A6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD MONDAY BASKETBALL Women’s College, SE Missouri St. at UT-Martin Men’s College, Duke at Miami Women’s College, NC State at Louisville Women’s College, Ohio State at Northwestern NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Milwaukee Bucks Men’s College, Oklahoma at Texas Tech Men’s College, Teams TBA HOCKEY NHL, Pittsburgh Penguins at New York Rangers Time 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. TV ESPNU ESPN ESPN2 BIG10 NBCSNW ESPN ESPN2 NBCSN Time TV 1 p.m. PAC12 2 p.m. FS1 4 p.m. ESPN, ESPN2 4 p.m. SEC 4 p.m. FS1 4:30 p.m. TNT 5 p.m. BIG10 5 p.m. NBCSNW 6 p.m. CBSSN 6 p.m. ESPN, ESPN2 6 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m. SEC 6 p.m. FS1 7 p.m. TNT 3 p.m. 5:30 p.m. NBCSN NBCSN 9:55 a.m. NBCSN 12:10 p.m. NBCSN Listings are the most accurate available. SPORTS BRIEFING WINTER SPORTS Germans sweep women’s luge medals, Austria wins relay title — Julia Taubitz led a German sweep of the med- als in Sunday’s luge women’s world championship event, and Austria closed the meet by winning the team relay title. Taubitz was first, Natalie Geisenberger second and Dajana Eitberger third for the medal sweep in the women’s race. It was Germa- ny’s first 1-2-3 finish in the women’s overall race since 2008; the Germans also went 1-2-3 in the women’s sprint race on Saturday. Austria’s team of Madeleine Egle, David Gleirscher and Thomas Steu and Lorenz Koller took the gold in the re- lay, followed by Germany and Latvia. For USA Luge, Sum- mer Britcher was sixth and Emily Sweeney was seventh in the women’s title race, with Ashley Farquharson 12th and Brittney Arndt 19th. The Americans just missed a medal in the relay, with the team of Britcher, Tucker West and the doubles sled of Chris Mazdzer and Jayson Terdiman finishing fourth. GOLF Day after rules controversy, Reed wins at Torrey Pines — Patrick Reed was so unaffected by a rules controversy a day earlier that he won the Farmers Insurance Open by five shots, the biggest margin in his nine career PGA Tour victo- ries. Reed closed with a 4-under 68 at Torrey Pines, making an eagle on the par-5 sixth and finishing off his dominating Sun- day with a birdie on the 18th. The former Masters champions finished at 14 under after a consistent four days at the blufftop municipal courses overlooking the Pacific Ocean. He shared the first-round lead with Alex Noren, was in a group one shot off the lead in the second round and then shared the third- round lead with Carlos Ortiz. Rejuvenated Casey wins in Dubai for 15th European Tour title — Paul Casey left behind one of the unhappiest years of his golfing career by capturing his first title since 2019 with a four-stroke win at the Dubai Desert Classic on Sunday. The 43-year-old Englishman struggled to adapt to what he described as the “soulless” playing environment during the pandemic, with his only top-10 finish in 2020 coming at the PGA Championship when he tied for second behind Collin Morikawa. He traveled to Dubai having not played on the Eu- ropean Tour since the end of 2019 and, aided by a new driver and a new mindset, wound up easing to his 15th victory on the European Tour — 20 years after his first — after shooting 2-under 70 in the final round. SOCCER Ferreira, Arriola, Lewis 2 goals each, U.S. routs Trinidad 7-0 — Jesús Ferreira scored his first two international goals and had three assists, and Paul Arriola and Jonathan Lewis scored twice each to power the United States over a rusty Trinidad and Tobago 7-0 in an exhibition on Sunday night. Lewis scored his first international goal, as did Miles Robinson. Coming off a 6-2 win over Panama in November with top American players and a 6-0 rout of El Salvador last month with a group mostly from Major League Soccer, the U.S. outshot the Soca Warriors 19-2 and scored five goals in three straight games for the first time. Three Americans had not scored two goals each since an 8-1 rout of the Cayman Islands in a 1993 friendly led by Joe-Max Moore, Dominic Kinnear and Mark Chung. — Bulletin wire report “Also … bringing the safety over the top a bit to double me and (Travis) Kelce. That kind of slowed us down a lot, plus their front seven is tre- mendous. Once they get click- ing on defense, they’re a great defense. They fly around the field; they’re great. I feel like I just got lucky and was able to get open.” The Chiefs scored on three of their first four possessions and led 17-0 before the Bucs crossed midfield. The margin could have been even greater had Tampa’s defense not forced a field goal after Kansas City SUPER BOWL Sunday, Feb. 7 at Tampa, Fla. Tampa Bay vs Kansas City, 3:30 p.m. (CBS) NBA BASKETBALL Men’s College, Utah at Arizona State Men’s College, Butler at Marquette Men’s College, Teams TBA Men’s College, Georgia at Auburn Men’s College, Penn State at Wisconsin NBA, Los Angeles Clippers at Brooklyn Nets Men’s College, Purdue at Maryland NBA, Teams TBA Men’s College, UNLV at Nevada Men’s College, Teams TBA Men’s College, Dayton at Duquesne Men’s College, Mississippi State at Arkansas Men’s College, Stanford at USC NBA, Boston Celtics at Golden State Warriors HOCKEY NHL, Buffalo Sabres at New York Islanders NHL, Minnesota Wild at Colorado Avalanche SOCCER Premier League, Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Arsenal Premier League, Manchester United vs Southampton Continued from A5 NFL Playoffs BASKETBALL 4 p.m. TUESDAY Hill FOOTBALL ran two plays from the 1-yard line. Davis knocked down Kelce’s pass to Mahomes, a nifty trick play that started when Ma- homes flipped to Hill, who pitched to Kelce, who expected to find Mahomes open in the end zone. It was Davis’ best play of the afternoon. Kansas City settled for the chip-shot field goal on the opening possession. Mahomes and Co. had a chance to extend their 17-0 lead early in the sec- ond, but Shaq Barrett stripped the quarterback on a first-and- goal play from the 8 and forced the Chiefs’ lone turnover. Tampa Bay waited until the fourth to make its comeback. EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Phila. 15 6 .714 Brooklyn 13 9 .591 Milwaukee 11 8 .579 Boston 10 8 .556 Indiana 11 9 .550 Atlanta 10 9 .526 Cleveland 9 11 .450 Charlotte 9 11 .450 New York 9 12 .429 Toronto 8 12 .400 Chicago 7 11 .389 Orlando 8 13 .381 Miami 7 12 .368 Detroit 5 15 .250 Washington 4 12 .250 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct L.A. Clippers 16 5 .762 Utah 15 5 .750 L.A. Lakers 15 6 .714 Denver 12 8 .600 Memphis 8 6 .571 Phoenix 10 8 .556 Portland 10 8 .556 Golden State 11 9 .550 San Antonio 11 9 .550 Houston 9 9 .500 Oklahoma City 8 10 .444 Sacramento 8 11 .421 Dallas 8 12 .400 New Orleans 7 11 .389 Minnesota 5 14 .263 Sunday’s Games L.A. Clippers 129, New York 115 Denver 128, Utah 117 Toronto 115, Orlando 102 Phila. 119, Indiana 110 Washington 149, Brooklyn 146 Minnesota 109, Cleveland 104 Monday’s Games Charlotte at Miami, 4:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Houston at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Cleveland, 5 p.m. New York at Chicago, 5 p.m. Portland at Milwaukee, 5 p.m. Sacramento at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Memphis at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Phoenix at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Detroit at Denver, 6 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Toronto at Orlando, 4 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Memphis at Indiana, 5 p.m. Portland at Washington, 5 p.m. Boston at Golden State, 7 p.m. Detroit at Utah, 7 p.m. GB — 2½ 3 3½ 3½ 4 5½ 5½ 6 6½ 6½ 7 7 9½ 8½ GB — ½ 1 3½ 4½ 4½ 4½ 4½ 4½ 5½ 6½ 7 7½ 7½ 10 Men’s College PACIFIC-12 CONFERENCE Conference All Games W L Pct W L Pct UCLA 9 1 .900 13 3 .813 Southern Cal 7 2 .778 13 3 .813 Oregon 4 2 .667 9 3 .750 Arizona 7 4 .636 13 4 .765 Colorado 7 4 .636 13 5 .722 Stanford 6 4 .600 10 6 .625 Oregon St. 4 5 .444 8 7 .533 Utah 4 6 .400 7 7 .500 Arizona St. 3 5 .375 6 8 .429 Washington St. 3 7 .300 10 7 .588 Washington 2 8 .200 3 12 .200 California 2 10 .167 7 12 .368 Sunday’s Games Washington St. 77, Washington 62 Monday’s Games Oregon at UCLA, ppd. Tuesday’s Games Southern Cal at Stanford, 6 p.m. Utah at Arizona St., ppd. SCORES Sunday’s Games AP TOP 25 No. 6 Houston (15-1) beat SMU 70-48. No. 13 Ohio St. (14-4) beat Michigan St. 79-62. EAST Bucknell 92, Lehigh 68 CCSU 85, St. Francis (Pa.) 77 Colgate 78, Holy Cross 60 Delaware 75, Elon 70 Fairleigh Dickinson 95, Bryant 84 Mount St. Mary’s 76, Sacred Heart 64 NJIT 69, UMBC 65 New Hampshire 71, Binghamton 65, OT Siena 63, Marist 50 Stony Brook 63, Hartford 49 Syracuse 76, NC State 73 Tulane 81, Temple 64 William & Mary 75, Towson 74 SOUTH Hofstra 89, UNC-Wilmington 83 James Madison 73, Drexel 64 NC A&T 67, Florida A&M 65 UAB 63, Middle Tennessee 52 MIDWEST Chicago 72, Missouri St. 46 Drake 78, Illinois St. 76, OT Evansville 70, Valparaiso 52 Indiana St. 60, Bradley 57 N. Michigan 91, Lake Superior St. 70 Ohio St. 79, Michigan St. 62 Rutgers 64, Northwestern 56 S. Illinois 71, N. Iowa 68 Sioux Falls 74, Minnesota St. 62 St. John’s 75, Marquette 73 SOUTHWEST Houston 70, SMU 48 North Texas 79, Rice 53 Stephen F. Austin 78, Sam Houston St. 68 FAR WEST E. Washington 68, Sacramento St. 60 Hawaii 62, UC Irvine 61 UC Riverside 71, UC San Diego 59 Women’s college PAC-12 CONFERENCE Conference All Games W L Pct W L Pct Stanford 12 2 .857 15 2 .882 Arizona 9 2 .818 11 2 .846 UCLA 8 2 .800 10 2 .833 Oregon 9 3 .750 11 3 .786 Washington St. 6 6 .500 8 6 .571 Southern Cal 5 6 .455 7 7 .500 Oregon St. 4 5 .444 6 5 .545 Arizona St. 4 6 .400 8 6 .571 Colorado 4 7 .364 6 8 .429 Utah 3 10 .231 4 10 .286 Washington 1 8 .111 4 8 .333 California 0 8 .000 0 11 .000 Sunday’s Games Oregon St. 84, Utah 74 No. 6 Stanford 74, Washington 48 Southern Cal 65, Arizona St. 57 No. 11 Oregon at Colorado, ppd. California at Washington St., ppd. No. 10 Arizona at No. 5 UCLA, ppd. SCORES Sunday’s Games AP TOP 25 No. 3 UConn (11-1) beat No. 17 DePaul 100-67. No. 4 South Carolina (14-1) beat Alabama 87-63. No. 6 Stanford (14-2) beat Washington 74-48. No. 8 Texas A&M (16-1) beat No. 22 Georgia 60-48. No. 9 Baylor (12-2) beat Iowa St 85-77. No. 15 Kentucky (13-4) beat Missouri 61-55. No. 16 Indiana (10-3) beat Michigan St 79-67. No. 17 DePaul (9-4) lost to No. 3 UConn 100-67. No. 19 Arkansas (13-6) beat Auburn 77-67. No. 20 Tennessee (12-3) beat Florida 79-65. No. 22 Georgia (13-4) lost to No. 8 Texas A&M 60-48. No. 24 West Virginia (13-2) beat TCU 79-70. EAST Army 79, Colgate 45 Bucknell 73, Lehigh 68 Dayton 68, St. Bonaventure 51 Drexel 58, Northeastern 56 Hofstra 59, UNC-Wilmington 48 La Salle 69, UMass 63 Mass.-Lowell 46, Albany (NY) 31 Rhode Island 50, Saint Joseph’s 48, OT Rider 45, Monmouth (NJ) 31 Stony Brook 62, Hartford 49 Syracuse 81, Notre Dame 69 SOUTH Clemson 69, Wake Forest 66 Coll. of Charleston 65, James Madison 63 Elon 83, Delaware 61 Fordham 73, Davidson 55 Kentucky 61, Missouri 55 LSU 75, Mississippi 66, OT Liberty 78, Jacksonville 52 North Florida 80, North Alabama 77 Richmond 67, George Mason 52 South Carolina 87, Alabama 63 Tennessee 79, Florida 65 Tulane 71, Temple 69 Virginia Tech 73, North Carolina 69 Stevenson MIDWEST Baylor 85, Iowa St. 77 Bellarmine 62, Kennesaw St. 60 Indiana 79, Michigan St. 67 Iowa 94, Minnesota 68 Loyola of Chicago 55, S. Illinois 46 Missouri St. 74, Valparaiso 73 Oklahoma 80, Kansas St. 78 Penn St. 80, Purdue 70 UConn 100, DePaul 67 Villanova 90, Butler 53 Wisconsin 69, Illinois 57 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 77, Auburn 67 Texas A&M 60, Georgia 48 FAR WEST Oregon St. 84, Utah 74 Santa Clara 66, Pepperdine 57 Southern Cal 65, Arizona St. 57 Stanford 74, Washington 48 HOCKEY NHL East GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 9 6 0 3 15 35 29 Philadelphia 10 7 2 1 15 35 31 Boston 8 5 1 2 12 25 17 Pittsburgh 9 5 3 1 11 29 34 New Jersey 9 4 3 2 10 23 26 Buffalo 10 4 4 2 10 30 32 N.Y. Islanders 9 3 4 2 8 19 24 N.Y. Rangers 8 2 4 2 6 22 25 Central GP W L OT Pts GF GA Florida 6 5 0 1 11 22 16 Columbus 10 4 3 3 11 24 28 Carolina 6 5 1 0 10 18 10 Dallas 6 4 1 1 9 23 14 Tampa Bay 6 4 1 1 9 19 14 Chicago 10 3 4 3 9 26 31 Nashville 8 4 4 0 8 20 24 Detroit 10 2 6 2 6 20 35 West GP W L OT Pts GF GA St. Louis 9 6 2 1 13 32 29 Colorado 10 6 3 1 13 36 23 Minnesota 10 6 4 0 12 29 28 Vegas 7 5 1 1 11 23 17 Los Angeles 8 3 3 2 8 25 26 Anaheim 10 3 5 2 8 16 27 Arizona 8 3 4 1 7 20 22 San Jose 8 3 5 0 6 22 31 North GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 10 7 2 1 15 33 29 Montreal 8 5 1 2 12 33 22 Vancouver 11 6 5 0 12 40 37 Winnipeg 8 5 3 0 10 29 25 Edmonton 10 4 6 0 8 30 36 Calgary 7 3 3 1 7 20 17 Ottawa 8 1 6 1 3 17 36 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. Sunday’s Games New Jersey 5, Buffalo 3 Florida 3, Detroit 2 Carolina 4, Dallas 3, SO Chicago 3, Columbus 1 Philadelphia 4, N.Y. Islanders 3, OT St. Louis 4, Anaheim 1 Minnesota 4, Colorado 3, OT Ottawa at Edmonton, late Monday’s Games Boston at Washington, 4 p.m. Nashville at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Vancouver at Montreal, 4 p.m. Calgary at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Vegas at San Jose, ppd 281 281 281 281 282 282 European Tour Omega Dubai Desert Classic Scores Sunday at Emirates Golf Club, Dubai, UAE Purse: $3.25 million Yardage: 7,353; Par: 72 Final Round Paul Casey, England 67-70-64-70 – 271 Brandon Stone, South Africa 70-67-66-72 – 275 Robert Macintyre, Scotland 67-68-67-74 – 276 Laurie Canter, England 70-68-68-72 – 278 Kalle Samooja, Finland 68-68-71-71 – 278 Bernd Wiesberger, Austria 73-68-69-69 – 279 Padraig Harrington, Ireland 71-69-69-70 – 279 Sergio Garcia, Spain 66-73-67-73 – 279 Rasmus Hojgaard, Denmark 72-72-69-67 – 280 Matthias Schwab, Austria 70-69-73-68 – 280 Ashun Wu, China 71-71-70-68 – 280 Adri Arnaus, Spain 68-69-74-69 – 280 Takumi Kanaya, Japan 70-69-72-69 – 280 Antoine Rozner, France 70-71-69-70 – 280 Alexander Levy, France 70-68-71-71 – 280 Thomas Detry, Belgium 67-67-74-72 – 280 DEALS Sunday’s Transactions rotator cuff, and is setting his sights on the Beijing Olympics next winter. “Full of gratitude more than anything — to not only be living but still having the physical ability to do what I love.” Fast-forward to last winter: At his first Winter X Games competition, Stevenson won the slopestyle and Knuckle Huck competitions, which he described as a “dream.” “I just skied the best I ever have that day — with my fam- ily and my friends there,” said Stevenson, who still experi- ences neck issues from an acci- dent that caused him to lose an inch of height (from 6-foot-2 to 6-1). “It was perfect.” So is this: Celebrating with friends every May 8. “It’s a special day for me to just reflect on the year and keep my sights set on what’s next,” Stevenson said. “I cele- brate life. Just live it up. ... Go to the top of the mountain, with my friends and say, ‘Let’s do this boys. We’re living.’” a week off, had a lot of guys get acclimated to the system that Tom Brady likes, their coach likes,” Chiefs defensive lineman Chris Jones said. “They’ve been playing well, especially later in the season. ... They’re definitely a different team from when we played them a couple of weeks ago.” Hill and Davis, though, are sure to be lined up across from each other at some point. “You go back and look at the game and what matchups you had,” Arians said. “Familiar- ity helps. I’m not really excited playing Tyreek Hill and Kelce and Mahomes (again). That’s a formidable challenge, but our guys will be up for it.” PGA one to put in a titanium plate. His mom and stepdad were in Hawaii at the time, but quickly made their way to the hospital. They were there when he woke up a few days later. “Apparently I looked at my mom and I was like, ’Sorry you guys had to come back from Hawaii,’” Stevenson said of an Tom Brady threw two intercep- tions in the third quarter and the Bucs trailed 27-10 before a furious rally. Brady found Mike Evans for scores of 31 and 7 yards, the first one coming on a fourth- and-3 play early in the quarter and the second one coming after a pair of roughing-the- passer penalties on Frank Clark. Down three with 4:10 to play, Tampa turned to its defense to get a stop and get Brady the ball back. But Mahomes didn’t let it happen, scrambling for one first down and then rolling left on third-and-7 and finding — who else? — Hill for a first down in front of — who else? — Davis. Mahomes then took a knee to end the game. “You learn from mistakes and you learn from really good things, and there were some re- ally good things in that game,” Arians said. “So we’ve got a lot of stuff to build on.” Mahomes completed 37 of 49 passes for 462 yards and three TDs. Hill finished with the 14th-most receiving yards in any game in NFL history and the most since Julio Jones notched 300 against Carolina in 2016. Brady completed 27 of 41 passes for 345 yards, with three scores and two picks. Neither team will be com- pletely the same in the rematch. The Chiefs had to shuffle their offensive line again this week after losing left tackle Eric Fisher to a torn Achilles ten- don in the AFC championship game. Two more starters — right tackle Mitchell Schwartz (back) and left guard Kelechi Osemele (knees) — haven’t played since October. The Bucs will have 350-pound defensive tackle Vita Vea back for the second straight game after he missed most of the season because of a broken right ankle. Vea re- turned last week and was the catalyst in Tampa’s five-sack day against Green Bay. “They kind of readjusted some things and then they had Kelsey Brunner/The Aspen Times via AP, File – – – – – – Farmers Insurance Open Scores Sunday at Torrey Pines, San Diego, Calif. Purse: $7.5 million South Course Yardage: 7,818; Par: 72 Final Round Individual FedExCup Points in parentheses Patrick Reed (500), $1,350,000 64-72-70-68 – 274 Tony Finau (167), $456,375 69-67-74-69 – 279 Viktor Hovland (167), $456,375 70-65-73-71 – 279 Henrik Norlander (167), $456,375 73-69-68-69 – 279 Ryan Palmer (167), $456,375 66-70-73-70 – 279 Xander Schauffele (167), $456,375 70-72-68-69 – 279 Lanto Griffin (85), $235,625 66-70-72-72 – 280 Jon Rahm (85), $235,625 69-67-72-72 – 280 Will Zalatoris, $235,625 68-71-70-71 – 280 Luke List (64), $168,125 66-77-72-66 – 281 Peter Malnati (64), $168,125 66-71-73-71 – 281 GOLF Stevenson offered to drive the roughly 750-mile trek. His last recollection be- fore the crash along an Idaho highway was stopping to buy a can of Starbucks Doubleshot Espresso. “The next memory I have was waking up in the hospital a few days later surrounded by my loved ones,” Stevenson said. He’d fallen asleep for just an instant and when he awoke tried to steer the Ford truck back onto the road. It flipped several times, with the roof caving in. Fabrizi was able to hobble to the road on his broken leg and flag down a car to call for help. “Saved my life,” Stevenson said of his friend, who escaped serious injuries. Stevenson’s broken bones in- cluded ribs, an eye socket, his jaw and his neck. He also frac- tured his skull, which required two major surgeries, including X Games rookie Colby Stevenson pauses before getting the Best in Snow award in Aspen, Colorado in January 2020. 72-71-72-66 71-69-69-72 72-67-72-70 67-69-72-73 68-71-70-73 73-64-73-72 BASEBALL Major League Baseball American League MINNESOTA TWINS — Agreed to terms with SS An- drelton Simmons on a one-year contract. FOOTBALL National Football League DETROIT LIONS — Acquired QB Jared Goff, a 2021 third- round pick, 2022 first-round pick and 2023 first-round pick from LOs Angeles Rams in exchange for QB Mat- thew Stafford. NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed OL Jonotthan Harrison to a reserve/futures contract. HOCKEY National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES — Assigned D Kyle Capobianco to Tucson (AHL). BUFFALO SABRES — Recalled C Casey Mittelstadt from the taxi squad. CAROLINA HURRICANES — Recalled C Drew Shore and G Alex Nedeljkovic from taxi squad. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Recalled RW Reese Johnson from the taxi squad. DETROIT RED WINGS — Designated C Chase Pearson for assignment to taxi squad. LOS ANGELES KINGS — Designated RW Arthur Kali- yev and D Austin Strand for assignment to taxi squad. Assigned LWs Bokondji and Samuel Fagemo to On- tario (AHL. MONTREAL CANADIENS — Designated RW Corey Perry for assignment on the taxi squad. NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Recalled Fs Jesper Boqvist and Mikhail Maltsev from the taxi squad. Designated RW Nicholas Merkley for assignment on the taxi squad. NEW YORK RANGERS — Waived D Tony DeAngelo. OTTAWA SENATORS — Recalled D Artem Zub from the taxi squad. East Coast Hockey League ALLEN AMERICANS — Activated D Ben Carroll from re- serve. Placed F Josh Lammon on reserve. GREENVILLE SWAMP RABBITS — Activated F Luc Brown from reserve. Placed F Brendan Connolly on reserve. INDY FUEL — Activated D Keoni Texeira from commis- sioner’s exempt list. Activated F Dylan Malmquist from reserve. Placed F Nick Hutchison and D Mike Lee on reserve. JACKSONVILLE ICEMEN — Activated F Craig Martin from commissioner’s exempt list. Placed F Christopher Brown on reserve. KANSAS CITY MAVERICKS — Signed D Theo Calvas and added to active roster. Placed F Boston Leier on reserve. Placed D Justin Woods and F Phil Marinaccio on injured reserve. ORLANDO SOLAR BEARS — Acquired D Devante Ste- phens from Syracuse. Activated F Tad Kozun from re- serve. Placed D Luke McInnis on reserve. UTAH GRIZZLIES — Activated F Yuri Terao from injured reserve. Placed D Ryker Killins and F Trey Bradley on re- serve. Loaned G Kevin Carr to Colorado (AHL). WHEELING NAILERS — Activated F Tyler Drevitch and F Vladislav Mikhalchuk from reserve. Placed D Matt Fo- ley, F Lawton Courtnall and D Adam Smith on reserve. WICHITA THUNDER — Activated D Riley Weselowski and F Chantz Petruic from reserve. Placed D Patrik Parkkonen and F John Albert on reserve. accident that happened on Mother’s Day. “So that’s when they knew I was going to be all right. That’s when they knew I was going to be myself. “I’m in the one percent of people with that skull fracture and there’s no brain damage. That never happens.” After a few weeks in the hos- pital, he went home to recu- perate. Five months later, he was taking his first ski runs in New Zealand. Although told to take it easy, he had to try his favorite trick — a Double-10 blunt — just to see if he could. The execution was perfect. Three months after that, he captured a World Cup slope- style competition in Italy. He was back. “The biggest fear for me af- ter the accident was when I thought I was done skiing ... and having those months of just uncertainty,” explained Stevenson, who was knocked out of qualifying for the 2018 Pyeongchang Games by a torn Continued from A5 Francesco Molinari (64), $168,125 Sam Ryder (64), $168,125 Rory Sabbatini (64), $168,125 Adam Scott (64), $168,125 Rory McIlroy (52), $125,625 Robby Shelton (52), $125,625