FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT B3 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • FrIday, FEBrUary 26, 2021 MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL Oregon hangs on to beat Stanford STANFORD, Calif. — Chris Duarte had 17 of his 24 points in the final 10 minutes and Oregon held off Stanford for a 71-68 win on Thursday night. Duarte’s 3-pointer with 3:55 left gave the Ducks (15-5, 10-4 Pac- 12) the lead for good at 65-64. Chandler Lawson followed 48 seconds later with a dunk for a three- point lead and Oregon made 4 of 6 from the foul line to hang on. Oregon kept its con- ference title hopes alive with four regular season games remaining on its schedule. L.J. Figueroa added 13 points, Eugene Omoruyi had 12 points and 10 rebounds, and Eric Wil- liams Jr. scored 10 for the Ducks. Ziaire Williams scored seven of his 12 points during a 13-4 run that gave the Cardinal (14-10, 10-8) their largest lead of the game at 56-50 with 9:06 to go. Jaiden Delaire led Stanford with 15 points. Daejon Davis scored 13 and Spencer Jones added 11. The Cardinal’s leading scorer and rebounder, Oscar da Silva, missed the game due to a lower ex- tremity injury. The Ducks visit Califor- nia on Saturday before returning to Eugene to host Arizona on Monday and UCLA on Wednes- day. — Associated Press bendbulletin.com/sports NFL COMMENTARY TRADE WINDS Seahawks probably aren’t trading Russell Wilson, but here’s a look at his reported list of teams BY BOB CONDOTTA The Seattle Times SEATTLE — S o, we may not really know if Russell Wilson Jennifer Stewart/AP file wants to be traded. Despite several reports of unhap- piness with the Seahawks, neither Wilson nor his agent, Mark Rodgers, have publicly said he wants out and the Seahawks have made no comment one way or the other. Both of ESPN’s Adam Schefter’s reports noted that if Wilson were to be traded he has four preferred desti- nations — the Dallas Cowboys, New Orleans Saints, Las Vegas Raiders or Chicago Bears, a somewhat oddly specific list considering Wilson re- portedly says he wants to stay in Se- attle. It continues to be worth noting that it seems really unlikely Wilson will ac- tually be traded. The team doesn’t want to trade Wilson and never has, and it would also be really cost prohibitive to do so. Seattle would take a $39 million hit Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson prior to a game against the San Francisco 49ers in January in Glendale, Arizona. year is March 17), trades cannot be against its 2021 cap if he is dealt be- executed earlier but then designated fore June 1. as post-June 1. After June 1, that changes. The $39 So, if Seattle were to million (which is what is remaining for Seattle to The team doesn’t trade Wilson before June 1 — which most logically account for against its cap want to trade is when any trade would of bonus money Wilson has already been paid) Wilson and never probably happen — it would hugely torpedo the could then be spread out has, and it would team’s chances of being over the last three years competitive in 2021. of his contract with Seat- also be really With Pete Carroll turn- tle. So, that would mean Seattle taking a $13 mil- cost prohibitive ing 70 in September and having signed a new five- lion cap hit for each of the to do so. year deal with the team 2021, 2022 and 2023 sea- sons if Wilson were traded last fall, the last thing any- after June 1. one wants is what could amount to a However, unlike with cutting play- resetting or rebuilding year, which the ers, where two players can be desig- dead cap hit would make more likely nated as post-June 1 cuts for salary than not regardless of the quarterback cap purposes even if they are cut after Seattle might get in return (and we’re the new league year begins (which this going on the assumption the Sea- hawks would definitely want a ready- made QB in any trade). Wilson also has a no-trade clause, something his side asked for when he signed a four-year, $140 million exten- sion in April 2019. Seattle put up zero fight on that, the Seahawks not envi- sioning having to even think about trading him at the time. But it may suddenly be relevant now as the clause essentially gives Wilson veto power. And with Wilson’s side suddenly naming four preferred teams, we at least have some names to ponder. (None of which is Houston, which has a QB issue of its own with Deshaun Watson wanting out. But apparently any possible Watson-for-Wilson deal is off the table if Wilson doesn’t want to go there.) See Wilson / B4 NBA League suspends T’Wolves Beasley MINNEAPOLIS — Min- nesota Timberwolves shooting guard Malik Beasley has been sus- pended for 12 games without pay by the NBA for his recent guilty plea to a felony charge of threats of violence. The league announced Thursday the punish- ment, which will begin with Minnesota’s game Saturday at Washington. Beasley is eligible to re- turn March 27 against Houston. Beasley, in his fifth NBA season, is averaging a ca- reer-best 20.5 points. He was sentenced earlier this month to 120 days in jail for the Sept. 26 incident, when he pointed a rifle outside his home in suburban Minneapolis at a family on a house-hunting tour. Police later found weap- ons and marijuana in the home. As part of Beasley’s plea deal, prosecutors dropped a felony fifth-de- gree drug possession charge. The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office said Beasley can serve his stay in the workhouse after his season is over; COVID-19 precautions could require the county to release him on elec- tronic home monitoring for the duration of the sentence. Speaking at his remote sentencing, he said, “I am not that person. I humbly apologize for my actions.” Timberwolves presi- dent of basketball opera- tions Gersson Rosas, in a statement distributed by the team, said the organi- zation fully supports the NBA’s decision “As we work together with Malik to advance his development as a player and a person, we look forward to seeing his growth,” Rosas said. — Associated Press WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL | OREGON STATE GOLF Phil Mickelson eyeing record 3rd straight PGA Tour Champions win BY JOHN MARSHALL Associated Press Courtesy Oregon State Athletics Oregon State’s Ellie Mack (20) looks to pass around UCLA’s Natalie Chou (23) after grabbing a rebound on Sunday in Los Angeles. Ellie Mack’s contributions key to Beavers’ success BY STEVE GRESS Albany Democrat-Herald When Ellie Mack decided to join the Oregon State women’s basketball program as a grad transfer for this season, the Beavers expected the former Patriot League player of the year to be just that, even with a step up in competition in the Pac-12. Mack, a 6-foot-3 forward, may not be putting up the same numbers she did at Buck- nell last season when she was third in the league in scoring (15 points) and added 6.5 re- bounds and 2.1 assists per game for the Bison, but she is making her presence known down the stretch. And just in time as the Bea- vers are trying to play their way into the NCAA tournament. Mack has started all 14 games and is averaging 7.3 points, 4.1 rebounds and 2.5 assists per game. She had what coach Scott Rueck said was the “best week of her career here at Oregon State” last week- end when she had 20 points, eight rebounds and five assists in a road sweep of USC and then-No. 8 UCLA. It just took some time, es- pecially with two pauses for the better part of six combined weeks, for Mack to come into her own at Oregon State. “We’ve talked about her previously how she’s very re- spectful,” Rueck said. “I mean she’s coming in as a fifth-year understanding she’s one of the new people even though she has all this experience. She’s kind of deferred and kind of tried to find her way within our system and within our pro- gram.” See Mack / B5 Phil Mickelson made his- tory 30 years ago in Tucson, becoming one of seven am- ateurs to win a PGA Tour event since 1940. Lefty is back in Arizona this weekend and he has a chance to stand alone in the record book. A winner in his first two PGA Tour Champions starts, Mickelson could become the first player to win his first three starts on a PGA Tour-sanctioned tour this weekend in the Cologuard Classic at Tucson National. “I think it’s going to be a tough challenge for me here because the course allows you to play it a lot of different ways,” Mickelson said Thurs- day. “Although I’m going to play it pretty aggressively, I’m going to bring in a lot of trou- ble, too. If I can kind of elimi- nate some of the big misses, I think I’m going to make a lot of birdies.” Mickelson had no trouble at Tucson National and TPC Starr Pass in 1991, overcom- ing a triple bogey in the final round to win the Northern Telecom Open as a 20-year- old amateur. The former Ar- izona State player is still the last amateur to win a PGA Tour event. Mickelson returns to the desert with a chance to make it 3 for 3 on the senior tour. He won at Ozarks National in Missouri last August in his first start after turning 50 and followed that up with a win at the Country Club of Virginia in October. Should he win in Tucson, the quest to make more his- tory might have to wait a while. The five-time major Joe Mahoney/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP file Winner Phil Mickelson gets a pat on the back from Jeff Johnson, the caddie for Retief Goosen, during final-round play in the Dominion Energy Charity Classic in Richmond, Virginia, in October. Lefty is back to the Champions Tour this weekend and has a chance to become the first player to win his first three career starts on a PGA-sanctioned tour. champion still believes he can compete on the PGA Tour and his upcoming schedule includes The Players Champi- onship, Honda Classic, Mas- ters and possibly the Valero Texas Open. Mickelson, who has 44 career PGA Tour wins, has made four cuts in eight events this 2021 season. “I haven’t really looked at Champions Tour schedule,” he said. “I want to start play- ing on the regular tour with a little bit less stress. I’ve been really hard on myself when I make some mistakes and I’ve got to kind of ease up and play a little bit more free and a lit- tle bit lighter. If I can do that, I think I can shoot some pretty good scores out there.” Mickelson will have to put up some low numbers on Tucson National’s Catalina Course with a deep field set to tee it up starting Friday. Schwab Cup money leader Bernhard Langer is still going strong at 63 and is the defend- ing champion after coming from four strokes back to win last year. Four-time major cham- pion Ernie Els is second in the points standings. Major champions Davis Love III and Mike Weir also are in the field, as is former University of Arizona player Jim Furyk, who won his first two senior starts last year. “The guys are still compet- itive and they are still hun- gry, and that’s what we all enjoy,” Furyk said. “We enjoy the competition and maybe I don’t have to hit 320 yards anymore to do so. I’m enjoy- ing it.” See Mickelson / B4