The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, January 27, 2021, Page 6, Image 6

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    A6 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
WEDNESDAY
FOOTBALL
College, Senior Bowl practice
College, Senior Bowl practice
BASKETBALL
Men’s college, BYU at Pepperdine
Men’s college, Vanderbilt at Florida
Men’s college, Penn St. at Ohio St.
Men’s college, Marquette at Providence
Men’s college, Georgia at South Carolina
Men’s college, Virginia Tech at Notre Dame
Men’s college, Creighton at Seton Hall
NBA, L.A. Lakers at Philadelphia
Men’s college, Ole Miss at Arkansas
Men’s college, Boise St. at Colorado St.
Men’s college, Kansas St. at Baylor
Men’s college, Washington St. at Colorado
Men’s college, St. John’s at DePaul
Men’s college, Wisconsin at Maryland
Women’s college, Stanford at Washington St.
NBA, Minnesota at Golden State
Men’s college, Utah St. at UNLV
GOLF
College, Southwestern Invitational
European Tour, Dubai Desert Classic
European Tour, Dubai Desert Classic
European Tour, Dubai Desert Classic
SOCCER
Premier League,
Manchester United vs. Sheffield United
HOCKEY
NHL, Chicago at Nashville
Time
9:30 a.m.
noon
noon
3:30 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
7 p.m.
8 p.m.
TV
ESPNU
ESPNU
Root
SEC
Big Ten
CBSSN
ESPN2
Root
FS1
ESPN
SEC
CBSSN
ESPN2
ESPNU
FS1
Big Ten
Pac-12
ESPN
FS1
noon
8 p.m.
1 a.m. (Thu)
3:30 a.m. (Thu)
12:10 p.m.
Golf
Golf
Golf
Golf
NBCSN
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Phila.
12
6
.667
Boston
10
6
.625
Milwaukee
10
6
.625
Indiana
10
7
.588
Brooklyn
11
8
.579
Atlanta
9
8
.529
Cleveland
8
9
.471
Orlando
8
10
.444
New York
8
11
.421
Toronto
7
10
.412
Chicago
7
10
.412
Charlotte
7
10
.412
Miami
6
10
.375
Detroit
4
13
.235
Washington
3
10
.231
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
L.A. Lakers
14
4
.778
Utah
13
4
.765
L.A. Clippers
13
5
.722
Denver
10
7
.588
Portland
9
7
.563
Memphis
7
6
.538
Phoenix
8
7
.533
Golden State
9
8
.529
San Antonio
9
8
.529
Dallas
8
9
.471
Houston
7
9
.438
Oklahoma City
7
9
.438
Sacramento
6
10
.375
New Orleans
5
10
.333
Minnesota
4
12
.250
Monday’s Late Games
Denver 117, Dallas 113
Boston 119, Chicago 103
Oklahoma City 125, Portland 122
Golden State 130, Minnesota 108
GB
—
1
1
1½
1½
2½
3½
4
4½
4½
4½
4½
5
7½
6½
GB
—
½
1
3½
4
4½
4½
4½
4½
5½
6
6
7
7½
9
Monday’s Late Box Score
4:30 p.m.
NBCSN
THURSDAY
FOOTBALL
College, Senior Bowl practice
College, Senior Bowl practice
SOCCER
Premier League, Tottenham Hotspur vs. Liverpool
GOLF
PGA Tour, Farmers Insurance Open
European Tour, Dubai Desert Classic
BASKETBALL
Women’s college, NC State at Virginia Tech
Women’s college, Rutgers at Maryland
Women’s college, Connecticut at Arkansas
Men’s college, Oregon St. at USC
Men’s college, Wyoming at San Diego St.
Women’s college, Northwestern at Iowa
Women’s college, Alabama at Kentucky
Men’s college,
Louisiana Tech at Southern Mississippi
Women’s college, South Carolina at Mississippi St.
Men’s college, Memphis at SMU
Men’s college, UNC-Asheville at Winthrop
Men’s college, Michigan St. at Rutgers
NBA, Portland at Houston
Women’s college, Ohio St. at Indiana
Women’s college, Texas A&M at Auburn
Men’s college, UAB at Middle Tennessee St.
Men’s college, Houston at Tulane
Men’s college, Belmont at Austin Peay St.
Men’s college, Gonzaga at San Diego
Men’s college, Villanova at Connecticut
NBA, Golden State at Phoenix
Men’s college, New Mexico vs. Fresno St.
Men’s college, Stanford at Arizona
Men’s college, Portland at Saint Mary’s (Calif.)
Men’s college, California at Arizona St.
BASKETBALL
9:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
ESPNU
ESPNU
11:55 a.m.
NBCSN
noon
11:30 p.m.
Golf
Golf
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
2 p.m.
2 p.m.
3 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
Root
Big Ten
ESPN2
ESPNU
FS1
Big Ten
SEC
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
5 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
7 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
CBSSN
ESPN
ESPN2
ESPNU
FS1
TNT
Big Ten
SEC
CBSSN
ESPN2
ESPNU
Root
FS1
TNT
CBSSN
ESPN2
Root
FS1
Thunder 125, Trail Blazers 122
OKLAHOMA CITY (125)
Gilgeous-Alexander 8-12 5-10 24, Bazley 6-11 4-6 19, Dort
3-7 0-0 7, Roby 4-11 7-7 16, Maledon 2-7 0-0 6, Jackson 2-5
2-2 6, Williams 3-7 1-2 7, Muscala 8-12 1-2 23, Pokusevski
2-4 0-0 6, Diallo 5-8 1-6 11. Totals 43-84 21-35 125.
PORTLAND (122)
Anthony 9-21 3-4 22, Jones Jr. 2-4 1-2 5, Kanter 5-10 3-4
13, Lillard 8-22 7-8 26, Trent Jr. 9-17 0-1 22, Giles III 2-2
0-0 4, Little 1-5 2-2 4, Simons 10-17 0-0 26. Totals 46-98
16-21 122.
Oklahoma City 34 35 25 31 — 125
Portland
24 36 31 31 — 122
3-Point Goals—Oklahoma City 18-40 (Muscala 6-10,
Gilgeous-Alexander 3-4, Bazley 3-6, Pokusevski 2-4,
Maledon 2-5, Roby 1-2, Dort 1-4, Jackson 0-2, Williams
0-3), Portland 14-41 (Simons 6-10, Trent Jr. 4-9, Lillard
3-12, Anthony 1-6, Jones Jr. 0-2, Little 0-2). Fouled Out—
None. Rebounds—Oklahoma City 43 (Gilgeous-Alexan-
der 9), Portland 49 (Kanter 22). Assists—Oklahoma City
25 (Gilgeous-Alexander 6), Portland 17 (Lillard 10). Total
Fouls—Oklahoma City 19, Portland 23.
Tuesday’s Games
Atlanta 108, L.A. Clippers 99
Houston 107, Washington 88
Utah 108, New York 94
Wednesday’s Games
Detroit at Cleveland, 4 p.m.
Indiana at Charlotte, 4 p.m.
Sacramento at Orlando, 4 p.m.
Brooklyn at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m.
Denver at Miami, 4:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Phila., 4:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
Chicago at Memphis, ppd
Boston at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m.
Dallas at Utah, 6 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Phoenix, 6 p.m.
Washington at New Orleans, 6 p.m.
Minnesota at Golden State, 7 p.m.
Men’s college
PAC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L Pct W
L Pct
UCLA
8 1 .889 12
3 .800
Southern Cal
6 2 .750 12
3 .800
Arizona
6 3 .667 12
3 .800
Colorado
6 3 .667 12
4 .750
Oregon
4 2 .667
9
3 .750
Stanford
5 3 .625
9
5 .643
Oregon St.
4 3 .571
8
5 .615
Utah
3 6 .333
6
7 .462
Washington St. 2 6 .250
9
6 .600
Washington
2 7 .222
3 11 .214
California
2 8 .200
7 10 .412
Arizona St.
1 5 .167
4
8 .333
Monday’s Late Game
Arizona 80, Arizona St. 67
Wednesday’s Game
Washington St. at Colorado, 6 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Oregon St. at Southern Cal, 2 p.m.
Oregon at No. 23 UCLA, ppd.
Stanford at Arizona, 8 p.m.
California at Arizona St., 8 p.m.
No. 10 Arizona at Southern Cal, 4 p.m.
Oregon St. at Colorado, 5 p.m.
Arizona St. at No. 5 UCLA, 6 p.m.
California at Washington, ppd.
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Agreed to terms with INF
Freddy Galvis on a one-year contract.
SEATTLE MARINERS — Named Michael Huie assistant
groundskeeper.
National League
WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Agreed to terms with LHP
Brand Hand on a one-year contract.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS — Announced the hiring of Jon
Hoke as secondary coach and Ted Monachino as outside
linebackers coach.
BUFFALO BILLS — Signed OT Trey Adams, TE Nate
Becker, DT Brandin Bryant, DE Bryan Cox, WRs Tanner Gen-
try, Jake Kumerow and Duke Williams, CB Dane Jackson, DE
Mike Love, S Josh Thomas, RBs Christian Wade and Antonio
Williams and QB Davis Webb to reserve/futures contracts.
GREEN BAY PACKERS — Signed WR Reggie Begelton, C
Jake Hanson, K J.J. Molson, CB KeiVarae Russell, DL Delontae
Scott and WR Juwann Winfree.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Signed OT Prince Tega
Wanogho to a reserve/futures contract.
LAS VEGAS RAIDERS — Signed WR Keelan Doss to a
reserve/futures contract.
MIAMI DOLPHINS — Signed CB Terrell Bonds to a re-
serve/futures contract.
NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed P Ryan Santoso to a re-
serve/futures contract.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Re-signed RB Jeff wilson to
a one-year contract.
WASHINGTON FOOTBALL TEAM — Named Jennifer
King assistant running back coach.
Canadian Football League
CALGARY STAMPEDERS — Signed DL Isaac Adeyemi-Ber-
glund.
OTTAWA REDBLACKS — Re-signed P Richie Leone, DB
Randall Evans, OL Mark Korte and WR Anthony Coombs.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ARIZONA COYOTES — Recalled D Jordan Gross from the
minor league taxi squad. Designated D Victor Soderstrom
for assignment to the taxi squad.
BOSTON BRUINS — Recalled Cs Jack Studnicka and
Trent Frederic from the minor league taxi squad. Signed F
Curtis Hall to a one-year AHL contract.
BUFFALO SABRES — Recalled RW Dylan Cozens from
the minor league taxi squad. Designated C Casey Mittel-
stadt for assignment to the taxi squad.
CAROLINA HURRICANES — Waived RW Jeremy Bracco.
COLORADO AVALANCHE — Recalled RW Kiefer Sher-
wood from the minor league taxi squad.
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Assigned LW Nathan
Gerbe to the minor league taxi squad. Assigned RW Ryan
Macinnis to Cleveland (AHL).
DALLAS STARS — Recalled Fs Tanner Kero and Rhet
Gardner from the minor league taxi squad. Designated
LW Jason Robertson for assignment to the taxi squad.
EDMONTON OILERS — Recalled LW Jujhar Khaira and
RW Patrick Russell from the minor league taxi squad. Des-
ignated C Devin Shore and LW Tyler Ennis for assignment
to the taxi squad.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS — Recalled C Connor Bunnaman
and LW Samuel Morin for the minor league taxi squad.
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS — Recalled LW Drew O’Connor
from the minor league taxi squad.
ST. LOUIS BLUES — Recalled C Jacob de la Rose from the
minor league taxi squad. Designated D Scott Perunovich
for assignment to the taxi squad.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Designated G Joseph Woll
for assignment to the taxi squad.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Recalled C Michael Sgar-
bossa and LW Daniel Carr from the minor league taxi squad.
Designated Cs Brian Pinho and Connor McMichael for as-
signment to the taxi squad.
WINNIPEG JETS — Recalled LW Kristian Vesalainen from
the minor league taxi squad.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
AUSTIN FC — Named Jinny Reif vice president of fi-
nance, Alexander Raitt, Jimena Panduro, Philip Edsel, Mau-
ricio Villarreal and Ninedimma Obiwuru to the marketing
team, Mike Fogel to stadium operations staff, Dylan Calo-
moneri to ticket operation coordinator, Emma Cohmn to
corporate partnership coordinator and Eric Hagen to chief
legal officer and general counsel.
INTER MIAMI CF — Signed W Edison Azcona and C
Ian Fray.
NASHVILLE SC — Traded the discovery rights to W
Deiber Caicedo to Vancouver for general allocation money
(GAM) contingent on player signing a MLS contract.
SPORTING KC — Announced MF Benny Feilhaber re-
turns as technical staff member. Named Randi Lininger
and Eric Schwartz assistant athletic trainers.
VANCOUVER WHITECAPS — Agreed to terms W Deiber
Caicedo on a three-year contract through 2023 with an
option for 2024.
National Women’s Soccer League
SKY BLUE FC — Signed MF McCall Zerboni to a two-
year contract with a third-year option.
WASHINGTON SPIRIT — Signed MF Julia Roddar to
a two-year contract.
COLLEGE
AUBURN UNIVERSITY — Named director of athlet-
ics Allen Greene, to a position as board member for the
LEAD1 Association.
COLUMBIA COLLEGE — Named Aaron Shockley di-
rector of Esports.
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY — Announced men’s head
basketball coach Jeff Neubauer is leaving the team im-
mediately and Mike DePaoli will be interim head coach.
UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO — Named director of
athletics Eddie Nunez to a position as board member for
the LEAD1 Association.
Arizona comes in at No. 10
and Oregon moved up two
spots to No. 11, giving the Pac-
12 four teams in the top 11.
No other conference team
received votes this week.
Arizona State is 4-4 to stay
in the top half of the standings.
Colorado and USC are 4-6 fol-
lowed by Utah (3-9), Oregon
State (1-5), Washington (1-6)
and California (0-8).
Poll watch
UCLA moved up one spot to
No. 5 in The Associated Press
poll after its road win over
then-No. 5 Stanford on Fri-
day night. The Cardinal, who
have lost back-to-back games,
dropped one spot to No. 6.
Standings
With Stanford losing two
in a row, the race for the regu-
lar-season conference title has
become a jumbled mess with
five weeks left in the season.
Stanford and Arizona are
the leaders at 9-2 with the
Cardinal holding a win over
the Wildcats. Oregon is a half
game back at 9-3 and UCLA is
7-2. The Bruins still have home
games against Arizona and Or-
egon.
Washington State holds
steady in fifth at 5-4 after end-
ing a three-game slide with a
77-75 double-overtime win at
Oregon State on Sunday.
Players of the week
UCLA sophomore Cha-
risma Osborne scored 24
points to help lead the Bruins
to a win over Stanford on Fri-
day and was named the confer-
ence’s player of the week for the
second time this season and
third time in her career. She
also had a season-best nine re-
bounds.
Washington State’s Charlisse
Leger-Walker earned her fifth
freshman of the week honor
after averaging 23 points, 6.5
rebounds and three steals a
game in a split with the Oregon
schools. She has scored in dou-
ble figures in 12 straight games.
and failed to win. Among the
more crushing losses was the
Waste Management Phoenix
Open last year, when Webb
Simpson birdied the last two
holes to force a playoff and then
made another birdie to win.
It’s always someone else, and
it only raises the same question.
One victory in 168 chances
with all that talent. Why?
The next one — there will
be a next one, right? — won’t
change that.
Charles Howell III has been
dealing with it his entire career.
Even when he won the RSM
Classic at Sea Island at the end
of 2018, the chatter inevitably
got around to why he hadn’t
won more than three times.
It wasn’t a lack of effort by
Howell, and it’s not by Finau.
He has had six runner-up fin-
ishes and 35 top 10s since his
lone playoff victory in Puerto
Rico.
“We would have thought
he would have won his sec-
ond title by now,” Boyd Sum-
merhays, his swing coach,
told Golf Channel on Sunday.
“You would have thought that.
The fans would have thought
that, which is why, behind the
scenes, I’ve never seen him
work as hard as he has the last
year.”
Finau left the desert encour-
aged, the opposite of what it
would seem.
He said he usually has a
pretty good sense when he
walks off the final hole, and
someone else is headed for the
trophy presentation, how much
a loss is going to sting. This
wasn’t one of them. He felt he
was headed in the right direc-
tion.
It’s not that the losses are
mounting, because in no other
sport does greatness have such
a high rate of losing.
The rate of winning is what
stands out for Finau.
And as Summerhays said,
“Every tournament that goes
by makes it more difficult.
There’s no other way to look
at it.”
Finau conceded it gets tir-
ing answering questions about
when he will win again. For
him, it only adds to the chal-
lenge, which already has
proven to be stout.
“I’m going to have a lot of
opportunities to win tourna-
ments. That’s to me what the
exciting thing is,” he said. “Ev-
ery time I don’t close a tour-
nament, I’m never thinking,
‘Wow, I let another slip. I’m
never going to have this oppor-
tunity again.’ For me it’s like,
‘What did I learn? How can
I take what I learned into the
next opportunity?’
“And I’ve got another oppor-
tunity tomorrow.”
He said this on Saturday af-
ternoon, before the final round
at PGA West.
He gets another opportunity
this week.
That’s all he can ask for.
TOP 25 SCORES
Tuesday’s Games
No. 24 Oklahoma 80, No. 5 Texas 79
No. 9 Alabama 70, Kentucky 59
Auburn 88, No. 12 Missouri 82
No. 18 Tennessee 56, Mississippi St. 53
Dayton 76, No. 22 Saint Louis 71
Women’s college
COACHES POLL
Record
Pts
Pvs
1. Louisville (30)
14-0
798
1
2. NC State (2)
11-0
760
2
3. South Carolina
12-1
726
3
4. Connecticut
10-0
714
5
5. UCLA
9-2
663
6
6. Stanford
12-2
637
4
7. Texas A&M
14-1
602
8
8. Baylor
10-2
556
9
9. Arizona
11-2
527
10
10. Maryland
11-2
519
7
11. Ohio St.
9-1
449
16
12. Oregon
11-3
421
13
13. Michigan
10-1
412
11
14. Kentucky
11-4
354
12
15. Indiana
9-3
345
15
16. South Florida
10-1
335
14
17. Gonzaga
13-2
265
18
18. Arkansas
11-6
190
17
19. Mississippi St.
8-4
179
19
20. DePaul
9-3
177
21
21. Georgia
13-2
170
23
22. Tennessee
10-3
120
NR
23. Texas
11-3
112
24
23. Northwestern
8-3
112
22
25. Missouri St.
8-2
72
25
Dropped out: No. 20 Syracuse (7-3).
Others receiving votes: Syracuse (7-3) 45; South
Dakota State (13-2) 44; West Virginia (11-2) 41; Florida
Gulf Coast (11-2) 15; Iowa (9-3) 11; Michigan State (9-2)
9; Washington State. (8-4) 8; Dayton (6-1) 5; Alabama
(12-2) 3; Milwaukee (15-1) 1; Iowa State (10-5) 1; IUPUI
(8-3) 1; Arizona State (8-4) 1.
PAC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L Pct W
L Pct
Stanford
9 2 .818 12
2 .857
Arizona
9 2 .818 11
2 .846
UCLA
7 2 .778
9
2 .818
Oregon
9 3 .750 11
3 .786
Washington St. 6 4 .600
8
4 .667
Arizona St.
4 4 .500
8
4 .667
Colorado
4 6 .400
6
7 .462
Southern Cal
4 6 .400
6
7 .462
Oregon St.
2 5 .286
4
5 .444
Utah
3 9 .250
4
9 .308
Washington
1 7 .125
4
7 .364
California
0 8 .000
0 11 .000
Tuesday’s Game
Oregon St. 98, Washington 68
Tuesday’s Box Score
TOP 25 SCORES
Tuesday’s Games
No. 1 Louisville 79, Miami 76
No. 3 UConn at Providence, ppd.
No. 9 Baylor 82, TCU 49
No. 12 Michigan at Michigan St., ppd.
HOCKEY
NHL
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington
7 4 0
3 11 25 23
Boston
6 4 1
1
9 18 12
Philadelphia
7 4 2
1
9 25 25
Pittsburgh
7 4 2
1
9 23 26
New Jersey
6 3 2
1
7 14 16
Buffalo
7 3 3
1
7 21 21
N.Y. Islanders
6 3 3
0
6 11 11
N.Y. Rangers
6 1 4
1
3 15 18
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Columbus
7 2 2
3
7 18 22
Dallas
3 3 0
0
6 12
3
Florida
3 3 0
0
6 14
9
Tampa Bay
4 3 1
0
6 15 10
Nashville
6 3 3
0
6 15 19
Chicago
7 2 3
2
6 21 26
Detroit
7 2 4
1
5 13 22
Carolina
3 2 1
0
4
9
6
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Vegas
6 5 1
0 10 19 12
Los Angeles
7 3 2
2
8 22 21
Minnesota
7 4 3
0
8 19 17
St. Louis
6 3 2
1
7 17 23
Colorado
6 3 3
0
6 18 15
Anaheim
6 2 2
2
6 11 14
San Jose
6 3 3
0
6 19 21
Arizona
6 2 3
1
5 17 19
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Montreal
6 4 0
2 10 29 18
Toronto
7 5 2
0 10 22 19
Winnipeg
7 5 2
0 10 28 21
Edmonton
8 3 5
0
6 23 29
Vancouver
8 3 5
0
6 27 34
Calgary
4 2 1
1
5 13
9
Ottawa
6 1 4
1
3 15 27
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime
loss. The top four teams in each division will qualify for
playoffs under this season’s temporary realignment.
Monday’s Late Game
Vancouver 7, Ottawa 1
Tuesday’s Games
Buffalo 3, N.Y. Rangers 2
Philadelphia 5, New Jersey 3
Washington 3, N.Y. Islanders 2
Florida 4, Columbus 3, SO
Boston 3, Pittsburgh 2, OT
Winnipeg 6, Edmonton 4
Los Angeles 2, Minnesota 1
Nashville 3, Chicago 2, OT
Dallas 2, Detroit 1, OT
Anaheim at Arizona, late
San Jose at Colorado, late
St. Louis at Vegas, late
Toronto at Calgary, late
Wednesday’s Games
Chicago at Nashville, 4:30 p.m.
Ottawa at Vancouver, 5 p.m.
Oregon St. 98, Washington 68
WASHINGTON (4-7)
Van Dyke 4-12 6-9 15, Miller 7-18 4-8 20, Griggsby 0-4
0-0 0, Noble 1-3 2-6 4, Sadler 3-8 6-6 12, Rooks 0-3 0-0
0, Rees 2-3 1-1 6, Finney 2-3 0-0 6, Lowery 2-7 0-2 5.
Totals 21-61 19-32 68.
OREGON ST. (4-5)
Corosdale 5-6 2-2 16, Jones 3-5 3-4 9, Mack 4-7 1-3 12,
Goforth 8-10 1-1 23, Goodman 3-3 0-0 9, Mitrovic 1-2
2-4 4, Subasic 1-2 0-0 2, Mannen 0-0 0-0 0, Simmons
2-3 1-2 6, Von Oelhoffen 3-8 6-6 13, Samuel 2-3 0-0 4.
Totals 32-49 16-22 98.
Washington 14 17 17 20 — 68
Oregon St.
25 29 25 19 — 98
3-Point Goals—Washington 7-24 (Van Dyke 1-4, Miller
2-6, Griggsby 0-3, Noble 0-2, Rooks 0-3, Rees 1-2, Fin-
ney 2-2, Lowery 1-2), Oregon St. 18-27 (Corosdale 4-5,
Mack 3-4, Goforth 6-7, Goodman 3-3, Simmons 1-2,
Von Oelhoffen 1-5, Samuel 0-1). Assists—Washington
10 (Griggsby 2), Oregon St. 26 (Goodman 10). Fouled
Out—None. Rebounds—Washington 29 (Van Dyke
5-5), Oregon St. 36 (Simmons 3-4). Total Fouls—Wash-
ington 23, Oregon St. 20. Technical Fouls—Oregon St.
Team 1. A—0.
Wednesday’s Game
No. 6 Stanford at Washington St., 6:30 p.m.
Friday’s Games
No. 6 Stanford at Washington St., noon
No. 11 Oregon at Utah, 2 p.m.
FOOTBALL
NFL playoffs
Super Bowl
Sunday, Feb. 7
At Tampa, Fla.
Tampa Bay vs. Kansas City, 3:30 p.m.
America’s Line
Favorite
CHIEFS
SUPER BOWL
Open Current O/U
Sunday, Feb. 7
3½ 3
56½
Underdog
Bucs
DEALS
Transactions
Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible
for late changes made by TV stations.
Ducks
SPORTS BRIEFING
Continued from A5
BASKETBALL
Ducks men pause activities due to COVID-19 —The
University of Oregon men’s basketball program announced
Tuesday that it has paused all team-related activities because of
COVID-19 protocols. As a result, the three scheduled games on
the Ducks’ upcoming trip to Los Angeles, including two games
at UCLA (Thursday, Jan. 28 and Monday, Feb. 1) and one at
USC on Saturday, Jan. 30, have been postponed. Rescheduled
dates for those games will be announced when finalized.
FOOTBALL
Super Bowl fan cutouts will fill seats — There will be
24,700 fans in attendance at Raymond James Stadium for Super
Bowl 55, with an untold number of fan cutouts filling in the rest
of the stadium. Each cutout costs $100 and comes with entry
into a drawing for two tickets to Super Bowl 56 in Los Angeles.
SKIING
Schwarz gets 2nd win in Austrian night race — Right
after finishing his second run and taking the lead in the race,
Marco Schwarz held up one finger. There were still five more
racers to come down at the World Cup night slalom on Tues-
day, but the Austrian held on to his No. 1 position, topping
Clément Noël by 0.68 seconds and Alexis Pinturault by 0.82.
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS
Conor McGregor sidelined up to 6 months following
beatdown — Unless a doctor says otherwise, mixed martial
arts star Conor McGregor cannot fight for 180 days following
a beating he took in the ring Saturday night at the hands and
feet of Dustin Poirier.
SOFTBALL
Ducks softball in top 11 of preseason polls — Oregon
softball will open 2021 in the top 11 of the major polls. The
Ducks are No. 10 in the preseason coaches poll and No. 11 in
the USA Softball poll. Oregon went 22-2 in last year’s short-
ened season.
— Bulletin wire reports
MEGA MILLIONS
The numbers drawn Tuesday night are:
29 49 56 66 67 24 x 3
Oregon
Lottery
results
The estimated jackpot is now $20 million.
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
Despite losing to Arizona
(57-41) the previous week,
Graves said he was pleased
with the defensive effort
against the Wildcats and it was
the one bright spot.
“That’s four really good de-
fensive efforts in a row and
that’s going to go a long way,”
Graves said after the WSU win
on Friday. “We’re going to find
our moxie, we’re going to get it
together offensively. Right now
it’s not clicking like it should,
but it will, as long as we’re do-
ing it on the defensive end.”
The three-point shooting has
hurt the No. 11 Ducks (11-3) in
the last three games as they are
a combined 14 for 56 in games
against Arizona, Washington
State and Washington.
“I think we’re good shooters,
Golf
Continued from A5
Rickie Fowler is approaching
the two-year anniversary of his
last win and is out of the top 50
for the first time in seven years.
Francesco Molinari tied for
eighth last week. That was his
first top 10 since he lost a two-
shot lead on the back nine of
the 2019 Masters, when he was
No. 7 in the world. The British
Open champion from 2018 is
now at No. 110.
Slumps are for those who
have a history of winning.
Finau should want to trade
places.
Instead, he heads from PGA
West after another close call to
Torrey Pines for what he sees
as another opportunity. He is
not easily discouraged, and
that requires a different kind of
strength.
The American Express was
the fourth time he has had at
least a share of the 54-hole lead
we’ll keep shooting the ball,”
Graves said. “Taylor Mikesell
got good looks (Sunday). If you
watched her and most of the
time she’s making those shots.
We need to make more, pretty
simple. …
“Offensively it’s still kind of
a struggle for whatever rea-
son. We’re just not in any kind
of a flow. But we’re going to
make a lot of those shots that
we missed, I think, I hope. I
think defensively we’ve been
doing a good job, that’s been a
real plus. I think we can build
on that.”