The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, January 29, 2021, Page 12, Image 12

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    B4 The BulleTin • Friday, January 29, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
FRIDAY
GOLF
PGA Tour, Farmers Insurance Open
European Tour, Dubai Desert Classic
BASKETBALL
Women’s college, Oregon at Utah
Time
noon
12:30 a.m. (Sat)
TV
Golf
Golf
2 p.m.
Pac-12,
Pac-12 (Ore)
Men’s college, Saint Louis at Richmond
3:30 p.m.
ESPN2
Men’s college, Ohio at Buffalo
4 p.m.
ESPNU
NBA, Milwaukee at New Orleans
4:30 p.m.
ESPN
Men’s college, Coastal Carolina at Georgia Southern 5:30 p.m.
ESPN2
Men’s college, Robert Morris at Wright St.
6 p.m.
ESPNU
Women’s college, Arizona St. at UCLA
6 p.m.
Pac-12
Men’s college, Iowa at Illinois
6 p.m.
FS1
NBA, Dallas at Utah
7 p.m.
ESPN
Men’s college,
Cal State Fullerton at Cal State Bakersfield
8 p.m.
ESPNU
Men’s college, Boise St. at Colorado St.
8 p.m.
FS1
GYMNASTICS
Women’s college, LSU at Auburn
2 p.m.
ESPN2
Women’s college, Missouri at Florida
4 p.m.
SEC
Women’s college, Arkansas at Georgia
5:30 p.m.
SEC
HOCKEY
College, North Dakota at Nebraska-Omaha
5 p.m.
CBSSN
ACTION SPORTS
Winter X Games 2021
7:30 p.m.
ESPN2
SOCCER
Premier League, Everton vs. Newcastle United
4:25 a.m. (Sat) NBCSN
SATURDAY
SOCCER
Premier League,
Manchester City vs. Sheffield United
Premier League, Arsenal vs. Manchester United
Mexico Primera Division, Tijuana vs. Toluca
BASKETBALL
Men’s college, Alabama at Oklahoma
Men’s college, Clemson at Duke
Men’s college, Texas A&M at Kansas St.
Men’s college, Providence at Georgetown
Men’s college, La Salle at VCU
Men’s college, Florida at West Virginia
Men’s college, Texas Tech at LSU
Men’s college, TCU at Missouri
Women’s college, Georgetown at Creighton
Men’s college, Utah at Colorado
Men’s college, Wisconsin at Penn St.
Men’s college, Villanova at Seton Hall
Men’s college, Rhode Island at Dayton
Men’s college, Auburn at Baylor
Men’s college, Arkansas at Oklahoma St.
Men’s college, UCF at Wichita St.
Men’s college, California at Arizona
Men’s college, Loyola Marymount at San Diego
Men’s college, Xavier at Butler
6:55 a.m.
9:30 a.m.
7 p.m.
NBCSN
NBC
FS1
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
noon
12:30 p.m.
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
2 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
ESPN
ESPN2
ESPNU
CBS
NBCSN
ESPN
ESPN2
ESPNU
FS1
Pac-12
Big Ten
FOX
CBSSN
ESPN
ESPN2
ESPNU
Pac-12
Root
FS1
Men’s college, Kansas at Tennessee
Men’s college, Iowa St. at Mississippi St.
Men’s college, Pacific at BYU
Men’s college, Ole Miss at Georgia
Men’s college, Oregon St. at UCLA
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
4 p.m.
Men’s college, Robert Morris at Wright St.
Men’s college, Minnesota at Purdue
Men’s college, Creighton at DePaul
Men’s college, Texas at Kentucky
Men’s college, Gonzaga at Pepperdine
NBA, Portland at Chicago
NBA, L.A. Lakers at Boston
Men’s college, South Carolina at Vanderbilt
Men’s college, Wyoming at San Diego St.
Men’s college, Stanford at Arizona St.
ACTION SPORTS
Winter X Games 2021
GOLF
PGA Tour, Farmers Insurance Open
European Tour, Dubai Desert Classic
HORSE RACING
America’s Day at the Races
America’s Day at the Races
FOOTBALL
College, 2021 Reese’s Senior Bowl
MOTOR SPORTS
IMSA Sportscar Championship,
Rolex 24h at Daytona
IMSA Sportscar Championship,
Rolex 24h at Daytona
IMSA Sportscar Championship,
Rolex 24h at Daytona
HOCKEY
College, Minnesota at Ohio St.
BOXING
PBC, Rances Barthelemy vs. All Rivera
PBC, Caleb Plant vs. Caleb Truax
GYMNASTICS
Women’s college, Washington at Utah
ESPN
ESPN2
CBSSN
SEC
Pac-12,
Pac-12 (Ore)
4 p.m.
ESPNU
4:30 p.m.
Big Ten
5 p.m.
CBSSN
5 p.m.
ESPN
5 p.m.
ESPN2
5 p.m.
NBCSNW
5:30 p.m.
ABC
5:30 p.m.
SEC
7 p.m.
CBSSN
7 p.m.
ESPN2
10 a.m.
ABC
10 a.m.
Golf
12:30 a.m. (Sun) Golf
10:30 a.m.
1 p.m.
FS2
FS1
11:30 a.m.
NFL
1:30 p.m.
NBCSN
8 p.m.
NBCSN
3 a.m. (Sun)
NBCSN
2 p.m.
Big Ten
3 p.m.
5 p.m.
FOX
FOX
7 p.m.
ESPNU
Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible
for late changes made by TV stations.
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
31/2 3
561/2
Underdog
Bucs
GOLF
Philadelphia 3, new Jersey 1
Carolina 1, Tampa Bay 0, OT
Washington 6, n.y. islanders 3
n.y. rangers 3, Buffalo 2, OT
Columbus 3, Florida 2, SO
Montreal 4, Calgary 2
Minnesota 5, los angeles 3
dallas 7, detroit 3
anaheim at arizona, late
San Jose at Colorado, late
Ottawa at Vancouver, late
Toronto at edmonton, late
St. louis at Vegas, ppd.
Friday’s Game
Columbus at Chicago, 5 p.m.
BASKETBALL
PGA Tour
Men’s college
Farmers Insurance Open Partial Scores
Thursday at San Diego, Calif.
North Course: Yardage 7,269; par 72
South Course: Yardage 7,818; par 72
First Round
Patrick reed
32-32—64
alex noren
31-33—64
Scottie Scheffler
34-31—65
Beau hossler
33-33—66
Peter Malnati
33-33—66
Talor Gooch
31-35—66
luke list
32-34—66
Sam Burns
31-35—66
Gary Woodland
33-33—66
ryan Palmer
32-34—66
lanto Griffin
34-32—66
rhein Gibson
32-34—66
Cameron Smith
32-34—66
K.J. Choi
33-33—66
Brandon hagy
33-33—66
Will Gordon, 31-36—67. Wyndham Clark, 33-34—67.
Tim Wilkinson, 33-34—67. adam Scott, 32-35—67. denny
McCarthy, 32-35—67. lucas Glover, 34-34—68. Si Woo
Kim, 33-35—68. Tom lewis, 33-35—68. Seung-yul noh,
32-36—68. roger Sloan, 35-33—68. anirban lahiri, 34-
34—68. Will Zalatoris, 35-33—68. robert Streb, 35-33—68.
Kevin Streelman, 34-34—68. rory Mcilroy, 32-36—68.
Cameron Champ, 34-34—68.
John huh, 34-35—69. Bronson Burgoon, 34-35—69.
Brandt Snedeker, 34-35—69. Tony Finau, 33-36—69. J.T.
Poston, 35-34—69. Grayson Murray, 35-34—69. Michael
Kim, 35-34—69. Jordan Spieth, 33-36—69. richy Werenski,
32-37—69. Sepp Straka, 32-37—69. Scott Stallings, 35-
34—69. Jon rahm, 33-36—69. Kevin Tway, 36-33—69.
Sungjae im, 34-35—69. adam hadwin, 31-38—69. Joseph
Bramlett, 34-35—69.
PAC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L Pct W
L Pct
uCla
8 1 .889 12
3 .800
Southern Cal
7 2 .778 13
3 .813
Colorado
7 3 .700 13
4 .765
arizona
6 3 .667 12
3 .800
Oregon
4 2 .667
9
3 .750
Stanford
5 3 .625
9
5 .643
Oregon St.
4 4 .500
8
6 .571
utah
3 6 .333
6
7 .462
Washington St. 2 7 .222
9
7 .563
Washington
2 7 .222
3 11 .214
California
2 8 .200
7 10 .412
arizona St.
1 5 .167
4
8 .333
Thursday’s Games
Southern Cal 75, Oregon St. 62
Oregon at no. 23 uCla, ppd.
Stanford at arizona, late
California at arizona St., late
HOCKEY
NHL
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington
8 5 0
3 13 31 26
Boston
7 5 1
1 11 22 13
Philadelphia
8 5 2
1 11 28 26
Pittsburgh
8 4 3
1
9 24 30
Buffalo
8 3 3
2
8 23 24
new Jersey
7 3 3
1
7 15 19
n.y. islanders
7 3 4
0
6 14 17
n.y. rangers
7 2 4
1
5 18 20
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Columbus
8 3 2
3
9 21 24
dallas
4 4 0
0
8 19
6
nashville
7 4 3
0
8 17 20
Florida
4 3 0
1
7 16 12
Tampa Bay
5 3 1
1
7 15 11
Chicago
8 2 3
3
7 22 28
Carolina
4 3 1
0
6 10
6
detroit
8 2 5
1
5 16 29
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Vegas
7 5 1
1 11 23 17
Minnesota
8 5 3
0 10 24 20
St. louis
7 4 2
1
9 22 27
Colorado
7 4 3
0
8 25 18
anaheim
7 3 2
2
8 12 14
los angeles
8 3 3
2
8 25 26
San Jose
7 3 4
0
6 22 28
arizona
7 2 4
1
5 17 20
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Montreal
7 5 0
2 12 33 20
Toronto
8 6 2
0 12 26 22
Winnipeg
7 5 2
0 10 28 21
Vancouver
9 4 5
0
8 32 35
edmonton
8 3 5
0
6 23 29
Calgary
6 2 3
1
5 18 17
Ottawa
7 1 5
1
3 16 32
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.
Thursday’s Games
Boston 4, Pittsburgh 1
Ducks
Continued from B3
“So she’s doing things that
you may not necessarily ap-
preciate all the time. But she
gets a lot of hands on balls.
That leads to tips, which lead
to steals.”
The 6-foot-2 Parrish is
fourth on the team in steals
(13) and fifth in rebound-
ing (3.1 rpg) coming off the
bench. She also averaged 15.0
points on 11-for-20 shooting
in the two meetings with the
Huskies this season.
Parrish said she played ner-
vous during the early part of
the season. After averaging 5.7
points on 6-for-15 shooting
over the first three games, she
scored 12 points on 5-for-9
shooting during Oregon’s 85-
43 victory over Utah.
The 11th-ranked Ducks
(11-3 overall, 9-3 Pac-12) play
the Utes (4-9, 3-9) in the re-
match on Friday in Salt Lake
City (2 p.m., Pac-12 Net-
works).
“I just got more comfortable
and my confidence just con-
tinued to grow,” Parrish said.
“I mean, my teammates have
Thursday’s Box Score
Southern Cal 75, Oregon St. 62
OREGON ST. (8-6)
alatishe 3-7 2-3 8, Tucker 1-1 2-2 4, lucas 6-11 2-2 18,
reichle 1-4 0-0 2, Thompson 7-17 4-4 20, hunt 1-7 0-0
3, Calloo 1-5 0-0 2, Franklin 1-2 0-0 3, Silva 1-2 0-0 2,
andela 0-3 0-0 0, Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, Silver 0-3 0-0 0.
Totals 22-62 10-11 62.
SOUTHERN CAL (13-3)
i.Mobley 4-8 1-2 9, e.Mobley 6-12 2-3 14, eaddy 3-8 0-0
7, Peterson 1-7 0-0 3, White 4-7 2-2 11, Baumann 4-8
0-0 11, Goodwin 4-6 0-3 8, e.anderson 3-7 2-2 10, ag-
bonkpolo 0-2 2-2 2. Totals 29-65 9-14 75.
Halftime —Southern Cal 30-27. 3-Point Goals —
Oregon St. 8-24 (lucas 4-6, Thompson 2-6, Franklin 1-1,
hunt 1-4, Calloo 0-2, Silver 0-2, reichle 0-3), Southern
Cal 8-24 (Baumann 3-6, e.anderson 2-4, White 1-1, ead-
dy 1-5, Peterson 1-5, agbonkpolo 0-1, e.Mobley 0-2).
Rebounds —Oregon St. 27 (Thompson 7), Southern
Cal 45 (e.Mobley 13). Assists —Oregon St. 12 (Thomp-
son 5), Southern Cal 16 (eaddy 4). Total Fouls —Ore-
gon St. 16, Southern Cal 13.
Saturday’s Games
utah at Colorado,11:30 a.m.
California at arizona, 2 p.m.
Oregon at Southern Cal, ppd.
Oregon St. at no. 23 uCla, 4 p.m.
Stanford at arizona St., 7 p.m.
TOP 25 SCORES
Thursday’s Games
no. 1 Gonzaga 90, San diego 62
no. 6 houston 83, Tulane 60
no. 15 Kansas 59, TCu 51
Women’s college
PAC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L Pct W
L Pct
Stanford
10 2 .833 13
2 .867
arizona
9 2 .818 11
2 .846
uCla
7 2 .778
9
2 .818
Oregon
9 3 .750 11
3 .786
Washington St. 6 5 .545
8
5 .615
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
Friday’s Games
no. 6 Stanford at Washington St., noon
no. 11 Oregon at utah, 2 p.m.
no. 10 arizona at Southern Cal, ppd.
Oregon St. at Colorado, 5 p.m.
arizona St. at no. 5 uCla, 6 p.m.
California at Washington, ppd.
Sunday’s Games
Oregon St. at utah, 11 a.m.
no. 11 Oregon at Colorado, 11 a.m.
California at Washington St., ppd.
arizona St. at Southern Cal, 1 p.m.
no. 6 Stanford at Washington, 1 p.m.
no. 10 arizona at no. 5 uCla, ppd.
DEALS
Transactions
TOP 25 SCORES
Thursday’s Games
no. 1 louisville 79, north Carolina 68
Virginia Tech 83, no. 2 nC State 71, OT
no. 19 arkansas 90, no. 3 uConn 87
no. 4 South Carolina 75, no. 21 Mississippi St. 52
no. 7 Maryland 92, Michigan St. 52
no. 8 Texas a&M 84, auburn 69
no. 14 Ohio St. 78, no. 16 indiana 70
no. 15 Kentucky 81, alabama 68
no. 18 Gonzaga at Pacific, late
no. 20 Tennessee 68, Mississippi 67
lSu 60, no. 22 Georgia 52
no. 23 northwestern 87, iowa 80
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Phila.
13
6
.684
Milwaukee
11
6
.647
indiana
11
7
.611
Brooklyn
12
8
.600
Boston
10
7
.588
Cleveland
9
9
.500
atlanta
9
9
.500
new york
8
11
.421
Orlando
8
11
.421
Chicago
7
10
.412
Toronto
7
11
.389
Charlotte
7
11
.389
Miami
6
12
.333
detroit
5
14
.263
Washington
3
11
.214
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
utah
14
4
.778
l.a. Clippers
14
5
.737
l.a. lakers
14
6
.700
denver
11
7
.611
Golden State
10
8
.556
San antonio
10
8
.556
Memphis
7
6
.538
Portland
9
8
.529
Phoenix
8
8
.500
houston
8
9
.471
Oklahoma City
8
9
.471
dallas
8
10
.444
Sacramento
7
10
.412
new Orleans
6
10
.375
Minnesota
4
13
.235
Wednesday’s Late Game
Golden State 123, Minnesota 111
Thursday’s Games
houston 104, Portland 101
l.a. Clippers 109, Miami 105
detroit 107, l.a. lakers 92
Golden State at Phoenix, late
GB
—
1
11/2
11/2
2
31/2
31/2
5
5
5
51/2
51/2
61/2
8
71/2
GB
—
1/2
1
3
4
4
41/2
41/2
5
51/2
51/2
6
61/2
7
91/2
Thursday’s Box Score
Rockets 104, Trail Blazers 101
PORTLAND (101)
anthony 3-15 0-0 6, Jones Jr. 5-8 0-0 11, Kanter 5-9 3-4
13, lillard 11-23 3-4 30, Trent Jr. 8-16 0-0 23, Giles iii 1-4
0-0 2, hood 1-5 0-0 2, little 0-0 0-0 0, Simons 5-13 0-0
14. Totals 39-93 6-8 101.
HOUSTON (104)
Tate 1-3 0-0 2, Tucker 1-4 0-0 2, Wood 8-12 5-6 22,
Oladipo 11-23 1-1 25, Wall 6-16 5-6 20, Brown 2-7 0-0 6,
nwaba 1-2 0-1 2, house Jr. 4-7 1-1 11, Cousins 2-5 1-1 6,
Gordon 2-11 2-2 8. Totals 38-90 15-18 104.
Portland
32 18 27 24 — 101
Houston
17 36 33 18 — 104
3-Point Goals—Portland 17-41 (Trent Jr. 7-13, lillard
5-11, Simons 4-9, Jones Jr. 1-3, anthony 0-4), houston
13-47 (Wall 3-7, Brown 2-5, house Jr. 2-5, Gordon 2-7,
Oladipo 2-10, Cousins 1-4, Wood 1-4, Tate 0-2, Tucker
0-2). Fouled Out—none. Rebounds—Portland 49
(Kanter 13), houston 47 (Wood 12). Assists—Portland
16 (lillard 9), houston 19 (Wall 6). Total Fouls—Port-
land 16, houston 12. A—3,154 (18,500)
Friday’s Games
atlanta at Washington, 4 p.m.
indiana at Charlotte, 4 p.m.
Cleveland at new york, 4:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at new Orleans, 4:30 p.m.
Sacramento at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
Brooklyn at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m.
l.a. Clippers at Orlando, 5 p.m.
Phila. at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
denver at San antonio, 5:30 p.m.
dallas at utah, 7 p.m.
“(Defending) was one of the downsides of our team at the
beginning, but we work really hard on defense in practice
and we make it a point to be better on defense. I think it has
been paying off. ”
— Sydney Parrish, Ducks freshman guard
more confidence in me, so it
just helped mine.”
Parrish credits guarding
Taylor Mikesell and other elite
shooters every day in practice
for her improved defense.
“That was one of the down-
sides of our team at the begin-
ning, but we work really hard
on defense in practice and we
make it a point to be better on
defense,” Parrish said. “I think
it has been paying off.”
Oregon, which is shoot-
ing 38.9% from the field and
23.5% on 3-pointers over the
last three games, has been
leaning on its team defense to
stay in the Pac-12 champion-
ship race.
Taylor Chavez, who led
the Pac-12 in 3-point shoot-
ing percentage last season at
47.4%, has been hesitant to
shoot and is only 6-for-17
(35.3%) behind the arc.
But the junior guard is still
going to be playing her share
of minutes as one of the key
contributors to the Ducks al-
lowing only 56.0 points per
game this season.
“We’re trying to get Tay-
lor Chavez on track because I
think she can give us a lot of
the intangibles that we need,”
Graves said. “Defensively she’s
done a nice job for us. She’s
played really well defensively.
I think that’s helped and is one
of the reasons why we are play-
ing better defensively.”
Two of Parrish’s classmates,
guard Maddie Scherr and for-
ward Kylee Watson, brought a
defensive mentality from high
school but have been limited
recently by injuries.
With Erin Boley and Nyara
Sabally sitting out, true fresh-
man forward Angela Dugalic
had 12 points and eight re-
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
American League
hOuSTOn aSTrOS — named Bill Murphy assistant
pitching coach and dan Firova quality control coach.
National League
ChiCaGO CuBS — agreed to terms with rhP Kohl
Stewart on a one-year contract.
MiaMi MarlinS — Signed rhP anthony Bass to a
two-year contract.
Frontier League
JOlieT SlaMMerS — Signed OF alonzo Jones.
Tri-CiTy ValleyCaTS — named Pete incavilglia field
manager.
WaShinGTOn Wild ThinGS — Traded OF Steve Brown
to Trois-rivieres. Signed OF Trevor McKinley.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
aTlanTa FalCOnS — named desmond Kitchings
running backs coach.
BuFFalO BillS — announced FB Patrick diMarco
retired.
ChiCaGO BearS — named Chris rumph defensive
line coach.
deTrOiT liOnS — named aubrey Pleasant pass game
coordinator/defensive backs coach.
indianaPOliS COlTS — announced running backs
coach Tom rathman retired.
WaShinGTOn FOOTBall TeaM — Waived K Kaare
Vedvik with a non-football injury (nFi) designation.
Canadian Football League
OTTaWa redBaCKS — Signed dB Treshaun abraha-
ms-Webster, Ol Brandon hitner and lB Frankie Griffin.
SaSKaTCheWan rOuGhriderS — Signed Wr ar-
tavis Scott.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BOSTOn BruinS — recalled lWs Trent Frederic and Par
lindholm and rW Jack Studnicka from the minor league
taxi squad. assigned G dan Vladar Providence (ahl).
CalGary FlaMeS — announced the relocation of
Stockton heat (ahl) to Calgary, alberta due to travel re-
strictions as a result of COVid-19.
CarOlina hurriCaneS — designated d Joey Keane
and C drew Shore for assignment to the taxi squad. re-
called d Jake Bean, lW Max McCormick, Cs Steven lorentz
and Morgan Geekie from the minor league taxi squad. re-
assigned rW Sheldon rempal to Chicago (ahl).
ChiCaGO BlaCKhaWKS — Waived d Madison Bowey
and signed him to one-year, two-way contract.
dallaS STarS — recalled Fs rhett Gardner and Joel
l’esperance from the minor league taxi squad. Placed lW
Jamie Benn on injured reserve.
deTrOiT red WinGS — announced G Jimmy how-
ard retired.
edMOnTOn OilerS — recalled C devin Shore and lW
Joakim Mygard from the minor league taxi squad. desig-
nated C Jujhar Khaira for assignment to the taxi squad.
lOS anGeleS KinGS — recalled C Jaret ander-
son-dolan from the minor league taxi squad.
MinneSOTa Wild — designated G andrew hammond
for assignment to the taxi squad.
MOnTreal CanadienS — recalled rW Corey Perry
from the minor league taxi squad.
naShVille PredaTOrS — reassigned F Philip Toma-
sino to Chicago (ahl). designated F Mathieu Olivier for
assignment to the taxi squad.
neW JerSey deVilS — designated F nick Merkley
for assignment to the taxi squad and F Jesper Brett to
the active roster.
neW yOrK iSlanderS — designated lW Kieffer Bel-
lows for assignment to the taxi squad.
neW yOrK ranGerS — recalled rW Colin Blackwell
from the minor league taxi squad.
OTTaWa SenaTOrS — recalled lW Filip Chlapik from
the minor league taxi squad.
PhiladelPhia FlyerS — recalled C Connor Bun-
naman and d nate Prosser from the minor league taxi
squad.
PiTTSBurGh PenGuinS — designated ds Will reilly
and yannick Weber, C Frederick Gaudreau and rW anthony
angello for assignment to the taxi squad. recalled d Kevin
Czuczman from the minor league taxi squad.
TOrOnTO MaPle leaFS — recalled C Jason Spezza
from the minor league taxi squad.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
COluMBuS CreW SC — Signed MF Perry Kitchen.
naShVille SC — loaned MF david accam to ham-
marby iF Fotbollforening for 12 months with option
to transfer.
National Women’s Soccer League
SKy Blue FC — re-signed G Megan hinz to one-
year contract.
COLLEGE
uniVerSiTy OF MeMPhiS — named Jordan hankins
linebackers coach.
bounds in her first career start
against Washington.
“Angela is still trying to fig-
ure it out, but she’s so long,”
Graves said. “I sat and watched
film with her (Tuesday) for
about a half-hour and I was
really impressed. … She has
a good understanding of de-
fensive positioning in a team
concept.”
Graves expects Boley (back)
to play and is hopeful Sabally
(ankle) will also be available
on Friday against Utah.
The return of 6-foot-7 for-
ward Sedona Prince, who had
16 points, seven rebounds and
five blocks against Washing-
ton, makes the game easier for
her teammates on both ends.
After the loss at Arizona on
Jan. 14, Graves warned that he
was going to go with a tighter
rotation.
Parrish and her teammates
have a clear understanding of
the message the coach was try-
ing to send.
“I think if I don’t play good
defense, then we’re not go-
ing to be on the floor,” Parrish
said. “That’s the reality of it.
You have to play good defense
to be on the court.”
SPORTS BRIEFING
BASKETBALL
Kim
Rockets top Blazers 104-101 — Victor Oladipo scored
Continued from B3
25 points and the Houston Rockets shook off a terrible first
quarter and held on late to beat the Portland Trail Blazers
104-101 on Thursday night. The Rockets were down by 20
points in the first quarter before using a big second to take
the lead and hold on down the stretch for their fourth straight
victory. A driving layup by Oladipo extended the lead to
101-98 with 26.2 seconds to go and Gary Trent Jr. missed a
layup on the other end. Christian Wood made one of two
free throws about 10 seconds later, before Anfernee Simons
cut the lead to one with a 3-pointer with 3.1 seconds remain-
ing. Eric Gordon made two free throws with 2.1 seconds to go
and Simons missed a shot at the buzzer to give Houston the
win. Wood finished with 22 points and 12 rebounds in his
return after missing three games with a sprained right ankle.
John Wall had 20. Damian Lillard had 30 points and nine as-
sists for Portland, and Trent added 23 points and tied a career
high by making seven 3-pointers. The Blazers continue a sev-
en-game road trip on Saturday in Chicago.
“Finding those similarities
with people who aren’t snow-
boarders or athletes, it opened
my world a bit more.”
When training resumed in
earnest this fall, Kim saw a
world vastly changed by the
coronavirus pandemic — her
trips now punctuated by quar-
antines and social distancing.
“It’s weird seeing someone
you haven’t seen in a year and
sorta giving them a fake air
hug,” she said.
In that way, she’s in the same
place as everyone else in her
sport — trying to adapt to a
new normal, in need of real
halfpipes and real competi-
— Bulletin wire report
Gregory Bull/AP file
Chloe Kim performs during the women’s halfpipe finals at the 2018
Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
tion to start the intense run-up
to the Beijing Olympics next
year.
But in so many other ways,
she’s unlike anyone else on the
snow.
She remains the only female
to land back-to-back 1080-de-
gree jumps in a competition
— a combo she landed even
though she didn’t need to to
punctuate the win on her ca-
reer-making day in Korea. To
her, that’s just a starting point
for the 2021 season and be-
yond.
“I definitely won’t be telling
anyone” what her newest trick
is, she said. “You just have to
tune in and see it. But the most
important thing is, we’re all
having fun out here.”