The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, March 20, 2021, Page 10, Image 10

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    B2 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MARCH 20, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
SATURDAY
MOTOR SPORTS
IMSA Sportscar Championship,
Twelve Hours of Sebring
NASCAR Truck Series, Atlanta
NASCAR Xfinity Series, Atlanta
IMSA Sportscar Championship,
Twelve Hours of Sebring
WRESTLING
College, NCAA Division I Championship
College, NCAA Division I Championship
BASKETBALL
Men’s NIT, Dayton vs. Memphis
Men’s NCAA, Georgetown vs. Colorado
Men’s NCAA, UNC Greensboro vs. Florida St.
Men’s NCAA, Eastern Washington vs. Kansas
Men’s NCAA, St. Bonaventure vs. LSU
Men’s NCAA, Texas Southern vs. Michigan
Men’s NCAA, UC Santa Barbara vs. Creighton
Men’s NCAA, Iona vs. Alabama
Men’s NCAA, Drake vs. USC
Men’s NIT, Mississippi St. vs. Saint Louis
Men’s NCAA, Grand Canyon vs. Iowa
Men’s NCAA, Maryland vs. Connecticut
Men’s NCAA, Ohio vs. Virginia
Men’s NCAA, Missouri vs. Oklahoma
Men’s NCAA, Norfolk St. vs. Gonzaga
Men’s NCAA, UCLA vs. BYU
Men’s NCAA, Abilene Christian vs. Texas
Men’s NCAA, VCU vs. Oregon
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, Boston at Atlanta
MLB preseason, L.A. Dodgers at San Diego
GOLF
PGA Tour, Honda Classic
PGA Tour, Honda Classic
European Tour, Kenya Open
European Tour, Kenya Open
GYMNASTICS
Women’s college, Big Ten Championships
Women’s college, Big-12 Championships
Women’s college, Pac-12 Championships
Women’s college, SEC Championships
Men’s college, Nebraska at Iowa
Women’s college, Big Ten Championships
Women’s college, SEC Championships
Women’s college, Pac-12 Championships
SOFTBALL
College, Howard at Norfolk St.
College, Texas Southern at Alabama St.
College, Missouri at Georgia
FOOTBALL
College, Jackson St. at Alabama St.
College, California Spring Game
HORSE RACING
Louisiana Derby
HOCKEY
Women’s college, NCAA Championship
SOCCER
Mexico Primera Division, Tijuana vs. Queretaro
Italian Serie A, Hellas Verona vs. Atalanta
Time
TV
ON DECK
7 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
2 p.m.
NBCSN
FS1
FS1
4 p.m.
NBCSN
8 a.m.
4 p.m.
ESPN2
ESPN
9 a.m.
9:15 a.m.
9:45 a.m.
10:15 a.m.
10:45 a.m.
noon
12:30 p.m.
1 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2 p.m.
3:25 p.m.
4:10 p.m.
4:15 p.m.
4:25 p.m.
6:20 p.m.
6:40 p.m.
6:50 p.m.
6:55 p.m.
ESPN
CBS
truTV
TBS
TNT
CBS
truTV
TBS
TNT
ESPN
TBS
CBS
truTV
TNT
TBS
CBS
truTV
TNT
10 a.m.
1 p.m.
MLB
MLB
10 a.m.
noon
2:30 a.m. (Sun)
3 a.m. (Sun)
Golf
NBC
Golf
Golf
10 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
1 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
5 p.m.
6 p.m.
Big Ten
ESPN2
Pac-12
SEC
Big Ten
Big Ten
SEC
Pac-12
11 a.m.
1 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
ESPNU
ESPNU
SEC
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
ESPN2
Pac-12
3 p.m.
NBCSN
4:30 p.m.
ESPNU
8 p.m.
FS1
4:25 a.m. (Sun) ESPN2
SUNDAY
LACROSSE
Women’s college, Michigan at Penn St.
BASEBALL
College, Missouri at Kentucky
MLB preseason, N.Y. Yankees at Toronto
College, Alabama at Arkansas
MLB preseason, L.A. Angels at San Diego
BASKETBALL
Men’s NCAA, teams TBD
Women’s NCAA, Central Michigan vs. Iowa
Women’s NCAA, Marquette vs. Virginia Tech
Women’s NCAA, Wake Forest vs. Oklahoma St.
Women’s NCAA, Idaho St. vs. Kentucky
Women’s NCAA, Middle Tennessee St. vs. Tennessee
Men’s NCAA, teams TBD
Women’s NCAA, Florida Gulf Coast vs. Michigan
Women’s NCAA, North Carolina A&T vs. NC State
Women’s NCAA, Jackson St. vs. Baylor
Women’s NCAA, Stephen F. Austin vs. Georgia Tech
Men’s NCAA, teams TBD
Women’s NCAA, South Dakota St. vs. Syracuse
Women’s NCAA, Mercer vs. South Carolina
Men’s NCAA, teams TBD
Men’s NCAA, teams TBD
Women’s NCAA, Florida St. vs. Oregon St.
Women’s NCAA, High Point vs. Connecticut
Women’s NCAA, Lehigh vs. West Virginia
Men’s NCAA, teams TBD
Women’s NCAA, Washington St. vs. South Florida
Men’s NCAA, teams TBD
Women’s NCAA, Utah Valley vs. Stanford
NBA, Dallas at Portland
SOCCER
Women’s college, Michigan at Penn St.
Women’s college, Iowa at Maryland
Premier League, Aston Villa vs. Tottenham Hotspur
CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Championship,
Dominican Republic vs. United States
Mexico Primera Division, Santos Laguna vs. León
CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Championship,
Costa Rica vs. Mexico
GOLF
PGA Tour, Honda Classic
PGA Tour, Honda Classic
SOFTBALL
College, Tennessee at Alabama
College, Arizona at Washington
College, Arizona St. at UCLA
College, Texas A&M at LSU
MOTOR SPORTS
NASCAR Cup Series, Atlanta
HOCKEY
NHL, Vegas at Los Angeles
7 a.m.
ESPNU
9 a.m.
10 a.m.
noon
1 p.m.
SEC
MLB
SEC
MLB
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
10 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
noon
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
CBS
ESPN
ESPNU
ESPN2
ESPN
ABC
CBS
ESPN2
ESPN
ABC
ESPNU
CBS
ESPN2
ESPN
TNT
TBS
ESPN2
ESPN
ESPNU
TNT
ESPN2
TBS
ESPN
NBCSNW
9 a.m.
11 a.m.
12:25 p.m.
Big Ten
Big Ten
NBCSN
4 p.m.
6 p.m.
FS1
FS2
6:30 p.m.
FS1
10 a.m.
noon
Golf
NBC
11 a.m.
noon
2 p.m.
3 p.m.
ESPNU
Pac-12
Pac-12
SEC
noon
FOX
3 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 Friday night are:
9 14 40 58 69 8
Oregon
Lottery
results
x
3
The estimated jackpot is now $105 million.
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
SATURDAY
Football: Beaverton at Summit, 2 p.m.
Volleyball: Mountain View at Crook County, 3 p.m.;
Ridgeview at Crook County, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.; Red-
mond at Hood River Valley, 12:15 p.m.; Redmond vs.
Hermiston, 2:45 p.m.; La Pine at Harrisburg, 2:30 p.m.
Boys soccer: Bend at Mountain View, 2 p.m.; The
Dalles at Crook County, noon; La Pine at Pleasant Hill,
1 p.m.
PREPS
Football
Thursday’s Late Game
Gervais 38, Culver 6
Friday’s Games
Mountain View vs. Bend, late
Redmond vs. Ridgeview, late
Madras vs. North Marion, late
Crook County vs. Gladstone, late
La Pine vs. Santiam Christian, late
Gilchrist vs. Elkton, late
Volleyball
Thursday’s Late Games
Bend 3, Summit 1 (16-25, 25-23, 25-15, 25-20)
Sisters 3, Woodburn 0 (25-7, 25-12, 25-6)
Central Christian 3, Hosanna-Triad 0 (25-11, 25-16, 25-19)
Friday’s Games
North Lake/Paisley 3, Trinity Lutheran 0 (25-15, 25-7,
25-18)
Culver vs. Colton, late
Boys soccer
Thursday’s Late Games
Hood River Valley 3, Ridgeview 1
Stayton 8, Sisters 0
Girls soccer
Thursday’s Late Games
Hood River Valley 0, Ridgeview 0
Stayton vs. Sisters 4, Stayton 0
Friday’s Game
Summit 2, Mountain View 1
Cross-country
Thursday Late Results
Clash in the Cascades at Big Meadow Golf Course
Boys 5,000 Meters
Team Scores — Summit 23, Sisters 67, Bend 77,
Mountain View 80, La Pine 106
Individuals (Top 10) — 1. Ethan Hosang, SIS,
16:13.10; 2. Mason Kissell, SUM, 16:46.45; 3. Sam Hat-
field, SUM, 16:50.91; 4. Jackson Keefer, SUM, 16:54.62;
5. Chase Schermer, MV, 17:30.53; 6. Jack Strang, SUM,
17:45.17; 7. Will Thorsett, SIS, 17:52.04; 8. Noah Laugh-
lin-Hall, SUM, 17:54.72; 9. Benjamin Keown, BHS,
18:00.80; 10. Sam May, SIS, 19:02.37.
Girls 5,000 Meters
Teams Scores — Summit 15, Mountain View 55,
Bend 86, Sisters 92.
Individuals (Top 10) — 1. Teaghan Knox, SUM,
18:43.33; 2. Magdalene Williams, SUM, 18:46.14; 3. Bar-
rett Justema, SUM, 18:50.98; 4. Makenzie McRay, SUM,
18:56. 58; 5. Jasper Fievet, SUM, 19:18.72; 6. Payton Mc-
Carthy, SUM, 19:36.94; 7. Ashley Boone, SUM, 19:52.86;
8. Ainslie Kno, SUM, 20:23.16; 9. Camille Broadbent,
SUM, 21:02.01; 10. Jorun Downing, SUM, 21:08.47.
BASKETBALL
Men’s college
NCAA TOURNAMENT
FIRST FOUR
Thursday’s Late Game
In West Lafayette, Ind.
UCLA 86, Michigan St. 80, OT
FIRST ROUND
Friday’s Games
Arkansas 85, Colgate 68
Baylor 79, Hartford 55
Rutgers 60, Clemson 56
Florida 75, Virginia Tech 70, OT
Houston 87, Cleveland St. 56
Illinois 78, Drexel 49
Loyola Chicago 71, Georgia Tech 60
Wisconsin 85, North Carolina 62
Oral Roberts 75, Ohio St. 72, OT
Oklahoma St. 69, Liberty 60
North Texas 78, Purdue 69, OT
Oregon St. 70, Tennessee 56
Texas Tech 65, Utah St. 53
Syracuse vs. San Diego St., late
Winthrop vs. Villanova, late
Morehead St. vs. West Virginia, late
Friday’s Box Score
Oregon St. 70, Tennessee 56
OREGON ST. (1-0)
Alatishe 2-10 0-0 4, Silva 8-8 0-0 16, Lucas 5-11 0-1 14,
Reichle 3-5 1-2 10, Thompson 5-12 2-2 13, Andela 1-5
0-0 2, Calloo 2-3 0-0 6, Hunt 1-2 3-5 5, Franklin 0-0 0-0
0, I.Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, Silver 0-0 0-0 0, Tucker 0-0 0-0 0.
Totals 27-56 6-10 70.
TENNESSEE (0-1)
Plavsic 0-0 1-2 1, K.Johnson 6-16 1-2 14, Springer 5-12 2-2
12, Vescovi 4-9 0-0 11, Pons 0-2 4-4 4, Bailey 4-14 0-0 9,
James 2-10 1-2 5, Nkamhoua 0-0 0-0 0, Anosike 0-0 0-0 0,
Gaines 0-0 0-0 0, Pember 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 21-63 9-12 56.
Halftime —Oregon St. 33-19. 3-Point Goals —Oregon
St. 10-21 (Lucas 4-9, Reichle 3-4, Calloo 2-3, Thompson
1-4, Hunt 0-1), Tennessee 5-26 (Vescovi 3-8, K.Johnson
1-2, Bailey 1-9, Pons 0-1, Springer 0-1, James 0-5). Re-
bounds —Oregon St. 40 (Thompson 10), Tennessee
33 (James 13). Assists —Oregon St. 20 (Thompson 6),
Tennessee 10 (Springer 3). Total Fouls —Oregon St. 13,
Tennessee 16.
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Phila.
28
13
.683
Brooklyn
28
14
.667
Milwaukee
26
14
.650
Miami
22
20
.524
Atlanta
21
20
.512
Charlotte
20
20
.500
New York
21
21
.500
Boston
20
21
.488
Chicago
18
21
.462
Indiana
18
22
.450
Toronto
17
24
.415
Washington
15
25
.375
Cleveland
15
26
.366
Orlando
14
27
.341
Detroit
12
29
.293
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Utah
30
11
.732
L.A. Lakers
28
13
.683
Phoenix
26
13
.667
L.A. Clippers
26
16
.619
Denver
24
16
.600
Portland
24
16
.600
San Antonio
22
16
.579
Dallas
21
18
.538
Golden State
22
20
.524
Memphis
18
20
.474
New Orleans
17
24
.415
Sacramento
17
24
.415
Oklahoma City
17
24
.415
Houston
11
29
.275
Minnesota
10
31
.244
Thursday’s Late Games
Portland 101, New Orleans 93
Minnesota 123, Phoenix 119
L.A. Lakers 116, Charlotte 105
GB
—
½
1½
6½
7
7½
7½
8
9
9½
11
12½
13
14
16
GB
—
2
3
4½
5½
5½
6½
8
8½
10½
13
13
13
18½
20
Detroit 113, Houston 100
Indiana 137, Miami 110
Golden State 116, Memphis 103
Utah 115, Toronto 112
Chicago at Denver, late
Dallas at Portland, late
Minnesota at Phoenix, late
Saturday’s Games
Atlanta at L.A. Lakers, 12:30 p.m.
Golden State at Memphis, 5 p.m.
Sacramento at Phila., 5 p.m.
San Antonio at Milwaukee, 6 p.m.
Charlotte at L.A. Clippers, 7 p.m.
GOLF
PGA Tour
Honda Classic Partial Scores
Friday at Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.
Purse: $7 million
Yardage: 7,048; Par: 72
Second Round
Aaron Wise
64-64—128
Brandon Hagy
69-62—131
Matt Jones
61-70—131
Sam Ryder
69-63—132
Denny McCarthy
68-65—133
Scott Harrington
66-67—133
Shane Lowry
67-66—133
Russell Henley
64-69—133
Camilo Villegas
69-65—134
Stewart Cink
71-64—135
Brice Garnett
71-64—135
Harry Higgs
68-67—135
Cameron Tringale
67-68—135
Zach Johnson
67-68—135
Robert Streb
69-66—135
Will Gordon, 67-69—136. Kevin Streelman, 69-67—136.
Sungjae Im, 68-68—136. J.B. Holmes, 69-67—136. Adam
Scott, 69-67—136. Joaquin Niemann, 69-67—136. Jason
Dufner, 68-68—136. Kevin Chappell, 66-70—136. Harold
Varner III, 71-65—136. Cameron Davis, 66-71—137. Michael
Thompson, 71-66—137. Steve Stricker, 66-71—137. Adam
Hadwin, 72-65—137. Jimmy Walker, 69-68—137. Lucas
Glover, 71-66—137.
Adam Schenk, 72-66—138. Keegan Bradley, 69-69—
138. Keith Mitchell, 69-69—138. Rickie Fowler, 70-68—138.
Brian Gay, 71-67—138. William McGirt, 69-69—138. Sepp
Straka, 68-70—138. Chase Koepka, 69-69—138. John Huh,
68-70—138. Brendan Steele, 73-65—138. Matthew Ne-
Smith, 70-68—138.
Tyler McCumber, 70-69—139. Chris Kirk, 68-71—139.
Bronson Burgoon, 69-70—139. Alex Noren, 71-68—139.
Lucas Herbert, 70-69—139. Charl Schwartzel, 70-69—139.
D.J. Trahan, 68-71—139. Phil Mickelson, 71-68—139. C.T.
Pan, 67-72—139. Nate Lashley, 68-71—139. Jhonattan
Vegas, 71-68—139.
Erik van Rooyen, 70-70—140. Tom Lewis, 74-66—140.
Roger Sloan, 71-69—140. Mackenzie Hughes, 68-72—140.
Vincent Whaley, 73-67—140.
Satoshi Kodaira, 70-71—141. Stephen Stallings, Jr.,
71-70—141. Jim Herman, 70-71—141. Ryan Armour, 70-
71—141. Pat Perez, 72-69—141. Ted Potter, Jr., 70-71—141.
Talor Gooch, 72-69—141. Mark Hubbard, 68-73—141. Beau
Hossler, 71-70—141. Kiradech Aphibarnrat, 70-71—141.
Chase Seiffert, 67-74—141.
HOCKEY
Thursday’s Late Box Score
Trail Blazers 101, Pelicans 93
NEW ORLEANS (93)
Ingram 7-21 2-2 19, Williamson 9-17 8-11 26, Adams
2-3 2-2 6, Ball 6-15 0-0 15, Bledsoe 3-8 0-4 7, Hayes 1-1
1-2 3, Alexander-Walker 2-10 0-0 6, Hart 3-5 2-2 9, Lewis
Jr. 0-3 2-2 2. Totals 33-83 17-25 93.
PORTLAND (101)
Covington 4-7 0-0 10, Jones Jr. 3-11 1-2 8, Kanter 4-5
8-10 16, Lillard 12-22 6-6 36, McCollum 3-16 2-2 11, An-
thony 6-12 1-1 15, Hood 0-1 0-0 0, Trent Jr. 1-11 1-2 3,
Little 0-2 2-2 2. Totals 33-87 21-25 101.
New Orleans
23 25 22 23 — 93
Portland
31 26 20 24 — 101
3-Point Goals—New Orleans 10-37 (Ingram 3-9, Ball
3-11, Alexander-Walker 2-8, Hart 1-3, Bledsoe 1-4, Lew-
is Jr. 0-2), Portland 14-43 (Lillard 6-15, McCollum 3-6,
Anthony 2-3, Covington 2-5, Jones Jr. 1-6, Little 0-2,
Trent Jr. 0-6). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—New
Orleans 44 (Adams, Williamson 10), Portland 50 (Kanter
13). Assists—New Orleans 24 (Ball 8), Portland 11 (An-
thony, McCollum, Trent Jr. 2). Total Fouls—New Orle-
ans 19, Portland 19. A—0 (19,393)
Friday’s Games
Sacramento 107, Boston 96
San Antonio 116, Cleveland 110
Orlando 121, Brooklyn 113
NHL
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington 30 20 6 4 44 105 89
N.Y. Islanders 31 19 8 4 42 90 71
Pittsburgh
30 18 11 1 37 96 85
Boston
28 16 8 4 36 77 66
Philadelphia 28 15 10 3 33 92 99
N.Y. Rangers 29 12 13 4 28 86 78
New Jersey
27 10 13 4 24 68 86
Buffalo
29 6 19 4 16 61 101
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Tampa Bay
29 21 6 2 44 106 69
Florida
29 19 6 4 42 100 83
Carolina
29 20 7 2 42 99 75
Chicago
31 14 12 5 33 94 102
Columbus
31 12 12 7 31 83 101
Nashville
30 13 16 1 27 73 98
Dallas
26 9 10 7 25 74 71
Detroit
31 10 17 4 24 71 101
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Vegas
27 20 6 1 41 90 61
Colorado
28 18 8 2 38 91 65
Minnesota
28 18 9 1 37 87 69
St. Louis
29 14 10 5 33 89 96
Los Angeles 28 12 10 6 30 83 79
Arizona
30 12 13 5 29 72 91
San Jose
27 11 13 3 25 80 96
Anaheim
31 9 16 6 24 70 105
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Toronto
31 19 10 2 40 105 83
Edmonton
33 20 13 0 40 112 95
Winnipeg
30 18 10 2 38 98 87
Montreal
30 13 8 9 35 95 83
Vancouver
34 16 16 2 34 95 106
Calgary
31 15 13 3 33 87 95
Ottawa
33 10 20 3 23 87 130
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.
Thursday’s Late Game
Anaheim 3, Arizona 2, OT
Friday’s Games
Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 1
Calgary 4, Toronto 3
Vancouver 3, Montreal 2, OT
St. Louis at San Jose, late
Vegas at Los Angeles, late
Saturday’s Games
Boston at Buffalo, ppd
Pittsburgh at New Jersey, 10 a.m.
Nashville at Florida, 11 a.m.
Minnesota at Colorado, noon
Chicago at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Calgary at Toronto, 4 p.m.
Columbus at Carolina, 4 p.m.
Dallas at Detroit, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 4 p.m.
Philadelphia at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m.
Vancouver at Montreal, 4 p.m.
Arizona at Anaheim, 5 p.m.
St. Louis at San Jose, 6 p.m.
Winnipeg at Edmonton, 7 p.m.
DEALS
Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
American League
NEW YORK YANKEES — Optioned RHPs Albert Abreau
and Brooks Kriske and INFs Thairo Estrada and Mike Ford
to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (Triple-A East).
National League
CHICAGO CUBS — Optioned RHP James Norwood
and LHPs Kyle Ryan and Justin Steele to Iowa (Triple-A
East) and LHP Brailyn Marquez to Tennessee (Double-A
South). Reassigned RHP Joe Biagini, C Jose Lobaton and
OFs Michael Hermosillo, Nick Martini and Ian Miller to
minor league camp.
NEW YORK METS — Optioned RHP Yennsy Diaz, C Pat-
rick Mazeika and LHP Daniel Zamora to Syracuse (Triple-A
East). Reassigned OF Johneshwy Fargas, INFs Jake Hager
and Wilfredo Tovarand C David Rodriguez.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
MILWAUKEE BUCKS — Acquired Fs P.J. Tucker and Rodi-
ons Kurucs from Houston in exchange for G D.J. Augus-
tin and F D.J. Wilson and were returned their own 2022
first-round draft pick and a Houston 2021 second-round
draft pick in exchange for Milwaukee’s 2021 and 2023
first-round draft picks.
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS — Fined F Paul George for
public criticism of officiating.
Women’s National Basketball Association
WASHINGTON MYSTICS — Retired G Jacki Gemelos.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS — Signed LB Brandon Copeland
and S Erik Harris to one-year contracts.
DENVER BRONCOS — Signed S Justin Simmons to a
four-year contract.
DETROIT LIONS — Re-signed LS Don Muhlbach to a
contract. Signed unrestricted free agents DE Charles Harris
and RB Jamaal Williams.
CINCINNATI BENGALS — Released DT Geno Atkins and
OT Bobby Hart. Signed CBs Chidobe Awuzie and Mike
Hilton, DE Trey Hendrickson, DT Larry Ogunjobi and OT
Riley Reiff. Agreed to trade QB Ryan Finley to Houston.
CLEVELAND BROWNS — Agreed to terms with WR
Rashard Higgins, T Greg Senat, K Cody Parkey, LBs Elijah Lee,
Anthony Walker and Malcolm Smith and WR JoJo Natson.
DALLAS COWBOYS — Waived C Marcus Henry, TE Cole
Hikutini, WRs Jon’Vea Johnson and Chris Lacy.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS — Re-signed DB Brandon
Facyson.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Signed WRs Nelson Ag-
holor and Kendrick Bourne, DLs Henry Anderson, Montra-
vius Adams and Deatrich Wise Jr., DBs Cody Davis and Jalen
Mills, TE Hunter Henry, LBs Matt Judon, Raekwon McMillan
and Kyle Van Noy and OL Ted Karras to contracts. Signed
unrestricted free agent TE Jonnu Smith from Tennessee.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Signed DL Samson Ebukam
and to a two-year contract. Signed WR Trent Sherfield to
a one-year contract. Re-signed CB Dontae Johnson to a
one-year contract.
TENNESSEE TITANS — Agreed to terms with CB Jano-
ris Jenkins and LB Bud Dupree on multi-year contracts.
COLLEGE
ETSU — Named Simon Harris women’s basketball
head coach.
Carson
Continued from B1
Carson finished the final season of his
initial four-year deal in 2020 that paid him
$3.73 million. The 26-year-old has suffered
a succession of injuries that forced him to
miss 19 games in four NFL seasons.
Carson made clear from the beginning
of last season that he hoped to strike it rich
in free agency.
“Of course, it’s something that’s on my
mind,” he said before last season. “You see
a lot of guys, they’re starting to get paid,
but I try not to let it distract me from the
season. I try to push it away.”
The Seahawks let Carson test free agency
when they declined to place a franchise tag
on him that would have paid him just over
$8 million in 2021 on a one-year deal, all of
which would go on the salary cap.
Seattle won its gamble there, with Car-
son able to earn up to $6.9 million in 2021.
The Seahawks’ offer apparently was bet-
ter than offers from the Jets, Panthers and
Patriots, who “all got involved” with Car-
son, according to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler.
Seattle will return its leading rusher to a
group that also includes 2018 first-round
pick Rashaad Penny, recent draftees Travis
Homer and DeeJay Dallas and Alex Col-
lins, who re-signed a one-year deal after
spending most of last season on the prac-
tice squad.
Seattle this week saw last year’s backup,
Carlos Hyde, sign with Jacksonville.
The presence of five running backs un-
der contract who all saw action last year
figures to mean Seattle is done adding to
that position.
But it also makes for an especially in-
teresting competition to see how the spots
fill out.
Re-signing Carson to what is essentially
Wilfredo Lee/AP file
Seattle Seahawks running back Chris Carson runs the ball against the Miami Dolphins in Miami
Gardens, Florida, in October.
a two-year deal also raises questions about
the future of Penny.
Penny was a controversial pick as the
No. 27 overall selection in 2018 and has
struggled to stay healthy, playing in just 27
of a possible 48 games. He missed all but
three last season while recovering from a
knee injury suffered in December 2019.
When Penny was drafted in the first
round, many viewed that as a sign he
would be the team’s running back of the
future, and some figured that meant Car-
son would leave.
But Penny’s injuries and inability to
prove he can be a consistent contributor
undoubtedly added to the urgency for Se-
attle to get something done with Carson.
The Seahawks were 10-2 last season
in games Carson played, and though his
running was a key factor, so was making
37 catches for a career-high 287 yards and
four touchdowns. That aspect of his game
figures to fit in nicely with the offense of
new coordinator Shane Waldron, who
spent the past four years with the Rams.
What Carson will be asked to do most,
though, is give the Seahawks the kind of
punishing, bruising rushing attack that
Carroll likes best.
“We have to run the ball better,’’ Car-
roll said after the season. “Not even better,
we have to run it more. We have to dictate
what’s going on with the people that we’re
playing, and that’s one of the ways to do
that.”
And as they have the past four years,
they’ll again count on Carson leading the
way.
SPORTS BRIEFING
GOLF
Former Ducks star Wise takes lead at Honda Classic —
Aaron Wise is making PGA National look easy. Wise shot his sec-
ond straight 6-under 64 on Friday to take a three-stroke lead into
the weekend at the Honda Classic. The 128 total is the lowest 36-
hole score at PGA National since the tournament moved there 15
years ago — and marks the first 36-hole lead of Wise’s PGA Tour
career. “It’s two great rounds of golf and I love that, and I love that
I’m playing good,” Wise said. “But this place can get to you pretty
quick and there’s a lot of golf left ahead and a lot of trouble out
there.” He had a pair of eagles to highlight the day, his first two of
2021. Brandon Hagy (62) and first-round leader Matt Jones (70)
were tied for second. Wise birdied the last to finish off the 64, the
eighth round of 64 or lower at PGA National this week. Wise made
a 3-footer for a 3 at the par-5 18th, his ninth hole of the day, then
connected on a 45-footer for eagle at the par-5 third. “I’ve made so
many bonus putts from outside 10 feet that I can’t complain,” said
the 24-year-old Wise, the 2016 NCAA champion for Oregon.
— Bulletin wire report