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

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    B4 The BulleTin • Friday, FeBruary 12, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
FRIDAY
BASKETBALL
Women’s college, Saint Joseph’s at Fordham
NBA G League,
Oklahoma City Blue vs. G League Ignite
Women’s college, Connecticut at Georgetown
Men’s college, St. Bonaventure at VCU
Men’s college, Akron at Miami (Ohio)
NBA, New Orleans at Dallas
Men’s college, Illinois at Nebraska
Men’s college, Detroit Mercy at Cleveland St.
Women’s college, Washington St. at Arizona
NBA, Memphis at L.A. Lakers
NBA, Cleveland at Portland
SOCCER
FA Women’s Super League,
Manchester City vs. Manchester United
Mexico Primera Division, Tijuana vs. León
Premier League, Leicester City vs. Liverpool
MOTORSPORTS
NASCAR Truck Series, Daytona qualifying
NASCAR Xfinity Series, Daytona practice
NASCAR Truck Series, Daytona
GOLF
PGA Tour, Pebble Beach Pro-Am
GYMNASTICS
Women’s college, Georgia at Alabama
Women’s college, LSU at Florida
Women’s college, Missouri at Auburn
TENNIS
Australian Open
Australian Open
Phillip Island Trophy
Australian Open
WRESTLING
College, Ohio St. at Michigan
SAILING
Prada Cup
BASEBALL
Australian Baseball League finals, teams TBD
Time
9 a.m.
noon
3 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
TV
NBCSN
ESPNU
CBSSN
ESPN2
ESPNU
ESPN
Big Ten
ESPNU
Pac-12
ESPN
NBCSNW
11 a.m.
NBCSN
7 p.m.
FS2
4:25 a.m. (Sat) NBCSN
noon
1:30 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
FS1
FS1
FS1
noon
Golf
3 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
SEC
SEC
SEC
4 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
midnight
Tennis
ESPN2
Tennis
ESPN2
4 p.m.
Big Ten
7 p.m.
NBCSN
8 p.m.
Root
6:30 a.m.
7:30 a.m.
8 a.m.
9 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
2 p.m.
FS2
FS2
FS1
FS1
FS1
FS1
6:55 a.m.
NBCSN
9:30 a.m.
NBC
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
noon
12:30 p.m.
12:30 p.m.
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
2 p.m.
2 p.m.
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
9 p.m.
Big Ten
FOX
ESPN
ESPN2
ESPNU
Root
CBS
SEC
CBSSN
ESPN
ESPN2
FOX
ABC
CBSSN
SEC
ESPN
ESPN2
FOX
Big Ten
NBCSNW
CBSSN
ESPN
ESPN2
SEC
Root
Pac-12
CBSSN
ESPNU
FS1
ABC
ESPNU
Pac-12
FS1
ESPNU
10 a.m.
noon
Golf
CBS
11 a.m.
Big Ten
11:30 a.m.
FS2
1 p.m.
NBC
4 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
midnight
Tennis
ESPN2
Tennis
ESPN2
7 p.m.
ESPN
Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible
for late changes made by TV stations.
Start
Continued from B3
“That’s the challenge as a
coach, right?” Holtmann said
during that stretch. “You’re
throwing him in midyear. …
Now you’re saying, ‘Hey, hop
in, play 15, 10 minutes in the
best league in the country. And
oh by the way, you’re also going
to play one of the most import-
ant positions on the floor, the
point guard position. Learn our
defensive system, learn our of-
fensive system and, by the way,
BASKETBALL
PGA Tour
Men’s college
Pebble Beach Pro-Am Partial Scores
Thursday at Pebble Beach, Calif.
Pebble Beach Course: Yardage, 6,958; Par, 71
Spyglass Hill Course: Yardage, 6,858; Par, 72
First Round
Patrick Cantlay
29-33—62
akay Bhatia
31-33—64
henrik norlander
32-32—64
nate laley
30-35—65
Jordan Spieth
34-31—65
Mark hubbard
31-35—66
russell Knox
31-35—66
Will Gordon
34-32—66
Brian Stuard
32-34—66
Tom lewis
33-33—66
Cameron Tringale, 33-34—67. Brian harman, 32-35—
67. Matt Jones, 32-35—67. Cameron Percy, 33-34—67.
Michael Thompson, 35-32—67. hunter Mahan, 34-33—
67. Tom hoge, 34-33—67. Vaughn Taylor, 34-33—67. Tim
Wilkinson, 33-34—67. daniel Berger, 32-35—67. Bran-
don hagy, 34-33—67.
Bronson Burgoon, 37-31—68. Jim herman, 36-32—
68. Paul Casey, 34-34—68. Chesson hadley, 32-36—68.
Vincent Whaley, 33-35—68. Ben Taylor, 34-34—68. Mav-
erick Mcnealy, 33-35—68. Si Woo Kim, 33-35—68. Jason
dufner, 33-35—68. ryan Moore, 32-36—68.
Jo Teater, 35-34—69. Charley hoffman, 32-37—69.
Scott Brown, 32-37—69. doug Ghim, 36-33—69. Chris
Kirk, 36-33—69. Scott Piercy, 33-36—69. Max homa, 34-
35—69. Francesco Molinari, 34-35—69. harold Varner iii,
33-36—69. Peter uihlein, 32-37—69.
Kevin Streelman, 36-33—69. Scott Stallings, 34-35—
69. nick Taylor, 35-34—69. Patton Kizzire, 35-34—69.
luke donald, 35-34—69. Brendan Steele, 34-35—69.
Jason day, 35-34—69. Pat Perez, 34-35—69. Will Zalato-
ris, 37-32—69. d.J. Trahan, 35-34—69. Mark anderson,
34-35—69.
rory Sabbatini, 34-36—70. John Senden, 34-36—70.
C.T. Pan, 35-35—70. hank lebioda, 34-36—70. aaron
Baddeley, 36-34—70. Brian Gay, 35-35—70. ryan ar-
mour, 33-37—70. Kyle Stanley, 34-36—70. Bill haas,
33-37—70.
PAC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L Pct W L Pct
Southern Cal
9 2 .818 15 3 .833
uCla
9 2 .818 13 4 .765
Colorado
10 4 .714 16 5 .762
Oregon
5 3 .625 10 4 .714
arizona
8 6 .571 14 6 .700
Stanford
8 6 .571 12 8 .600
utah
6 6 .500 9 7 .562
Oregon St.
6 7 .462 10 9 .526
arizona St.
3 5 .375 6 8 .429
Washington St. 4 8 .333 11 8 .579
Washington
2 10 .167 3 14 .176
California
2 13 .133 7 15 .318
Thursday’s Games
utah 76, California 75
Colorado 69, Stanford 51
arizona 70, Oregon St. 61
Oregon at arizona St., late
no. 20 Southern Cal at Washington, late
uCla at Washington St., late
TENNIS
Australian Open
SATURDAY
MOTORSPORTS
NASCAR Cup Series, Daytona 500 practice
NASCAR Xfinity Series, Daytona qualifying
NASCAR Xfinity Series, Daytona qualifying
NASCAR Cup Series, Daytona 500 practice
ARCA Series, Daytona
NASCAR Xfinity Series, Daytona
SOCCER
Premier League, Crystal Palace vs. Burnley
Premier League,
Manchester City vs. Tottenham Hotspur
BASKETBALL
Women’s college, Michigan St. at Penn St.
Men’s college, Connecticut at Xavier
Men’s college, Indiana at Ohio St.
Men’s college, Loyola-Chicago at Drake
Men’s college, Kansas St. at Oklahoma St.
Men’s college, Wake Forest at Florida St.
Men’s college, Auburn at Kentucky
Men’s college, Vanderbilt at Mississippi St.
Men’s college, Butler at Georgetown
Men’s college, Tennessee at LSU
Men’s college, Oregon at Arizona
Men’s college, Iowa at Michigan St.
Men’s college, Kansas at Iowa St.
Men’s college, Saint Louis at Fordham
Men’s college, Georgia at Alabama
Men’s college, Duke at NC State
Men’s college, Arkansas at Missouri
Men’s college, Villanova at Creighton
Men’s college, Northwestern at Rutgers
Women’s college, San Francisco at Portland
Men’s college, Rice at Western Kentucky
Men’s college, North Carolina at Virginia
Men’s college, Gonzaga at San Francisco
Men’s college, Ole Miss at South Carolina
Men’s college, Pacific at Loyola Marymount
Men’s college, UCLA at Washington
Men’s college, Saint Mary’s (Calif.) at Pepperdine
Men’s college, USC at Washington St.
Men’s college, Providence at DePaul
NBA, Brooklyn at Golden State
Men’s college, Colorado at California
Men’s college, Utah at Stanford
Men’s college, UNLV at Boise St.
Men’s college, UC Irvine at UC Riverside
GOLF
PGA Tour, Pebble Beach Pro-Am
PGA Tour, Pebble Beach Pro-Am
HOCKEY
College, Wisconsin at Michigan
HORSE RACING
America’s Day at the Races
TRACK AND FIELD
New Balance Indoor Grand Prix
TENNIS
Australian Open
Australian Open
Phillip Island Trophy
Australian Open
BOXING
Joe Smith Jr. vs. Maxim Vlasov
GOLF
don’t overthink, just play.’ That’s
a lot to ask of a young man.”
Dayton has found a major
boost in Amzil, a 6-10 forward
from Finland. The November
signee joined the Flyers in De-
cember, with coach Anthony
Grant saying he had little prac-
tice time before his Dec. 30 de-
but against La Salle.
“The process of trying to get
him acclimated probably re-
ally started more similar to an
NBA-type deal,” Grant said,
“where you give him some ba-
sic things and say, ’Hey, here’s
Thursday at Melbourne, Australia
(Seedings in parentheses)
MEN
Second Round — andrey rublev (7), russia, def. Thia-
go Monteiro, Brazil, 6-4, 6-4, 7-6 (8). Feliciano lopez, Spain,
def. lorenzo Sonego (31), italy, 5-7, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-4. Karen
Khachanov (19), russia, def. ricardas Berankis, lithuania,
6-2, 6-4, 6-4. Casper ruud (24), norway, def. Tommy Paul,
united States, 3-6, 6-2, 6-4, 7-5. lloyd harris, South africa,
def. alexei Popyrin, australia, 6-2, 1-6, 6-3, 6-7 (5), 6-3.
Mikael ymer, Sweden, def. Carlos alcaraz Garfia, Spain,
2-6, 6-4, 6-4, 7-6 (5). Filip Krajinovic (28), Serbia, def. Pablo
andujar, Spain, 6-2, 5-7, 6-1, 6-4. Mackenzie Mcdonald,
united States, def. Borna Coric (22), Croatia, 6-4, 6-2, 4-6,
6-4. radu albot, Moldova, def. Christopher O’Connell,
australia, 6-2, 7-5, 7-6 (8). Matteo Berrettini (9), italy, def.
Tomas Machac, Czech republic, 6-3, 6-2, 4-6, 6-3.
Stefanos Tsitsipas (5), Greece, def. Thanasi Kokkinakis,
australia, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-1, 6-7 (5), 6-4. Fabio Fognini (16),
italy, def. Salvatore Caruso, italy, 4-6, 6-2, 2-6, 6-3, 7-6
(12). alex de Minaur (21), australia, def. Pablo Cuevas,
uruguay, 6-3, 6-3, 7-5. daniil Medvedev (4), russia, def.
roberto Carballes Baena, Spain, 6-2, 7-5, 6-1. rafael na-
dal (2), Spain, def. Michael Mmoh, united States, 6-1, 6-4,
6-2. Cameron norrie, Britain, def. roman Safiullin, russia,
3-6, 7-5, 6-3, 7-6 (3).
WOMEN
Second Round — Shelby rogers, united States, def.
Olga danilovic, Serbia, 6-2, 6-3. Karolina Muchova (25),
Czech republic, def. Mona Barthel, Germany, 6-4, 6-1.
Karolina Pliskova (6), Czech republic, def. danielle Col-
lins, united States, 7-5, 6-2. elise Mertens (18), Belgium,
def. Zhu lin, China, 7-6 (8), 6-1. Belinda Bencic (11), Swit-
zerland, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova, russia, 7-5, 2-6, 6-4.
ashleigh Barty (1), australia, def. daria Gavrilova, aus-
tralia, 6-1, 7-6 (7). yulia Putintseva (26), Kazakhstan, def.
alison van uytvanck, Belgium, 6-4, 1-6, 6-2. Kaia Kanepi,
estonia, def. Sofia Kenin (4), united States, 6-3, 6-2. don-
na Vekic (28), Croatia, def. nadia Podoroska, argentina,
6-2, 6-2. ekaterina alexandrova (29), russia, def. Barbora
Krejcikova, Czech republic, 6-3, 7-6 (4).
Jennifer Brady (22), united States, def. Madison Bren-
gle, united States, 6-1, 6-2. anett Kontaveit (21), estonia,
def. heather Watson, Britain, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-2. Kaja Juvan,
Slovenia, def. Mayar Sherif, egypt, 3-6, 7-6 (2), 6-3. Kristina
Mladenovic, France, def. nao hibino, Japan, 7-5, 6-1. elina
Svitolina (5), ukraine, def. Coco Gauff, united States, 6-4,
6-3. Jessica Pegula, united States, def. Sam Stosur, aus-
tralia, 6-0, 6-1.
Thursday’s Box Score
Arizona 70, Oregon St. 61
OREGON ST. (10-9)
alatishe 5-10 0-2 10, Silva 0-1 0-2 0, lucas 5-12 1-1 13,
reichle 2-5 0-0 5, Thompson 5-12 2-2 13, hunt 5-10 0-0
12, Tucker 1-4 1-1 3, Calloo 1-6 2-2 5, andela 0-2 0-0 0,
Silver 0-1 0-0 0, Franklin 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 24-64 6-10 61.
ARIZONA (14-6)
a.Tubelis 3-7 0-0 6, Koloko 2-5 5-6 9, akinjo 5-12 2-2 14,
Kriisa 2-7 2-2 8, Mathurin 5-11 1-2 14, T.Brown 1-4 5-8 7,
J.Brown 2-4 5-10 9, Terry 0-0 3-4 3. Totals 20-50 23-34 70.
Halftime —arizona 38-30. 3-Point Goals —Oregon
St. 7-23 (hunt 2-3, lucas 2-8, Calloo 1-3, Thompson
1-3, reichle 1-4, Franklin 0-1, Silver 0-1), arizona 7-18
(Mathurin 3-6, akinjo 2-4, Kriisa 2-6, T.Brown 0-1,
a.Tubelis 0-1). Fouled Out —Tucker. Rebounds —Or-
egon St. 31 (alatishe 6), arizona 45 (a.Tubelis 10). As-
sists —Oregon St. 8 (reichle 3), arizona 15 (T.Brown 6).
Total Fouls —Oregon St. 26, arizona 12.
Saturday’s Games
Oregon at arizona, 11 a.m.
uCla at Washington, 4:30 p.m.
no. 20 Southern Cal at Washington St., 5 p.m.
Colorado at California, 7 p.m.
utah at Stanford, 7 p.m.
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
18
7
.720
16
9
.640
15
12
.556
13
11
.542
13
13
.500
12
14
.462
12
14
.462
11
13
.458
11
14
.440
11
15
.423
10
14
.417
10
16
.385
9
16
.360
6
16
.273
6
19
.240
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
utah
20
5
.800
l.a. lakers
20
6
.769
l.a. Clippers
18
8
.692
Phoenix
15
9
.625
Portland
13
10
.565
San antonio
14
11
.560
denver
13
11
.542
Golden State
13
12
.520
Memphis
10
10
.500
Sacramento
12
12
.500
dallas
12
14
.462
new Orleans
11
13
.458
houston
11
14
.440
Oklahoma City
10
14
.417
Minnesota
6
19
.240
Wednesday’s Late Games
Phoenix 125, Milwaukee 124
l.a. lakers 114, Oklahoma City 113, OT
Thursday’s Games
Boston 120, Toronto 106
Miami 101, houston 94
indiana 111, detroit 95
Orlando at Golden State, late
Phila. at Portland, late
Friday’s Games
detroit at Boston, 4 p.m.
Minnesota at Charlotte, 4 p.m.
new york at Washington, 4 p.m.
new Orleans at dallas, 4:30 p.m.
San antonio at atlanta, 4:30 p.m.
l.a. Clippers at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Milwaukee at utah, 6 p.m.
Oklahoma City at denver, 6 p.m.
Cleveland at Portland, 7 p.m.
Memphis at l.a. lakers, 7 p.m.
Orlando at Sacramento, 7 p.m.
Phila.
Milwaukee
Brooklyn
Boston
indiana
Toronto
Charlotte
atlanta
Miami
new york
Chicago
Cleveland
Orlando
Washington
detroit
TOP 25 SCORES
Thursday’s Games
no. 1 Gonzaga at Santa Clara, ppd.
no. 3 Michigan vs. no. 6 illinois, ppd.
Minnesota 71, no. 24 Purdue 68
Women’s college
PAC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L Pct W L Pct
Stanford
14 2 .875 17 2 .895
arizona
10 2 .833 12 2 .857
uCla
9 3 .750 11 3 .786
Oregon
9 4 .692 12 4 .750
Southern Cal
7 6 .538 9 7 .562
Washington St. 7 7 .500 9 7 .562
Oregon St.
4 5 .444 6 5 .545
arizona St.
4 6 .400 9 6 .600
Colorado
5 8 .385 7 9 .438
utah
4 11 .267 5 11 .312
Washington
1 10 .091 4 10 .286
California
0 10 .000 0 13 .000
Friday’s Games
no. 8 uCla at utah, 10 a.m.
California at no. 11 Oregon, ppd.
Washington at arizona St., 4 p.m.
Southern Cal at Colorado, 5 p.m.
Washington St. at no. 10 arizona, 6 p.m.
Saturday’s Game
no. 5 Stanford at Oregon St., 6 p.m.
TOP 25 SCORES
Thursday’s Games
no. 1 South Carolina 77, Missouri 62
no. 3 louisville 85, Georgia Tech 70
no. 4 nC State 86, Clemson 65
no. 6 Texas a&M at Vanderbilt, ccd.
no. 12 Michigan 62, Purdue 49
no. 20 Kentucky 71, no. 16 Tennessee 56
no. 17 Gonzaga 79, San Francisco 66
no. 18 arkansas vs. Mississippi St., late
rutgers 70, no. 21 northwestern 54
no. 24 Georgia 74, auburn 54
GB
—
2
4
4½
5½
6½
6½
6½
7
7½
7½
8½
9
10½
12
GB
—
½
2½
4½
6
6
6½
7
7½
7½
8½
8½
9
9½
14
HOCKEY
NHL
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Boston
12 9 1 2 20 39 26
Philadelphia 13 8 3 2 18 46 41
Washington 12 6 3 3 15 44 45
n.y. islanders 12 5 4 3 13 28 31
Pittsburgh
12 6 5 1 13 37 44
n.y. rangers 12 4 5 3 11 31 33
new Jersey
9 4 3 2 10 23 26
Buffalo
10 4 4 2 10 30 32
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Tampa Bay
12 9 2 1 19 44 25
Florida
11 8 1 2 18 37 30
Chicago
14 6 4 4 16 39 41
Columbus
14 6 5 3 15 39 45
Carolina
10 7 3 0 14 34 27
dallas
10 5 2 3 13 34 25
nashville
13 5 8 0 10 31 46
detroit
14 3 9 2
8 27 46
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Vegas
10 8 1 1 17 37 26
St. louis
13 7 4 2 16 43 43
Colorado
11 7 3 1 15 38 24
arizona
12 6 5 1 13 34 33
anaheim
14 5 6 3 13 29 39
Minnesota
11 6 5 0 12 30 30
San Jose
11 5 5 1 11 32 40
los angeles 12 3 6 3
9 34 42
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Toronto
14 11 2 1 23 52 36
Montreal
13 8 3 2 18 50 35
edmonton
15 8 7 0 16 52 52
Winnipeg
12 7 4 1 15 41 35
Calgary
12 6 5 1 13 36 33
Vancouver
16 6 10 0 12 50 63
Ottawa
14 2 11 1
5 31 58
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.
Thursday’s Games
Florida 5, Tampa Bay 2
Pittsburgh 4, n.y. islanders 3, SO
new Jersey at Philadelphia, ppd.
Washington at Buffalo, ppd.
Columbus at Chicago, 5 p.m.
detroit at nashville, 5 p.m.
edmonton at Montreal, 5 p.m.
Ottawa at Winnipeg, 5 p.m.
St. louis at Minnesota, ppd.
Carolina at dallas, 5:30 p.m.
arizona at Colorado, ppd.
anaheim at Vegas, late
Calgary at Vancouver, late
San Jose at los angeles, late
Friday’s Games
Boston at n.y. rangers, 4 p.m.
St. louis at arizona, 6 p.m.
DEALS
Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
American League
lOS anGeleS anGelS — agreed to terms with inF
Phil Gosselin, OF Jon Jay and OF Juan lagares on minor
league contracts.
TOrOnTO Blue JayS — Claimed rhP Joel Payamps
off waivers from Boston. designated rhP Shun yama-
guchi for assignment. agreed to terms with rhP david
Phelps on a one-year contract. designated OF derek
Fisher for assignment.
National League
CinCinnaTi redS — agreed to terms with rhP Shane
Carle on a minor league contract.
lOS anGeleS dOdGerS — agreed to terms with
rhP Walker Buehler on a two-year contract. agreed to
terms with rhP Trevor Bauer on a three-year contract.
designated rhP Josh Sborz for assignment.
neW yOrK MeTS — agreed to terms with inF Jona-
than Villar on a one-year contract. designated rhP Brad
Brach for assignment.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
deTrOiT liOnS — Signed Te alize Mack to a reserve/
futures contract.
JaCKSOnVille JaGuarS — named Charlie Strong
assistant head coach/inside linebacker coach, darrel
Bevell offensive coach, Joe Cullen defensive coach, Brian
Schneider special teams coordinator, Brian Schotten-
heimer quarterback coach/passing game coordinator,
Tyler Bowen tight-end coach, Sanjay lal wide receiver
coach, Bernie Parmalee running back coach, George
Warhop offensive line coach, Todd Washington assistant
offensive line coach, Quinton Ganther offensive quality
control coach, Will harriger offensive assistant coach,
Carlos Polk special team assistant coach, Chris ash safe-
ties coach, Tim Walton cornerback coach, Joe danna
nickelback coach, Tosh lupoi defensive line coach, Ster-
ling lucan assistant defensive line coach, Zach Orr out-
side linebacker coach, Tony Gilbert assistant linebacker
coach, Patrick reilly defensive quality control coach and
Bob Sutton senior defensive assistant coach.
lOS anGeleS CharGerS — named derrick ansley
secondary coach, Tom donatell assistant secondary
coach, Shaun Sarrett assistant offensive line coach, Giff
Smith defensive line coach, Chris Beatty wide receivers
coach, derrick Foster running back coach, dan Shamash
offensive assistant coach, John Timu alex G. Spanos
coaching fellow, Mayur Chaudhari assistant special
teams coach, Kevin Koger tight end coach, isaac Shew-
maker defensive quality control coach, Chandler Whit-
mer offensive quality control coach, Shane day passing
game coordinator/quarterback coach, Jay rodgers run-
ning back coordinator/outside linebacker coach, Frank
Smith run game coordinator/offensive line coach and
Michael Wilhoite linebacker coach.
San FranCiSCO 49erS — named Butch Barry
assistant offensive line coach, James Bettcher senior
defensive assistant/run game specialist, Chris Foerster
changed to offensive line coach, leonard hankerson
offensive quality control coach, Matthew harper assis-
tant special teams coach, andrew hayes-Stoker defen-
sive quality control coach, Johnny holland changed to
linebacker coach, Klay Kubiak defensive quality control
coach, august Mangin special teams quality control
coach, rich Scangarello quarterback coach, Bobby Slow-
ik changed to offensive passing game specialist, darryl
Tapp assistant defensive line coach and Cory undlin de-
fensive pass game specialist/secondary coach. Signed S
Kai nacua to a one-year contract extension.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ariZOna COyOTeS — announced the termination
of the contract for Steve Sullivan assistant general
manager and executive vice president of hockey op-
erations.
BuFFalO SaBreS — reassigned F C.J. Smith from
rochester (ahl) to minor league taxi squad and G
dustin Tokarski to rochester (ahl).
COLLEGE
WiSCOnSin uniVerSiTy — named hank Poteat
football cornerback coach.
SPORTS BRIEFING
GOLF
SKIING
Cantlay grabs early lead at Pebble Beach — Patrick Cant-
lay looked just as good Thursday at Pebble Beach as the last
round he played 18 days ago. Jordan Spieth looked as good as his
last tournament, too. Coming off a 61 in the California desert
followed by at two-week break, Cantlay opened with seven bird-
ies in eight holes and closed with two straight birdies for a 10-un-
der 62. That tied the course record at Pebble Beach last matched
24 years ago by David Duval, and it gave Cantlay a two-shot lead
in the Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Henrik Norlander and 19-year-old
Akshay Bhatia were at 64. Bhatia hit all 18 of the small greens
at Pebble Beach, the first player to do that at Pebble since Ryan
Palmer in 2008. Spieth moved another round closer to some kind
of a groove. He tied for fourth last week in the Phoenix Open. He
holed out a wedge on the 10th hole for eagle and finished with
three birdies over his last five holes for a 65.
Shiffrin claims women’s super-G bronze behind Swiss
skiers; Kriechmayr tops men’s field — Lara Gut-Behrami
NHL
dashed to gold ahead of Swiss teammate Corinne Suter in a race
that saw Mikaela Shiffrin take bronze in the American’s first
speed race in more than a year. The trio was made to wait to get
their awards until after the subsequent men’s super-G, which
was won by Vincent Kriechmayr of Austria. Romed Baumann
of Germany finished 0.07 seconds behind for silver, and France’s
Alexis Pinturault was third, 0.38 behind. Both races took place
without fans amid strict anti-coronavirus measures, which also
prevented officials from handing over the medals and trophies.
Gut-Behrami mastered the sun-bathed Olympia delle Tofane
course to finally win the only medal missing from her storied ca-
reer, which includes six medals from previous major events.
— Bulletin wire reports
“It’s competitive and it’s in-
tense,” Canucks rookie Adam
Gaudette said. “It’s a lot of fun
playing in these important,
competitive games. Every se-
ries means something. That’s
the way it’s going to be all year.”
A couple of title-winning
coaches, Washington’s Peter
Laviolette and Columbus’ John
Tortorella, haven’t noticed their
games getting out of control yet.
Edmonton’s Zach Kassian de-
scribed it early on as a “feeling
out process” between division
rivals and expects it to be a slow
build from now through May.
Of course, certain events in
games can cause spikes of ha-
tred.
The Canadiens were none
too pleased with a hit by Ca-
nucks defenseman Tyler Myers
on Joel Armia last month, and
Montreal coach Claude Julien
added some grit to his lineup
the next game against Vancou-
ver by inserting Corey Perry.
Garland mentioned a hit on
teammate Nick Schmaltz that
got Coyotes players’ backs up.
And the next St. Louis-Vegas
game could feature some fire-
works after Golden Knights
captain Mark Stone injured Ty-
ler Bozak with a heavy hit.
“Shots that happened to
Bozy or other guys like that,
sometimes that can carry over,”
Perron said.
Arizona coach Rick Tocchet
said he sees a carryover from
one game to the next against
the same opponent, just like
a playoff series. The roller
coaster ride also shakes up
emotions.
“One team’s happy, one
team’s unhappy,” Tocchet said.
“The team that’s happy, can you
stay even keel in the moment?
And the team that’s pissed, are
they going to do something
about it? That’s really why the
chippiness comes out.”
Nashville and Tampa Bay
weren’t even in the same con-
ference until this season, but
that didn’t stop them from
combining for 60 penalty min-
utes in back-to-back games.
Arizona and St. Louis didn’t
play much in previous years
either, but it’s fair to call it a ri-
valry, even if it ends up being
temporary.
“It’s like anything,” Garland
said. “You spend time around
somebody too long, you get
aggravated with them, and
you play someone seven times,
you’ll get aggravated with
them, too.”
what we’ll do and here’s how
you’ll fit in and then we’ll try to
teach you as you go on.”
Amzil has been a quick
learner. He had 22 points and
seven rebounds in 36 minutes
for his debut and has started all
12 of his games. He’s averaging
10.3 points and 5.3 rebounds,
and on Monday was named
Atlantic 10 rookie of the week
for the third time.
“I’d say it’s been a great help
for me,” Amzil said. “I don’t
know if it’s for everybody, but
for me, I think it’s helping me.”
For most midyear enroll-
ees, the production has been
modest, with strong perfor-
mances more of a bonus for
their teams.
Oregon got a boost from
6-11 center Franck Kepnang
with season-highs of eight
points in 15 minutes in Satur-
day’s win against Washington.
That same day in the Pac-12,
6-9 forward Mac Etienne made
his UCLA debut with eight
points and five rebounds in 28
minutes in a loss to USC.
USC has its own midyear
addition in guard Reese Wa-
ters, though he has seen limited
work (11 minutes in his first
three games), much like Gon-
zaga forward Ben Gregg (25
minutes in nine games) and
Maryland swingman James
Graham III (averaging 6.8
minutes through five games).
DePaul has two, with for-
ward David Jones making
his debut in Saturday’s loss to
Butler to join Keon Edwards
as midyear enrollees to have
played this year.
As for Wake Forest’s Whitt,
he’s averaging about 20 min-
utes through 11 games with
three starts, part of an effort
to fast-track his own develop-
ment and first-year coach Steve
Forbes’ program rebuild.
“No offense to high school
basketball, but this is like he’s
getting a master’s and a doctor-
ate right now in hoops, right?
And ahead of schedule,” Forbes
said. “I mean, you can tell a
kid, ‘Hey, it’s like this, it’s the
pace, the physicality.’ But until
they do it, they don’t get it. And
he gets it now.”
Continued from B3