The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, February 02, 2021, Page 6, Image 6

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    A6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
TUESDAY
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
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
WEDNESDAY
BASKETBALL
Time
Men’s College, Xavier at DePaul
2 p.m.
Men’s College, South Carolina at Florida
3:30 p.m.
NBA, Indiana Pacers at Milwaukee Bucks
4 p.m.
Men’s College, LSU at Alabama
4 p.m.
Men’s College, Virginia Tech at Pittsburgh
4 p.m.
Men’s College, Seton Hall at Providence
4 p.m.
Men’s College, Vanderbilt at Texas A&M
5:30 p.m.
Men’s College, Villanova at St. John’s
6 p.m.
Men’s College, Oklahoma State at TCU
6 p.m.
Men’s College, Tulane at Wichita State
6 p.m.
Men’s College, Georgetown at Creighton
6 p.m.
NBA, Phoenix Suns at New Orleans Pelicans
6:30 p.m.
Men’s College, San Diego State at New Mexico
8 p.m.
GOLF
European PGA Tour, Saudi International, First Round midnight
HOCKEY
NHL, Detroit Red Wings at Tampa Bay Lightning
2:30 p.m.
NHL, Boston Bruins at Philadelphia Flyers
5 p.m.
SOCCER
Premier League, Burnley vs Manchester City
9:55 a.m.
Premier League, Liverpool vs Brighton & Hove Albion 12:10 p.m.
CONCACAF League,
Final -- LD Alajuelense vs Deportivo Saprissa
7 p.m.
TV
FS1
SEC
ESPN
ESPN2
ROOT
FS1
SEC
CBSSN
ESPN2
ESPNU
FS1
ESPN
FS1
GOLF
NBCSN
NBCSN
NBCSN
NBCSN
FS2
Listings are the most accurate available.
SPORTS BRIEFING
WORLD CUP SKIING
Gut-Behrami dominates another super-G for 4th
straight win — Lara Gut-Behrami outclassed the field once
again in a World Cup super-G on Monday, winning the last
race before the world championships. In a repeat of Satur-
day’s race on the same course, the Swiss skier had a clean run
on the challenging Kandahar course and extended her lead
at each split time before clinching her fourth straight vic-
tory in the discipline. Her winning streak comes on the back
of an extended drought when she failed to win a World Cup
super-G for three years. Her 16th career win in super-G put
Gut-Behrami in a tie for third with Katja Seizinger of Ger-
many on the all-time winners list. Only American great Lind-
sey Vonn (28) and Austrian skier Renate Götschl (17) have
won more super-Gs. Bend’s Laurenne Ross finished 36th on
Monday and was the fifth American.
FOOTBALL
NFL Playoffs
SUPER BOWL
Sunday, Feb. 7 at Tampa, Fla.
Tampa Bay vs Kansas City, 3:30 p.m. (CBS)
BASKETBALL
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Phila.
15
6
.714
Milwaukee
12
8
.600
Brooklyn
13
9
.591
Boston
10
8
.556
Indiana
11
9
.550
Atlanta
10
10
.500
Cleveland
10
11
.476
Charlotte
10
11
.476
Chicago
8
11
.421
New York
9
13
.409
Toronto
8
12
.400
Orlando
8
13
.381
Miami
7
13
.350
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
16
6
.727
Memphis
9
6
.600
Denver
12
8
.600
Phoenix
11
8
.579
Golden State
11
9
.550
Houston
10
9
.526
Portland
10
9
.526
San Antonio
11
10
.524
Sacramento
9
11
.450
Oklahoma City
8
11
.421
Dallas
8
13
.381
New Orleans
7
12
.368
Minnesota
5
15
.250
Monday’s Games
L.A. Lakers 107, Atlanta 99
Houston 136, Oklahoma City 106
Milwaukee 134, Portland 106
Charlotte 129, Miami 121, OT
Chicago 110, New York 102
Cleveland 100, Minnesota 98
Sacramento 118, New Orleans 109
Memphis 133, San Antonio 102
Phoenix 109, Dallas 108
Detroit at Denver, ppd
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.
Wednesday’s Games
Indiana at Milwaukee, 4 p.m.
Phila. at Charlotte, 4 p.m.
Dallas at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m.
Houston at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Cleveland, 5 p.m.
New York at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Washington at Miami, 5 p.m.
Minnesota at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m.
Phoenix at New Orleans, 6:30 p.m.
Boston at Sacramento, 7 p.m.
GB
—
2½
2½
3½
3½
4½
5
5
6
6½
6½
7
7½
9½
8½
GB
—
½
½
4
3½
4
4½
5
5
5
6½
7
8
8
10½
Men’s College
THE AP TOP 25
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Gonzaga (61)
17-0
1597
1
2. Baylor (3)
16-0
1539
2
3. Villanova
11-1
1458
3
4. Michigan
13-1
1402
4
5. Houston
15-1
1348
6
6. Texas
11-3
1228
5
7. Ohio St.
14-4
1133
13
8. Iowa
12-4
1079
7
9. Oklahoma
11-4
966
24
10. Alabama
14-4
958
9
11. Tennessee
12-3
869
18
12. Illinois
11-5
850
19
13. Texas Tech
12-5
797
10
14. Virginia
11-3
752
8
15. Creighton
13-4
732
17
16. Virginia Tech
13-3
718
20
17. West Virginia
11-5
669
11
18. Missouri
11-3
589
12
19. Wisconsin
13-5
452
14
20. Florida St.
10-3
393
16
21. UCLA
13-3
260
23
22. Florida
10-4
196
-
23. Kansas
11-6
171
15
24. Purdue
12-6
130
-
25. Drake
16-0
117
-
Others receiving votes: Oklahoma St. 111, Southern Cal
57, Loyola of Chicago 52, Minnesota 42, Xavier 25, Boise
St. 23, St. Bonaventure 19, Saint Louis 11, Belmont 11,
Toledo 9, Oregon 8, Colorado 8, San Diego St. 6, UConn 5,
Louisville 4, North Carolina 3, Georgia Tech 2, Rutgers 1.
MEN’S COACHES POLL
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Gonzaga (28)
17-0
796
1
2. Baylor (4)
16-0
772
2
3. Villanova
11-1
735
3
4. Michigan
13-1
690
4
5. Houston
15-1
660
6
6. Texas
11-3
610
5
7. Alabama
14-4
495
8
8. Iowa
12-4
490
7
9. Ohio State
14-4
478
15
10. Tennessee
12-3
446
17
11. Texas Tech
12-5
422
10
12. Creighton
13-4
396
14
13. Illinois
11-5
382
22
14. Oklahoma
11-4
379
NR
15. Virginia
11-3
368
8
16. Virginia Tech
13-3
357
19
17. Missouri
11-3
343
12
18. West Virginia
11-5
277
11
19. Florida State
10-3
237
16
20. Wisconsin
13-5
212
13
21. UCLA
13-3
165
21
22. Kansas
11-6
112
18
23. Florida
10-4
90
NR
24. Oklahoma State
11-4
88
NR
25. Drake
16-0
67
NR
Dropped out: No. 20 Minnesota (11-6); No. 23 Louis-
ville (10-4); No. 24 Saint Louis (7-2); No. 25 Oregon (9-3).
Others receiving votes: Minnesota (11-6) 66; Purdue
(12-6) 59; Southern California (13-3) 44; Loyola-Chicago
(14-3) 43; Oregon (9-3) 39; Louisville (10-4) 26; Xavier
(11-2) 9; St. Bonaventure (9-1) 8; Colorado (13-5) 8; Boise
State (14-2) 7; LSU (11-5) 6; San Diego State (13-4) 5; To-
ledo (15-4) 3; Belmont (18-1) 3; Rutgers (10-6) 2; North
Carolina (11-5) 2; Winthrop (16-1) 1; Saint Louis (7-2) 1;
Georgia Tech (8-5) 1.
PAC-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
Monday’s Games
Oregon at UCLA, ppd.
Tuesday’s Games
Southern Cal at Stanford, 6 p.m.
Utah at Arizona St., ppd.
SCORES
Monday’s Games
AP TOP 25
No. 9 Oklahoma (11-4) lost to No. 13 Texas Tech 57-52.
No. 25 Drake (17-0) beat Illinois St. 95-60.
EAST
Fairmont St. 101, Alderson-Broaddus 67
West Liberty 117, Glenville St. 85
SOUTH
Carson-Newman 91, Limestone 55
FIU 90, Florida Memorial 74
Jackson St. 63, Ark.-Pine Bluff 55
Louisville 74, Georgia Tech 58
Memphis 96, UCF 69
Miami 77, Duke 75
Stetson 110, Carver 56
W. Carolina 76, The Citadel 75
Wofford 67, ETSU 62
MIDWEST
Austin Peay 74, SIU-Edwardsville 59
Chicago 70, Missouri St. 50
Drake 95, Illinois St. 60
Evansville 58, Valparaiso 51
Indiana St. 67, Bradley 55
Murray St. 77, SE Missouri 60
Tiffin 70, Trevecca Nazarene 61
SOUTHWEST
Texas Southern 66, Alabama A&M 49
FAR WEST
E. Washington 94, Sacramento St. 79
Hawaii Hilo 69, Chaminade 68
Women’s college
THE AP TOP 25
Record
16-0
14-1
11-1
11-1
10-2
15-2
16-1
12-2
11-2
12-2
10-1
11-3
10-1
10-1
1. Louisville (26)
2. South Carolina (4)
3. Connecticut
4. North Carolina State
5. UCLA
6. Stanford
7. Texas A&M
8. Baylor
9. Arizona
10. Maryland
11. Ohio State
12. Oregon
13. Michigan
14. South Florida
Pts
746
721
648
646
642
597
593
535
488
478
462
412
388
340
Prv
1
4
3
2
5
6
8
9
10
7
14
11
12
13
Texas’ Smart says he had “significant” COVID-19
symptoms — Texas coach Shaka Smart said Monday he
had “significant” symptoms while in extended isolation from
his team and family after testing positive for COVID-19 as he
and the No. 6 Longhorns prepare for a showdown with No.
2 Baylor. “This was not a walk in the park for me, not say-
ing it has been for anyone else,” Smart said ahead of Tuesday
night’s matchup of the top two teams in the Big 12. “When
you go through that kind of stuff, it certainly swirls some
things around your mind.” Smart didn’t detail the extent of
the symptoms he experienced, but appeared frustrated that
Texas played last week’s home loss to No. 9 Oklahoma when
the Longhorns were missing their head coach, two starters
and a key reserve because of COVID-19 protocols. Smart said
his team had several positive tests a week earlier and noted
other programs have shut down for several days for less.
Smart said that just before he tested positive, he ran a work-
out with only two players.
—Bulletin wire reports
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawn Monday night are:
8 20 21 31 41 47
Oregon
Lottery
results
The estimated jackpot is now $1.4 million.
As listed at OregonLottery.org and individual lottery websites
SCORES
Monday’s Games
AP TOP 25
No. 1 Louisville (16-1) lost to No. 4 NC State 74-60.
No. 4 NC State (12-1) beat No. 1 Louisville 74-60.
No. 11 Ohio St. (10-1) lost to No. 22 Northwestern 69-57.
No. 22 Northwestern (9-3) beat No. 11 Ohio St. 69-57.
EAST
VCU 64, George Washington 50
SOUTH
Belmont 68, Tennessee St. 52
Grambling St. 56, MVSU 52
Jackson St. 81, Ark.-Pine Bluff 48
NC State 74, Louisville 60
UT Martin 80, SE Missouri 70
MIDWEST
Marquette 66, Creighton 53
Northwestern 69, Ohio St. 57
SOUTHWEST
Alabama A&M 73, Texas Southern 50
Alabama St. 83, Prairie View 70
FAR WEST
Grand Canyon 64, Tarleton St. 55
Nevada 73, UNLV 70
San Diego 69, Portland 62
HOCKEY
NHL
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Philadelphia 10 7 2
1 15 35 31
Washington 10 6 1
3 15 38 34
Boston
9 6 1
2 14 30 20
Pittsburgh
10 5 4
1 11 30 37
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
9 3 4
2
8 25 26
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida
6 5 0
1 11 22 16
Tampa Bay
7 5 1
1 11 24 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
Chicago
10 3 4
3
9 26 31
Nashville
9 4 5
0
8 22 29
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
9 6 1
2 14 39 24
Vancouver
12 6 6
0 12 42 43
Winnipeg
9 5 3
1 11 32 29
Edmonton
11 5 6
0 10 38 41
Calgary
8 4 3
1
9 24 20
Ottawa
9 1 7
1
3 22 44
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 Games
Montreal 6, Vancouver 2
N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh 1
Tampa Bay 5, Nashville 2
Boston 5, Washington 3
Calgary 4, Winnipeg 3, SO
Vegas at San Jose, ppd
Tuesday’s Games
Buffalo at N.Y. Islanders, 3 p.m.
Dallas at Columbus, 4 p.m.
Continued from A5
Hill takes over as MLB disciplinarian; Ibañez also
hired — Michael Hill is taking over from Chris Young, who
BASKETBALL
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
Lewis
BASEBALL
stayed just one season in the role of Joe Torre’s replacement as
Major League Baseball’s disciplinarian. Hill was hired Mon-
day by MLB as a senior vice president of on-field operations
along with former major leaguer Raúl Ibañez. Hill will over-
see umpires and on-field discipline, and Ibañez will be in-
volved in rules, equipment and on-field technology while con-
tributing to scouting and amateur baseball initiatives. Former
pitcher Joe Martinez was hired as senior director of on-field
strategy, former outfielder outfielder Rajai Davis as senior di-
rector of on-field operations and former Houston manager
Bo Porter as a consultant on coaching development. Hill and
Ibañez will report to executive vice president of baseball oper-
ations Morgan Sword, and Martinez will report to vice presi-
dent of baseball economics Reed MacPhail.
15. Kentucky
13-4
312
15
16. Arkansas
13-6
258
19
17. Indiana
10-4
257
16
18. Tennessee
12-3
221
20
19. Gonzaga
15-2
218
18
20. DePaul
9-4
160
17
21. West Virginia
13-2
144
24
22. Northwestern
9-3
106
23
23. South Dakota State
13-2
86
25
24. Mississippi State
8-5
85
21
25. Georgia
13-4
73
22
Others receiving votes: Missouri State 64, Georgia Tech
25, Syracuse 20, Iowa State 9, Rice 5, South Dakota 3, Ste-
phen F. Austin 3, Texas 2, LSU 2, Virginia Tech 1.
Hallock’s Killer, courtesy Gary Kutz. Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Fly-tying corner
Blaine Hallock, it is said, watched what fell off the willows, and
what trout ate, and tied this fly, now known as the Hallock’s Killer, first
written about in “Of Men and Mountains” by William O. Douglas.
Hallock recommended that the fly be kept hidden during the pro-
cess of knotting it to the leader “to the end that the fish cannot pos-
sibly see the fly during the operation.” This was to keep the fish from
attacking prematurely and perchance injuring the angler, “inflicting
deep cuts and lacerations with their teeth.”
Developed in the Pacific Northwest, this fly can be fished dry, but
if it sinks should be allowed to drift and even swing. Really, it’s a stim-
ulator pattern that can be sized to imitate caddis, stoneflies or small
hoppers. Try it in lazy trout water on the McKenzie River on a June
evening.
Tie Hallock’s Killer on a No. 10-14 dry-fly or wet-fly hook. For the
tail, use red hackle fibers. Wrap the body with yellow floss and red
thread rib. For the wing, use deer hair and leave a small trimmed
head. Finish with a fine grizzly hackle collar.
—Gary Lewis, for The Bulletin
Virtuoso
Continued from A5
For the last decade, he’s
been travelling across Vene-
zuela to put on shows draw-
ing up to 7,000 spectators.
The troupe charges specta-
tors $3 to $5 to enter the or-
ganized shows — hefty in a
country where most earn a
monthly minimum wage less
than $2.
The coronavirus pandemic,
however, has kept him from
touring far from his home in
Venezuela’s capital.
He’s been forced to hold
improvised pop-up shows ad-
vertised by word of mouth,
playing a cat-and-mouse
game with officials. On social
media, he encourages spec-
tators to wear facemasks and
practice social distancing,
though in practice that ap-
pears to be optional.
On Saturday, Aldana’s crew
converged on a parking lot of
cracked asphalt in the coastal
Because resting trout tend
to look upward and even the
lightest leader is probably not
going to be completely verti-
cal, a leader length of 20 to 36
inches is more desirable. Now
the floating bait, when used
with a light hook, should be
presented in the prime feeding
zone for the bigger fish.
Cast, let the bait splash
down and sink with an open
bail. When the weight touches
down, turn the reel till the
weight bumps against the
swivel. Put the rod down and
wait. Holding the rod trans-
mits jitters and scares off crit-
ters. Watch the rod tip and
the line, but don’t walk too far
away. A big fish will yank the
rod into the water.
Two rods better than one
If you’ve been looking for
a reason to get a two-rod li-
cense, this is it. The Oregon
Department of Fish and Wild-
life offers a two-rod endorse-
ment for $28. With two rods, a
bait fisherman can anchor off
a point of rocks and cast one
bait to one side of the point
and another offering to the
city of La Guaira, only to be
stopped by local police, who
said they didn’t have permis-
sion. Aldana says he’s worked
official channels in the past to
get permission, but has been
frustrated by bureaucrats de-
manding bribes.
“I tell the police that this is
a sport, that they should un-
derstand and work with us,”
he said. “We’re doing some-
thing healthy and positive.”
On Sunday, squad of
soldiers blocked another
New Jersey at Pittsburgh, ppd
Vancouver at Montreal, 4 p.m.
Arizona at St. Louis, 5 p.m.
Calgary at Winnipeg, 5 p.m.
Carolina at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Minnesota at Colorado, 5:30 p.m.
Anaheim at Los Angeles, 7 p.m.
Ottawa at Edmonton, 7 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Detroit at Tampa Bay, 2:30 p.m.
Boston at Philadelphia, 5 p.m.
Vegas at San Jose, ppd
DEALS
Monday’s Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER — Named Michael Hill
and Raul Ibanez senior vice presidents of field oper-
ations.
American League
BOSTON RED SOX — Announced the retirement of 2B
Dustin Pedroia.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Agreed to terms with LHP Carlos
Rodon on a one-year contract. Designated RHP Emilio
Vargas for assignment.
HOUSTON ASTROS — Signed free agent OF Steven
Souza to a minor league contract.
TAMPA BAY RAYS — Agreed to terms with RHPs Adrian
De Horta and Yacksel Rios on minor league contracts.
TEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms with OF Delino
DeShields and RHP Sam Gaviglio on minor league con-
tracts.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES — Added Chipper Jones to major
league coaching staff as part-time hitting consultant.
COLORADO ROCKIES — Agreed to terms with SS-2B-OF
Chris Owings on a minor league contract.
Minor League Baseball
Atlantic League
LONG ISLAND DUCKS — Placed LHP David Rosebloom
on reserve/retired list.
BASKETBALL
Women’s National Basketball Association
WASHINGTON MYSTICS — Signed F Alysha Clark as
a free agent.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS — Named Dwaune Jones assistant
director of college scouting and Chandler Henley assis-
tant offensive line coach.
BUFFALO BILLS — Signed PL Jordan Devey to a one-
year contract.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed WR J.J. Nelson and QB
Jalen Morton to reserve/futures contracts.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Placed C Daniel Kilgore and WR
Demarcus Robinson on Covid 19 list.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Promoted Ryan Ficken to special
teams coordinator. Hired Josh Hingst as head strength
and conditioning coach.
TENNESSEE TITANS — Signed DB Maurice Smith to a
futures contract.
Canadian Football League
BC LIONS — Re-signed free agents R Bryan Burnham
and LB Bo Lokombo. Signed LB Isaiah Guzylak-Messam
to a contract extension.
EDMONTON FOOTBALL TEAM — Named Jaime Elizondo
head coach.
TORONTO ARGONAUTS — Signed QB Nick Arbuckle to
a one-year contract.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES — Reassigned Fs Jean-Sebastien Dea
and C.J. Smith from Rochester (AHL) to the taxi squad
and F Jack Quinn to Rochester.
CALGARY FLAMES — Activated C Derek Ryan from mi-
nors from taxi squad.
CAROLINA HURRICANES — Reassigned RW Sheldon
Rempel, D Joey Keane and C Drew Shore to minors
Chicago (AHL).
DALLAS STARS — Reassigned F Tanney Kero to the
taxi squad.
DETROIT RED WINGS — Reassigned C Chase Pearson and
Ds Dennis Cholowski and Gustav Lindstrom to Grand
Rapids Griffins from taxi squad.
EDMONTON OILERS — Waived RW Alex Chiasson.
NEW YORK RANGERS — Recalled D Anthony Bitetto
from taxi squad and F Jonny Brodzinsky from Hartford
Wolf Pack (AHL).
MONTREAL CANADIENS — Activated RW Corey Perry
from minors from taxi squad.
SAN DIEGO GULLS — Assigned F Maxim Golod to Tulsa
(ECHL).
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
DALLAS FC — Released D Bryan Reynolds to A.S. Roma.
LOS ANGELES FC — Signed G Tomas Romero.
ORLANDO CITY SC — Loaned F Daryl Dike to English
Side Barnsley.
USL Championship
USL — Announced addition of Monterey Bay FC.
other side.
Sometimes one color of
floating bait works better than
another. With a two-rod li-
cense, one angler can use yel-
low and chartreuse while side
by side, his buddy could use
flo orange and rainbow.
Trolling, a single angler can
fish for legals on one line with
a Mack’s Lure Trout Spin on
one rod and run a fly with a
sinking line to target bigger
fish. Another angler might fish
jar bait on one rod and cast a
chironomid with another.
When ODFW stocks a lake
with 10,000 legals, they may
also plant 10 or 20 or 50 fish
which look like salmon next to
a limit of 10-inchers. They are
hungry, too. These fish weigh
between 2 and 15 pounds.
Somebody is going to catch
them. With a two-rod license
and a well-placed bait or fly, it
could be you. Sometimes the
difference between catching
a big one and a cookie-cut-
ter hatchery trout is just a few
inches of leader.
e e
Gary Lewis is the host of “Frontier
Unlimited TV” and author of “Fishing
Central Oregon,” “Fishing Mount
Hood Country,” “Hunting Oregon” and
other titles. Contact Gary at www.
GaryLewisOutdoors.com
planned show in a poor Ca-
racas neighborhood before it
could start. Aldana responded
by leading a caravan of several
hundred motorcycles — per-
formers and spectators alike
— in a mad dash across Ca-
racas into the sprawling and
scenic barrio of Petare.
They took over a narrow
street with a steep incline,
dodging cars and buses, for
a sort of pirate performance
free of charge. Then the rain
started and the show was over.