A6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, MARCH 8, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD MONDAY BASKETBALL NBA G League, First Quarterfinal Women’s College, Sun Belt Tournament, Final NBA G League, Second Quarterfinal Men’s College, CAA Tournament, First Semifinal NBA G League Men’s College, Horizon Tournament: Northern Kentucky vs Oakland Men’s College, Southern Tournament, Final Men’s College, Sun Belt Tournament, Final Women’s College, Big East Tournament, Final NBA G League Basketball Men’s College, WCC Tournament -- TBA vs Gonzaga Men’s College, CAA Tournament, Second Semifinal Men’s College, Horizon Tournament Wisconsin-Milwaukee vs Cleveland State Men’s College, WCC Tournament -- TBA vs BYU SOCCER Premier League Soccer, Chelsea vs Everton Time TV 10:30 a.m. ESPN2 11 a.m. ESPNU 12:45 p.m. ESPN2 3 p.m. CBSSN 3 p.m. ESPNEWS 3:30 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. ESPN2 5 p.m. FS1 5:15 p.m. ESPNEWS 6 p.m. ESPN 6:30 p.m. CBSSN 6:30 p.m. 9 p.m. ESPN2 ESPN2 9:55 a.m. NBCSN TUESDAY BASEBALL College Baseball, South Alabama at Alabama BASKETBALL Women’s College, Horizon Tournament, Final Women’s College, Summit Tournament, Final Women’s College, WCC Tournament, Final Women’s College, Big Ten Tournament, First Round Men’s College, CAA Tournament, Final Men’s College, Horizon Tournament, Final Men’s College, NEC Tournament, Final NBA G League Basketball Men’s College, WCC Tournament, Final Men’s College, Summit Tournament, Final NBA G League Basketball HOCKEY NHL, New York Rangers at Pittsburgh Penguins NHL, Chicago Blackhawks at Dallas Stars SOCCER UEFA Champions League, Juventus vs FC Porto Time 4 p.m. TV SEC 9 a.m. 11 a.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6:15 p.m. ESPNU ESPNU ESPNU BIG10 CBSSN ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU 3 p.m. 5:30 p.m. NBCSN NBCSN noon CBSSN Listings are the most accurate available. Women’s College BASKETBALL NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Phila. 24 12 .667 Brooklyn 24 13 .649 Milwaukee 22 14 .611 Boston 19 17 .528 New York 19 18 .514 Miami 18 18 .500 Charlotte 17 18 .486 Toronto 17 19 .472 Chicago 16 18 .471 Indiana 16 19 .457 Atlanta 16 20 .444 Washington 14 20 .412 Cleveland 14 22 .389 Orlando 13 23 .361 Detroit 10 26 .278 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Utah 27 9 .750 Phoenix 24 11 .686 L.A. Lakers 24 13 .649 L.A. Clippers 24 14 .632 Portland 21 14 .600 Denver 21 15 .583 San Antonio 18 14 .563 Dallas 18 16 .529 Golden State 19 18 .514 Memphis 16 16 .500 New Orleans 15 21 .417 Oklahoma City 15 21 .417 Sacramento 14 22 .389 Houston 11 23 .324 Minnesota 7 29 .194 Sunday’s Games 2021 All-Star Game Team LeBron 170, Team Durant 150 Wednesday’s Games Washington at Memphis, 5 p.m. San Antonio at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. GB — ½ 2 5 5½ 6 6½ 7 7 7½ 8 9 10 11 14 GB — 2½ 3½ 4 5½ 6 7 8 8½ 9 12 12 13 15 20 SKIING Shiffrin left fuming over start delay — Mikaela Shiffrin slammed Slovakian race organizers after a women’s World Cup giant slalom Sunday, calling them “unprofessional” for making her wait in the start gate before her final run for what she felt was too long. Holding a slim lead from the opening leg, Shiffrin was ready to start when she had to wait for two minutes while course workers replaced a broken gate. Finally allowed to go, the American posted only the 11th-fastest time and dropped to third, 0.37 behind the winner, Petra Vlhova of Slovakia. “It took (two) minutes to fix a gate, that should take 30 seconds,” Shiffrin said. “I just felt like she is a good enough skier to win these races on her own and doesn’t need this unprofessional act from something that she doesn’t have control over, I don’t have control over, but just to say, ‘Oh, she is in the lead, let’s see if we can do something to get into (Shiffrin’s) head.’” While Shiffrin acknowledged interruptions are a common part of the sport, she said the lengthy delay was not necessary this time. By beat- ing her rival, Vlhova turned the tables on Shiffrin a day after the American had beaten her in the slalom. Vlhova finished 10th and 12th in the last two giant slaloms on the World Cup, and 12th at the world championships last month. GOLF Ernst wins Drive On Championship for 3rd LPGA title — Austin Ernst won the Drive On Championship on Sunday for her third LPGA Tour title, pulling away to beat fellow former NCAA champion Jennifer Kupcho by five strokes at Golden Ocala. Tied for the lead with Kupcho after each of the first two rounds and a stroke ahead entering the day, Ernst closed with a 2-under 70 to finish the wire-to-wire victory at 15-under 273. “I think it’s just really cool to be in the heat of it all week and to be able to perform the way I did,” Ernst said. Kupcho, coming off a closing eagle Saturday, had a double bogey and three bo- geys in a 74. Following sisters Jessica and Nelly Korda in the first two events of the year, Ernst gave the United States three straight victories to open a season for the first time since 2007. The 29-year-old former LSU star from South Carolina, showing her school spirit Sunday with a purple shirt, also won the 2014 Portland Classic and the 2020 NW Arkansas Championship. She won the NCAA title in 2011. Nelly Korda, tied with Ernst and Kupcho for the first-round lead, had weekend rounds of 76 and 75 to tie for 28th at even par. Jessica Korda shot a 71 to tie for eighth at 4 under. BASKETBALL No. 4 Stanford drubs No. 9 UCLA, 75-55, wins Pac 12 title — Kiana Williams scored 26 points to lead No. 4 Stanford to the Pac 12 Tournament championship with a 75- 55 win over No. 9 UCLA on Sunday night. Stanford, which has made the Pac-12 championship game 18 times in 20 total tournaments, improved to 14-4 in the finals while winning its third title in five years. Lexie Hull added 24 points while Haley Jones finished with 10 points and 13 rebounds for Stanford (25-2). Michaela Onyenwere led UCLA (16-5) with 30 points. Charisma Osborne finished with 11 points and five rebounds for the Bruins. The game was a renewal of one of the more storied rivalries in Pac 12 postseason history, as Stanford has played UCLA more than any other team in the Pac-12 Tournament. The Cardinal improved to 11-1 against the Bruins in the event - including four wins in championship meetings. AP source: Blake Griffin agrees to deal with Nets — Blake Griffin is joining the collection of stars in Brooklyn.The six-time All-Star agreed to sign with the Nets, a person with knowledge of the details said Sunday. Griffin became a free agent Friday when he completed a buyout agreement with the Detroit Pistons. He cleared waivers Sunday and was eligible to sign with any team. The often-injured forward decided to join All-Stars Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and James Harden in Brooklyn, the person told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because there was no announcement. ESPN first re- ported Griffin’s plans. The 31-year-old Griffin is a six-time All- Star who has averaged 21.4 points and 8.7 rebounds since being the No. 1 pick in the 2009 draft. — Bulletin wire reports SCORES Sunday’s Games TOP 25 No. 1 UConn (23-1) beat Villanova 84-39. No. 3 NC State (20-2) beat No. 5 Lousiville 58-56. No. 4 Stanford (25-2) beat No. 9 UCLA 75-55. No. 7 South Carolina (22-4) beat No. 16 Georgia 67-62. EAST American U. 76, Army 56 Boston U. 74, Lafayette 68 Bucknell 65, Loyola (Md.) 50 Lehigh 75, Holy Cross 57 Maine 67, Albany (NY) 47 Stony Brook 75, Mass.-Lowell 55 UConn 84, Villanova 39 SOUTH Louisiana-Lafayette 58, UALR 48 Mercer 60, Wofford 38 NC State 58, Louisville 56 South Carolina 67, Georgia 62 Troy 66, Appalachian St. 63 MIDWEST Marquette 64, Creighton 59 N. Dakota St. 79, Denver 67 W. Illinois 60, UMKC 59 SOUTHWEST Oklahoma 90, Kansas St. 81 Texas 69, TCU 60 FAR WEST Air Force 56, San Diego St. 48 Wyoming 69, Utah St. 41 HOCKEY Men’s College NHL PAC-12 CONFERENCE Conference All Games W L Pct W L Pct Oregon 14 4 .778 19 5 .792 Southern Cal 15 5 .750 21 6 .778 Colorado 14 6 .700 20 7 .741 UCLA 13 6 .684 17 8 .680 Arizona 11 9 .550 17 9 .654 Oregon St. 10 10 .500 14 12 .538 Stanford 10 10 .500 14 12 .538 Utah 8 11 .421 11 12 .478 Arizona St. 7 10 .412 10 13 .435 Washington St. 7 12 .368 14 12 .538 Washington 4 16 .200 5 20 .200 California 3 17 .150 8 19 .296 Saturday’s Games Utah 98, Arizona St. 59 Southern Cal 64, UCLA 63 Sunday’s Games Oregon 80, Oregon St. 67 East GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Islanders 25 15 6 4 34 73 56 Washington 24 14 6 4 32 79 76 Boston 22 13 6 3 29 65 54 Pittsburgh 24 14 9 1 29 77 75 Philadelphia 22 12 7 3 27 71 69 N.Y. Rangers 23 10 10 3 23 66 63 New Jersey 21 8 11 2 18 51 66 Buffalo 23 6 14 3 15 52 75 Central GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 23 17 4 2 36 83 48 Carolina 24 17 6 1 35 85 64 Florida 24 15 5 4 34 80 70 Chicago 26 13 8 5 31 82 80 Columbus 26 10 11 5 25 69 85 Nashville 24 10 14 0 20 57 79 Dallas 19 7 8 4 18 53 50 Detroit 26 7 16 3 17 54 87 West GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vegas 21 16 4 1 33 70 45 St. Louis 25 14 8 3 31 81 79 Colorado 22 13 7 2 28 68 55 Minnesota 22 13 8 1 27 69 60 Los Angeles 23 10 8 5 25 68 65 Arizona 24 11 10 3 25 65 73 Anaheim 25 7 12 6 20 55 76 San Jose 22 8 11 3 19 63 86 North GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 26 18 6 2 38 90 63 Winnipeg 24 15 8 1 31 79 69 Edmonton 26 15 11 0 30 83 80 Montreal 23 11 6 6 28 78 66 Calgary 25 11 12 2 24 68 76 Vancouver 28 11 15 2 24 81 93 Ottawa 26 8 17 1 17 70 102 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 N.Y. Islanders 5, Buffalo 2 Tampa Bay 6, Chicago 3 New Jersey 1, Boston 0 Carolina 4, Florida 2 Washington 3, Philadelphia 1 Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Rangers 1 Nashville at Dallas, late Ottawa at Calgary, late Monday’s Games Vegas at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Arizona at Colorado, 6 p.m. Ottawa at Edmonton, 6 p.m. St. Louis at San Jose, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Anaheim, 7 p.m. Montreal at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 3 p.m. Boston at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. Buffalo at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Florida at Columbus, 4 p.m. Nashville at Carolina, 4 p.m. New Jersey at Washington, 4 p.m. Winnipeg at Toronto, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Vegas at Minnesota, 4 p.m. Ottawa at Edmonton, 5 p.m. Arizona at Colorado, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Anaheim, 6:30 p.m. Montreal at Vancouver, 8 p.m. Oregon 80, Oregon St. 67 SPORTS BRIEFING PAC-12 CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT All Games in Las Vegas CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday’s Game (1)Stanford 75. (3)UCLA 55 OREGON (18-5) Omoruyi 5-7 5-6 18, Williams 5-9 0-0 14, Duarte 3-8 2-2 10, Richardson 7-12 2-3 22, Figueroa 4-7 2-4 10, Lawson 2-2 0-0 4, Hardy 1-2 0-1 2. Totals 27-47 11-16 80. OREGON ST. (14-12) Alatishe 6-10 2-4 14, Silva 5-6 0-0 10, Lucas 5-9 0-0 12, Z.Reichle 3-6 2-2 9, Thompson 7-15 1-2 16, Hunt 2-6 2-2 6, Andela 0-1 0-0 0, Tucker 0-1 0-0 0, Calloo 0-0 0-0 0, I.Johnson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 28-54 7-10 67. Halftime —Oregon 44-31. 3-Point Goals —Oregon 15- 23 (Richardson 6-7, Williams 4-6, Omoruyi 3-4, Duarte 2-3, Figueroa 0-3), Oregon St. 4-17 (Lucas 2-6, Z.Reichle 1-4, Thompson 1-5, Hunt 0-2). Rebounds —Oregon 22 (Williams 6), Oregon St. 24 (Alatishe 7). Assists —Or- egon 18 (Duarte 6), Oregon St. 15 (Z.Reichle 4). Total Fouls —Oregon 11, Oregon St. 19. SCORES Sunday’s Games TOP 25 No. 2 Michigan (19-3) lost to Michigan St. 70-64. No. 3 Baylor (21-1) beat No. 18 Texas Tech 88-73. No. 5 Iowa (20-7) beat No. 25 Wisconsin 77-73. No. 9 Houston (21-3) beat Memphis 67-64. No. 15 Texas (17-7) beat TCU 76-64. No. 20 Loyola Chicago (24-4) beat Drake 75-70. EAST Hofstra 83, Delaware 75 Northeastern 63, William & Mary 47 Penn St. 66, Maryland 61 SOUTH Cincinnati 82, East Carolina 69 Elon 72, James Madison 71 Georgia St. 84, Louisiana-Lafayette 73 Liberty 79, North Alabama 75 Mercer 73, VMI 59 Tennessee 65, Florida 54 UNC-Greensboro 77, ETSU 65 Winthrop 80, Campbell 53 MIDWEST Chicago 75, Drake 65 Iowa 77, Wisconsin 73 Michigan St. 70, Michigan 64 Northwestern 79, Nebraska 78 Oral Roberts 76, North Dakota 65 SOUTHWEST Baylor 88, Texas Tech 73 Houston 67, Memphis 64 Texas 76, TCU 64 FAR WEST Pepperdine 78, Santa Clara 70 GOLF PGA Tour Arnold Palmer Invitational Scores Sunday at Bay Hill Club and Lodge Orlando, Fla. Purse: $9.3 million Yardage: 7,409; Par: 72 Final Round Bryson DeChambeau (550), $1,674,000 67-71-68-71 – 277 Lee Westwood (315), $1,013,700 69-71-65-73 – 278 Corey Conners (200), $641,700 66-69-71-74 – 280 Andrew Putnam (120), $391,375 70-72-69-71 – 282 Jordan Spieth (120), $391,375 70-69-68-75 – 282 Richy Werenski (120), $391,375 71-69-69-73 – 282 Christiaan Bezuidenhout, $313,875 70-70-70-73 – 283 Chris Kirk (86), $281,325 71-70-69-74 – 284 Jason Kokrak (86), $281,325 68-73-69-74 – 284 Keegan Bradley (65), $195,300 69-74-64-78 – 285 Paul Casey (65), $195,300 70-69-72-74 – 285 Matthew Fitzpatrick (65), $195,300 69-71-71-74 – 285 Tommy Fleetwood (65), $195,300 70-70-68-77 – 285 Charley Hoffman (65), $195,300 71-72-67-75 – 285 Max Homa (65), $195,300 70-70-72-73 – 285 Rory McIlroy (65), $195,300 66-71-72-76 – 285 Will Zalatoris, $195,300 73-68-72-72 – 285 Hideki Matsuyama (52), $132,525 75-70-69-72 – 286 Brendan Steele (52), $132,525 71-72-71-72 – 286 Matt Wallace (52), $132,525 70-73-72-71 – 286 Lanto Griffin (44), $97,557 69-68-73-77 – 287 Emiliano Grillo (44), $97,557 71-74-68-74 – 287 Tyrrell Hatton (44), $97,557 77-67-66-77 – 287 Sungjae Im (44), $97,557 69-70-72-76 – 287 Harold Varner III (44), $97,557 72-72-70-73 – 287 Harris English (35), $69,285 73-70-71-74 – 288 Branden Grace (35), $69,285 74-71-67-76 – 288 Bo Hoag (35), $69,285 74-70-71-73 – 288 Denny McCarthy (35), $69,285 72-73-67-76 – 288 Ian Poulter (35), $69,285 70-73-70-75 – 288 Jason Day (27), $55,614 70-72-68-79 – 289 Padraig Harrington (27), $55,614 70-74-69-76 – 289 Cameron Tringale (27), $55,614 70-75-69-75 – 289 Bernd Wiesberger, $55,614 72-71-72-74 – 289 Danny Willett (27), $55,614 73-71-68-77 – 289 Jason Dufner (19), $42,381 74-70-71-75 – 290 Charles Howell III (19), $42,381 74-72-70-74 – 290 Kevin Kisner (19), $42,381 73-72-67-78 – 290 Robert MacIntyre, $42,381 71-71-76-72 – 290 Pat Perez (19), $42,381 75-71-70-74 – 290 Kristoffer Ventura (19), $42,381 75-70-67-78 – 290 Doug Ghim (19), $42,381 71-73-65-81 – 290 Byeong Hun An (12), $30,287 68-74-75-74 – 291 Talor Gooch (12), $30,287 73-73-71-74 – 291 Mark Hubbard (12), $30,287 71-74-72-74 – 291 Martin Laird (12), $30,287 69-67-76-79 – 291 Keith Mitchell (12), $30,287 73-71-69-78 – 291 Kevin Na (12), $30,287 71-71-76-73 – 291 Will Gordon (8), $22,832 72-72-72-76 – 292 Viktor Hovland (8), $22,832 69-68-77-78 – 292 Zach Johnson (8), $22,832 74-70-72-76 – 292 Danny Lee (8), $22,832 73-71-71-77 – 292 Maverick McNealy (8), $22,832 71-72-72-77 – 292 Sebastian Munoz (8), $22,832 68-76-72-76 – 292 Alex Noren (8), $22,832 72-71-70-79 – 292 Chez Reavie (8), $22,832 74-70-73-75 – 292 Tyler Duncan (6), $21,018 72-72-71-78 – 293 Jazz Janewattananond, $21,018 75-65-69-84 – 293 Patton Kizzire (6), $21,018 76-69-73-75 – 293 Patrick Rodgers (6), $21,018 73-72-69-79 – 293 Brendon Todd (6), $21,018 74-70-71-78 – 293 Erik van Rooyen (6), $21,018 72-74-72-75 – 293 John Huh (5), $20,181 74-71-72-77 – 294 Luke List (5), $20,181 71-72-75-76 – 294 Steve Stricker (5), $20,181 72-71-74-77 – 294 Lucas Glover (4), $19,716 72-74-72-77 – 295 Doc Redman (4), $19,716 73-73-76-73 – 295 Victor Perez, $19,344 69-74-78-75 – 296 Brandt Snedeker (4), $19,344 75-71-75-75 – 296 Russell Knox (3), $19,065 74-71-73-79 – 297 Henrik Norlander (3), $18,879 71-75-74-78 – 298 Rickie Fowler (3), $18,693 76-70-76-77 – 299 LPGA Drive On Championship Scores Sunday at Golden Ocala Golf and Equestrian Club Orlando, Fla. Purse: $1.5 million Yardage: 6,526; Par: 72 a-amateur Final Round Austin Ernst, $225,000 67-67-69-70 – 273 Jennifer Kupcho, $139,217 67-67-70-74 – 278 Jenny Coleman, $100,992 70-69-70-71 – 280 In Gee Chun, $78,125 70-73-69-69 – 281 Albane Valenzuela, $62,882 70-73-66-73 – 282 Leona Maguire, $47,257 69-71-73-70 – 283 Danielle Kang, $47,257 72-70-69-72 – 283 Charley Hull, $30,463 74-70-70-70 – 284 Megan Khang, $30,463 69-72-73-70 – 284 Jaye Marie Green, $30,463 68-72-74-70 – 284 Jennifer Chang, $30,463 73-71-69-71 – 284 Jessica Korda, $30,463 69-75-69-71 – 284 Lydia Ko, $30,463 69-72-72-71 – 284 Perrine Delacour, $21,037 71-74-70-70 – 285 Sei Young Kim, $21,037 72-70-73-70 – 285 Jennifer Song, $21,037 70-72-73-70 – 285 Gaby Lopez, $21,037 69-72-74-70 – 285 Patty Tavatanakit, $21,037 70-70-69-76 – 285 Lexi Thompson, $17,226 74-69-74-69 – 286 Yu Liu, $17,226 70-70-77-69 – 286 Caroline Masson, $17,226 70-75-70-71 – 286 Carlota Ciganda, $17,226 71-65-75-75 – 286 Xiyu Lin, $14,574 72-70-75-70 – 287 Aditi Ashok, $14,574 72-73-70-72 – 287 Hee Young Park, $14,574 73-72-68-74 – 287 Cheyenne Knight, $14,574 71-70-72-74 – 287 Brittany Altomare, $14,574 70-73-69-75 – 287 Kristen Gillman, $11,751 75-70-71-72 – 288 Jing Yan, $11,751 68-74-74-72 – 288 Haeji Kang, $11,751 Nanna Koerstz Madsen, $11,751 Mel Reid, $11,751 Nelly Korda, $11,751 Anna Nordqvist, $8,499 Sarah Kemp, $8,499 Sung Hyun Park, $8,499 Stephanie Meadow, $8,499 Angel Yin, $8,499 Ally Ewing, $8,499 Ryann O’Toole, $8,499 Elizabeth Szokol, $8,499 Lindy Duncan, $8,499 Ashleigh Buhai, $8,499 Yealimi Noh, $6,364 Georgia Hall, $6,364 Brooke M. Henderson, $6,364 Mariah Stackhouse, $6,364 Nicole Broch Larsen, $5,469 Cristie Kerr, $5,469 Sophia Popov, $5,469 Katherine Kirk, $5,469 Dana Finkelstein, $4,725 Jenny Shin, $4,725 Lindsey Weaver, $4,725 Tiffany Joh, $4,725 Stacy Lewis, $4,725 Cydney Clanton, $4,192 Annie Park, $4,192 Mi Jung Hur, $3,837 Sarah Schmelzel, $3,837 Jeongeun Lee6, $3,837 Daniela Darquea, $3,582 Jaclyn Lee, $3,582 Bronte Law, $3,582 Wichanee Meechai, $3,429 Dani Holmqvist, $3,316 Haley Moore, $3,316 Eun-Hee Ji, $3,163 Jane Park, $3,163 Mina Harigae, $3,030 Laura Davies, $3,030 73-72-70-73 73-71-71-73 70-74-70-74 67-70-76-75 74-70-75-70 72-72-74-71 73-73-71-72 71-75-71-72 71-74-71-73 71-73-72-73 71-71-74-73 72-73-70-74 69-73-73-74 70-70-72-77 74-72-76-68 74-72-72-72 74-69-74-73 69-74-74-73 72-74-70-75 74-69-73-75 74-70-71-76 69-72-73-77 75-70-75-72 74-72-73-73 72-74-73-73 73-71-75-73 71-73-75-73 74-72-74-73 71-72-76-74 69-72-80-73 71-74-74-75 69-77-68-80 72-74-74-75 74-71-72-78 70-73-73-79 73-73-74-76 70-76-75-77 75-71-73-79 75-70-76-78 70-76-72-81 74-71-77-78 75-69-76-80 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 288 288 288 288 289 289 289 289 289 289 289 289 289 289 290 290 290 290 291 291 291 291 292 292 292 292 292 293 293 294 294 294 295 295 295 296 298 298 299 299 300 300 MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Cup Series Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube Results Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas Lap length: 1.50 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (3) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 267 laps, 50 points. 2. (10) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 267, 54. 3. (14) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 267, 36. 4. (6) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 267, 48. 5. (26) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 267, 46. 6. (4) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 267, 35. 7. (16) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 267, 39. 8. (2) William Byron, Chevrolet, 267, 40. 9. (15) Joey Logano, Ford, 267, 30. 10. (29) Erik Jones, Chevrolet, 267, 27. 11. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Chevrolet, 267, 26. 12. (12) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 267, 25. 13. (8) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 267, 34. 14. (18) Chris Buescher, Ford, 267, 23. 15. (19) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 266, 22. 16. (30) Matt DiBenedetto, Ford, 266, 24. 17. (5) Michael McDowell, Ford, 266, 20. 18. (13) Ryan Newman, Ford, 266, 19. 19. (7) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 266, 18. 20. (1) Kevin Harvick, Ford, 266, 17. 21. (24) Chase Briscoe, Ford, 266, 16. 22. (11) Tyler Reddick, Chevrolet, 266, 15. 23. (21) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 266, 14. 24. (27) Anthony Alfredo, Ford, 266, 13. 25. (20) Cole Custer, Ford, 266, 12. 26. (22) Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 265, 11. 27. (9) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 265, 21. 28. (23) Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 262, 9. 29. (25) Justin Haley, Chevrolet, 262, 0. 30. (34) BJ McLeod, Ford, 260, 0. 31. (31) Garrett Smithley, Ford, 259, 0. 32. (32) Cody Ware, Chevrolet, 259, 0. 33. (36) Quin Houff, Chevrolet, 256, 4. 34. (37) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, 255, 3. 35. (35) Josh Bilicki, Ford, 252, 2. 36. (38) Timmy Hill, Ford, 246, 0. 37. (33) Corey Lajoie, Chevrolet, garage, 188, 1. 38. (28) Aric Almirola, Ford, accident, 178, 1. DEALS Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball American League BOSTON RED SOX — Activated C Kevin Plawecki from the reserve/COVID-19 list. Agreed to terms with INF/OF Danny Santana on a minor league contract. TEXAS RANGERS — Optioned RHPs Joe Gatto and Tyler Phillips to Round Rock (Triple-A West). National League PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Acquired RHP Duane Under- wood Jr. from Chicago Cubs in exchange for INF Shendrik Apostel. Designated RHP Carson Fulmer for assignment. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Released RHP Jeremy Jeffress. HOCKEY National Hockey League BUFFALO SABRES — Designated D Henri Jokiharju for assignment on the taxi squad. Recalled C Casey Mittel- stady and D Brandon Davidson from the taxi squad. BOSTON BRUINES — Recalled D Urho Vaakanainen and C Jack Studnicka from the taxi squad. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Recalled Ds Wyatt Kalynuk and Lucas Carlsson from Rockford (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS — Recalled C Casey Mittelstady and D Brandon Davidson from the taxi squad. OTTAWA SENATORS — Recalled D Erik Brannstrom from the taxi squad. Designated D Braydon Coburn for assign- ment on the taxi squad. All-Star Continued from A5 Lillard pulled up for a 3-pointer from the half-court line. Not to be outdone, Curry knocked down one from virtu- ally the same spot. The atmosphere at State Farm Arena was downright ee- rie compared to a normal All- Star Game. Instead of a packed house, with A-list celebrities crammed into prime courtside seats, this game was attended by a smat- tering of hand-picked guests. They had plenty of room to spread out in a 17,000-seat venue that was essentially transformed into a giant tele- vision studio, with socially dis- tanced spectators kept far from the court. Towering video screens were set up behind the benches. Ve- gas-style lights flashed around the arena. Recorded crowd noise blared over the sound system. The entertainment was provided by the host At- lanta Hawks, who didn’t have any players in the game but were represented by their cheerleaders, drum line and DJ. To address fears that one of its biggest events would be- come a super-spreader for a virus that has killed more than a half-million Americans, the NBA pared down its usual weekend-long ritual of extrava- gant parties, gridlocked streets and people watching Brynn Anderson/AP Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry holds the trophy after winning the 3-point contest at basket- ball’s NBA All-Star Game in Atlanta on Sunday. Curry shot his way to another 3-point title on Sunday. Curry also won the 3-point contest in 2015. This All-Star Game was a one-night-only event, with a pair of skill competitions held shortly before the game and the Dunk Contest squeezed into the halftime break. The players flew in Saturday after- noon and were largely con- fined to a nearby hotel except for their time on the court. “This is when everyone in basketball all over the world comes to one city,” James said during a Zoom call before the game. “We’re able to sit back and go, ‘Wow, this is the game we have built.’ It’s a beautiful weekend for all walks of life, on the floor and off the floor. “But I’m sitting here in my hotel room, isolated. My fami- ly’s not here. I’m by myself. It’s just different, to say the least, compared to previous years.” TIP-INS Team Durant: Zion William- son of New Orleans started the game in place of Embiid. The Pelicans forward had 10 points. Team LeBron: Paul had 16 assists. ... Lillard ended the game with another long 3-pointer. UP NEXT The 71st All-Star Game will be held Feb. 20, 2022, at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse in Cleve- land. The 2023 game is set for Salt Lake City, followed by In- dianapolis in 2024.