The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, April 05, 2021, Monday E-Edition, Page 6, Image 6

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    A6 The BulleTin • Monday, april 5, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
MONDAY
BASEBALL
MLB Baseball, Minnesota Twins at Detroit Tigers
MLB Baseball, Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Indians
MLB Baseball, Tampa Bay Rays at Boston Red Sox
MLB Baseball, Chicago White Sox at Seattle Mariners
BASKETBALL
NCAA Tournament, Final: Gonzaga vs Baylor
SOFTBALL
College Softball, Florida at Georgia
TENNIS
WTA Tennis, Volvo Car Open-WTA, Early Rounds
WTA Tennis, Volvo Car Open-WTA, Early Rounds
WATER SPORTS
World Surf League, Championship Tour:
Newcastle Cup - Day 4
WINTER SPORTS
World Men’s Curling Championship,
United States vs Canada
Time
TV
10 a.m.
ESPN
1 p.m.
ESPN
4 p.m.
ESPN
7 p.m. ESPN, ROOT
6 p.m.
CBS
4 p.m.
SEC
7 a.m.
4 p.m.
TENNIS
TENNIS
2:30 p.m.
FS2
8 a.m.
NBCSN
Time
10 a.m.
1 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
TV
MLB
MLB
ESPN
SEC
MLB
ROOT
TUESDAY
BASEBALL
MLB Baseball, Minnesota Twins at Detroit Tigers
MLB Baseball, Regional Coverage
MLB Baseball, New York Mets at Philadelphia Phillies
College Baseball, North Carolina at South Carolina
MLB Baseball, Regional Coverage
MLB Baseball, Chicago White Sox at Seattle Mariners
BASKETBALL
NBA, Philadelphia 76ers at Boston Celtics
NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Los Angeles Clippers
NBA, Milwaukee Bucks at Golden State Warriors
HOCKEY
NHL, Pittsburgh Penguins at New York Rangers
SOCCER
CONCACAF Champions League,
Marathón vs Portland Timbers
CONCACAF Champions League,
Alajuelense vs Atlanta United FC
CONCACAF Champions League,
Arcahaie FC vs Cruz Azul
TENNIS
WTA Tennis, Volvo Car Open-WTA, Early Rounds
WTA Tennis, Volvo Car Open-WTA, Early Rounds
WATER SPORTS
World Surf League, Championship Tour:
Newcastle Cup - Day 5
Women’s College Swimming & Diving,
2021 NCAA Championships: TCU at Texas A&M
4:30 p.m.
TNT
7 p.m. NBCSNW
7 p.m.
TNT
4 p.m.
NBCSN
3 p.m.
FS1
5 p.m.
FS1
7 p.m.
FS1
7 a.m.
4 p.m.
TENNIS
TENNIS
2:30 p.m.
4 p.m.
FS2
ESPNU
Listings are the most accurate available.
NCAA Men’s
Continued from A5
GAMES LOST
This matchup has been a
long time in the making.
Had the COVID-19 pan-
demic not washed out the
2020 postseason, both these
teams would have been No. 1
seeds in last season’s NCAA
Tournament.
They were supposed to
play this season, too. The
meeting was set for Dec. 5 in
Indianapolis — a Final Four
preview in the Final Four
city, many predicted — but
the game got scratched when
a Zags player and a staffer
tested positive.
The coaches worked hard
to try to reschedule. But there
was no room on the calen-
dar. Instead, they meet for
the title.
This marks the first time
since 2005 that the top two
teams on the overall seeding
list have faced in the final.
Gonzaga has spent the entire
season at No. 1 in the AP poll.
Baylor spent 15 of 17 weeks
at No. 2 and finished at No. 3
(behind Illinois).
MO’S MOMENT
Nobody will ever for-
get Adam Morrison’s tears
against UCLA. Now, nobody
will forget his “Yeessssss.”
The former Gonzaga star
was crestfallen, weeping with
his head buried in the hard-
wood after a devastating loss
to the Bruins in the Sweet 16
back in 2006.
Fifteen years, later, he does
color for Bulldogs radio,
and his reaction to Suggs’
game-winner was getting
plenty of buzz a day later. It’s
three loud shouts of “Yesssss”
with some other hooting and
hollering to wrap it up.
Few said the team’s sports
information director played it
for him on the way over to do
his interviews Sunday.
“A pretty special moment,
and I was happy for him and
proud of him for letting his
guard down,” the coach said.
PRIOR TO THE PAUSE
Before COVID-19 put a
three-week hold on their sea-
son in February, the Bears
were undefeated, too.
After starting 18-0, they
lost two of six shortly af-
ter coming out of the break.
Drew said the lack of quality
practice time during the lay-
off, then afterward when Bay-
lor was playing almost every
other day, took its toll on the
team’s defense.
Only when the Bears lost to
Oklahoma State in the Big 12
tournament semifinals were
they able to get back to prac-
ticing regularly, and get back
to basics.
“Our players really bought
in,” Drew said. “Our defense
was lapsing, and we had to get
back to where we were.”
Analytics rank the Bears
third in the nation in forced
turnovers and sixth in steals
— part of the formula for
stopping Gonzaga’s top-
ranked offense.
PRIME MATCHUP
Baylor’s Davion Mitchell’s
nickname is “Off Night,” be-
cause anyone he D’s up on
seems to have one. His next
task: Stopping Suggs.
In addition to making the
shot of the tournament, Suggs
is averaging 14 points and 5.5
rebounds a game and setting
himself up as an NBA lottery
pick should he decide to leave.
Mitchell says he knows he
can’t shut down anyone com-
pletely.
“My job is just to slow ‘em
down, not to keep ’em from
scoring,” Mitchell said. “Ev-
eryone’s really good at this
game. My job is just to limit
that.”
UNDEFEATED
Few and Drew are fishing
buddies in the offseason, and
pickleball partners in the bas-
ketball bubble.
Conceding that it might be
a break in COVID-19 proto-
cols, Few said he and the Bay-
lor coach haven’t lost a game
on the pickleball courts set up
at the baseball stadium where
teams have gone for fresh air
during their semi-quaran-
tined stay in Indianapolis.
The coaches’ time together
during the tournament has
offered them a chance to re-
flect on their journeys. Few
has been head coach at Gon-
zaga since 1999 and helped
build the tiny school into a
powerhouse. Drew took over
a Baylor program eviscer-
ated after the 2003 murder of
player Patrick Dennehy by a
teammate.
“We’ve talked about where
we were and where we are,”
Few said. “Our path was a lot
smoother and didn’t come
from a dark place. But from
where they were, it’s unbeliev-
able what they’ve been able
to do.”
ON DECK
SPORTS BRIEFING
Prep sports
GOLF
MONDAY
Volleyball: estacada at Madras, 6 p.m.
Boys soccer: Summit at Bend, 5 p.m.
Girls soccer: Corbett at Madras, 4 p.m.; Santiam
Christian at la pine, 4 p.m.
TUESDAY
Volleyball: Summit at Bend, 6:30 p.m.; la pine at
Trinity lutheran, 5:30 p.m.; Gilchrist at prospect Char-
ter, 5 p.m.
Boys soccer: Summit at Sandy, 6:30 p.m.
Girls soccer: Bend at South eugene, 6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Girls soccer: lakeview at la pine, 3 p.m.
Cross-country: iMC championships, at Sorosis
park, The dalles.
THURSDAY
Volleyball: Mountain View at Bend, 6:30 p.m.
Boys soccer: Bend at north eugene, 6:30 p.m.
Girls soccer: Bend at north eugene, 4 p.m.
FRIDAY
Football: Mountain View at Bend, 7:15 p.m.; pend-
leton at Summit, 7:15 p.m.; The dalles at redmond, 7
p.m.; ridgeview at la Salle prep, 7 p.m.; henley at Crook
County, 6 p.m.; South umpqua at la pine, 7 p.m.; Sisters
at philomath, 7 p.m.; alsea at Gilchrist, 1 p.m.
SATURDAY
Cross-country: oxford Classic, at Juniper park in
Bend, 1 p.m.; 4a state championships, at Tillamook;
3a/2a/1a state championships, at lebanon.
BASKETBALL
Tavatanakit holds off charging Ko in ANA Inspiration
— Patty Tavatanakit survived Lydia Ko’s final-round charge
Sunday to win the ANA Inspiration for her first LPGA Tour vic-
tory. Five strokes ahead entering the day and six in front after a
chip-in eagle on the par-5 second, Tavatanakit shot a 4-under 68
in 100-degree heat to beat Ko by two strokes in the first major
championship of the year. Ko matched Lorena Ochoa’s tourna-
ment record with a 62, shooting 7-under 29 on the front nine for
the best nine-hole score in event’s 50-year history. The New Zea-
lander began the day tied for seventh at 6 under, eight strokes
behind Tavatanakit in the tournament played without spectators
for the second time in seven months.
— Bulletin wire report
Men’s college
NCAA TOURNAMENT
Lucas Oil Stadium, in Indianapolis
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
Monday’s Game
Baylor vs. Gonzaga, 6:20 p.m. (CBS)
Women’s college
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
l
pct
phila.
34
16
.680
Brooklyn
34
16
.680
Milwaukee
32
17
.653
atlanta
26
24
.520
Miami
26
24
.520
Charlotte
25
24
.510
new york
25
25
.500
Boston
25
25
.500
indiana
22
26
.458
Chicago
20
28
.417
Toronto
19
30
.388
Washington
17
31
.354
orlando
17
32
.347
Cleveland
17
32
.347
detroit
14
35
.286
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
l
pct
utah
38
11
.776
phoenix
34
14
.708
l.a. Clippers
33
18
.647
denver
30
18
.625
l.a. lakers
31
19
.620
portland
30
19
.612
dallas
27
21
.563
Memphis
24
23
.511
San antonio
24
23
.511
Golden State
23
27
.460
new orleans
22
27
.449
Sacramento
22
28
.440
oklahoma City
20
29
.408
houston
13
36
.265
Minnesota
12
38
.240
Sunday’s Games
Chicago 115, Brooklyn 107
l.a. Clippers 104, l.a. lakers 86
Boston 116, Charlotte 86
Memphis 116, phila. 100
atlanta 117, Golden State 111
new orleans 122, houston 115
orlando at denver, late
Monday’s Games
Cleveland at San antonio, 4 p.m.
detroit at oklahoma City, 4 p.m.
new york at Brooklyn, 4 p.m.
Sacramento at Minnesota, 4 p.m.
utah at dallas, 4 p.m.
Washington at Toronto, 4 p.m.
phoenix at houston, 5 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Chicago at indiana, 4 p.m.
l.a. lakers at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
new orleans at atlanta, 4:30 p.m.
phila. at Boston, 4:30 p.m.
Memphis at Miami, 5 p.m.
detroit at denver, 6 p.m.
Milwaukee at Golden State, 7 p.m.
portland at l.a. Clippers, 7 p.m.
GB
—
—
1½
8
8
8½
9
9
11
13
14½
16
16½
16½
19½
GB
—
3½
6
7½
7½
8
10½
13
13
15½
16
16½
18
25
26½
Saturday’s Late Box Score
Portland 133, Oklahoma City 85
OKLAHOMA CITY (85)
pokusevski 3-13 0-0 8, roby 2-4 1-4 5, Brown 4-7 2-4
10, Maledon 1-12 4-4 7, Mykhailiuk 1-5 1-2 3, Bradley
6-8 2-2 14, hall 1-2 0-0 2, Jackson 0-8 0-0 0, Jerome 2-6
1-2 7, Miller 3-7 3-3 11, Williams 7-13 3-3 18. Totals 30-
85 17-24 85.
PORTLAND (133)
Covington 2-6 0-0 5, powell 6-13 1-2 15, nurkic 3-5 3-3
9, lillard 6-15 1-1 16, McCollum 8-14 0-0 20, anthony
4-7 0-0 10, Giles iii 4-5 1-2 12, elleby 2-8 1-2 5, little 5-7
1-1 13, Kanter 6-13 0-0 12, Simons 5-11 3-3 16. Totals
51-104 11-14 133.
Oklahoma City 19 27 13 26 — 85
Portland
35 30 39 29 — 133
3-point Goals_oklahoma City 8-34 (Jerome 2-4, Miller
2-6, pokusevski 2-6, Williams 1-3, Maledon 1-7, Jack-
son 0-5), portland 20-46 (McCollum 4-8, Giles iii 3-3,
lillard 3-7, Simons 3-8, anthony 2-3, little 2-4, powell
2-5, Covington 1-3, elleby 0-4). Fouled out_none.
rebounds_oklahoma City 46 (Brown 14), portland 56
(Kanter 17). assists_oklahoma City 17 (Jerome, poku-
sevski 4), portland 25 (lillard 6). Total Fouls_oklahoma
City 21, portland 18. a_0 (19,393)
NCAA TOURNAMENT
Alamodome, In San Antonio
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
Sunday’s Game
Stanford 54, arizona 53
Sunday’s Box Score
Stanford 54, Arizona 53
ARIZONA (21-6)
Baptiste 3-8 0-0 7, reese 2-6 0-0 4, Thomas 0-3 0-0 0,
Mcdonald 5-20 8-12 22, yeaney 1-5 0-0 2, pellington
5-12 5-6 15, pueyo 1-4 0-0 3, Ware 0-1 0-0 0, Team 0-0
0-0 0, Totals 17-59 13-18 53
STANFORD (31-2)
Brink 5-9 0-0 10, lexie hull 4-13 1-1 10, Jones 8-14 1-1
17, Williams 2-6 0-0 5, Wilson 2-3 0-0 5, Belibi 0-2 0-0 0,
Jerome 0-1 0-0 0, prechtel 3-9 0-0 7, lacie hull 0-0 0-0 0,
Jump 0-0 0-0 0, Van Gytenbeek 0-0 0-0 0, Team 0-0 0-0
0, Totals 24-57 2-2 54
Arizona
8
16
16
13
—
53
Stanford
16
15
12
11
—
54
3-point Goals—arizona 6-22 (Baptiste 1-3, reese 0-2,
Thomas 0-2, Mcdonald 4-9, yeaney 0-1, pellington 0-2,
pueyo 1-3), Stanford 4-14 (Brink 0-1, hull 1-3, Williams
1-3, Wilson 1-2, Jerome 0-1, prechtel 1-4). assists—ar-
izona 5 (Baptiste 2), Stanford 15 (Williams 3). Fouled
out—none. rebounds—arizona 29 (Thomas 2-7),
Stanford 47 (prechtel 3-8). Total Fouls—arizona 11,
Stanford 17. Technical Fouls—none. a—4,604.
MLB
EAST
Baltimore
Tampa Bay
Toronto
new york
Boston
CENTRAL
detroit
Kansas City
Minnesota
Chicago
Cleveland
WEST
houston
los angeles
Seattle
Texas
oakland
EAST
phila.
new york
Washington
Miami
atlanta
CENTRAL
Chicago
Cincinnati
Milwaukee
pittsburgh
St. louis
WEST
los angeles
San diego
San Francisco
arizona
Colorado
W
2
2
2
1
1
GB
_
1
1
2
3
Pct
.667
.667
.667
.333
.333
GB
_
_
_
1
1
W
L
Pct
4
0
1.000
2
1
.667
2
1
.667
1
2
.333
0
4
.000
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W
L
Pct
3
0
1.000
0
0
.000
0
0
.000
1
2
.333
0
3
.000
GB
_
1½
1½
2½
4
W
2
2
1
1
1
L
1
1
1
2
2
L
1
1
2
2
2
W
L
3
1
3
1
1
2
1
3
1
3
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Toronto 3, n.y. yankees 1
Cleveland 9, detroit 3
Baltimore 11, Boston 3
Texas 7, Kansas City 3
Minnesota 8, Milwaukee 2
houston 9, oakland 2
Chicago White Sox at l.a. angels, late
HOCKEY
NHL
BASEBALL
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W
L
Pct
3
0
1.000
2
1
.667
2
1
.667
1
2
.333
0
3
.000
Monday’s Games
Minnesota (Shoemaker 0-0) at detroit (ureña 0-0),
10:10 a.m.
Toronto (Matz 0-0) at Texas (Foltynewicz 0-0), 1:05 p.m.
Kansas City (duffy 0-0) at Cleveland (allen 0-0), 1:10 p.m.
Baltimore (lópez 0-0) at n.y. yankees (Montgomery 0-0),
3:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Wacha 0-0) at Boston (pivetta 0-0), 4:10 p.m.
houston (Garcia 0-0) at l.a. angels (Quintana 0-0),
6:38 p.m.
l.a. dodgers (May 0-0) at oakland (Montas 0-0),
6:40 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (rodón 0-0) at Seattle (Sheffield 0-0),
7:10 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
phila. 2, atlanta 1
Cincinnati 12, St. louis 1
Chicago Cubs 4, pittsburgh 3
Minnesota 8, Milwaukee 2
l.a. dodgers 4, Colorado 2
arizona 3, San diego 1
n.y. Mets at Washington, ppd.
Monday’s Games
atlanta (Smyly 0-0) at Washington (Scherzer 0-0),
1:05 p.m.
pittsburgh (Brubaker 0-0) at Cincinnati (de león 0-0),
3:40 p.m.
St. louis (ponce de leon 0-0) at Miami (rogers 0-0),
3:40 p.m.
n.y. Mets (deGrom 0-0) at phila. (Moore 0-0), 4:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (anderson 0-0) at Chicago Cubs (Williams
0-0), 4:40 p.m.
l.a. dodgers (May 0-0) at oakland (Montas 0-0),
6:40 p.m.
San Francisco (deSclafani 0-0) at San diego (Morejon
0-0), 7:10 p.m.
GB
_
1½
1½
2
3
Pct
.667
.667
.333
.333
.333
GB
_
_
1
1
1
Pct
.750
.750
.333
.250
.250
GB
_
_
1½
2
2
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington 38 25 9 4 54 132 117
n.y. islanders 38 24 10 4 52 117 90
pittsburgh
38 24 12 2 50 126 102
Boston
34 19 10 5 43 96 86
philadelphia 36 17 14 5 39 109 132
n.y. rangers 37 17 15 5 39 117 99
new Jersey
36 13 17 6 32 88 113
Buffalo
37 8 23 6 22 82 128
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida
39 26 9 4 56 130 103
Tampa Bay
38 26 10 2 54 130 93
Carolina
37 25 9 3 53 120 92
nashville
39 20 18 1 41 99 113
Chicago
39 17 17 5 39 109 122
dallas
36 13 13 10 36 98 95
Columbus
40 14 18 8 36 98 129
detroit
40 13 22 5 31 88 125
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Colorado
37 25 8 4 54 132 83
Vegas
36 24 10 2 50 113 84
Minnesota
36 23 11 2 48 104 89
arizona
37 17 15 5 39 99 114
St. louis
37 16 15 6 38 103 118
San Jose
37 17 16 4 38 105 122
los angeles 36 14 16 6 34 98 102
anaheim
38 11 21 6 28 85 127
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Toronto
37 24 10 3 51 121 93
edmonton
38 23 14 1 47 125 109
Winnipeg
38 22 13 3 47 121 104
Montreal
34 16 9 9 41 111 94
Vancouver
37 16 18 3 35 100 120
Calgary
38 16 19 3 35 98 115
ottawa
38 13 21 4 30 101 142
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
detroit 5, Tampa Bay 1
Washington 5, new Jersey 4
Florida 3, Columbus 0
Carolina 1, dallas 0
arizona at anaheim, late
Toronto at Calgary, late
Vancouver at Winnipeg, ppd
Monday’s Games
edmonton at Montreal, 4 p.m.
ottawa at Winnipeg, 4 p.m.
philadelphia at Boston, 4 p.m.
Colorado at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
Vegas at St. louis, 5 p.m.
Toronto at Calgary, 6:30 p.m.
arizona at los angeles, 7 p.m.
NCAA Women’s
Continued from A5
The Cardinal, after another
timeout, couldn’t even get a
shot off, giving Arizona one last
chance with 6.1 seconds left,
but McDonald’s contested shot
from the top of the key at the
buzzer bounced off the rim.
“I got denied hard. I tried to
turn the corner, they sent three
at me. I took a tough, con-
tested shot and it didn’t fall,”
said McDonald, who fell near
midcourt, slumped in disbelief
while the Cardinal celebrated.
It’s been quite a journey for
VanDerveer and the Cardi-
nal this season. The team was
forced on the road for nearly 10
weeks because of the coronavi-
rus, spending 86 days in hotels
during this nomadic season.
The team didn’t complain
and went about their business
and now have another NCAA
championship. Along the way
the Hall of Fame coach earned
her 1,099th career victory to
pass Pat Summitt for the most
all time in women’s basketball
history.
Now the 67-year-old coach
has a third national title to go
along with the ones she won
in 1990 and 1992. That moved
her into a tie with Baylor’s Kim
Mulkey for third most all time
behind Geno Auriemma and
Summitt.
VanDerveer had many great
Eric Gay/AP
Arizona guard Aari McDonald (2) passes between Stanford guard Anna
Wilson (3) and forward Cameron Brink, right, from Beaverton, during
the second half on Sunday at the Alamodome in San Antonio.
teams between titles, including
the ones led by Candice Wig-
gins and the Ogwumike sisters
— Nneka and Chiney, but the
Cardinal just couldn’t end their
season with that elusive win
in the title game until Sunday
night.
It was the first women’s bas-
ketball championship for the
Pac-12 since VanDerveer and
Stanford won the title in 1992.
The last time a team from the
conference was in the title game
was 2010 when the Cardinal
lost to UConn. That game was
also played in the Alamodome
— the site of every game in this
tournament from the Sweet 16
through Sunday’s champion-
ship game.
The entire NCAA Tourna-
ment was played in the San
Antonio area because of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
While Stanford had history
on its side, Arizona has been
building under coach Adia
Barnes, who was the fourth
Black woman to lead her team
to the championship game,
joining Carolyn Peck, Dawn
Staley and C. Vivian Stringer.
Peck and Staley won titles.
Barnes starred for the Wild-
cats as a player in the late 90s
and came back to her alma ma-
ter five years ago. She guided
the team to the WNIT title in
2019 and led them to their first
NCAA title game ever. This
was the team’s first appearance
Tuesday’s Games
Boston at philadelphia, 4 p.m.
Buffalo at new Jersey, 4 p.m.
Florida at Carolina, 4 p.m.
pittsburgh at n.y. rangers, 4 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Columbus, 4 p.m.
Washington at n.y. islanders, 4 p.m.
nashville at detroit, 4:30 p.m.
dallas at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Vancouver at Winnipeg, ppd
anaheim at San Jose, 7:30 p.m.
GOLF
PGA Tour
Valero Texas Open Scores
Sunday at TPC San Antonio — Oaks Course
San Antonio, Texas
Purse: $7.7 million
Yardage: 7,494; Par: 72
Final Round
Jordan Spieth (500), $1,386,000 67-70-67-66 – 270
Charley hoffman (300), $839,300 75-66-65-66 – 272
Matt Wallace (190), $531,300
69-68-67-70 – 274
lucas Glover (135), $377,300
73-67-70-66 – 276
anirban lahiri (110), $315,700
71-69-69-69 – 278
Chris Kirk (92), $259,875
72-72-67-68 – 279
Brandt Snedeker (92), $259,875
72-67-72-68 – 279
Gary Woodland (92), $259,875
71-72-67-69 – 279
patton Kizzire (75), $209,825
71-74-70-65 – 280
Sebastian Munoz (75), $209,825 68-74-69-69 – 280
Cameron Tringale (75), $209,825 66-69-73-72 – 280
Tom hoge (63), $171,325
68-76-66-71 – 281
Matt Kuchar (63), $171,325
70-70-70-71 – 281
Corey Conners (55), $140,525
71-74-67-70 – 282
Kyle Stanley (55), $140,525
71-68-72-71 – 282
erik van rooyen (55), $140,525
71-68-72-71 – 282
rickie Fowler (46), $105,875
76-68-69-70 – 283
Brandon hagy (46), $105,875
70-70-72-71 – 283
luke list (46), $105,875
73-71-70-69 – 283
Keith Mitchell (46), $105,875
72-69-71-71 – 283
ryan palmer (46), $105,875
72-71-70-70 – 283
Camilo Villegas (46), $105,875
64-76-71-72 – 283
abraham ancer (34), $65,285
72-73-69-70 – 284
Keegan Bradley (34), $65,285
71-73-70-70 – 284
Branden Grace (34), $65,285
75-71-70-68 – 284
Chesson hadley (34), $65,285
73-72-66-73 – 284
adam hadwin (34), $65,285
70-73-71-70 – 284
Si Woo Kim (34), $65,285
72-72-70-70 – 284
Kyoung-hoon lee (34), $65,285 70-73-70-71 – 284
K.J. Choi (26), $49,280
72-74-69-70 – 285
Martin laird (26), $49,280
72-73-72-68 – 285
hideki Matsuyama (26), $49,280 67-74-73-71 – 285
rory Sabbatini (26), $49,280
71-70-74-70 – 285
LPGA
ANA Inspiration Scores
Sunday at Mission Hills Country Club,
Rancho Mirage, Calif.
Purse: $3.1 million
Yardage: 6,865; Par: 72
Final Round
patty Tavatanakit, $465,000
66-69-67-68 – 270
lydia Ko, $287,716
70-69-71-62 – 272
Sei young Kim, $151,615
72-71-68-66 – 277
nelly Korda, $151,615
71-70-70-66 – 277
nanna Koerstz Madsen, $151,615 72-68-71-66 – 277
Shanshan Feng, $151,615
67-69-72-69 – 277
Jin young Ko, $79,025
69-70-71-68 – 278
inbee park, $79,025
70-69-70-69 – 278
ally ewing, $79,025
71-70-66-71 – 278
Megan Khang, $59,333
68-73-71-67 – 279
Moriya Jutanugarn, $59,333
68-69-73-69 – 279
Mirim lee, $59,333
69-70-68-72 – 279
danielle Kang, $51,666
72-70-73-65 – 280
Mel reid, $43,476
71-73-70-67 – 281
pernilla lindberg, $43,476
72-72-69-68 – 281
Mi hyang lee, $43,476
73-71-68-69 – 281
hannah Green, $43,476
71-71-70-69 – 281
Charley hull, $43,476
69-69-71-72 – 281
Stephanie Meadow, $34,340
71-73-71-67 – 282
ryann o’Toole, $34,340
71-71-72-68 – 282
Christina Kim, $34,340
70-70-73-69 – 282
Brooke M. henderson, $34,340
75-69-68-70 – 282
Gabriela ruffels, $34,340
72-70-69-71 – 282
yu liu, $34,340
71-71-69-71 – 282
Minjee lee, $28,984
72-70-74-67 – 283
anna nordqvist, $28,984
68-70-74-71 – 283
Gaby lopez, $28,984
73-67-70-73 – 283
Cristie Kerr, $23,352
72-73-74-65 – 284
Jenny Shin, $23,352
71-74-72-67 – 284
hyo Joo Kim, $23,352
72-73-70-69 – 284
lauren Stephenson, $23,352
71-72-72-69 – 284
yui Kawamoto, $23,352
71-69-75-69 – 284
azahara Munoz, $23,352
70-72-72-70 – 284
leona Maguire, $23,352
67-73-74-70 – 284
DEALS
Sunday’s Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
American League
BalTiMore orioleS — reinstated rhp Shawn arm-
strong from the paternity list and placed him on the
10-day il.
neW yorK yanKeeS — activated lhp aroldis Chapman.
ToronTo Blue JayS — Selected the contract of lhp
Tommy Milone from the alternate training site. optioned
rhp Joel payamps to the alternate training site. placed
rhp Kirby yates on the 60-day il.
National League
loS anGeleS dodGerS — recalled rhp dennis San-
tana from the alternate training site. placed rhp Tony
Gonsolin on the 10-day il retroactive to april 1.
piTTSBurGh piraTeS — activated rhp Kyle Crick from
the CoVid-19 il. placed inF Ke’Bryan hayes on the 10-
day il. optioned rhp Wil Crowe to the alternate training
site. Selected the contract of inF Wilmer difo from the
alternate training site. designated rhp Tyler Bashlor
for assignment.
in the NCAA Tournament
since 2005 — although the
Wildcats would have made the
NCAA’s last season had it not
been canceled by the corona-
virus.
The Wildcats started the
season No. 7 in the poll and
moved up to as high as sixth —
the best ranking ever in school
history —for a few weeks.
McDonald, who followed
her coach from Washington as
a transfer, has been a huge rea-
son for the team’s success. The
5-foot-6 guard, who is light-
ning quick, is one of the rare
two-way players in the game
who can make an impact on
both ends of the court.
She struggled against the
Cardinal, finishing with 22
points while going 5-for-20
from the field.
The Wildcats were trying
to be only the fourth team to
trail by double digits and win a
championship.
These teams met twice
during the regular season and
Stanford rolled past Arizona
both times, winning by double
digits in each game.
This one came down to a fi-
nal chance for the Wildcats, but
they fell just one-point short.
TIP-INS
Sunday night’s game was the
first with two teams from west
of the Mississippi playing for a
title since 1986.