The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, March 10, 2021, Page 8, Image 8

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    A8 The BulleTin • Wednesday, March 10, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
WEDNESDAY
BASKETBALL
Time
TV
Women’s college, Big Ten, Minnesota vs. Nebraska 8 a.m.
Big Ten
Women’s college, Big Ten, Illinois vs. Northwestern 10:30 a.m.
Big Ten
Men’s college, Big East, Marquette vs. Georgetown noon
FS1
Men’s college, Pac-12, Washington St. vs. Arizona St. 1 p.m.
Pac-12
Men’s college, Patriot, Loyola (Md.) at Army
2:30 p.m.
CBSSN
Men’s college, Big East, Butler vs. Xavier
3 p.m.
FS1
Men’s college, Big Ten, Minnesota vs. Northwestern 3:30 p.m.
Big Ten
Men’s college, Big 12, Kansas St. vs. TCU
3:30 p.m.
ESPN
Women’s college, Big Ten, Penn St. vs. Michigan St. 3:30 p.m.
FS2
Men’s college, Pac-12, Washington vs. Utah
4 p.m.
Pac-12
Men’s college, SEC, Texas A&M vs. Vanderbilt
4 p.m.
SEC
Men’s college, Patriot, Bucknell at Colgate
4:30 p.m.
CBSSN
Men’s college, Big Ten, Nebraska vs. Penn St.
6 p.m.
Big Ten
Men’s college, Big East, DePaul vs. Providence
6 p.m.
FS1
Women’s college, Big Ten, Purdue vs. Iowa
6 p.m.
FS2
Men’s college, Big 12, Iowa St. vs. Oklahoma
6:30 p.m.
ESPN
Men’s college, Pac-12, California vs. Stanford
7 p.m.
Pac-12
Women’s college, Mtn. West, TBD vs. Fresno St.
8 p.m.
CBSSN
SOCCER
Premier League, Manchester City vs. Southampton 9:55 a.m.
NBCSN
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, Detroit at Philadelphia
10 a.m.
MLB
MLB preseason, Arizona at L.A. Dodgers
5 p.m.
MLB
HOCKEY
NHL, Vegas at Minnesota
4 p.m.
NBCSN
NHL, Los Angeles at Anaheim
6:30 p.m.
NBCSN
LACROSSE
College, High Point at Duke
4 p.m.
ESPNU
GOLF
European Tour, Qatar Masters
3:30 a.m. (Thu) Golf
THURSDAY
BASKETBALL
Women’s college, Big Ten, TBD vs. Maryland
Men’s college, Big Ten, Michigan St. vs. Maryland
Men’s college, Big 12, Oklahoma St. vs. West Virginia
Men’s college, ACC, TBD vs. Virginia
Men’s college, AAC, Temple vs. South Florida
Men’s college, SEC, Mississippi St. vs. Kentucky
Men’s college, Big East, TBD vs. Villanova
Women’s college, Big Ten, TBD vs. Michigan
Men’s college, Big Ten, TBD vs. Ohio St.
Men’s college, SEC, TBD vs. Florida
Men’s college, ACC, TBD vs. Georgia Tech
Men’s college, Big 12, TBD vs. Baylor
Men’s college, Pac-12, TBD vs. Oregon
Men’s college, Mtn. West, San Diego St. vs. TBD
Men’s college, AAC, Tulane vs. Tulsa
Men’s college, Big East, Seton Hall vs. St. John’s
NBA G League final,
Lakeland Magic vs. Delaware Blue Coats
Men’s college, Mtn. West, Nevada vs. Boise St.
Men’s college, Pac-12, Oregon St. vs. UCLA
Men’s college, Big East, TBD vs. Creighton
Men’s college, Big Ten, Indiana vs. Rutgers
Men’s college, ACC, TBD vs. Florida St.
Men’s college, Big 12, TBD vs. Kansas
Women’s college, Big Ten, TBD vs. Indiana
Men’s college, AAC, East Carolina vs. UCF
Men’s college, SEC, Georgia vs. Missouri
NBA, Boston at Brooklyn
Men’s college, Pac-12, TBD vs. USC
Men’s college, Big Ten, TBD vs. Wisconsin
Men’s college, Mtn. West, Utah St. vs. TBD
Men’s college, ACC, TBD vs. Virginia Tech
Men’s college, Big East, TBD vs. UConn
Men’s college, SEC, South Carolina vs. Ole Miss
Women’s college, Big Ten, TBD vs. Rutgers
Men’s college, Big 12, Texas Tech vs. Texas
Women’s college, AAC final, teams TBD
NBA, Phoenix at Portland
NBA, Golden State at L.A. Clippers
Men’s college, Mtn. West, TBD vs. Colorado St.
Men’s college, Pac-12, TBD vs. Colorado
GOLF
Players Championship
European Tour, Qatar Masters
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, N.Y. Yankees at Philadelphia
MLB preseason, Seattle at L.A. Dodgers
SAILING
America’s Cup
8 a.m.
8:30 a.m.
8:30 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
noon
noon
noon
1:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
3 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
8:30 p.m.
8:30 p.m.
FS2
Big Ten
ESPN2
ESPN
ESPNU
SEC
FS1
FS2
Big Ten
SEC
ESPN
ESPN2
Pac-12
CBSSN
ESPNU
FS1
ESPN2
CBSSN
Pac-12
FS1
Big Ten
ESPN
ESPN2
FS2
ESPNU
SEC
TNT
Pac-12
Big Ten
CBSSN
ESPN
FS1
SEC
FS2
ESPN2
ESPNU
NBCSNW
TNT
CBSSN
ESPN
9 a.m.
3:30 a.m. (Fri)
Golf
Golf
10 a.m.
5 p.m.
MLB
MLB
7 p.m.
NBCSN
Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible
for late changes made by TV stations.
MEGA MILLIONS
The numbers drawn Tuesday night are:
Oregon
Lottery
results
4 33 46 58 65 13 x 2
The estimated jackpot is now $68 million.
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
PREP SPORTS
Volleyball
Monday’s Late Game
Mountain View at sisters 3, Mountain View 0 (25-12,
25-10, 25-17)
Tuesday’s Games
summit vs. Bend, late
Pendleton vs. ridgeview, late
crook county 3, redmond 0 (25-10, 25-18, 25-15)
central christian 3, la Pine 0 (25-11, 25-15, 25-16)
Boys soccer
Monday’s Late Game
Madras at estacada 2, Madras 0
Tuesday’s Games
Mountain View 7, la Pine 0
ridgeview 4, Bend 0
redmond 4, crook county 3
sisters vs. sweet home, late
Girls soccer
Monday’s Late Game
estacada 0, Madras 0
Tuesday’s Games
Mountain View vs. sisters, late
Bend vs. ridgeview, late
sweet home 2, la Pine 0
HOCKEY
NHL
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
n.y. islanders 26 16 6 4 36 75 57
Washington 25 15 6 4 34 84 80
Pittsburgh
25 15 9 1 31 81 77
Boston
23 13 6 4 30 66 56
Philadelphia 23 13 7 3 29 76 73
n.y. rangers 24 10 11 3 23 68 67
new Jersey
22 8 11 3 19 55 71
Buffalo
24 6 14 4 16 56 80
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Tampa Bay
24 18 4 2 38 87 51
carolina
25 18 6 1 37 88 66
Florida
25 16 5 4 36 84 72
chicago
27 13 9 5 31 83 86
columbus
27 10 12 5 25 71 89
nashville
26 11 14 1 23 63 85
dallas
21 8 8 5 21 62 55
detroit
27 7 16 4 18 57 91
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Vegas
22 16 5 1 33 70 47
st. louis
26 14 8 4 32 83 82
Minnesota
23 14 8 1 29 71 60
colorado
23 13 8 2 28 70 58
arizona
25 12 10 3 27 68 75
los angeles 24 10 8 6 26 73 71
anaheim
26 8 12 6 22 61 81
san Jose
23 9 11 3 21 66 88
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Toronto
27 18 7 2 38 93 67
Winnipeg
25 16 8 1 33 83 72
edmonton
27 16 11 0 32 86 82
Montreal
24 11 6 7 29 79 68
Vancouver
29 12 15 2 26 83 94
calgary
26 11 12 3 25 71 80
Ottawa
28 9 18 1 19 76 108
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.
Monday’s Late Games
edmonton 3, Ottawa 2
Prep sports
Continued from A7
During the first week of
high school athletics, family
members and fans were not
allowed to watch games from
the stands. Instead, they had to
resort to either watching lives-
treams, which brought mixed
reviews, or catching a glimpse
from outside the facilities.
arizona 3, colorado 2
san Jose 3, st. louis 2, OT
anaheim 6, los angeles 5, OT
Vancouver 2, Montreal 1, sO
Tuesday’s Games
Pittsburgh 4, n.y. rangers 2
Winnipeg 4, Toronto 3
Florida 4, columbus 2
n.y. islanders 2, Boston 1, sO
Philadelphia 5, Buffalo 4, sO
Washington 5, new Jersey 4, OT
carolina 3, nashville 2, OT
Tampa Bay 4, detroit 3, OT
dallas 6, chicago 1
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.
Men’s college
PAC-12 CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT
In Las Vegas
FIRST ROUND
Wednesday’s Games
(9)Washington st. vs. (8)arizona st., 1 p.m.
(10)Washington vs. (7)utah, 4 p.m.
(11)california vs. (6)stanford, 7 p.m.
TOP 25 SCORES
Tuesday’s Game
no. 1 Gonzaga vs. Byu
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
Wednesday’s Games
Washington at Memphis, 5 p.m.
san antonio at dallas, 5:30 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
detroit at charlotte, 4 p.m.
atlanta at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
Boston at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m.
Minnesota at new Orleans, 5 p.m.
new york at Milwaukee, 5 p.m.
Orlando at Miami, 5 p.m.
Phila. at chicago, 5 p.m.
dallas at Oklahoma city, 6 p.m.
Golden state at l.a. clippers, 7 p.m.
houston at sacramento, 7 p.m.
Phoenix at Portland, 7 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
The increase in capacity
numbers will allow more peo-
ple to attend the events when
the changes go into effect on
Friday — mainly, family mem-
bers of the players.
“We are trying to get im-
mediate family members and
household members and get
that all going Friday when
we move,” said Bend-La Pine
Schools athletic director Dave
Pac-12
Continued from A7
Oregon will face the winner
of the game between Wash-
ington State and Arizona State
in the Pac-12 quarterfinals on
Thursday.
TOP 25 SCORES
Tuesday’s Games
no. 16 Gonzaga 43, Byu 42
no. 20 south Florida 48, Wichita st. 44
DEALS
Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
National League
neW yOrK MeTs — reassigned rhPs Matt allen, Oscar
de la cruz, ryley Gilliam, J.T. Ginn, harol Gonzalez, Trevor
hildenberger, Tyler Megill, stephen nogosek, Marcel rent-
eria and Jared robinson and lhP Tom Windle. reassigned
cs Francisco alvarez, nick Meyer and hayden senger. re-
assigned OFs Pete crow-armstrong and drew Ferguson
and inFs Brett Baty, ronny Mauricio and Mark Vientos.
Optioned rhPs Franklyn Kilome and sean reid-Foley and
Williams.
The athletic directors of all
the Bend-La Pine Schools are
scheduled to meet this week to
develop a plan for spectators
checking into games, dealing
with contact tracing, form-
ing guest lists and distribut-
ing tickets. The new reality for
high school athletics during
a pandemic is learning how
to operate given the statewide
guidelines that are constantly
changing.
“Hopefully we will be there
for the rest of the time and
start small and see how it goes,
add things as we go,” Williams
said. “We will constantly re-
evaluate and reassess and move
things as schools get used to
having fans at facilities again.”
we should be playing an 8 seed.
We’re 4th best, we should be
playing 4th worst.”
ally got on track, plagued by
COVID-19 issues and injuries.
Coach Bobby Hurley did not
have his entire roster for a sin-
gle game in 2020-21 and the
Sun Devils finished ninth in
the Pac-12 at 7-10.
Second-leading scorer Josh
Christopher missed the final
seven games of the regular sea-
son with a back injury and fel-
low freshman Marcus Bagley
was in and out of the lineup
due to injuries.
Better Beavers
Oregon State may have been
the Pac-12’s most surprising
team.
The Beavers were expected
to be in rebuilding mode and
were picked to finish last in
the preseason poll. Oregon
State exceeded those projec-
tions, finishing 14-12 overall
and 10-10 in conference to end
up sixth in the regular-season
standings.
The Beavers have one of the
conference’s best players in
Ethan Thompson and could be
a tough out in the Pac-12 Tour-
nament.
No Arizona
Arizona will not be in Las
Vegas.
The Wildcats self-imposed
a postseason ban as the pro-
gram awaits word on possible
NCAA sanctions. Arizona was
sent a notice of allegations by
the NCAA last fall and asked
for the case to go through the
Independent Accountability
Resolution Process.
The case is ongoing and the
Wildcats finished 17-9.
Adjusted format
With Arizona out of the
bracket, the Pac-12 Tourna-
ment was left with 11 teams,
so the conference adjusted the
format.
Instead of the top four teams
getting a first-round bye, the
top five will this year, with the
Nos. 4 and 5 seeds facing each
other in the quarterfinals.
That did not sit well with
TOP 25 COACHES POLL
Record
Pts
Pvs
1. connecticut (27)
24-1
771
1
2. stanford (4)
25-2
745
3
3. nc state
20-2
704
4
4. Texas a&M
23-2
650
2
5. south carolina
22-4
642
7
6. Baylor
22-2
627
6
7. louisville
23-3
611
5
8. Maryland
21-2
579
8
9. indiana
18-4
508
10
10. ucla
16-5
505
9
11. arizona
16-5
419
11
12. Michigan
14-4
401
12
13. Georgia
20-6
354
21
14. Gonzaga
22-3
352
15
15. Tennessee
16-7
319
16
16. arkansas
19-8
282
13
17. Missouri st.
20-2
267
17
18. south Florida
15-3
256
14
19. Kentucky
17-8
217
19
20. West Virginia
19-5
185
23
21. Florida Gulf coast
23-2
143
24
22. Oregon
13-8
128
18
23. rutgers
14-3
115
26
24. Ohio st.
13-7
104
20
25. south dakota state
21-3
59
22
dropped out: no. 25 northwestern (13-7).
Others receiving votes: northwestern (13-7) 26; Mar-
quette (19-6) 20; dayton (13-2) 15; iowa (15-8) 13; Okla-
homa state (17-7) 11; Mississippi state (10-9) 9; dePaul
(14-8) 9; central Florida (14-3) 8; Brigham young (18-4)
5; delaware (19-3) 4; stephen F. austin (22-2) 3; rice
(16-3) 3; Georgia Tech (15-8) 3; Oregon state (11-7) 2;
houston (15-6) 1.
note: One ballot is missing. seton sobolewski of idaho
state could not be reached before the voting deadline.
Courtesy Oregon State Athletics
Oregon State’s Ethan Thomp-
son (5) shoots a jumper during a
game against Washington State
on Feb. 6 in Corvallis.
UCLA coach Mick Cronin,
whose team will face Oregon
State instead of the Washing-
ton State-Arizona State winner.
“I don’t understand why
we have to play a 5 seed first
round,” he said. “We’re a 4 seed,
lhP Thomas szapucki to syracuse(il).
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
chicaGO Bulls — recalled G adam Mokoka.
hOusTOn rOcKeTs — Waived G Mason Jones.
MeMPhis GriZZlies — recalled F Jontay Porter from
Memphis hustle.
neW Orleans Pelicans —recalled F Wenyen Gabriel.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
aTlanTa FalcOns — released G James carpenter.
carOlina PanThers — Placed the franchise tag on
Ol Taylor Morton.
chicaGO Bears — Placed the franchise tag on Wr
allen robinson ii.
cleVeland BrOWns — released de adrian clayborn.
dallas cOWBOys — Placed the franchise tag on
QB Zak Prescott.
denVer BrOncOs — Placed the franchise tag on s
Justin simmons.
deTrOiT liOns — signed Wr Tyrell Williams.
hOusTOn TeXans — Waived FB cullen Gillaspia.
JacKsOnVille JaGuars — Placed the franchise tag
on Ol cam robinson.
Kansas ciTy chieFs — re-signed Wr Marcus Kemp.
MinnesOTa ViKinGs — released K dan Bailey from
contract.
neW Orleans sainTs — Placed the franchise tag on
s Marcus Williams.
neW yOrK GianTs — Placed the franchise tag on dT
leonard Williams. named rob sale offensive line coach,
Pat Flaherty consultant, Freddie Kitchens senior offensive
assistant, derek dooley tight ends coach and Jeremy Pruitt
senior defensive assistant.
neW yOrK JeTs — Placed the franchise tag on s Mar-
cus Maye.
PhiladelPhia eaGles — released s Blake countess
and dT Treyvon hester.
PiTTsBurGh sTeelers — re-signed lB Marcus allen
to a one-year contract.
TaMPa Bay Buccaneers — Placed the franchise tag
on Wr chris Godwin.
Tennessee TiTans — named Gary Treangen vice pres-
ident of corporate partnerships and activation, shannon
Myers vice president of finance and adam nuse vice pres-
ident of business operations. agreed to terms with Wr
Marcus Johnson.
WashinGTOn FOOTBall TeaM — Placed the franchise
tag on Ol Brandon scherff.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BuFFalO saBres — recalled d henri Jokiharju from
taxi squad. loaned d Brandon davidson to taxi squad.
BOsTOn Bruins — recalled ds steven Kampfer, lW
Trent Frederic, urho Vaakanainen and c Jack studnicka
from minors from taxi squad.
carOlina hurricanes — recalled G alex nedel-
jkovic and d Jake Bean from taxi squad.
chicaGO BlacKhaWKs — recalled d nicolas Beaudin,
rW reese Johnson and d lucas carlsson from the taxi
squad.
dallas sTars — recalled c rhett Gardner and rW
Joel Kiviranta from taxi squad.
nashVille PredaTOrs — recalled c rem Pitlick, rW
Mathieu Oliuvier and d Jeremy davies from taxi squad.
neW Jersey deVils — recalled c Michael Mcleod
from the taxi squad.
neW yOrK ranGers — recalled G Keith Kinkaid, d
K’andre Miller and rW Kaapo Kakko from minors from
taxi squad.
OTTaWa senaTOrs — designated lW Matthew Peca
for assignment taxi squad.
PiTTsBurGh PenGuins — recalled rW anthony an-
gello from minors from taxi squad.
TaMPa Bay liGhTninG — signed F daniel Walcott to
a two-year two-way contract.
Struggling Sun Devils
The other big surprise
during the regular season was
the inconsistency of Arizona
State.
The Sun Devils were pro-
jected to contend for the con-
ference title with the return
of Remy Martin and Alonzo
Verge complemented by one
of the best recruiting classes in
program history.
Arizona State never re-
e e
Reporter: 541-383-0307, brathbone@
bendbulletin.com
Monster Mobley
This year’s Pac-12 Tourna-
ment could be the only one for
USC freshman Evan Mobley.
The 7-foot forward has been
projected to be one of the top
picks in the next NBA draft
and has been dominant at
times during what’s expected
to be his lone season with the
Trojans.
Mobley was a unanimous
selection as The Associated
Press’ Pac-12 newcomer of the
year after averaging 16.1 points
per game and leading the Pac-
12 with 8.4 rebounds. He also
led the conference with 2.8
blocked shots per game and
was third in shooting percent-
age at 58%.
SPORTS BRIEFING
BASKETBALL
ESPN’s Joe Lunardi weighs in on how high Oregon men
will be seeded in NCAA Tournament — Oregon could im-
prove its NCAA Tournament seeding with a successful week in
Las Vegas. ESPN Bracketologist Joe Lunardi has the Pac-12 reg-
ular season champion Ducks (19-5, 14-4 Pac-12) as a No. 6 seed
in his projected field of 68 on Tuesday and 23rd overall, down
one spot from Monday. Should Oregon win the Pac-12 tourna-
ment, which would likely mean multiple Quadrant 1 games to
boost its resume, Lunardi believes UO could move up to a 5 seed.
“I’m hearing from a lot of people that the Ducks are really good
enough to be a top 4 line team — and they probably are from a
basketball standpoint,” Lunardi said.
Selection committee could take ‘reassessment’ of
Oregon women’s tournament seeding — Oregon women’s
basketball is trending in the wrong direction heading into Selec-
tion Monday and it will likely cost the Ducks in terms of their
NCAA Tournament seeding. Oregon (13-8) has lost five of its last
six games, including back-to-back to surging Oregon State last
week, and is expected to be without starting point guard Te-Hina
Paopao for at least the first weekend of the NCAA tourney, if not
the remainder of the postseason. ESPN bracketologist Charlie
Creme weighed in on where he sees the Ducks less than a week
before the field is set. “I think the ceiling now is probably a 6,”
Creme said. “I suppose perhaps a 5. The committee seems to re-
ally like Oregon and the NET certainly like Oregon, but it’s hard
to get over the fact that they haven’t won a top 25 in (six) chances
to do it and they haven’t played well at all in a really long time.”
SOFTBALL
Oregon softball moves into top 5 in polls — Oregon soft-
ball moved into the top 5 in the polls after sweeping its four-game
opening homestand. The Ducks (13-1) are No. 5 with 658 points
in the NFCA coaches poll after beating Boise State and Portland
State each twice last weekend, up from No. 6 with 636 points and
the same spot with 393 points in the USA Softball poll last week.
Oregon hosts another pair of doubleheaders against Nevada on
Friday and Sacramento State and Oregon State on Saturday.
FOOTBALL
KU Jayhawks will pay Les Miles nearly $2 million of re-
maining contract in settlement — Les Miles, who agreed
to step down as Kansas Jayhawks football coach Monday night,
days after sexual harassment allegations against him from his
LSU tenure became public, will be paid nearly $2 million of his
remaining contract. KU Athletics released the two sides’ set-
tlement agreement Tuesday, with KU agreeing to pay Miles
$1,991,062.50. Originally, Miles had about $8 million left on his
KU contract that ran through 2023 and paid him $2.775 million
annually. Both Miles and certain top KU employees agreed to
non-disparagement clauses as part of the arrangement.
— Bulletin wire reports