The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, February 22, 2021, Monday E-Edition, Page 6, Image 6

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    A6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
MONDAY
BASKETBALL
NBA G League, Long Island Nets vs G League Ignite
Men’s College, Pepperdine at Saint Mary’s
Men’s College, Syracuse at Duke
Men’s College, Oregon State at Utah
Men’s College, Wofford at Samford
Women’s College, Creighton at Marquette
Men’s College, Texas Tech at Oklahoma State
Women’s College, Arizona at Stanford
NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Phoenix Suns
Men’s College, Oregon at USC
SOCCER
Premier League, B&H Albion vs Crystal Palace
WRESTLING
College Wrestling, Maryland at Penn State
College Wrestling, Indiana at Purdue
Time
noon
3 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
TV
ESPNU
ROOT
ESPN
ESPN2
ESPNU
FS1
ESPN
ESPN2
NBCSNW
FS1
11:55 a.m. NBCSN
3 p.m.
5 p.m.
BIG10
BIG10
TUESDAY
BASKETBALL
Time
TV
NBA G League, Lakeland Magic vs Westchester Knicks noon
ESPN2
Men’s College, Saint Louis at VCU
3 p.m.
CBSSN
Men’s College, Teams TBA
4 p.m.
ESPN
Men’s College, West Virginia at TCU
4 p.m.
ESPN2
Men’s College, UCF at SMU
4 p.m.
ESPNU
Men’s College, Georgia Tech at Virginia Tech
4 p.m.
ROOT
Men’s College, LSU at Georgia
4 p.m.
SEC
Men’s College, Illinois at Michigan State
4 p.m.
FS1
NBA, Boston Celtics at Dallas Mavericks
4:30 p.m.
TNT
Men’s College, St. John’s at Villanova
5 p.m.
CBSSN
Men’s College, Teams TBA
6 p.m. ESPN, ESPN2
Men’s College, Ole Miss at Missouri
6 p.m.
SEC
Men’s College, Connecticut at Georgetown
6 p.m.
FS1
NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Denver Nuggets
7 p.m.
TNT
HOCKEY
NHL, Pittsburgh Penguins at Washington Capitals
4 p.m.
NBCSN
SOCCER
Premier League, Leeds United vs Southampton
9:55 a.m. NBCSN
UEFA Champions League, Atlético Madrid vs Chelsea noon
CBSSN
Listings are the most accurate available.
SPORTS BRIEFING
return from a fifth back surgery, and he could not give a de-
finitive answer Sunday when asked if he would be at the Mas-
ters. “God, I hope so,” Woods on the CBS broadcast of the
Genesis Invitational. Woods, at Riviera to hand out the trophy
as the tournament host, had a microdiscectomy Dec. 23. It was
the fifth surgery on his back, and the first since a procedure
to fuse his lower spine in April 2017. “I’m feeling fine,” Woods
said. Woods has not played since he joined 11-year-old Charlie
at the PNC Challenge a few days before his surgery.
Homa gets another chance and wins hometown
event at Riviera — The dream of winning at Riviera felt too
good to be true for Max Homa, and it nearly was. Needing a
birdie on the 18th hole Sunday to win the Genesis Invitational,
he hit sand wedge to a back pin that settled 3 feet away, set-
ting up the storybook finish for a guy who grew up 30 miles
away and has been watching this tournament his whole life.
And then he missed. His ball next to the base of a tree left of
the 10th green on the first playoff hole, Homa hooded a gap
wedge with enough top spin to scoot up the Kikuyu grass and
onto the edge of the green, setting up par. Tony Finau missed
a 7-footer, and Homa was happy just to get to the next hole.
Homa won on the second extra hole when Finau failed to save
par from a bunker, missing a 10-foot putt.
SOCCER
Press, Rapinoe score, U.S. beats Brazil 2-0 in SheBe-
lieves Cup — Christen Press scored in the 11th minute, Me-
gan Rapinoe added a late goal and the U.S. women beat Brazil
2-0 in the SheBelieves Cup on Sunday. The United States sits
atop the standings with two wins. Canada beat Argentina 1-0
in the late match Sunday. The round-robin tournament con-
cludes Wednesday when the U.S. plays Argentina (0-2) and
Canada (1-1) faces Brazil (1-1). The United States, winner of
the last two World Cups, is unbeaten in 36 straight games
overall and 52 straight at home. The Americans have won
five straight over Brazil and are unbeaten in the last seven
matches. The team is 20-0-2 against Brazil on American soil.
— Bulletin wire reports
Bell chased down Joey Lo-
gano on the winding Day-
tona road course to grab his
first victory. Logano had a
commanding lead but Bell,
on fresher tires than Logano,
reeled him in and passed
him with just over one lap re-
maining.
“This is one of the high-
lights of my life,” Bell said.
“I’ve prepared my whole life
for this moment to race in the
Cup Series.”
The 26-year-old Oklaho-
man is a longtime Toyota de-
velopment driver who won
16 Xfinity Series races driv-
ing for Gibbs. But there’s only
four Cup seats in the organi-
zation and they were full last
season when it was time to
move Bell to the big leagues.
He was instead loaned to
Leavine Family Racing, and
although it was also a Toyota
team, the one-car operation
wasn’t nearly as strong as the
Gibbs group. Team owner Joe
Gibbs last summer decided
not to renew Erik Jones, who
GB
—
½
2½
4
4
4½
5
5
6
6½
6½
7
8
10
11½
GB
—
2½
3
4½
5½
6½
8
8½
9
10
11
11½
12
12
17½
Washington 118, Portland 111
Woods recovering from back surgery and hopes for
Masters — Tiger Woods says he’s doesn’t know when he will
Continued from A5
NBA
NBA Conference Glance
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Phila.
20
11
.645
Brooklyn
20
12
.625
Milwaukee
17
13
.567
Indiana
15
14
.517
Toronto
16
15
.516
Boston
15
15
.500
New York
15
16
.484
Charlotte
14
15
.483
Chicago
13
16
.448
Miami
13
17
.433
Atlanta
13
17
.433
Orlando
13
18
.419
Washington
10
17
.370
Cleveland
10
21
.323
Detroit
8
22
.267
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Utah
24
6
.800
L.A. Lakers
22
9
.710
L.A. Clippers
22
10
.688
Phoenix
19
10
.655
Portland
18
11
.621
San Antonio
16
11
.593
Denver
16
14
.533
Golden State
16
15
.516
Memphis
13
13
.500
Dallas
13
15
.464
New Orleans
13
17
.433
Sacramento
12
17
.414
Oklahoma City
12
18
.400
Houston
11
17
.393
Minnesota
7
24
.226
Sunday’s Games
New Orleans 120, Boston 115, OT
Oklahoma City 117, Cleveland 101
Orlando 105, Detroit 96
New York 103, Minnesota 99
Toronto 110, Phila. 103
Atlanta 123, Denver 115
Brooklyn 112, L.A. Clippers 108
Sacramento at Milwaukee, late
Monday’s Games
San Antonio at Indiana, ppd
Chicago at Houston, 5 p.m.
Memphis at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.
Charlotte at Utah, 6 p.m.
Miami at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m.
Portland at Phoenix, 6 p.m.
Washington at L.A. Lakers, 7 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Atlanta at Cleveland, 4 p.m.
Detroit at Orlando, 4 p.m.
Boston at Dallas, 4:30 p.m.
Golden State at New York, 4:30 p.m.
Phila. at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
Sacramento at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 5 p.m.
Portland at Denver, 7 p.m.
Washington at L.A. Clippers, 7 p.m.
Saturday’s late box score
GOLF
NASCAR
BASKETBALL
said he was blindsided by the
move, and instead bring Bell
back into the fold.
It put the pressure on Bell
to deliver and he did after a
rocky opening a week ago.
Bell was running at the front
of the Daytona 500 pack
when he gave Aric Almirola
too big of a shove and trig-
gered a 16-car crash on just
the 14th lap of NASCAR’s
first race of the season.
Bell’s win bookended a
statement weekend for JGR’s
young drivers. Ty Gibbs, the
18-year-old grandson of team
owner Joe Gibbs, won the
Xfinity Series race Saturday
night in his first career na-
tional series start.
McDowell, meanwhile,
backed up his Daytona 500
win with a career-best road
course finish of eighth.
Logano for the second
week came up empty but
without the dramatics of his
last-lap crash with teammate
Keselowski as they raced for
the Daytona 500 win. Logano
finished second.
“I hate being that close,”
Logano said.
WASHINGTON (118)
Hachimura 5-12 7-8 17, Mathews 2-2 0-0 5, Wagner
3-6 1-2 7, Beal 16-27 3-4 37, Westbrook 11-17 5-7 27,
Avdija 1-1 0-0 2, Bertans 2-9 0-0 6, Len 0-0 0-0 0, Lopez
3-8 4-6 10, Bonga 1-2 0-0 2, Neto 1-5 2-2 5. Totals 45-89
22-29 118.
PORTLAND (111)
Covington 4-11 1-2 11, Jones Jr. 4-9 1-2 11, Kanter 8-12
3-5 19, Lillard 10-30 8-8 35, Trent Jr. 6-16 0-2 16, Antho-
ny 2-10 1-1 7, Hood 0-3 1-2 1, Little 1-2 0-0 2, Simons
2-10 3-3 9. Totals 37-103 18-25 111.
Washington
31 30 28 29 — 118
Portland
43 12 37 19 — 111
3-Point Goals_Washington 6-26 (Beal 2-8, Bertans 2-8,
Neto 1-3, Hachimura 0-2, Wagner 0-2), Portland 19-55
(Lillard 7-17, Trent Jr. 4-11, Jones Jr. 2-5, Anthony 2-6,
Covington 2-6, Simons 2-6, Hood 0-3). Fouled Out_
None. Rebounds_Washington 54 (Lopez, Westbrook
11), Portland 50 (Kanter 13). Assists_Washington 23
(Westbrook 13), Portland 19 (Lillard 12). Total Fouls_
Washington 19, Portland 22. A_0 (19,393)
Men’s College
PACIFIC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L Pct W L Pct
Southern Cal
12 3 .800 18 4 .818
UCLA
12 3 .800 16 5 .762
Oregon
9 3 .750 14 4 .778
Colorado
11 6 .647 17 7 .708
Stanford
10 7 .588 14 9 .609
Arizona
9 8 .529 15 8 .652
Oregon St.
7 9 .438 11 11 .500
Washington St. 7 10 .412 14 10 .583
Utah
6 9 .400 9 10 .474
Arizona St.
4 8 .333 7 11 .389
Washington
4 13 .235 5 17 .227
California
3 15 .167 8 17 .320
Saturday’s Games
Washington St. 85, Stanford 76, 3OT
Arizona 81, Southern Cal 72
Colorado 61, Oregon St. 57
Oregon 67, Utah 64
UCLA 80, Arizona St. 79
Washington 62, California 51
Monday’s Games
Oregon at Southern Cal, 6 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Washington at Arizona St., 6 p.m.
SCORES
Sunday’s Games
AP TOP 25
No. 3 Michigan (16-1) beat No. 4 Ohio St 92-87.
No. 6 Houston (18-3) beat Cincinnati 90-52.
No. 11 Iowa (17-6) beat Penn St. 74-68.
No. 21 Wisconsin (16-8) beat Northwestern 68-51.
EAST
Albany (NY) 67, Stony Brook 59
Binghamton 72, NJIT 58
Bryant 76, Merrimack 60
Colgate 78, Boston U. 63
Delaware St. 75, St. Mary’s College of Maryland 58
George Washington 78, Rhode Island 70
Holy Cross 67, Army 51
LIU 81, CCSU 79
Lehigh 76, Loyola (Md.) 72
Djokovic
Continued from A5
That is when he will reach
311 weeks at No. 1 for his ca-
reer, one more than Federer’s
total, another aim Djokovic
made clear mattered to him.
“When you are going for No.
1 rankings, you kind of have
to be playing the entire sea-
son, and you have to be play-
ing well; you have to play all
the tournaments. My goals will
adapt and will shift a little bit,
which means that I will have
to adjust, also, my calendar,”
Djokovic said. “Not have to,
MLB
Continued from A5
Arizona pitchers Zac Gallen
and Stefan Crichton said that
having fans in the park would
be a welcome change. All 30
teams played without fans
during the pandemic-short-
ened, 60-game schedule in
Maryland 68, Rutgers 59
Mount St. Mary’s 74, Fairleigh Dickinson 61
Navy 69, American U. 60
Quinnipiac 93, Rider 68
Sacred Heart 88, St. Francis Brooklyn 82
Siena 68, Niagara 66
South Florida 83, Temple 76
St. Bonaventure 69, Davidson 58
Wagner 70, St. Francis (Pa.) 68
SOUTH
Coastal Carolina 65, Georgia Southern 55
Louisiana-Monroe 78, UALR 66
NC A&T 70, Florida A&M 63
MIDWEST
Drake 85, Evansville 71
Iowa 74, Penn St. 68
Michigan 92, Ohio St. 87
Valparaiso 66, S. Illinois 65
Wisconsin 68, Northwestern 51
Xavier 63, Butler 51
SOUTHWEST
Houston 90, Cincinnati 52
Prairie View 77, Texas Southern 75
FAR WEST
UNLV 67, San Jose St. 64
Women’s college
PAC-12 CONFERENCE
Conference
All Games
W L Pct W L Pct
Stanford
17 2 .895 20 2 .909
Arizona
13 2 .867 15 2 .882
UCLA
11 4 .733 13 4 .765
Oregon
10 6 .625 13 6 .684
Oregon St.
6 6 .500 8 6 .571
Colorado
8 8 .500 10 9 .526
Southern Cal
8 9 .471 10 10 .500
Washington St. 8 10 .444 10 10 .500
Arizona St.
5 9 .357 10 9 .526
Utah
4 15 .211 5 15 .250
Washington
3 12 .200 6 12 .333
California
1 11 .083 1 14 .067
Sunday’s Games
No. 13 Oregon 72, Southern Cal 48
Washington St. 68, Utah 55
Oregon St. 71, No. 8 UCLA 64
California 67, Arizona St. 55.
Colorado 55, Washington 50
Monday’s Game
No. 10 Arizona at No. 6 Stanford, 6 p.m.
Sunday’s late box score
No. 13 Oregon 72, Southern Cal 48
OREGON ()
Boley 5-10 1-2 13, Sabally 4-7 0-0 11, Chavez 2-8 0-0 5,
Mikesell 3-7 0-0 7, Paopao 2-5 0-0 4, Dugalic 0-0 0-0 0,
Giomi 0-0 0-0 0, Prince 5-7 1-2 11, Parrish 5-9 3-4 17,
Shelley 1-2 0-0 3, Scherr 0-1 1-2 1, Watson 0-0 0-0 0,
Wilson 0-0 0-0 0, Team 0-0 0-0 0, Totals 27-56 6-10 72
SOUTHERN CAL ()
Jenkins 1-3 0-0 2, Pili 6-14 1-2 14, Sanders 4-6 0-0 8,
Caldwell 0-2 2-2 2, Rogers 1-10 2-2 5, Oliver 0-0 0-0 0,
Jackson 4-10 1-2 9, Aaron 1-5 0-0 3, Campbell 0-0 0-0 0,
Miura 1-4 2-2 5, White 0-1 0-0 0, Team 0-0 0-0 0, Totals
18-55 8-10 48
Oregon
21 18 15 18 — 72
Southern Cal 16
9 10 13 — 48
3-Point Goals—Oregon 12-28 (Boley 2-5, Sabally
3-3, Chavez 1-6, Mikesell 1-5, Paopao 0-1, Parrish 4-6,
Shelley 1-2), Southern Cal 4-13 (Pili 1-4, Rogers 1-3,
Aaron 1-3, Miura 1-3). Assists—Oregon 18 (Paopao
8), Southern Cal 11 (Rogers 5). Fouled Out—None. Re-
bounds—Oregon 36 (Boley 2-8), Southern Cal 30 (Pili
3-6). Total Fouls—Oregon 13, Southern Cal 8. Technical
Fouls—None. A—0.
Oregon St. 71, No. 8 UCLA 64
Mercer 83, Wofford 74, 2OT
NC State 82, North Carolina 63
Norfolk St. 65, NC A&T 54
Northeastern 78, UNC-Wilmington 58
Radford 76, Charleston Southern 67, OT
South Carolina 76, Kentucky 55
Stetson 64, Kennesaw St. 53
Texas A&M 66, Mississippi 55
UALR 66, Louisiana-Monroe 46
UNC-Greensboro 58, Chattanooga 50
Virginia Tech 76, Syracuse 68
MIDWEST
E. Michigan 69, Toledo 59
Kent St. 73, N. Illinois 58
Michigan 75, Ohio St. 66
Michigan St. 76, Purdue 73
Missouri 96, Florida 80
Nebraska 87, Penn St. 72
South Dakota 76, Oral Roberts 54
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 77, Oklahoma 66
FAU 67, UTEP 62
Texas 59, Kansas St. 48
FAR WEST
California 67, Arizona St. 55
Colorado 55, Washington 50
Fresno St. 82, San Diego St. 61
Oregon 72, Southern Cal 48
Oregon St. 71, UCLA 64
Washington St. 68, Utah 55
HOCKEY
NHL
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Boston
16 11 3 2 24 51 36
Washington 17 9 5 3 21 58 60
Philadelphia 15 8 4 3 19 51 51
Pittsburgh
16 9 6 1 19 51 53
N.Y. Islanders 17 8 6 3 19 41 41
N.Y. Rangers 16 6 7 3 15 40 42
New Jersey
13 6 5 2 14 36 37
Buffalo
14 5 7 2 12 35 43
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Carolina
16 12 3 1 25 62 43
Florida
16 11 3 2 24 56 47
Chicago
19 9 6 4 22 55 56
Tampa Bay
15 10 4 1 21 54 36
Columbus
19 8 7 4 20 55 64
Dallas
12 5 3 4 14 40 34
Nashville
17 7 10 0 14 40 57
Detroit
20 5 12 3 13 39 64
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
St. Louis
18 10 6 2 22 59 56
Vegas
15 10 4 1 21 45 34
Colorado
14 9 4 1 19 44 29
Los Angeles 16 7 6 3 17 51 48
Arizona
17 7 7 3 17 44 49
Minnesota
14 8 6 0 16 38 36
San Jose
16 7 7 2 16 45 58
Anaheim
18 6 9 3 15 34 50
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Toronto
19 14 3 2 30 72 51
Edmonton
20 12 8 0 24 72 62
Montreal
17 9 5 3 21 57 47
Winnipeg
17 10 6 1 21 57 46
Calgary
18 8 9 1 17 47 54
Vancouver
21 8 12 1 17 62 74
Ottawa
20 5 14 1 11 47 80
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
Washington 4, New Jersey 3
Boston 7, Philadelphia 3
Ottawa 3, Montreal 2, OT
Winnipeg at Vancouver, late
Monday’s Games
Buffalo at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m.
Calgary at Toronto, 4 p.m.
Dallas at Florida, 4 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 4 p.m.
Los Angeles at St. Louis, 5 p.m.
Anaheim at Arizona, 6 p.m.
Vegas at Colorado, 6 p.m.
Minnesota at San Jose, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Buffalo at New Jersey, 4 p.m.
Chicago at Columbus, 4 p.m.
Montreal at Ottawa, 4 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Washington, 4 p.m.
Nashville at Detroit, 4:30 p.m.
Edmonton at Vancouver, 7 p.m.
Patrick Cantlay (55), $151,125
James Hahn (55), $151,125
Xander Schauffele (55), $151,125
Jordan Spieth (55), $151,125
Will Zalatoris, $151,125
Rickie Fowler (45), $101,835
Branden Grace (45), $101,835
Matthew NeSmith (45), $101,835
C.T. Pan (45), $101,835
Scottie Scheffler (45), $101,835
Nick Taylor (45), $101,835
Jim Furyk (34), $67,890
Lanto Griffin (34), $67,890
Adam Hadwin (34), $67,890
Scott Harrington (34), $67,890
Andrew Landry (34), $67,890
Cameron Tringale (34), $67,890
Bo Hoag (25), $51,925
Mackenzie Hughes (25), $51,925
Jason Kokrak (25), $51,925
Marc Leishman (25), $51,925
Andrew Putnam (25), $51,925
Kyle Stanley (25), $51,925
Tyler Duncan (18), $40,455
Russell Henley (18), $40,455
Brooks Koepka (18), $40,455
Kevin Na (18), $40,455
Adam Scott (18), $40,455
Wesley Bryan (12), $28,179
Cameron Davis (12), $28,179
Brian Harman (12), $28,179
Collin Morikawa (12), $28,179
Sebastian Munoz (12), $28,179
Joaquin Niemann (12), $28,179
J.T. Poston (12), $28,179
Brendan Steele (12), $28,179
Sepp Straka (12), $28,179
Charley Hoffman (7), $22,153
Tom Hoge (7), $22,153
Danny Lee (7), $22,153
Tyler McCumber (7), $22,153
Kevin Streelman (7), $22,153
J.B. Holmes (6), $21,297
Nate Lashley (6), $21,297
Richy Werenski (6), $21,297
Keegan Bradley (6), $20,832
Brian Gay (6), $20,832
Charl Schwartzel (5), $20,460
Harold Varner III (5), $20,460
Scott Piercy (5), $20,088
Matthew Wolff (5), $20,088
Kyoung-Hoon Lee (4), $19,809
Sung Kang (4), $19,623
67-70-71-72 – 280
74-66-71-69 – 280
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68-68-73-71 – 280
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MOTOR SPORTS
NASCAR Cup Series
O’Reilly Auto Parts 253 at DAYTONA
Sunday at Daytona International Speedway
Daytona Beach, Fla.
Lap length: 2.50 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (12) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 70 laps, 47 points.
2. (11) Joey Logano, Ford, 70, 52.
3. (4) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 70, 52.
4. (17) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 70, 48.
5. (15) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 70, 39.
6. (5) Kevin Harvick, Ford, 70, 33.
7. (34) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 70, 0.
8. (2) Michael McDowell, Ford, 70, 29.
9. (6) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 70, 28.
10. (36) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 70, 27.
11. (30) Chris Buescher, Ford, 70, 27.
12. (19) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 70, 35.
13. (13) Cole Custer, Ford, 70, 27.
14. (37) Erik Jones, Chevrolet, 70, 23.
15. (27) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 70, 22.
16. (35) Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 70, 21.
17. (26) Aric Almirola, Ford, 70, 20.
18. (16) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Chevrolet, 70, 19.
19. (38) Ty Dillon, Toyota, 70, 0.
20. (33) Ryan Newman, Ford, 70, 17.
21. (1) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 70, 31.
22. (31) Anthony Alfredo, Ford, 70, 15.
23. (39) James Davison, Chevrolet, 70, 14.
24. (20) Justin Haley, Chevrolet, 70, 0.
25. (21) Cody Ware, Chevrolet, 70, 0.
26. (10) Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 70, 11.
27. (25) Garrett Smithley, Ford, 70, 0.
28. (28) Scott Heckert, Ford, 70, 9.
29. (40) Timmy Hill, Ford, 70, 0.
30. (8) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 70, 12.
31. (7) Corey Lajoie, Chevrolet, 70, 6.
32. (18) Chase Briscoe, Ford, 70, 5.
33. (22) William Byron, Chevrolet, 69, 8.
34. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 69, 6.
35. (14) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 69, 3.
36. (23) Josh Bilicki, Ford, brakes, 68, 1.
37. (32) Matt DiBenedetto, Ford, 65, 1.
38. (24) Tyler Reddick, Chevrolet, accident, 58, 1.
39. (9) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, accident, 26, 1.
40. (29) Quin Houff, Chevrolet, engine, 3, 1.
OREGON ST. (8-6)
Corosdale 0-4 0-0 0, Jones 7-9 2-4 16, Mack 3-6 0-0 7,
Goforth 3-9 1-2 8, Goodman 6-13 6-6 20, Mitrovic 1-5
3-4 5, Simmons 0-1 0-0 0, Von Oelhoffen 5-12 1-1 13,
Samuel 1-1 0-0 2, Team 0-0 0-0 0, Totals 26-60 13-17 71
UCLA (13-4)
Miller 6-15 1-1 13, Onyenwere 6-18 6-6 19, Chou 2-8 2-2
7, Corsaro 2-6 2-2 7, Osborne 4-21 2-2 11, Bessoir 0-4
0-0 0, Brown 0-0 0-0 0, Darius 0-0 0-0 0, Horvat 1-4 4-4
7, Team 0-0 0-0 0, Totals 21-76 17-17 64
Oregon St. 13 23 15 20 — 71
UCLA
18 13 21 12 — 64
3-Point Goals—Oregon St. 6-16 (Corosdale 0-2, Mack
1-2, Goforth 1-2, Goodman 2-6, Simmons 0-1, Von
Oelhoffen 2-3), UCLA 5-22 (Onyenwere 1-1, Chou 1-4,
Corsaro 1-4, Osborne 1-8, Bessoir 0-2, Horvat 1-3). As-
sists—Oregon St. 14 (Goodman 9), UCLA 14 (Osborne
4). Fouled Out—Oregon St. Mack. Rebounds—Oregon
St. 45 (Von Oelhoffen 2-6), UCLA 39 (Team 5-7). Total
Fouls—Oregon St. 14, UCLA 20. Technical Fouls—
None. A—0.
SCORES
Sunday’s Games
AP TOP 25
No. 2 South Carolina (18-3) beat No. 17 Kentucky 76-55.
No. 3 Louisville (20-2) lost to Florida St. 68-59.
No. 4 NC State (15-2) beat North Carolina 82-63.
No. 5 Texas A&M (20-1) beat Mississippi 66-55.
No. 7 Baylor (17-2) beat Oklahoma 77-66.
No. 8 UCLA (13-4) lost to Oregon St. 71-64.
No. 11 Michigan (13-2) beat No. 15 Ohio St. 75-66.
No. 13 Oregon (13-6) beat Southern Cal 72-48.
No. 18 Arkansas (17-7) beat LSU 74-64.
No. 21 Tennessee (13-6) lost to No. 22 Georgia 57-55.
EAST
American U. 62, Loyola (Md.) 52
Boston College 49, Georgia Tech 43
Fairfield 60, Monmouth (NJ) 46
Holy Cross 60, Boston U. 52
Lafayette 70, Lehigh 60
Marshall 68, Rice 56
Mount St. Mary’s 87, Bryant 49
Siena 63, Quinnipiac 60
St. John’s 65, Providence 47
St. Peter’s 70, Niagara 55
Towson 77, Drexel 62
Villanova 64, Georgetown 56
SOUTH
Alabama 71, Mississippi St. 63
Arkansas 74, LSU 64
Florida Gulf Coast 87, Jacksonville 58
Florida St. 68, Louisville 59
Furman 56, W. Carolina 44
Georgia 57, Tennessee 55
Georgia Southern 73, NC Central 65
Howard 67, Coppin St. 45
James Madison 65, Delaware 62
Liberty 73, Shepherd 65
Lipscomb 74, North Florida 70
Genesis Invitational Scores
Sunday at Riviera Country Club
Pacific Palisades, Calif.
Purse: $9.3 million
Yardage: 7,040; Par: 71
Final Round
Max Homa wins playoff on second hole
Max Homa (550), $1,674,000
66-70-70-66 – 272
Tony Finau (315), $1,013,700
71-67-70-64 – 272
Sam Burns (200), $641,700
64-66-74-69 – 273
Cameron Smith (140), $455,700
69-68-71-67 – 275
Matthew Fitzpatrick (105), $344,100 66-71-69-71 – 277
Viktor Hovland (105), $344,100
71-69-70-67 – 277
Jon Rahm (105), $344,100
70-69-72-66 – 277
Wyndham Clark (81), $262,725
67-69-73-69 – 278
Dustin Johnson (81), $262,725
68-67-71-72 – 278
Matt Jones (81), $262,725
67-72-69-70 – 278
Francesco Molinari (81), $262,725 68-73-70-67 – 278
Talor Gooch (65), $197,625
68-71-69-71 – 279
Alex Noren (65), $197,625
67-70-71-71 – 279
Patrick Rodgers (65), $197,625
71-69-70-69 – 279
Sunday’s Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES — Sent LF Travis Demeritte outright
to Gwinnett (IL).
SAN DIEGO PADRES — Agreed to terms with C Wynston
Sawyer on a minor league contract.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Agreed to terms with RHP
Aaron Sanchez on a one-year contract. Designated RHP
Trevor Gott for assignment.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Transferred F Sean McDermott
to the Memphis Hustle (NBA G League).
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES — Designated Ds Jacob Bryson and
Casey Fitzgerald for assignment to the taxi squad.
COLUMBIA BLUE JACKETS — Designated G Matiss Kiv-
lenieks for assignment to the taxi squad.
DETROIT RED WINGS — Designated Ds Danny DeKeyser
and Alex Biega and LW Mathias Brome for assignment
to the taxi squad.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Designated F Yegor Sha-
rangovich for assignment to the taxi squad. Recalled F
Mikhail Maltsev from the taxi squad to the active roster.
but I will have an opportunity
to do that, which, as a father
and a husband, I’m really look-
ing forward to.”
One part of the calculus is that
no one knows, of course, whether
Federer, who hasn’t played in
more than a year after two knee
operations and turns 40 in Au-
gust, or Nadal, 34, will win more
majors — or how many more.
It bears repeating that until
Federer, Nadal and Djokovic
came along, no man had won
more than Pete Sampras’ 14
Grand Slam titles. Here we are,
less than 20 years after Sam-
pras retired, and he’s been sur-
passed by a trio of men, and by
a lot of majors.
“We’re talking about some
Cyborgs of tennis, in a good
way,” Medvedev said, refer-
ring to the longevity and un-
precedented success of the
guys known as the Big Three.
“They’re just unbelievable.”
Djokovic’s coach, 2001
Wimbledon champion Goran
Ivanisevic, predicted Nadal will
claim “one more, maybe two”
championships at the French
Open, where he collected a
13th last October. That is the
only instance of a man own-
ing more singles titles from
one major than Djokovic’s haul
in Australia. Federer’s high is
eight at Wimbledon.
All have career Grand Slams.
“Roger and Rafa inspire me.
That’s something that I’ve said
before. I’ll say it again. I mean,
I think as long as they go, I’ll
go,” Djokovic said. “In a way,
it’s like a race (of) who plays
tennis more, I guess, and who
wins more. It’s a competition
between us in all areas. But
I think that’s the very reason
why we are who we are, be-
cause we do drive each other,
we motivate each other, we
push each other to the limit.”
2020. Limited fans were al-
lowed during the postseason.
“Hopefully we can keep tak-
ing steps toward getting the
stadiums full,” Crichton said.
New COVID-19 cases have
gone down in Arizona over
the past few weeks, just like
they have throughout most
of the country. Lovullo said
his team would continue to
strictly follow the league’s pro-
tocols but seeing fans is an-
other reminder that baseball
might be a little more “nor-
mal” in 2021.
“We missed our fans,”
Lovullo said. “Not just Dia-
mondbacks fans but I think
baseball fans throughout the
entire United States. We’ve
lost a little bit of a connection.
We’ve done what we could in
our special way in Arizona to
remain connected to our core
group of fans, but the fact that
they’re out there, they sold out,
it doesn’t surprise me at all.
“Fans have been patiently
waiting for these days.”
TENNIS
Australian Open
Results Sunday at Melbourne Park
Melbourne, Australia
Purse: AUD32,790,000
Surface: Hardcourt outdoor
MEN’S SINGLES
Championship
Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Daniil Medvedev (4),
Russia, 7-5, 6-2, 6-2.
MEN’S DOUBLES
Championship
Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Filip Polasek (9), Slovakia, def.
Rajeev Ram, United States, and Joe Salisbury (5), Brit-
ain, 6-3, 6-4.
GOLF
PGA Tour
DEALS
Sunday’s Transactions