East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 24, 2019, Page B2, Image 10

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

    B2
SPORTS
East Oregonian
Friday, May 24, 2019
Portland Timbers Leonard scores 35, Raptors beat Bucks
to host summer
youth soccer camp
By ANDREW SELIGMAN
Associated Press
East Oregonian
The Portland Timbers
are welcoming all Oregon
and southwest Washington
soccer players aged 5-16 to
their annual summer soc-
cer camp.
The four-day Portland
Timbers Youth Soccer
Camp will be held at East-
ern Oregon University in
La Grande from Monday,
July 22 through Thursday,
July 25.
The program offers
full-day and half-day
opportunities. Full days
last from 9 a.m. until
3 p.m., and half days run
from 9 a.m. until noon.
Those who wish to partic-
ipate for the full day will
pay a $150 entry fee, and
half-day participants will
be charged $135.
Campers will have the
opportunity to get involved
in a variety of programs
and exercises through-
out the day. All activities
are open to both boys and
girls.
Timbers and Thorns
Day Camps are open to
those aged 5-13. Timbers
and Thorns Goalkeeper
and Striker Camps are
for those aged 8-18, and
the Timbers and Thorns
Residential Camps are
reserved for athletes from
the ages of 12-18. Compet-
itive training camps will
also be available for those
aged 10-18.
The coaching staff con-
sists of college and club
coaches, college players,
and members of the Tim-
bers Academy, Olym-
pic Development, and
Regional Training Center.
At the end of the week,
all Timbers and Thorns
campers aged 5-9 will
receive a camp certificate,
and players 10 and older
will receive a camp evalu-
ation form, which provides
feedback on their perfor-
mance over the course of
the week.
Registration forms can
be found online at timbers.
com/camps. For any ques-
tions, email camps@tim-
bers.com.
Twins hit franchise
record-tying eight
home runs in win
Associated Press
ANAHEIM, Calif. —
Miguel Sano and Jona-
than Schoop each hit two
of Minnesota’s franchise
record-tying eight home
runs and the Twins ham-
mered Matt Harvey and the
Los Angeles Angels 16-7
Thursday.
C.J. Cron homered,
doubled twice and singled
twice for the Twins. Max
Kepler, Jorge Polanco and
Eddie Rosario also hom-
ered for Minnesota.
It was the third time in
franchise history — dat-
ing to their days as the
Washington Senators —
and second time this sea-
son the Twins homered
eight times. Before doing
it April 20 against Balti-
more, the last time it hap-
pened was in 1963 against
Washington.
Schoop drove in four
runs and Sano three as the
Twins won six of seven
on their trip that began in
Seattle and wound up with
their first sweep in Ana-
heim since 1996.
There were a total of 11
home runs in this game,
which was originally set
for Wednesday but post-
poned due to unplayable
field conditions following a
pregame storm.
The eight home runs
also tied the Angels mark
for most allowed. It pre-
viously happened in 2005
against Texas and 1996 vs.
Oakland. Tommy La Stella
hit his first grand slam in
the ninth for the Angels,
who have dropped four
straight. David Fletcher
and Brian Goodwin also
homered for Los Angeles.
Four of the seven hits
Matt Harvey (2-4) allowed
in 2 2/3 innings went over
the wall.
Twins starter Mar-
tin Perez (7-1) went five
innings and yielded two
runs on five hits.
Yankees 6, Orioles 5
BALTIMORE
—
Mychal Givens walked
Aaron Hicks with the bases
loaded to force in the tie-
breaking run in the ninth
inning, and New York
completed a four-game
sweep of Baltimore.
Clint Frazier and Luke
Voit homered for the Yan-
kees, who went deep 13
times in the series.
Down 4-1 in the eighth,
the Orioles mounted a
comeback. Two walks
and an RBI single by
Trey Mancini brought in
Tommy Kahnle (2-0) from
the bullpen, and Renato
Nunez tied it with a three-
run drive.
In the ninth, Gley-
ber Torres drew a walk
and Gary Sanchez sin-
gled before Givens (0-2)
walked DJ LeMahieu to
load the bases. After going
3-0 on Hicks, Givens got
two strikes before missing
badly outside.
Zack Britton worked the
ninth for his second save.
Baltimore has lost six
straight. The Orioles own
the worst record in the
majors (15-35) and worst
record at home (6-19).
Rays 7, Indians 2
CLEVELAND — Ryan
Yarbrough handled Cleve-
land’s lineup into eighth
inning in his first start this
season and Kevin Kier-
maier legged out a three-
run, inside-the-park homer
when two outfielders col-
lided in the win for Tampa
Bay.
Tommy Pham, Avisail
Garcia and Willy Adames
hit solo homers off Adam
Plutko (1-1) as the Rays
improved baseball’s best
road record to 16-7.
Yarbrough (3-1) allowed
two runs and four hits in a
career-high 7 1/3 innings.
The Indians dropped
their fourth straight and
nearly lost two more play-
ers to injury on a freak-
ish play in the sixth when
rookie left fielder Oscar
Mercado and center fielder
Leonys Martin slammed
into each other trying to
catch the ball.
Mercado took the worst
of the crash as Martin’s left
knee drove hard into his
right hip. As the two Indi-
ans players lay helplessly
in the grass, the ball rico-
cheted toward the left-field
corner and Kiermaier eas-
ily circled the bases for
the first inside-the-parker
allowed by Cleveland since
2008.
Mets 6, Nationals 4
NEW YORK — Car-
los Gomez hit a go-ahead,
three-run homer in the
eighth inning that helped
New York overcome a
Washington
comeback
that started after Nationals
manager Dave Martinez’s
heated ejection.
Gomez’s first homer of
the season came off Wan-
der Suero (1-4) as the Mets
completed a four-game
sweep.
The Nationals came to
life after Martinez’s ejec-
tion in the eighth. Juan
Soto walked against Rob-
ert Gsellman (1-0), Victor
Robles singled, and Yan
Gomes brought in Soto
with a double. Gerardo
Parra followed with a
pinch-hit, two-run single
for a 4-3 Washington lead.
MILWAUKEE — Kawhi
Leonard scored 35 points
and the Toronto Raptors
beat the Milwaukee Bucks
105-99 on Thursday night to
take a 3-2 lead in the East-
ern Conference finals.
Leonard showed no obvi-
ous signs of the leg soreness
that bothered him in Toron-
to’s victories in the previ-
ous two games, hitting the
30-point mark for the fourth
time in the series. He made
five 3-pointers and had
seven rebounds and nine
assists.
Fred VanVleet scored 21
points, hitting seven 3s. Kyle
Lowry added 17 as the Rap-
tors put themselves in posi-
tion to advance to the NBA
Finals for the first time. A
victory at home Saturday
would set up a matchup with
two-time defending cham-
pion Golden State.
“This was a super-hard
win tonight,” Raptors coach
Nick Nurse said.
The Raptors battled out
of an early 14-point hole,
then got 15 points from
Leonard in the fourth quar-
ter to send the top-seeded
Bucks to their first three-
game losing streak of the
season.
AP Photo/Morry Gash
Toronto Raptors’ Kawhi Leonard shoots past Milwaukee
Bucks’ Brook Lopez during the second half of Game 5 of the
NBA Eastern Conference basketball playoff finals Thursday
in Milwaukee.
“We weathered the storm
early,” Leonard said.
Giannis
Antetokoun-
mpo had 24 points for Mil-
waukee hours after being
announced as a unanimous
first-team, All-NBA selec-
tion. Eric Bledsoe scored
20 and Malcolm Brog-
don added 18 points and 11
rebounds in his return to the
starting lineup.
“It’s first to four. We’ve
got to go to Toronto, get
a game. I think the group
will be ready,” Bucks coach
Mike Budenholzer said.
The Raptors were cling-
ing to a two-point lead in the
closing minute after Khris
Middleton drove around
Leonard on the baseline for
a layup.
Toronto was initially
called for a shot-clock vio-
lation when Leonard missed
a fadeaway jumper with 35
seconds left. That got over-
turned by a replay review,
and Brook Lopez was
called for a foul, instead,
for bumping Marc Gasol
after he retrieved the loose
ball.
Gasol hit both free throws
to make it 100-97. Another
replay review went in Toron-
to’s favor when officials
determined a ball went out
of bounds off Brogdon with
26.8 seconds left. Brogdon
pulled his hand away, think-
ing his dribble had gone off
Pascal Siakam’s foot.
Siakam then drove for a
dunk, making it 102-97, and
the Raptors hung on from
there.
Milwaukee was lead-
ing 81-79 with about 8 1/2
minutes left when Leonard
nailed back-to-back 3-point-
ers. He hit two free throws
before Siakam threw down
a put-back dunk to make it
89-81.
The Bucks tied it at
93-all with 2:44 left on a
3-pointer by Lopez. VanV-
leet answered with one of
his own before Antetokoun-
mpo threw down an alley-
oop dunk to cut it to 96-95
with just over two minutes
remaining.
The Bucks set a fast pace
early on and led by 10 after
the first quarter, delight-
ing the towel-waving fans
chanting “Fear The Deer!
Fear the Deer!” They with-
stood a 16-2 run by Toronto
to start the second, with
Antetokounmpo nailing a 3
to stop it.
The Bucks also went
on a 14-2 run early in the
third, with the Greek Freak
throwing down a hard
dunk off a feed by Middle-
ton for a 63-51 lead. But
the Raptors got right back
into it.
SCOREBOARD
LOCAL SLATE
FRIDAY, MAY 24
Baseball
Pendleton at Crescent Valley, 5 p.m.
Softball
Hermiston at Bonney Lake, noon
Mac-Hi at Banks, 3 p.m.
Pendleton at West Albany, 5 p.m.
Track and field
Hermiston at State Championship Meet
(Mount Tahoma HS)
Pendleton at State Championship Meet
(Mt. Hood Community College)
SATURDAY, MAY 25
Track and field
Hermiston at State Championship Meet
(Mount Tahoma HS)
Pendleton at State Championship Meet
(Mt. Hood Community College)
NBA
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7)
Eastern Conference
Milwaukee 4, Detroit 0
Sunday, April 14: Milwaukee 121, Detroit
86
Wednesday, April 17: Milwaukee 120,
Detroit 99
Saturday, April 20: Milwaukee 119,
Detroit 103
Monday, April 22: Milwaukee 127, Detroit
104
Toronto 4, Orlando 1
Saturday, April 13: Orlando 104, Toronto
101
Tuesday, April 16: Toronto 111, Orlando
82
Friday, April 19: Toronto 98, Orlando 93
Sunday, April 21: Toronto 107, Orlando 85
Tuesday, April 23: Toronto 115, Orlando
96
Philadelphia 4, Brooklyn 1
Saturday, April 13: Brooklyn 111, Phila-
delphia 102
Monday, April 15: Philadelphia 145,
Brooklyn 123
Thursday, April 18: Philadelphia 131,
Brooklyn 115
Saturday, April 20: Philadelphia 112,
Brooklyn 108
Tuesday, April 23: Philadelphia 122,
Brooklyn 100
Boston 4, Indiana 0
Sunday, April 14: Boston 84, Indiana 74
Wednesday, April 17: Boston 99, Indi-
ana 91
Friday, April 19: Boston 104, Indiana 96
Sunday, April 21: Boston 110, Indiana 106
Western Conference
Golden State 4, L.A. Clippers 2
Saturday, April 13: Golden State 121, L.A.
Clippers 104
Monday, April 15: L.A. Clippers 135,
Golden State 131
Thursday, April 18: Golden State 132, L.A.
Clippers 105
Sunday, April 21: Golden State 113, L.A.
Clippers 105
Wednesday, April 24: L.A. Clippers 129,
Golden State 121
Friday, April 26: Golden State 129, L.A.
Clippers 110
Denver 4, San Antonio 3
Saturday, April 13: San Antonio 101, Den-
ver 96
Tuesday, April 16: Denver 114, San Anto-
nio 105
Thursday, April 18: San Antonio 118,
Denver 108
Saturday, April 20: Denver 117, San Anto-
nio 103
Tuesday, April 23: Denver 108, San Anto-
nio 90
Thursday, April 25: San Antonio 120,
Denver 103
Saturday, April 27: Denver 90, San Anto-
nio 86
Portland 4, Oklahoma City 1
Sunday, April 14: Portland 104, Okla-
homa City 99
Tuesday, April 16: Portland 114, Okla-
homa City 94
Friday, April 19: Oklahoma City 120, Port-
land 108
Sunday, April 21: Portland 111, Oklahoma
City 98
Tuesday, April 23: Portland 118, Okla-
homa City 115
Houston 4, Utah 1
Sunday, April 14: Houston 122, Utah 90
Wednesday, April 17: Houston 118,
Utah 98
Saturday, April 20: Houston 104, Utah
101
Monday, April 22: Utah 107, Houston 91
Wednesday, April 24: Houston 100,
Utah 93
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
(Best-of-7)
Eastern Conference
Milwaukee 4, Boston 1
Sunday, April 28: Boston 112, Milwau-
kee 90
Tuesday, Apil 30: Milwaukee 123, Bos-
ton 102
Friday, May 3: Milwaukee 123, Boston 116
Monday, May 6: Milwaukee 113, Bos-
ton 101
Wednesday, May 8: Milwaukee 116, Bos-
ton 91
Toronto 4, Philadelphia 3
Saturday, April 27: Toronto 108, Phila-
delphia 95
Monday, April 29: Philadelphia 94,
Toronto 89
Thursday, May 2: Philadelphia 116,
Toronto 95
Sunday, May 5: Toronto 101, Philadel-
phia 96
Tuesday, May 7: Toronto 125, Philadel-
phia 89
Thursday, May 9: Philadelphia 112,
Toronto 101
Sunday, May 12: Toronto 92, Philadel-
phia 90
Western Conference
Golden State 4, Houston 2
Sunday, April 28: Golden State 104,
Houston 100
Tuesday, April 30: Golden State 115,
Houston 109
Saturday, May 4: Houston 126, Golden
State 121, OT
Monday, May 6: Houston 112, Golden
State 108
Wednesday, May 8: Golden State 104,
Houston 99
Friday, May 10: Golden State 118, Hous-
ton 113
Portland 4, Denver 3
Monday, April 29: Denver 121, Port-
land 113
Wednesday, May 1: Portland 97, Den-
ver 90
Friday, May 3: Portland 140, Denver 137,
4OT
Sunday, May 5: Denver 116, Portland 112
Tuesday, May 7: Denver 124, Portland 98
Thursday, May 9: Portland 119, Den-
ver 108
Sunday, May 12: Portland 100, Denver 96
CONFERENCE FINALs
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Eastern Conference
Toronto 3, Milwaukee 2
Wednesday, May 15: Milwaukee 108,
Toronto 100
Friday, May 17: Milwaukee 125, Toronto
103
Sunday, May 19: Toronto 118, Milwau-
kee 112, 2OT
Tuesday, May 21: Toronto 120, Milwau-
kee 102
Thursday, May 23: Toronto 105, Milwau-
kee 99
Saturday, May 25: Milwaukee at Toronto,
5:30 p.m.
x-Monday, May 27: Toronto at Milwau-
kee, 5:30 p.m.
Western Conference
Golden State 4, Portland 0
Tuesday, May 14: Golden State 116, Port-
land 94
Thursday, May 16: Golden State 114,
Portland 111
Saturday, May 18: Golden State 110 Port-
land 99
Monday, May 20: Golden State 119, Port-
land 117, OT
FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Golden State vs. Milwaukee/Toronto
winner
Thursday, May 30: Golden State at Mil-
waukee/Toronto, 6 p.m.
Sunday, June 2: Golden State at Milwau-
kee/Toronto, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, June 5: Milwaukee/Toronto
at Golden State, 6 p.m.
Friday, June 7: Milwaukee/Toronto at
Golden State, 6 p.m.
x-Monday, June 10: Golden State at Mil-
waukee/Toronto, 6 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 13: Milwaukee/Toronto
at Golden State, 6 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 16: Golden State at Mil-
waukee/Toronto, 5 p.m.
MLB
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
W
L
Pct
GB
New York
32
17
.653
—
Tampa Bay
29
18
.617
2
Boston
27
23
.540
5½
Toronto
20
30
.400
12½
Baltimore
15
35
.300
17½
Central
W
L
Pct
GB
Minnesota
33
16
.673
—
Cleveland
25
24
.510
8
Chicago
23
26
.469
10
Detroit
18
29
.383
14
Kansas City
17
32
.347
16
West
W
L
Pct
GB
Houston
33
18
.647
—
Texas
24
23
.511
7
Oakland
25
25
.500
7½
Los Angeles
22
27
.449
10
Seattle
23
29
.442
10½
———
Thursday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 6, Baltimore 5
Boston 8, Toronto 2
Miami 5, Detroit 2
Minnesota 16, L.A. Angels 7
Tampa Bay 7, Cleveland 2
Chicago White Sox 4, Houston 0
Friday’s Games
San Diego (Lucchesi 3-3) at Toronto
(Thornton 1-4), 4:07 p.m.
Detroit (Soto 0-2) at N.Y. Mets (Synder-
gaard 3-4), 4:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Snell 3-4) at Cleveland (Bie-
ber 3-2), 4:10 p.m.
Boston (Sale 1-5) at Houston (Miley 4-2),
5:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Lopez 3-4) at Minne-
sota (Berrios 6-2), 5:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Green 0-2) at Kansas City
(Junis 3-5), 5:15 p.m.
Baltimore (Means 5-4) at Colorado (Hoff-
man 0-1), 5:40 p.m.
Seattle (LeBlanc 2-1) at Oakland (Meng-
den 1-1), 7:07 p.m.
Texas (Smyly 0-3) at L.A. Angels (Canning
2-1), 7:07 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota,
11:10 a.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City, 11:15 a.m.
San Diego at Toronto, 12:07 p.m.
Seattle at Oakland, 1:07 p.m.
Detroit at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m.
Boston at Houston, 4:15 p.m.
Baltimore at Colorado, 6:10 p.m.
Texas at L.A. Angels, 7:07 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East
W
L
Pct
GB
Philadelphia
29 21 .580
—
Atlanta
28 23 .549
1½
New York
24 25 .490
4½
Washington
19 31 .380
10
Miami
16 31 .340 11½
Central
W
L
Pct
GB
Chicago
29 19 .604
—
Milwaukee
29 22 .569
1½
Pittsburgh
25 22 .532
3½
St. Louis
25 24 .510
4½
Cincinnati
22 27 .449
7½
West
W
L
Pct
GB
Los Angeles
32 18 .640
—
San Diego
26 24 .520
6
Arizona
25 25 .500
7
Colorado
22 26 .458
9
San Francisco 21 28 .429 10½
———
Wednesday’s Games
Milwaukee 11, Cincinnati 9
Kansas City 8, St. Louis 2, 1st game
San Diego 5, Arizona 2
Colorado 9, Pittsburgh 3
Miami 6, Detroit 3
N.Y. Mets 6, Washington 1
Tampa Bay 8, L.A. Dodgers 1
St. Louis 10, Kansas City 3, 2nd game
Chicago Cubs 8, Philadelphia 4
Atlanta 9, San Francisco 2
Thursday’s Games
N.Y. Mets 6, Washington 4
Pittsburgh 14, Colorado 6
Miami 5, Detroit 2
Philadelphia 9, Chicago Cubs 7
Atlanta at San Francisco, 12:45 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Cincinnati (DeSclafani 2-2) at Chicago
Cubs (Hendricks 4-4), 11:20 a.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Buehler 4-1) at Pittsburgh
(TBD), 4:05 p.m.
Miami (Lopez 3-5) at Washington
(McGowin 0-0), 4:05 p.m.
San Diego (Lucchesi 3-3) at Toronto
(Thornton 1-4), 4:07 p.m.
Detroit (Soto 0-2) at N.Y. Mets (Synder-
gaard 3-4), 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Eickhoff 2-2) at Milwaukee
(Anderson 2-0), 5:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Foltynewicz 0-3) at St. Louis
(Mikolas 4-4), 5:15 p.m.
Baltimore (Means 5-4) at Colorado (Hoff-
man 0-1), 5:40 p.m.
Arizona (Ray 3-1) at San Francisco
(Pomeranz 1-4), 7:15 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m.
San Diego at Toronto, 12:07 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m.
Miami at Washington, 1:05 p.m.
Detroit at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m.
Atlanta at St. Louis, 4:15 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 4:15 p.m.
Baltimore at Colorado, 6:10 p.m.
NHL
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Columbus 4, Tampa Bay 0
Wednesday, April 10: Columbus 4,
Tampa Bay 3
Friday, April 12: Columbus 5, Tampa
Bay 1
Sunday, April 14: Columbus 3, Tampa
Bay 1
Tuesday, April 16: Columbus 7, Tampa
Bay 3
Boston 4, Toronto 3
Thursday, April 11: Toronto 4, Boston 1
Saturday, April 13: Boston 4, Toronto 1
Monday, April 15: Toronto 3, Boston 2
Wednesday, April 17: Boston 6, Toronto 4
Friday, April 19: Toronto 2, Boston 1
Sunday, April 21: Boston 4, Toronto 2
Tuesday, April 23: Boston 5, Toronto 1
Carolina 4, Washington 3
Thursday, April 11: Washington 4, Car-
olina 2
Saturday, April 13: Washington 4, Caro-
lina 3, OT
Monday, April 15: Carolina 5, Washing-
ton 0
Thursday, April 18: Carolina 2, Wash-
ington 1
Saturday, April 20: Washington 6, Car-
olina 0
Monday, April 22: Carolina 5, Washing-
ton 2
Wednesday, April 24: Carolina 4, Wash-
ington 3, 2OT
New York Islanders 4, Pittsburgh 0
Wednesday, April 10: N.Y. Islanders 4,
Pittsburgh 3, OT
Friday, April 12: N.Y. Islanders 3, Pitts-
burgh 1
Sunday, April 14: N.Y. Islanders 4, Pitts-
burgh 1
Tuesday, April 16: N.Y. Islanders 3, Pitts-
burgh 1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Dallas 4, Nashville 2
Wednesday, April 10: Dallas 3, Nashville 2
Saturday, April 13: Nashville 2, Dallas
1, OT
Monday, April 15: Nashville 3, Dallas 2
Wednesday, April 17: Dallas 5, Nashville 1
Saturday, April 20: Dallas 5, Nashville 3
Monday, April 22: Dallas 2, Nashville
1, OT
St. Louis 4, Winnipeg 2
Wednesday, April 10: St. Louis 2, Win-
nipeg 1
Friday, April 12: St. Louis 4, Winnipeg 3
Sunday, April 14: Winnipeg 6, St. Louis 3
Tuesday, April 16: Winnipeg 2, St. Louis
1, OT
Thursday, April 18: St. Louis 3, Winni-
peg 2
Saturday, April 20: St. Louis 3, Winni-
peg 2
Colorado 4, Calgary 1
Thursday, April 11: Calgary 4, Colorado 0
Saturday, April 13: Colorado 3, Calgary
2, OT
Monday, April 15: Colorado 6, Calgary 2
Wednesday, April 17: Colorado 3, Cal-
gary 2, OT
Friday, April 19: Colorado 5, Calgary 1
San Jose 4, Vegas 3
Wednesday, April 10: San Jose 5, Vegas 2
Friday, April 12: Vegas 5, San Jose 3
Sunday, April 14: Vegas 6, San Jose 3
Tuesday, April 16: Vegas 5, San Jose 0
Thursday, April 18: San Jose 5, Vegas 2
Sunday, April 21: San Jose 2, Vegas 1, 2OT
Tuesday, April 23: San Jose 5, Vegas 4, OT
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
(Best-of-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Boston 4, Columbus 2
Thursday, April 25: Boston 3, Colum-
bus 2, OT
Saturday, April 27: Columbus 3, Bos-
ton 2, 2OT
Tuesday, April 30: Columbus 2, Boston 1
Thursday, May 2: Boston 4, Columbus 1
Saturday, May 4: Boston 4, Columbus 3
Monday, May 6: Boston 3, Columbus 0
Carolina 4, N.Y. Islanders 0
Friday, April 26: Carolina 1, N.Y. Island-
ers 0, OT
Sunday, April 28: Carolina 2, N.Y. Island-
ers 1
Wednesday, May 1: Carolina 5, N.Y.
Islanders 2
Friday, May 3: Carolina 5, N.Y. Islanders 2
WESTERN CONFERENCE
St. Louis 4, Dallas 3
Thursday, April 25: St. Louis 3, Dallas 2
Saturday, April 27: Dallas 4, St. Louis 2
Monday, April 29: St. Louis 4, Dallas 3
Wednesday, May 1: Dallas 4, St. Louis 2
Friday, May 3: Dallas 2, St. Louis 1
Sunday, May 5: St. Louis 4, Dallas 1
Tuesday, May 7: St. Louis 2, Dallas 1, 2OT
San Jose 4, Colorado 3
Friday, April 26: San Jose 5, Colorado 2
Sunday, April 28: Colorado 4, San Jose 3
Tuesday, April 30: San Jose 4, Colorado 2
Thursday, May 2: Colorado 3, San Jose 0
Saturday, May 4: San Jose 2, Colorado 1
Monday, May 6: Colorado 4, San Jose
3, OT
Wednesday, May 8: San Jose 3, Colo-
rado 2
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Boston 4, Carolina 0
Thursday, May 9: Boston 5, Carolina 2
Sunday, May 12: Boston 6, Carolina 2
Tuesday, May 14: Boston 2, Carolina 1
Thursday, May 16: Boston 4, Carolina 0
WESTERN CONFERENCE
St. Louis 4, San Jose 2
Saturday, May 11: San Jose 6, St. Louis 3
Monday, May 13: St. Louis 4, San Jose 2
Wednesday, May 15: San Jose 5, St. Louis
4, OT
Friday, May 17: St. Louis 2, San Jose 1
Sunday, May 19: St. Louis 5, San Jose 0
Tuesday, May 21: St. Louis 5, San Jose 1
STANLEY CUP FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Boston vs. St. Louis
Monday, May 27: St. Louis at Boston,
5 p.m.
Wednesday, May 29: St. Louis at Bos-
ton, 5 p.m.
Saturday, June 1: Boston at St. Louis,
5 p.m.
Monday, June 3: Boston at St. Louis,
5 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 6: St. Louis at Boston,
5 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 9: Boston at St. Louis,
5 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 12: St. Louis at Bos-
ton, 5 p.m.