The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, January 11, 2021, Page 6, Image 6

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    A6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, JANUARY 11, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
MONDAY
BASKETBALL
Men’s College, Colorado at Utah
Men’s College, Connecticut at DePaul
Men’s College, Loyola-Chicago at Drake
Men’s College, Boise State at Wyoming
NBA, Toronto Raptors at Portland Trail Blazers
FOOTBALL
CFP National Championship, Ohio State vs Alabama
Time
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
4 p.m.
6 p.m.
7 p.m.
TV
PAC12
FS1
CBSSN
CBSSN
NBCSNW
5 p.m.
ESPN
Time
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
TV
CBSSN
ESPN
ESPN2
ROOT
SEC
FS1
ESPN
ESPN2
PAC12
SEC
FS1
TUESDAY
BASKETBALL
Men’s College, Miami (Ohio) at Ohio
Men’s College, Wisconsin at Michigan
Men’s College, Tennessee at South Carolina
Men’s College, Miami at Boston College
Men’s College, Ole Miss at Florida
Men’s College, Butler at St. John’s
Men’s College, Alabama at Kentucky
Men’s College, West Virginia at Baylor
Men’s College, Teams TBA
Men’s College, Vanderbilt at Missouri
Men’s College, Providence at Marquette
SOCCER
Premier League, Burnley vs Manchester United
12:10 p.m. NBCSN
Listings are the most accurate available.
SPORTS BRIEFING
WORLD CUP SKIING
Gut-Behrami’s veteran skills win tricky World Cup su-
per-G — It took the veteran skills of Lara Gut-Behrami to win
a tricky World Cup super-G on Sunday. Even Gut-Behrami
veered off the best racing line before making two gates on a
fast, twisting course as she finished 0.16 ahead of Marta Bas-
sino of Italy. World Cup super-G champion Corinne Suter was
third, trailing her Switzerland teammate by 0.20. Racing early
with the No. 5 bib, Gut-Behrami took a route few could fol-
low — 11 of the first 25 top-ranked starters failed to complete
the course. They included Sofia Goggia, the winner of Satur-
day’s downhill, who lasted barely 10 seconds before skiing out.
Gut-Behrami’s 13th win in World Cup super-G came more
than 12 years after her debut victory in a discipline that de-
mands speed and technical ability to improvise.
Austria’s Schwarz wins World Cup slalom to lead
standings — Marco Schwarz salvaged Austria’s tough week-
end in Switzerland by winning a World Cup slalom on Sunday
to lead the season-long standings. Schwarz rose from fourth
place after the first run to race though fast-fading light in the
afternoon and finish 0.14 seconds ahead of Linus Strasser of
Germany. The powerful Austrian team had just a single top-
10 placing to show from giant slaloms on the previous two
days at the storied Adelboden hill cherished by its neighbor
Switzerland. Dave Ryding was third, trailing Schwarz by 0.15,
to give the British racer his third career podium and best re-
sult in traditional slalom for four years. First-run leader Clé-
ment Noël had a difficult ride down the steep final slope and
dropped to eight place, 0.38 back.
FOOTBALL
Trump to honor Belichick with Presidential Medal of
Freedom — President Donald Trump will present one of the
nation’s highest civilian honors to Bill Belichick, the football
coach of the New England Patriots and the only coach to win
six Super Bowl titles. The presentation of the Presidential Medal
of Freedom is expected Thursday, a White House official con-
firmed on condition of anonymity because they were not autho-
rized to discuss the matter publicly. Trump has selected a string
of sports figures and political backers for the award of late, and
recent ceremonies have taken place in private.
GOLF
English wins Kapalua in playoff for 1st victory in 7
years — Harris English went more than seven years with-
out winning on the PGA Tour, and he didn’t mind going one
extra hole to win the Sentry Tournament of Champions on
Sunday. English missed a 10-foot eagle putt in regulation on
the par-5 18th hole at Kapalua for a 4-under 69 to force a play-
off with Joaquin Niemann, and he ended it on the 18th with a
6-foot birdie. Niemann, who closed with a 64, pulled his ap-
proach enough to tumble down the steep, shaggy hill. His full
swing from thick grass got him to the fringe, but he missed
the birdie putt. English capped off his remarkable turnaround
at a tournament he ordinarily wouldn’t be allowed to play. The
Tournament of Champions is for winners only from the pre-
vious year, but the field was expanded to include anyone who
reached the Tour Championship because of the COVID-19
pandemic that shut down the PGA Tour for three months.
PGA Championship leaving Trump National in ‘22 tour-
nament — The PGA of America cut ties to President Don-
ald Trump when it voted Sunday to take the PGA Champi-
onship event away from his New Jersey golf course next year.
The vote comes four days after the Trump-fueled riot at the
nation’s Capitol as Congress was certifying the election vic-
tory of President-elect Joe Biden. This is the second time in just
over five years the PGA of America removed one of its events
from a Trump course. PGA President Jim Richerson says the
board voted to exercise its right to “terminate the agreement”
with Trump National in Bedminster, New Jersey. The PGA of
America signed the deal with Trump National in 2014.
TENNIS
SWISS TREAT
FOOTBALL
NFL Playoffs
WILD-CARD PLAYOFFS
Saturday9s Games
Buffalo 27, Indianapolis 24
Los Angeles Rams 30, Seattle 20
Tampa Bay 31, Washington 23
Sunday9s Games
Baltimore 20, Tennessee 13
New Orleans 21, Chicago 9
Cleveland 48, Pittsburgh 37
DIVISIONAL PLAYOFFS
Saturday, Jan. 16
Los Angeles Rams at Green Bay, 1:35 p.m.
Baltimore at Buffalo, 5:15 p.m.
Sunday, Jan. 17
Cleveland at Kansas City, 12:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 3:40 p.m.
College
Monday
COLLEGE FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
Miami Gardens, Fla.
No. 1 Alabama vs. No. 3 Ohio St., 8 p.m. (ESPN)
BASKETBALL
NBA
NBA Conference Glance
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Phila.
7
3
.700
Boston
7
3
.700
Indiana
6
3
.667
Orlando
6
4
.600
Milwaukee
6
4
.600
New York
5
5
.500
Cleveland
5
5
.500
Charlotte
5
5
.500
Miami
4
4
.500
Brooklyn
5
6
.455
Atlanta
4
5
.444
Chicago
4
7
.364
Toronto
2
7
.222
Detroit
2
8
.200
Washington
2
8
.200
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
L.A. Lakers
8
3
.727
Phoenix
7
3
.700
L.A. Clippers
7
4
.636
Utah
6
4
.600
Golden State
6
4
.600
Dallas
5
4
.556
Portland
5
4
.556
Oklahoma City
5
4
.556
Denver
5
5
.500
San Antonio
5
5
.500
New Orleans
4
5
.444
Sacramento
4
6
.400
Houston
3
5
.375
Memphis
3
6
.333
Minnesota
3
7
.300
Sunday9s Games
Utah 96, Detroit 86
L.A. Clippers 130, Chicago 127
Denver 114, New York 89
Oklahoma City 129, Brooklyn 116
L.A. Lakers 120, Houston 102
Minnesota 96, San Antonio 88
Golden State 106, Toronto 105
Miami at Boston, ppd
Monday9s Games
Memphis at Cleveland, 4 p.m.
Milwaukee at Orlando, 4 p.m.
New York at Charlotte, 4 p.m.
Phoenix at Washington, 4 p.m.
Phila. at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.
Indiana at Sacramento, 7 p.m.
Toronto at Portland, 7 p.m.
Tuesday9s Games
Miami at Phila., 4 p.m.
Denver at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m.
Utah at Cleveland, 4:30 p.m.
Boston at Chicago, 5 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Houston, 5 p.m.
San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m.
Indiana at Golden State, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday9s Games
Dallas at Charlotte, 4 p.m.
Milwaukee at Detroit, 4 p.m.
Utah at Washington, 4 p.m.
Brooklyn at New York, 4:30 p.m.
Orlando at Boston, 4:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m.
Memphis at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
Atlanta at Phoenix, 6 p.m.
New Orleans at L.A. Clippers, 7 p.m.
Portland at Sacramento, 7 p.m.
GB
—
—
½
1
1
2
2
2
2
2½
2½
3½
4½
5
5
GB
—
½
1
1½
1½
2
2
2
2½
2½
3
3½
3½
4
4½
Saturday9s late box score
Portland 125, Sacramento 99
PORTLAND (125)
Covington 2-4 0-0 6, Jones Jr. 4-6 0-0 9, Nurkic 4-8 2-2
10, Lillard 5-16 6-6 17, McCollum 13-22 5-5 37, Anthony
4-12 4-6 13, Giles III 0-2 0-0 0, Elleby 1-1 0-0 3, Hood 0-5
0-0 0, Little 1-2 0-0 3, Trent Jr. 4-9 0-0 10, Kanter 4-9 3-4
11, Simons 2-4 0-0 6. Totals 44-100 20-23 125.
SACRAMENTO (99)
Barnes 4-8 0-0 10, Haliburton 5-8 1-1 12, Bagley III 5-14
4-6 15, Fox 3-9 4-6 10, Hield 3-10 0-0 8, Bjelica 1-5 2-2 4,
James 0-3 1-2 1, Robinson III 3-5 4-4 11, Woodard II 1-1
0-0 3, Metu 1-3 4-5 6, Whiteside 3-7 5-9 11, Joseph 4-8
0-0 8, Ramsey 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-81 25-35 99.
Portland
38 28 27 32 4 125
Sacramento
24 25 20 30 4 99
3-Point Goals_Portland 17-41 (McCollum 6-11, Simons
2-3, Covington 2-4, Trent Jr. 2-4, Jones Jr. 1-2, Anthony
1-5, Lillard 1-7, Hood 0-3), Sacramento 8-30 (Barnes
2-4, Hield 2-8, Bagley III 1-2, Robinson III 1-3, Halibur-
ton 1-4, James 0-2, Joseph 0-2, Bjelica 0-3). Fouled Out_
None. Rebounds_Portland 50 (Kanter 15), Sacramento
47 (Bagley III, Whiteside 8). Assists_Portland 26 (Lillard
6), Sacramento 21 (Haliburton 8). Total Fouls_Portland
27, Sacramento 20.
College
PACIFIC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L
Pct W L Pct
UCLA
5 0 1.000 9 2 .818
Oregon
4 1
.800 9 2 .818
Stanford
4 1
.800 8 3 .727
Southern Cal
3 1
.750 8 2 .800
Arizona
3 3
.500 9 3 .750
Washington St. 2 2
.500 9 2 .818
Colorado
2 2
.500 8 3 .727
Oregon St.
1 2
.333 5 4 .556
Arizona St.
1 2
.333 4 5 .444
Utah
1 3
.250 4 4 .500
California
1 5
.167 6 7 .462
Washington
0 5
.000 1 9 .100
Seahawks
Continued from A5
Kenin beats Putintseva to reach Abu Dhabi quarterfi-
nals — Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin of the United
States came back from match point down to beat Yulia Putint-
seva and reach the quarterfinals of the Abu Dhabi Open on
Sunday. Kenin posted 57 unforced errors to Putintseva’s 43
but still prevailed 3-6, 7-6 (5), 6-4 over the 13th-seeded Putint-
seva. Kenin dropped the opening set for the second consecu-
tive match in Abu Dhabi. Putintseva had match point when
serving at 6-5 up in the second set, but Kenin saved the point
and broke Putintseva’s serve to take the set to a tiebreak.
Tiafoe beats fellow American Fratangelois at Delray
Beach — Frances Tiafoe gained momentum Sunday in his
bid for another Delray Beach Open title by winning a seesaw
match against fellow American Bjorn Fratangelois, 6-4, 3-6,
6-1. Tiafoe won his first ATP Tour title as a 20-year-old wild
card at Delray Beach in 2018. His career record is 9-2 in the
tournament and 62-93 elsewhere on the ATP Tour.
— Bulletin wire reports
It’s the second time in three
seasons the Seahawks were
ousted from the postseason in
the wild-card round after losing
in the 2018 playoffs at Dallas.
In the five playoff appear-
ances since losing in the Super
Bowl, the Seahawks have a 3-5
record.
Most franchises would be
thrilled to have that many play-
off appearances. But for the
Seahawks, it’s a continual run
of what they see as missed op-
portunity.
“We got to be better. We got
to find ways to win these type
of matchups,” Wilson said.
“Frustration? I mean, yeah, of
course I’m frustrated.”
Gabriele Facciotti/AP
Austria’s Marco Schwarz speeds down the course on his way to win an alpine ski men’s World Cup slalom in
Adelboden, Switzerland, on Sunday.
Saturday9s Games
California 84, Washington 78
Oregon St. at Colorado, ppd.
Stanford 75, Washington St. 60
Southern Cal 73, Arizona St. 64
UCLA 81, Arizona 76
Oregon 79, Utah 73
Monday9s Games
Colorado at Utah, 3 p.m.
Tuesday9s Games
UC Riverside at Southern Cal, 6 p.m.
Saturday9s late box score
No. 17 Oregon 79, Utah 73
OREGON (9-2)
Omoruyi 0-7 0-0 0, Williams 6-13 4-5 19, Duarte 9-13
4-5 25, Hardy 4-9 3-3 13, Figueroa 6-11 1-1 15, Lawson
2-3 0-0 4, Estrada 1-5 1-2 3, Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, Kepnang
0-1 0-0 0, Wur 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 28-62 13-16 79.
UTAH (4-4)
Allen 9-13 4-7 23, Battin 3-4 0-0 7, Jantunen 8-14 3-3
20, Jones 1-5 0-0 2, Larsson 5-8 2-2 15, Plummer 2-5
0-0 4, Carlson 1-3 0-0 2, Martinez 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-
52 9-12 73.
Halftime 4Utah 43-33. 3-Point Goals 4Oregon 10-
22 (Duarte 3-5, Williams 3-6, Hardy 2-2, Figueroa 2-5,
Omoruyi 0-1, Estrada 0-3), Utah 6-17 (Larsson 3-3,
Battin 1-2, Jantunen 1-2, Allen 1-3, Plummer 0-3, Jones
0-4). Fouled Out 4Williams, Larsson. Rebounds 4Or-
egon 24 (Williams, Lawson 6), Utah 32 (Jantunen 7). As-
sists 4Oregon 15 (Omoruyi, Hardy 4), Utah 20 (Jones
8). Total Fouls 4Oregon 16, Utah 19.
SCORES
Sunday9s Games
AP TOP 25
No. 5 Iowa (11-2) beat Minnesota 86-71.
No. 12 Illinois (9-4) lost to Maryland 66-63.
No. 16 Minnesota (10-4) lost to No. 5 Iowa 86-71.
No. 19 Virginia Tech (9-2) beat Notre Dame 77-63.
EAST
Colgate 89, Boston U. 45
Hartford 75, Mass.-Lowell 58
Holy Cross 70, Army 61
Lafayette 87, Bucknell 76
Maine 45, NJIT 41
Monmouth (NJ) 72, Marist 62
Navy 73, Lehigh 58
Siena 75, Fairfield 68
UMBC 68, New Hampshire 66
Vermont 84, Binghamton 44
SOUTH
Coll. of Charleston 73, Drexel 68
Florida A&M 70, SC State 68
James Madison 100, Chowan 76
Longwood 78, Campbell 69
Norfolk St. 89, Morgan St. 85
Radford 68, Charleston Southern 48
UNC-Asheville 85, Hampton 77
Virginia Tech 77, Notre Dame 63
Winthrop 91, Gardner-Webb 83
MIDWEST
Illinois St. 73, Evansville 68
Indiana 84, Nebraska 76
Indiana St. 76, Chicago 71
Iowa 86, Minnesota 71
Maryland 66, Illinois 63
Missouri St. 78, Valparaiso 68
N. Iowa 78, Bradley 72
Wichita St. 82, Cincinnati 76
Xavier 74, Providence 73
FAR WEST
Fresno St. 80, San Jose St. 65
Loyola Marymount 68, San Francisco 60
Women’s college
PAC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L
Pct W L Pct
Stanford
7 0 1.000 10 0 1.000
Washington St. 5 1
.833 7 1 .875
Oregon
7 2
.778 9 2 .818
Arizona
6 2
.750 8 2 .800
UCLA
5 2
.714 7 2 .778
Arizona St.
2 4
.333 6 4 .600
Colorado
2 4
.333 4 5 .444
Utah
3 6
.333 4 6 .400
Southern Cal
2 5
.286 4 5 .444
Oregon St.
1 3
.250 3 3 .500
Washington
1 5
.167 4 5 .444
California
0 7
.000 0 10 .000
Sunday9s Games
No. 7 Arizona 71, Washington St. 69
No. 9 UCLA 92, Utah 67
No. 11 Oregon 100, California 41
Oregon St. at No. 1 Stanford, ppd.
Arizona St. at Washington, ppd.
Monday9s Game
Colorado at Southern Cal, noon
In previous seasons, there
seemed to be an understanding
or justification for why playoff
runs fell short of reaching their
full potential.
A year ago, there was a feel-
ing of optimism after losing in
the divisional round at Green
Bay when Seattle was so de-
pleted by injuries at the key
position of running back that
Marshawn Lynch was brought
out of retirement to carry the
load.
That was not the case in the
aftermath of Saturday. Opti-
mism was scarce. Left in its
place was confusion about
what happened and what the
path is going forward after Se-
attle mortgaged a significant
amount of its future by acquir-
ing Jamal Adams and Carlos
Sunday9s box score
No. 11 Oregon 100, California 41
OREGON (9-2)
Boley 5-12 0-0 11, Sabally 5-11 3-5 13, Mikesell 3-5 3-3
10, Paopao 5-8 0-0 13, Shelley 3-6 0-0 6, Giomi 3-3 0-0
6, Chavez 6-7 1-1 13, Dugalic 3-7 0-0 7, Parrish 0-5 2-2
2, Scherr 3-7 0-0 7, Watson 6-8 0-1 12, Wilson 0-1 0-0 0,
Team 0-0 0-0 0, Totals 42-80 9-12 100
CALIFORNIA (0-10)
Lutje Schipholt 4-6 2-2 10, Onyiah 6-9 1-5 13, Daniels
3-15 1-1 7, McIntosh 0-9 0-2 0, Olson 1-6 1-1 3, Heide
0-2 0-0 0, Samb 1-3 2-2 4, Muca 1-5 1-2 4, Richey 0-0
0-0 0, Team 0-0 0-0 0, Totals 16-55 8-15 41
Oregon
26 24 29 21 4 100
California 15
4
8 14 4
41
3-Point Goals—Oregon 7-21 (Boley 1-5, Mikesell 1-2,
Paopao 3-6, Shelley 0-1, Chavez 0-1, Dugalic 1-1, Par-
rish 0-1, Scherr 1-3, Wilson 0-1), California 1-16 (Daniels
0-3, McIntosh 0-5, Olson 0-4, Muca 1-4). Assists—Ore-
gon 26 (Paopao 7), California 10 (McIntosh 3). Fouled
Out—None. Rebounds—Oregon 47 (Sabally 5-6),
California 35 (Team 4-4). Total Fouls—Oregon 13, Cal-
ifornia 13. Technical Fouls—None. A—0.
SCORES
Sunday9s Games
AP TOP 25
No. 2 Louisville (10-0) beat Clemson 70-45.
No. 5 South Carolina (8-1) beat No. 10 Kentucky 75-70.
No. 7 Arizona (8-2) lost to Washington St. 71-69, OT.
No. 8 Texas A&M (12-0) beat No. 13 Arkansas 74-73.
No. 9 UCLA (7-2) beat Utah 92-67.
No. 10 Kentucky (9-3) lost to South Carolina 75-70.
No. 11 Oregon (9-1) beat California 100-41.
No. 12 Maryland (9-1) beat Purdue 83-46.
No. 13 Arkansas (10-4) lost to No. 8 Texas A&M 74-73.
No. 14 Mississippi St. (8-2) beat Ole Miss 60-56.
No. 15 Michigan (9-0) beat Illinois 70-50.
No. 19 Indiana (7-3) beat Wisconsin 74-49.
No. 23 Michigan St. (8-2) lost to Nebraska 68-64.
EAST
Boston U. 62, Colgate 58
Bucknell 79, Lafayette 45
Dayton 67, George Washington 54
Delaware 77, William & Mary 64
Holy Cross 61, Army 42
La Salle 81, Saint Joseph’s 66
Maine 74, NJIT 51
Marist 50, Manhattan 46
Maryland 83, Purdue 46
Mass.-Lowell 74, Hartford 52
New Hampshire 57, Binghamton 52
Quinnipiac 68, St. Peter’s 56
Rhode Island 62, Davidson 44
Richmond 80, Duquesne 78
Siena 69, Rider 60
UMass 61, Fordham 56
VCU 69, St. Bonaventure 67, OT
SOUTH
Alabama 80, Vanderbilt 56
Gardner-Webb 68, Charleston Southern 59
Georgia 68, Florida 58
Georgia Tech 56, Virginia Tech 54
High Point 58, Winthrop 41
Liberty 60, Kennesaw St. 50
Lipscomb 65, Bellarmine 58
Longwood 54, Campbell 52
Louisville 70, Clemson 45
Miami 69, North Carolina 59
Mississippi St. 60, Mississippi 56
NC A&T 97, SC State 54
Presbyterian 66, SC-Upstate 53
South Carolina 75, Kentucky 70
Tennessee 64, LSU 63
W. Carolina 49, UNC-Greensboro 42
Wake Forest 68, Boston College 48
MIDWEST
E. Michigan 67, W. Michigan 62
Indiana 74, Wisconsin 49
Michigan 70, Illinois 50
Nebraska 68, Michigan St. 64
Penn St. 69, Minnesota 60
SOUTHWEST
Iowa St. 99, Texas Tech 72
Texas A&M 74, Arkansas 73
FAR WEST
Oregon 100, California 41
UCLA 92, Utah 67
Washington St. 71, Arizona 69, OT
Final Round
Harris English (500), $1,340,000
65-67-66-69 – 267
Joaquin Niemann (300), $782,000 69-67-67-64 – 267
Justin Thomas (190), $490,000
65-69-68-66 – 268
Ryan Palmer (135), $378,000
67-67-64-71 – 269
Sungjae Im (105), $280,500
67-68-67-69 – 271
Xander Schauffele (105), $280,500 69-66-70-66 – 271
Bryson DeChambeau (85), $199,333 69-67-70-66 – 272
Collin Morikawa (85), $199,333
69-65-65-73 – 272
Jon Rahm (85), $199,333
70-66-69-67 – 272
Daniel Berger (75), $172,000
69-65-67-72 – 273
Sergio Garcia (68), $155,500
67-71-67-69 – 274
Dustin Johnson (68), $155,500
71-65-69-69 – 274
Patrick Cantlay (56), $125,250
68-68-67-72 – 275
Lanto Griffin (56), $125,250
71-68-69-67 – 275
Scottie Scheffler (56), $125,250
70-66-70-69 – 275
Brendon Todd (56), $125,250
68-67-70-70 – 275
Abraham Ancer (48), $92,000
70-71-69-66 – 276
Martin Laird (48), $92,000
69-69-68-70 – 276
Sebastian Munoz (48), $92,000
75-66-67-68 – 276
Webb Simpson (48), $92,000
70-67-69-70 – 276
Patrick Reed (41), $75,000
67-68-72-70 – 277
Adam Scott (41), $75,000
68-71-68-70 – 277
Michael Thompson (41), $75,000 73-68-67-69 – 277
Billy Horschel (34), $63,200
71-66-66-75 – 278
Kevin Kisner (34), $63,200
70-71-69-68 – 278
Marc Leishman (34), $63,200
69-69-71-69 – 278
Cameron Smith (34), $63,200
70-70-66-72 – 278
Richy Werenski (34), $63,200
69-69-70-70 – 278
Brian Gay (29), $55,000
70-67-71-71 – 279
Nick Taylor (29), $55,000
67-71-69-72 – 279
Cameron Champ (24), $49,000
71-68-70-72 – 281
Stewart Cink (24), $49,000
71-69-67-74 – 281
Tony Finau (24), $49,000
74-68-68-71 – 281
Viktor Hovland (24), $49,000
69-68-68-76 – 281
Jason Kokrak (21), $43,000
71-66-70-76 – 283
Hudson Swafford (21), $43,000
73-70-72-68 – 283
Carlos Ortiz (19), $41,000
69-67-75-74 – 285
Andrew Landry (17), $39,000
70-71-76-70 – 287
Kevin Na (17), $39,000
71-68-69-79 – 287
Robert Streb (17), $39,000
67-72-72-76 – 287
Mackenzie Hughes (15), $36,500 73-71-72-72 – 288
Hideki Matsuyama (15), $36,500 73-75-72-68 – 288
DEALS
Transactions
Sentry Tournament of Champions Scores
Sunday at Kapalua Plantation Course
Kapalua, Maui, Hawaii
Purse: $6.7 million
Yardage: 7,596; Par: 73
Sunday9s Transactions
BASEBALL
National League
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Announced that Special
Assistant of Player Development Joe Amalfitano has
announced his retirement.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed RBs Darius Ander-
son and Paul Perkins, S Ibraheim Campbell, CBs Andre
Chachere, Will Sunderland and Roderic Teamer, DTs
Kameron Cline, Chris Williams and Rob Windsor, WR
Quartney Davis, Gs Jake Eldrenkamp and Sam Jones,
TEs Farrod Green and Andrew Vollert, T Carter O’Don-
nell and P Austin Rehkow to futures contracts. Signed
WR Ashton Dulin and DT Taylor Stallworth to one-year
contract extensions.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES — Waived D Brandon Davidson, RW
Steven Fogarty, LW C.J. Smith and G Dustin Tokarski.
CALGARY FLAMES — Waived G Louis Dominigue, C By-
ron Froese, D Alexander Petrovic, RW Buddy Robinson
and LW Justin Kirkland.
COLORADO AVALANCHE — Waived Kiefer Sherwood.
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Signed D Michael Del
Zotto to a one-year two-way contract.
EDMONTON OILERS — D Ryan Stanton optioned to
Bakersfield (AHL). Waived C Seth Griffith and RW Adam
Cracknell.
FLORIDA PANTHERS — Waived G Philippe Desrosiers
and LW Scott Wilson.
LOS ANGELES KINGS — Waived D Daniel Brickley and
LW Bokondji Imama.
MINNESOTA WILD — Waived D Matt BartKowski, D Louie
Belpedio, C Joseph Cramarossa, C Gabriel Dumont, G
Andrew Hammond, C Luke Johnson, RW Gerald May-
hew, D Ian McCoshen, D Dakota Mermis and C Kyle Rau.
MONTREAL CANADIENS — Waived LW Brandon Bad-
dock, RW Alex Belzile, C Joseph Blandisi, C Laurent Dau-
phin, D Noah Juulsen, G Charlie Lindgren, D Gustav
Olofsson, D Xavier Ouellet and RW Jordan Weal.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Re-signed F Jesper Bratt to a
two-year contract.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Waived C Mason Jobst and
RW Joshua Ho-Sang.
OTTAWA SENATORS — D Maxime Lajoie.
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS — Waived D Kevin Czuczman,
C Frederick Gaundreau, G Maxime Lagace and D Zach
Trotman.
SOCCER
USL Championship
USL — Announced North Carolina FC will compete in
USL League One beginning in the 2021 season.
Dunlap to win this season.
“We got to make that next
step. I think this is part of the
process, to figure out this off-
season along the way, and how
we can do that and do what-
ever it takes,” Wilson said. “So
I’m looking forward to starting
2021 with a new season come
next fall. Unfortunately today
we didn’t get it done.”
The aftermath of the loss to
the Rams made clear there are
issues about identity on the of-
fensive side for Seattle, which
seemed unfathomable at the
start of the season. Wilson was
the leading MVP candidate
throwing a record number of
touchdowns to begin the sea-
son as Seattle started 5-0.
But the limitations of that
offense which grew as the sea-
son progressed were on full
display in the loss to the Rams.
Seattle’s’ 278 total yards were a
season worst, as was Wilson’s
40.7% completion rate, the
only time all season he didn’t
hit at least 55% of his passes.
Both Wilson and Carroll ex-
pressed a frustration at the lack
of offensive adjustments as the
season progressed, even as Se-
attle’s defense was making dra-
matic improvement.
“At one part of the year, it
was available, and we took it,
and then in the second part of
the year, against the really good
defenses that we played, they
were able to keep us out of that
kind of a mode,” Carroll said.
“I wish we would have adapted
better under those circum-
stances.”
GOLF
PGA Tour