B4 The BulleTin • Friday, FeBruary 5, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD FRIDAY BASKETBALL High school, Oak Hill Academy (VA) vs. Wasatch (UT) High school, Montverde (FL) vs. Sunrise Christian (KS) Women’s college, Arizona at Oregon St. Men’s college, George Mason at Dayton Men’s college, Akron at Kent St. Men’s college, Maryland at Penn St. NBA, Toronto at Brooklyn Men’s college, Monmouth at Manhattan Men’s college, Boise St. at Nevada NBA, Boston at L.A. Clippers GOLF PGA Tour, Phoenix Open European Tour, Saudi International HOCKEY College, Notre Dame at Ohio St. NWHL, Isobel Cup finals SOCCER Premier League, Aston Villa vs. Arsenal Time TV noon ESPNU NFL playoffs 2 p.m. 4 p.m. ESPNU Pac-12, Pac-12 (Ore) 4 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. FS1 4:30 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m. FS1 7 p.m. ESPN noon 1:30 a.m. (Sat) 1:30 p.m. 4 p.m. Golf Golf Big Ten NBCSN 4:25 a.m. (Sat) NBCSN SATURDAY SOCCER Premier League, Newcastle United vs. Southampton Premier League, Fulham vs. West Ham United Mexico Primera Division, Monterrey vs. Pumas UNAM Italian Serie A, Benevento Calcio vs. Sampdoria Premier League, Tottenham Hotspur vs. West Brom BASKETBALL Women’s college, Siena at Manhattan Men’s college, Seton Hall at Connecticut Men’s college, Toledo at Ball St. Men’s college, Alabama at Missouri Men’s college, Iowa St. at Oklahoma Men’s college, Virginia Tech at Miami Men’s college, DePaul at Butler Men’s college, La Salle at Fordham NBA, Portland at New York Men’s college, Kansas at West Virginia Men’s college, St. Bonaventure at Saint Louis Men’s college, Florida at LSU Men’s college, East Carolina at Memphis Men’s college, St. John’s at Providence Men’s college, Wisconsin at Illinois Men’s college, Texas at Oklahoma St. Men’s college, Mississippi St. at South Carolina Men’s college, Washington at Oregon Men’s college, Air Force at UNLV Men’s college, Pittsburgh at Virginia Men’s college, Ole Miss at Auburn Men’s college, Northwestern at Purdue Men’s college, Creighton at Marquette Men’s college, Colorado St. at Wyoming Men’s college, North Carolina at Duke Men’s college, UCF at Tulsa Men’s college, Washington St. at Oregon St. Thursday’s Games utah 112, atlanta 91 Golden State 147, dallas 116 Portland 121, Phila. 105 houston at Memphis, late denver at l.a. lakers, late FOOTBALL 6:55 a.m. 9:30 a.m. NBCSN NBC 7 p.m. FS2 3:25 a.m. (Sun) ESPN2 4 a.m. (Sun) NBCSN 9 a.m. 9 a.m. 9 a.m. 9 a.m. 9 a.m. 9 a.m. 9 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 10 a.m. 11 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. 1:30 p.m. 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 3 p.m. 3 p.m. 3 p.m. ESPNU FOX CBSSN ESPN ESPN2 Root FS1 NBCSN NBCSNW CBS CBSSN ESPN ESPN2 FS1 FOX ABC SEC CBS CBSSN ESPN ESPN2 Big Ten FOX CBSSN ESPN ESPN2 Pac-12, Pac-12 (Ore) Men’s college, Vanderbilt at Georgia 3 p.m. SEC Men’s college, Nebraska at Michigan St. 3:30 p.m. Big Ten Men’s college, Tennessee at Kentucky 5 p.m. ESPN Men’s college, Massachusetts at Rhode Island 5 p.m. ESPN2 Men’s college, Prairie View A&M at Texas Southern 5 p.m. ESPNU Men’s college, Arizona at Colorado 5 p.m. FS1 NBA, Golden State at Dallas 5:30 p.m. ABC Men’s college, UCLA at Southern Cal 7 p.m. ESPN Men’s college, Cal State Bakersfield at UC Irvine 7 p.m. ESPNU Men’s college, Utah St. at Fresno St. 7 p.m. FS1 GOLF PGA Tour, Phoenix Open 10 a.m. Golf PGA Tour, Phoenix Open noon NBC European Tour, Saudi International 12:30 a.m. (Sun) Golf HOCKEY College, Notre Dame at Ohio St. 10:30 a.m. Big Ten College, Nebraska-Omaha at Denver 5 p.m. CBSSN HORSE RACING America’s Day at the Races 11 a.m. FS2 GYMNASTICS Women’s college, Utah at Arizona St. noon Pac-12 Women’s college, Minnesota at Iowa 1 p.m. ESPNU Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations. SUPER BOWL Sunday at Tampa, Fla. Tampa Bay vs. Kansas City, 3:30 p.m. (CBS) Thursday’s Box Score Trail Blazers 121, 76ers 105 America’s Line SUPER BOWL Open Current O/U Sunday 31/2 3 56 Favorite ChieFS Underdog Bucs GOLF PGA Tour Phoenix Open Partial Scores Thursday at Scottsdale, Ariz. Yardage: 7,266; Par: 71 First Round Matthew neSmith 33-30—63 Mark hubbard 32-31—63 nate lashley 31-33—64 Sam Burns 32-32—64 Steve Stricker 33-32—65 Tom hoge 33-33—66 Xander Schauffele 33-33—66 Ted Potter, Jr. 32-34—66 Keegan Bradley 31-35—66 Billy horschel 34-32—66 Kyoung-hoon lee 34-32—66 James hahn, 34-33—67. Carlos Ortiz, 31-36—67. andrew Putnam, 33-34—67. Bo hoag, 32-35—67. Scott Stallings, 36-31—67. Scottie Scheffler, 33-34—67. adam hadwin, 32- 35—67. Michael Kim, 32-35—67. Jordan Spieth, 35-32—67. Matt Jones, 33-35—68. russell Knox, 31-37—68. Brooks Koepka, 35-33—68. J.T. Poston, 33-35—68. Zach Johnson, 35-33—68. Satoshi Kodaira, 34-34—68. Cameron Champ, 34-34—68. Kevin Streelman, 33-35—68. henrik norlander, 35-33—68. harold Varner iii, 34-34—68. John huh, 36- 32—68. Jon rahm, 33-35—68. Matthew Wolff, 32-36—68. ryan armour, 35-33—68. Brendon Todd, 33-35—68. nick hardy, 34-34—68. emiliano Grillo, 34-35—69. Byeong hun an, 35-34—69. daniel Berger, 34-35—69. Max homa, 34-35—69. Patton Kizzire, 33-36—69. richy Werenski, 34-35—69. Pat Perez, 36-33—69. louis Oosthuizen, 34-35—69. Bo Van Pelt, 35- 34—69. Stewart Cink, 33-36—69. Chez reavie, 32-37—69. Corey Conners, 34-35—69. Matt Kuchar, 33-36—69. BASKETBALL NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Phila. 16 7 .696 Milwaukee 13 8 .619 Brooklyn 14 9 .609 Boston 11 9 .550 indiana 12 10 .545 Charlotte 10 12 .455 Cleveland 10 12 .455 atlanta 10 12 .455 new york 10 13 .435 Toronto 9 12 .429 Chicago 8 12 .400 Orlando 8 14 .364 Miami 7 14 .333 Washington 5 13 .278 detroit 5 16 .238 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct utah 17 5 .773 l.a. Clippers 17 6 .739 l.a. lakers 16 6 .727 denver 12 8 .600 Portland 12 9 .571 Memphis 9 7 .563 Phoenix 11 9 .550 Golden State 12 10 .545 San antonio 12 10 .545 houston 10 10 .500 Sacramento 10 11 .476 Oklahoma City 9 11 .450 new Orleans 8 12 .400 dallas 9 14 .391 Minnesota 5 16 .238 Wednesday’s Late Games new Orleans 123, Phoenix 101 Sacramento 116, Boston 111 GB — 2 2 31/2 31/2 51/2 51/2 51/2 6 6 61/2 71/2 8 81/2 10 GB — 1/2 1 4 41/2 5 5 5 5 6 61/2 7 8 81/2 111/2 Chiefs Continued from B3 Nor should players over- looked by every other NFL team in the draft, including those that have won far fewer games, jump at the opportu- nity to sign with Kansas City when it would appear to be a longshot to survive the cut. Yet those are some of the reasons why guys such as line- backer Ben Niemann and de- fensive tackle Tershawn Whar- ton not only signed with the Chiefs but carved out import- ant roles. They are surrounded by some of the NFL’s best players every time they step into the locker room, and that often forces them to raise their play PORTLAND (121) anthony 8-14 3-4 22, Covington 4-9 0-0 9, Kanter 7-14 3-4 17, hood 7-14 0-0 16, Trent Jr. 8-23 4-4 24, Giles iii 2-4 0-0 4, elleby 5-9 4-6 15, Blevins 0-2 0-0 0, Simons 4-9 4-5 14. Totals 45-98 18-23 121. PHILADELPHIA (105) harris 5-14 2-2 12, Korkmaz 5-14 2-2 13, embiid 14-21 9-9 37, Curry 0-1 0-0 0, Green 1-5 0-0 3, Bradley 1-1 0-0 2, howard 1-2 0-2 2, Milton 4-9 4-5 12, Poirier 0-0 0-0 0, Joe 2-3 0-0 6, Maxey 5-8 3-4 15, Thybulle 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 39-81 20-24 105. Portland 28 29 40 24 — 121 Philadelphia 28 29 19 29 — 105 3-Point Goals—Portland 13-31 (Trent Jr. 4-9, anthony 3-4, hood 2-2, Simons 2-7, Covington 1-4, elleby 1-5), Philadelphia 7-27 (Joe 2-3, Maxey 2-4, Thybulle 1-3, Green 1-5, Korkmaz 1-7, harris 0-2, Milton 0-2). Fouled Out—none. Rebounds—Portland 53 (Kanter 18), Phil- adelphia 37 (harris 11). Assists—Portland 17 (anthony 5), Philadelphia 19 (harris 5). Total Fouls—Portland 18, Philadelphia 15. A—0 (20,478) TOP 25 SCORES Thursday’s Games no. 1 Gonzaga 76, Pacific 58 no. 7 Ohio St. 89, no. 8 iowa 85 Women’s college PAC-12 Conference W L Pct Stanford 12 2 .857 arizona 9 2 .818 uCla 8 2 .800 Oregon 9 3 .750 Washington St. 6 6 .500 Southern Cal 5 6 .455 Oregon St. 4 5 .444 arizona St. 4 6 .400 Colorado 4 7 .364 utah 3 10 .231 Washington 1 8 .111 California 0 8 .000 Friday’s Games no. 5 uCla at Washington St., noon no. 9 arizona at Oregon St., 4 p.m. Colorado at no. 6 Stanford, 6 p.m. utah at California, 6 p.m. Southern Cal at Washington, 7 p.m. arizona St. at no. 12 Oregon, ppd. Saturday’s Game uC davis at no. 12 Oregon, 6 p.m. All Games W L Pct 15 2 .882 11 2 .846 10 2 .833 11 3 .786 8 6 .571 7 7 .500 6 5 .545 8 6 .571 6 8 .429 4 10 .286 4 8 .333 0 11 .000 Thursday’s Games Columbus 4, dallas 3 Toronto 7, Vancouver 3 n.y. rangers 4, Washington 2 Ottawa 3, Montreal 2 nashville 6, Florida 5, OT Winnipeg 4, Calgary 1 arizona 4, St. louis 3 Chicago 6, Carolina 4 Buffalo at n.y. islanders, ppd. new Jersey at Pittsburgh, ppd. Minnesota at Colorado, ppd. Friday’s Games Boston at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. detroit at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m. nashville at Florida, 4 p.m. los angeles at Vegas, 7 p.m. San Jose at anaheim, 7 p.m. DEALS Transactions Saturday’s Games Washington at Oregon, 1 p.m. Washington St. at Oregon St., 3 p.m. arizona at Colorado, 5 p.m. no. 21 uCla at Southern Cal, 7 p.m. NHL Glance NHL East GP W L OT Pts GF GA Boston 10 7 1 2 16 34 23 Philadelphia 11 7 2 2 16 38 35 Washington 11 6 2 3 15 40 38 Pittsburgh 10 5 4 1 11 30 37 new Jersey 9 4 3 2 10 23 26 n.y. rangers 10 4 4 2 10 29 28 Buffalo 10 4 4 2 10 30 32 n.y. islanders 9 3 4 2 8 19 24 Central GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 8 6 1 1 13 29 17 Columbus 12 5 4 3 13 31 37 Florida 7 5 0 2 12 27 22 Carolina 8 6 2 0 12 26 19 Chicago 12 4 4 4 12 35 39 dallas 8 5 2 1 11 32 21 nashville 10 5 5 0 10 28 34 detroit 11 2 7 2 6 21 40 West GP W L OT Pts GF GA Colorado 11 7 3 1 15 38 24 St. louis 11 7 3 1 15 39 36 Minnesota 11 6 5 0 12 30 30 Vegas 7 5 1 1 11 23 17 anaheim 11 4 5 2 10 19 28 arizona 10 4 5 1 9 27 29 los angeles 9 3 4 2 8 26 29 San Jose 8 3 5 0 6 22 31 North GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 11 8 2 1 17 40 32 Montreal 11 7 2 2 16 46 30 Winnipeg 11 7 3 1 15 39 32 edmonton 12 6 6 0 12 42 43 Vancouver 14 6 8 0 12 48 55 Calgary 10 4 5 1 9 27 27 Ottawa 11 2 8 1 5 27 50 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. BASEBALL Major League Baseball American League lOS anGeleS anGelS — acquired OF dexter Fowler and cash considerations from St. louis in exchange for a player to be named later or cash considerations. TeXaS ranGerS — agreed to terms with rhP nick Vincent on a minor league contract. TOrOnTO Blue JayS — announced Charlie Montoyo manager, dave hudgens bench coach, Guillermo Martinez hitting coach, Pete Walker pitching coach, Mark Budz- inski first base coach, luis rivera third base coach, Matt Buschmann director of pitching and development and bullpen coach, John Schneider major league coach and Gil Kim player development. National League San FranCiSCO GianTS — agreed to terms with inF Tommy la Stella on a three-year contract. Minor League Baseball Atlantic League lOnG iSland duCKS — Signed C Sal Giardina. American Association of Professional Baseball BOard OF direCTOrS — announced Kane County Cougars as new league member. Frontier League GaTeWay GriZZlieS — Signed lhP andrew Gist. QueBeC CaPiTaleS — Signed OF Jhalan Jackson. Tri-CiTy ValleyCaTS — Signed 3B Carter Maxwell. FOOTBALL National Football League ariZOna CardinalS — Signed QB Cole Mcdonald to a one-year contract. ChiCaGO BearS — named Michael Pitre running backs coach. denVer BrOnCOS — named Chris Cook offensive quality control coach. San FranCiSCO 49erS — Signed lS Taybor Pepper to a two-year extension. Canadian Football League edMOnTOn FOOTBall TeaM — agreed to terms with Ol SirVincent rogers on a one-year contract extension. TOrOnTO arGOnauTS — Signed dl Charleston hughes to a two-year contract. acquired dl Cordorro law in a trade with the Calgary Stampeders. WinniPeG Blue BOMBerS — agreed to terms with r Janarion Grant on a one-year contract extension. HOCKEY National Hockey League COluMBuS Blue JaCKeTS — designated G Cam John- son for assignment to the taxi squad. Promoted G Matiss Kivlenieks to the active roster from the taxi squad. dallaS STarS — Promoted F Jason robertson to the active roster from the taxi squad. FlOrida PanTherS — reassigned d alec rauhauser from Syracuse (ahl) to Greenville (eChl). neW yOrK ranGerS — Promoted d libor hajek to the active roster from the taxi squad. OTTaWa SenaTOrS — Promoted d erik Brannstrom to the active roster from the taxi squad. designated d Braydon Coburn for assignment to the taxi squad. SOCCER Major League Soccer auSTin FC — Signed free agent F aaron Schoenfeld. POrTland TiMBerS — Signed MF eryk Williamson to multi-year contract extension. National Women’s Soccer League ChiCaGO red STarS — Waived d hannah davison. OrlandO Pride — acquired rights to F Jodie Taylor from north Carolina Courage in exchange for d Car- son Pickett. COLLEGE eaST CarOlina — named Colby Bortles director of operations and dennis Wilson strength and condi- tioning coach. to a level not even they thought possible. They are welcomed by a group of players so confident and secure in their own ability that they are willing to pour into them whatever knowl- edge they can. And with Reid in control, they have a coach that has proven over several decades that he can get the best out of his players. The result: 2020 fourth- round draft pick L’Jarius Sneed was among the highest-rated cornerbacks in the league this season, and 2019 sixth- rounder Rashad Fenton has become indispensable along- side him and Sorensen in the defensive backfield. When injuries popped up on the offensive line, the Chiefs plugged a big hole with Nick Allegretti, a seventh-round pick in 2019. They also added depth with Yasir Durant, an undrafted rookie capable of playing several positions. “When they’re looking for guys to add to our roster,” Chiefs offensive line coach Andy Heck said, “they’re look- ing for guys that love football, love to compete. Self-starters. That would be true on the of- fensive line. Guys that are ex- tremely tough, guys that are able to move onto the next play, guys that are physically tough and rugged.” Reid deserves much of the credit, but so does general manager Brett Veach, who has an uncanny ability to unearth talent everywhere from junior colleges and Division II schools to the mighty Southeastern Conference. He needs to keep doing it, too. Like any other NFL team, the Chiefs can only afford to carry the gargantuan contracts of Mahomes and their other pricey stars if they’re able to stock the rest of the roster with inexpensive talent. “Brett does a nice job of knowing what the coaches need to be successful on both sides of the ball,” Reid said. “He lis- tens and weighs out what his scouts believe, what he believes, what the coaches believe, then he comes to a conclusions. He’s been strong on his conviction with certain players that he thought would boost us and gone for it. And it’s worked out.” Friday’s Games Chicago at Orlando, 4 p.m. new Orleans at indiana, 4 p.m. Milwaukee at Cleveland, 4:30 p.m. Toronto at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. utah at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Washington at Miami, 5 p.m. detroit at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Boston at l.a. Clippers, 7 p.m. Men’s college PAC-12 CONFERENCE Conference All Games W L Pct W L Pct uCla 9 1 .900 13 3 .813 Southern Cal 8 2 .800 14 3 .824 Oregon 4 2 .667 9 3 .750 Colorado 7 4 .636 13 5 .722 arizona 7 5 .583 13 5 .722 Stanford 7 5 .583 11 7 .611 Oregon St. 5 5 .500 9 7 .563 utah 5 6 .455 8 7 .533 arizona St. 3 5 .375 6 8 .429 Washington St. 3 7 .300 10 7 .588 Washington 2 9 .182 3 13 .188 California 2 11 .154 7 13 .350 Thursday’s Games utah 73, arizona 58 Stanford 70, California 55 Oregon St. 91, Washington 71 Washington St. at Oregon, late arizona St. at Colorado, ppd. Thursday’s Box Score Oregon St. 91, Washington 71 WASHINGTON (3-13) Brooks 0-1 0-0 0, roberts 3-3 0-0 6, Bey 2-6 8-8 13, Green 1-7 0-0 2, Stevenson 5-11 4-4 14, Tsohonis 8-13 4-4 22, Wright 3-5 0-0 8, Bajema 1-3 4-6 6, Sorn 0-2 0-0 0, Pryor 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 23-51 20-22 71. OREGON ST. (9-7) alatishe 7-13 1-2 15, Silva 6-7 2-2 14, lucas 6-12 2-3 19, reichle 4-9 7-7 17, Thompson 6-12 1-1 16, Calloo 2-6 2-2 7, Tucker 0-1 1-2 1, hunt 0-1 0-0 0, Silver 0-2 0-0 0, andela 1-1 0-0 2, Franklin 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 32- 65 16-19 91. Halftime —Oregon St. 47-35. 3-Point Goals —Wash- ington 5-20 (Wright 2-3, Tsohonis 2-4, Bey 1-2, Bajema 0-2, Green 0-4, Stevenson 0-5), Oregon St. 11-24 (lucas 5-9, Thompson 3-7, reichle 2-4, Calloo 1-2, Silver 0-2). Fouled Out —Silva. Rebounds —Washington 30 (Sorn 6), Oregon St. 27 (alatishe 11). Assists —Washington 10 (Bey, Green, Stevenson 2), Oregon St. 25 (reichle 8). Total Fouls —Washington 17, Oregon St. 21. TOP 25 SCORES Thursdays Games no. 1 louisville 97, Boston College 68 no. 2 South Carolina 77, auburn 58 no. 7 Texas a&M 54,. lSu 41 no. 8 Baylor 83, Kansas 50 no. 10 Maryland 84, Wisconsin 48 no. 11 Ohio St. 92, iowa 87 no. 13 Michigan vs. Minnesota, ppd. Mississippi 72, no. 15 Kentucky 60 no. 16 arkansas 85, Missouri 80 no. 17 indiana vs. rutgers, ppd. no. 18 Tennessee at no. 24 Mississippi St., ppd. no. 20 dePaul at Seton hall, ppd. no. 25 Georgia 83, alabama 76, OT HOCKEY NHL SPORTS BRIEFING BASKETBALL NHL Short-handed Blazers rout Sixers 121-105 — Already without one All-Star, the 76ers held their collective breath as another left Thursday’s game in the first quarter after land- ing awkwardly on his right knee. Yet Joel Embiid’s departure was brief before his dominant return. His teammates couldn’t follow his lead. Embiid scored 37 points, but the Sixers (16-7) lost, 121-105, to an undermanned Portland Trail Blazers team in Philadelphia. The Blazers (12-9) pulled away with a 40-19 third quarter after the teams were tied 57-57 at halftime. Trail Blazers’ Damian Lillard missed his first game of the season with an abdominal strain and C.J. McCollum was out for his eighth straight game with a left foot fracture for the Blazers. Portland only had nine available players, but they got dou- ble-digit scoring from seven of them, including 24 from Gary Trent Jr. and 22 from Carmelo Anthony. Enes Kanter had a double-double with 17 points and 18 rebounds. Continued from B3 GOLF NeSmith, Hubbart early leaders at Phoenix Open — Co-leader Matthew NeSmith nearly made a hole-in-one on the par-3 16th — and barely got a reaction from the few fans. Xander Schauffele flubbed a chip — and couldn’t help but hear a surprised spectator’s reaction. With attendance capped at about 5,000 at sunny TPC Scottsdale — a fraction of the usual turnout but the most for a PGA Tour event since the on- set of the COVID-19 pandemic — the Phoenix Open began Thursday with some very different sights and sounds. Ne- Smith started on No. 10, and went through 16 in the morning before many of the 2,000 allowed fans made their way to the stadium hole. NeSmith and Mark Hubbard topped the leader- board at 8-under 63, a stroke ahead of fellow morning starters Nate Lashley and Sam Burns, and two in front of 53-year-old Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker. Hubbard had his lowest score on the PGA Tour, and NeSmith matched his career low. — Bulletin wire reports The Wild added another player to the list Thursday to get up to seven total and the Sabres said 61-year-old coach Ralph Krueger had tested pos- itive and will enter virus pro- tocol immediately. Vegas had three coaches in the protocol last week. “The league is reacting to what’s happening right now, and it’s normal,” Pittsburgh defenseman Kris Letang said. “They’re trying to find ways to make it safer and to just act and try and find ways that we can still get our stuff done but in different ways.” So far, 22 games have been postponed affecting 16 of the league’s 24 U.S.-based teams. Only one of the 40 players currently on the COVID list is from a Canadian team, and that is because Pierre-Luc Du- bois is in quarantine after a trade from Columbus to Win- nipeg. The Jets’ union represen- tative, Andrew Copp, said he understands some of the changes but is particularly un- happy with later arrivals on game day, which he believes will be challenged in the name “(The league is) trying to find ways to make it safer and to just act and try and find ways that we can still get our stuff done but in different ways.” — Kris Letang, Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Bruce Bennett/Pool photo via AP Due to updated COVID-19 protocols, the glass has been removed from behind the team benches as workers take measurements for addi- tional safety methods prior to a game between the Capitals and the Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Thursday in New York. of preventing injuries. “It’s getting your mind right, it’s getting your body right to put out the best possible prod- uct for the fans and trying to lower injury as much as possi- ble,” Copp said. “This is pretty much the only place we’re al- lowed to come. … I don’t see what the difference is between a 5:15 and 4:15 entrance for guys.” After completing last season in quarantined bubbles in To- ronto and Edmonton, Alberta, the NHL planned for 2021 out- side a bubble with 12 different protocol documents spanning 213 pages. The rules call for masks everywhere at team fa- cilities, including locker rooms, and coaches and backup goal- tenders wearing them on the bench. Teams were also shuf- fled into four divisions and are playing only division foes over a shortened 56-game regular season schedule to limit travel. Being on the road at all may be the biggest concern. “Because you are going in and out of hotel lobbies and elevators with other people around, it’s impossible to feel as safe,” Bowness said. “You’ve got strangers on the elevator. In Carolina the other day when we were getting on to an ele- vator, a couple got off and the woman did not have a mask on, so we don’t know, was she coughing in the elevator? Was she sneezing? Who knows?” Players, coaches and staff are also limited to the hotel and rink on the road. “I think the protocols are appropriate,” Philadelphia gen- eral manager Chuck Fletcher said Tuesday. “You can do ev- erything right and still contract COVID. I think we’re all trying to be careful. I think the play- ers recognize how fortunate we are to be back playing, playing games, competing for a Stanley Cup and earning a paycheck.”