias also notched five steals. ——— BHS 18 11 10 17 — 56 IHS 19 14 13 3 — 49 BURNS — A. Hueckman 23, M. Skunkcap 9, O. West 7, M. Hoyt 7, A. Ceja 5, B. Sand- ers 2, J. Garner 2 IRRIGON — A. Zacarias 12, T. Davis 11, J. Burns 10, A. Luna 6, N. Romero 6, B. Rice 4. 3-pointers — BHS 4, IHS 3. Free throws — BHS 10-16, IHS 6-8. W-M 14. IONE 60, CONDON/ WHEELER 42 — In Condon, Ione senior Maggie Flynn led the Cardinals to a 60-42 victory with a game- high 29 points. Ione (4-11 overall, 3-2 Big Sky League) had a narrow five-point lead after the first quarter, up 17-12. The game remained tight until halftime when Condon- Wheeler (2-14, 2-4) came out of the break and scored only four points in the third quarter. The Knights never recovered and dropped their third consecutive game. Leading the home team was senior Annika Rietmann with 20 points. ——— IHS 17 16 10 19 — 60 C/w 12 13 4 15 — 42 IONE — M. Flynn 29, M. Heideman 10, M. Orem 10, K. Burns 5, E. Martin 4, B. Garcia 2. CONDON/WHEELER — A. Rietmann 20, L. Clark 10, Ki. Takagi 6, A. Greenwood 2, K. Nation 2, Ka. Takagi 1, A. Carnine 1. VALE 52, RIVERSIDE 39 — A 19-point perfor- mance in the fourth quarter propelled Vale over River- side on Friday night. The Pirates dropped their third league game, 52-39. Vale’s (7-9 overall, 3-1 Eastern Oregon League) efforts were led by freshman Matyson Siddoway, who finished with 16 points. For Riverside (12-5, 0-3), junior Faith Rosen scored a team-high 12 points. Rosen also recorded nine rebounds, and fellow junior Alondra Caldera had five assists to go with her eight points. ——— VHS 8 11 13 19 — 52 RHS 9 6 15 9 — 39 VALE — M. Siddoway 16, D. Johnson 7, E. Johnson 6, G. Jacobs 6, H. Radloff 4, H. Dearing 4, T. McFetridge 4, R. Wolfe 3, J. Bodily 2. RIVERSIDE — F. Rosen 12, M. Hager 11, A. Caldera 8, Br. Avalos 5, Bi. Avalos 2. 3-pointers — VHS 2, RHS 1. Free throws — VHS 12-22, RHS 8-18. Fouls — VHS 15, RHS 17. SCOREBOARD No. 9 Michigan State at Illinois, 6 p.m. (FS1) No. 6 West Virginia at No. 24 TCU, 6 p.m. (ESPN) Local slate PREP BOYS BASKETBALL Saturday Vale at Umatilla, 3 p.m. Weston-McEwen at Stanfield, 4 p.m. Heppner at Pilot Rock, 4 p.m. Ontario at Mac-Hi, 4:30 p.m. Nyssa at Irrigon, 4:30 p.m. Burns at Riverside, 4:30 p.m. Nixyaawii at Wallowa, 5 p.m. Helix at Echo, 5 p.m. Condon/Wheeler at Horizon Christian, 5:30 p.m. Arlington at South Wasco, 5:30 p.m. Sherman at Ione, 5:30 p.m. Pac-12 Schedule Friday No games scheduled. Saturday No. 14 Arizona at Stanford, 1 p.m. (CBS) Washington at Colorado, 3 p.m. (PAC12) USC at Oregon State, 5 p.m. (PAC12) UCLA at Oregon, 7:15 p.m. (ESPN) No. 16 Arizona State at Cal, 7:30 p.m. (PAC12) Sunday Washington State at Utah, 5 p.m. (ESPNU) PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL Saturday Nyssa at Irrigon, 3 p.m. Burns at Riverside, 3 p.m. Ontario at Mac-Hi, 3 p.m. Nixyaawii at Wallowa, 3 p.m. Helix at Echo, 3:30 p.m. Sherman at Ione, 4 p.m. Condon/Wheeler at Horizon Christian, 4 p.m. Arlington at South Wasco, 4 p.m. Vale at Umatilla, 4:30 p.m. Weston-McEwen at Stanfield, 5:30 p.m. Heppner at Pilot Rock, 5:30 p.m. PREP WRESTLING Saturday Mac-Hi, Riverside, Irrigon, Echo at Hep- pner Tournament Hermiston at Liberty Invitational Pendleton at Wilsonville Invite PREP SWIMMING Saturday Pendleton, Hermiston at Hood River Valley COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL Saturday BMCC at Walla Walla CC, 4 p.m. EOU at Northwest Christian, 7:30 p.m. COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Saturday BMCC at Walla Walla CC, 2 p.m. EOU at Northwest Christian, 5:30 p.m. COLLEGE WRESTLING Saturday EOU vs. Warner Pacific/Embry-Riddle (AZ) (at Portland), 1 p.m. Prep Scores BOYS PREP BASKETBALL Friday Arlington 68, Mitchell/Spray 30 Bend 74, Redmond 70 Condon/Wheeler 60, Ione 42 Dufur 53, South Wasco County 23 Grant Union 56, Imbler 31 Griswold 45, Pine Eagle 34 Hermiston 78, The Dalles 61 Irrigon 54, Burns 52 La Grande 60, Baker 50 Mountain View 55, Summit 48 Nixyaawii 46, Joseph 40 Pilot Rock 59, Weston-McEwen 36 Powder Valley 61, Wallowa 54 Sherman 73, Horizon Christian Hood River 51 Umatilla 51, Nyssa 42 Vale 50, Riverside 40 GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL Friday Baker 48, La Grande 24 Bend 63, Redmond 31 Burns 56, Irrigon 49 Enterprise 40, Union 34 Grant Union 46, Imbler 29 Griswold 53, Pine Eagle 32 Kai Eiselein/Moscow-Pullman Daily News via AP Washington State quarterback Luke Falk cries during a candlelight memorial ser- vice for fellow quarterback Tyler Hilinski, Friday in Pullman, Wash. Hilinski, a sopho- more, committed suicide earlier in the week. Hermiston 76, The Dalles 44 Ione 60, Condon/Wheeler 42 Mitchell/Spray 33, Arlington 32 Mountain View 47, Summit 31 Nixyaawii 63, Joseph 33 Nyssa 41, Umatilla 19 Sherman 44, Horizon Christian Hood River 40 Vale 52, Riverside 39 Weston-McEwen 48, Pilot Rock 36 Basketball NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Boston 34 12 .739 Toronto 31 13 .705 Philadelphia 21 20 .512 New York 21 25 .457 Brooklyn 17 29 .370 Southeast Division W L Pct Miami 26 19 .578 Washington 26 20 .565 Charlotte 18 25 .419 Atlanta 13 31 .295 Orlando 13 32 .289 Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 27 17 .614 Milwaukee 23 21 .523 Indiana 24 22 .522 Detroit 22 22 .500 Chicago 17 28 .378 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct Houston 31 12 .721 San Antonio 30 17 .638 New Orleans 23 21 .523 Memphis 16 28 .364 GB — 2 10½ 13 17 GB — ½ 7 12½ 13 GB — 4 4 5 10½ GB — 3 8½ 15½ Dallas 15 30 .333 17 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Minnesota 29 18 .617 — Oklahoma City 25 20 .556 3 Portland 24 21 .533 4 Denver 23 23 .500 5½ Utah 18 27 .400 10 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 37 9 .804 — L.A. Clippers 23 21 .523 13 Phoenix 17 29 .370 20 L.A. Lakers 16 29 .356 20½ Sacramento 13 32 .289 23½ ——— Friday’s Games Toronto 86, San Antonio 83 Brooklyn 101, Miami 95 Memphis 106, Sacramento 88 Washington 122, Detroit 112 Phoenix 108, Denver 100 L.A. Lakers 99, Indiana 86 New York 117, Utah 115 Saturday’s Games Oklahoma City at Cleveland, 12:30 p.m. Chicago at Atlanta, 2 p.m. Memphis at New Orleans, 4 p.m. Miami at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Golden State at Houston, 5:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Utah, 6 p.m. Toronto at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Dallas at Portland, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games Orlando at Boston, 10 a.m. New York at L.A. Lakers, 12:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Detroit, 1 p.m. Indiana at San Antonio, 4 p.m. NCAA Men’s Basketball Top 25 Schedule Friday No. 9 Michigan State 85, Indiana 57 Saturday No 3 Purdue at Iowa, 9 a.m. (ESPN) No. 22 OUS at Minnesota, 9 a.m. (BTN) No. 1 Villanova at UConn, 9 a.m. (CBS) No. 7 Wichita State at Houston, 9 a.m. (ESPNU) Georgia Tech at No. 15 UNC, 11 a.m. (ESPN2) No. 8 Texas Tech at Iowa State, 11 a.m. (ESPNU) No. 4 Oklahoma at Oklahoma State, 11 a.m. (ESPN) Texas at No. 6 West Virginia, 11 a.m. (CBS) No. 11 Xavier at No. 19 Seton Hall, 11:30 a.m. (FOX) Notre Dame at No. 20 Clemson, 1 p.m. (ESPN) Pitt at No. 5 Duke, 1 p.m. (ACCNE) ECU at No. 12 Cincinnati, 1 p.m. (EPSNN) No. 14 Arizona at Stanford, 1 p.m. (CBS) No. 24 TCU at Kansas State, 1 p.m. (ESPNU) No. 21 Tennessee at South Carolina, 3 p.m. (ESPN2) Georgia at No. 17 Auburn, 3 p.m. (SECN) Baylor at No. 10 Kansas at 3 p.m. (ESPN) No. 13 Gonzaga at Santa Clara, 5 p.m. Flordia at No. 18 Kentucky, 5:15 p.m. (ESPN) No. 16 Arizona State at Cal, 7:30 p.m. (PAC12) Sunday No. 25 Miami at NC State, 9 a.m. (ACCNE) Rutgers at No. 23 Michigan, 9 a.m. (BTN) No. 2 UVA at Wake Forest, 3 p.m. (ESPNU) Monday No. 15 UNC at Virginia Tech, 4 p.m. (ESPN) Nebraska at No. 22 OSU, 5 p.m. (BTN) NCAA Women’s Basketball Top 25 Schedule Friday Utah 58, No. 22 Arizona State 56 No. 13 UCLA 60, No. 21 Cal 52 No. 18 Oregon State 85, No. 7 Oregon 79, OT Saturday No. 24 Oklahoma State at Oklahoma, 10 a.m. No. 23 Green Bay at Oakland, 12 p.m. (ESPN3) No. 9 Texas at Texas Tech, 1 p.m. Illionois at No. 19 Michigan, 3 p.m. (BTN) Kansas State at No. 4 Baylor, 4 p.m. No. 17 West Virginia at Iowa State, 4:30 p.m. Sunday No. 10 South Carolina at Kentucky, 9 a.m. (ESPNU) Clemson at No. 5 Notre Dame, 10 a.m.(ACCNE) No. 1 UConn at Temple, 10 a.m. (ESPN2) No. 15 Duke at UNC, 11:30 a.m. (ACCNE) No. 3 Miss. St. at No. 6 Tennessee, 12 p.m. (ESPN2) No. 20 Iowa at Minnesota, 1 p.m. No. 21 Cal at USC, 1 p.m. (PAC12) Colorado at No. 22 Arizona State, 1 p.m. Arkansas at No. 11 Missouri, 2 p.m. (SECN) No. 12 FSU at No. 2 Louisville, 2 p.m. (ESPN2) Nebraska at No. 25 Rutgers, 3 p.m. Stanford at No. 13 UCLA, 3 p.m. (PAC12) No. 18 Oregon State at No. 7 Oregon, 5 p.m. (PAC12) Monday LSU at No. 16 Texas A&M, 4 p.m. (SECN) No. 8 OSU at No. 14 Marlyand, 4 p.m. (ESPN2) Pac-12 Schedule Friday Utah 58, No. 22 Arizona State 56 Arizona 72, Colorado 63 No. 13 UCLA 60, No. 21 Cal 52 No. 18 Oregon State 85, No. 7 Oregon 79, OT Stanford 59, USC 55 Sunday Utah at Arizona, 11 a.m. (PAC12) Washington State at Washington, 1 p.m. No. 21 Cal at USC, 1 p.m. (PAC12) Colorado at No. 22 Arizona State, 1 p.m. Stanford at No. 13 UCLA, 3 p.m. (PAC12) No. 18 Oregon State at No. 7 Oregon, 5 p.m. (PAC12) Football NFL CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS Sunday Jacksonville at New England, Noon (CBS) Minnesota at Philadelphia, 3:40 p.m. (FOX)